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  • Is Seattle Mayor a Bad Job?

    One and done. That’s been the story of late when it comes to the number of terms Seattle mayors serve. Seattle Met asked three experts, including UW history professor Margaret O’Mara, to offer their takes.

    02/25/2021 | Seattle Met
  • People sleep less before a full moon

    Researchers led by UW biology Professor Horacio de la Iglesia have found that whether you live in a rural or urban environment, your sleep patterns are affected by a full moon. On the nights leading up to full moon, people fall asleep later and sleep less overall.

    02/25/2021 | EarthSky
  • The Coronavirus Is Threatening a Comeback. Here’s How to Stop It.

    Many scientists are expecting another rise in infections. But this time the surge will be blunted by vaccines and, hopefully, widespread caution. By summer, Americans may be looking at a return to normal life. Carl Bergstrom, professor of biology at the UW, is quoted.

    02/25/2021 | The New York Times
  • Scientists describe earliest primate fossils

    Gregory Wilson Mantilla, professor of biology and curator of vertebrate paleontology at the Burke Museum of Natural History & Culture, has co-led a new study analyzing several fossils of the earliest-known primates.

    02/25/2021 | UW News
  • Black history is American history

    "Black History Month is a chance to recognize that Black history is American history. It’s an important time to reflect on the ways in which Black people, their stories and their impact have so often been elided and erased from our shared understanding of ourselves as a nation and a people," writes UW President Ana Mari Cauce.

    02/25/2021 | UW Office of the President
  • Paleontologists use fossilized teeth to flesh out ancient tale of earliest primates

    The shapes of fossilized teeth from 65.9 million-year-old, squirrel-like creatures suggest that the branch of the tree of life that gave rise to humans and other primates flowered while dinosaurs still walked the earth. The UW’s Gregory Wilson Mantilla, Burke Museum curator of vertebrate paleontology and professor of biology, and Brody Hovatter, a graduate student in Earth and space sciences, are quoted.

    02/24/2021 | GeekWire
  • COVID-19 interrupted a generation of theater artists. Now they wonder what’s next

    UW theater student Jarrett Johnson is among an entire class of emerging theater artists — fresh from drama programs, hustling between part-time jobs and busy audition schedules, or about to make their big breaks — whose careers have been stalled by the COVID-19 pandemic. The UW's Odai Johnson, professor of theater history, and Stefka Mihaylova, assistant professor of theater theory and criticism, are quoted.

    02/24/2021 | The Seattle Times
  • Mystery of Spinning Atomic Fragments Solved at Last

    New experiments have answered the decades-old question of how pieces of splitting nuclei get their spins. George Bertsch, professor emeritus of physics at the UW, is quoted.

    02/24/2021 | Scientific American
  • New Initiative Focuses on Revitalization of Arts Spaces

    Public-private partnership will renovate Art and Music Buildings.

    02/24/2021 | College of Arts & Sciences
  • The dogs that grew wool and the people who love them

    Indigenous communities in the Pacific Northwest bred little, fluffy white dogs that provided for them, both materially and spiritually. A discovery made by Coast Salish spinning researcher Liz Hammond-Kaarremaa at the UW’s Burke Museum is mentioned.

    02/23/2021 | Hakai Magazine