- See Washington
for other uses. Not to be mistaken for Washington State
University

University of Washington
(UW, commonly pronounced U-Dub)
was founded in 1861 and is a public research
university in Seattle
, Washington
, United
States
. UW is the largest university in the northwestern
United States
and one of the oldest universities on the west
coast. The university has three campuses, with its
flagship campus in Seattle's University
District
and much smaller branch campuses in Tacoma and Bothell
. Its operating budget for fiscal year 2005
was $3.1 billion. The university is also considered a
Public Ivy.
In 2009, the school placed 16th in the world's top universities,
according to the
Academic Ranking of World
Universities.
History
The city of Seattle was one of several settlements in the mid to
late 19th century vying for primacy in the newly formed
Washington Territory. In 1854,
territorial governor
Isaac Stevens
recommended the establishment of a university in Washington.
Several prominent Seattle-area residents, chief among them
Methodist preacher
Daniel
Bagley, saw the siting of this University as a chance to add to
the city's prestige. They were able to convince early founder of
Seattle and member of the territorial legislature
Arthur A. Denny of the importance of Seattle winning
the school.
The legislature initially chartered two
universities, one in Seattle and one in Lewis
County
, but later repealed its decision in favor of a
single university in Lewis County, provided locally donated land
could be found. When no site emerged, the legislature,
encouraged by Denny, relocated the university to Seattle in
1858.
In 1861, scouting began for an appropriate 10
acre (40,000 m²) site in Seattle to serve as the campus
for a new university.
Denny, along with fellow pioneers Edward Lander and Charlie Terry, donated a site on "Denny's
Knoll" in downtown Seattle
. This tract was bounded by 4th and 6th
Avenues on the west and east and Union and Seneca Streets on the
north and south.

The original University building on
Denny's Knoll, c1870
UW opened officially on
November 4,
1861, as the
Territorial University of
Washington. The following year, the legislature passed
articles formally incorporating the University and establishing a
Board of Regents. The school struggled initially, closing three
times: in 1863 for lack of students, and again in 1867 and 1876 due
to shortage of funds. However,
Clara Antoinette McCarty Wilt
became the first graduate of UW in 1876 when she graduated from UW
with a
bachelor's degree in
science.
By the time Washington
entered the Union
in 1889,
both Seattle and the University had grown substantially.
Enrollment had increased from an initial 30 students to nearly 300,
and the relative isolation of the campus had given way to
encroaching development. A special legislative committee headed by
UW graduate
Edmond Meany was created
for the purpose of finding a new campus better able to serve the
growing student population.
The committee selected a site on Union Bay northeast of
downtown
, and the legislature appropriated funds for its
purchase and subsequent construction.
The University relocated from downtown to the new campus in 1895,
moving into the newly built Denny Hall. The regents tried and
failed to sell the old campus, and eventually settled on leasing
the area. The University still owns what is now called the
Metropolitan Tract. In the
heart of the city, it is among the most valuable pieces of
real estate in Seattle and generates millions of
dollars in revenue
annually.
The original Territorial University building was torn down in 1908
and its former site currently houses the Fairmont Olympic Hotel.
The sole surviving remnants of UW's first building are four ,
white, hand-fluted cedar, Ionic columns. They were salvaged by
Edmond S. Meany--one of the University's first
graduates and the former head of the history department. Meany and
his colleague, Dean Herbert T. Condon, dubbed each of the columns
"Loyalty," "Industry," "Faith" and "Efficiency," or "LIFE." The
columns now stand in the Sylvan Grove Theater.
[5549]
Organizers of the 1909
Alaska-Yukon-Pacific
Exposition eyed the still largely undeveloped campus as a prime
setting for their
world's fair. They
came to an agreement with the Board of Regents that allowed them to
use the campus grounds for the exposition. In exchange, the
University would be able to take advantage of the development of
the campus for the fair after its conclusion. This included a
detailed site plan and several buildings. The plan for the A-Y-P
Exposition prepared by
John Charles
Olmsted was later incorporated into the overall campus master
plan and permanently affected the layout of the campus.
