91探花Housing & Food Services – 91探花News /news Sat, 10 Feb 2024 00:19:51 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 ArtSci Roundup: Journeys of Black Mathematicians, Circa Performance, Building Scyborgs Lecture, and more /news/2024/02/08/artsci-roundup-journeys-of-black-mathematicians-circa-performance-building-scyborgs-lecture-and-more/ Fri, 09 Feb 2024 00:04:20 +0000 /news/?p=84365 This week, head to Kane Hall for the film screening of Journeys of Black Mathematicians: Forging Resilience, attend K. Wayne Yang’s discussion on scyborgs and decolonization, enjoy next level circus by the Australian contemporary circus group Circa, and more.


February 12, 3:30 – 5:00 pm | Smith Hall

As part of the History Colloquium, Professor La Tasha Levy will discuss 鈥淏lack Soldiers and the Racial Debilitation of Slavery and the Civil War.” Levy is a Black Studies scholar who currently serves as an Assistant Professor in the Department of American Ethnic Studies

The History Colloquium aims to encourage greater intellectual exchange within the 91探花community by discussing works in progress from faculty members and graduate students.

Free |听


February 12, 5:30 – 7:30 pm | Thomson Hall

Join the Department of Asian Languages & Literature for a series of films exploring diversity and inclusion in Japanese society. “Whole” is a short drama created by Writer Usman Kawazoe and Director Bilal Kawazoe depicting Haruki, a biracial student who decides to quit college and travel to Japan, and Makoto, a construction worker raised in the projects of Kansai who is also biracial. Haruki and Makoto grow closer and begin their journey from “Half” to “Whole.”

The film is in Japanese with English subtitles and will be followed by a brief discussion.

Free |


February 12, 7:30 pm | Meany Hall

Dynamic duo Cuong Vu and Cristina Vald茅s straddle the worlds of contemporary classical music and free improvisation, premiering works for trumpet and piano by Oliver Schneller, Wang Lu, and Sk煤li Sverrisson, and performing music by Huck Hodge and Eva-Maria Houben.

Tickets |


February 13, 5:00 – 6:20 pm | Architecture Hall

Join the Jackson School of International Studies for a Middle East Lecture Series with Marc Lynch, Professor of Political Science and International Affairs at the George Washington University, on Regional Repercussions of the War.听

This event is part of听War in the Middle East, a series of talks and discussions on the aftermath of October 7, the war in Gaza, and responses worldwide.

Recordings of past lectures are available on the .

Free |


February 13, 6:30 pm | Building Scyborgs. An evening on decolonization, Town Hall Seattle & Livestream

Join scholar, organizer, and co-conspirator K. Wayne Yang as he shares stories about decolonizing endeavors from past, present, future, and speculative somewheres. Yang will discuss monsters, machines, mortals, and how people are the objects of colonization and agents of decolonization.

The livestream of this lecture will be accompanied by an ASL interpreter and include CART captioning.

Free | More info & Registration


February 14 & 15, 11:00 am – 3:00 pm | Husky Union Building Street/Lyceum

The Makers Fair showcases the creative talents and uniquely made crafts and creations of 91探花students, faculty, and staff. The quarterly fair is sponsored by the Husky Union Building and Housing & Food Services.

Free |


February 15, 6:00 – 8:30 pm | Kane Hall

The Simons Laufer Mathematical Sciences Institute is joined by the Departments of Applied Mathematics, Mathematics, and Statistics for the film screening of Journeys of Black Mathematicians: Forging Resilience.

The film, by George Csicsery, traces the cultural evolution of Black scholars, scientists, and educators. Follow the stories of prominent pioneers, and the challenges and accomplishments reflected in today’s working Black mathematicians. Their mathematical descendants are now present day college and K-12 students across the US, learning they belong in mathematics and STEM.

The screening will follow with a Q&A with Director George Csicsery.

Free |


February 15 – 17, 8:00 pm | Meany Hall

A symphony of acrobatics, sound, and light, Humans 2.0 is next level circus by the Australian contemporary circus group Circa. Ten bodies appear in a flash of light. They move in harmony for a fleeting moment and then descend into a sinuous trance. Created by circus visionary Yaron Lifschitz, with pulsing music by composer Ori Lichtik and dramatic lighting by Paul Jackson, Humans 2.0 is intimate, primal, and deeply engaged with the challenge of being human.

Tickets |


February 15, 4:00 – 5:30 pm | Thomson Hall

The 91探花South Asia Center invites Elora Shehabuddin, professor of Gender & Women’s Studies and Global Studies at the University of California, Berkeley, to present a unique and engaging history of feminism as a story of colonial and postcolonial interactions between Western and Muslim societies.

Stretching from the eighteenth-century Enlightenment era to the War on Terror present, Sisters in the Mirror shows how changes in women鈥檚 lives and feminist strategies have consistently reflected wider changes in national and global politics and economics.

Free |


February 15, 7:30 pm | Brechemin Auditorium

Craig Sheppard, Robin McCabe, and Cristina Vald茅s lead students from the 91探花piano studios to perform works from the piano repertoire.

