
Julie Wernau
Health and Science Reporter at The Wall Street Journal
Health reporter @WSJ. I spend time with humans who use drugs, hear voices and the folks who care for them. Ask me about that time I got expelled from China.
Articles
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1 week ago |
wsj.com | Meridith McGraw |Josh Dawsey |Julie Wernau
WASHINGTON—The Government Publishing Office, which prints the official presidential portraits that hang in hundreds of federal buildings, received an unusual request from the White House last month. President Trump wanted his portrait to glimmer. $13.75/Week $1.75/Week Includes unlimited digital access to The Wall Street Journal, MarketWatch, Barron’s and Investor’s Business Daily $9.75/Week $1/Week Includes unlimited digital access to WSJ's unrivaled journalism.
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1 month ago |
wsj.com | Julie Wernau |Brianna Abbott |Josh Ulick
$13.75/Week $4/Week Includes unlimited digital access to The Wall Street Journal, MarketWatch, Barron’s and Investor’s Business Daily
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1 month ago |
wsj.com | Julie Wernau |Brianna Abbott |Josh Ulick
$13.75/Week $4/Week Includes unlimited digital access to The Wall Street Journal, MarketWatch, Barron’s and Investor’s Business Daily
-
1 month ago |
wsj.com | Julie Wernau
VIENNA, Va.—Rob Dart always hoped a story he wrote would reach people all over the country. He never thought the story would be about him. The Wall Street Journal last year wrote about Dart’s descent from a full life as a lawyer, writer and father through his break from family, home and career to follow voices in his head. He stopped treatment for schizoaffective and bipolar disorder during the pandemic and started wandering the streets of greater Los Angeles.
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1 month ago |
wsj.com | Julie Wernau
PUEBLO, Colo.—When Colorado became one of the first states to legalize recreational marijuana, an enthusiastic county commissioner here said he wanted Pueblo to become the “Napa Valley of cannabis.”What this city imagined was that the high plains just east of the Rockies would draw marijuana lovers from around the country. A big slaughterhouse had closed years earlier, and a steel mill had been shedding workers. A cannabis boom would bring new jobs and tax revenue. Already a subscriber? Sign In
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Amid January’s historic fire, Los Angeles County sent evacuation alerts to some parts of suburban Altadena too late. The consequences were grave. https://t.co/fd5ocRexzX via @WSJ