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Selected topic: International.
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Alumni are networking around careers, diverse communities, and global connections.
Amid news of normalization efforts between the United States and Cuba, Apertura [Opening]: Photography in Cuba Today has made a timely debut at the Chazen Museum of Art.
[“The Warlord’s Biographer,” Spring 2015], was an excellent article! Brian [Glyn] Williams was my teacher back in Madison (1998, I think) for a Central Asian Studies class, and it was the best class I ever took. Your article definitely took me back. He’s an incredible teacher, and it’s great…
[In regard to Flashback in the Spring 2015 issue]: When I was an eleven-year-old, my mother, Etta Wittchow Barfknecht ’31, brought me to Madison to see and hear one of the great world leaders [Jawaharlal Nehru]. Thank you for reminding me of that day.
Charles Barfknecht ’60 Iowa City,…
Chinese alumni create talk-show videos to educate, ease isolation.
Chen had no idea what she wanted to do with her life — only that she wanted a U.S. education.
Due to a belief that their body parts bring good luck, people with albinism in some African countries are hunted and killed. Two alumni are stepping in to help Tanzania, where the problem is most severe.
With the assistance of WAA, various incarnations of Bucky have been to all seven continents and floated on every ocean.
Economist Andrew Zimbalist ’69 argues that big-time sports and big-time stadiums are not necessarily a boon for cities.
Think that world hunger can’t be overcome? Bettina Luescher begs to differ.
Delivering birth control to elephants is more difficult than you’d think — and more important.
As China gains prominence on the world stage, the university strengthens its connections.
A master’s program prepares students to use French in professions outside the classroom.
Have you ever wanted to learn Spanish, but never had the time?
“I have become somewhat of a voice for the voiceless,” says public school teacher Dena Grushkin Florczyk ’80, who founded The Nigerian School Project to provide much-needed resources to teachers and students in Nigeria.
Travel writer Everett Potter ’76 has the kind of job that most people only dream of — getting paid to travel the world, sample the best hotels, or ski at the finest mountain resorts.
UW offers students choices that span the globe.
From Babcock Hall to Africa, a love of cheese yields friendship.