Craig Sheppard is Professor of Piano and Head of Keyboard at the 91探花School of Music. He is also Professor of the Advanced Innovation Center at the China Conservatory in Beijing.

Celebrated pianist Robin McCabe has established herself as one of America鈥檚 most communicative and persuasive artists. McCabe鈥檚 involvement and musical sensibilities have delighted audiences across the globe.

Pianist Cristina Vald茅s presents innovative concerts of standard and experimental repertoire, and is known to 鈥減lay a mean piano.鈥 A fierce advocate for new music, she has premiered countless works, including many written for her.

Free |


February 16, 3:00 pm | Brechemin Auditorium

91探花Strings students perform concerto movements for outside judges, competing听for a chance to perform with the 91探花 Symphony.

Free |


February 20, 1:00 pm | Husky Union Building South Ballroom

The College of Arts & Sciences welcomes the 91探花community of faculty, staff, and students to participate in the second annual 鈥淏ig Read.鈥

Tune into the conversation with Dr. Joy Buolamwini, founder of the Algorithmic Justice League and author of Unmasking AI: My Mission to Protect What is Human in a World of Machines and听Dr. Emily M. Bender, 91探花Professor of Linguistics and Director of the Master鈥檚 Program in Computational Linguistics.

Free |


February 22, 4:00 pm | Climate Crisis: Our Response as Artivists, Walker Ames Room, Kane Hall

Appearing onstage at the UW鈥檚 Meany Center in February, 鈥Small Island Big Song鈥 is an immersive concert experience that celebrates the seafaring cultures of the Pacific and Indian Oceans, and features Indigenous musicians from the frontline of the climate crisis.

The UWAA and Meany Center are excited to gather a 91探花College of the Environment alumna, a current student (Majoring in geography) and creators of 鈥淪mall Island Big Song鈥 to talk about issues of climate change, advocacy, art and culture. Our panelists each come to these topics from different vantage points and will share their reflections on how these topics all impact one another.

As the climate crisis quickly rises to the top of world concerns, different sectors 鈥 including artists 鈥 scramble to figure out ways to respond to its impending pressures. We all have a vital role to play. Join the conversation as we explore ways we can use our voices to push the needle on political, economic, social and cultural questions at the root of this global concern.

UWAA hosted reception to follow.

Free | More info & Registration


 

Have an event that you would like to see featured in the ArtSci Roundup? Connect with Kathrine Braseth (kbraseth@uw.edu).

]]>
Video: 91探花welcomes students to campus as thousands move into residence halls /news/2023/09/20/video-uw-welcomes-students-to-campus-as-thousands-move-into-residence-halls/ Wed, 20 Sep 2023 21:41:27 +0000 /news/?p=82649

It鈥檚 once again mini fridge season at the 91探花, as thousands of students move into campus housing and prepare for the new academic year. About 8,500 students, including 78% of this year鈥檚 freshman class, are expected to move into 91探花residence halls and apartments this week.

For journalists

鈥淭his is a very exciting week at UW,鈥 said Pamela Schreiber, assistant vice president for Student Life and executive director of 91探花Housing & Food Services. 鈥淭he on-campus living experience is an important part of building community for students and supporting their academic success.鈥

This week has been carefully choreographed, with a team of more than 500 91探花employees spread across campus to direct traffic, share directions and prepare students鈥 first meals on campus. On Friday, 91探花President Ana Mari Cauce will greet students outside the dorms near Denny Field at the north end of campus.听

As always, move-in week will end in style with Sunday鈥檚 Convocation ceremony. President Cauce and other campus leaders, including the Board of Regents and deans of all 16 91探花schools, will officially welcome the new class of Huskies and their families and help set students on the path to academic success. The ceremony will start at 1:30 p.m. in Alaska Airlines Arena at Hec Edmundson Pavilion, and will also be .

Fall quarter classes begin Wednesday, Sept. 27.

For more information on move-in week, contact Alden Woods at acwoods@uw.edu. To learn more about Convocation, contact Alex Bartick at abartick@uw.edu.

]]>
91探花welcomes PepsiCo as official partner beginning July 1 /news/2023/06/13/uw-welcomes-pepsico-as-official-partner-beginning-july-1/ Tue, 13 Jun 2023 16:00:20 +0000 /news/?p=81957 Campus photo
The 91探花selected PepsiCo as its official beverage partner beginning on July 1. Photo: 91探花

The 91探花 today announced that PepsiCo will become its official beverage partner beginning July 1.

PepsiCo鈥檚 relationship with the 91探花is built on a commitment to enhancing the student experience, innovating around sustainability, supporting the UW鈥檚 diversity, equity and inclusion goals, and creating more positive impacts for all.

91探花will offer the full suite of PepsiCo products in its three main campuses, hospitals and athletics venues for the next 10 years. The relationship is valued at more than $24.92 million, with an additional $2.4 million in PepsiCo products.

鈥淲e鈥檙e very pleased to welcome PepsiCo as a partner and sponsor. Their commitment to supporting core 91探花values 鈥 the Husky Experience; diversity, equity and inclusion; and sustainability 鈥斕齱ill expand our capacity to provide a world-class education for students and increase access to the UW,鈥 91探花President Ana Mari Cauce said.

