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The latest news from the UW

April 3, 2018

New arboretum trail daylights creek, gives greater access to wetlands

A new trail that winds through Washington Park Arboretum is bringing to focus plants previously hidden and a stream that used to be underground in pipes and culverts. The 91探花together with Seattle Parks and Recreation and the Arboretum Foundation on Sunday, April 8 will celebrate the trail opening with festivities along the path.

March 29, 2018

Stellar break-up likely behind 鈥榬unaway鈥 star鈥檚 fast pace, researcher says

During a recent survey of supermassive stars, an international team of astronomers discovered a star that is in quite a hurry. As they report in a new paper, the team tracked one yellow supergiant star cruising along at about 300,000 miles per hour, a velocity that would get you from the Earth to the Moon in about 48 minutes.

Arts Roundup: Opera star Kathleen Battle, 91探花faculty perform Beethoven 鈥 and a ballet by Hubbard Street Dance Chicago

In the arts, see legendary opera star Kathleen Battle take the Meany stage, hear UW鈥檚 own faculty perform Beethoven and other iconic works, experience a breathtaking contemporary ballet where 鈥渦nparalleled versatility and virtuosity鈥 are on full display, and attend a 91探花Symphony performance.

March 28, 2018

91探花historian Michael Honey recalls Martin Luther King’s message of economic justice in new book, ‘To the Promised Land’

As the 50th anniversary approaches of the murder of civil rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King, 91探花historian Michael Honey reminds us in a new book that economic justice and labor rights were always part of King’s progressive message.

March 27, 2018

Distinguished pediatrician Dr. Benjamin Danielson to be UW鈥檚 2018 commencement speaker

Dr. Benjamin Danielson, a 1992 graduate of the 91探花School of Medicine, a Children鈥檚 Hospital pediatrician and director of the Odessa Brown Children鈥檚 Clinic, will be the featured speaker at the 91探花鈥檚 Commencement exercises Saturday, June 9.

March 26, 2018

Underground neutrino experiment sets the stage for deep discovery about matter

In a study published March 26 in Physical Review Letters, collaborators of the MAJORANA DEMONSTRATOR have shown they can shield a sensitive, scalable 44-kilogram germanium detector array from background radioactivity. This accomplishment is critical to developing a much larger future experiment to study the nature of neutrinos.

March 22, 2018

A blind date in the deep sea: First-ever observations of a living anglerfish, a female with her tiny mate, coupled for life

A pair of anglerfish, a species never before seen alive by humans, was recorded recently on camera by researchers aboard the LULA1000, a submersible operated by the marine science-focused Rebikoff-Niggeler Foundation.

March 21, 2018

Partnering with indigenous communities to anticipate and adapt to ocean change

With a new $700,000 grant awarded from the NOAA Ocean Acidification Program, scientists from the 91探花’s Applied Physics Laboratory, Washington Sea Grant and the Joint Institute for the Study of the Atmosphere and Ocean have teamed with federal and tribal partners to study the social and ecological vulnerabilities of Olympic Coast ocean acidification.

With new 鈥榮huffling鈥 trick, researchers can measure gene activity in single cells

Researchers at the 91探花 and the Allen Institute for Brain Science have developed a new method to classify and track the multitude of cells in a tissue sample. In a paper published March 15 in the journal Science, the team reports that this new approach 鈥 known as SPLiT-seq 鈥 reliably tracks gene activity in a tissue down to the level of single cells.

March 14, 2018

Could anti-Trump sentiment mobilize African-American voters in 2018?

African-American voters who dislike and feel threatened by Donald Trump and his presidency are more likely to vote and to engage with politics, according to new research from the 91探花and California State University, Sacramento.

Arts Roundup: Guest Lecture Recital and Master Class with Paul Roberts, Performances by Simon Trp膷eski and Diego El Cigala, and help sculpt a city at the Henry Art Gallery

In the arts, hear renowned piano performances, attend a piano master class, listen to a three time Grammy winner sing, and help sculpt a city that works for everyone.

How social networks help perpetuate the ‘Cycle of Segregation’

  Think about the last time you looked for a new apartment or house. Maybe you asked your friends or colleagues about where they lived. You thought about your route to work, or that neighborhood you always drive through on your way to your kid’s soccer practice. Many of these places were familiar to you, whether from an occasional visit or part of a daily routine. And if you’re like most people, you ultimately moved to a neighborhood you knew…

March 8, 2018

‘Trump in the World’: Jackson School faculty give public talks through spring quarter

The 91探花Jackson School of International Studies presents “Trump in the World: International Implications of the Trump presidency,” a series of public lectures and discussions Tuesday afternoons through spring quarter.

91探花political scientist Megan Ming Francis named fellow with NAACP’s Thurgood Marshall Institute

Megan Ming Francis, 91探花associate professor of political science, has been named a fellow with the Thurgood Marshall Institute. The institute is a multidisciplinary research and advocacy policy center within the NAACP’s Legal Defense and Educational Fund.

March 5, 2018

Harry Bridges Center for Labor Studies to hold ‘Re-imagining Solidarity’ conference March 10

Immigrant rights, environmental concerns and racial, class, gender and sexual justice will be the focus of a daylong conference hosted by the Harry Bridges Center for Labor Studies March 10 at the UW.

March 2, 2018

Celebrated poet Charles Simic to give UW’s 54th Theodore Roethke Poetry Reading April 12

Charles Simic, one of America鈥檚 most celebrated poets, will give the 2018 Theodore Roethke Memorial Poetry Reading on April 12. Simic will be the 54th poet to appear in the series since its inception in 1964.

March 1, 2018

Tri-campus survey aims to identify student struggles with housing, food costs

    In a region as expensive as the Puget Sound, making ends meet affects college students, too. Rent, utilities and food can run into the hundreds, if not thousands, of dollars a month 鈥 and for students without the means, it’s a daunting and sometimes compromising challenge. Urban@ 91探花is trying to learn more about the situations facing students. From now through March 16, a survey is available for students ages 18 or older at all three 91探花…

February 28, 2018

Arts Roundup: Chamber Singers and University Chorale, Writing Workshop, and Un-dammed: Reflections on Art, Education, and Restoration of the Elwha River

In the arts, listen to the Chamber Singers and University Chorale perform music from the Baltic state in their winter quarter concert, join poet Shin Yu Pai in a creative writing workshop, engage in a discussion on art, education, and the restoration of the Elwha Rivier, and watch the Cloud Gate Dance Theatre of Taiwan perform “Formosa” (“beautiful island”)

February 23, 2018

Despite snow in Seattle, cherry blossoms on track for typical season

With snow falling in the Puget Sound region this week, it’s hard to imagine cherry trees in bloom. But assuming temperatures return to normal soon, this year’s cherry blossoms are on track for a typical bloom season. Full bloom is expected the week of March 19.

February 22, 2018

Reducing failed deliveries, truck parking time could improve downtown Seattle congestion, new report finds

If online shopping continues to grow at its current rate, there may be twice as many trucks delivering packages in Seattle鈥檚 city center within five years, a new report projects 鈥 and double the number of trucks looking for a parking space.

New curriculum prioritizes tribal sovereignty, cultural respect in scientific research of American Indian, Alaska Native communities

    When scientists have conducted research in Native American communities, the process and the results have sometimes been controversial. There have been a few well-known cases, such as the 1979 Barrow Alcohol Study, in which researchers examined substance use in the tiny Arctic Circle town and issued findings to the press, before briefing the local community. Media coverage interpreting the findings described an “alcoholic” society of I帽upiats “facing extinction,” while the people of Barrow (now known as Utqia摹vik) felt…