News for the Washington University Campuses & Community
Straight from The Source
|
|
|
Malaria drug protects fetuses from Zika infection
Studying pregnant mice, School of Medicine researchers found that Zika virus manipulates the body’s normal barrier to infection. They also found that a malaria drug, hydroxychloroquine, interferes with this process, protecting the fetus from viral infection.
|
|
Sleep, Alzheimer’s link explained
Researchers, including from the School of Medicine, have published a study showing that disrupting just one night of sleep in healthy, middle-aged adults causes an increase in a brain protein associated with Alzheimer’s disease.
|
|
WashU Expert: K-12 school hair policies discriminatory
Despite some school districts’ claims to the contrary, the naturally curly hair of many African-Americans is not unprofessional, distracting or faddish, said Kimberly Norwood, a Washington University expert on implicit bias and the law.
|
|
Keeping students in STEM fields
Megan Daschbach, senior lecturer in chemistry in Arts & Sciences, discusses in the Ampersand efforts to keep students, especially women and minorities, in science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) courses and ultimately, STEM careers.
|
|
|
Events
Sunday, July 16-Thursday, July 20
7:30 p.m. Sunday, July 16
4 p.m. Wednesday, July 19
View all events →
|
|
Campus Announcements
A pedestrian and driver safety program is being developed by the Operations and Facilities Management Department at the School of Medicine. The program will address campus pedestrian and vehicular safety needs; provide education; and encourage walking.
|
|
|
|
Thinking about our students during summer break
|
|
|
|
Obituaries
Richard F. “Dick” Ford, emeritus trustee of Washington University, died July 8 at his home in St. Louis after a long battle with cancer. He was 81. A memorial service will take place Saturday, July 15.
|
|
Campus Voices
Jo Ellen Dardick Lewis, professor of practice in the School of Law, has published a book, “Telling Your Story,” to help students polish their legal resumes and cover letters as they prepare for job searches. Lewis worked closely with undergraduate student Lydia Duran, who designed and created the samples for the book.
Read more Campus Voices →
|
|
|
Two students at the School of Medicine — Rachel Stern (left) and I-Ling Chiang (right) — have received accolades for research and essay writing from the Alpha Omega Alpha National Honor Medical Society.
|
|
University Libraries’ Film & Media Archive received a grant from the National Film Preservation Foundation to preserve “Code Blue,” a 1972 recruitment film aimed at bringing minorities into the medical profession.
|
|
|
Who Knew WashU?
Question: Which former WashU student authored a best-selling children’s book in the 1950s after achieving success as an actress, singer, composer and voice coach?
Answer: B) Kay Thompson (left), who was a contemporary of playwright Tennessee Williams, at Soldan High School and then at Washington University. She enrolled in 1927 and spent time studying music and theater before moving to California. In 1955, she published the book “Eloise,” about a precocious child living in New York’s Plaza Hotel.
Congrats to this week’s winner, Susan Starbuck, of the Department of Pediatrics at the School of Medicine. She will receive an “I Knew WashU” luggage tag! |
|
You have received this e-mail because you expressed interest in receiving updates from wustl.edu, the Record and its related products by e-mail. Thanks for your subscription. If you do not want to receive the Record via e-mail, you may unsubscribe. Got this as a forward? Sign up to receive our future e-mails.
|
|