UW News

The latest news from the UW


October 21, 2009

It takes two to tutor a sparrow

It may take a village to raise a child, and apparently it takes at least two adult birds to teach a young song sparrow how and what to sing.

Infant sucking habits may affect how baby talks

Pacifier, bottle, or finger sucking may hamper a child’s speech development if the habit goes on too long.

New University of Washington memorial honors alumni who hold the Congressional Medal of Honor

With eight Medal recipients, the UW has more such alumni than any other public university in the country except the service academies.

October 20, 2009

Depression in older cancer patients more effectively treated

Depression in older cancer patients is very common, and has debilitating effects on their quality of life both during and after treatment.

‘Playing French.’

The third annual Playing French Seattle festival of dramatic works will feature Romanian-born playwright Matei Visniec and also includes work by Georges Feydeau, Honore de Balzac and Samuel Beckett, all staged in French.

October 19, 2009

Research gives glimpse of tectonic history on Puget Sound-region fault zones

New research finds evidence that ancient earthquakes rased land at least 6 feet on the west edge of Washington state’s Puget Sound.

Picturing AYPE.

Join Nicolette Bromberg and John Stamets, author and photographer of Picturing the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition, a new book by UW Press with photos of the fair site then and now.

October 17, 2009

Home Movie Day.

A celebration of amateur films and filmmaking.

October 16, 2009

Savery Hall open house.

The departments of economics, philosophy and sociology invite the campus community to stop by and explore the newly renovated building.

Race and AYPE.

How did the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition reflect, reproduce and perhaps challenge prevailing notions of race and empire? “Race and Empire at the Fair: The Alaksa-Yukon-Pacific Exposition in Historical Perspectives” explores that question.

October 15, 2009

Combined Fund Volunteer: Mendez understands problems immigrants face

Editor’s note: Through the duration of the Combined Fund Drive campaign, University Week will spotlight members of the UW community who are personally involved with one of the 2,800 agencies supported by CFD funds.

UW Astrobiology Program to present lecture series ‘Life and the Universe’ through Nov. 17

The UW Astrobiology Program presents a series of lectures by renowned experts in celebration of the 400th anniversary of Galileo’s telescopic discoveries and the 150th anniversary of Darwin’s theory of evolution.

Streissguth garden is all in the family

By Catherine O’Donnell
News & Information


The Streissguth Gardens began when Daniel Streissguth and Ann Roth Pytkowicz fell in love.

Seaglider sets new underwater endurance and range records

A UW Seaglider operated for nine months and five days in the Pacific Ocean, an endurance record more than double what any other autonomous underwater-vehicle group has accomplished on a single mission.

What do research administrators talk about when they get together? A look at the ‘stage hands’ of academic research

When Lawrie Robertson worked as administrator of the Division of Public Health Sciences at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, he got to know a graduate student named Christopher Li.

Talk traces long journey of Japanese art treasure

Heather Blair, assistant professor of religious studies at Indiana University, will give a talk titled Sacred, Scrap, or Art? The Modern Career of Zao Gongen at 2:30 p.

Playing French Seattle to feature works by Feydeau, Balzac, Beckett and Romanian-born playwright Matei Visniec

The third annual Playing French Seattle festival of dramatic works will feature Romanian-born playwright Matei Visniec and also includes work by Georges Feydeau, Honoré de Balzac, and Samuel Beckett.

Open access to scholarship in the spotlight Oct. 20-22

The UW will celebrate Open Access Week Oct.

Official Notices

Board of Regents

The Board of Regents will hold a regular meeting Thursday, Oct.

Faculty artist Stephen Fissel to perform on bass trombone Oct. 19

UW faculty artist and Seattle Symphony Orchestra trombonist Stephen Fissel will step from the back of the orchestra to the front of the stage to present solo music for the bass trombone in a concert at 7:30 p.

UW breaks ground on nation’s largest molecular engineering building

UW leaders officially broke ground on a molecular engineering building on Friday, Oct.

Big chill: Experts discuss the last Ice Age in Oct. 18 event at the Burke

12,000 years ago residents of the Puget Sound lived in the coldest temperatures the region has ever known.

Jacob Lawrence Gallery presents work by Garvens

The Jacob Lawrence Gallery presents Devices: Works by Associate Professor Ellen Garvens now through Oct.

NASA shuttle astronaut, energy ‘smart grids,’ cyber-security talks the focus of College of Engineering fall lecture series

A space-walking astronaut, a pair of cyber-security experts and energy-saving “smart grids” will be topics for the College of Engineering’s fall lecture series, which this year it titled <A href="http://www.

Economic stimulus awards top $100 million, include funds for work in Latin America and with Native Americans

By Mary Guiden and Catherine O’Donnell
News & Information


The UW has passed the $100 million mark in economic stimulus awards.

At last – a soda-cup lid that’s compostable

UW Housing and Food Services is one step closer to reaching its goal of zero-waste with the introduction of the first compostable soda cup lid.

UW’s Carole Terry to perform at St. Mark’s Cathedral

Carole Terry, professor in the School of Music, will perform works by Felix and Fanny Mendelssohn and Schumann on the St.

UW oceanographer is a lead scientist in largest airborne survey of polar ice

By Sandra Hines
News & Information


During the next six years Operation Ice Bridge will use aircraft to conduct what NASA says is the largest airborne survey ever made of ice at the Earth’s polar regions.

Where are we?

The photo above was taken somewhere on campus.

An ‘accumulation’ of old cars — starring a 1937 Plymouth sedan

By Peter Kelley
University Week


Mike Harrell says he doesn’t collect cool old cars, exactly — it’s more that he accumulates them.

UW Medical Genetics Clinic celebrates 50th anniversary

By Mary Guiden
News and Community Relations


UW Medical Genetics Clinic faculty, administration and staff will celebrate the clinic’s 50th anniversary Nov.

A place in space for Praczukowski — help identify this week’s Lost and Found Film

Editor’s Note: The UW Audio Visual Services Materials Library has more than 1,200 reels of film from the late 1940s through the early 1970s, documenting life at the University through telecourses, commercial films and original productions.

What’s old is relevant again: Dances from the ’30s featured in Chamber Dance Company’s ‘The Shape of Dissent’

A homeless woman does not seem at first glance to be the perfect subject for a dance.

Inventor of the Year Awards honor work on cystic fibrosis drug

Drs.

UW Dental Alumni Association director gives son special gift

By Steve Steinberg
School of Dentistry


Randy Newquist took a little extra time off this summer, but he wasn’t slacking.

October 14, 2009

Tiny but adaptable wasp brains show ability to alter their architecture

For an animal that has a brain about the size of two grains of sand, a lot of plasticity seems to be packed into the head of the tropical paper wasp Polybia aequatorialis.

AYPE Exhibit Tours.

The last of three public tours of the Libraries Special Collections exhibit The Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition: When the World Came to Campus.

October 13, 2009

Presidential address.

UW President Mark A.

Sylvia Toran.

This solo piano recitalist’s career has taken her to Europe, South America, Australia and New Zealand.

October 12, 2009

Major improvements made in engineering heart repair patches from stem cells.

University of Washington researchers have succeeded in engineering human tissue patches free of some problems that have stymied stem-cell repair for damaged hearts.

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