Five myths about vaccines
Amid today’s pandemic, as many eagerly await a vaccine against the novel coronavirus, SARS-CoV-2, Michael Kinch explains five myths about this medical innovation.
Senate bill would disempower elected prosecutor, disenfranchise St. Louis voters
The people of St. Louis, the only majority-black jurisdiction in Missouri, elected Gardner to fulfill that promise. And now, writes Kimberly Norwood, some state legislators are trying to strip Gardner of her power, and by extension, deny the people of St. Louis their voice.
COVID-19 and the color line
In St. Louis, as in the country at large, the deadly disparities of the pandemic are as unsurprising as they are unsettling, writes Jason Purnell. It is not simply that African Americans in St. Louis, as in the rest of the United States, have been left behind, and thus set in the way of the virus.
By hitting low-wage industries hard, pandemic is likely to make inequality worse
Steven Fazzari, the Bert A. and Jeanette L. Lynch Distinguished Professor of Economics
Sudden vanishing of sports due to coronavirus will cost at least $12 billion, analysis says
Patrick Rishe, Sports Business Program & Professor of Practice in Sports Business
Sudden vanishing of sports due to coronavirus will cost at least $12 billion, analysis says
Patrick Rishe, director, Sports Business Program
‘What medieval texts tell us about emotions’
Jessica Rosenfeld, a faculty fellow at the Center for the Humanities in Arts & Sciences, discusses on the center’s website her book project exploring the emotions of envy and love.
Here’s How Scientists and Public-Health Experts Recommend the U.S. Gets Back to ‘Normal’
Hilary Babcock, MD, professor of medicine
St. Louis Engineers Put Homemade Mask Materials To The Test, As N95 Supply Dwindles
Brent Williams, the Raymond R. Tucker Distinguished InCEES Career Development Associate Professor
Hawley Charts Out Big Shift In How America Handles Unemployment Amid Coronavirus
Radhakrishnan (Radha) Gopalan, professor of finance
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