A committee of representatives from across the University 鈥 including all three campuses, 91探花Medicine and Intercollegiate Athletics 鈥 unanimously selected PepsiCo in a competitive bidding process.

鈥淲e at PepsiCo are excited and honored for the opportunity to partner with the 91探花 as their exclusive beverage provider,鈥 said Shay Hobby, senior vice president of Commercial, PepsiCo Beverages North America 鈥 West Division.听鈥淭hrough this partnership, we are committed to making a positive impact on the Husky student experience and community.听 We are grateful for UW鈥檚 collaboration and excited to share this news with our passionate Pepsi teammates who live in that community.鈥

By becoming a 91探花 signature partner, PepsiCo will:

  • Support the student experience by funding scholarships that uplift diversity, equity, and inclusion and for students serving in the military at 91探花Bothell, 91探花Tacoma and on the Seattle campus
  • Boost student exposure to career opportunities, with specialized programming at 91探花Bothell, 91探花Tacoma, and on the Seattle campus through Student Life and the Office of Minority Affairs & Diversity. PepsiCo also will provide real-world job experience by hiring student ambassadors to represent its brand at the UW.
  • Help fight food insecurity among the 91探花student population with direct support to the Any Hungry Husky food assistance program
  • Limit and reduce beverage packaging and single-use containers, seeking solutions to minimize waste and shift toward clean energy by endowing an on-campus innovation fund
  • Provide 91探花Athletics with Gatorade sports beverages and offer 91探花coaches access to the Gatorade Sports Science Institute, a team of researchers working to optimize sports nutrition. PepsiCo also will support the Athletics Impact Fund in Intercollegiate Athletics.
  • Promote more positive impacts, pledging that two-thirds of PepsiCo鈥檚 product line will contain 100 calories or fewer per 12-ounce serving by 2025 all as a part of its pep+ (PepsiCo Positive) transformation initiative, which centers on sustainability and inspires positive change for the planet and people

PepsiCo equipment is scheduled to be installed across the 91探花campuses this summer. For more information click here or contact uwnews@uw.edu.

###

Here鈥檚 what other 91探花leaders said about the new partnership:

鈥淧epsi鈥檚 commitment to invest in diversity, equity, inclusion and belonging at the 91探花will help the university advance important efforts across the three campuses,鈥 said Rickey Hall, the university鈥檚 diversity officer and vice president of the Office of Minority Affairs & Diversity. 鈥淚nvesting in these programs places a college education in reach for more students, from more parts of Washington, and will help with efforts to create more accessible and welcoming campuses.鈥

“PepsiCo鈥檚 commitment to supporting the Husky student experience is terrific! From scholarships to career opportunities, this partnership will benefit 91探花students for years to come,” said Denzil Suite, 91探花Vice President for Student Life.

鈥淲e are excited to welcome Pepsi to UW,鈥 said Pamela Schreiber, assistant vice president for Student Life and executive director of 91探花Housing & Food Services. 鈥淲e look forward to a partnership with shared values and priorities, and ensuring a variety of product options across our campus dining operations.鈥

鈥淲e are excited about bringing PepsiCo and their full range of product offerings to the UW,鈥 said Jen Cohen, director of Athletics. 鈥淲e know our partnership will be extremely beneficial for our student-athletes, staff and Husky Nation, and the opportunities that are created from our collective collaboration will make an incredible impact both on campus and in the community.鈥

鈥淲e commend PepsiCo鈥檚 movement towards healthier drinks and wellness and its commitment to sustainability, equity and diversity for a better future,鈥 said Cynthia Dold, interim president of Hospitals & Clinics, 91探花Medicine.

鈥淕atorade is a trusted brand in the sports beverage industry that is backed by the work they do at the Gatorade Sport Science Institute,鈥 said Mike Dillon, associate athletic director for Health & Wellness. 鈥淲e are thrilled to have access to their extensive product line that spans hydration, fueling and recovery as well as direct access to the research and support from GSSI. Gatorade has a long-standing history in the world of sports and constantly prioritizes the overall student-athlete experience.鈥

鈥淭he announcement of this partnership is perfectly timed with the opening of our Terrace Dining Pavilion later this summer,鈥 said Scott James, vice chancellor for the Division of Enrollment Management & Student Affairs, 91探花Bothell. 鈥淲e welcome PepsiCo to the 91探花Bothell campus and look forward to collaborating on ways to enrich opportunities for our students.鈥

鈥淲e are excited to partner with PepsiCo to punch up the flavor of the student experience on the 91探花Tacoma campus. Their support for scholarships, internships, sustainability initiatives and events like Convocation will immeasurably strengthen the Husky community,鈥 said Mentha Hynes-Wilson, vice chancellor for Student Affairs, 91探花Tacoma.

(Editor鈥檚 note: Due to an internal miscommunication, the original content of this news release was edited after publication. The full, original text has been restored.)

