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  • Turkey loses its way

    Professor Resat Kesaba looks at Turkey's past and talks about its progress toward democracy.
    04/22/2014 | Muftah
  • Journalism schools should educate non-journalists and 'almost-journalists' too

    If we recognize journalism in places where we never used to acknowledge its existence, journalism programs will discover niches that could fuel new programs and attract new students. Matthew Powers, assistant professor of communication, is quoted.
    04/22/2014 | PBS
  • 'Cambodian Son' film chronicles poet's story

    The Samuel E. Kelly Ethnic Cultural Center (ECC) Theatre screened "Cambodian Son" and held a question-and-answer session with the director, Masahiro Sugano, on April 22.
    04/22/2014 | The Daily
  • UW Latin classes expand to local high schools

    The UW Department of Classics recently expanded beyond the UW campus and into various high schools in Washington, making the UW the first college in the state to offer Latin university courses to high school students.
    04/21/2014 | The Daily
  • Indonesian group hosts movie screening

    Students and community members gathered at Kane Hall on Sunday night to watch a screening of "Soekarno: Indonesia Merdeka," a feature-length movie chronicling the struggle for Indonesia's independence through the eyes of Indonesia's first president.
    04/20/2014 | The Daily
  • The decline of labor unions and the rise of the minimum wage

    In an op-ed piece, Jake Rosenfeld, associate professor of sociology, looks at the consequences of organized labor's decline in the U.S.
    04/19/2014 | The Seattle Times
  • Scientists find an "Earth twin," or perhaps a cousin

    It is a bit bigger and somewhat colder, but a planet circling a star 500 light-years away is otherwise the closest match of our home world discovered so far. Victoria Meadows, professor of astronomy, is quoted.
    04/18/2014 | The New York Times
  • Your baby is a racist -- and why you can live with that

    Are babies racist? The latest evidence for that decidedly unlovely trait comes from research out of the UW that actually sought to explore one of babies' more admirable characteristics: their basic sense of fairness.
    04/17/2014 | Time
  • Veterans open up, learn to tell stories under Red Badge Project

    English professor Shawn Wong helps discharged veterans learn to tell their story and cope with transition.
    04/16/2014 | The News Tribune
  • Emerging from the shadows

    Local governments in China have taken to forced urbanisation with relish in their rush to acquire precious land. Kam Wing Chan, professor of geography, is quoted.
    04/16/2014 | The Economist