Los Angeles Times
Aftershocks prompt fears of major Tokyo quake
03/15/2011
The pattern of aftershocks in Japan appears to be shifting south toward Tokyo, raising concerns among scientists that the temblors could transfer stress to nearby faults. The fear is that the initial quake and the series of large aftershocks will transfer geophysical stress into nearby faults, causing some near Tokyo to shift violently, said Michael Wysession, a seismologist at Washington University in St. Louis. Link to Article See also Chicago Tribune, Seattle Times, Hamilton Spectator (Canada).
The Washington Post
No matter what happens in NFL labor negotiations, the players pay the price
03/15/2011
No matter how well the NFL players’ union bargains, most players will end up broke — and broken in body. Recently, researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis released the results of interviews with 644 former players who played in the league between 1979 and 2006, who averaged 48 years in age. The survey found 93 percent of them suffered some level of pain, and 73 percent described that pain as moderate to severe. Link to Article
Scientific American
How radiation threatens health
03/15/2011
The developing crisis at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant has raised concerns over the health effects of radiation exposure: What is a “dangerous” level of radiation? How does radiation damage health? What are the consequences of acute and long-term low-dose radiation? “We are nowhere near levels where people should be worried,” says Susan M. Langhorst, a health physicist and the Radiation Safety Officer at Washington University in St. Louis. Link to Article
Brookings Institution
Ten-year impacts of individual Development Accounts on Homeownership: Evidence from a Randomized Experiment
03/15/2011
With the housing market still recovering from the subprime crisis, a key question for policymakers is how and whether to encourage homeownership and the role of down payments in the initial homeowner purchase. A new research paper, co-authored by Michael Sherraden and Mark Schreiner of Washington University in St. Louis looks specifically at the long-term impact of an experiment with an Individual Development Accounts (IDA) program, which provide matching funds for qualified savings withdrawals, including housing down payments. Link to Article
Ingram’s
The specialized MBA
03/16/2011
While general-business MBA programs are still commonplace, it is more likely that the adult student today will focus on something a little more specific. Washington University’s Olin School of Business, for example, offers courses not only from its home base in St. Louis and its Kansas City satellite branch, but halfway around the globe with an executive MBA in Shanghai. That program, nearly a decade old, is a partnership with Fudan University, and is ranked by Financial Times as No. 1 in its class in China. Link to Article
IRB Advisor
University facilitates more CEnR involvement
03/01/2011
As Washington University in St. Louis, MO, expanded its interest in community-engaged research (CEnR), officials realized that both the researchers and their community partners needed to better understand human subjects protection requirements. In response, they’ve developed a program that not only ensures community groups are trained to help conduct research ethically, but guides researchers through the sometimes overwhelming Institutional Review Board (IRB) process. Read Full Text
theday.com
Research unit going to China, Pfizer says
03/16/2011
Pfizer Inc. plans to move its antibacterials research unit in Groton to Shanghai, China, but said some local scientists involved in the research will remain in Groton for up to two years as the company builds the new Shanghai unit. Pfizer also said it plans to continue a collaboration with Washington University in St. Louis that enlists academics’ help in finding new uses for Pfizer’s established products.
Link to Article
Related news release on WUSTL-Pfizer agreement http://news.wustl.edu/news/Pages/20770.aspx
Saint Louis Beacon
Five questions with R. Marie Griffith
03/15/2011
In July, R. Marie Griffith, 43, will become director of Washington University’s John C. Danforth Center for Religion & Politics. She brings to St. Louis varied academic and leadership experience at top schools, including Princeton University. Griffith, who is completing a book due out next year titled “Christians, Sex and Politics: An American History,” responds to five questions from Beacon editor Donna Korando. Link to Article
KPLR-TV
News 11 at Noon (1/2)
03/15/2011
St. Louis University’s health law program is again ranked number one in the nation by U.S. News & World Report. It’s the eighth straight year the SLU law school has been number one. In the overall rankings, the Yale and Harvard are the top two law schools. Washington University is number 18. Link to Broadcast
News in Higher Education
New York Times
Loan study on students goes beyond default rates
03/15/2011
For each student who defaults on a loan, at least two more fall behind in payments, a new study has found. The Institute for Higher Education Policy, a nonprofit organization, said in a report that two out of five student loan borrowers were delinquent at some point in the first five years after they started repaying their loans. Link to Article
New York Times
U.C.L.A. student’s video Rant Against Asians Fuels Firestorm
03/15/2011
Since recording a three-minute video of herself ranting about Asian students and posting it to YouTube, Alexandra Wallace, a third-year political science student at U.C.L.A, has achieved a sudden, unwelcome celebrity: her video has been viewed by millions of people, and she has become the subject of nationwide condemnation and the catalyst of a debate about racial intolerance and free speech. Link to Article
Boston Globe
Advocates for blind want college review
03/16/2011
The National Federation of the Blind filed a complaint with the federal government yesterday accusing New York University and Northwestern University of discriminating against blind students by adopting Google e-mail and other programs that aren’t fully compatible with technology that translates written words into speech. Link to Article
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