]]>
ArtSci Roundup: Frontiers of Physics Lecture, Dance Concert, Undergrad Research Symposium and more /news/2023/05/12/artsci-roundup-frontiers-of-physics-lecture-dance-concert-undergrad-research-symposium-and-more/ Fri, 12 May 2023 19:31:17 +0000 /news/?p=81490 This week, learn about the Warped Side of the universe, listen to Russian Journalist Yevgenia Albats speak about her experiences, tune into the “Reflections on the 1968 91探花Black Student Union” event livestream and more.

 


May 16 – 17, 11:00 AM – 3:00 PM | , HUB Street/Lyceum/Lawn

The Makers Fair听showcases the creative talents and uniquely made crafts and creations of 91探花students, faculty, and staff. The quarterly fair is sponsored by the Husky Union Building, The Whole U, and Housing & Food Services.

Free |


May 16, 11:30 AM 鈥 1:00 PM | Communications Building

Join the 91探花Translation Studies Hub for two short talks and conversation:

鈥淎gainst Translation as Metaphor: Sultanic Languages of Sovereignty in Late 19th Century Morocco鈥
Sam Kigar (Islamic Studies, Department of Religion, University of Puget Sound) challenges a scholarly tradition of describing religions as languages that can be translated into one another. He examines the translation of two letters by Sultan Hassan I (r. 1873-1894) about his journeys to the S奴s region of southern Morocco. The Sultan was not translating forms of Islamic sovereignty into 鈥渇oreign鈥 territorial terms, instead, he was participating in the territorialization of the S奴s.

鈥淒ecentering French to re-center Wolof: Translation as a Nationalist Performance in Boubacar Boris Diop鈥檚 Work鈥
Rokiatou Soumar茅 (French and Francophone Studies, University of Puget Sound) proposes that Senegalese novelist Boubacar Boris Diop positions himself in his work as a nationalist linguistic activist by writing in Wolof instead of French, Senegal鈥檚 lingua franca. For Diop, translating these essential pieces initiated an ambitious political project that aligns with his nationalistic views, and his rejection of French hegemony.

Free |


May 17, 7:30 PM | Meany Hall

This project was born from a collaboration between Abigail Jara (choreographer and dancer) and Juan Pampin (sound artist and composer). The work was created during a residency of MUSSE DC at the Department of Digital Arts and Experimental Media (DXARTS) at the 91探花Seattle campus in April 2022.

The performance is an exploration of the territory based on sound maps. The use of sensors enables the performers to carry out a space-time reconfiguration of the forest based on its sounds, which has the body as its axis, and movement and time as its organizing principle. In turn, the performers are part of an audiovisual ecosystem in which their bodies are captured by infrared cameras 鈥 similar to those used by scientists to investigate the presence of animals in the forest.

In each section of the work, the performers explore this interactive audiovisual space based on certain concepts related to the forest, such as the animal, the arborescent, the vegetal, the aviary, and the spectral.

Free |


May 17 – May 21 | ,听Meany Hall

Join the Department of Dance for their first-ever concert in the round. Six premieres by current graduate students, including one film, explore topics from Artificial Intelligence to the concept of Yin and Yang.

$10 Tickets |


May 17, 7:30 鈥 9:00 PM | Kane Hall

The Frontiers of Physics Lecture Series brings renowned scientists to the 91探花to offer free lectures on exciting advances in physics with the goal of fostering an appreciation of science and technology in our community. This spring the Department of Physics is honored to welcome 2017 Nobel Laureate in Physics, Kip Thorne.

When Kip Thorne embarked on his career as a physicist in the 1960s, there were hints that our universe might have a 鈥渨arped side鈥: 听objects and phenomena such as black holes that are made from warped spacetime instead of from matter. Most of Kip’s half-century career has been devoted to converting those hints into clear understanding. He and his colleagues have explored the Warped Side through theory (using mathematics and computer simulations to probe what the laws of physics predict) and through astronomical observations (primarily with gravitational waves). In this lecture he will recount the history of those explorations, he will describe what we now know about the Warped Side, and he will speculate about the future.

Free |


May 18, 4:00 鈥 5:30 PM | Communications Building

This lecture series and colloquium advance crucial conversations on world language and literature study on the 91探花Seattle campus through an interdisciplinary, multi-departmental speaker series focused on issues of race, identity, colonialism, and migration within a broad European context. These approaches to national literatures offer effective frameworks for undergraduates, graduate students, and faculty to grasp the intersectional complexity of power configurations in literary and visual cultures.

Free |


May 18, 7:30 PM | Meany Hall

Indian Classical vocalist, educator, and composer, Srivani Jade听presents “Ritu Chakra: Ragas of the Six Seasons of North India” in听the听culminating听recital of her artist residency at the 91探花School of Music. She听is accompanied by Deepashri Joglekar (Harmonium), Ravi Albright (Tabla), Suchitra Iyer (Vocal Saath), and Tanpura. Her 91探花students present a short opening act of Ragas and bandish compositions they learned during the quarter.

Srivani Jade identifies deeply with the Khayal and Thumri traditions of North India, and devotional repertoire from the Bhakti movement. Her performances have received critical acclaim in the 2014 Sawai Gandharva Festival and 2016 Earshot Jazz Festival, and she has many albums, film and musical scores to her credit.

