UW News

The latest news from the UW


April 7, 2005

James Jiambalvo named dean of UW Business School

James Jiambalvo, a UW professor of accounting whose research includes audit decision-making, the relationships between stock prices and information, and earnings management, has been selected by UW President Mark Emmert as the new dean of the University of Washington Business School, subject to approval by the Board of Regents.

April 6, 2005

UW researchers identify potential therapeutic target for Huntington’s disease

Researchers studying yeast cells have identified a metabolic enzyme as a potential therapeutic target for treating Huntington’s disease, a fatal inherited neurodegenerative disorder for which there is currently no effective treatment.

UW Medical Center installs first volume CT scanner in the western United States

UW Medical Center has completed the first installation in the western United States of a next-generation volume computed tomography (VCT) scanner.

April 5, 2005

UW to dedicate collection of art by artists of color

The University of Washington and the Washington State Arts Commission’s Art in Public Places Program will dedicate a new collection of artworks by nine artists of color at 6 p.

Pairs of Seagliders set endurance records

Two ocean-diving gliders built at the University of Washington were retrieved late last month near the Hawaiian island of Kauai after setting a world record by traveling a quarter of the way across the Pacific Ocean.

April 1, 2005

UW study shows weight loss reduces markers of inflammation associated with increased risk of heart problems

In otherwise healthy obese women, weight loss is associated with significant decreases in biomarkers associated with cardiovascular risk, according to an article printed in the April 6 edition of the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism.

Selected local dentists in five-state region will join in UW research collaborative

The National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research (NIDCR), part of the National Institutes of Health, is awarding two seven-year research grants totaling $22 million to researchers in the University of Washington School of Dentistry.

UW tops national primary care medical school rankings for 12th straight year

The University of Washington again has been ranked first among primary care medical schools in the country, according to annual rankings of graduate and professional programs provided by U.

March 31, 2005

Dancers with and without disabilities to blend talents in innovative summer program

Most of us, when we think of a dancer, are likely to think of someone gliding across the stage with ease and grace.

Mystery Photo

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

When it comes to landscape, looks matter, rural residents say

Adding homes to a rural countryside, harvesting timber or building condos on a lake shore affects how an area looks, and that has become so important that growth management, sustainable forestry and other development plans now include mandates concerning changes to the “visual landscape.

Sylvan Theater undergoing needed restoration

Work in the Sylvan Theater, originally scheduled for last October, is now in full swing.

Missouri dean, Seattle native to head UW Graduate School

UW President Mark Emmert has selected Suzanne Trager Ortega, vice provost for advanced studies and dean of graduate school at the University of Missouri-Columbia, as dean and vice provost of the UW Graduate School, effective Aug.

New Kane collection spotlights artists of color

The UW and the Washington State Arts Commission’s Art in Public Places Program will dedicate a new collection of artworks by nine artists of color at 6 p.

Burke Museum to expand gallery space

The Burke Museum’s popular 2001 exhibit about the Antarctic voyage of Ernest Shackleton and his ship The Endurance was realistic for reasons both good and unfortunate, remembers Roxana Augusztiny, the museum’s interim director.

UW Tacoma formalizes commitment to transfer students

With the state poised to allow the first freshmen at UW Tacoma in 2007, a new agreement promising transfer students nearly three-quarters of UWT’s undergraduate seats has been signed by UW President Mark Emmert and representatives from the State Board for Community and Technical Colleges and the Higher Education Coordinating Board.

Summer Learning Guide available

The Work/Life Resource Center now has information about summer programs for school children of all ages.

Fish quotas may reduce discarding, study shows

Contradicting previous assumptions, new fisheries research shows that allocating catch among vessels reduces the amount of fish discarded at sea.

Birds and brains: Singing a similar tune

A pair of leading scientists who study songbirds as models for understanding the human brain and how humans acquire language say it’s time for the burgeoning field to begin singing a different tune and study a wider variety of species.

Forward into the past: Researchers study matter created in microsecond after Big Bang

Scientists trying to recreate conditions that existed just a few millionths of a second after the big bang that started the universe have run into a mysterious problem — some of the reactions they are getting don’t mesh with what they thought they were supposed to see.

