Wednesday, Dec. 13, 2023
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Top stories
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Understanding the brain and nervous system is one of the most pressing challenges in medicine. To meet this challenge, WashU Medicine has built and is opening the Neuroscience Research Building, a 609,000-square-foot facility expected to be among the nation’s premier neuroscience research hubs. |
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WashU researchers will adapt their COVID-19-detecting breathalyzer to one that can also screen for common seasonal viruses with a two-year $3.6 million grant from Flu Lab. They plan to take the technology from the bench into clinical trials. |
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Adolescence can be particularly stressful for teens who resettle in an unfamiliar country. Brown School researchers have been studying challenges for those who resettled from the Middle East and North Africa. They find that schools play an important role in fostering resilience and helping teens adjust. |
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David T. Curiel, MD, PhD (left), and James W. Janetka, PhD, professors at the School of Medicine, have been elected fellows of the National Academy of Inventors. The recognition represents the highest professional distinction accorded solely to academic inventors. |
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Campus and community news
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Notables Michelle Oyen, an associate professor of biomedical engineering at the McKelvey School of Engineering, has been named among the 200 Trailblazing Leaders in Women’s Health and FemTech for 2023 by Women of Wearables. |
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Research Wire Matthew A. Ciorba, MD, a professor of medicine and director of the Inflammatory Bowel Disease Center at the School of Medicine, has received a $2.8 million award from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to evaluate a new treatment for colorectal cancer. |
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Announcements The Office of Sustainability offers tips for reducing energy use during the winter break. It’s also hosting the annual holiday lights recycling drive through Feb. 2. |
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Perspectives
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Doug Villhard, a professor of practice in entrepreneurship at Olin Business School, has published his second historical fiction novel, “City of Women.” He tells a piece of the story of charismatic real-life entrepreneur E.G. Lewis, who works to build up Atascadero, Calif., as a community for progressive women and their families around the time of World War I.
Olin Business School
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Who Knew WashU? Question: During this season of giving, we ask: According to the Gephardt Institute, how many hours do WashU community members volunteer each year?
A) 700,000B) 2.5 millionC) 4 millionD) 7 million
Submit your answer → |
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