‘Crazy’ offshoots of Einstein’s theories topic of 2012 McDonnell Distinguished Lecture
Clifford Will, PhD, the James S. McDonnell Professor of Space Sciences, will deliver the McDonnell Distinguished Lecture at 7 p.m. Thursday, April 12, in Room 100, Whitaker Hall, at Washington University in St. Louis. Will plans to discuss “Black Holes, Waves of Gravity and Other Warped Ideas of Dr. Einstein.”
Trustees grant faculty promotions, tenure
At recent Board of Trustees meetings, the following faculty members were appointed with tenure, promoted with tenure or granted tenure effective July 1, 2012, unless otherwise noted.
Ten WUSTL faculty to receive Outstanding St. Louis Scientists Awards
The Academy of Science of St. Louis will honor 10 faculty members from Washington University in St. Louis for their contributions and leadership in science and medicine. The Outstanding St. Louis Scientists Awards will be presented Thursday, April 19, at the Chase Park Plaza Hotel. The awards are designed to focus attention on St. Louis individuals and institutions known around the world for scientific contributions to research, industry and quality of life.
Sports update April 2: Baseball wins 20th game
The baseball team recorded 24 hits, including 10 for extra bases, as the Bears earned their 20th win of the season — and 8th in a row — with a 25-13 victory over St. Norbert College April 1 at Kelly Field. Updates also included on softball, men’s tennis, track & field and women’s golf.
Arts & Sciences junior named Newman Civic Fellow
Tej Azad, a junior in Arts & Sciences at Washington University in St. Louis, was among 162 students from across the country named a Newman Civic Fellow for 2012 by Campus Compact. The Newman Civic Fellows Awards recognize inspiring college student
leaders who have demonstrated an investment in finding solutions for challenges facing communities throughout the country and the world.
DNA sequencing lays foundation for personalized cancer treatment
Scientists at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis are using powerful DNA sequencing technology not only to identify mutations at the root of a patient’s tumor – considered key to personalizing cancer treatment – but to map the genetic evolution of disease and monitor response to treatment.
Siteman Cancer Center expert honored nationally for prevention efforts
Graham A. Colditz, MD, DrPH, a disease prevention expert at the Siteman Cancer Center at Barnes-Jewish Hospital and Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, will be recognized April 3 for his 30 years of fighting cancer before it starts.
Can the Supreme Court survive a health-care decision?
After it rules on the highly contested health-care
debate and makes other momentous decisions this term, will the U.S.
Supreme have sufficient stores of legitimacy to weather the inevitable
backlash? Yes, but barely, says a professor of political science at
Washington University in St. Louis.
Young Choreographers Showcase April 6-8
The Performing Arts Department in Arts & Sciences will present its fifth biennial Young Choreographers Showcase Friday through Sunday, April 6-8 in the Annelise Mertz Dance Studio. The concert will feature more than a dozen dancers in ten original works created by student choreographers in the Dance Program in the Performing Arts Department in Arts & Sciences.
East Asian conference explores cultural aftermath of war and violence, April 6 and 7
“War, Violence, and The Aftermath: Historical Memory,
Literary Imagination, and Cultural Regeneration,” is the focus of an
international conference to be held Friday, April 6, and Saturday, April
7, in Room 276 of the Danforth University Center at Washington
University in St. Louis.
View More Stories