UW News


May 29, 2003

David Thomas to give Public Health faculty lecture on contraceptives and cancer

Dr.


Project of the Year award for malaria research

An effort to test protein farnesyltransferase (PFT) inhibitors against malaria parasites has received the “Project of the Year Award” from the Medicines for Malaria Venture.


Medical students head out of town and into underserved areas for summer experiences

The School of Medicine’s Rural/Underserved Opportunities Program (R/UOP) will have a record number of participants as it enters its 14th year.


Mary Gates landscape project under way

A very visible part of campus will get a new look when a landscaping project now under way is completed.


Mystery Photo

Last week’s Mystery Photo was taken at the left entrance to the Snoqualmie Reading Room at the UW Tacoma library.


Wheels keep on turning for cycling-happy couple


This summer, UW staffers Maggie Williams and Eric Vigoren are taking a 3,500 mile trip.


Grad school staffer prepares for seventh year as commencement volunteer


Maybe it’s because she works in the graduate school that Barbara Buchmann has a thing about graduation.


Faculty Senate


The Faculty Council on Retirement, Insurance & Benefits (FCRIB) is responsible for “all matters of policy relating to faculty retirement, insurance and benefits” (UW Handbook, Vol II, and Sec 42-44).


Health Sciences News Briefs

Cosmetic surgery
UW Medical Center’s Cosmetic Surgery Center is presenting an informal seminar, “Recent Advances in Facial Cosmetic Surgery,” from 4 to 6 p.


Vice Provost Severson to speak

Dr.


Panel discussion focuses on looting in wartime

The newscasts are rife with stories of looting and destruction of cultural artifacts at the Iraq National Museum in Baghdad.


Results mixed in lung surgery study

Results of the largest study of bilateral lung volume reduction surgery (LVRS) to treat severe emphysema indicate that, on average, patients who undergo LVRS with medical therapy are more likely to function better after two years and do not face an increased risk of death compared to those who receive medical therapy only.


More people than ever living with HIV infection

Back in the ‘80s and early ‘90s, most people thought they knew what the face of AIDS looked like.


Memorial planned for law professor

A campus memorial will be held Tuesday, June 3, for Joan Fitzpatrick, the internationally known human rights expert and professor of law who died May 16.


Notices

Board of Regents
The University of Washington Board of Regents will hold a regular meeting at 1 p.


Staffer’s illustrations grace children’s book

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Digital Portfolio uses shared at forum

When a new tool called Portfolio was released last fall, Catalyst employees had some ideas about how it could be used, but they knew it might be put to all kinds of uses they hadn’t thought of in advance.


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SPJ HONORS: The UW’s Columns magazine and KUOW radio station did very well at the recent awards competition of Western Washington’s chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists.


School funding gets failing mark

School districts transfer millions of dollars each year from schools in poor neighborhoods to those with wealthier students and higher-paid teachers, a new study shows.


$8.6 million grant nearly doubles autism research at UW

Autism research at the University of Washington has received a major boost from an $8.6 million grant from the National Institutes of Health. The grant, which runs for five years, nearly doubles the research funding of the UW’s Autism Center, directed by psychology professor Geraldine Dawson.


May 27, 2003

System takes from poor schools and gives to the rich, study shows

School districts transfer millions of dollars each year from schools in poor neighborhoods to those with wealthier students and higher-paid teachers, a new study shows.


May 22, 2003

School of Music class to sing gospel May 30

A free concert on Friday, May 30 is the culmination of a new School of Music class in gospel music.


UWT has one student athlete, and that’s no bull

UW Tacoma’s first official athlete is a Husky who rides bulls.


Mystery Photo

Where are we? The photo above was taken somewhere at the UW, but not in Seattle.


Students get hands-on research experience on cruise

Students grabbed sediment, sieved for shrimp and viewed plankton with a video microscope during Puget Sound research cruises led by UW alumnus Jim Norris.


Doing, defining ‘good work’ is focus of class

What constitutes “good work?”

This is the central question explored in an innovative class offered by Britt Yamamoto, doctoral candidate in geography.


Aerosols’ effects could change current understanding of global climate change

Atmospheric aerosols, airborne particles that reflect the sun’s heat away from Earth and into space, are part of everyday life.


Study traces roots of violence in lives of murderers

Murder often begins at a terrifyingly early age.


K-12 teachers flock to UW classes on teaching writing

Writing and the teaching of writing are drawing record numbers of school teachers to classes and seminars here.


UW librarian swaps jobs, homes with British counterpart

If you’ve ever had the desire to live someone else’s life for a while, Janice Thomas has a message for you: It can be done.


Committee calls for more student writing, more coordinated writing programs

If recommendations of the Arts and Sciences Undergraduate Curriculum Writing Committee are accepted, students will be writing more and college writing programs will be more coordinated.


Physicist to lead UW oceanography, engineering laboratory

The manager of a multi-million dollar research program for the Office of Naval Research and an expert on using sound energy to “see” inside the world’s oceans has been named director of the University of Washington’s Applied Physics Laboratory, a center for research and teaching that last fiscal year brought in $43 million in grants and contracts.


UW researchers win award for research on groundbreaking class of anti-malarial drugs

The Medicines for Malaria Venture has awarded its Project of the Year Award to two researchers at the University of Washington, Dr. Wesley Van Voorhis, professor in the School of Medicine, and Dr. Michael Gelb, professor in the Department of Chemistry.


Past PNW climate not a good guide for future, researcher says

How global climate change may alter how we live in the Pacific Northwest will be discussed by University of Washington research scientist Nate Mantua Tuesday, May 27, 7 p.m., Kane Hall 120.


May 21, 2003

Budding biotechnology company takes UW business plan competition

Creators of a company that will broaden advances in genome science have won the $25,000 top prize at the University of Washington’s sixth annual business plan competition.


May 20, 2003

Low-dose diuretics are the most effective way to treat hypertension, according to analysis of 42 studies

An analysis of clinical trials involving more than 192,000 patients with hypertension shows that low-dose diuretics are more effective at preventing cardiovascular health problems than any other blood-pressure medication, according to University of Washington researchers and colleagues.


May 19, 2003

People only slightly more likely to die after episodes of stagnant air

People are only slightly more likely to die of respiratory and cardiovascular problems when the air is increasingly stagnant, according to research by University of Washington scientists that will be presented today at the annual meeting of the American Thoracic Society in Seattle.


May 15, 2003

Harborview and UWMC join response to terrorism drill

Harborview Medical Center, UW Medical Center, and several other Puget Sound area hospitals were among the participants this week in a national counter-terrorism drill.


Medical ethics and casualties

Dr.


Catterall selected for Bristol-Myers Squibb Award in neuroscience research

Dr.



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