Both
World Wars brought the military to
the campus, with certain facilities temporarily loaned to the
federal government. The subsequent post-war periods were times of
dramatic growth for the University. The period between the wars saw
significant expansion on the upper campus. Construction of the
liberal arts quadrangle, known to students as
"The Quad," began in 1916 and continued in stages until 1939.
The first
two wings of Suzzallo
Library
, considered the architectural centerpiece of the
University, were built in 1926 and 1935, respectively.
Further growth came with the end of
World
War II and passage of the
G.I. Bill. Among the most important
developments of this period was the opening of the medical school
in 1946. It would eventually grow into the
University of Washington
Medical Center, now ranked by
U.S. News and World Report among
the top ten hospitals in the United States
. It was during this era in University of
Washington history in which many Japanese Americans were sent away
from the university to internment
camps along the West-coast of the United States as part of
Executive Order 9066 following
the attacks on Pearl
Harbor
. As a result, many Japanese American
"soon-to-be" graduates were unable to receive their diplomas and be
recognized for their accomplishment at the university until the
University of Washington's commemoration ceremony for the
Japanese Americans entitled
The Long Journey Home held on May 18,
2008 at the main campus.
In the early 1950s, the University of Washington Police Department
was established.
It currently has jurisdiction over the
University of Washington campus and University-owned housing,
except for the Radford Court apartments in Sand
Point
.
The 1960s and 1970s are known as the "golden age" of the university
due to the tremendous growth in students, facilities, operating
budget and prestige under the leadership of
Charles Odegaard from 1958 to 1973.
Enrollment at UW more than doubled—from around 16,000 to 34,000—as
the
baby boom generation came of
age. As was the case at many American universities, this era was
marked by high levels of
student
activism, with much of the unrest focused around opposition to
the
Vietnam War. Odegaard instituted a
vision of building a "community of scholars" and convinced the
state of Washington legislatures to increase their investments
towards the university. Additionally, Washington
senators,
Henry M. Jackson and
Warren G. Magnuson used their political clout to
funnel federal research monies to the University of Washington and
to this day, UW is among the top recipients of federal research
funds in the United States. The results included an operating
budget increase of $37 million in 1958, to over $400 million in
1973, and 35 new buildings that doubled the floor space of the
university.
The
University opened branch campuses in Bothell
and Tacoma in 1990.
Initially, these campuses offered curricula for students seeking
bachelor's degrees who have
already completed two years of higher education, but both schools
have transitioned to four year universities, accepting the first
freshman class in the fall of 2006. Both campuses offer
master's degree programs as well.
Campus

An aerial view of the UW
campus, dating from 1922 or before
The University of Washington, Seattle campus is situated on the
shores of
Union and
Portage
Bays
, with views of the
Cascade
Range to the east and the
Olympic Mountains
to the west.
Its most popular views are from Suzzallo
Library
, which has a vista of Mount Rainier
to the southeast, the Quad and its Yoshino cherry trees that bloom spectacularly each spring to the north,
and Red Square
spreading out in front of it to the west.

Cherry trees in bloom in the
Quad.
The main campus is bounded on the west by 15th Avenue N.E., on the
north by N.E. 45th Street, on the east by Montlake Boulevard N.E.,
and on the south by N.E. Pacific Street. East Campus stretches east
of Montlake Boulevard to
Laurelhurst and is largely
taken up by
wetlands and sports fields.
South
Campus occupies the land between Pacific Street and the Lake
Washington Ship Canal
which used to be a golf
course and is given over to the health sciences, oceanography, fisheries, and the University of Washington
Medical Center. West Campus is less of a separate entity
than the others, many of its facilities being on city streets, and
stretches between 15th Avenue and
Interstate 5 from the Ship Canal to N.E. 41st
Street.
University Way, known locally as "The Ave
", lies nearby and is a focus for much student life
at the university.
The oldest building on campus is Denny Hall. Built in 1895 in the
French Renaissance style, it was
named in honor of Seattle pioneers
Arthur A. and
Mary
Denny. It served as the core of the University for many years.
The
Theodore
Jacobsen Observatory
, the on campus observatory situated just north of
Denny Hall, was built from the left over material used in the
construction of Denny Hall. Although it is rarely used
today, the observatory is the second oldest building on campus.
