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Longtime director of the Henry Art Gallery retires
At the beginning of September, it was announced that Sylvia Wolf, the director of the Henry Art Gallery since 2008, will be retiring. in spring 2023. Across her career, Wolf held a distinct and profound love for the gallery, as well as the university and city with which the gallery’s art, artists, and curators are in relentless dialogue.
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My Memorable DC Internship
As a Congressional intern in Washington DC, UW senior Lillian Williamson was immersed in historic — and contentious — events on Capitol Hill.
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Making Music in the Military
Veterans of the US Army and US Navy found their way to the UW School of Music after serving their country as musicians.
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UW professor authors book on monetization of Black womanhood
Timeka Tounsel, a professor in the department of communication, published her first book. Titled “Branding Black Womanhood: Media Citizenship from Black Power to Black Girl Magic,” the book discusses the ways in which Black women's images are monetized in the commercial media marketplace.
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Global Visionaries: Dr. Anu Taranath
Dr. Anu Taranath, teaching professor with a joint appointment in UW’s Departments of English and the Comparative History of Ideas, shares her experience advancing conversations on diversity, racial equity, social justice, and global consciousness.
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International field course held in Indonesia and led by UW professor ends after 30 years
Randall Kyes established the International Field Study Program-Indonesia at the UW. The month-long study abroad program provided field-based educational and research opportunities for students from the UW, Indonesia and other participating countries.
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Feed your brains well: Meet neuroscientist Chantel Prat
Released last month, “The Neuroscience of You: How Every Brain is Different and How to Understand Yours,” is Chantel’s first book, and it arrived with a splash. A small tsunami, really; the highly anticipated text has been described by reviewers as “marvelous,” “hilarious,” “highly accessible,” “charming,” and “the smartest, clearest, and funniest book I’ve ever read about the brain.”
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From student activist to intersectional labor organizer: Meet Yasmin Ahmed
At the Harry Bridges Center for Labor Studies, Yasmin fosters relationships between UW students and local labor organizations to promote social change.
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At the Intersection of STEM and Feminism
With a double major in computer science and gender, women & sexuality studies, Simona Liao is lifting women in STEM in the U.S. and China.
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UW professor outlines how states went from the laboratories of democracy to working against it
In a new book, Jake Grumbach writes that states are no longer looking at each other to see what works and what doesn’t to improve the lives of their residents. Rather, he says, they’re looking to the national political parties for guidance on policy, ideology and objectives.
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The Burke Museum’s ‘spiderman’ searches high and low to find Washington’s arachnid species
Rod Crawford has discovered nearly 200 species that hadn’t been described before, many of which proved to be new to science. Of the nearly 190,000 Washington specimens in the Burke’s spider collection, Crawford contributed about half.
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A Black woman hits glass ceiling then breaks ground as her own boss
After leaving a job as a television news producer in 1990, Dr. Sheila D. Brooks (Communication, ’78) started her own company producing news stories and documentaries.
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POET LAUREATE: ADA LIMÓN
The 1998 drama graduate receives the nation's highest poetry honor.
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Ada Limón Is Named the Next Poet Laureate
Ada Limón, a UW School of Drama alum, is the 24th U.S. poet laureate.
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Ada Limón Is Named the Next Poet Laureate
Ada Limón, a UW School of Drama alum, is the 24th U.S. poet laureate.