Sam Fox School of Design & Visual Arts
Background information on the new Sam Fox School of Design & Visual Arts at Washington University in St. Louis.
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A stitch in time Using a cow’s heart, Kory Lavine (left) learns to do sutures from fellow student Andrew Harger at clinic orientation for new third-year students June 19. Other students (from left) are Michelle Moniz, Alistair Kent and Jeffrey Lau. Photo credit: Ray Marklin
Campus Watch
The following incidents were reported to University Police June 7-July 11. Readers with information that could assist in investigating these incidents are urged to call 935-5555. This information is provided as a public service to promote safety awareness and is available on the University Police Web site at police.wustl.edu. Crime alert University Police issued the […]
Dean’s distinguished service awards
Photo by Robert BostonJean Audrain in the Department of Internal Medicine receives the Dean’s Distinguished Service Award from Larry J. Shapiro, M.D., executive vice chancellor and dean of the School of Medicine.
barrack photo cutline
Heavy metal Robert L. Barrack, M.D., (right) performs a hip implant with the Birmingham Hip on a patient at Barnes-Jewish Hospital. Barrack was the first U.S. surgeon to implant the system, which resurfaces the head of the femur with a metal hip joint and leaves the patient’s thighbone intact.
Metro opens new transfer center
The opening is part of a long-term plan to make Euclid Avenue a more pedestrian-friendly zone.
Medical Center presents alumni, distinguished service awards
Honored were: Marshall E. Bloom, Willard B. Walker, Clay F. Semenkovich, Gregory A. Storch, William H. McAlister, Alan L. Schwartz, and Samuel L. Stanley.
Of basketballs and beakers
A former college basketball player, Loomis is a physical chemist whose research interests are centered on probing and controlling reaction dynamics at the atomic level.
May appointed to state alliance
The Alliance is a group that will develop an action plan to improve math, engineering, technology and science (METS) learning and student achievement in Missouri.
Nanostructured material that can repel pests, sweeten air, developed
Photo by David KilperA material created by chemistry’s Karen Wooley might someday be used as a timed drug-delivery system.Karen Wooley says that the results of her research with the polymers — the promoted release, the anti-fouling application — are “strange, if not weird, but there is so much going on here, we want to explore it all.”
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