Category: News
Academic Success Workshop Series For International Students
Keys to Academic Success in the U.S. Classroom (Sept 22, 23)
Avoiding Plagiarism (ERC) (Sept 29, 30)
Keys to Successful College Writing (Oct 6, 7)
Tips for Exam Success (Oct 20, 21)
U.S. Libraries & Library Support at BU (Oct 27, 28)
Stock Market Plunge More Fear Than Fundamentals
BU economist Laurence Kotlikoff: average investor should do nothing
A Doctor’s Gift To The Brave Nurses Of Sierra Leone
In the darkest hours, bonds formed between Nahid Bhadelia, an infectious disease doctor from Boston University who volunteered to fight Ebola last year, and the West African nurses who cared for patients beside her.
Crossing Cultures
Meet two alums who used their American education to bridge cultures and build successful businesses in Asia. And find out how you can emulate them-even if you skipped study abroad.
Biologist Primack Wins Humboldt Award
Grant funds collaborations across Germany
Two Professors Win Fulbright Awards
Samuel Hammer will go to Sri Lanka; Meg Tyler to Belfast
Mortality Rates Twice as High for Those Who Leave HIV Care
HIV-positive patients who drop out of antiretroviral therapy (ART) in a South African clinic have double the death rate of those in treatment, yet one-year mortality among patients in care remains high, and most patient deaths occur while they are still in care, according to a study co-authored by a School of Public Health researcher.
Networking Event Celebrates Ethnic Cuisines, Public Art
Soirée offers exotic tastes, talk on acclaimed sculpture
Gallagher Op-Ed: TPP and Financial Stability
Kevin Gallagher, Associate Professor of Global Development Policy at the Frederick S. Pardee School of Global Studies at Boston University, said that developing nations in the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) should negotiate to ensure they can continue regulating cross-border financial flows.
Keylor Says Nuke Deal Could Be “Legacy-Defining”
The nuclear agreement between Iran and six major powers, including the U.S., has been defined as potentially historic but also fraught with danger if it is not implemented properly. William Keylor, Professor of International Relations and History at Boston University’s Frederick S. Pardee School of Global Studies agrees that history’s verdict will be based on how it is implemented.