UW News

The latest news from the UW


June 21, 2007

Spisso appointed UW Medicine clinical operations officer

Johnese Spisso, chief operating officer for Harborview Medical Center, has been appointed to the new position of clinical operations officer (COO) for UW Medicine and vice president for medical affairs (VPMA) for the UW, effective July 1.

Task force promotes global citizenship

“UW undergraduates are global citizens.

June 18, 2007

UW president forms work group to consider new campus

The University of Washington has appointed a 16-member work group to provide advice on an appropriate location, size of student body and degree programs for a UW campus to be located in Snohomish, Island or Skagit county.

CEOs reap financial benefits from mergers regardless of stock performance

Following an acquisition of another company, chief executive officers’ compensation levels usually increase, even when the purchase turns out to be unprofitable, according to researchers at the University of Washington and University of British Columbia.

June 13, 2007

Deaf computing academy welcomes first participants in national program

WHAT: The 2007 Summer Academy for Advancing Deaf & Hard of Hearing in Computing, a nine-week academy teaching talented students the fundamentals of computer science and aimed at boosting their numbers in the field.

June 12, 2007

University of Washington researchers play leading role in major study of human genome function

Scientists at the University of Washington and other members of an international consortium have completed a multi-year research effort that dramatically boosts understanding of how the human genome functions.

When it comes to delinquency boys are exposed to more risk, less protection

Researchers trying to understand why high school-age boys are involved in serious delinquency more often than girls have found that males are exposed to higher levels of risk factors and lower amounts of protective factors.

National concrete canoe races come to Seattle

WHAT: 20th Annual American Society of Civil Engineers National Concrete Canoe Competition


WHO: 700 civil engineering students from 22 of the nation’s top schools whose teams won their regional championships


WHEN: Thursday, June 14, and Saturday, June 16


WHERE: University of Washington Seattle campus and Lake Sammamish


DETAILS: On Thursday the teams will display their canoes, weigh the boats and “swamp” them underwater in a tank to prove their buoyancy in the UW’s Red Square.

June 11, 2007

The woes of Kilimanjaro: Don’t blame global warming

The “snows” of Africa’s Mount Kilimanjaro inspired the title of an iconic American short story, but now its dwindling icecap is being cited as proof for human-induced global warming.

June 7, 2007

Sheila Edwards Lange selected as vice president for minority affairs and vice provost for diversity

University of Washington President Mark A.

University of Washington to receive art and furniture from Safeco Insurance



Early next year, when the University of Washington moves into the property recently acquired from Safeco Corp.

High self-esteem may be culturally universal, international study shows

The notion that East Asians, Japanese in particular, are self-effacing and have low self-esteem compared to Americans may well describe the surface view of East Asian personality, but misses the picture revealed by recently developed measures of self-esteem, according to a new study by a team of researchers from the United States, China and Japan.

June 5, 2007

Hitchin’ a ride: Stray penguins probably reached northern waters by fishing boat

Guy Demmert got quite a surprise when he hauled a fishing net into his boat off the coast of southeast Alaska in July 2002.

Ports could hasten freight traffic by doubling up on crane trips

A massive crane reaches down 25 stories, picks up a container filled with Asian goods, and sets it on a truck for delivery.

May 31, 2007

UW signs on to Designated Suppliers Program of anti-sweatshop coalition

The University of Washington has become a signatory to the Designated Suppliers Program of the Worker Rights Consortium, which works to assure that all university-licensed apparel is made in factories meeting specific criteria regarding fair labor practices.

Shingles pain is subject of lecture June 19

Dr.

UW Police launch night walk

The UW Police Department launched a new program this week to provide uniformed escorts for faculty, staff and students to and from buildings, from parking lots and within close proximity of the campus.

Home Improvement Fair set

Has spring cleaning got you thinking of making changes to your home? Maybe a bit of remodeling, or some new landscaping? UW Benefits & Work/Life, in partnership with Home Street Bank, is ready to help with its Home Improvement Fair.

Mystery photo

Where are we? The photo above was taken somewhere on campus.

Official notices

Board of Regents

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

White Center Heights: UW landscape architecture team creates gathering space for neighborhood

Soft, wet concrete slid into the curving channel like cake batter into a pan, and teams from the UW and King County smoothed it into place.

A long way from recovery: Staffer working on Gulf Coast finds continuing devastation from hurricane

Editor’s Note: News & Information staffer Vince Stricherz traveled to the Gulf Coast last week to work with Habitat for Humanity.

Kevin Desouza: Small office, big impact

Clearly, Kevin Desouza is not much on décor.

Faculty Senate: Planning, budgeting panel takes on big issues

As we all know, the Faculty Senate is the mechanism by which faculty govern themselves and share the governance of the University with the administration.

Are babies like birds — learning by listening in?

Long before the National Security Agency began eavesdropping on the phone calls of Americans, young song sparrows were listening to and learning the tunes sung by their neighbors.

Concrete floats at annual races

By Hannah Hickey

News & Information

Don’t tell these paddlers that concrete isn’t the best material for building boats.

She helps students reach their dreams

Mona Pitre-Collins once swore she would never be a teacher like most of the members of her family.

Etc: campus news and notes

RUNNING THE NUMBERS: You’ve heard the expression “trash into treasure” applied to recycling, but UW Recycling probably hadn’t thought of its trash as being the inspiration for art.

Time flies as UW artist has fun with pig

For Jennifer Carroll, happiness is a gold pig .

Giving back: Faculty, staff and retirees contribute to the UW out of their values

Each faculty, staff or retiree gift to the UW is a story of relationships — of how people choose to work at the UW because it reflects their values, and how those values are carried out not just in their working days but in the gifts they choose to make.

Alzheimer’s disease Public Forum set for June 13

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Commencements slated June 8-10

Mark A.

June features Foege, life sciences, biostatistics, and brain injury

Rushmer Lecture

Dr.

UWMC wins national environmental award

Gary Butrymowicz has empty pop cans in his office.

Rotary-UW ‘Saving Lives’ Partnership: Creative collaboration to address rural poverty

The UW has entered into a partnership with Rotary International to fast-track dissemination of interventions and technologies to improve quality of life to those in greatest need throughout the world.

Scientists to catalog differences in human genome

A major new effort to uncover the medium- and large-scale genetic differences within the human species may soon reveal DNA sequences that contribute to a wide range of diseases, according to a paper by Evan Eichler, UW associate professor of genome sciences, and 17 colleagues published in the May 10 issue of Nature.

Lipsky honored for amputation prevention efforts

Dr.

Integrative health program application deadline is June 7

The UW’s Faculty Integrative Health Program is accepting applications for the upcoming school year.

2007-08 Magnuson Scholars announced: Current scholars at work on array of projects

Six graduate students, one from each UW health sciences school, have been named as Magnuson Scholars for the 2007-08 academic year.

Elise Saba

Elise Saba, who will be receiving a bachelor’s degree in English, has been awarded a President’s Medal for scholarship as a transfer student — an award given to a student who entered the UW with at least 60 transfer credits from a Washington community college.

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