Archive
November 15, 2001
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.
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.
You guessed it…
Most entrants this week were not fooled by our shot of the roof of Fluke Hall.
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.
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.
Dr. Elders at Children’s
Former U.
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.
Does fallout from Sept. 11 threaten rights we take for granted?
Since Sept.
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
Surgery simulation
Elected officials and leaders in higher education and health from Washington, Wyoming, Alaska, Montana and Idaho were at the UW Health Sciences Center in late October for a WWAMI Legislative Conference focusing on the School of Medicine’s regional medical education and training programs.
Symposium features Northwest community research projects
Several UW and Northwest-based researchers will be participating in a symposium on Friday, Nov.
Student-designed satellite set for space
After three years of work, University of Washington students have nearly completed the world’s smallest self-propelled satellite and are preparing to deliver it to the Air Force and NASA for launch.
Expert on inflammatory bowel disease coming to UW
Dr.
Public turning to books to understand war on terrorism
By Steve Hill
University Week
The terror of Sept.
The Home Front: Campus landscape altered by Sept. 11.
Since Sept.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Employee prefers helpful over helpless
The Combined Fund Drive runs through Nov.
Etc.
OYSTER FEVER: “What, then, draws oyster farmers to the water’s edge at dawn or in the dead of night? What makes them work so hard, often in miserable weather, to keep their oysters fat and fit? What makes the rest of us clamor for that small tidbit of flesh, cradled by the smooth inner nacre of an oyster’s thickly sculpted shell? One answer’s obvious: the ambrosial taste of the world’s most edible shellfish.
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.
Notices
Legal Notices
Notice of Possible Rule Making – Preproposal Statement of Inquiry
(per RCW 34.
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.
Council active, with range of issues
The Faculty Council on Faculty Affairs (FCFA) shall be responsible (as described in Section 42-33) for all matters of policy relating to the interests of the faculty, such as appointment, tenure, promotion, professional leave, compensation (including salary and fringe benefits), academic freedom, standards of academic performance, and professional ethics.
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.
Mystery photo
Where are we? The photo above was taken somewhere on campus.
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.
Briefly
Memorial service planned to honor architecture professor
A Dec.
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.
Construction site
The Eye Center at UW Medical Center won the award for “most constructive” pumpkin as part of the annual Halloween decorating contest, judged last week.
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.
November 5, 2001
Local researchers join in national effort to study health impact of toxic substances
The Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, in collaboration with the University of Washington, has been selected to participate 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. Such research will help answer puzzling questions such as why some people who have never smoked a cigarette develop lung cancer, while others who have smoked heavily for years never show signs of the disease.
November 2, 2001
One of world’s smallest self-propelled satellites nearly ready for Air Force, NASA
After three years of work, University of Washington students have nearly completed one of the world’s smallest self-propelled satellites and are preparing to deliver it to the Air Force and NASA for launch.
Former surgeon general to speak Nov. 8
Dr. M. Joycelyn Elders, former U.S. surgeon general in the first Clinton administration, will be in Seattle next week to present the UW Department of Pediatrics Grand Rounds and speak to local women physicians.
Urban Horticulture to brief public Nov. 19 on concepts, design for rebuilding
Designers with the architectural firm Miller Hull Partnership of Seattle are now considering ways to rebuild Merrill Hall, which was firebombed at the University of Washington’s Center for Urban Horticulture last May, and will explain the pre-design phase and seek comments from the neighborhood and campus community Nov. 19.
Expert on disparities in international health to speak Nov. 14
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.m. on Nov. 14 at the University of Washington’s Kane Hall. Admission is free and open to the public.
November 1, 2001
Emergency guide: New posters installed in campus buildings
As a result of last February’s earthquake, a new poster is making an appearance in buildings around campus.
Department of Genome Sciences formed by consolidation of Genetics and Molecular Biotechnology
By Walter Neary
HS News & Community Relations
The UW Board of Regents, at its Oct.
Guide available on suspicious mail
As the anthrax scare continues on the East Coast, the UW’s Mailing Services has increased its vigilance and advises others on campus who handle mail to do the same.
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