Features

March 1, 2012

Surviving and thriving

Innovative management keeps University Book Store successful despite ongoing upheavals in the publishing industry


Taming the saxophone

The Broctave Key—the first U.S. patented invention from one of the UW Arts divisions—is now on its way to being manufactured.


December 1, 2011

Team transplant

Team Transplant is made up of dozens of transplant recipients, their spouses, parents, children and friends. They represent the importance of organ donation, and what it means to truly be alive.


Green giant

The Sierra Club honors the UW as the most environmentally minded college in the nation.


Major milestone

The College of Arts and Sciences celebrates its 150th anniversary this year, providing an opportunity to acknowledge the achievements of faculty, staff, and students—past and present.


September 1, 2011

Hidden cost of war

Gen. Peter Chiarelli, a Seattle native and Evans School alum, was in town as part of a national effort “to begin a conversation about veterans and what we can do to connect communities to veterans.”


Wonder years

As the UW turns 150 years old, we take a moment to reflect and celebrate the accomplishments and existence of our neighbor that has meant so much to us—even if we never realized it before.


Out in the open

Rick Welts broke new ground as the first executive in major professional sports to declare that he is gay.


June 1, 2011

Space out

For Janet Kavandi, '90, and her colleagues, it’s a bittersweet time to be an American astronaut.


Up to the challenge

With an adventurer’s spirit, Michael Young plans to make the UW a leader in solving the public higher education funding model.


The natural

Jane Lubchenco’s ability to bring real-world approaches to scientific inquiry led her to become the first woman director of NOAA. The 1971 alumna is the recipient of the UW's highest alumni honor.


2011's top teachers

The seven recipients of the Distinguished Teaching Award and the one recipient of the Marsha L. Landolt Distinguished Graduate Mentor Award cover the spectrum of subject matter.


March 1, 2011

The pedagogy of gaming

The growing suspicion that video games are culturally and artistically relevant is attracting attention from an unlikely source—the academic world.


The business of gaming

If you still think video games are for teens in the rec room, it might be time for a closer look at what’s become the biggest entertainment phenomenon since television.


The science of gaming

UW faculty, students and alumni are using computer-game technology to solve some of humankind's most vexing problems.


December 1, 2010

Medicine for the masses

Using business, medical and engineering smarts, UW alumni are solving medical problems in Washington and beyond.


Special collection

The Henry Art Gallery, UW Libraries and UW Press are teaming up to bring the beauty of the Seattle Camera Club to the public.


Market ready

Ideas generated in the academy are creating real-world revenue.


Teaching moment

Two UW instructors are using a $200,000 grant to study teaching methods regarding the Elwha River and the upcoming removal of its two dams.


Bay keeper

Half of the West Coast’s oyster supply and roughly one in 10 oysters harvested in the U.S. comes from Willapa Bay. Ensuring the bay will remain productive, without compromising its overall health, has become the mission of Jennifer Ruesink, ’96, an associate professor with UW Department of Biology.