Click to see our upcoming calendar of events or our calendar of past events from the 2001-2002, 2002-2003, 2003-2004, 2004-2005, 2005-2006, 2006-2007 or 2007-2008 academic years.
Fall Quarter 2003 | Winter Quarter 2004 | Spring Quarter 2004
Thursday, October 2
Jeanne Hallacy will present her new documentary film Mercy
3:30-5:00 pm
HUB 204N
Mercy is an emotionally charged documentary about the resilience and courage of Luk Nam, an 11-year old girl in Thailand whose life has been forever changed by AIDS. Filmed over two years at a community hospice in the slums of Bangkok, the story unfolds through Luk Nam's voice; reading from her journal as she recalls losing her entire family and her best friend. The video follows Luk Nam as she cares for her little sister dying of AIDS. Mercy explores the selfless humanity of three staff at the hospice who encourage her to go on as they struggle with their own feelings in caring for HIV positive children. The documentary is an intimate portrait of an overlooked side to the AIDS crisis focusing on children of HIV+ parents who are deeply affected by the loss of their loved ones. Mercy is a film about survival and the power of compassion. This moving story is a lesson about how to embrace life in the face of death.
Friday, October 3
Burma Diaries
A conversation with filmmaker Jeanne Hallacy
12:00-1:30 pm
HUB 204N
This powerful documentary explores the revolutionary movement fighting for
democracy in Burma and depicts how young people, in particular, are affected by the human rights abuses of Burma's dictatorial military government. Burma Diary focuses on a young man, Tint Aung, who in college was active in the protest movement, but who since has been driven by the oppressive regime into exile in the jungle along the Thailand-Burma border. As the film chronicles four harsh years of Tint Aung's struggle to survive, it provides a passionate and at times heartbreaking study of the hopes of and the obstacles facing the Burmese democracy movement.
Tuesday, October 7
Aceh at War: A View from the Front Lines of Indonesia's Rebellious Province
a discussion with William Nessen
3:30-5:00pm
Smith 311
William Nessen, a year 1999 graduate of the University of Washington, recently served 40 days in an Indonesian jail after daring to report from the rebel zones in Aceh Province during the government's latest offensive. Mr. Nessen, who attended the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, has written and photographed for more than a dozen newspapers and magazines on four continents.
Thursday, October 9
Southeast Asia Center Fall Reception
4:00-6:00pm
Burke Room, Burke Museum
Come and ring in the new academic year, meet new faculty and students and see old friends. Thai food and beverages will be served.
Thursday, October 9
Fall Thai Film Series
Sayew (Titillation)
6:30pm, FREE
Simpson Center for the Humanities, Communications Room 206
(Free. Thai with English subtitles)
Saunter over from the fall reception and help kick off our Thai feature film festival for fall quarter. Sayew (Titillation): Tao has a problem. The tomboyish student aspires to be the most famous erotic writer in Thailand, but she has no actual sexual experience. Her uncle, the editor of the pornographic magazine where she secretly moonlights, has given her an ultimatum - add more sex to her spicy stories or else she's out and the magazine's new star, the aptly named Stallion, is in! To make matters worse, her advisor at school is threatening to flunk her unless she rewrites her thesis on romantic novels. As Tao sorts through her confused feelings on sex, desire and writing, the result is a goofy, surprisingly sweet and utterly original movie that charts a path through the bewildering world of contemporary sexuality in Thailand. You won't want to miss it. After all, where else can you see a movie in which the staff of an adult magazine solemnly chants the motto "For the pleasure of all Thai people!" at the end of each editorial meeting?
Friday, October 10
Patricio Nunes Abinales (Political Science, Kyoto University, Japan)
Revolutionaries and Ex-Revolutionaries on the Verge of Retirement: Reflections on the Phlippines Left
3:00-5:00pm, reception to follow
Communications 226
Dr. Patricio Abinales is an associate professor of Political Science at Kyoto University, Japan, and the Southeast Asia editor of the journal Critical Asian Studies. He wrote on colonial and postcolonial Mindanao, and the Communist Party of the Philippines. His recent publications include Fellow Traveler: Essays on Filipino Communism (2001) and Making Mindanao: Cotabato and Davao in the Formation of the Philippine State (2000).
