‘Managing hot moments in 2025’

Rick Moore, at WashU’s Center for Teaching and Learning, takes part in a podcast episode to offer ideas about how faculty members can prepare for and navigate politically charged moments in their classes.

How to Protect Your Right to Culture

The United States government’s coordinated repeal of the right to culture has grave consequences for the texture of our daily lives. But there are ways to fight back, writes Ignacio Sánchez Prado.

‘A well-placed light’

Sean Savoie, in the Performing Arts Department in Arts & Sciences, explores the surprising ways that lighting design shapes our well-being and daily life.

Should States Be Abolished?

American politics have reached a point where a radical solution may be needed. It’s worth thinking about, anyway, writes Stephen Legomsky.

Conflict at the drugstore: When pharmacists’ and patients’ values collide

If pharmacists wish to regulate themselves, history makes clear they need to define what it means to act in the public interest and ensure that other pharmacists comply. If not, the state has proved more than willing to step in and do the job for them. They may not like the results, writes Elizabeth Chiarello.

MAHA’s Hallucinations

At a minimum, the authors of the MAHA report should be held to the same standards of scientific integrity that we require from public health students, write Amy Eyler, Jenine Harris and Kimberly Johnson.
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