Class Acts: Celebrating the past, ready for the future
In a countdown to Commencement 2014, we offer a five-part series in recognition of students who are changing the world through research, service and innovation.
Interdisciplinary efforts on economic fragility spark new book, May 28 policy discussion in D.C.
In an effort to study causes and find solutions, Washington University in St. Louis faculty from across disciplines are examining economic insecurity through the university’s Livable Lives Initiative. One of the products of this interdisciplinary collaboration is a new book, “Working and Living in the Shadow of Economic Fragility.”
WUSTL to race wild strain of amoeba in World Dicty Race 2014
Biology researchers at Washington University in St. Louis are placing their bets on the wild side as they prepare a pack of social amoeba for competition Friday, May 16, in the first-ever Dicty World Race, an international science competition that carries a $5,000 prize for the single-celled organism deemed to be the “smartest and fastest” in negotiating a microscopic maze.
MEDIA ADVISORY: Washington University Commencement is 8:30 a.m. Friday, May 16
Washington University’s 153rd Commencement is at 8:30 a.m. Friday, May 16, in Brookings Quadrangle on the Danforth Campus. The university will award 3,030 degrees to 2,899 undergraduate, graduate and professional students. Baseball Hall of Famer Tony La Russa will deliver the 2014 Commencement address and receive an honorary degree.
Antidepressant may slow Alzheimer’s disease
Antidepressants can reduce production of the main ingredient of Alzheimer’s brain plaques, according to new research at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis and the University of Pennsylvania. The plaques are highlighted in red in this image of a mouse’s brain.
IDEA Labs teams unveil medical innovations
Interdisciplinary student teams presented innovations designed to solve problems in health care at IDEA Labs’ Demo Day last month. Engineering student Matthew Burkhardt (seated) won a summer internship through the university’s Skandalaris Center to continue developing his team’s invention. His teammates are (from left) Yuni Teh, Katrina Leyden, Adina Stoica and Elizabeth Rosenberg.
School of Medicine nurses honored with 2014 Excellence in Nursing awards
Four School of Medicine nurses recently received the 2014 Excellence in Nursing Award from St. Louis Magazine, honoring local nurses who have made a difference in the lives of their patients and colleagues. Several others were honored as finalists.
Study: Can vitamin D slow heart complications from diabetes?
Washington University researchers are studying African Americans with diabetes to learn whether vitamin D can slow the development of cardiovascular problems. Shown is principal investigator Carlos Bernal-Mizrachi, MD, with study patient Helen Randall.
Test of KMOV video player embed (bimvid)
Test of KMOV video player embed (bimvid)
‘30% Club’ could work here with better defined objectives
A group of a two dozen corporate leaders, including
Warren Buffet, is trying to influence American companies to increase the
number of women in positions of senior leadership. The effort, called the 30% Club,
is an expansion of an effort in Great Britain to increase female corporate
board representation there to 30 percent by the end of 2015. But can it work in the United States? Maybe, with more defined objectives, says Olin Business School’s Michelle Duguid, PhD, an expert on women in the workplace.
View More Stories