This talk will include comments from Robert Garcia, Fellow in the Project for Critical Asian Studies, Program Officer of the Asian-South Pacific Bureau of Adult Education, Chair of Peace Advocates for Truth, Justice, and Healing, and author of To Suffer Thy Comrades: How the Revolution Decimated Its Own (2000).
Monday, October 13
Southeast Asia Center Booksale
3:30-6:00pm
Thomson 317
Books! Books! Books! Come and find classic books and journals about Southeast Asia, anthropology, sociology and much more. Bargain prices and all proceeds go to support educational outreach.
Thursday, October 30
Fall Thai Film Series
Nang Nak
6:30pm
Simpson Center, Communications Room 206
(Free. Thai with English subtitles)
After recovering from battle wounds, conscripted soldier Maak returns home to his adoring wife Nak and his new infant son. But why is everyone acting so strangely? And why are villagers dying? It soon becomes clear that all is not what it seems, and something is very wrong indeed! Just in time for Halloween, join us for this lavish re-telling of Thailand's most famous ghost story - and that's saying something in a country famed for its spooks and ghouls. Universally know and much loved in Thailand, Nang Nak is rumored to be a true story and has been filmed over twenty times for television and the cinema. This 1999 film version was a huge hit and features beautiful cinematography and an excellent cast. The nineteenth-century sets and costumes are carefully detailed, so between the spooks and chills, viewers can catch a glimpse of traditional life in a central Thai village of the past.
Thursday, November 6
Fall Thai Film Series
Moonhunter (14 Dula, Songkram Prachachon)
6:30pm
Simpson Center, Communications Room 206
(Free. Thai with English subtitles)
This film relays the story of some of the most important events in recent Thai history from the perspective of two students at the heart of the action. In the early 1970s, Seksan and Chiranan -- two university students in Bangkok -- were young, in love, and passionately committed to ending military dictatorship in Thailand. Seksan and other student leaders led the biggest mass demonstration in modern Thai history in October 1973, an event that led to the popular uprising that toppled the military dictatorship and restored democracy. But Seksan and Chiranan's lives take a drastic turn when they are caught in the wave of political violence, stirred up by remnants of the old ruling elite agitating for the return of dictatorial rule. The two flee to the jungle to join the Communist Party, fighting guerilla-style in the forests of Thailand. Cutting between "newsreel" footage of the 1973 protests and the activist's lives in the jungle, this film is a thought provoking attempt to come to terms with a part of recent Thai history that still has social and political repercussions.
Monday, November 10
Naoko Kumada (Stanford post-doctoral fellow)
Buddhism and Modernity in Burma
3:30-5:00pm
Denny 401
Thursday, November 20
Fall Thai Film Series
Mekong Full Moon Party
Simpson Center, Communications Room 206
(Free. Thai with English subtitles)
More than 100,000 people gather by the Mekong River in Northeast Thailand
on November Full Moon each year. After sunset, mysterious fireballs rise
up from the river and disappear into the sky. While the locals still
adhere to the traditional myth of the dragon, Great Naga, making a sacred
offering to Buddha, the Western visitors take a more skeptical stance: Dr.
Norati sets out to prove that the fireballs are natural; Dr. Surapol wants
to prove the phenomenon a hoax. Meanwhile, temple-custodian Abbot Loh
believes his monks have been responsible for the "miracle" for the past 30
years. The critically-acclaimed movie about the mystery of the
controversial naga fireballs in Nong Khai province was honored for Best
Movie, Best Director, and Best Actor.
Thursday, Dec 4
"Tending the Ruins: Archaeology, Landscape and Memory in Indonesia"
Thursday Dec. 4, 2003, 6: 30 PM
The Burke Room, Burke Museum
Free admission
www.burkemuseum.org
When does a building become a ruin? Indonesia's landscape is covered in ruins. Many of the more ancient ones have only recently been re-discovered in dense jungles or buried under volcanic ash. Meanwhile, new sets of ruins are constantly created, such as decaying 19th century colonial plantations, or in the case of East Timor, administrative buildings only recently abandoned by Indonesian forces. This lecture takes a look at how ruins are created and used by archaeologists and the general public in Southeast Asia to remember histories and establish new identities.
Peter Lape is the Curator of Archaeology at the Burke Museum and an Assistant Professor in the UW Dept. of Anthropology. He has conducted archaeological research on the origins of the spice trade in Indonesia, as well as other projects on the archaeology of cross cultural interaction in the US and in Mexico. He is currently conducting research in the new nation of East Timor (formerly a province of Indonesia) on the impact of immigration and colonialism from the 10th-19th centuries.
