Skip to main content

Campus news Latest News

UW expertise helps land a $1.6 million grant for Wisconsin

August 4, 2005

A system built by the UW–Madison Division of Information Technology (DoIT) played a key role in winning $1.6 million in federal research funding for Wisconsin health agencies. Read More

Center for Integrated Ag Systems Selected as a Pesticide Reduction Champion

August 4, 2005

The UW–Madison Center for Integrated Agricultural Systems has been selected by the EPA as a Pesticide Environmental Stewardship Program Champion for 2005. This designation honors CIAS for its efforts to reduce pesticide risk through sustainable agricultural practices such as Integrated Pest Management and organic farming. CIAS also received this national honor in 2003. Read More

Study may expand applied benefits of super-hard ceramics

August 4, 2005

A discovery reported in the August 5 issue of Science could speed the design of materials that approach the hardness of diamond yet remain supple enough to be worked like metal. Read More

WAA seeks nominations for distinguished alumni awards

August 4, 2005

The Wisconsin Alumni Association is calling for nominations for its top honors, the Distinguished Alumni Award and Distinguished Young Alumni Awards. Since 1936, WAA has been presenting the awards during Alumni Weekend festivities in May to the most prestigious graduates of the UW–Madison. Read More

Madison World Music Festival to be held Sept. 15-17

August 3, 2005

Following the success of last year's World Music Festival, this year's festival will be held on campus from Thursday, Sept. 15-Saturday, Sept. 17, with encore performances by three of the groups at the Willy Street Fair on Sunday, Sept. 18. Read More

Art, astronomy mix at Washburn Observatory

August 3, 2005

Starry Transit, an exhibition organized by the Madison Museum of Contemporary Art (MMoCA) in partnership with the Department of Astronomy, will feature an installation of new, site-specific sculptural works by Wisconsin artist Martha Glowacki. Read More

South African telescope poses opportunities for U.S. businesses

August 3, 2005

Thanks to its geography and its clear skies, South Africa has long been a prime location for astronomy. Which is why UW–Madison – plus a dozen other international organizations - signed on a little more than five years ago to help build and fund SALT, the Southern African Large Telescope. Faculty and administrators will travel to this emerging economic powerhouse on the African continent’s southern tip in November when SALT – the largest telescope in the hemisphere - captures its first light. They also hope to open doors to Wisconsin business leaders accompanying them on the trip, nurturing what they foresee as a two-way commercial exchange that will benefit both the Badger State and South Africa. Read More

Engineers chart semiconductors on the scale of atoms

August 1, 2005

Spanning fewer than a thousand atoms, the electronic devices on semiconductor chips have become so miniscule they defy most efforts to characterize them. Now for the first time, engineers have demonstrated a way to image these vanishingly small devices by mapping them atom by atom. Read More

Three finalists named in CALS dean search

August 1, 2005

Three finalists for dean of the College of Agricultural and Life Sciences have been forwarded to Chancellor John W. Wiley today (Aug. 1) for his consideration. Read More

Summer undergraduate research scientists to present findings

August 1, 2005

As part of the 2005 Synchrotron Radiation Center-Research for Undergraduates in Education program, the UW–Madison facility hosted five students this summer from colleges and universities throughout the United States and, in one case, Puerto Rico. Read More

Campus works to preserve air quality on ‘Clean Air Action Days’

August 1, 2005

Another Clean Air Action Day has been scheduled for Tuesday, Aug. 2, and UW–Madison will again employ a number of measures to help safeguard local air quality. Read More

New analysis of pottery stirs Olmec trade controversy

August 1, 2005

Clearing - or perhaps roiling - the murky and often contentious waters of Mesoamerican archeology, a study of 3,000-year-old pottery provides new evidence that the Olmec may not have been the mother culture after all. Read More

Grainger Hall addition delayed to contain costs

July 28, 2005

Plans for an addition to Grainger Hall, which will house graduate programs in the University of Wisconsin–Madison School of Business, are being redesigned as a cost-saving move after bids for the project came in over budget. Read More

Alvarez to leave coaching after 2005 football season

July 28, 2005

University of Wisconsin head football coach and athletic director Barry Alvarez, who transformed the Badgers football program into a national powerhouse, announced Thursday that he will step down from his coaching duties at the end of the 2005 season. Read More

PEOPLE completes summer programs with public events

July 26, 2005

Two events will mark the final week of the summer 2005 Pre-college Enrichment Opportunity Program for Learning Excellence (PEOPLE) Program on the UW–Madison campus. More than 800 PEOPLE students have participated on campus over the past three months. Read More

First Business Financial Services elects Bugher to board of directors

July 25, 2005

First Business Financial Services, Inc., located at 401 Charmany Dr. in Madison, announced July 22, 2005 that Mark D. Bugher has been elected to… Read More

Celluloid Bucky: Recent films make Badger connection

July 25, 2005

When the movie version of "The Dive from Clausen's Pier" premieres on the Lifetime Channel tonight (Monday, July 25 at 8 p.m.), viewers are likely to see some Badger wear and University of Wisconsin–Madison memorabilia used as props, wardrobe or set dressing in some of the scenes. They may also see quick scenes of the campus, provided by John Roach Projects at the request of the university. Read More

World-renowned performer, composer named fall artist in residence

July 21, 2005

The UW–Madison Arts Institute welcomes world-renowned performer, composer, conductor, educator, music producer, and publisher Gunther Schuller as its Fall 2005 Interdisciplinary Artist in Residence. Schuller will teach university courses and participate in public forums and performances from September through December 2005. Read More

Prominent UW–Madison sociologist Stephen Bunker dies at 61

July 21, 2005

Stephen G. Bunker, a professor of sociology and rural sociology at UW–Madison, died Tuesday, July 19, at his home in Hollandale, Wis. A longtime professor who joined the UW–Madison faculty in 1989, Bunker was known as a skilled and dynamic instructor who taught courses that explored the links between economics and ecology. Read More

World land use seen as top environmental issue

July 21, 2005

The massive conversion of the world's natural landscapes to agriculture and other human uses may soon begin to undermine the capacity of the planet's ecosystems to sustain a burgeoning human population. Read More