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In the Media

Displaying 15 news clips on page 343

Inside Higher Ed

Stuart Schmill, dean of admissions and student financial services, discusses the statement by admissions deans aimed at assuaging the anxieties of college applicants during the Covid-19 pandemic. “I believe that the most important thing for students to do right now is to take care of themselves and those around them, and not to overworry about how this will all affect their college application,” says Schmill.

STAT

STAT reporter Sharon Begley writes that MIT Press and the University of California at Berkeley are starting a journal that will publish reviews of Covid-19 research. “Preprints have been a tremendous boon for scientific communication, but they come with some dangers,” said Nick Lindsay, director of journals at the MIT Press. “We want to debunk research that’s poor and elevate research that’s good.”

Inside Higher Ed

MIT Press and the University of California at Berkeley are launching a new Covid-19 journal that will peer-review popular preprint articles, reports Lindsay McKenzie for Inside Higher Ed. “We want to ensure that clinicians and researchers have trusted information they need to make crucial decisions,” says Nick Lindsay, director of journals and open access at MIT Press.

CBS Boston

Boston Mayor Martin Walsh named Lecturer Karilyn Crockett, “a brilliant innovator and change maker,” as the head of Boston’s new Equity and Inclusion Cabinet, reports CBS Boston. “I need everyone standing here with me, and within the hearing of my voice, to be bold and move beyond what we may individually think is possible,” said Crockett. 

Boston Herald

Karilyn Crockett, a lecturer at MIT, has been named to head Boston’s new equity and inclusion office, reports Erin Tiernan for The Boston Herald. “She will apply an equity lens to make sure everything our city government does is dismantling systemic racism and creating fair opportunity for all Bostonians,” said Boston Mayor Martin Walsh.

The Wall Street Journal

Wall Street Journal reporter David Harrison writes that a study by MIT researchers provides evidence that use of public transportation is associated with a higher Covid-19 death rate. The researchers found “a 10% increase in the share of a county’s residents who use public transit versus those who telecommute raised Covid-19 death rates by 1.21 per 1,000 people when looking at counties around the U.S.”

WGBH

Reporting for WGBH, Tori Bedford examines a new study by MIT researchers that shows evictions disproportionately impact communities of color. The researchers found that, “tenants living in market-rate apartments in Roxbury, which is 90% people of color, are evicted seven times more than tenants in Allston/Brighton, which is 62% white.”

Boston Globe

A new report co-authored by MIT researchers finds that evictions tend to hit Black communities hardest in the City of Boston, reports Zoe Greenberg and Tim Logan for The Boston Globe. “The share of Black renters in a neighborhood is a better predictor of market rate eviction filings than income, rental burden, or other economic factors,” says graduate student David Robinson.

Associated Press

AP reporter Michael Casey writes that a report co-authored by MIT researchers finds people of color are disproportionately affected by evictions in the City of Boston. “The results are very troubling,” says Prof. Justin Steil. “We see white supremacy and anti-blackness functioning in the housing markets as well as other areas of social life.”

National Public Radio (NPR)

NPR’s Scott Simon remembers former MIT Professor Michael Hawley. Simon notes that Hawley’s “Things That Think and Toys of Tomorrow projects prophesied so much of the ways in which our world would become digitally connected.”

The Atlantic

Writing for The Atlantic, Prof. Charles Stewart III underscores the importance of developing strategies that allow Americans to safely vote in-person. “The current trajectory in many states suggests that the demand for in-person voting will hugely outstrip the supply of poll workers and polling places,” writes Stewart. “This imbalance erects barriers to voter participation and needlessly jeopardizes the health of poll workers and voters.”

Quartz

Quartz reporter Anne Quito spotlights The Future of Work Grand Challenge, a competition aimed at bridging the gap between education and employment. Quito notes that as part of the challenge, MIT Solve is hosting a “six-month competition to crowdsource innovative programs to assist unemployed or underemployed workers to land better careers.”

The Wall Street Journal

Wall Street Journal reporter Robert Lee Hotz explores Prof. Markus Buehler’s work transforming the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus into music. In the coronavirus’s spike protein, “the structural complexity translates into musical complexity,” says Buehler. “There are many, many melodies layered into each other. It has a balance of order and disorder.”

WBZ TV

A new report co-authored by MIT researchers finds that genomic information from sewer systems combined with cell phone data could be used to help prevent another global pandemic, reports Kim Tunnicliffe for WBZ Radio.

WBUR

WBUR’s Lisa Mullins spotlights the life and work of former Prof. Michael Hawley, whose “accomplishments seemed too vast for one life.”