UW News
The latest news from the UW
November 10, 2005
Annual drive benefits U District Food Bank
The “Hungry for the Holidays” Food Drive to benefit the University District Food Bank is in full swing on campus.
New speech pathology degree announced
The UW announced last week that starting fall 2006, it will offer a new Master of Science in Medical Speech-Language Pathology degree.
Depression and diabetes: A fatal mix
Type 2 diabetes and depression can be a fatal mix.
Engineering dean candidates to visit
Campus interviews for the next dean of the College of Engineering have been scheduled.
Sex and violence in 1906: UW prof writes of ‘vigilante newspapers’
Saturation media coverage of strange rituals, weird attire and sexual eccentricities put the case in the public spotlight for weeks on end.
Mystery Photo
Where are we? The photo above was taken somewhere on campus.
UWT prof to help design AIDS policy
Most people think of HIV/AIDS as a young person’s disease.
Combined Fund Drive
Editor’s Note: Through the Combined Fund Drive, which runs until Nov.
Don Quixote: World’s most famous unread book gets 400 year celebration
Miguel de Cervantes’ Don Quixote is one of those books that everybody has heard of but almost nobody has read.
Doctoral programs to get global look
The UW has convened a group of international innovators in doctoral education to explore the forces that are driving change around the globe and the forms that innovation is taking.
Etc.: Campus news & notes
PREMIER COURSEWARE: A group of faculty and students in the UW’s College of Engineering has won an award for an interactive CD tutorial the team created to use in an engineering class.
If babies follow gaze early, language learning improved
Infants begin pulling off an amazing feat sometime in the final three months of their first year of life.
November 9, 2005
When it comes to babies learning language, the eyes have it
Infants begin pulling off an amazing feat sometime in the final three months of their first year of life.
November 4, 2005
State ballot measures draw record amounts of cash
Record amounts of cash have gone to statewide ballot initiatives this year in Washington, according to data compiled by a student research team at the University of Washington.
November 3, 2005
Read all about it: Campus crime down in 2004
The University Police have released their breakdown of campus crime statistics for the calendar year 2004, and have made the report available to all online.
Mystery Photo
Where are we? The photo above was taken somewhere on campus.
Long-term Care Insurance Workshop Nov. 17
The University of Washington Retirement Association (UWRA) offers its next Long-term Care Insurance Workshop from 5 to 7 p.
Engineering dean candidate to visit Nov. 7
The campus community is invited to meet with the first candidate to visit, Matthew O’Donnell, Jerry W.
Homecoming events on tap this weekend
The UW Alumni Association is sponsoring a Homecoming Rally beginning at 8 p.
Youth explore possibilities of ocean and marine sciences
Pacific Northwest eighth- and ninth-graders identified by teachers as being at or above the 95th percentile through national standardized testing — and with an interest in marine and ocean sciences — attended a day of exploration Oct.
Policymakers, former foster kids paired in UW-run ‘Walk a Mile’ program
A pilot project in participatory democracy will begin later this month in King County, pairing local policymakers with young adults who were once in foster care and are now existing on minimum-wage incomes.
Paris Piano Trio plays Meany
Meany Hall’s International Chamber Music Series continues with a program of classical and romantic music performed by the Paris Piano Trio at 8 p.
Opera composer on hand for opening of UW’s “Tartuffe”
When the UW School of Music opens the comic opera Tartuffe on Friday, Nov.
Faculty, staff to be honored at fund-raising breakfast
Community leaders and several UW faculty and staff who promoted diversity at the University and in the community will be honored when the UW Alumni Association and the Multicultural Alumni Partnership hold the 11th annual Bridging the Gap Breakfast on Saturday, Nov.
‘Life as we do not know it’: UW prof wants to expand tree of life
What would you call an alien if you encountered it on the street tomorrow? What if that alien didn’t come from another world but rather was created in a laboratory right here on Earth and functioned differently from other Earth life?
Either way, Peter Ward has the beginnings of an answer.
New information number to be used for severe weather, other emergencies
The chill in the air means it’s time to become familiar with the University’s inclement weather and suspended operations policies and the new numbers to call for the latest information on possible disruption of operations.
English lessons on the job: Program helps non-native speakers
What if you had to work all day in a language not your own? How would you feel if, despite education in your native tongue, you couldn’t fully grasp the nuances of the language around you each work day?
Such is the case for a number of UW employees who are not native speakers of English, from maintenance crews to research fellows.
10 UW profs honored as Fellows of AAAS
Ten UW faculty members have been awarded the distinction of Fellows of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, or AAAS.
November 1, 2005
Walk a Mile pairs King County policymakers with former foster youth
A pilot project in participatory democracy will begin later this month in King County, pairing local policymakers with young adults who were once in foster care and are now existing on minimum-wage incomes.
October 31, 2005
New book expands biological classifications to account for ‘alien’ life
What would you call an alien if you encountered it on the street tomorrow? What if that alien didn’t come from another world but rather was created in a laboratory right here on Earth and functioned differently from other Earth life?
Either way, Peter Ward has the beginnings of an answer.
October 28, 2005
Effects from global warming tops agenda
The level and breadth of interest in the subject of climate change and its effects in Washington state was evidenced Thursday as a capacity crowd of more than 600 attended “The Future Ain’t What It Used to Be: Planning for Climate Disruption,” sponsored by King County and various state agencies.
October 27, 2005
Motivation expert to give teaching forum Nov. 3
Marilla Svinicki, associate professor in the Department of Educational Psychology at the University of Texas at Austin, will be the speaker at the Quarterly Forum on Teaching and Learning, scheduled for 2 p.
Long-term Care Insurance Workshop Nov. 17
The University of Washington Retirement Association (UWRA) offers its next Long-term Care Insurance Workshop from 5 to 7 p.
Tacoma businessman to serve as regent
Gov.
Provost plans town meeting
Provost Phyllis Wise will hold her first Town Meeting with the University community from 3:30 to 5 p.
Notices
ACADEMIC OPPORTUNITIES
Foreign Language and Area Studies (FLAS) Fellowship Information Sessions
Monday, November 7, 4:30–5:50 p.Mystery Photo
Where are we? The photo above was taken somewhere on campus.
A labor of love: UW Press turns 85
To publish academic and scholarly writing and research is to swim against an ever-growing tide of pop celebrity blather, exploitive tell-alls and diet crazes.
UW prof: Comic book hero
When the press picks up on research a university professor is doing, he or she can win a bit of notoriety, but it’s a rare day that a professor winds up in a comic strip.
UW scientists find growth control organ
Many baffled parents have wondered whether their teenagers would ever stop growing.
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