Husky History

September 1, 2000

'Radio Free Seattle'

On May 7, 1970, during a student strike, a group of about 50 students walked into KUOW's studios in the Communications Building and demanded air time.


June 1, 2000

King for a day

Martin Luther King Jr.'s lunchtime speech at the old Meany Hall on Nov. 9, 1961, came during the legendary civil rights leader's only visit to the Pacific Northwest.


March 1, 2000

So long, Sand Point

Starting this summer, the "temporary" housing left over from World War II will see the wrecking crew.


December 1, 1999

100 memorable alumni

Our unofficial listing of the most interesting 100 alumni of the 20th century.


First dorms

Simply put, the UW's Y1.9K problem was that the campus was bursting at the seams.


September 1, 1999

Goal postmortem

Today the UW has a new set of stronger goal posts that cannot be torn down.


June 1, 1999

Standing up for bricks

A student protest in the 1960s prevented the UW administration from tearing up the Quad's brick pathways and replacing them with blacktop.


March 1, 1999

Fore fathers

The UW golf course was doomed the day the University decided to build the School of Medicine.


September 1, 1998

Columns’ origins

Student Marshall W. Gill, son of Seattle Mayor Hiram Gill, came up with the idea of incorporating the columns into a Sylvan Theater.


June 1, 1998

Past, present, future

Somehow, despite budget cuts, student riots, two world wars, the Great Depression and the Internet, this magazine has survived for 90 years.


March 1, 1998

Major malfunction

The 1987 collapse of the newly built addition to Husky Stadium may have drawn more attention, but one of the most painful crashes at the UW that year happened in Loew Hall.


December 1, 1997

Seeing red

Fifty years ago, a hearing on “un-American” activities tore the UW campus apart, setting a precedent for faculty firings across academe.


Radical cheek

It was 1974. On college campuses across the nation—including the UW—a new fad delivered a different kind of naked truth. It was called streaking.


September 1, 1997

UW’s first mascot was a hunk of wood that got around

For three years (1920-23), the UW's mascot was Sunny Boy, a 3 1/2-foot, gold-painted wooden statue.


June 1, 1997

The day the UW campus went ‘Bully’ for Roosevelt

“Teddy" Roosevelt had been out of office for two years, yet his popularity was never higher when he visited the UW in 1911.


March 1, 1997

Monkey business: The story of the UW Medicinal Herb Garden and its guardians

In the 66 years they have rested atop twin 12-foot poles at the entrance of the UW's Medicinal Herb Garden, two guardian monkeys have repeatedly been sitting ducks to vandals.


December 1, 1996

Photographer captured Husky Stadium collapse for posterity

John Stamets captured eight shots as the Husky Stadium addition fell upon itself.


Gift from 4 generations helps students in law, medicine, engineering

The history of a Seattle family is honored through a bequest to the University from John Brace Scurry.


When Seattle’s grunge scene exploded, you had to be in the know

Many UW students were part of the grunge music scene from its beginning, and the campus radio station KCMU played a crucial role in its formation.


September 1, 1996

A stroke of genius saved countless lives with dialysis

"I literally woke up in the middle of the night with the idea of how we could save these people," Belding Scribner recalls.