Triple Door jazz event benefits history, jazz studies at UW

Celebrated pianist and composer, Marc Seales will be joined by fellow UW jazz and history faculty to explore how jazz has intimately reflected the African American experience through the years at 7:30 p.

Ice core ‘dipstick’ shows West Antarctic ice has thinned less than previously believed

Rising sea levels 20,000 years ago, as the last ice age was beginning to wane, often are attributed in part to melting in West Antarctica.

Chancellor of UW Bothell to step down

Warren W.

CareNet: One-stop shopping on UW benefits

Randi Shapiro, assistant director of the Work/Life office, was a little surprised herself when she saw all the UW support and benefit programs lined up together — even though listing them that way had been her idea in the first place.

Two budgets, different implications for UW


It’s a tale of two budgets.

Separate genes influence speed, accuracy in decoding written words in dyslexia

Researchers trying to tease out the genetic basis of dyslexia have discovered a location on chromosome 2 that may contain one or more genes that contribute to the reading disorder and make it difficult for people to rapidly pronounce pseudowords.

March 30, 2005

Immigration has become hallmark of America’s image at home and abroad

PHILADELPHIA — Even though the American government and people have not always embraced immigrants with open arms, the image of the United States as a land of opportunity and refuge has become the focal point of the nation’s identity at home and around the world, says the incoming president of the Population Association of America.

March 29, 2005

Chancellor of UW Bothell to step down

Warren W.

UW students win national, international awards

While the UW men’s basketball team was doing its part for national recognition, UW students were winning more than their share of prominent national and international awards and competitions on an unprecedented scale.

Continents, colleges converge at UW Global Business Challenge

Mitja Gorenak was born on the day the torch for the 1984 Winter Olympics in Sarajevo was carried through his birth city, Celje.

March 28, 2005

Economist finds that Cuba’s state-run baseball league doesn’t go to bat for players

On the brink of a U.

March 24, 2005

Fewer fish discarded after individual transferable quotas offered

Contradicting previous assumptions, new fisheries research shows that allocating catch among vessels reduces the amount of fish discarded at sea.

Researchers call for expanding the repertoire in studying birdsong

A pair of leading scientists who study songbirds as models for understanding the human brain and how humans acquire language say it’s time for the burgeoning field to begin singing a different tune and study a wider variety of species.

March 23, 2005

Ice core ‘dipstick’ indicates West Antarctic ice has thinned less than believed

Rising sea levels 20,000 years ago, as the last ice age was beginning to wane, often are attributed in part to melting in West Antarctica.

March 21, 2005

Exhibit of emerging architectural ideas offers ‘glimpse of future’

WHAT: “Headlines: Emerging Architectural Ideas.

Exotic physics finds black holes could be most ‘perfect,’ low-viscosity fluid

In three spatial dimensions, it is a close relative of the quark-gluon plasma, the super-hot state of matter that hasn’t existed since the tiniest fraction of a second after the big bang that started the universe.

Pregnant women face risk after motor vehicle crashes regardless of the presence of injuries

Pregnant women who are hospitalized following motor vehicle crashes are at increased risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes, even if they are not seriously injured or not injured at all.

March 18, 2005

Suzanne Trager Ortega selected as dean of the UW Graduate School

University of Washington President Mark Emmert has selected Suzanne Trager Ortega, vice provost for advanced studies and dean of graduate school at the University of Missouri-Columbia, as dean and vice provost of the UW Graduate School, effective Aug.

March 16, 2005

UW alum first recipient of award for outstanding achievements in biomaterials

A University of Washington alumnus who invented more than 30 biomedical devices, including a shunt that made kidney dialysis practical, has been named the inaugural recipient of the Northwest Pioneers of Biomaterials and Medical Devices Award.

Researchers find evidence of dark energy in our galactic neighborhood

Astrophysicists in recent years have found evidence for a force they call dark energy in observations from the farthest reaches of the universe, billions of light years away.

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