Economist Horn discusses inflation concerns
John Horn at Olin Business School discusses Americans’ growing concerns about inflation, from interest rate hikes to wage growth to supply chain disruptions, in a Q&A.
School of Law’s Appleton on what the end of Roe v. Wade means for Missourians
Family law expert Susan Appleton, the Lemma Barkeloo & Phoebe Couzins Professor of Law, shares her takeaways from the Dobbs v. Jackson decision, including potential consequences beyond the issue of abortion.
‘Cristina Rivera Garza’s Bodies Politic’
Ignacio Sanchez Prado, the Jarvis Thurston and Mona Van Duyn Professor in the Humanities in Arts & Sciences, contributes to an article exploring the work of Mexican-born writer Cristina Rivera Garza, a previous visiting scholar at WashU.
What is actually killing Americans and how to solve it
The only way we are going to solve an exponentially growing crisis that spans all socioeconomic classes is to come together again like we did for COVID, writes Liberty Vittert, professor at Olin Business School.
A discussion on Montás’ ‘Rescuing Socrates’
Ignacio M. Sánchez Prado, the Jarvis Thurston and Mona van Duyn Professor in the Humanities at Washington University, gives a review of Roosevelt Montás’ “Rescuing Socrates” and discusses humanities education.
A bacterium that is not a microbe
A new discovery challenges the prevailing view of the boundaries of bacterial cell size, writes Petra Levin, professor of biology.
Collisions hint that four neutrons form a transient isolated entity
Lee Sobotka and Maria Piarulli of Arts & Sciences describe the significance of an experiment firing helium-8 nuclei at a proton target, which generated evidence that four neutrons can exist transiently without any other matter. But doubts remain, because the existence of such systems is at odds with theory.
A look at exhibit on Japanese American artist Chiura Obata
A new exhibition at Olin Library focuses on Chiura Obata, hailed as one of the great American landscape painters of the last century. The exhibition highlights the artist’s paintings from 1942, when President Roosevelt’s executive order forced more than 120,0000 West Coast Japanese Americans into internment camps. The exhibit is on display until Sept. 4.
A reflection on the history of Juneteenth
Geoff Ward, professor in Arts & Sciences and director of the WashU & Slavery Project, explores the history of Juneteenth and offers resources to learn more about the commemoration and to take part in activities on campus and across the St. Louis region.
Figgatt, Marotta discuss the Prison Education Program
Sarah Figgatt, graduate student at the Brown School, and Phillip Marotta, assistant professor at the Brown School, write an op-ed about the transformational impact of the Prison Education Project at Washington University. The program provides incarcerated students with a second chance at pursuing a college education.
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