This newfound 3.8-million-year-old skull is an ‘iconic’ specimen in human evolution
David Strait, professor of physical anthropology
Ethics outcry as Trump touts ‘magnificent’ Doral for next G7
Kathleen Clark, professor of law
Wallace publishes book on Michelangelo
William E. Wallace, of Arts & Sciences, has written a new book, “Michelangelo: God’s Architect,” which tells the story of Italian Renaissance artist Michelangelo’s final decades, when he became the master architect of St. Peter’s Basilica and other major buildings.
Naked And Unafraid: The Secret Lives Of Naked Mole Rats
Stan Braude, professor of the practice of biology
‘Why American cities remain segregated 50 years after the Fair Housing Act’
Henry S. Webber, executive vice chancellor and chief administrative officer, writes on the Oxford University Press blog that segregation remains a problem in St. Louis, Chicago and other urban areas and that middle-income neighborhoods in such cities have dwindled.
State of the Unions
Jake Rosenfeld, associate professor of sociology
Your Employer May Be Spying on You—and Wasting Its Time
Lamar Pierce, professor of strategy
‘Empress of the stage’
Paige McGinley, associate professor of performing arts in Arts & Sciences, writes about blues pioneer Bessie Smith for NPR’s “Turning the Tables: Eight Women Who Invented American Popular Music.”
Roughly half of all Neanderthals suffered from ‘swimmer’s ear’
Erik Trinkaus, the Mary Tileston Hemenway Professor in Arts & Sciences
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