$10 – $20 Tickets |


May 18, 7:30 PM | Kane Hall

Christopher Ozubko is a Canadian-American designer, educator, and former Director of the School of Art + Art History + Design at the 91探花. He completed his BFA at the University of Alberta, and his MFA at the renowned Cranbrook Academy of Art, then under the direction of Katherine and Michael McCoy. After his appointment to the Design faculty at the 91探花in 1981, Ozubko established his own atelier in Seattle, Studio Ozubko, which garnered numerous regional, national, and international design awards.

Ozubko’s poster designs are in the collections of the George Pompidou Museum, Paris; the US Library of Congress; the Museum of Applied Art, Helsinki; Dansk Plakatmuseum, Arhus, Denmark; and IPT Toyama, Japan.

As an educator, Ozubko developed and led the 91探花summer 鈥淒esign in Rome鈥 program for more than a decade, which exposed students to photography, history, epigraphy, traditional craft, and industrial technology.

Free |


May 18, 7:30 PM | Husky Union Building

Come to the Husky Union Building and listen to Yevgenia Albats, Distinguished Journalist in Residence, Jordan Center for the Advanced Study of Russia, talk about Putin’s Wars. The speech is followed by a public Q&A.

Yevgenia Albats is a Russian investigative journalist, political scientist, author, and radio host. She has been Political Editor and then Editor-in-Chief and CEO of The New Times, a Moscow-based, Russian language independent political weekly, since 2007. On February 28, 2022, Vladimir Putin blocked its website, just days after Russia invaded Ukraine. Despite that, Albats continues to run the newtimes.ru, and she kept reporting from Russia until she had to leave the country in the last week of August 2022 after she was fined for her coverage of the war with Ukraine and pronounced a foreign agent. She graduated from Moscow State University and holds a Ph.D. in Political Science from Harvard University. Additionally, she was a full-time professor at Moscow鈥檚 Higher School of Economics.

Free with Registration |


May 19, 11:00 AM – 5:00 PM | Undergraduate Research Symposium, Kane Hall

The Undergraduate Research Symposium is an opportunity for undergraduates to present what they have learned through their research experiences to a larger audience. It is also a space for students, faculty, and the community to discuss cutting-edge research. This event is held on UW鈥檚 campus and is open to all students, faculty, and community members to attend.

The event includes poster, visual arts and design, performing arts, and oral presentations by students from all academic disciplines and all three 91探花campuses, plus invited student presenters from peer institutions.

Free |


Credits: Emile Pitre Collection, James Garrett, MOHAI, Steve Ludwig Photo: Credits: Emile Pitre Collection, James Garrett, MOHAI, Steve Ludwig

May 19, 5:00 – 6:30 PM | , Livestream

Join together with students 鈥 past and present 鈥 to celebrate and commemorate the 55th Anniversary of the Black Student Union (BSU).

This panel conversation is an opportunity for our campus community to hear from BSU founding members听James P. Garrett, Larry Gossett, Kathleen Haley, Carl Miller, and Leathia Stallworth-Krasucki, who demanded changes in how the 91探花served students of color. From their 1968 occupation of the 91探花administration building (now Gerberding Hall), to the myriad ways they have been leading voices in justice and equity over the years, these visionary leaders have shaped this university and our greater community.

The panel will be moderated by 91探花alum and听former Black Student Union leader听Dr. Marc Arsell Robinson, Assistant Professor of History from California State University, San Bernardino.

Registration for in-person attendance is听at capacity听and is only open for the livestream.

Free |


Have an event that you would like to see featured in the ArtSci Roundup? Connect with Lauren Zondag (zondagld@uw.edu).

]]>
Video: 91探花welcomes students back to campus with move-in days /news/2022/09/21/video-uw-welcomes-students-back-to-campus-with-move-in-days/ Wed, 21 Sep 2022 23:30:39 +0000 /news/?p=79464

The 91探花鈥檚 campus again is bustling as students began moving into residence halls on Tuesday and will participate in annual fall activities for incoming undergraduates. About 10,000 students are expected to move into campus housing this week.

“There’s definitely a lot of energy and everyone is excited to be back on campus,” said Andrew Line, a student with the 91探花Residential Community Student Association.

Provost Mark Richards greeted students near north campus residence halls Tuesday while 91探花President Ana Mari Cauce welcomed students on Wednesday at the dorms near Denny Field. Move-in days are an all-hands-on-deck effort for 91探花Housing & Food Services, and dozens of staff and student leaders helped students move into their new homes over the course of the week.

For journalists

On Sunday, President Cauce and other campus leaders will officially welcome the new class with Convocation, this year held in-person at Alaska Airlines Arena at Hec Edmundson Pavilion for the first time since 2019. Immediately following Convocation, students will form a giant 鈥榃鈥 on Husky Field.

Fall quarter classes begin on Wednesday, Sept. 28. See a .