Special thanks to the Simpson Center for the Humanities
Friday, January 9
Dr. Naomi Cassirer
"Addressing Gender and the World of Work in Southeast Asia"
12:30-1:30pm Savery 209
Dr. Cassirer, formerly a professor of sociology at Notre Dame and now a gender specialist for the ILO will discuss her work at the International Labor Organization.
Thursday, January 15
K-12 Teacher Event: The Global Classroom Uneasy Alliances: US Relations with Pakistan and Indonesia
4:15-7:15pm
($15 registration fee, pre-registration required)
UW Campus, HUB 310
Co-sponsored with the World Affairs Council and UW FIUTS Featuring UW Professor Emeritus Dan Lev and South Asia Center Associate Director Keith Snodgrass.
Thursday, January 15
Winter quarter Thai films
6:30pm Communications 206
6ixty Nin9 (Ruang Talok 69)
Our winter film series kicks off with this witty and stylish thriller from one of Thailand's most promising up-and-coming directors, Pen-Ek Ratanaruang. Tum, a young woman living in Bangkok, returns home depressed after losing her job in the first wave of the 1997 Asian economic crisis. Suddenly left with no income and no prospects, is it any wonder that she decides to keep the box full of money that mysteriously appears in front of her door? But soon the unscrupulous owners of the money want it back, and as you might expect, things very quickly start to get out-of-hand. A hit at film festivals around the world, this film manages to be both an effective thriller and a sly social satire about the tribulations of surviving Thai capitalism in the age of greed and globalization.
Wednesday, January 21
K-12 Teacher Event: The Global Classroom Uneasy Alliances: US Relations with Pakistan and Indonesia
4:15-7:15pm
($15 registration fee, pre-registration required)
Bates Technical College, Tacoma Co-sponsored with the World Affairs Council and UW FIUTS Featuring University of Puget Sound Assistant Professor Carlo Bonura and South Asia Center Associate Director Keith Snodgrass
Wednesday, January 28
Dinner/lecture series: International Update (Southeast & South Asia) Bullets and Ballots: Militaries in South and Southeast Asian Politics
Mary Callahan (Jackson School of International Studies)
5:30-8:00 PM Walker-Ames room, Kane Hall
Cost is $25 (pre-registration required), and includes the talk, Q&A session, dinner, wine and clock hours (for K-12 educators). To register, send your name, address, the title of the lecture and $25.00 (payable to the University of Washington) no later than January 21, 2004 to: International Updates Registration c/o REECAS University of Washington Box 353650 Seattle, WA 98195-3650 For more information call 206-543-4852 or e-mail reecas@u.washington.edu.
Thursday, January 29
Winter quarter Thai films
6:30pm Communications, Room 206
Sunset at Chaopraya (Khu Gam)
It's 1939 in Siam. The Japanese are threatening invasion and the Free Thai movement is gaining momentum. In this classic Thai love story Angsumalin, the beautiful daughter of a Thai military general, becomes involved with Kobori, an idealistic Japanese captain who is leading the occupation forces in Bangkok. Although she hates the Japanese and Kobori for what they are doing to her country, she is pressured into marrying him for political reasons. The trouble is, she develops feelings for him and their complex relationship takes them beyond anything either of them could have imagined. Sunset at Chaopraya is based on a popular Thai novel and has been made into three movies, a television series and even a comic book series. You can't miss this particularly heartfelt version, with the popular Thai singer Thongchai "Bird" McIntyre as Kobori and Apisiri Nitibhon as Angsumalin.
Friday, February 2
Elizabeth Becker
"Bringing the Khmer Rouge to Trial"
3:30-5:00pm
Thomson 317
Elizabeth Becker is the trade, aid and development correspondent at the New York Times with a special interest in agriculture. Most recently she covered the global trade talks in Cancun, Mexico. She has covered foreign affairs and national security at the newspaper and was the Pentagon correspondent during the Kosovo War. Before joining the Times, she was senior foreign editor at National Public Radio. She began her career covering the war in Cambodia for The Washington Post. Her book WHEN THE WAR IS OVER, a history of modern Cambodia and the Khmer Rouge, won a Robert F. Kennedy Book Award citation. It is considered one of the classic books on the subject and has been in print for more than 15 years. Among her honors are two Dupont-Columbia Awards for coverage of Rwanda and South Africa and an Overseas Press Club citation for her coverage of Cambodia. She is a graduate of the University of Washington in South Asian studies and did studies at the Kendriya Hindi Sanstan in Agra, India. She is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and the board of the Arthur F. Burns Foundation. She lives in Washington and is the mother of two children.
