"Carol Graham" is a senior fellow and the Charles W. Robinson/Charles Robinson Chair at the Brookings Institution, a University of Maryland, College Park/College Park professor at the School of Public Policy at the University of Maryland, a research fellow at the Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA), and the author of numerous books, papers and edited volume chapters.

Graham has written extensively and is considered an expert on issues including poverty, inequality, insecurity, the political economy of market reforms, subjective well-being, and the economics of happiness. In Happiness around the World: the Paradox of Happy Peasants and Miserable Millionaires (Oxford University Press, 2010), Graham explores what we know about the determinants of happiness across and within countries of different development levels, including some counterintuitive and surprising relationships. Her latest book, The Pursuit of Happiness: An Economy of Well-Being, examines what the new science and metrics of well-being can contribute to policy and, in particular, if they can serve as new benchmarks of economic progress.

More Carol Graham on Wikipedia.

They come with a recipe for syrup. You put them frozen in a pan, pour the syrup on top and bake them for about an hour.

We see how many people we have that will be able to help and if we'll have enough help to do it, ... We kind of know the people that have helped before so we ask them If we have people we don't know for sure, we ask them a few weeks before we start.

Some people like to work in the morning, some like to work Monday nights, and some come to both, ... We've got people everywhere from (age) 50s to 90s.

Up to 2004, we made 53,839 dumplings. This year, we made 2,815 so far, ... We've made (a total of) $44,154. We don't have figures for 2005 yet.