UW News

The latest news from the UW


February 4, 2000

Volcanos, oceans and life in our solar system subjects of Feb. 15 lecture

Free lecture “Volcanos, Oceans and Life in Our Solar System: A Fiber-Optic Telescope to Inner Space” by University of Washington oceanographer John Delaney.

February 3, 2000

Father, daughter collaborate on book to promote bioliteracy

As scientists who are fascinated by biology and enjoy communicating its wonders, David and Ilona Barash are concerned that many people don’t know their DNA and RNA from their ABCs.

February 2, 2000

UW survey shows residents support trade, distrust the WTO

The World Trade Organization will never gain broad public acceptance until it becomes much more open and democratic, a new University of Washington opinion survey indicates.

February 1, 2000

A family’s legacy to Persian studies

This is a story about a man who loved poetry, his three sons who graduated from the University of Washington, and the bonds that tie a community to a university. The story will be retold on Feb. 12 in the introduction to the second annual Afrassiabi Memorial Lecture, which honors Hooshang Afrassiabi, a leader of the local Iranian community who died two years ago.

Harborview is first hospital to dispense methadone through pharmacy

A major study on heroin addiction treatment enters an important phase
Feb. 1, as Harborview Medical Center becomes the first health-care facility in the country to dispense methadone through a pharmacy for patients recovering from heroin addiction.

January 28, 2000

UW study gauges growing economic clout of Washington’s African American businesses and consumers

African Americans have become an increasingly vital force in Washington’s economy, spending more than $2 billion annually and owning more than 6,600 businesses, according to a new University of Washington report.

January 25, 2000

UW explores aftermath of ‘Battle for Seattle’ and future of WTO

As World Trade Organization delegates left Seattle in a cloud of tear gas and disappointment, University of Washington scholars began studying and debating the outcome and its implications for the future.

January 24, 2000

Hailey and Sandpoint, Idaho; and Soldotna, Alaska; each welcome UW medical students for six months of training in rural practice

Four University of Washington (UW) third-year medical students have started their six-month WWAMI Rural Integrated Training Experience (WRITE) in three rural towns.

Women’s problems with alcohol have far-reaching consequences

Women who drink heavily are significantly more likely than their male counterparts to suffer from liver disease, depression, psychological distress, and recent physical, emotional or sexual abuse, according to a study by researchers at Harborview Medical Center published in the January 2000 issue of the Journal of Trauma.

January 20, 2000

Pediatric training unit marks 25th anniversary in Spokane

The University of Washington (UW) School of Medicine’s pediatric training unit in Spokane will be honored Jan. 24 for more than a quarter century of teaching UW medical students and pediatric residents about children’s health care.

Independent audits reveal no major problems

Independent audits of the UW for the year ended June 30, 1999, presented recently to the Board of Regents, show a remarkable lack of major problems for a large, complex and highly decentralized institution.

Doctors perform region’s first nerve graft to preserve erectile function

University of Washington surgeons performed the region’s first two operations of their kind yesterday to help men avoid their greatest fear about prostate cancer surgery: impotence.

January 19, 2000

Jon Jory joins faculty at UW School of Drama

Jon Jory, producing director at the acclaimed Actors Theatre of Louisville, has been appointed to the faculty of the nationally renowned University of Washington School of Drama, pending final approval by the Board of Regents on January 21.

UW surgeon performs region’s first surgery to clear lung arteries

The first surgery of its kind in the region, performed at University of Washington Medical Center, has given a once very ill 48-year-old Alaska man, who faced a lung transplant and/or potentially heart failure, a normal life expectancy and the hope of living a normal life.

University of Washington president outlines strategies for coping with loss of affirmative action

Richard L. McCormick, in a speech to be delivered Jan. 20 to the Association of American Colleges and Universities at its annual meeting at the Grand Hyatt Hotel in Washington, D.C., outlines the steps that the university is taking to cope with the passage in November 1998 of Initiative 200, which prohibited the use of race or ethnicity as factors in college admissions

Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist with a classical passion leaves $2.9 million to UW classics department

Meg Greenfield’s lifelong passion for classical languages and literature did not end when the former Washington Post editorial page editor and Pulitzer Prize winner died last May. The journalist has left a bequest valued at about $2.9 million to the University of Washington’s department of classics.

January 18, 2000

MEDIA ADVISORY: Lunar eclipse will be spectacular in Northwest – if weather cooperates

The first total lunar eclipse in more than two years will occur Thursday and, barring cloudy skies, Northwest residents should get some spectacular views.

100 families from variety of racial, ethnic backgrounds needed for study exploring origins of aggressive behavior in children

University of Washington researchers trying to understand the roots and continuity of aggressive behavior in children are looking for 100 families in the greater Seattle area to participate in a new study.

We are not alone – or are we?

A new book by two University of Washington scientists contends that, contrary to popular thought, we just might be alone and Earth might be unique, if not in the universe at least in this celestial neighborhood.