Thursday, February 12
Winter quarter Thai films
6:30pm Communications, Room 206
Bangkok Dangerous
Do you like stories about brooding loners trying to go straight in a hard, uncaring world? Then this is the movie for you! The Pang Brothers, now better known for the creepy The Eye, wrote and directed this action movie inspired by the great Hong Kong gangster movies. Kong is a deaf-mute hit man who lives an isolated existence trying to survive in the Bangkok underworld. Used by everyone around him, he one day begins to see the possibility of another kind of life affe.
Wednesday, February 18
Religion, Conflict, and Violence Monks, Guns and Rice: Theravada Buddhism, Political Violence, and Social Injustice
Charles Keyes (Anthropology and Comparative Religion Program)
7:30pm, Kane 220
** Sponsored by the Simpson Center for the Humanities
Thursday, February 26
Winter quarter Thai films
6:30pm Communications, Room 206
Ong Bak (this film does NOT have English subtitles, but is easy to follow)
A sacred Buddha statuette called Ong Bak is stolen from a village in northeastern Thailand. A young villager, Boonting (Phanom Yeeram), is asked by the abbot to go to Bangkok to find the image and reclaim it for the village temple. He is first introduced as an exceptional practitioner of Thai kick-boxing (Muai Thai) and it is these skills he uses when he finds himself pitted against a powerful mafia that has been engaged in stealing and selling sacred images from throughout the country. Much of the film shows Boonting in combat with various bad guys who attack him physically and with all types of weapons. In the vein of Bruce Lee and Jackie Chan, Boonting emerges triumphant despite all the odds. The film is also interesting in that it makes a Khon Isan, a northeastern Thai villager, the hero rather than is usually the case in Thai films the comic country bumpkin.
February 26-27
Philippines Symposium Colonialism, Nationalism and Globalization: The Philippines and Filipino-Americans
The program is free and open to the public The Southeast Asia Center will host a symposium entitled "Colonialism, Nationalism and Globalization: The Philippines and Filipino-Americans" February 26-27, 2004 on the University of Washington Seattle campus. The symposium will consist of a keynote lecture (Rey Ileto, NUS), a cultural performance event (Isangmahal), and a series of day-long panels featuring important scholars in the field to generate interest and thinking around Philippine issues that have direct bearing on Southeast Asia and the rest of the world. The symposium will be held in conjunction with an exhibit of the Carlos Bulosan papers and artifacts relating to the history of the Filipinos workers in the Alaskan canneries at the University Libraries. It is our hope that such an event will not only highlight the scholarly resources that UW has on the Philippines, Filipino Americans and Southeast Asia, but that it will also shed light on the importance that the Philippines holds for understanding enduring questions about colonialism, the history of nation-states and nationalist discourse, the socio-political context of scientific knowledge, the vexed relationship among immigration, labor and race, and the uneven unfolding of the US empire in the 20th and 21st century.
Thursday, March 4
Filipino American Cultural Production Rick Bonus (Professor, American Ethnic Studies)
5:00-6:00pm Music, Room 213
Thursday, March 11
12:30pm-1:30pm, Thomson 109
Saw Aung Naing works for the Shan Sapawa Organization, the first environmental organization dedicated to preserving the environment in the Shan State in Burma. He spent time interviewing Shan Refugees along the Thai-Burmese border about human rights and environmental abuses associated with the Burmese military, and recently conducted a fact-finding mission on the Tasang Dam, the military hydropower dam project on the Salween River (Southern Shan State). Mr. Kher helped to organize grass-roots opposition against the dam believing that if it was built, it would provoke forced labor, forced relocations, environmental destruction, and the suppression of dissent. Saw Aung Naing has worked in a variety of capacities as a researcher for Earth Rights International and Save the Children (UK). Additionally, his work has been featured in at the World Conference Against Racial Discrimination (South Africa, 2000) and the Open Society Institute (New York City, 2003).
