The best shot at overcoming vaccination standoffs?
Mary Politi, of the School of Medicine, writes for The Conversation about ways for medical professionals to better understand and respond to parents’ reluctance to vaccinate their children.
Rishe talks tennis and economics
Patrick Rishe, director of Olin’s Sports Business Program, discusses on the WalletHub site the U.S. Open underway this week in New York and the economic impact of such a lengthy sporting event.
Graduate student explores slavery in ‘The Half Beneath’
Brandon Robert Wilson, a Chancellor’s Fellow and PhD student in Arts & Sciences, recently published a book, “The Half Beneath” (TouchPointPress). The Riverfront Times reviewed the work, which explores the life of a slave, drawing from Wilson’s great-great-grandfather’s experience.
St. Louis researchers will use $1.1 million grant to develop a healthy school model
Jason Purnell, associate professor, Brown School
Mixing politics and hurricanes? Trump might want to tread carefully.
Andrew Reeves, associate professor of political science
Leuthardt explains personalized brain mapping
Eric Leuthardt, MD, of the School of Medicine, explains in an HEC-TV Innovations episode a research effort to create 3-D personalized maps of the brain to help neurosurgeons operate more safely and successfully.
Meritocracy and the history of the science of biological differences
Garland Allen, professor emeritus of biology
‘We all must stand against hatred’
Will Ross, MD, of the School of Medicine, writes eloquently in The St. Louis American about the protests and violence in Charlottesville, Va., and how we must move forward and confront hatred and injustice.
Using Confederate monument controversies in St. Louis and elsewhere as a teaching tool
David Cunningham, professor of sociology
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