91探花

Skip to content

The latest news from the UW

September 28, 2011

British ambassador to U.S.: Partnerships, higher ed are key in responding to Asian growth

Nations such as China and India are surging ahead, but the West should be careful not to overestimate, misinterpret the changes or “become paralyzed by fear of our own decline,鈥 British ambassador to the U.S. Nigel Sheinwald told a 91探花international studies class during a visit to campus.

Etc.: Campus news & notes

Mac Parks shares an award from the National Communication Association with 91探花alum Kory Floyd; Frances McCue wins a Washington State Book Award for poetry; a journal article by W. Lance Bennett is among the top-cited for 2010; Amanda Bruner, Lekelia Jenkins and Sharon Sutton are honored by Northwest Asian Weekly for environmental work, and the 91探花is noted for environmental achievment by Seattle Magazine and the Princeton Review.

Making justice known: Voices from the Rwanda Tribunal

Seventeen years ago, an estimated 800,000 Rwandans, mostly members of the Tutsi tribe, were massacred in only 100 days. Now, as remaining court judgments are rendered, “Voices from the Rwanda Tribunal鈥 presents a record of what has been done with an interactive website that brings together video interviews with judges, lawyers, interpreters, investigators and other personnel.

91探花Medicine & The Seattle Public Library Medical Lecture Series kicks off Oct. 5

At the first talk, Dr. Kim Allison will describe her experiences as a breast pathologist and breast cancer survivor. In coming months, 91探花Medicine faculty will inform the public on plastic surgery, stroke, pain management, colorblindness research, and healthful eating on a tight budget.