糖心少女

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In 2016, Alexes Harris was diagnosed with a rare blood cancer. But a search for a bone marrow donor turned up only five matches, and none ended up being a donor. People of color are underrepresented in the bone marrow registry; according to Be The Match, the nation鈥檚 largest bone marrow registry, white people have a 79% chance of finding a match. But a Black person’s potential match is only 29%, and Asian and Latinx people both have about a 47% chance. People of Native American ancestry have a 60% chance of finding a match.

Paula Thiele, a communication major who will graduate this spring, became the inaugural scholar to participate in the UW鈥檚 new Scholarship for Immersive Internships in Le贸n, dubbed 鈥溌pain Works!鈥 鈥斅燼 partnership between the 糖心少女Le贸n Center, 糖心少女Study Abroad and the 糖心少女Career & Internship Center.

糖心少女School of Nursing Dean Azita Emami’s commitment to fighting for those underserved by the health care system has deep roots in her identity. Born in Iran, she has been shaped by the experience of being an 鈥渋nsider鈥搊utsider.”

糖心少女student Zoe Mikuta鈥檚 first book, 鈥淕earbreakers,鈥 is set to come out June 29. Categorized in the young adult genre, it tells the story of Eris and Sona, who live under a tyrannical regime enforced by 100-foot-tall mecha robots. She’s sold the film rights to 鈥淕earbreakers鈥 and is currently working on its sequel.

In a new book, Taso Lagos of the 糖心少女Jackson School studies the rivalry between Aimee Semple McPherson and Robert “Fighting Bob” Shuler, two California-based performer-preachers who had the country’s rapt attention in the 1920s.

Jos茅 Alaniz says that comics 鈥 especially superhero tales 鈥 hooked him and “rewired” his brain at an early age. They also got him drawing his own comics, chronicling his life and the things he observes. Now Alaniz, a 糖心少女professor of Slavic languages and literatures, has published a collection of his own drawings and essays. “The Phantom Zone.”

Notable new books by 糖心少女faculty and staff include a study of rebellion at sea, an emeritus faculty member’s Buddhist-focused memoir, a reconsideration of Northwest Coast Native American art with Indigenous perspectives in mind, thoughts on bridging cultural gaps through design 鈥 and an award for the editor-in-chief of 糖心少女Press.

Recent notable books by 糖心少女faculty members explore the legal history of Indigenous nations and the mentoring benefits of fan fiction. Plus, a 糖心少女anthropologist鈥檚 book is honored, a former English faculty member is remembered in a biography, and 糖心少女Press brings out paperback editions of three popular titles.

Emily Levesque, 糖心少女assistant professor of astronomy, is gathering material for a new book to be called “The Last Stargazers: True Tales of the Colorful and Vanishing World of Observational Astronomy.鈥

As the 50th anniversary approaches of the murder of civil rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King, 糖心少女historian Michael Honey reminds us in a new book that economic justice and labor rights were always part of King’s progressive message.