Columns Magazine
December 2002 Features


 
Lasting Legacies


Lasting Legacies
From winning the Nobel Prize to inventing the "Wave," from circling the moon to perfecting the disposable diaper, we list 101 Outstanding UW Achievements.
By Tom Griffin and Jon Marmor

On the BallHistory Lessons
The American Revolution is not ancient history but an explosion with shock waves that are still being felt today, says UW Historian Richard Johnson
By Steve Hill


 

From the Ground UpFrom The Ground Up
Four Months Before 9/11, Terrorism Struck the UW When Arsonists Burned Down Parts of the Center for Urban Horticulture. Today a New Center is Rising From the Ashes.
By Beth Luce


Briefings


 News
  Striking Back At Muscular Dystrophy.

Columns and Departments


  Departments

Extras

  • Music Man
    Tom Heston realizes the importance of music and perscribes it to his patients.
  • A Life's Work
    David Tapper, surgeon-in-chief at Children's Hospital, died July 23 after a three-year struggle with kidney cancer. He was 57.
  • First Alumnae President
    Lucile Thompson, the first president of the Alumnae Board, died Oct. 14. She was 90.

Association News


  A 1969 mountain climbing class on the UW campus gives these three UW students a chance to hang out in high places.  File photo.











A 1969 mountain climbing class on the UW campus gives these three UW students a chance to hang out in high places. File photo.

Class Notes


 
  • Music Man Tom Heston realizes the importance of music and perscribes it to his patients.
  • A Life's Work David Tapper, surgeon-in-chief at Children's Hospital, died July 23. He was 57.
  • First Alumnae President Lucile Thompson, the first president of the Alumnae Board, died Oct. 14. She was 90.
  • Alumnotes: News of classmates from 1930 to 2001.
  • Obituaries Alumni, faculty and friends of the University.
  • Alumnotes Page How to submit a class note plus our Alumnotes Archive


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