UW News


July 24, 2003

Carnegie grant ushers in new era for teacher preparation at UW

The UW’s College of Education and College of Arts and Sciences were awarded a $5 million grant and designated one of 11 “Teachers for a New Era” schools today.


Students aim to improve U-District

While Seattle city officials considered the lease lid, UW students worked to enhance the neighborhood surrounding their campus.


Summer Arts Festival won’t return

The UW Summer Arts Festival, which has graced the campus each July for the past four years, will not be returning next year.


July 23, 2003

Hydrothermal vent systems could have persisted millions of years, incubated life

The staying power of seafloor hydrothermal vent systems like the bizarre Lost City vent field is one reason they also may have been incubators of Earth’s earliest life, scientists report in a paper published in the July 25 issue of Science.


July 18, 2003

Homestake collaboration completes new underground lab design

The group that proposed creating a National Underground Science and Engineering Laboratory at a closed South Dakota gold mine has completed a detailed engineering plan for the conversion, replacing the initial proposal sent to the National Science Foundation two years ago.


July 17, 2003

UW Medical Center joins top 10 among nation’s Best Hospitals

University of Washington Medical Center has achieved a top 10 ranking among the premier hospitals in the country, according to U.S.News & World Report’s 2003 annual guide to “America’s Best Hospitals,” which will be updated in its July 28 issue, available July 21.


Research shows link between child and parental mental-health problems

Research from the Univerity of Washington’s Washington Kids Count project shows the emotional well-being of Washington children is strongly linked to their parents’ mental health. In turn, parents’ mental health is profoundly sensitive to their children’s emotions and behavior.


July 14, 2003

Social interaction plays key role in how infants learn language, studies show

Social interaction apparently plays a far more important role in how infants learn language than previously believed, according to three related studies conducted by researchers at the University of Washington’s Center for Mind, Brain & Learning (CMBL).


July 10, 2003

‘Practicing’ dentistry

This summer, the School of Dentistry is again teaming up with the Washington Dental Service Foundation (WDSF) to conduct dental camps for junior high school students from across the state.


Students work to restore damaged landscapes

This year, as players kicked the first balls around Grass Lawn Park’s $1.


Search for sculpture ends with charming find in ‘back yard’

The UW has commissioned a major sculptural work for the area north of Parrington Hall.


Circles have enriched teaching, research on Bothell campus

To strengthen our capacities for interdisciplinary work at the UW Bothell campus, 33 faculty and academic staff joined teaching and research circles during the 2002-03 academic year.


Computer Science & Engineering begins move to new building

The UW’s Department of Computer Science & Engineering has started to move across campus into the department’s new building — a transition that will take one of the nation’s top 10 computer science programs to a state-of-the-art facility where it can expand on its tradition of leadership.


Mystery Photo

Last issue’s answer.


Virology Division develops new assay for West Nile virus

Researchers and doctors in the Northwest who wonder if a blood or tissue sample has West Nile virus will no longer have to send samples to the East Coast for testing.


UW Medicine system adjusts to changes in national duty-hours standards for medical residents

Residency training programs across the nation have undergone significant changes in residents’ duty hours to comply with new accreditation standards.


Biomedical Research Integrity series begins July 22

The 2003 Biomedical Research Integrity Series, an annual summer offering that includes lectures and discussion groups, will begin on Tuesday, July 22.


Notices

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


Student, faculty view on technology often differs, study shows

The first-ever study at the UW to investigate perceptions, uses and expectations of educational technology shows the challenges ahead in meeting the desires of students and engaging more faculty.


Seismology getting to know hydrology

Through many decades, stories about earthquakes raising or lowering water levels in wells, lakes and streams have become the stuff of folklore.


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RESEARCH STAR: UW’s Research-Channel will be featured in an Internet2 Virtual Briefing from 10 to 11:30 a.


Annual celebration of the arts covers wide ‘Sphere’

The Summer Arts Festival returns to campus July 16–19, with its many events built around the theme of “Spheres.


Online test shows strong racial bias

Given only a fraction of a second to respond to images of men popping out from behind a garbage dumpster, people were more likely to shoot blacks than whites, even when the men were holding a harmless object such as a flashlight rather than a gun.


Totem pole carver at the Burke

On selected Saturdays this summer, Tlingit carver Stephen Jackson will demonstrate the art of totem pole carving within the temporary exhibition, Out of the Silence: The Enduring Power of Totem Poles.


UW Tacoma to destroy building, preserve heritage

The UW, Tacoma has announced plans to pull down what remains of the historic Japanese Language School building and hopes the news of this decision will generate ideas for how best to preserve the heritage of the school, which with Tacoma’s Japan Town became a casualty of World War II.


July 8, 2003

Blacks more likely to be shot than whites even when holding harmless objects

Given only a fraction of a second to respond to images of men popping out from behind a garbage Dumpster, people were more likely to shoot blacks than whites, even when the men were holding a harmless object such as a flashlight rather than a gun.


Youth get opportunity to ‘practice dentistry’ at UW Dental Camp

This summer, the University of Washington School of Dentistry will again team up with the Washington Dental Service Foundation (WDSF) to conduct dental camps for junior high school students from across the state.


July 3, 2003

UW Computer Science & Engineering begins move to new home

The University of Washington’s Department of Computer Science & Engineering has started to move across campus into the department’s new building.


UW licenses two technologies for development by Teranode Corp.

A private technology start-up company, Teranode Corp. of Seattle, has licensed two technologies developed at the University of Washington: Labscape, which promises to revolutionize how data is collected and analyzed in laboratories, and JSim, which offers cutting-edge simulations of biological systems.


July 2, 2003

Booster Seat Coupons Help young passengers during summer drives

To make the summer a safer time for families with young children, the Washington State Booster Seat Coalition is now offering discount coupons for Cosco booster seats being sold at Target Stores throughout the state.


July 1, 2003

Historic Japanese Language School building could be leveled in late fall

The University of Washington, Tacoma has announced plans to pull down what remains of the historic Japanese Language School building and hopes the news of this decision will generate ideas for how best to preserve the heritage of the school, which with Tacoma’s Japan Town became a casualty of World War II.


June 26, 2003

Artist in Residence: UW grad at Henry this summer

Starting next week, members of the campus community will have the opportunity to drop in on an artist at work.


Mystery Photo





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Oils from fatty fish supported as intervention to reduce risk of sudden cardiac death

An editorial in the June 3 issue of Circulation calls attention to the clinical implications of research related to n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs), myocardial vulnerability, and sudden cardiac death.


Belding Scribner Memorial service Monday, June 30

A memorial service to celebrate the life of Dr.


Set change gets applause as student’s design debuts

So familiar is the amateur theatrical production, that it’s practically an American rite of passage for young schoolchildren.


Black named principal lecturer

Albert W.


Health Sciences News Briefs

Brentnall “almost famous”
Dr.


Public Health holds celebration to mark rise in U.S. News & World Report rankings

The UW School of Public Health and Community Medicine held an all-school celebration event this spring to mark its rise, from fifth to fourth, in the rankings of the 33 accredited schools of public health by U.


New therapy for blunt trauma victims being tested at Harborview

Hypertonic resuscitation – a concentrated intravenous (IV) dose of saline and dextran, a sugar solution – has the potential to help survivors of blunt trauma by improving blood flow and delivery of oxygen to the injured brain while decreasing high pressure in the brain, a common problem for patients with brain injury.



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