After other structures were erected near Denny Hall with apparently
little overall planning, the Board of Regents determined that a
master plan was needed. Early plans, including a preliminary
proposal by
John Charles
Olmsted, stepson of renowned
landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted, had little
impact.
Instead, it was the
Alaska-Yukon-Pacific
Exposition that defined much of the campus' future layout. The
exposition plan, also designed by John C. Olmsted, defined the
University's major axis on the lower campus.
Oriented to the
southeast, it provides the University with its primary vista of
Mount
Rainier
on clear days. Most of the University's
science and
engineering buildings line this axis.
After the exposition, the Board of Regents sought a master plan
that would unite the newly developed lower campus with the original
buildings of the upper campus including Denny Hall. Rejecting a
further proposal from Olmsted, the regents instead turned to local
architects
Carl F. Gould and
Charles
H. Bebb. Their proposal was
accepted, and came to be called the Regents' Plan. It specified a
northeast-southwest axis on upper campus around which would be
centered the University's
liberal arts
departments. This axis joins the lower campus axis laid down during
the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition at an open space left behind
after a large temporary structure built for the fair was torn down.
This space was later paved with a distinctive red brick and has
come to be known as
Red Square. Some of
the buildings from the exposition were kept by the university and
have been retrofitted over the years since. One of these is
Architecture Hall.
Bebb and Gould's plan also called for all future construction to
adhere to a
Collegiate Gothic
style.
This style is best exemplified on the
University campus by the early wings of Suzzallo Library
, the University's central library.
New construction in the 1960s saw a deviation from the Collegiate
Gothic style as specified in the Regents' Plan. Business facilities
on the upper campus, science and engineering structures on lower
campus, and a new wing of Suzzallo Library, were all built in a
modernist style, as was a unique,
glass-walled building housing an experimental
nuclear reactor. The reactor opened in 1961;
a small
radiation leak in
1972 resulted only in a temporary shutdown, but security concerns
eventually led to it being decommissioned. It was deactivated in
1988, dismantled in 2006,and as of 2008 the building is being
considered for demolition.
An apparent attempt to harmonize future development with the
Regents' Plan can be seen in the University's most recent
construction, including the 1990
Kenneth
Allen wing of the central library and a new generation of
medical, science and engineering buildings. Significant funding
came from
Microsoft co-founders
Paul Allen and
Bill
Gates, who have strong family connections to the university but
did not attend UW.
Mary Gates
Hall opened in May 2000, and in September 2003, the UW law
school relocated to the $74 million
William H. Gates Hall on the northwest corner of
campus, and the $90 million
UW Medical Center
surgery pavilion opened for operation. The $72 million Paul G.
Allen Center for Computer Science & Engineering opened in
October 2003. In March 2006, the $150 million
William H. Foege
bioengineering and genome sciences
building was dedicated by
Bill Gates and
former U.S. president
Jimmy
Carter.
In September 2006, President Emmert announced that the University
had finalized the purchase of the neighboring 22-story Safeco Plaza
(a University District landmark) as well as several adjacent
buildings for the sum of $130 million. At present, plans are being
finalized to relocate UW administration and support services to the
complex, leaving the main campus (two blocks away) for teaching and
research.
Most of the streets and major walkways on campus are named after
the state's
counties.
Major exceptions are Memorial Way and
George Washington Lane. Memorial Way is
named in honor of members of the UW community who died in
World War I and also features a flagpole
engraved at its base with the members of the UW community who died
in
World War II.
Other
attractions on campus include the Henry Art Gallery
and the Burke Museum of Natural History and
Culture
. The
Washington Park Arboretum, south
of main campus across
Union Bay,
is run by the university, though owned by the city of Seattle.
The
Warren G.
Magnuson Health Sciences
Center
is also an interesting attraction. The
building, at , is the second largest office building in the United
States.
Several major motion picture films were filmed on campus or used it
as a backdrop, including
The Sixth
Man,
WarGames, and
What the Bleep!?: Down
the Rabbit Hole.
Sustainability
President Emmert recently signed the American College &
University Presidents Climate Commitment.
[5550] To help follow through on this promise,
the UW has created a Climate Action Team.
