UW News

Archive


October 11, 2001

Etc.

GENEROUS UW: When it was announced that UW employees could donate to the Red Cross Disaster Relief Fund – which goes to help the victims of the terrorist attacks – through the University’s Combined Fund Drive, they responded enthusiastically.


UWTV series to focus on IT leaders

Information Technology Leaders, an interview series produced by the UW Business School and airing on UWTV and the Research Channel, proves that top IT executives are the sum of their experiences – both professional and personal.


Notices

Academic Opportunities


Search continues for Dean of Undergraduate Education and Vice Provost


The University of Washington invites nominations and applications for the position of Dean of Undergraduate Education and Vice Provost, with a term to begin July 1, 2002.


New protection for bus riders due next week

A new bus shelter for patrons who wait in front of Guthrie Annex 4 on the main campus should be ready for use on Monday.


Peer Portfolio

DR.


MacArthur scholars scheduled to speak

What does it mean to be a genius? Five UW professors who have received MacArthur Foundation Fellowships will share their thoughts with the audience in the upcoming lecture series, Scholarly Adventure and Creative Process: UW MacArthur Fellows in the Humanities.


Mystery photo

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


Inner workings

IW: Center for Career Services


Name and title of unit head: Susan Terry, director


Location: 134 Mary Gates Hall


Number of employees: 17


Unit’s main function: To provide job search services to students and alumni.


Faculty Senate will conduct more of its business without using paper

By Lea B.


Briefly

MAP breakfast slated Oct.


Big day in Bothell

A dedication is planned Saturday for two new buildings on the Cascadia Community College, UW, Bothell campus.


Correction

An item in last week’s University Week contained an incorrect figure.


UW assistance program ramping up

By Steve Hill
University Week


The UW is working to help faculty and staff maintain a degree of serenity in an increasingly stressed-out world.


Health Sciences Brief News

Award for Stamm


Dr.


New VP will always be Rusty

When the UW’s new vice president for minority affairs started kindergarten, she told the teacher her name was Rusty Barcelo.


Whiplash Research Center established; volunteer subjects needed

UW researchers have been awarded a five-year grant of more than $2 million from the National Institutes of Health to study whiplash injuries from motor vehicle accidents (MVAs).


Survey responses spur changes to University Week

Newspapers exist to serve readers, and University Week is no different.


Hartwell wins Nobel Prize

Dr.


Piano concert

Pianist David Korevaar will present a program of piano preludes at 8 p.


Lifetime series features UW ‘Women Docs’

By Craig Degginger
HS News & Community Relations


Four UW physicians are featured prominently in this week’s episode of “WomenDocs,” a new Lifetime Television series.


Elkon named to lead Division of Rheumatology

Dr.


Course to consider impact of environmental problems

The UW’s budding partnership with the University of British Columbia has produced an ambitious new course this fall probing environmental problems that blithely ignore international borders.


Thursday events will precede Garrett talk

Several health sciences faculty and staff members are leading sessions today as part of the University’s Day of Reflection and Engagement.


Event will highlight careers in, study of the environment

An Environmental Opportunities Fair will be held from 10 a.


Eldercare workshop helps adult children cope

By Steve Hill
University Week


Jody Burns was faced with what’s becoming an increasingly common problem – how to care for an aging parent.


Stargazing: Astronomy undergrads use old telescope for new interest

The observatory may be the second oldest building on campus, but it can still draw a crowd.


African-American profs to give talks

A new outreach program developed by the premier African-American men’s social service organization in Seattle and the UW is aimed at establishing greater links between the African-American community and the UW, with the goal of attracting more African-American students to the UW.


October 10, 2001

UW receives $3.5 million grant to establish National Center on Accessible Information Technology in Education (AccessIT)

The University of Washington has been awarded a $3.5 million federal grant to establish a National Center on Accessible Information Technology in Education, to be known as AccessIT. The five-year renewable grant, awarded on a competitive basis, comes from the National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research (NIDRR).


October 9, 2001

Misdiagnosis of appendicitis continues despite new tools

Although more diagnostic tools are available now than ever, there has been no improvement in the rate of misdiagnosis of appendicitis during the last decade, according to University of Washington researchers.


October 5, 2001

Education Forums establish links between African-Americans and UW

A new outreach program developed by the premier African American men’s social service organization in Seattle and the University of Washington is aimed at establishing greater links between the African-American community and the UW, with the goal of attracting more African American students to the UW.


October 4, 2001

A superhero’s welcome

Community Transit’s superhero, Mr.


Dawg Dash

Greg Crowther, a graduate student in Physiology and Biophysics and winner of the 1999 Dawg Dash, encourages UW departments to sign up as teams in the annual walk/run Oct.


UW gets $30 million for genome research

The UW has received two five-year grants of $15 million each from the National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI) for inaugurating the next phase of research into understanding how the human genome functions.


Center’s goal to view the ‘ultrasmall’

A new NIH-supported center housed on the UW campus will develop modular microscale instrumentation systems for the detection and analysis of how, when, and why very small populations of living cells interact with each other and their environment.


Sept. 11 remembered

Campus responding to attack with variety of offerings


Sept.


Support services improved, deans say

UW deans are more satisfied with support services than they were two years ago, but there’s still plenty of room for improvement.


Health Scienes Brief News

Lectures rescheduled


-The Department of Surgery’s Strauss Lecture, originally scheduled for Sept.


From Mauritius to the Mariners: UW staffer makes up for childhood without baseball

When UW staffer Jenny Mao and her husband attend a Mariner game, they arrive about three hours early.


Muilenburg Tower dedicated

Members of the family of Rob Muilenburg, longtime executive director of UW Medical Center who died in September 2000, were on hand for dedication of the medical center’s eastern wing as the Robert H.


Northwest coast needs more Doppler radar installations, scientist says

Coastal Washington and Oregon are being left to the mercy of Mother Nature because federal Doppler radar installations don’t provide meteorologists with enough information to come up with more accurate short-term forecasts, a UW scientist says.



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