A screening of WABAN-AKI: People from Where the Sun Rises, by Canadian filmmaker Alanis Obomsawin, a member of the Abenaki Nation and one of Canada’s most distinguished documentary filmmakers.
February 26, 2010
February 26, 2010
A screening of WABAN-AKI: People from Where the Sun Rises, by Canadian filmmaker Alanis Obomsawin, a member of the Abenaki Nation and one of Canada’s most distinguished documentary filmmakers.
A professor of piano at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Coop will perform works by Bach, Beethoven and Mendelssohn.
February 25, 2010
The Global Social Entrepreneurship Competition, March 2 to 4, has student teams from around the globe pitching business solutions.
For five months, students have been organizing every aspect of the upcoming Dance Majors Concert.
Everyone has an opinion about Wal-Mart, whether they love it or hate it.
The trove is vast:
Fifty years of audio recordings.
As biologists and ecologists propose ever-larger conservation areas in the tropics, ones that encompass multiple countries, social scientists say it’s local people banding together with their community leaders who ultimately determine the success or failure of such efforts in many parts of the world.
Board of Regents
The Board of Regents will hold a regular meeting on Thursday, March 18, at UW Tacoma.
South African guitarist, singer-songwriter and poet-activist Vusi Mahlasela will perform at 8 p.
Homeful is not a word, but perhaps it should be.
When Pam Schreiber was an undergraduate at the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater, she took a job as a resident adviser in student housing.
There will be a free hearing aid informational seminar from 1 to 2:30 p.
A five-person team sent to evaluate damage from the devastating magnitude-7 earthquake that struck Haiti on Jan.
The UW School of Music will offer a program of guitar music on Feb.
As the world’s top athletes complete their competition in Vancouver, BC, a global competition of another kind is getting under way in Seattle — the sixth annual Global Social Entrepreneurship Competition (GSEC).
Despite big changes over recent decades, workplace gender inequalities endure in the United States and other industrialized nations around the world.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: UW alumnus Wolf Bauer, legendary mountaineer, kayaker, environmental educator and conservationist, will be honored by the Washington state Legislature for his many achievements and for his 98th birthday on Friday, Feb.
Max Hunter, a former drug dealer, will explain how he came to accept violence as a legitimate tactic for achieving his ends and how he made a transition to nonviolent action in a lecture at 6 p.
The deadline for nominating an outstanding woman for the annual “Celebrating UW Women” has been extended to Friday, March 5.
Where are we? The photo above was taken somewhere on campus.
It’s become a kind of mantra that in lean times, UW offices must do more with less — and this time of year, nowhere is that more true than at the Office of Undergraduate Admissions.
Poet, critic, teacher and “sometime curator” Berkson will read from a new publication, Portrait and Dream.
English Professor Shawn Wong and UW alumna Tanya Egan Gibson will discuss fiction, publishing and the differences between academic and creative writing.
Editor’s Note: The UW Audio Visual Services Materials Library has more than 1,200 reels of film from the late 1940s through the early 1970s, documenting life at the University through telecourses, commercial films and original productions.
Childhood leukemia rates have more than doubled over the past 15 years in the southern Iraq province of Basrah, according to the study, “Trends in Childhood Leukaemia in Basrah, Iraq (1993-2007),” published online Feb.
Dr. Anthony Atala led the Wake Forest team that developed the first lab-grown organ, a bladder. Atala will speak at the UW March 25
The extraordinary animated film based on Marjane Satrapi’s autobiographical graphic novels about coming of age in Iran.
Part of the School of Drama’s series of readings called “Looking Up at Down: Plays from the Great Depression,” actors perform a staged reading S.
The UW Percussion Ensemble performs a variety of contemporary music composed for metallophones, membranophones, and idiophones.
February 24, 2010
Michael Beecher, UW professor of psychology and adjunct professor of biology; and Michael H.
February 23, 2010
Gerard Schwarz conducts the University Symphony side by side with members of the Seattle Symphony Orchestra.
Baltasar Garzon, investigating judge of the Spanish National Court, speaks on Human Rights and Historical Memory.
Susan Hassmiller, senior adviser for nursing at the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, explores critical issues facing nursing in a new era of health care focusing specifically on how nursing could be affected by health care reform.
February 22, 2010
Project originators teach the journalism they practice: independent, multimedia, funded by a number of sources.
A five-person team sent to evaluate damage from the devastating magnitude-7 earthquake that struck Haiti on Jan.
February 21, 2010
Sarah Reichard, associate professor, hosts “Botany, Bugs and the Art of Forensic Science,” where forensic scientists (in town for their annual convention) present a fascinating look at the world of forensic science in the areas of botany, entomology and anthropology as they relate to crime investigations and solving cold cases.
Seattle Symphony Orchestra bassist Jordan Anderson performs original compositions and other works for double bass.
February 19, 2010
As large conservation areas are proposed in the tropics, social scientists say it’s local people who determine the success of such efforts.
Friends of the UW Libraries and the UW Alumni Association present an evening with journalist and novelist Jim Lynch, author of The Highest Tide.