Skip to main content

Campus news Latest News

Songs help Indian women solve real-world problems

October 4, 2005

Songs help Indian women solve real-world problems

Biologist to speak in zoology lecture series on Oct. 7

October 4, 2005

Among the many bizarre evolutionary patterns of the animal kingdom is the curious diversity of male “horns” in different species of the dung beetle.

Roundtable plans fall speaker events

October 4, 2005

University Roundtable begins its fall schedule on Wednesday, Oct. 19, with Gary Sandefur, dean of the College of Letters and Science. He’ll talk about “The Beat Goes On: Maintaining the Healthy Heart of a Great University.â€

Homecoming: W marks the spot

October 4, 2005

Homecoming 2005 sets sail on Friday afternoon, Oct. 14, when 128 students will compete in the EA Sports NCAA Football Challenge from noon-4 p.m. in the Memorial Union parking lot. It’s billed as “the ultimate college video game tournament.” Sixteen universities across the nation are participating, and the champion from each campus will be flown to New York to compete for the title of national champion.

UW-Madison historian aims to broaden perceptions of American West

October 4, 2005

“I wish I’d been a fly on the wall instead of a first-grader,” says Susan L. Johnson, the Women’s Studies Research Center Fellow for…

MacBeth takes Kabuki turn in student production

October 4, 2005

A Kabuki version of “MacBeth” frames the Shakespearean tragedy in traditional Japanese theater.

Writer’s Choice

October 4, 2005

On the verge of earning her master’s degree in library and information studies, Gay Strandemo has developed an acute appreciation of the proper care of library books.

‘Community’ encourages contribution to inclusive campus

October 4, 2005

A unique problem about crises is that they often hold valuable lessons. “I asked myself what kinds of things create community and I came up with a sad answer. Crisis creates community,”says Bernice Durand, associate vice chancellor for diversity and climate. “How do we generate and sustain that bonding, which grows out of the thought, empathy and generosity of a crisis?”Durand posed this query among many other questions to faculty, staff and students last week at the Multicultural Campus Forum on Creating Community held at the Memorial Union.

Book Smart

October 4, 2005

Fall 1991 found Francine Hirsch entering the Ph.D. program in history at Princeton, just as unprecedented change was unfolding in the former Soviet Union.

Counseling psychology honored for minority achievement

October 4, 2005

The Department of Counseling Psychology in the University of Wisconsin–Madison School of Education has received the 2005 Suinn Minority Achievement Award from the American Psychological Association (APA) in recognition of the department's exemplary recruitment, retention and graduation of racial and ethnic minority students.

Partners in Giving campaign begins Oct. 10

October 4, 2005

University, UW Hospital and Clinics, and state government employees in Dane County can support any of more than 400 charities by contributing to this fall’s Partners in Giving campaign, which begins Monday, Oct. 10 and ends Wednesday, Nov. 30.

Scientist uses form to explain building blocks of life

September 30, 2005

UW-Madison biochemists have developed an approach that allows them to measure with unprecedented accuracy the strengths of hydrogen bonds in a protein. The scientists were then able to predict the function of different versions of the protein based on structural information, a novel outcome that was published recently in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Brittingham Viking Organization offers study-abroad scholarships

September 29, 2005

The Brittingham Viking Organization (BVO), a group that sponsors study-abroad programs in Scandinavia, is accepting scholarship applications for 2006 and 2007. Scholarship programs provide all-expenses-paid study-abroad opportunities to UW–Madison undergraduate and graduate students in Norway, Sweden, Finland and Denmark.