Tyson Center gets local high schoolers involved in research
Early in the morning of a summer day, high school students Hope Jett and Kari Koerner are counting mosquitoes in a tree-canopied clearing of Tyson Research Center, Washington University in St. Louis’ sprawling environmental field station in west St. Louis County. They are part of the Mosquito Team, a WashU research project to better understand the ecology and evolution of mosquitoes.
‘Design Agendas: Modern Architecture in St. Louis, 1930s–1970s’
This fall, the Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum at Washington University in St. Louis will present “Design Agendas: Modern Architecture in St. Louis, 1930s–1970s.” With nearly 300 architectural drawings, models, photographs, films, digital maps and artworks, “Design Agendas” is the first major exhibition to examine how interlocking civic, cultural and racial histories, as well as conflicting ideological aims, reshaped the city.
NEURO360 initiative aims to make St. Louis a neuroscience juggernaut
A group led by BioSTL and Washington University recently applied for $160 million in grant funding to boost the region’s neuroscience and neurotech ecosystems.
Ferguson 10 Years Later: How Protests Gave Way to Politics and Policy
When Michael Brown Jr., an unarmed Black teenager, was fatally shot in 2014 by a white police officer and his body left in the street under the August sun, the small St. Louis suburb of Ferguson roiled and plunged into crisis. The protests drew activists from across the nation, amplified the national Black Lives Matter movement and fueled larger questions about race in America. And at a more grass-roots level, it created a political incubator of emerging local leaders: A new generation of young protesters who came of age during the Ferguson uprising have found ways to chip away at the racial disparities in Ferguson and nearby St. Louis, shifting from protests to politics and policies.
Guest column: St. Louis has a great story to tell. Why does nobody know about it?
Sometimes life has a way of coming around full circle and during a recent college visit for our daughter, I was reminded of just what a great city St. Louis is. We stayed in the Cortex district, had dinner in the Central West End and were struck by how great the city looked. If you drew a straight line from Wash U, through Forest Park, continued through BJC’s campus, through Cortex and ended up at Union Station you would see a city on the upswing.
Seeking environments that ‘generate health’
Washington University recently announced that Sandro Galea, MD, DrPH — one of the world’s most influential public health leaders — will become inaugural dean of its planned School of Public Health, effective Jan. 1, 2025. In this critical role, Galea will help shape WashU’s first new school in 100 years. The school is part of “Here and Next,” WashU’s 10-year strategic plan to make both the university and St. Louis a global hub for solving society’s deepest challenges.
Reconciling with our past
The WashU & Slavery Project is an initiative started in spring 2021 to advance scholarship around WashU’s history with slavery. But the project is also reshaping public history in the St. Louis region by striving to add or improve information around slavery and racial discrimination at area historical sites, including the General Daniel Bissell House and the Missouri Botanical Garden.
In ‘Radical Atlas,’ 100 maps show the what and why of Ferguson
There are infinite ways to map a place, and capturing the many dimensions of Ferguson is what Patty Heyda set out to do in her new book, “Radical Atlas of Ferguson, USA.” With more than 100 maps that explore the distribution of libraries, fast-food franchises, airport runways and Fortune 500 companies in north St. Louis County, Heyda’s survey-like book illustrates how municipal planning has led to poverty and racial inequality.
‘Radical Atlas’ is graphic depiction of Ferguson disparity
If you want to learn about why life can be so difficult in north St. Louis County, Patty Heyda has mapped it all out in clear and convincing detail. Ten years after the killing of Michael Brown in Ferguson brought stark, unwanted attention to the North County suburb, “Radical Atlas of Ferguson, USA” provides a close, critical look into disparities in the region, how they compare with similar conditions in other parts of the county and what can be done to correct them.
A St. Louis firm races to diagnose Alzheimer’s faster
In the world of Alzheimer’s disease research, where the setbacks have been many, the advent of blood tests has been hailed as a welcome innovation. And a St. Louis company is on the cutting edge of the field, pioneering new tests in hopes of advancing drug research and one day giving patients earlier indicators of the disease. The company has been growing its workforce and competing in the crowded field of medical firms developing faster methods of diagnosing Alzheimer’s and other types of dementia.