Public Interest Law and Policy Speakers series begins Sept. 12
The School of Law’s 2016-17 “Access to Justice” Public Interest Law & Policy Speakers series at Washington University in St. Louis features an outstanding lineup of judges, lawyers, authors, and...
View ArticleWashington University affirms commitment to freedom of expression
The need to respect and protect freedom of speech is the key cornerstone on which institutions of higher education are structured. Washington University in St. Louis is affirming its commitment to this...
View ArticlePlanetary smackdown
Measurements of an element in Earth and moon rocks have just disproved the leading hypotheses for the origin of the moon. Tiny differences in the segregation of the isotopes of potassium between the...
View ArticleVideo: Inside an installation
The Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum at Washington University in St. Louis boasts one of the nation’s finest university collections. This fall, the museum is celebrating the 10th anniversary of its...
View ArticleGluttonous cancer cells
One of the hallmarks of cancer is a change in cellular metabolism, a series of chemical reactions so fundamental to life that their alteration makes cancer cells seem creepily malevolent. Healthy...
View ArticleThe sharing economy’s effect on business
Collaborative consumption is an expanding economic force in our country and globally, with consumers sharing everything from cars, bicycles and even agricultural equipment. It happens quickly and...
View ArticleDUC Chamber Series begins Sept. 27
Flutist Mark Sparks (left) and pianist Peter Henderson will launch the Danforth University Center’s fall Chamber Music Series Tuesday, Sept. 27. Though best remembered for his concerti for solo violin,...
View ArticleBrain development through adolescence to be focus of national study
In a landmark national study, scientists will use advanced brain imaging on more than 10,000 children, along with interviews and behavioral tests, to determine how experiences, together with a child’s...
View ArticleMed school study examines firearms in the home
A study of parents by researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis shows that about half of the children whose parents were surveyed spend time in homes that have firearms....
View ArticleEbola focus of $13 million grant
How the Ebola virus replicates and interacts with the body is the focus of a $13 million grant awarded to a team led by researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. These...
View ArticleHidden green skills
What have plant scientists learned in the laboratory in the past three to five years that could be used to reduce inputs of water, chemical fertilizers and herbicides to agricultural fields? This...
View ArticleSecond annual conference will bring in sports executives from around the country
Olin’s Sports Business Summit brings together executives from across the field for a series of panel discussions. A panel at last year’s summit featured Bill DeWitt III (left) of the St. Louis...
View ArticleThe realms of Mordor
In June 2015, when the cameras on NASA’s approaching New Horizons spacecraft first spotted the large reddish polar region on Pluto’s largest moon, Charon, mission scientists knew two things: they had...
View ArticleCollege students want a voice in the debate
If college students ran the presidential debates, what issues would they want addressed? College affordability, certainly. And jobs, of course. But the student delegates who gathered this month at...
View ArticleThe shape-shifting protein behind Alzheimer’s disease
Researchers have known that the peptide amyloid beta plays a role in causing Alzheimer’s disease, but they are still working to determine how it becomes toxic. Jan Bieschke, a biomedical engineer at...
View ArticleBuilding smarter, safer infrastructure
Our nation’s infrastructure includes massive networks of highways, roadways, bridges, ports, railways, energy delivery systems and aviation. Every American is reliant on these networks, yet they need...
View ArticleFlying high
On Sept. 19, Henric Krawczynski, the principal investigator on the X-Calibur telescope mission, announced on the mission blog that the telescope had landed safely near the border between Arizona and...
View ArticleNew explanation offered for symptoms of fragile X syndrome
A new explanation for some of the symptoms of fragile X syndrome, the most common inherited cause of intellectual disability, has been proposed by researchers at Washington University School of...
View ArticleAlberti Program introduces kids to power, potential of architecture
Architecture shapes our environment. But studying architecture shapes how we see, understand and interpret the world. A building, a neighborhood, a city — each is the result of particular priorities,...
View ArticleAcademic, corporate, political leaders gather in Brisbane to address global...
Research universities, with their dual mission of educating future leaders and spurring innovation, are uniquely positioned to address some of the world’s most complex challenges. To strengthen this...
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