‘A semester of momentum’
Chancellor Andrew D. Martin shares reflections as the fall 2019 semester comes to a close. “I’m also proud of all we’ve accomplished, and look forward to seeing all we’ll continue to do as we increase our momentum and bolster the strong legacy upon which this university was built.”
The Dearth Of Black CEOs: How Corporate Diversity Initiatives Ignore People Of Color
Adia Harvey Wingfield, professor of sociology
‘Lessons from the street at 50’
Benjamin Akande, the university’s assistant vice chancellor for international affairs-Africa, writes a guest column in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch about the lessons that generations of children have learned from “Sesame Street,” which celebrates its 50th anniversary this year.
There’s a lot to like about the Senate privacy bill, if it’s not watered down
We can do better on privacy than a GDPR-lite, or the inadequate Wicker bill, and the Cantwell bill is a good, if imperfect, place to begin, writes Neil Richards.
NBA should trim schedule to 68 games, says Washington University sports business director
Patrick Rishe, director, Sports Business Program
Do women and people of color running for president get to be as angry as Joe Biden?
Adia Harvey Wingfield, professor of sociology
‘How Spain’s women lobbied against slavery in Cuba’
Akiko Tsuchiya, professor and a faculty fellow with the Center for the Humanities in Arts & Sciences, shares a preview of the book she is working on, which explores how Spanish women in the mid-1800s spoke out against slavery in the Spanish colony of Cuba.
Trauma Surgeon Battles Bullets In The Operating Room And The Community
Laurie Punch, MD, associate professor of surgery
What does it mean to censure a politician?
Gregory Magarian, professor of law
How the NFL’s and NBA’s viewership numbers stack up
Patrick Rishe, director, Sports Business Program
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