Dec. 1994 issue
For 18 years of humiliation at the University of Washington, the Father of Our Country had his feet in the mud.
Dec. 1994 issue
John J. Bonica was the UW anesthesiology professor considered by many to be the founding father of the field of pain relief.
Dec. 1994 issue
Osborne is a longtime columnist for the Hollywood Reporter, host of a movie classic series on the Turner Channel, and author of eight books chronicling the Academy Awards.
Dec. 1994 issue
Despite the financial hardship, incredibly long days and stiff competition for funding, graduate school has never been more popular.
Dec. 1994 issue
Software engineers are creating programs that will turn computers into the ultimate in personal assistants.
Sept. 1994 issue
Two UW psychologists are teaching players and coaches how to play the game, no matter who wins or loses.
Sept. 1994 issue
Records were broken in June when 9,019 students graduated from the UW. At the same time pressure to get into the UW remains steady.
Sept. 1994 issue
It was a record-setting year for private support at the University of Washington, with more than $122 million in gifts and private grants received during 1993-94.
Sept. 1994 issue
Columns won two First Place Awards and two Second Place Awards in the 1993 Excellence in Journalism Competition.
Sept. 1994 issue
Tumors in the prostate and liver have a new nemesis in the Pacific Northwest—a UW Medical Center machine that can freeze and destroy cancer cells.
Sept. 1994 issue
A UW survey has found that both sexes have about the same number of accidents in their driving career, but it found some differences in the data.
Sept. 1994 issue
UW medical student Michael Emery published the first experiment that links infant steroid hormones to breathing patterns during sleep.
Sept. 1994 issue
The Seattle City Council voted to approve the University's master plan for its Southwest Campus—completing a five-year process.
Sept. 1994 issue
Retreating from a possible yearlong television ban, the NCAA infractions committee imposed additional penalties on the UW football program.
Sept. 1994 issue
A yearlong Presidential Task Force proposed substantial changes to prepare the UW for the 21st century.
Sept. 1994 issue
In the ever-changing world of physics and astronomy, the UW took a bit of a risk to inscribe 30 formulae and diagrams on the side of a building.
Sept. 1994 issue
For 45 years the Conibear Shellhouse on Lake Washington was the home not only of racing shells, but also of many of the men who rowed in them.
Sept. 1994 issue
The University of Washington lost one of its closest friends and biggest supporters when Mary Maxwell Gates, '50, a civic leader and longtime UW regent, died of cancer.
No Issue
Bolcom, '58, returned to the UW for a two-week residency with his wife, noted mezzo-soprano Joan Morris.
Sept. 1994 issue
A landmark building ties high-tech science to traditional architecture, forging a link to the southwest campus.