January 14, 2000

Space Grant resource center provides tools for K-12 science teachers

The Washington NASA Space Grant Consortium’s recent move into new offices could be profitable for K-12 teachers throughout the Northwest, giving them easy access to a wealth of science teaching materials produced by the nation’s space agency.

January 13, 2000

Rapid size change in introduced species indicates it is evolving as it invades North America

The Old World fruit fly has exhibited one of fastest evolutionary changes ever recorded.

Runstads give $1 million to UW real estate program

Jon and Judy Runstad have pledged $1 million to establish the H. Jon and Judith M. Runstad Endowment for Excellence in Real Estate at the University of Washington. Income from the endowment will support a comprehensive new real estate program in the College of Architecture and Urban Planning.

Jimmy Carter to address human rights and global progress

Jimmy Carter will address a Seattle audience on Wednesday (Jan. 19) using an unconventional format in which a University of Washington professor engages the former president in a conversation about global progress.

“Millennium Twins” being transferred from UW Medical Center to Wenatchee hospital

Santos and Orlando Villafuerte-Mora, twins born at University of Washington Medical Center in two different centuries, are scheduled to be transferred Friday by ambulance to Central Washington Hospital in Wenatchee.

January 12, 2000

Astronomers use Hubble telescope to further Hubble’s research

Seventy-five years after Edwin Hubble demonstrated that the universe extended beyond the Milky Way, three University of Washington astronomers using the telescope that bears his name have made some surprising discoveries about one object of his research.

You were cooked in a star – UW faculty lecture will explain how

To paraphrase an old car ad, “This is not your father’s universe.

January 11, 2000

UW’s network of neighborhood clinics earns a perfect score from national accrediting organization

The University of Washington Physicians Neighborhood Clinics are celebrating a coup. The network of neighborhood clinics received an exceptional score of 100 percent in an accreditation survey performed by the Accreditation Association for Ambulatory Health Care (AAAHC).

January 10, 2000

Study provides information for circumcision decision

Parents of newborn boys have better knowledge about the possible risks of circumcision from a new study by doctors at the University of Washington.

January 7, 2000

Russian reform leader to assess nation at crossroads: Yeltsin, elections and Chechnya

Yegor Gaidar, one of the principal architects of Russia’s painful transition from communism, will assess his country’s current situation in a speech Tuesday, Jan. 18, at the University of Washington.

81-year-old recovers from kidney surgery quickly, thanks to new technique

Frank Keyser, 81, really ought to be bedridden right now. But thanks to a new surgical technique, he’s able to visit his beloved spaniel Mugsy’s kennel in his Bremerton yard.

January 6, 2000

UW hires Crew as executive director of new K-12 leadership institute

Rudy Crew, who stepped down Wednesday after four years as chancellor of New York public schools, will become executive director of the University of Washington’s new Institute for K-12 Leadership effective Feb. 1.

HIV virus can alter the way genes function within days of exposure

According to a University of Washington study published in the January 2000 issue of Virology, genes involved in T-cell signaling, protein trafficking and transcriptional regulation were among the genes that displayed functional changes within three days of exposure to the HIV virus.

January 4, 2000

LEARN Clinic offers comprehensive evaluations of children having problems in school

To help children and their parents deal with such situations, the newly created LEARN Clinic was established at the UW to provide comprehensive learning and behavioral assessments for children who are experiencing difficulties in school or whose parents are considering changing their school placement.

Tribute to Martin Luther King, Jr. planned at UW Health Sciences Center

An annual University of Washington tribute to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. will take place from 11:30 a.m. to 1:15 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 13, in the lobby of the Warren G. Magnuson Health Sciences Center, 1959 N.E. Pacific, Seattle.

Algal food quality, not quantity, critical factor in healthy lake ecosystems

Phytoplankton high in a certain essential fatty acid may be a major factor in supporting thriving fish populations and clear water in lake ecosystems, according to researchers in California and Washington.

January 3, 2000

Do insurance policies discourage doctors from counseling patients on alcoholism?

Concerns about the legal right of insurance companies to deny patients coverage for injuries due to alcohol use may be discouraging physicians from screening and counseling their patients on the risks of alcoholism, according to a study by physicians at Harborview Medical Center to be published in the January 2000 issue of the Journal of Trauma.

December 28, 1999

UW Academic Medical Center affiliates with First Choice Health Network

The University of Washington Academic Medical Center has signed a participation agreement with First Choice Health Network, Inc., which promises to significantly improve access to health care for thousands of Washington residents.

December 23, 1999

Dental students study in a classroom of the future

University of Washington dental students are studying in a modified laboratory this year that may show us what many dental classrooms will look like someday.

December 22, 1999

One year later: Young recipient of Christmas Eve heart transplant doing well

By last year at this time, young Nicole Ehli of Puyallup had spent two long months at University of Washington Medical Center, hospitalized as she waited for a donor heart. Nicole’s wait ended last Christmas Eve, when a donor heart became available

December 17, 1999

New research may help predict when an individual’s HIV infection will progress to clinical AIDS

Newly published research led by University of Washington scientists could one day lead to a laboratory test to predict when people infected with human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) are likely to progress to symptomatic AIDS.

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