Vol. 37 No. 2, February 2011
Index
- 25 years ago.
- Alzheimer's item.
- Another tough year.
- Blog: the thicket.
- Correction.
- Did you know ...
- On the field.
- Perils of partisanship.
- Teens and pregnancy.
- Whose dome is it?
- By the numbers.
- Hard heads don't hurt.
- A veteran Utah newspaperman is the new chief deputy of the House.
- Arizona Representative Frank Pratt, on Christmas day, was ambushed, beaten unconscious and tied up for some five hours at his place of business before his wife found him.
- Former Connecticut House speaker and Congressman William Ratchford died in January at age 76.
- Lansing.
- Missouri House Speaker Steven Tilley took the gavel in a decidedly Republican chamber.
- Officeholder responsibilities can keep a guy busy in New Jersey.
- The longest serving legislator in Nevada history has resigned after 38 years.
- The man many once considered the most powerful politician in the North Carolina General Assembly, Marc Basnight, said a degenerative nerve disease as well as his desire to spend more time with his fiancee, convinced him to resign from the Senate after 25 years, 18 as Senate president pro tem.
- Workers' Compensation Bureau.
- Getting at the Hard Core.
- Accountable health care.
- Employee or contractor?
- Nuclear power unplugged.
- Drink up.
- Electric Louisiana.
- Fat foods from the 50.
- Firefighters' foe.
- The public perception.
- Voters in Vermont.
- A Hajj right.
- Capitol keys.
- Click it or not.
- Flunking at finance.
- Ipad pilot.
- Right turn: a new Congress intent on fiscal discipline means states can expect little budget help from Washington.
- Deep holes, few options: the end of stimulus money and still shaky revenues mean FY 2012 may be the worst budget year yet.
- Heads up! NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell talks about the importance of protecting student athletes from traumatic head injuries.
- The great divided: lawmakers who once prided themselves on working across the aisle find the statehouse turning deeply partisan.
- Taking responsibility: new federal money to prevent teen pregnancies gives states some options.
- Sorting right from wrong: being ethical goes beyond just following the law.
- The growing cost of care.
- As they see it.