UW News


November 29, 2001

Mystery photo

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


November 28, 2001

Treatment reduces risk of heart attack by 60 to 90 percent, reverses arterial plaque buildup; antioxidant vitamins diminish beneficial effect

Treatment with a combination of statin and niacin can slash the risk of a fatal or non-fatal heart attack or hospitalization for chest pain by 70 percent among patients who are likely to suffer heart attacks and/or death from coronary heart disease, according to a study by University of Washington researchers in the Nov. 29 New England Journal of Medicine. Cardiovascular disease is the No. 1 killer in most industrialized countries.


November 27, 2001

Take the Web test to measure your prejudice against Arab Muslims

American attitudes about Arab Muslims may have changed or been colored as a result of the Sept. 11 attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. How much they changed is difficult to assess, but individuals have the opportunity to measure their own level of unconscious prejudice toward Arab Muslims by taking a test on the Internet developed by University of Washington and Yale University psychologists.


Brains of deaf people rewire to ‘hear’ music

Deaf people sense vibration in the part of the brain that other people use for hearing — which helps explain how deaf musicians can sense music, and how deaf people can enjoy concerts and other musical events.


November 26, 2001

Personal decisions exercise the emotional part of the brain

People use the emotional parts of their brain to make so-called rational personal decisions, according to a University of Washington researcher.


Ancient Chinese folk remedy may hold key to non-toxic cancer treatment

Two bioengineering researchers at the University of Washington have discovered a promising potential treatment for cancer among the ancient arts of Chinese folk medicine.


November 20, 2001

UW speech traces history of African-American nurses in Seattle

University of Washington School of Nursing Professor Lois Price-Spratlen will discuss the experiences of early African-American nurses in Seattle who overcame racial discrimination and adversity to achieve their dreams. Her free public presentation at 4 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 27, in Hogness Auditorium at the UW Health Sciences Center is titled “Seattle African-American Nurses: How They Have Overcome.” It is the third in a series of public lectures sponsored as a community service by the UW School of Nursing.


November 17, 2001

UW researchers hope to improve rain, flood forecasts in the Northwest

The Pacific Northwest’s fabled rainy season typically starts in November. This year Cliff Mass is counting on the storms to give up some of their secrets and help researchers develop more precise forecasts for precipitation and flooding.


November 15, 2001

Public Health organizes forum focusing on bioterrorism and other threats

By Walter Neary
HS News & Community Relations


The campus community and public can learn more about bioterrorism at a community forum featuring public health experts planned from 7 to 8:30 p.


Cut your chance of developing Type 2 diabetes by 50 percent!

That headline sounds like an ad from the back of a magazine, doesn’t it? Amazingly, a recently released study says it’s true.


Team Transplant

By Craig Degginger
HS News & Community Relations

A unique team of UW Medical Center staff and faculty, transplant recipients and donor family members will run and walk as part of the Seattle Marathon on Nov.


Health sciences brief news

Kid’s headaches


Pediatric neurologist Sarah Cheyette has written a parents’ guide to understanding children’s headaches.


Fee committee accepting tech project proposals

The Student Technology Fee Committee will be accepting proposals from the Seattle campus for student technology related projects for the 2001-02 proposal cycle beginning Nov.


Staffer relishes CFD roles

The Combined Fund Drive runs through Nov.


D.C. office gives University a presence in nation’s capital

When an earthquake struck the Northwest last winter, UW researchers swung into action.


Book offers information about Northwest oysters

Washington’s oyster industry owes its origins to the fertile shellfish beds of Willapa Bay.


Does fallout from Sept. 11 threaten rights we take for granted?

Since Sept.


Grant to help K-12 educators expand math teaching strategies

By Steve Hill
University Week


It seems that old saying, “as easy as 1-2-3” might not be so easy after all.


Dr. Elders at Children’s

Former U.


Answering medication questions

UW Pharmacy student Tiffany Tennant, left, and UWMC pharmacist Yvonne Mark answer Sharlene Aldrich’s questions at a booth set up at UW Medical Center-Roosevelt to provide information on medications and general health tips.