Thursday, March 11
Art and Activism: Subverting Cultural Genocide Isangmahal Arts Kollective (Filipino/Asian American spoken word group from Seattle)
5:00-6:00pm Music, Room 213
Week of April 5
Balinese Dance & Clowning Didik Nini Thowok Time and location TBA
DIDIK NINI THOWOK is a multi-talented artist from Indonesia (performance artist , choreographer, dancer, teacher, mime, actor, make-up artist, comedian and singer who appears regularly on National Television ). Hi is known for his unique style; combining classical, folk, modern and comedic dance form. He is one of the few artists who continues the long tradition of " Traditional Cross Gender " in the dance form. His talent in impersonating female characters as well as his incredible skill in various dance traditions such as topeng (mask dance), Sundanese, Cirebon, Balinese, and Central Javanese has on many occasions dumfounded the audience in determining the gender of the artist. Didik's Dance Studio teaches many styles of dances, including Javanese, Sundanese, Cirebon Mask Dance, Balinese and Original Choreography.
Monday, March 29
Beyond Sanctions: A Discussion of the Role of the International Community in Promoting Peace and Prosperity in Burma
Morten Pedersen (Australian National University)
3:30-5:00pm Thomson 317
Morten B. Pedersen is a research scholar in the Department of Political and Social Change, Australian National University, and currently works as senior analyst for the International Crisis Group and consultant to various governments and international organizations on Burma. He is the co-editor and -author of the book, Burma/Myanmar: Strong Regime, Weak State (Adelaide; Crawford House, 2000) and has written a number of articles and reports on contemporary Burmese politics and international policies towards Burma since 1988.
Saturday, April 3
Balinese Dance & Clowning Didik Nini Thowok Gamelan Pacifica
7:30pm, Kane Hall, Room 130
Didik Nini Thowok is a multi-talented artist from Indonesia (performance artist, choreographer, dancer, teacher, mime, actor, make-up artist, comedian and singer who appears regularly on National Television). Hi is known for his unique style, combining classical, folk, modern and comedic dance form. He is one of the few artists who continue the long tradition of " Traditional Cross Gender " in the dance form. His talent in impersonating female characters as well as his incredible skill in various dance traditions such as topeng (mask dance), Sundanese, Cirebon, Balinese, and Central Javanese has on many occasions dumfounded the audience in determining the gender of the artist. Didik's Dance Studio teaches many styles of dances, including Javanese, Sundanese, Cirebon Mask Dance, Balinese and Original Choreography. Gamelan Pacifica is one of the most active and adventurous gamelan ensembles in the United States, with a reputation for providing the Northwest with diverse productions merging traditional and contemporary musical forms with dance, theater, puppetry, and visual media. Visiting artists have included some of the most notable artists of Indonesia, including Sri Djoko Rahardja, I Made Sidia, Endo Suanda, I Made Lesmawan, Midiyanto, A.W. Sutrisno, Undang Sumarno, Hani Schnaith, and Nunuk Sri Rahayu. They have been guest performers on The Smithsonian Institute's Festival of Indonesia, New Music Across America Festival, Vancouver New Music Society, On the Boards, Walker Art Center, Performing Arts Chicago, and many others. Gamelan Pacifica's CD, Trance Gong has received international acclaim and is available from O.O. Discs. Noted composer and Cornish College of the Arts Professor Jarrad Powell directs gamelan Pacifica.
Thursday, April 15
Write About the Singing Sky: Literary Life in Indonesia Henk Maier, (Luce Professor of Southeast Asian Studies, University of California Riverside)
3:30-5:00pm Simpson Center conference room, Communications 206
"Literary life" is a concept that has gone out of favor because of its claims of comprehension and totality. Its pitfalls and advantages will be tested in an effort to comprehend the literary scene in Indonesia after the fall of Suharto and will focus on the welter of novels that have appeared since 1998.
