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Here’s what author, UW student Zoe Hana Mikuta is reading
The Seattle Times asks author and UW student Zoe Hana Mikuta what she's reading, as part of a monthly feature.
06/30/2021 | The Seattle Times -
Revisiting ‘Streetwise’
“Despite nearly four decades since the documentary [‘Streetwise’] first moved audiences with its portrayal of kids in crisis, the dismissive attitude of some to the film suggests why the crisis of homelessness has yet to be redressed, and why punitive responses only further contribute to the crisis itself,” writes Andrew Heddon, a doctoral student in history and associate director of the UW’s Harry Bridges Center for Labor Studies.
06/30/2021 | Real Change News -
Astronomers Thrill at Giant Comet Flying into Our Solar System
Legacy Survey of Space and Time member and Associate Professor of Astronomy Mario Jurić discusses a giant comet.
06/30/2021 | Scientific American -
From the Jackson School: Endowed scholarship for India study, book on angels in ancient Jewish culture
Mika Ahuvia, associate professor in the Jackson School, discusses her new book.
06/29/2021 | UW News -
Tech Moves: Adriane Brown joins KKR board; AI2 adds HR exec; Ossia and LevelTen hire CFOs; more
Tatiana Toro, professor of mathematics at the UW, will maintain her tenure at the UW during her five-year director term of MSRI, a collaborative mathematics research center based in Berkeley. [This is part of "Tech Moves"]
06/28/2021 | GeekWire -
Meet the UW student whose first published book has already been optioned for a movie
Before heading off to college, UW student and English major Zoe Hana Mikuta signed a two-book deal with major publisher Macmillan, with the movie rights quickly optioned. The first of those books, a young adult science fiction novel called “Gearbreakers,” comes out June 29; in it, two teen girls fighting opposite sides in a futuristic society fall in love. Shawn Wong, professor of English at the UW, is quoted.
06/28/2021 | The Seattle Times -
Fantastic fossils and where to find them
There's a market for just about anything — and fossils are hot right now. Collectors are paying tens of thousands of dollars for the latest dig, and that's making it difficult for paleontologists to track important finds. The UW's Christian Sidor, curator of vertebrate paleontology at the Burke Museum and professor of biology, is interviewed. [This is the third segment on "The Record"]
06/28/2021 | KUOW -
When Will Regular People Be Able to Visit the Moon?
As a tourist destination, the moon doesn’t have a lot to offer: no beaches, no museums, no oxygen. On the other hand, it does have the virtue of being the moon. When will common folk, not just the super-rich, get to make the trip? Scott Magelssen, professor of theatre history at the UW, is quoted.
06/28/2021 | Gizmodo -
Is Intelligent Life As Uncommon As ‘Rare Earth’ First Proposed?
With the publication of “Rare Earth: Why Complex Life is Uncommon in the Universe” 20 years ago, the UW’s Peter Ward, professor of biology, and Donald Brownlee, professor of astronomy, explained why microbial life may be ubiquitous in the universe, but intelligent life may be rare indeed. They are now working on a sequel, tentatively titled “The Rare Earth Hypothesis: Assessing the Frequency of Complex Life in the Cosmos, in the Age of Exoplanet Discovery.”
06/28/2021 | Forbes -
ArtSci Roundup: Serious Tings, Sonolocations: A Sound Works Series, and MoreThis week, watch a UW alum on NBC’s Making It, attend a discussion hosted by the Henry Art Gallery, and more.
This week, watch a UW alum on NBC’s Making It, attend a discussion hosted by the Henry Art Gallery, and more.
06/28/2021 | UW News