Engineering students help health nonprofit in Uganda

The WashU Engineers Without Borders group has worked for years to improve hospital infrastructure and access to affordable health care through a nonprofit in Uganda. Over winter break, a team of students and faculty traveled there to put their engineering concepts into practice, helping improve reliable power and safe, accessible water.

From Close Reading to Career Advising

An English Ph.D. program can provide many opportunities for the development of transferable skills, writes Laura Evers.

WashU is lowering the financial barriers to higher education

Our work is far from done. But lowering the barriers to higher education benefits St. Louis, benefits Missouri and benefits WashU itself. Most of all, it benefits talented and deserving students, writes Chancellor Andrew D. Martin.

Ida B. Wells Taught Us That Care and Justice Go Hand in Hand

Wells may have been right about the unending demands of freedom. In many ways, we continue to fight her fight against the erasure of Black history in American history. She was also right that it is a heroic act to care for our fellow humans while we pursue a more just world, writes Amy Gais.

Identifying brands as Black-owned can pay off for businesses

Ultimately, our study is a step toward understanding how transparency and visibility can shape economic outcomes. It highlights a diversity initiative that has benefited both customers and businesses, and provides a road map for companies that want to design initiatives that matter, writes Oren Reshef.
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