]]>
91探花wins 2021 EPA Regional Food Recovery Challenge, preventing waste and feeding the hungry /news/2022/01/31/uw-wins-2021-epa-regional-food-recovery-challenge-preventing-waste-and-feeding-the-hungry/ Mon, 31 Jan 2022 19:28:01 +0000 /news/?p=77141  91探花farms
The 91探花was recognized by the EPA for how well the university reduced food waste and helped feed the community. Part of that effort includes products grown at the 91探花Farm, a 1.5-acre student-powered urban farm on the Seattle campus. Photo: 91探花

The 91探花鈥檚 Seattle campus saved more than 5 tons of food from being thrown away in 2020, preventing unnecessary waste and helping feed people in the community who struggle with food security.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency recognized the achievement by selecting the 91探花for a in the 2021 Food Recovery Challenge. The award is given to select institutions and businesses that voluntarily set data-driven goals, implement targeted strategies to reduce wasted food in their operations, and then report the results to the EPA. The 91探花is recognized as a national leader for its deep commitment to sustainability on its campuses and in the community. UW鈥檚 Seattle campus recovered 10,720 pounds of food in 2020 that would have otherwise been wasted, a 13% increase over 2019 and a 26% increase from 2018.

The success comes from the UW鈥檚 food recovery efforts across dining facilities, the the 91探花Food Pantry, and its partnership with . works with local food banks, including the one on campus, to divert excess food purchased or overproduced at dining facilities.

The programs also support the UW鈥檚 waste reduction goal under the . Working to minimize food waste has been a major part of the efforts toward of reducing the amount of waste generated 10 percent by 2025.

 

]]>
91探花campus prepares for return to in-person classes, activities /news/2021/09/10/uw-campus-prepares-to-welcome-back-students-staff/ Fri, 10 Sep 2021 18:00:03 +0000 /news/?p=75697

It鈥檚 been about 18 months since the 91探花 led the nation in pivoting to largely online learning and working as the COVID-19 pandemic took hold.

While campus operations never halted completely, many students and 91探花staff have been based elsewhere, studying and working remotely.

Now, with autumn quarter set to begin at the end of this month and many 91探花staff beginning their return to on-campus work on Sept. 13, officials are making final preparations.

鈥淲e can鈥檛 wait for everybody to come back,鈥 said Lou Cariello, UW鈥檚 vice president of facilities. 鈥淧eople are going to come back to a campus, and buildings on this campus, that have never been more clean, never been more beautiful and shiny.鈥

Throughout the pandemic, heating, ventilation and cooling engineers have worked to ensure that air is properly flowing through buildings and classrooms. Filters are being changed more frequently, airflow machines are running longer and air purifiers have been added to many locations.

鈥淥ur facilities team has been on campus every day, through the entire pandemic,鈥 Cariello said. 鈥淲e really haven鈥檛 skipped a beat.鈥

Window washers, plumbers, electricians, custodians, power plant operators, gardeners and more have been working to maintain the buildings and the 634-acre grounds. Facilities teams worked with experts across the university to determine the best way to adapt and keep campus safe. They deep-cleaned floors and carpets, dusted even in hard-to-reach places, power-washed, and scoured restrooms.

鈥淲e鈥檙e making sure that the systems are working effectively,鈥 Cariello said. 鈥淲e listen to what the guidance is on what will keep people safe. And we do the cleaning and disinfecting. We make sure that our ventilation systems are operating as best as they possibly can be.鈥

Also receiving a lot of attention: doorknobs, railings, elevator push buttons 鈥 places that people come into contact with the most.

鈥淭hose high-touch-point surfaces get cleaned on a more frequent basis than they did pre-pandemic,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 as a result of mitigating our safety and health risks for the people on campus.鈥

Campus housing is expected to return to full capacity this year, said Pam Schreiber, assistant vice president for Student Life and the executive director of Housing & Food Services.

鈥淔or many of our students it鈥檚 going to feel like a brand-new experience,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e cannot wait for our students to return. We are looking forward to it. We know the power of the residential experience and how much it adds to the student鈥檚 time at the UW.鈥

About 10,000 students are expected to move into the residence halls this year. This includes first-year students and returning second- and even third-year students whose on-campus living experience was interrupted by the pandemic. Demand for on-campus housing was so great that Haggett Hall, which closed in 2019, has been reopened. And isolation rooms are reserved throughout the residence halls to provide a safe space, should a student need to quarantine.

Teams are planning to make life safe and simple for students elsewhere on campus. Many dining halls will have grab-and-go prepared meals, and officials are expanding the use of , an online, mobile food-ordering system.

Most important, housing and food service crews recognize that they鈥檙e providing much more than a service, Schreiber said; they鈥檙e creating a welcoming space where students can feel at home.

鈥淲e recognize that they鈥檒l need a lot of support, need a lot of help, directions, they鈥檒l have a lot of questions. We need to have a lot of patience to support them and make sure they really get everything out of the experience of being on campus that they can,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e way more than just buildings and serving food, we鈥檙e really here to create this community for students and to help them connect with the UW, and have this really tremendous collegiate experience.鈥

Cariello said he鈥檚 eager to see the campus bustling once again.

鈥淲e鈥檙e going to get back to it, and it鈥檚 going to be terrific,鈥 he said.

Still, he points out that everyone has a role to play in keeping the 91探花safe by heeding the calls of public health officials, and following vaccination and masking requirements.

