Student discusses NASA internship, astronauts’ health
Michaela Sewall, an undergraduate student at the McKelvey School of Engineering, reflects on a NASA blog about her internship experience last summer at NASA’s Langley Research Center in Virginia. Sewall ultimately hopes to research the neurological, psychophysiological and biological health of astronauts before, during and after missions.
Are Antibiotics the Cause, Not Solution, of Recurrent UTIs?
Scott Hultgren, the Helen L. Stoever Professor of Molecular Microbiology
Missouri U.S. House candidates hit the campaign trail without set districts or voters
Travis Crum, associate professor of law
How humanitarian parole works, and why so many Afghan families are waiting to be reunited
Katie Herbert Meyer, director of the Immigration Law Clinic at the School of Law
As in-person life resumes, self-care businesses see surge in customers
Glenn MacDonald, John M. Olin Distinguished Professor of Economics and Strategy
Gen Z has lived their entire lives online. Some are fed up.
Emma Lembke, freshman
As Leak Theories Circulate, Supreme Court Marshal Takes Up Investigation
Dan Epps, the Treiman Professor of Law
Once Close Allies, Roberts and Alito Have Taken Divergent Paths
Lee Epstein, the Ethan A. H. Shepley Distinguished University Professor
Experts on why Elon Musk’s antidepressant tweet ‘puts people at risk’
Jessica Gold, MD, assistant professor of psychiatry
Wingfield discusses ‘working while Black’
Adia Harvey Wingfield, professor of sociology in Arts & Sciences, is a guest on an episode of the Slate podcast “Better Life Lab” to discuss her research on racial discrimination in the workplace — and why it’s harmful not just for employees but also the overall economy.
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