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Archive
An editorial in the June 3 issue of Circulation calls attention to the clinical implications of research related to n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs), myocardial vulnerability, and sudden cardiac death.
Archive
Belding Scribner Memorial service Monday, June 30
A memorial service to celebrate the life of Dr.
Archive
Set change gets applause as student’s design debuts
So familiar is the amateur theatrical production, that it’s practically an American rite of passage for young schoolchildren.
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Black named principal lecturer
Albert W.
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Health Sciences News Briefs
Brentnall “almost famous” Dr.
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Public Health holds celebration to mark rise in U.S. News & World Report rankings
The UW School of Public Health and Community Medicine held an all-school celebration event this spring to mark its rise, from fifth to fourth, in the rankings of the 33 accredited schools of public health by U.
Archive
New therapy for blunt trauma victims being tested
at Harborview
Hypertonic resuscitation – a concentrated intravenous (IV) dose of saline and dextran, a sugar solution – has the potential to help survivors of blunt trauma by improving blood flow and delivery of oxygen to the injured brain while decreasing high pressure in the brain, a common problem for patients with brain injury.
Archive
BabyCues card sets available soon
A new tool developed by researchers in the UW School of Nursing promises to help parents, grandparents and other caregivers become more tuned in to the infants and young children in their lives.
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MRI use for low-back pain questioned
A UW study featured in the June 4 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association shows that while the latest technology may be faster than traditional radiograph or X-ray in providing images of the spine, rapid magnetic resonance imaging, or rapid MRI, does not result in cost savings or significant reductions in lower back pain.
Archive
UW studies link iron and manganese intake to Parkinson’s
UW researchers have found that the risk of someone getting Parkinson’s disease after high consumption of both iron and manganese together is greater than expected.
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Book Picks
African American Women Confront the West: 1600–2000 Editor, Quintard Taylor, professor of history with Shirley Ann Wilson Moore University of Oklahoma Press
African American women in the West have long been stereotyped as socially and historically marginal, existing in isolation from other women in the West and from their counterparts in the East and South.
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UW linguist to lead efforts to save language
It’s getting harder and harder for the few remaining residents of the Aleutian and Pribilof islands who speak Aleut to hold a conversation in the native Alaskan language.
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Notices
ACADEMIC OPPORTUNITIES
Staff Forum members wanted
Would you like to share your thoughts with the President of the University, work with a dynamic group of classified and professional staff from all three UW campuses to provide input on problems at the University, and have a positive impact on the UW in general and its staff in particular? If so, the President’s Staff Forum is the place for you!
The President’s Staff Forum is looking for seven new members to replace members whose terms are ending.
Archive
Administrative staff wax poetic in lesson on communication
What does poetry have to do with a University center dedicated to developing a new generation of biomaterials for medical implants? And what does it have to do with eight staff members of that center whose jobs vary from dealing with the budget to providing computer support?
That’s a question the administrative staff of UW Engineered Biomaterials (UWEB), an engineering research center, was exploring in a light-hearted way recently.
Archive
Learning sciences scholar to join College of Ed.
John Bransford, regarded as perhaps the nation’s pre-eminent scholar in learning sciences, will be hired as a professor in the UW’s College of Education, Acting Provost David Thorud has announced.
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Social program benefits ‘spill over,’ study shows
Social-welfare programs may help many more people than previously thought, UW research indicates.
Archive
Study of undergraduate learning probes thoughts, feelings of students
For the last four years she’s been listening, and now it’s Catharine Beyer’s turn to speak.
Archive
Etc.
GOING THE DISTANCE: A UW professor and a doctoral student, both from the College of Engineering, have been named recipients of the third annual R1edu Awards recognizing pioneering work in the field of distance learning.
Archive
Discretionary leave gives supervisors another way to reward good service
With another year of state budget cuts, UW supervisors may be looking around for ways they can reward good employees.
Archive
Budget cuts to be 3 to 4 percent
The state Legislature has finally concluded its work, with two special sessions, and the UW fared pretty well, considering.
Archive
Charting seismic effects on water levels can refine earthquake understanding
The relationship between seismic activity and hydrology is not well understood and is ripe for serious examination by scientists from the two disciplines, said David Montgomery, a University of Washington professor of Earth and space sciences.
Archive
June 24, 2003
Internal waves appear to have the muscle to pump up mid-lats
In a novel use of mooring data, a University of Washington researcher has calculated just how much punch waves appear to carry as they travel thousands of miles from where they originate.
Archive
Memorial service will be held June 30 for Dr. Belding H. Scribner
A memorial service to celebrate the life of Dr. Belding H. Scribner will be held at 4 p.m. on Monday, June 30, in Hogness Auditorium at the University of Washington Health Sciences Center in Seattle.
Archive
Saving Aleut: Linguist begins new effort to preserve native Alaskan language
The number of Alaskans who speak Aleut has fallen to around 100 from 620 just two decades ago. That’s a far cry from the estimated 20,000 people who once spoke Aleut in the Aleutians and Pribilofs, which jut out hundreds of miles into the North Pacific Ocean off the Alaska Peninsula.
Archive
June 23, 2003
Is the cessation of abuse enough to resolve depression for victims of intimate partner violence?
Women who have been victims of intimate partner violence experience a decreased likelihood of depression after the violence ceases, according to a study by researchers at the Harborview Injury Prevention and Research Center published in the latest issue of the Violence and Victims.
Archive
June 20, 2003
UW mourns loss of Dr. Belding H. Scribner
Dr. Belding H. Scribner, professor emeritus of medicine in the University of Washington School of Medicine and an inventor whose device has saved millions of lives, died in Seattle on June 19, 2003.
Archive
June 19, 2003
Social programs may provide hidden ‘spillover’ benefits, study finds
Social-welfare programs may help many more people than previously thought, University of Washington research indicates.
Archive
June 16, 2003
Hypertonic resuscitation may help victims of blunt trauma
Hypertonic resuscitation — a concentrated intravenous (IV) dose of saline and dextran, a sugar solution — has the potential to help survivors of blunt trauma by improving blood flow and delivery of oxygen to the injured brain while decreasing high pressure in the brain, a common problem for patients with brain injury. This therapy is now being tested in a research study by University of Washington (UW) physicians based at Harborview Medical Center.
Archive
Washington state financial institutions yield substantial returns for investors
In the wake of the dot-com bust, banks and savings and loan associations headquartered in Washington state proved to be smart investments in 2002, according to a University of Washington expert in banking and financial markets.
Archive
June 13, 2003
Major gift by Milgard family names business school at UW Tacoma
The University of Washington, Tacoma has announced a gift of $15 million from the Milgard family of Tacoma, founders of Milgard Manufacturing, to fund expansion of its Business Administration program, which now offers both baccalaureate and master’s degrees.
Archive
June 11, 2003
Architecture students joining Montana tribe for ‘barn raising’
Forty architecture students soon will head to Montana to help the Northern Cheyenne tribe build a house out of straw.
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