Wednesday, Aug. 17, 2022
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Top stories
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Washington University has hit a major milestone in its quest to enroll more students with limited resources: 20% of the incoming Class of 2026 is Pell Grant-eligible. Also, 15% of incoming students will be the first in their families to attend college, and 51% identify as students of color. |
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A study in Molecular Cell led by chemist Gary Patti in Arts & Sciences shows that cancer cells don’t want to waste glucose — they just consume it too quickly. The discovery was made possible with metabolomics, which allowed Patti’s team to observe the speed at which molecules move through cells. |
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Scholarships help the School of Medicine enroll the most talented students, enabling them to take advantage of a vast array of training and mentorship opportunities. Read about a few students’ goals and their futures in medicine. |
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Read more stories on The Source →
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Events
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10 a.m.–Noon Wednesday, Aug. 17 |
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10 a.m.–2 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 18 |
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View more events →
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WashU in the News
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PBS Newshour
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The Philadelphia Inquirer
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Discover Magazine
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Fox 2 St. Louis
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See more WashU in the News →
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Washington People
Andrew Jordan
Economist Andrew Jordan, in Arts & Sciences, sees his field through a different lens than those who study production costs or consumer behavior. Rather, Jordan uses economics and data analytics to study decision-making and potential bias in all aspects of the criminal justice system.
See more Washington People →
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Campus and community news
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Notables John F. DiPersio, MD, PhD, the Virginia E. and Sam J. Golman Endowed Professor of Oncology and director of the Division of Oncology at the School of Medicine, has been named by OncLive as a member of the Giants of Cancer Care inductee class of 2022. |
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Research Wire Erik Henriksen, associate professor of physics in Arts & Sciences, received a three-year nearly $600,000 grant from the Office of Naval Research for a research project on topological qubits.
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Research Wire A new technological pairing from the lab of Quing Zhu at the McKelvey School of Engineering may lead to an improved diagnostic tool for colorectal cancer. The results were published in the Journal of Biophotonics. |
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Perspectives
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Ian Bogost, professor in Arts & Sciences and the McKelvey School of Engineering, writes an article lamenting the demise of cars with stick shifts and what the loss means for drivers who love them.
The Atlantic
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Read more Perspectives →
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Who Knew WashU? Question: The university’s Institute for School Partnership offers K-12 educational support, including the mySci curriculum, which provides hands-on science lessons and teacher training. About how many students does the mySci curriculum reach?
A) 20,000B) 53,000C) 77,000D) 125,000
Submit your answer → |
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