Biden should halt sales of certain U.S. tech to China, Vittert says
Liberty Vittert, at Olin Business School, writes in an opinion piece on Fox News that technological identification facilitated by the U.S. is “a dangerous tool that tyrannical governments can use against their own people,” such as the Uighur Muslims in northwest China.
WashU Athletics launches podcast
Washington University Athletics has launched a podcast, “Outside the Game,” to delve into pressing topics in college athletics. In the first episode, Anthony J. Azama, the John M. Schael Director of Athletics, visits with Tim Bono, lecturer in psychological and brain sciences and assistant dean in Arts & Sciences, to discuss “positive mindset.”
‘The Twilight’s Last Gleaming’
In the fall issue of The Common Reader, the university’s online journal, seven WashU faculty members share essays on topics ranging from race and COVID-19 to police brutality and America as the house of pain.
‘Making sense of the racial divergence of AIDS and COVID-19’
The COVID-19 infection rate among Black and Latinx people and white people remains disproportionate. Looking back at the AIDS epidemic, René Esparza in Arts & Sciences finds a striking similarity in the country’s historical treatment of viruses that disproportionally affect minority communities.
‘Health care workers are experiencing more than COVID-19 burnout’
Psychiatrist Jessica Gold, at the School of Medicine, co-writes an op-ed published on CNN’s website about the strain health-care workers are under as the COVID-19 pandemic rages on. “We, collectively, say that we are ‘tired’ because we have no other, easy words to describe how we are.”
Remaining hopeful this Thanksgiving
Chancellor Andrew D. Martin reflects in a blog post on the difficulties of this past year and shares a message of hope and gratitude as we head into Thanksgiving.
‘Great. Truly great.’
Robert W. Duffy remembers Chancellor Emeritus William H. Danforth. “In turn, the institution was rewarded by having this exceptional man— this great man — in its midst, a man who stood tall because he was tall, not because he set out to be tall or proclaimed his stature as tall, but because he was tall, and exceptional,” Duffy writes.
Considering the future of STEM education
Sarah Elgin, the Viktor Hamburger Professor Emerita in Arts & Sciences, discusses ideas for engaging undergraduate students in hands-on science from day one and how to reach a wider range of college students on a national scale.
Doctors: Health care workers are experiencing more than Covid-19 burnout
Health care providers know plenty about working hard. And we are not strangers to burnout. Even before Covid-19 hit the United States, our health care system was in trouble. Many emergency departments were overflowing, too often workers were being asked to do more with less, and average Americans couldn’t afford their ever-rising insurance deductibles and premiums, writes Jessica Gold.
‘The work we still have to do’
Marie Griffith, director of the John C. Danforth Center on Religion and Politics, writes about the work we Americans still have to do in the wake of the presidential election. “While America is not unique in its sins as a country, we are unique in our refusal to acknowledge them.”
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