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KOMO Radio | The impact of the election on US foreign policy
Herb Weisbaum interviews David Bachman, professor of international studies at UW, about how the Presidential election results may change U.S. foreign policy, specifically with China.
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KOMO Radio | Professor explores US relations with Russia post-election
KOMO Radio's Herb Weisbaum interviews Scott Radnitz, associate professor of international studies at the UW, about President-elect Donald Trump's opinion of Vladimir Putin.
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US, European relations uncertain under incoming administration
Sabine Lang, associate professor of international studies at UW, discusses how President-elect Donald Trump may change U.S. relations with European nations.
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Trump and foreign policy: UW Jackson School faculty speak out
What will the ramifications of a Donald Trump presidency be on United States foreign policy and its place in the world?
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Dark days ahead: American professors on Trump's presidency
UW Arts & Sciences faculty members weigh in on whether President-elect Trump's election means doomsday.
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Philanthropy in Silicon Valley: Big Bets on Big Ideas
UW Economics and Jackson School alum Matt Bannick, who is managing partner of the Omidyar Network, shares his approach to philanthropy in Silicon Valley.
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Devin Naar's book 'Jewish Salonica’ tells of city’s transition from Ottoman Empire to Greece
Devin Naar, professor of Sephardic studies at the UW, explores the fate of Salonica’s Jews and offers insight into how he uncovered the lost sources necessary to write his new book.
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Deceased Thai King to Remain a Future Father Figure
For Thailand's royalists — and there are millions of them — King Bhumibol Adulyadej will probably long remain embedded as a potent, father-like figure.
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Former UW professor is subject of new film starring Rachel Weisz
The movie "Denial" is based on the true story of Deborah Lipstadt, a professor of Jewish Studies who taught her first classes at the UW.
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The Sephardic Jewish Brotherhood of America Celebrates Its Centennial
The Sephardic Jewish Brotherhood of America, which first met in a Lower East Side café in 1915, strives to connect to the youth 100 years later.
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Crossing the Bosphorus: My Great-Grandmother’s Sephardic Memoir
Dr. Hannah Pressman, Communications Director for the UW Stroum Center for Jewish Studies uncovers the journey of her great-grandmother from the island of Rhodes to Paris.
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China Leads The Quantum Race While The West Plays Catch Up
Now that China has launched the world's first quantum communication satellite, the question is will it deliver on its promise.
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‘Star Trek’ at 50: How a space saga inspired a generation of scientists, engineers and writers
A variety of space-savvy luminaries reflect on the 50th anniversary of “Star Trek,” which is being celebrated at Seattle's EMP Museum.
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Inuktitut 101 with Elena Bell
Elena Bell, a PhD student in International Studies, spent the summer studying Inuktitut with instructor and Inuktitut scholar Mick Mallon.
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Illinois voter registry breach smaller than first thought
State election officials suspect hackers stole the personal information of 86,000 voters, not 200,000 it first suspected.