Skip to main content

NSF grant aids state plastics industry

October 4, 2004

A project that partners students from across the state with UW–Madison professors and Wisconsin companies could help boost the state's plastics industry in years to come. Read More

New language institute prepares students for the global marketplace

October 4, 2004

UW-Madison, which has more world languages courses than any other college or university in the United States, has created the Language Institute to help prepare graduates to compete for job opportunities in the global marketplace. Read More

Applied corporate finance center celebrates expanded facilities

October 4, 2004

The Nicholas Center for Applied Corporate Finance at the School of Business celebrated its new facilities in Grainger Hall on Sept. 30. Read More

Student projects aid area small businesses

October 4, 2004

A semester-long project through UW–Madison's Small Business Development Center in the School of Business gives small businesses in and around Madison a jump-start on creating business plans while university students receive hands-on training for future jobs. Read More

Meeting to explore a changing natural world

October 4, 2004

A two-day workshop aimed at documenting and exploring the significance of ecological change in Wisconsin will be held Oct. 7 and 8 at the Pyle Center on the UW–Madison campus. Read More

UW-Madison welcomes talented freshman class

September 30, 2004

UW-Madison continues to enroll talented and qualified classes of incoming freshman, says Admissions Director Rob Seltzer. Read More

UW to start master’s program in occupational therapy

September 29, 2004

Beginning next summer, UW–Madison will launch a master's-level program in occupational therapy. Read More

PBS program to feature UW medical historian

September 29, 2004

Judith Leavitt, a UW Medical School historian, and other national experts on the history of Mary Mallon - also known as Typhoid Mary - will be featured in a program to air on NOVA, the acclaimed television science series on the Public Broadcasting System (PBS). Read More

Tiny arm shuttles electrons in a new transistor

September 29, 2004

Using a vibrating arm less than one-millionth of an inch long and one-thousand times thinner than a human hair, a new transistor toggles on and off through the movement of a single electron. Read More

New York Times writer to discuss his welfare reform book

September 29, 2004

Jason DeParle, whose new book "American Dream" tracks the story of welfare reform from the White House to three Milwaukee families living in poverty, will speak Thursday, Sept. 30, at UW–Madison Read More

Wisconsin scientists develop quick botox test

September 28, 2004

Scientists at UW–Madison have developed a pair of rapid-fire tests for botulinum toxin, a feat that could underpin new technologies to thwart bioterrorism and spur the development of agents to blunt the toxic action of the world's most poisonous substance. Read More

Master plan to create a vision of UW–Madison’s future

September 28, 2004

An uncommon opportunity to define UW–Madison for years to come arrived this week, with the announcement of a yearlong process to create a master plan to guide campus renewal well into the next decade. Read More

Original music honors memorial library’s 50th anniversary

September 24, 2004

The Memorial Library will premiere five original musical compositions with a theme of libraries and librarians this Monday, Sept. 27, at 4:30 p.m. in the Petrovich Reading Room, 212 Memorial Library. This original music has been commissioned by the Mills Music Library to commemorate the 50th anniversary of Memorial Library. Read More

Volunteer fair set for Sept. 28

September 24, 2004

New center examines nanotechnology

September 23, 2004

A new kind of science is revolutionizing technology, and UW–Madison just received more than $13 million to harness its potential during the next five years. Read More

Students of color to make Career Links with alumni

September 23, 2004

Students of color attending UW–Madison will get a glimpse of the "real world" as they interact with alumni at the 2004 Career Links reception on Thursday, Sept. 30. Read More

Nobelist to address issue of science and election politics

September 22, 2004

Peter Agre, professor of biological chemistry at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and a Nobel Prize winner, will lecture on “Science Policy and the 2004 Election”on Wednesday, Sept. 29. Read More

Seminar focuses on higher-education ethics

September 22, 2004

The ethical complexities of administrative decision-making in a higher-education setting will be the topic of a two-session course at the Pyle Center, 702 Langdon St., on Thursday, Sept. 30, and Thursday, Oct. 7. Read More

Talk focuses on women’s role in rural economic growth

September 22, 2004

A presentation on the status of women and economic development in rural Wisconsin will be held Thursday, Sept. 23. Read More