In Jupiter’s swirling Great Red Spot, NASA spacecraft finds hidden depths
Paul Byrne, associate professor of earth and planetary sciences
Why haven’t U.S. mothers returned to work? The child-care infrastructure they need is still missing.
For women with children at home, the Great Resignation is really the Great Push, our research finds, writes sociology’s Caitlyn Collins.
Why haven’t U.S. mothers returned to work? The child-care infrastructure they need is still missing.
Caitlyn Collins, assistant professor of sociology
Democrats Choosing Less Risky Path on Drug Prices
Rachel Sachs, Treiman Professor of Law
How About Never?
Caitlyn Collins, assistant professor of sociology
Wysession a guest on ‘The Climate Pod’ podcast
Michael Wysession, professor of earth and planetary sciences in Arts & Sciences, was a guest on a Halloween special of “The Climate Pod” podcast, discussing Frankenstein and climate change, “monsters of our own making.”
How the US supreme court could be a threat to climate action in the US
Dan Epps, Treiman Professor of Law
‘The Spanish conquest of Mexico as viewed through a Jewish lens’
Martin Jacobs, professor of rabbinic studies in Jewish, Islamic and Middle Eastern studies in Arts & Sciences, offers a Jewish perspective of the 500th anniversary of the fall of Tenochtitlán, what is today Mexico City, to the Spanish conquistadors.
Student publishes children’s book about genetics
Jeff Hansen, an MD-PhD student at WashU, has written a children’s book, “The Perfect Baseball Player.” The project grew out of his thesis focused on the human genome.
World Series highlights the dwindling of Black players in America’s pastime
Gerald Early, professor of English and African and African-American studies, and the Merle Kling Professor of Modern Letters
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