[5551]. He has also created an Environmental
Stewardship Advisory Committee (ESAC), which recently created an
inventory of UW's greenhouse gas emissions
[5552], an environmental stewardship
coordinator position, and has formalized a policy on environmental
stewardship to give full institutional support to the cause of
campus sustainability.
As of February 2006, the UW joined a partnership with Seattle City
Light as part of their Green Up Program. All of Seattle campus'
electricity is purchased from renewable sources. Housing and Food
Services (HFS) spends several million dollars annually on locally
produced, organic, and natural foods. HFS does not use styrofoam
containers for any of its facilities on campus, instead using
compostable cups, plates, utensils, and packaging whenever
possible. Students Expressing Environmental Concern (SEED) is
funded by HFS and is responsible for most of the sustainable
changes made to HFS. Several new residence halls are planned for
2020, all of which are expected to meet silver or gold LEED
standards.. All new state-funded buildings and major renovations
must meet a
LEED standard
of at least Silver. The University of Washington was one of only
six universities to receive the highest grade on the Sustainable
Endowments Institute's College Sustainability Report Card 2008, an
"A-".The report card identified the UW as one of 15 Overall College
Sustainability Leaders among the 300 institutions surveyed.
Student organizations
Many of the sustainable changes at the University of Washington
have resulted from campus activism. Several environmental-activism
groups on campus include:
- Students Expressing Environmental Dedication
(SEED) - SEED works with Housing and Food Services to
increase the sustainability of the residence halls and dining
areas.
- UW Earth Club - The Earth Club is interested
in promoting the expression of environmental attitudes and
consciousness through specialized events.
- UW Farm - The UW farm grows crops on campus
and advocates urban farming in the UW community.
- Washington Public Interest Research Group
(WashPIRG) - WashPIRG engages students in a variety of
activism causes, including environmental projects on campus and the
community.
- UW Sierra Student Coalition - SSC is dedicated
to many larger environmental issues on campus and providing related
opportunities to students.
Organization and administration
The
current president of the University of Washington is Dr. Mark Emmert, the former chancellor of Louisiana
State University
. Emmert, a 1975 graduate, took office as the
University's 30th president on
June 14,
2004.
The University is governed by ten regents, one of whom is a
student. Its most notable current regent is likely
William H. Gates, Sr., father of
Bill Gates. The undergraduate student government
is the
Associated
Students of the University of Washington (ASUW) and the
graduate student government is the
Graduate and
Professional Student Senate (GPSS).
The University offers
bachelor's,
master's and
doctoral degrees through its 140
departments, themselves organized into various colleges and
schools:
Academics and research
In 2006, the University of Washington research budget passed the $1
billion milestone. Virtually all of the funding came from
peer-reviewed research proposals.
UW research budget consistently ranks
among the top 5 in both public and private universities in the
United
States
. UW is also the largest recipient of federal
research funding among public universities and second among all
public and private universities in the country, a position that the
university has held each year since 1974. The university is an
elected member of the
Association of American
Universities.
As of the 2006-07 autumn term, the university has 40,216 students.
In 2007, the average high school GPA of incoming freshmen was 3.75,
and the average
SAT (math and critical reading)
score was 1,251. About 33% of all undergraduates are members of
ethnic
minority groups.
Among the faculty, there are five winners of
Albert Lasker
Award for Clinical Medical Research, one winner of the
Fields Medal, eight winners of
Gairdner International Awards,
twelve
MacArthur Fellows, two
winners of the
National Book
Award, one winner of the
National Medal of Arts, five winners
of the
National Medal of
Science, six
Nobel Prize laureates,
nineteen winners of the
Presidential
Early Career Awards in Science and Engineering, and two
Pulitzer Prize winners.
Additionally, among
UW faculty are fifty-eight members of the American Academy for Arts
and Sciences, four members of the American
Philosophical Society
, thirteen Howard Hughes
Medical Institute Investigators, forty-eight members of the
Institute of Medicine, fifteen
members of the National
Academy of Engineering, and sixty members of the National Academy of Sciences
.
The
University of
Washington library system is among the largest academic
libraries in the United
States
, with holdings of more than 6.5 million volumes and
7.5 million microforms. The Association of Research
Libraries ranked the UW library system between the top fifth and
fifteenth in various categories.
