June 2018 issue
Acting out the Bard’s works enables veterans to access feelings of rage, isolation and grief—
and heal the invisible wounds of war.
June 2018 issue
For 40 years, a group of Seattle-area women has helped UW students strive to be the best in science and engineering.
June 2018 issue
Help us catch the Cougs by adding purple pride to your license plate—and raise money for students along the way.
June 2018 issue
Lantos, the first and only Holocaust survivor ever elected to Congress, was perhaps the unlikeliest UW graduate of them all.
June 2018 issue
The great power of our University and its public mission is that it touches every person in Washington, through education, research and service.
June 2018 issue
This spring, 20 dawgs teamed up to build a UW-themed tiny house to shelter the homeless.
June 2018 issue
Paul Tupper, ’14, started Onda Origins, a Seattle-based coffee company with a technological spin, to further his environmental agenda.
June 2018 issue
Five students stood out in this year’s Three-Minute Thesis competition, an annual event sponsored by the Graduate School.
June 2018 issue
The UW's first Distinguished Alumni Veteran Award honoree was a success in business after his Navy tour.
June 2018 issue
She teamed with her husband to make her mark at the UW through generosity and service.
June 2018 issue
What if your class schedule put you in a room with all of this year's best teachers?
June 2018 issue
Junior Coffey went from the NFL to training racehorses. He's been one of the most successful trainers at Emerald Downs.
June 2018 issue
Ingrid Walker wants to change the way media and government frame our perceptions about illicit drugs, and the people who use them.
June 2018 issue
Why did we keep playing softball even after graduating? Because we loved softball and the IMA league was much more fun than other leagues. And we really wanted those championship T-shirts.
June 2018 issue
A trumpet player in the Husky Marching Band during the late ’80s, she gave acting a try before becoming a sports radio journalist for ESPN 710.
June 2018 issue
Marine biologist Kristin Laidre is living her dream of studying narwhals, the mysterious 2,000-pound mammals that are notoriously tricky to find.
June 2018 issue
There’s a new blockbuster drug that could save the lives of thousands of people with type 2 diabetes in the U.S.
June 2018 issue
This summer's Special Olympic Games likely will be the most notable sporting event at the UW and the Puget Sound region as a whole since the 1990 Goodwill Games.
June 2018 issue
Anne-Lise Nilsen has known the next Husky mascot since he was 9 days old.