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  • UW launches online bachelor's degree completion program in social sciences

    Beginning in the fall 2014, people interested in social sciences who have already earned roughly two years of college credit or an associate's degree will be able to finish their bachelor's degree online through a new program offered by the UW.
    03/31/2014 | The News Tribune
  • Exhibit offers glimpse at Burke's vast collection

    In 129 years the Burke Museum has amassed a collection of more than 15 million items. In a new exhibit, the museum hopes to answer questions such as: why do museums have all these things, where did they come from, and what are they used for?
    03/30/2014 | The News Tribune
  • Is the Affordable Care Act a success?

    UW history professor William Rorabaugh says we still don't know if the the program has succeeded in enrolling enough young, healthy people.
    03/30/2014 | Seattle Times
  • Research in action: Pilot program gives parents tools to boost babies' brains

    The UW's Institute for Learning & Brain Sciences is part of a new, privately-funded campaign in South King County that helps parents put into practice the latest findings from infant brain research. UW's Patricia Kuhl is quoted.
    03/30/2014 | The Seattle Times
  • Ukraine's perilous evolution between the East and West

    A Seattle Times editorial on the situation in the Ukraine cites the opinion of Scott Radnitz, director of the UW's Ellison Center for Russian, East European and Central Asian Studies.
    03/28/2014 | The Seattle Times
  • Matchmakers help those over 60 handle dating's risks and rewards

    The 60-plus crowd represents the fastest-growing segment in online dating. Pepper Schwartz, a professor of sociology at the University of Washington and AARP's love and relationship ambassador, comments.
    03/28/2014 | The New York Times
  • Decline of natural history troubling for science, society

    Support for natural history - the study of organisms, how and where they live and how they interact with their environment - appears to be in steep decline in developed countries, according to Joshua Tewksbury, a University of Washington professor and WWF International scientist.
    03/26/2014 | UW Today
  • 25 years after Exxon Valdez, lessons are still relevant

    In an op-ed piece, Angela Day, doctoral candidate in political science looks to lessons from the Exxon Valdez as the Salish Sea is slated to become one of North America's busiest fossil fuel trans-shipment corridors.
    03/23/2014 | Everett Herald
  • Local Russians, Ukrainians split on Putins move in Crimea

    As the Ukrainian conflict rages, Russians and Ukrainians now in the Northwest feel divided. Scott Radnitz, associate professor in the Jackson School of International Studies, is quoted.
    03/22/2014 | The Seattle Times
  • From Ukraine: The heartbreak of victory; the fear of Russia

    In an op-ed piece, Jennifer Carroll, research assistant in anthropology currently doing research in Kiev, comments on the current political climate in Ukraine.
    03/22/2014 | The Seattle Times