UW is also the host university of ResearchChannel program, the only
TV channel in the United States dedicated solely for the
dissemination of research from academic institutions and research
organizations. Current participation of ResearchChannel includes 36
universities, 15 research organizations, two corporate research
centers and many other affiliates. UW also disseminates knowledge
through its proprietary UWTV channel and online.
To promote equal academic opportunity, especially for people of low
income, UW launched
Husky Promise in 2006. Families of
income up to 65 percent of state median income or 235 percent of
federal poverty level are eligible. With this, up to 30 percent of
undergraduate students may be eligible. The cut-off income level
that UW set is the highest in the nation, making top quality
education available to more people. UW President, Mark Emmert,
simply said that being "elitist is not in our DNA". "Last year, the
University of Washington moved to a more comprehensive approach [to
admissions], in which the admissions staff reads the entire
application and looks at grades within the context of the
individual high school, rather than relying on computerized
cutoffs."
There is also a
Transition School
and Early Entrance Program on campus. "The Early Entrance
Program is the Robinson Center’s original early university entrance
program. Recognized as one of the most prestigious early university
entrance programs in the nation, this program facilitates early
entry to the University of Washington for a carefully selected
group of sixteen highly-capable young students younger than fifteen
(15) years old. As mandated by state law, students must have
completed 6th grade in order to enroll in the Transition School."
This Robinson Center also has a program called the UW Academy: "The
UW Academy is the premier early university entrance program for
high school students in Washington State. A small cohort of up to
thirty-five academically advanced and highly motivated students are
admitted to the UW Academy each year. Students apply to the UW
Academy during their 10th grade year, and if accepted, withdraw
from high school at the end of 10th grade to enroll as freshmen at
the University of Washington." All Academy students are
automatically admitted into the UW Honors Program.
Rankings
UW's undergraduate program was ranked 42nd among "national
universities" and tied for 11th among public doctoral universities
by
U.S. News and World Report.
The
UW
School of Medicine (
primary care)
and
nursing school. are both ranked
first and its medical research was ranked sixth in 2008. The UW
School of Nursing has been ranked #1 in the nation since 1984, when
the first survey of nursing schools was conducted. The U.S News
& World Report only began ranking the primary medical school in
1993, ever since which UW has also always been #1. The School of
Public Health and Community Medicine is as well ranked fourth by US
News.
The graduate program in social work is ranked third, the pharmacy
school fifth, the Library and Information School fourth, the
graduate school of education seventh, the school of engineering
21st, and the
UW
School of Law 30th.
The University of Washington was ranked 16th internationally by the
Academic
Ranking of World Universities in 2008.
The University of Washington also ranked 22nd internationally by
Newsweek "Top 100 Global
Universities".
The Performance Ranking of Scientific Research Papers of World
Universities ranked UW 4th internationally in terms of overall
research productivity.
The Faculty Scholarly Productivity Index created by Academic
Analytics ranks University of Washington overall at #19. UW has a
total of 7 number 1 rankings for disciplines and only three
universities have as many or more #1 rankings.
G Factors ranked UW 7th internationally in 2006.
A private review by the
National Opinion Research
Center, and published in the
Washington Monthly, ranked the university
14th in the United States for 2006.
The Top American Research Universities report from the
Center at Arizona State ranked UW eleventh overall and third among
public institutions.
Global Language Monitor, produced at Austin that ranks college
based on media presence, placed University of Washington at #16 in
the nation.
University of Washington ranks #1 in
Peace
Corps volunteers in 2007 and #3 throughout the years.
Kiplinger
[5553]ranked the University of Washington #9 of
the top 100 colleges in early 2008 as one of the Best values in
Public Colleges.
Traditions and student activities
The student newspaper is
The Daily of the
University of Washington, usually referred to as simply
The Daily.
Athletics
UW students, sports teams, and alumni are called
Washington Huskies, and often referred to
metonymically as "Montlake," due to the campus's location on
Montlake Boulevard N.E.