鈥淭he most important thing we can do to mitigate risks of the virus spreading is to get vaccinated, to mask up indoors and to always practice good hygiene,鈥 Cariello said. 鈥淛ust wash your hands a lot.鈥

 

]]>
Video: 91探花students move into residence halls /news/2020/09/23/video-uw-students-move-into-residence-halls/ Thu, 24 Sep 2020 00:30:08 +0000 /news/?p=70541

 

Around 4,000 students are moving into the residence halls at the 91探花 this week. This number is less than half the UW鈥檚 normal residence hall capacity.

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, a number of special precautions are being taken to ensure minimal contact and proper physical distancing during the move-in process. These include听requiring facemasks in all indoor spaces, per campus policy, and outside whenever appropriate physical distance cannot be ensured, plus limiting the number of vehicles and family members present during move-in. Volunteers and staff helping with move-in also are following safety guidelines with proper PPE and distancing.

“Because of the situation with COVID, we have made a lot of changes to the move-in process this year,” said听Megan Baffaro, student move-in volunteer coordinator with 91探花Housing & Food Services. “I think we focused a lot on making sure it’s a welcoming experience while also making sure that it’s safe for both volunteers and residents.”

Related: 91探花announces COVID-19 testing program for students, faculty and staff across all three campuses

Fall quarter begins Sept. 30, and about 90% of classes will be held remotely.

To welcome students 鈥 whether they will be living on 91探花campuses, in the community or at home with their families 鈥 the university sent each of them two reusable 91探花facemasks, along with the听Husky PACK Pledge. Developed with undergraduate and graduate student leaders on all three campuses, the pledge promotes a culture of safety by outlining the responsibilities that students, instructors and staff have to each other.

For students living in campus residence halls,听a number of听 are in place,听including setting aside spaces for residents who test positive to be supported as they isolate.

“When students made the decision that they did want to live in residences, we were very excited, and we also understood that to mean they have trust in us, and this is where they want to be,”听 said听Pam Schreiber, executive director of 91探花Housing & Food Services.

Additionally, many students are returning to housing in nearby neighborhoods, even as they take all their courses remotely. For those students, the university has offered a听sample roommates agreement. Additionally, Student Life continues to work closely with the Greek community to promote health and safety.

]]>
Soundbites & B-roll: 91探花students move into residence halls /news/2020/09/22/soundbites-b-roll-uw-students-move-into-residence-halls-on-campus/ Tue, 22 Sep 2020 22:11:16 +0000 /news/?p=70524

 

91探花 students living in residence halls began moving in on Tuesday, and about 4,000 students total will move in this week. This number is less than half the UW鈥檚 normal residence hall capacity. Move-in usually happens over two days, but will take place over a four-day period this year to ensure minimal contact and proper physical distancing.

Download soundbites and B-roll

Download additional B-roll of dining facilities and an example isolation room

Fall quarter begins Sept. 30, and about 90% of classes will be held remotely.

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, a number of special precautions are being taken to ensure minimal contact and proper physical distancing during the move-in process. Among these:

Facemasks are required in all indoor space, per campus policy, and outside whenever appropriate physical distance cannot be ensured.

A limit of two people can arrive with students to help with moving in. No pets are allowed during move-in.

Only one vehicle can be used per student to move in.

Carts will be available for students and their families to move belongings from the check-in location to their rooms. Carts will be sanitized between each use using EPA-registered disinfectants. Hand sanitizer will be available for use near elevators.

All staff and volunteers assisting during move-in will be required to wear surgical masks. There will be student volunteers assisting with the loading and unloading of residents鈥 belongings.

In each community, one elevator will be designated to move carts to floors and one elevator will be designated for resident and guest use. No more than two people (or three people from the same household) will be permitted in an elevator at a time.

Soundbites:
Ainsley Jordan, first-year student from Everett
Rachel Oommen, first-year student from Sammamish
Megan Baffaro, student move-in volunteer coordinator
Pam Schreiber, executive director of 91探花Housing & Food Services

B-roll:
Students and families arrive, pick up housing assignment information
Unloading cars, moving belongings into residence halls
Unpacking in individual rooms
Students visiting 91探花dining facilities
An example of the isolation rooms available for students, if needed

]]>
Food pantry, emergency grants help students in need during all-remote spring quarter /news/2020/04/28/food-pantry-emergency-grants-help-students-in-need-during-all-remote-spring-quarter/ Tue, 28 Apr 2020 16:26:16 +0000 /news/?p=67608
The 91探花Food Pantry has shifted to an online ordering system for spring quarter. Volunteers place items for each order in baskets, and customers bag their own. Photo: Olivia Hagan/U. of Washington

 

At the 91探花鈥檚 food pantry, the shelves are stocked with cans, jars, boxes and bags, but not for customers to browse. The storefront on the street level of Poplar Hall is open, but only for shoppers to grab and go.

And business? Steady.

This is the new 91探花Pantry: Still providing free food to anyone with a Husky Card, but for the all-remote spring quarter, accepting only . With fewer students currently living in the University District and on campus, the number of orders is half of normal 鈥 about 150 a week 鈥 but has stayed consistent. Nearly one-fourth of recent customers are new.

