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The latest news from the UW

March 7, 2002

Notices

Academic Opportunities




ADAI research grants available




The Alcohol & Drug Abuse Institute invites applications from University faculty for its Small Grants Research Awards.

Summer chum return to Big Beef Creek in numbers not seen since ’70s

For the first time in decades hundreds of summer chum returned to Big Beef Creek Fish Research Station last fall. This follows five years of work to re-establish the run, an effort involving the UW, Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the citizens of the Hood Canal Salmon Enhancement Group.

March 6, 2002

New center to build on and develop genetic and protein technology to fight deadly microbial pathogens

The University of Washington School of Medicine has established the Keck Center for Functional, Structural, and Chemical Genomics of Microbial Pathogens. The Keck Center will use state-of-the-art technology to mount an assault on some of the most dangerous and deadly infections on earth.

Notices



ACADEMIC OPPORTUNITIES




ADAI research grants available


The Alcohol & Drug Abuse Institute invites applications from University faculty for its Small Grants Research Awards.

More precise solar neutrino production figure determined by UW scientists

Scientists working at huge underground laboratories in Japan and Canada have made major strides in understanding neutrinos during the last three years. Now a team working with a particle accelerator at the University of Washington has added another significant finding, determining with the greatest precision yet just how many energetic neutrinos are generated in the sun’s nuclear furnace.

February 25, 2002

Alaskan waters growing hospitable to sharks while seals and sea lions decline

University of Washington professor of fisheries and aquatic sciences Vince Gallucci has studied shark population dynamics for more than a decade. During the American Association for the Advancement of Science meeting in Boston earlier this month, Gallucci presented findings during the session “Not Enough Sea Lions, Too Many Sharks: Global Warming Signal?”