(It should be noted that the traditional
bounds of the Montlake
neighborhood do not extend north of the Montlake Cut
to include the campus.) The husky was selected as the school mascot by student
committee in 1922. It replaced the "Sun Dodger," an abstract
reference to the
local
weather that was quickly dropped in favor of something more
tangible. The costumed "Harry the Husky" performs at sporting and
special events, and a live
Alaskan
Malamute, currently named Dubs, has traditionally led the UW
football team onto the field at
the start of games. The school colors of
purple and
gold were
adopted in 1892 by student vote. The choice was purportedly
inspired by the first
stanza of
Lord Byron's
The Destruction of
Sennacherib:
- :The Assyrian came down like the
wolf on the fold,
- :And his cohorts were gleaming in purple and
gold;
- :And the sheen of their spears was like stars on the
sea,
- :When the blue wave rolls nightly on
deep Galilee
.
The sports teams participate in the
National Collegiate
Athletic Association's Division I-A and in the
Pacific Ten Conference.
Among its facilities
on campus are Husky
Stadium
(football and track & field), the Bank of America Arena at Hec Edmundson
Pavilion
(basketball and volleyball), Husky ballpark
(baseball), Husky Softball Stadium, The Bill Quillian Tennis Stadium, The
Nordstrom
Tennis Center, Dempsey Indoor (Indoor track &
field, football) and the Conibear Shellhouse (rowing). The
golf team plays at the Washington National Golf
Club and the
swimming team calls
the
Weyerhaeuser Aquatic Center and the
Husky pool home.
The
University football team
is traditionally competitive, having won a title in 1960 and a
share of the national championship in the 1991 season, to go along
with eight Rose
Bowl
victories and an Orange Bowl title. From 1907 to
1917, Washington football teams were unbeaten in 63 consecutive
games, an
NCAA record.
Tailgating by boat has been a Husky Stadium
tradition since 1920 when the stadium was first built on the shores
of Lake
Washington
.
The
Apple Cup game is an annual game against
cross-state rival Washington State University
that was first contested in 1900 with UW leading
the all-time series, 64 wins to 29 losses and 6 ties.
Steve Sarkisian is the current head
football coach.
The men's
basketball team has been
moderately successful, though recently the team has enjoyed a
resurgence under coach
Lorenzo Romar.
With Romar as head coach, the team went to 4
NCAA
tournaments (2003-2004 season, 2004-2005 season, 2005-2006
season, and 2008-2009 season),2 consecutive top 16 (sweet sixteen)
appearances, and secured a #1 seed in 2005. On
December 23,
2005, the men's
basketball team notched their 800th victory in Hec Edmundson
Pavilion, the most wins for any NCAA team in its current arena. In
2009, the basketball team finshed first in the Pac-10 on its way to
an NCAA tournament appearance.
Rowing is a
longstanding tradition at the University of Washington dating back
to 1901.
The Washington men's crew gained
international prominence by winning the gold
medal at the 1936 Summer
Olympics in Berlin
, defeating
the German
and Italian
crews much to the chagrin of Adolf Hitler who was in attendance.
In 1958,
the men's crew furthered their lore with a shocking win over
Leningrad
Trud's world champion rowers in
Moscow
, resulting
in the first American
sporting victory on Soviet
soil, and
certainly the first time a Russian
crowd gave any American team a standing ovation
during the Cold War. The men's crew
is the current national champion and in all, have won 14 national
titles, 15 Olympic gold medals, two silver and five bronze. The
women have 10 national titles and two Olympic gold medals. This
year the Husky men swept the IRAs winning gold in all three
"eights" events and a gold in the "Open four" and silver in the
"Varsity four". The last crew to sweep this event was Washington in
1997.
Recent national champions include the
softball team (
2009), the men's rowing
team (
2009,
2007), NCAA
Division I women's
cross
country team (
2008), and the women's
volleyball team (
2005).
Individually,
James Lepp was the 2005
NCAA men's
golf champion. Ryan Brown (men's 800
meters) and Amy Lia (women's 1500 meters) won individual titles at
the 2006 NCAA
Track &
Field Championships. Ryan Brown also won the 800 meter title at
the 2007 NCAA Indoor Track & Field Championships.
Husky Stadium is one of several places that may have been the
birthplace of the crowd phenomenon known as "
The Wave." It is claimed that the wave was
invented in October 1981 by Husky graduate Robb Weller and UW band
director Bill Bissel. Their opponent that night was Stanford.
