Friday, July 30, 2021
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Top stories
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University faculty, staff and students will now be able to use a COVID-19 exposure notification system through their smartphones. The university is piloting the system, called MO/Notify, launched with approval from the state of Missouri. |
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Research from the lab of Kimberly Parker at the McKelvey School of Engineering reveals key differences between single- and double-stranded RNA, insights that may prove useful to fields from agriculture to medicine. |
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Research involving Olin Business School provides a blueprint for development of a sustainable milk production supply chain, where milk waste is reduced in a way that is cost-effective, socially acceptable and environmentally sound. |
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The remains of microscopic plankton blooms in near-shore ocean environments slowly sink to the seafloor, setting off processes that forever alter an important record of Earth’s history, according to research from geoscientists, including David Fike in Arts & Sciences. |
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Srikanth Singamaneni and Barani Raman at the McKelvey School of Engineering developed technology to use nanoparticles to heat and manipulate cells in the brain and heart. |
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Read more stories on The Source →
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Events
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12:30 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 3 |
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11 a.m. Wednesday, Aug. 4 |
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10 a.m.–Noon Thursday, Aug. 5 |
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View more events →
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WashU in the News
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BBC
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St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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KSDK-TV
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HEC Media
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See more WashU in the News →
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Campus and community news
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Notables Dan Epps, the Treiman Professor of Law, testified before the Presidential Commission on the Supreme Court of the United States last week. He has expertise in court reform, where his work is influencing major policy debates. |
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Research Wire Research from Hong Chen’s lab at the McKelvey School of Engineering highlights the interaction between MRI and focused ultrasound with microbubbles. |
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Notables Rebecca Wanzo, professor and chair of women, gender and sexuality studies in Arts & Sciences, has won two major awards in comic book studies, the Eisner Award for Best Academic/Scholarly Work and the Charles Hatfield Book Prize from the Comics Studies Society. |
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Perspectives
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C. Robert Cloninger, MD, PhD, professor emeritus of psychiatry at the School of Medicine, is the guest on a podcast episode, where he discusses getting to know oneself and what leads to happiness.
‘Take the Long View’
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Read more Perspectives →
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Who Knew WashU? Question: Which former chancellor has served in the Cabinet of a U.S. president?
Answer: C) David F. Houston served as one of Woodrow Wilson’s advisers during his presidential campaign and took a leave of absence from the university to become agriculture secretary during Wilson’s presidency.
Congrats to this week’s winner, Nadia Suhail, an MBA student at Olin Business School, who will receive an “I Knew WashU” luggage tag!
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