Antibody therapies effective against COVID-19 variants, WashU animal study finds
Michael Diamond, MD, PhD, the Herbert S. Gasser Professor of Medicine; and Jacco Boon, associate professor of medicine
Mandatory vaccinations are legal and in our best interest
hould businesses and universities require vaccinations for employees and students to return? As a mathematician who has studied coronavirus risk at large-scale sporting events and in other places, I believe the answer is a resounding yes, writes mathematics department chair John McCarthy.
How a single new Alzheimer’s drug could blow up the federal budget
Rachel Sachs, associate professor of law
St. Louis to celebrate Juneteenth
Gerald Early, professor of English and African and African-American studies, and the Merle Kling Professor of Modern Letters
St. Louis’ top workplaces could be models for the new normal
Peter Boumgarden, professor of practice, strategy and organizations
Republicans point to inflation in bid to retake Congress
John Horn, professor of practice in economics
The Supreme Court’s Newest Justices Produce Some Unexpected Results
Lee Epstein, the Ethan A.H. Shepley Distinguished University Professor; and Chancellor Andrew D. Martin
Court: If bias rules have exceptions, faith groups qualify
Lee Epstein, the Ethan A.H. Shepley Distinguished University Professor
Why ineffective diversity training won’t go away
Calvin Lai, assistant professor of psychological and brain sciences
Biden’s Supreme Court commission probably won’t sway public opinion
By creating a bipartisan panel of experts, Biden likely hopes to temper the politicization surrounding the debate and confer credibility on reforms he might pursue. However, once the time to push policy change arrives, Biden might find that public support for his reforms would have been the same had he not convened it, writes political science associate professor Andrew Reeves.
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