On May 1, 2009, the athletic department announced it was
discontinuing both men's and women's swimming programs effective
immediately due to budget cuts.
Song
The University of Washington Husky
Marching Band performs at many Husky sporting
events including all
football
games. The band was founded in 1929, and today it is a cornerstone
of Husky spirit. The band marches using a traditional high step,
and it is one of only a few marching bands left in the United
States to do so. Like many college bands, the Husky band has
several traditional songs that it has played for decades, including
the official
fight song "
Bow Down to Washington" and "
Tequila", as well as fan-favorite "
Africano". In addition to athletic events, the band
also plays at various other events such as
commencement and
convocation.
Mascot
The University of Washington's mascot is
Harry the Husky.
The University of Washington has hosted a long line of
Alaskan Malamutes as mascots. The 13 dogs
thus far have been:Frosty I (1922-29)Frosty II (1930-36)Wasky
(1946)Wasky II (1947-53)Ski (1954-57)Denali (1958)King Chinook
(1959-68)Regent Denali (1969-80)Sundodger (1981-91)King Redoubt
(1992-97)Prince Redoubt (1998)Spirit (1999-2008)Dubs
(2009-)Originally the dogs were cared for by the Sigma Alpha
Epsilon fraternity, followed by a 50 year tradition (1959-2008) of
care by the Cross family (a UW professor followed by his
son).
University of Washington in the movies
People
See also
References
- University of Washington Annual Report (January
2006).
- Comparing Black Enrollments at the Public
Ivies
- [1]City of Seattle Press Release, 2/2006
- [2]Housing and Food Services: Environmental
Stewardship and Sustainability
- http://uwnews.org/article.asp?articleID=43903
- [3] Program on the EnvironmentNews and
Events
-
http://www.washington.edu/home/departments/departments.html
- UW passed $1 billion research budget mark
- The
Top American Research Universities (December 2005)
- " Student Headcount By Campus and Term, making it
the largest university (in terms of student population) on the west
coast." Office of Institutional Studies. University of
Washington.
- " Undergraduates." Office of News and
Information. University of Washington.
- UW culls the best for 2007 incoming
freshmen
- ARL Statistics 2004
- ResearchChannel contact UW
- ResearchChannel participants
- UWTV
- Inside HigherEd Husky Promise
- UW Husky Promise
- CollegeJournal | News & Trends
- "[4]" US News and World Report, America's Best
Colleges 2008
- [5][6]
- USNews.com: America's Best Graduate Schools 2008:
Top Medical Schools - Research
- UW Nursing #1 1
- UW Primary Med School #1
- Search - Public Health - Best Graduate Schools -
Education - US News and World Report
- USNews.com: America's Best Graduate Schools 2008:
Health: Social Work
- " America's Best Grad Schools 2009: Pharmacy
School." U.S. News and World Report.
- Top Library and Information Schools (2009)
US News Report Library and Information School
- USNews.com: America's Best Graduate Schools 2009:
Top Education Schools
- USNews.com: America's Best Graduate Schools 2008:
Top Engineering Schools
- US News and World Report - Best Law Schools -
University of Washington
- Top 500 World Universities (2008) Institute
of Higher Education, Shanghai Jiao Tong University
- Top 100 Global Universities (2006).
Newsweek.
- [7]. Performance Ranking of Scientific
Research Papers of World Universities.
- [8] Faculty Scholarly Productivity
Index
- Academic Analytics
- Chronicle Facts & Figures: Faculty Scholarly
Productivity Index
- G-Factor International University Ranking (2006).
G Factor.
- The Washington Monthly College Guide.
The Washington Monthly.
- The
Top American Research Universities (December 2005). The Center,
University of Florida.
- UW ranked 16th by Global Language Monitor
- UW First in Peace Corps 2007
- Peace Corps Top Colleges 2007
- Mora's move generates intrigue
- Events of the Century, Seattle PI,
December 21, 1999.
- Water World, Sports Illustrated,
November 17, 2003.
-
http://www.gohuskies.com/sports/c-swim/spec-rel/050109aab.html
External links