The importance of Global Entrepreneurship Week
Associate Provost Dedric A. Carter, PhD, writes on the Fuse website about the need to encourage entrepreneurship — and the risk-taking that goes with it — and why we set aside this week to focus on the concept.
A look at ‘Designing Creativity: Innovation Across Disciplines’
Freshman Mariel Sokolov writes a blog entry on the Fuse site about how helpful a new course has been for thinking about creativity and innovation across disciplines and considering career options.
‘What can France do to battle homegrown terrorism?’
In a Los Angeles Times opinion piece on the Paris attacks, Arts & Sciences’ John R. Bowen, PhD, offers advice for French President Francois Hollande: “This is a time for solidarity, not division.” Bowen is also the author of the book “Can Islam be French?”
Students take on story of McMillan Hall
Students in the anthropology course “Social Landscapes in a Global View” considered the concept of a university landscape, helping deepen students’ interactions with McMillan Hall. The class added QR codes to things in and around the building, ranging from native Midwest plants to Gothic architecture. Find the codes or visit the website to learn more.
‘Round Trip: Bicycling Asia Minor, 1891’
Bears Repeating, the blog of University Archives, highlights the story behind an exhibit now on display in Olin Library. The exhibit features photos taken by university alumni Thomas Allen Jr. and William Sachtleben in 1891 as they trekked by bicycle through Greece, Turkey and beyond. The exhibit runs through Jan. 10.
‘Bite your tongue (I’d rather be offended than shot)’
Bob Hansman, of the Sam Fox School, writes with passion on the Institute for Public Health blog about young lives lost to gun violence in St. Louis and the tough conversations that need to happen to bring about change.
Veterans who came home and found new ways to serve
Former U.S. Army Sgt. Mike Pereira will be on NPR’S “The Diane Rehm Show” Nov. 11 to talk about his experience and service work as a returning veteran. Pereira earned a bachelor’s degree from University College in Arts & Sciences and is now in the premedical program.
‘India and Biotechnology’
Anthropologist Glenn Stone, of Arts & Sciences, discusses the debate surrounding the role of genetically modified crops in the developing world for a “Hold That Thought” podcast.
‘What would it take to have an economy full of good jobs again?’
Sociologist Adia Harvey Wingfield, PhD, of Arts & Sciences, writes in The Atlantic about how changes in the nature of jobs and in public policies have made it tougher for people to make a good living with reliable benefits.
Kittens, geckos and hippos
Junior Emma Milford, who is majoring in international and area studies, writes an entry on the Unofficial Field Guide to WashU ArtSci blog about her semester spent abroad in South Africa. She shares what she’s learning about daily life and about the animals she has encountered there.
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