Drug industry poised for rare political loss on prices
Rachel Sachs, the Treiman Professor of Law
How do grand juries work? Their major role in criminal justice, and why prosecutors are using them to investigate efforts to overturn the 2020 election
Grand juries play a major role in the U.S. criminal justice system. And they’re very much in the news these days, writes Peter Joy in The Conversation.
Many Smokers Who Want to Quit Just End Up Vaping, Too
Li-Shiun Chen, associate professor of psychiatry
How much exercise you need to reach your fitness goals, according to experts
Deborah Salvo, assistant professor at the Brown School
Missouri declares a state of emergency after record rain in St. Louis area
Claire Masteller, assistant professor of earth & planetary sciences
Historic rainfall in St. Louis raises questions about flooding and climate change
Michael Wysession, professor of earth & planetary sciences
‘Transforming society through play’
Eileen G’Sell, a senior lecturer in Arts & Sciences, reviews “Assembly Required,” an exhibit that encourages the public to engage with art. It remains on view through Sunday, July 31, at the Pulitzer Arts Foundation in St. Louis.
Fears of more long COVID, a ‘mass disabling event’ as variants rip through California 
Ziyad Al-Aly, MD, assistant professor of medicine
How will the obesity epidemic end? With kids.
Denise Wilfley, professor of psychological & brain sciences and professor of medicine, pediatrics and psychiatry at the School of Medicine
How to Go to Law School for Free
Katherine Scannell, vice dean for institutional success at the School of Law
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