鈥淭he people who were financially struggling before all of this have in no way stabilized their situation,鈥 explained Sean Ferris, manager of student success for the 91探花Division of Student Life. A recent survey of pantry users found that many have lost jobs or had their hours cut, or now live with a family member who is out of work and rely on the pantry to get by.

鈥淲e work with students, an audience that is often overlooked in policy decisions such as unemployment benefits or basic-needs food assistance. And the expectation is that somehow they are self-sufficient, which is a challenging expectation,鈥 Ferris said. 鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 take much to move from food secure to food insecure, and that鈥檚 what鈥檚 happened.鈥

Under circumstances that have upended students鈥 academic and personal lives, changes to the pantry are just one of the ways the university community 鈥 students, staff, donors and alumni 鈥 is rethinking traditional programs and services to try to meet the needs that arise.

A primary need is financial: Applications are up for emergency aid grants, which provide funds for tuition, supplies, technology lost wages,听even basic household needs such as food security.听Since March 6, more than 500 grants have been requested across all three campuses, compared to 366 grants requested during the entire 2018-2019 academic year. So far, the number of grant applications from 91探花Bothell students was two-thirds the campus鈥 total for all of 2019.

鈥淭he fund helps students in every way possible,鈥 said Tomitha Blake, assistant vice provost for advancement, academic and student affairs. 鈥淲e鈥檙e recognizing that distance learning is impactful for every student, and even more so for students who have overcome significant hurdles to be at the UW. Students are in need, and it鈥檚 unprecedented for them and their families.鈥

For more information on how to contribute to programs providing student assistance, visit the , Any Hungry Husky, or the broader university efforts of Together We Will.

Students and identify which campus they attend. A financial aid counselor contacts the student, and staff then route the request to the appropriate office. Response times have slowed slightly due to the volume of requests, but staff try to contact students within four to five days.

Sometimes other groups on campus, such as a student鈥檚 academic home department, might be asked to contribute. During the pandemic, however, many groups have simply redirected their resources to the fund. 91探花Tacoma鈥檚 class of 2020 decided to dedicate its class gift to the emergency assistance for Tacoma students.

A broader campaign has launched to support all students and add to 91探花resources and federal grants.听The 91探花also will be听receiving $19.8 million in student financial aid from the U.S. Education Department as part of the federal CARES Act to be distributed to students who have the most significant need.

Meanwhile, some of the university’s strategic partners, AT&T, BECU and Coca-Cola, are supporting the Seattle and Tacoma food pantries by donating money, supplies and resources. (Starbucks, another of the university’s strategic partners, continues to donate excess food from its campus locations to the food pantry.) AT&T contributed $50,000 toward needs at both pantries, and at 91探花Tacoma will also support delivery efforts for customers who can’t make the trip to campus.

The $25,000 donated to the Seattle campus pantry can pay for months鈥 worth of inventory, Ferris said. Food drives, a traditional source of donations, aren鈥檛 feasible during the pandemic, so the pantry will need to buy more to stock up, especially on staples or more expensive items such as sauces, peanut butter, rice and pasta to meet the need during spring and summer.

The 91探花Food Pantry generally fills online customer orders within 12 hours. Photo: Olivia Hagan/U. of Washington

Shortly after the switch to remote instruction at the end of winter quarter, 91探花Housing and Food Services donated to the pantry 500 pounds of fresh food, such as produce, eggs and dairy items, that wouldn鈥檛 be able to be served in campus dining facilities. The pantry distributed nearly all of it to customers, and HFS has set aside cooler space for its ongoing donations to the pantry, which in turn displays a 鈥渇resh sheet,鈥 restaurant-style, for customers to order from at pick-up. 91探花Farm Manager Perry Acworth said the farm has begun sending produce to the pantry, as well.

The switch to an online-ordering system at the pantry 鈥 also implemented at — is practical for both staffing and shopping during the COVID-19 pandemic. At 91探花Bothell, the Husky Pantry at Husky Village remains open, but visits are down, and students are provided with information about .

At the Seattle campus pantry, health and safety is a priority for customers and workers alike, Ferris said. There is a designated area for a line outside the pantry, with markings for where customers should stand at a safe distance apart, and a pantry worker greets each customer outside to take their name and identification number. Inside, workers maintain social distancing, sanitize frequently and wear gloves. Face masks are encouraged.

Barriers prevent customer access to the pantry鈥檚 store shelves; when a customer steps inside, a worker brings their order, in a basket, to a table by the front door, and the customer bags their own food. The typical visit inside is designed to last fewer than two minutes.

The online shift definitely altered operations, 91探花Pantry coordinator Alexandra Rochester said, but new volunteers stepped up to help, and staff remain flexible and strategic.

鈥淚t has always been a conflicting feeling to serve so many people because it confronts you with how many people are food insecure, and with each new visitor opting to use our resource, you see the effects of what’s happening to the world,鈥 said Rochester, a graduate student in the Department of Communication. 鈥淏ut it鈥檚 also a good feeling because they’re utilizing a service to help themselves, so it鈥檚 satisfying to be able to provide that.鈥

]]>