‘Lest We Forget’
Members of WU Style Step perform a rally scene during Black Anthology in Edison Theatre. Now in its 22nd year, the annual student-run production educates people about African-American culture and highlights important issues. This year’s production, “Lest We Forget,” focused on the tumultuous 1960s.
Facebook valuation will be high, but justified, expert says
Facebook’s initial public offering (IPO) filing shows real numbers for profit and revenues, which are likely to drive a valuation that could be as high as $100 billion.This astronomical number does require some aggressive assumptions about future growth, but the high valuation may be more justified than for other internet companies, says Mark T. Leary, PhD, assistant professor of finance at Washington University’s Olin Business School.
Radio Free Emerson Feb. 17-26
Cheat on your wife. Betray your colleagues. The moral thing to do is whatever makes you feel good. When a beloved radio talk-show host dies, his son highjacks the station’s memorial broadcast to preach an inflammatory reading of Ralph Waldo Emerson’s Self-Reliance. So begins Radio Free Emerson, a loose adaptation of Henrik Ibsen’s The Wild Duck by contemporary playwright Paul Grellong.
SuperAd Bowl kicks off Thursday, Feb. 9
Can’t get enough Elton John, Weego the dog,
Matthew Broderick or babies in slingshots? Plan to relive all your
favorite Super Bowl commercials during the annual SuperAd Bowl,
sponsored by the Olin Marketing Association, at 6 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 9 in
the Knight Executive Education Center.
Clues to rare childhood brain tumor uncovered
New research from the St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital
– Washington University Pediatric Cancer Genome Project (PCGP) shows that mutations linked to a rare, lethal childhood tumor of the
brainstem play a unique role in other aggressive pediatric brain tumors. The findings offer important insight into a poorly understood tumor that kills more than 90 percent of patients within two years.
Introducing new faculty members
The following are among the new faculty members at Washington University in St. Louis: Derek Hoeferlin; Irena Knezevic; Seng Kuan, PhD; Gary J. Patti, PhD; and Monika Weiss.
Sports update Feb. 6: Men’s basketball picks up big win at Emory
The No. 25 men’s basketball team snapped No. 17 Emory University’s 17-game home winning streak with a 92-83 victory Feb. 5 in Atlanta. The
victory enabled WUSTL, who lost Feb. 3 at the University of Rochester,
to remain in a tie for first place in the University Athletic
Association standings with New York University. Updates also included on women’s basketball, track and field and men’s tennis.
American Airlines layoffs could spell end of the airline
American Airlines’ plan to lay off more than
13,000 employees and eliminate all four of its pension plans as part of
its bankruptcy reorganization could eventually spell the end of the
airline and leave its pilots with dramatically reduced pensions, say two
experts at Washington University in St. Louis.
Cashore Marionettes at Edison Feb. 11
Puppets and marionettes are among the world’s oldest entertainments. Though today often associated with humorous children’s programming, they are equally capable of evoking the tender and moving. This month, master puppeteer Joseph Cashore and his Cashore Marionettes will present Simple Gifts — a series of quiet, everyday vignettes set to classical music — as part of Edison’s ovations for young people series.
Three start-ups share Olin Cup prize
In a move reflecting the wave of entrepreneurial activity happening in the region, an unprecedented three teams were selected to receive up to $50,000 each at the annual Olin Cup awards ceremony Feb. 1. The annual competition is sponsored by the Skandalaris Center for Entrepreneurial Studies at Washington University in St. Louis.
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