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'A brilliant scholar, an outstanding teacher'
 St. Louis Public Schools teaching award named for Washington University Professor David Konig

Nov. 4,
2009 -- An award for the St. Louis Public Schools' social studies teacher of the year has been named in honor of David T. Konig, Ph.D., professor of history, of African & African American Studies and director of the Legal Studies Program, all in Arts & Sciences, and professor of law at Washington University in St. Louis.

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Obama shaping a different world
 Historian finds 'profound' difference between President Obama's Nobel Peace Prize and those awarded to Presidents Wilson and Roosevelt

Oct. 9,
2009 --
An historian of politics and American institutions at Washington University in St. Louis says that there is a "profound" difference between the awarding of a Nobel Peace Prize to President Barack Obama and ones to Presidents Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson. And it has nothing to do with the fact that President Obama is only eight months into his first term as president and Presidents Roosevelt and Wilson were both near the end of their second terms when they received theirs, says Peter J. Kastor, Ph.D., an associate professor of history and of American culture studies in Arts & Sciences.

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'Deeply saddened by this event'
 WUSTL statement on incident at Holocaust Museum

June 10,
2009 -- Washington University is dismayed and shocked to learn that an attack was made today at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C. The university has a long-standing commitment to human rights and religious studies, including the Holocaust and Jewish studies, as well as being a sponsor of Holocaust lectures by experts from around the world.

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Happy Birthday Dear George
 George Washington Panel Discussion

Feb. 16,
2009 -- To commemorate the 277th anniversary of George Washington's birth, Washington University in St. Louis scholars will examine the legend versus the real man, and consider whether the philosophical and moral ambiguities he wrestled with during his lifetime have modern connotations.

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Innovative Entrepreneurship Education Award Named
 Course combining western civ with history of entrepreneurs is honored

Jan. 27,
2009 -- Steven C. Hause, Ph.D., senior scholar in the Humanities at Washington University in St. Louis, has received the Innovative Entrepreneurship Education Course Award from the U.S. Association of Small Business and Entrepreneurship for his course, "Economic History and Entrepreneurialism in Modern Western Civilization."

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Won't 'interfere' with states' issue
 Gun owners, sellers needn't worry with Obama as president, says Second Amendment expert

Jan. 5,
2009 --
An expert on the Second Amendment says that gun owners and sellers should not be sweating bullets over Barack Obama's election as president. Despite Obama's record on gun control, David T. Konig, Ph.D., a professor of history in Arts & Sciences and a professor of law at Washington University in St. Louis, says that the right of the people to keep and bear arms will not be an issue that Obama will address as president early in his term — if at all.

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Finding the Six out of Six Million Lost
 History, Family and Judaism

Oct. 30,
2008 -- Award-winning writer and critic, Daniel Mendelsohn, will give this year's annual Holocaust Memorial Lecture. His talk, "Finding 'The Lost': A Journey into the History, Family and Judaism," will focus on his quest to unearth the stories of his family members who perished during World War II. In his 2006 best-selling memoir, "The Lost: A Search for Six of Six Million" Mendelsohn tells the story of his grandfather's brother, who stayed behind in Ukraine and was killed in the Holocaust after his siblings had emigrated to America.

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Flashback to 1952?
 For all the talk of change, the candidates and campaigns are similar to elections throughout the years, says history and culture expert

Sept. 26,
2008 --
"These are unprecedented candidates in an unusual election year, but what's striking is how these candidates are positioning themselves and describing themselves in ways very similar to previous presidential candidates, and in ways that are very typical of their parties," says Peter Kastor, Ph.D., history and American culture studies professor at Washington University in St. Louis.

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Fighting in Georgia
 U.S. policy of 'overpromising' support for Georgia helped fuel Russian conflict, expert suggests

Aug. 12,
2008 --
Ambiguous U.S. policies toward emerging democracies in former Soviet states may have set the stage for the brutal military conflict that erupted this week between Russia and its neighboring Republic of Georgia, suggests James V. Wertsch, an expert on post-Soviet democracy movements at Washington University in St. Louis.

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"Celebrating Our Books, Recognizing Our Authors"
 Famed novelist Joyce Carol Oates to present keynote address Dec. 3

Nov. 20,
2007 --
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Joyce Carol Oates, one of America's most important and distinguished authors, three times nominated for the Nobel Prize for Literature, will deliver the keynote address, titled "The Writer's (Secret) Life: Woundedness, Rejection, and Inspiration," for "Celebrating Our Books, Recognizing Our Authors," Washington University's sixth annual faculty book colloquium.

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