Thursday, April 22
Film: The Golden Triangle: Forbidden Land of Opium (52 minutes)
Followed by a discussion with the filmmaker, Barry Broman
1:30-3:00pm Allen Auditorium, Allen Library
The Golden Triangle documents the opium harvest in the Wa Hills of Burma in l993 and the challenge to opium cultivators as the government of Burma moves to eradicate opium production. We were given unique access to the opium-growing region of Burma and conducted interviews with opium warlords, cultivators, Burma army and police officials, UN and DEA officials working on the narcotics problem. Barry Broman received his MA in SE Asian Studies from the UW in 1968. He served as an AP photographer in Bangkok, Phnom Penh, and Saigon '62-'63 and then joined the Marine Corps as an infantry officer in Vietnam '69-'70. I served in the Foreign Service ''71-'96 with postings in Phnom Penh, Bangkok (twice), Jakarta, Paris, and Rangoon. Since retiring in l996, Mr. Broman has worked as a consultant in SE Asia and written and photographed books, articles, and films on the region.
Tuesday, April 27
UW Ethnomusicology Visiting Artists Concert:
Hossein Omoumi & I Wayan Sinti: Music of Persia and Bali
7:30 pm, Meany Theater, UW campus $10 general admission ($8 student/senior) 206-543-4880
Friday, April 30
Will the Mekong River Survive Globalism? Charnvit Kasetsiri (University of Hawaii)
12:00-1:30pm, location TBA
Professor Kasetsiri will show slides and discuss the Mekong River region in Southeast Asia, with a specific focus on how the river is currently used for navigation and trade. He will discuss the challenges and dangers posed by recent proposals for dams and hydroelectric projects along the Mekong.
Week of May 11 (Exact date/time and location TBA)
Elections in Indonesia
Goenawan Mohammad
Writer, editor, activist, poet, for more than 30 years Goenawan Mohamad has set standards for journalists around the world. Mr. Mohamad is founder and Editor of Tempo Magazine, Indonesia’s most widely circultated weekly. His magazine was officially banned in 1994, but reopened in October, following the ousting of Indonesian President Suharto. Goenawan Mohamad writes critical remarks on the press, on the massive corruption and lack of human rights and of democratic tradition in Indonesia. His ongoing struggle for freedom of expression has led to the foundation of several new media organizations and made the Indonesian Press one of the most free in Southeast Asia.
Thursday, May 13
US Involvement in the History of West Papua and the Human Rights Situation Today
John Rumbiak, West Papuan human rights advocate
11:00-12:30 Thomson 317
John Rumbiak, internationally recognized as an advocate for the rights of indigenous peoples, serves as supervisor of the Papua-based Institute for Human Rights Study and Advocacy (ELSHAM). ELSHAM has gained recognition as the leading credible source of information regarding human rights conditions in Papua, the western half of New Guinea, one of the most culturally and biologically diverse places on the planet. The Indonesian military and government have engaged in widespread human rights violations in the territory since Indonesia took control in the 1960s via a U.N.-supervised process that U.N. officials have now rejected as deeply flawed. Mr. Rumbiak is currently a visiting scholar at Columbia University's Center for the Study of Human Rights, where he also participated in the 1999 Human Rights Advocates Program. He serves on the board of directors of the U.S.-based Papua Resource Center and is a member of the Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Center for Human Rights Indonesia Support Group.
Friday, May 14
The Thai Court and Its Subjects: The Administration of Corvee, 1827-1885
Constance Wilson (UW)
12:00-1:30pm Location TBA
This paper represents an attempt to reconstruct the process of administrating corvee between 1827 and 1885 based on records from the National Library in Bangkok. For the past three decades Professor Wilson has been working with this material in an effort to find out how corvee was administered and supervised, and to see just what services and types of work the corvee laborers performed. The study covers the process of the registration of eligible men as well as the ways in which workers were organized for specific tasks: assisting in central or local administration; participating in royal ceremonies; construction of royal and local projects; collecting and transporting goods for state revenue; guard duty; and serving as military forces in time of war.
Tuesday, May 18
SE Asia Center Spring Reception
4:00-6:00pm Burke Room, Burke Museum
Come and celebrate spring with your fellow UW Southeast Asianist colleagues! Hear about student awards and achievements. Eat great SE Asian food and mingle.
| Southeast Asia Center | |
| University of Washington | |
| 303 Thomson Hall | |
| Box 353650 | |
| Seattle, WA 98195 | |
| (206) 543-9606 tel | |
| (206) 685-0668 fax | |
| ► | seac@u.washington.edu |
| Laurie Sears, Director |
| Rick Bonus, Director of Graduate Studies |
| Sara Van Fleet, Associate Director |
| Tikka Sears, Outreach Coordinator |
| Marjorie McKinley, Program Coordinator |
| McKay Caruthers, Graduate Student Assistant |