• According to a study by Young Lee and Roger Gordon of Hanyang University, South Korea and University of California, San Diego, that alone would increase economic growth by between one and two percentage points a year for five years to come.

    FORBES: Academics Have Spoken, And Obamanomics Is The Path To Slow Growth

  • But the announcement made this week by Woo Suk Hwang, of Seoul National University in South Korea, and his colleagues, is serious.

    ECONOMIST: An embryonic development

  • The oldest university in South Korea, Yonsei can trace its origins to 1885 when a teaching hospital was set up by royal decree.

    CNN: ASIANOW - Asiaweek

  • Work on the machine was carried out by researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard University in the US, and Seoul National University in South Korea.

    BBC: Pentagon helps build Meshworm reconnaissance robot

  • That was when he was 12 years old and after he graduated from Yonsei University in South Korea he moved to the Graduate School of Architecture at Columbia, New York.

    CNN: Minsuk Cho's dramatic architecture

  • Park faces an opposition with a strengthened veto power, and the possibility of organized resistance to her foreign policy initiatives by prominent liberal groups, Park Ihn-hwi, a professor at Ewha Womans University in South Korea, wrote on the Council on Foreign Relations' website.

    NPR: South Korean Prez Stumbles In First Month On Job

  • Beauram Hur is a student at Stanford University, originally from South Korea.

    BBC: Facebook's journey into the East

  • Seung Mi Lee of South Korea's Kunsan University and her team announced a nanotube material at the conference that, they claimed, could store more than 14% of its own weight of hydrogen.

    ECONOMIST: Space-age soot

  • Despite Stalinism's decay, Andrei Lankov of South Korea's Kookmin University suggests that the regime, which during the famine may have faced collapse or military rebellion, now actually feels more sure of itself.

    ECONOMIST: The state the North Korean regime is in

  • North Korea recently acknowledged that its long-range rockets have both scientific and military uses, and Kong Chang-duk, a professor of rocket science at South Korea's Chosun University, said the same argument could apply to the South.

    NPR: SKorea: Satellite Working Normally, Sending Data

  • Researchers at Sungkyunkwan University in Seoul, South Korea, have developed a novel method of turning sound into electricity, and the technology could soon be used to charge our mobile phones with nothing more than the power of the human voice, reports the Telegraph.

    FORBES: Written by Bryan Nelson

  • Kim came to Yanji from South Korea in 1986 to open the Yanbian University of Science and Technology.

    CNN: 'The South's Guangdong'

  • Others could be that some people in South Korea weren't happy with this university being so far advanced.

    NPR: Author of Debunked Stem-Cell Papers Apologizes

  • On Thursday a team of researchers at Newcastle University in the UK, which hopes to join South Korea in the forefront of stem cell research, also said they had successfully cloned an human embryo.

    CNN: Cloning success hailed, feared

  • Even though adjusting to life in South Korea was not easy, I made a plan and started studying for the university entrance exam.

    CNN: Why I fled North Korea

  • In South Korea, internet-gaming stars earn six-figure dollar salaries, attend university on special gaming scholarships and have massive fan clubs glued to the two cable channels dedicated to the sport.

    ECONOMIST: Geeks gather for the world gaming championships

  • Dr. Faust, who will also visit South Korea, said China is the "largest supplier" of international students enrolled at the university's campus, in Cambridge, Mass.

    WSJ: Harvard Expands Reach in Asia

  • Mr. Bae was born in South Korea and is a naturalized U.S. citizen, according to an account on the University of Oregon's Daily Emerald website.

    WSJ: U.S. Denounces North Korea Sentencing

  • Siegfried Hecker, a nuclear scientist based at Stanford University who has visited North Korea's nuclear facilities seven times, emphasized at a conference in Busan, South Korea, on Tuesday that China is the only country that can penalize North Korea if it chooses to, saying Beijing "holds the key to the price" North Korea will pay if it moves forward with its weapons pursuit.

    WSJ: China Seeks Peacemaker Role on North Korea

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