Unfurling the flag

The UW’s Navy Reserve Officer Training Corps sponsored a flag pole dedication to all United States armed forces veterans last week at the east side of Husky Stadium.


You guessed it…

Most entrants this week were not fooled by our shot of the roof of Fluke Hall.


Notices

Academic Opportunities


Visiting Professorships at the University of Bergen, 2002-2003


The UW-University of Bergen Faculty Exchange Program announces its annual competition for Visiting Professor appointments at the University of Bergen, Norway, for a minimum term of one quarter.


Etc.

RESEARCH/TEACHING HONOR: Gretchen Kalonji, Kyocera Chair in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering, was among seven university educators nationwide to be honored with a new National Science Foundation award during a ceremony in Washington, D.


Nov. 27 community forum will discuss public health and bioterrorism

People can learn more about bioterrorism at a community forum featuring public health experts from 7 to 8:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Nov. 27, in Room 110 of Kane Hall at the University of Washington, Seattle.


Organ transplant surgeons and staff, organ recipients and donor family members to run in Seattle Marathon

A team of University of Washington Medical Center staff and faculty, transplant recipients and donor family members will run and walk as part of the Seattle Marathon on Nov. 25.


November 9, 2001

Growing importance of minority-owned businesses to be recognized at awards ceremony

When young brothers David and Rick Cantu launched Redapt Systems and Peripherals in the mid-90s, they ran the computer resale business out of their home. That would make things a little crowded now. With $59 million in annual revenues, the Redmond company is not only the fastest-growing Hispanic-owned business in the state, it is the state’s fastest-growing small business — period.


November 8, 2001

Expert on inflammatory bowel disease coming to UW

Dr.


Symposium features Northwest community research projects

Several UW and Northwest-based researchers will be participating in a symposium on Friday, Nov.


British expert on health status of countries to give Walker-Ames lecture

Richard Wilkinson, an expert on the differences in health status from country to country, will speak about “Unhealthy Societies: The Politics of Human Social Needs” at 6 p.


New consortium gets $7 million

By Kristin Woodward
Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center


The Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center and the UW will be participating in a federally funded, $37 million research consortium to study how individual genetic makeup affects one’s response to various environmental agents, from asbestos to tobacco smoke.


Medications and pregnancy

The UW’s National Center of Excellence in Women’s Health is conducting new research into how drugs are handled in the body by pregnant women, a field which according to the U.


Health Sciences News

Curriculum open house


The Department of Rehabilitation Medicine’s curriculum programs in occupational therapy, physical therapy and prosthetics/orthotics will be featured in an open house from 3:30 to 5 p.


New Web site helps job seekers learn about UW

People seeking employment at the University will be able to get more information than the job listings, thanks to a new Web site that debuted last week.


Mastering the business of caring: MBA students run campus food drive

By Steve Hill
University Week

Schlepping 70 waist-high barrels across campus and getting them in their proper locations for the UW’s annual food drive is a part of the job Lorrie Johnson would prefer to delegate.


Employee prefers helpful over helpless

The Combined Fund Drive runs through Nov.


Inner Workings: Scandinavian Studies

Department Chair’s Name: Terje Leiren


Department Location: Raitt Hall


Number of Faculty: 12, including two lecturers who are partially funded by the governments of Finland and Denmark


Number of Students: 16 graduate students and 81 undergraduate majors; department teaches about 2,000 students a year.


New Urban Horticulture building to be considered

Designers with the architectural firm Miller Hull Partnership of Seattle are now considering ways to rebuild Merrill Hall, which was firebombed at the UW’s Center for Urban Horticulture last May.


In Adams novel there’s no place like ‘Home’

Back in the 1960s, after Professor Emeritus Hazard Adams had completed more than 10 years of teaching, he decided it was time to put his money where his mouth was.


Opening a window on the past

The UW is partnering with the Museum of History and Industry (MOHAI), as well as with many of the smaller museums in King County, to create a digital archive of county history containing 12,000 images.



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