Extraordinary service
Photo by Robert BostonThe School of Medicine’s Central Administration Recognition Luncheon recognized 64 employees with at least 10 years of service.
Early humans were prey not killers
Anthropology Professor Robert Sussman goes against the prevailing view and argues that primates, including early humans, evolved as prey of many predators.
Hypertension in African-Americans connected with two genomic regions
Researchers at WUSTL, Stanford University and Loyola University Medical Center, among others, used a first-of-its-kind statistical method.
Osteoporosis linked with common gene
About 19 percent of people have a genetic variation that may increase susceptibility to osteoporosis, a School of Medicine study says.
Stroke-prevention drug study compares therapies
The research shows that the stroke-prevention drug Exanta is less cost-effective for most patients than the blood thinner warfarin.
National parks get boost from Olin School project
Over a handful of classes, M.B.A. students developed programs for selling merchandise featuring National Park System logos.
Will named McDonnell professor of physics
Will is one of the world’s leading experts in using experimental and observational data to explain Einstein’s theory of general relativity.
Hundreds of college dancers to perform March 3-6
The American College Dance Festival Association event will feature student and faculty dancers from 20 universities across nine states.
Poet D.A. Powell to read from his work March 3
His Cocktails, a harrowing yet disturbingly witty collection of works, is a finalist for this year’s National Book Critics’ Circle Award in poetry.
Van Duyn & Thurston collaboration on display
When Jarvis Thurston and Mona Van Duyn moved to St. Louis in 1950, they brought the literary magazine Perspective with them; it was published for nearly 30 years.
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