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June 1, 2003

Lane closures

On May 5, 1970 — the day after four students were killed by National Guardsmen at Kent State University in Ohio — a march from the UW employed a new tactic never tried before in the nation: blocking a freeway.


March 1, 2003

Rarified air

Fifty years ago this month—March 17-18, 1953, to be exact—the Huskies qualified for the Final Four, the only time in UW history.


December 1, 2002

Lasting legacies

From winning the Nobel Prize to inventing the Wave; from circling the moon to inventing the disposable diaper. We list 101 outstanding UW achievements.


September 1, 2002

Jewel renewal

After a decade of planning and construction, a $47 million price tag and a 6.8 earthquake, Suzzallo Library returns to its rightful place as the soul of the university.


Suzzallo memories

A brief item in a past issue of Columns asked for alumni memories of Suzzallo Library. Here are some of the responses.


Why it's named Suzzallo

Henry Suzzallo felt that a campus of beauty would enhance the intellectual and moral growth of his students.


June 1, 2002

Who was Henry?

In 1926 Seattle businessman Horace C. Henry gave 172 works of art to the UW-and enough money to build a museum to house them.


The inside story

By perfecting ultrasound, Don Baker revolutionized the way doctors make their diagnoses, and put Seattle on the biotech map.


March 1, 2002

A place apart

Ten places—some famous, some obscure—that make the University of Washington one of the most beautiful—and best-loved—campuses in the nation.


Dream season

Of the myriad highlights in the long history of the storied University of Washington football program, one of the sweetest just turned 10 years old.


December 1, 2001

Architect of the Towers

A native of Seattle, Minoru Yamasaki, ’34, was born on Dec. 1, 1912, in a cold-water tenement in the Yesler Hill district of Seattle. His most famous work was the World Trade Center.


September 1, 2001

Inspiration on a whim

On a whim, Lester J. Wilson, who enrolled at the University of Washington in 1909, wrote "Bow Down to Washington."


Row show

While most Huskies take them for granted, our Greek Row houses are architectural gems that some day might comprise a historic district.


March 1, 2001

33-year experiment

It’s now a UW tradition, but when it was founded in 1968, the Experimental College was anything but traditional.


December 1, 2000

Fading star

In its heyday, the UW campus observatory was a magical place. Now the future of the cute little building, sitting just east of Memorial Way, is up in the air.


A civil action

Almost a century after snubbing Takuji Yamashita, the state's legal establishment is taking steps to honor the first Japanese graduate of the UW Law School.


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.