Spotlight

people outdoors wearing graduation gowns throwing their caps in the air on a sunny day

Celebrating Iowa’s spring 2026 graduates

A new class of Hawkeyes is ready to soar — and we couldn’t be prouder of all they’ve achieved.

Student success

university of iowa grad Adam Heflin stands before a Hawkeye-themed wall

Graduate spotlight: Adam Heflin

After graduating with a Master of Science in Nursing, Adam Heflin plans to return to serve the rural Iowa area he grew up in.
University of Iowa graduate Advika Shah stands in the halls of Pappajohn Business Building

Graduate spotlight: Advika Shah

Advika Shah found her place at the University of Iowa by exploring opportunities in analytics and ethics while building friendships, gaining career-ready skills, and discovering how to create real-world solutions.
Portrait of Ben Ahlrichs in an Iowa sweatshirt

Graduate spotlight: Ben Ahlrichs

Writing is everywhere at the University of Iowa, and Ben Ahlrichs was thrilled to find himself in the middle of it.

Health care

a woman standing outside a building on the university of iowa campus

Care when and where it’s needed most

Experiencing her father’s death in a farming accident and the pressures of COVID-19 as a health care worker inspired Bailey VandeLune to pursue emergency medicine. Now, she’s committed to making a difference in a rural community like the one she grew up in — Winterset, Iowa.
an illustration that conveys the idea of someone suffering from a migraine headache, with a colorful lightning bolt emphasizing chaos inside someone's head

A focus on precision medicine therapies for migraines

University of Iowa researchers are working to connect migraine patients with the treatments that will actually work for them.

Research

a man sits at a table in his home, smiling at the camera

Turning rare cancer research into real hope

When Ron Muhlenbruck was diagnosed with a rare cancer in 2005, he came to the University of Iowa — then a rising leader in neuroendocrine tumor research. Twenty years later, Iowa remains the only U.S. institution to receive specialized federal funding twice for this rare cancer.
an illustration that conveys the idea of someone suffering from a migraine headache, with a colorful lightning bolt emphasizing chaos inside someone's head

A focus on precision medicine therapies for migraines

University of Iowa researchers are working to connect migraine patients with the treatments that will actually work for them.
a researcher in a white lab coat holds a container that has water and a zebrafish inside

UI researcher tackles rare eye cancer through novel approaches

Using zebrafish, UI professor Colin Kenny studies uveal melanoma to better understand how it forms and spreads — and how it can be treated. His dedication to research comes from what he calls the “sheer thrill of discovery.”

Always a Hawkeye: Alumni stories

a man poses with the Graduation Herky statue on the Pentacrest of the University of Iowa campus

New graduate returns to Iowa to finish what he started

More than 40 years after leaving while just credits short of a degree, Tim Dickson fulfills a promise to his mother by returning to the University of Iowa — thanks to an online program that finally made finishing possible from afar.
Jim Green standing before a colorful backdrop in a building on the University of Iowa campus

Hawkeye roots shape a NASA career

Before leading some of NASA’s most ambitious missions, Jim Green found his trajectory at the University of Iowa — where a series of “gravity assists” set him on a path to the stars.
a man wearing a black Hanna Golf jacket and a green hat stands in a manufacturing facility, holding a putter

Precision, pride, and putters: Alum builds a golf brand in Iowa

After leaving a VP role, Iowa MBA grad Jared Doerfler bet on himself and launched a custom putter company that now ships worldwide — all from a growing production floor in the Hawkeye State.

Community impact

a young girl interacts with a simulated patient while an AirCare staff member looks on at a Teens Go STEM event

New STEM event hosted by UI Health Care attracts Iowa high school students

Nearly 100 Iowa high school students attended the first-ever Teens Go STEM event on the University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine campus, exploring health care careers, participating in hands-on medical simulations, and more.
several students standing for a group photo in a school classroom, along with a returning alumna

Back in their seats: Medical students return home through Hawkeye Hometown Visits

Returning to Epworth and Winterset, two University of Iowa medical students reflect on the mentors, classrooms, and moments that first sparked their path to medicine.
a young woman stands near a sign in Winterset, Iowa

Back in their seats: Medical students return home through Hawkeye Hometown Visits

Returning to Winterset and Epworth, two University of Iowa medical students reflect on the mentors, classrooms, and moments that first sparked their path to medicine.

Faculty and staff features

a researcher in a white lab coat holds a container that has water and a zebrafish inside

UI researcher tackles rare eye cancer through novel approaches

Using zebrafish, UI professor Colin Kenny studies uveal melanoma to better understand how it forms and spreads — and how it can be treated. His dedication to research comes from what he calls the “sheer thrill of discovery.”
University of Iowa researcher Michael Welsh stands outside on the UI campus

Iowa researcher calls CF breakthroughs ‘unfathomable’

Michael Welsh could not have imagined the life-altering treatments for cystic fibrosis that would grow from the discoveries made in his University of Iowa lab. Once considered a fatal childhood disease, CF now can be managed with drugs that significantly extend patients’ lives.
a man sits at his desk as sunlight streams through the windows to his right

Curiosity and compassion fuel Iowa researcher’s work

From rural beginnings to groundbreaking advances in the treatment of cystic fibrosis, Michael Welsh has helped reshape what’s possible for patients. Supported by a collaborative academic environment at the University of Iowa, his dedication to discovery and improving lives has increased our understanding of this complex condition.

Athletics

a young girl wearing an iowa hawkeyes jersey raises her hand to deliver a high-five to a nearby friend or family member

Meet Kid Captain Millie Judge

Millie Judge was transferred to UI Health Care Stead Family Children’s Hospital shortly after birth for breathing issues, and she underwent open-heart surgery at just 4 months old. Diagnosed with a rare syndrome, she continues to return for expert monitoring and care.
Kid Captain Ray Walker holding a football; the photo backdrop features a foam finger and Ray's signature

Meet Kid Captain Ray Walker

Ray Walker was having an average of 20 seizures a day as a toddler. UI Health Care experts diagnosed the Indianola, Iowa, boy with focal epilepsy and performed a surgery that disconnected one side of his brain from the other. He has been seizure-free for five years.
a young boy wearing an Iowa Hawkeyes jersey brings his arm back to throw a football

Meet Kid Captain Blake Bonta

Blake Bonta was a healthy and happy 10-year-old until severe headaches sidelined him. A scan showed a mass at the back of his brain, which UI doctors diagnosed as an aggressive cancer.