Many Washington University community members, with the support of university stipends, grants and compensation, are working this summer to make St. Louis a stronger, safer and more equitable city.
School of Medicine parasitologist L. David Sibley is leading a team to find drugs to cure toxoplasmosis, a parasitic disease characterized by vision problems and brain complications.
In an age when social media ensures everyone can have a voice, more Americans than ever — some 40% — are choosing to keep their mouths shut, according to a new study from Arts & Sciences.
Researchers at the School of Medicine have combined two types of immunotherapy into a single treatment that may be more effective and possibly safer than current immunotherapies for blood cancers.
Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum will remain closed to the public for the fall 2020 semester. However, in coordination with the universitywide COVID-19 response plan and health and safety guidelines, the museum will be accessible in a limited fashion to WashU students, faculty and staff.
In this Q&A, Bradley Jolliff, new director of the McDonnell Center for the Space Sciences in Arts & Sciences, describes current collaborative work in the space sciences at Washington University and looks forward to the next generation of research.
After a national search, noted radiologist Debbie Lee Bennett, MD, has been named chief of breast imaging for the Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology at the School of Medicine.
“Dateline–Saigon,” a documentary about Vietnam War reporting produced by Richard Chapman, senior lecturer in film and media studies in Arts & Sciences, has been released for streaming on iTunes, Amazon Prime and other platforms.
For a companion piece to a recently published study, PNAS editors asked Fiona Marshall of Arts & Sciences to quickly author a commentary about the global context of cat domestication. Titled “Cats as predators and early domesticates in ancient human landscapes,” the piece was published July 20.
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