Honor society event features living legend of civil rights
The UW–Madison chapter of the nation's leading honorary society, Phi Beta Kappa, will celebrate its 100th anniversary on campus with a discussion Sunday (Feb. 7) featuring a revered civil rights and community leader, Velma Hamilton. Read More
Rose Bowl celebration set for Feb. 6
The UW–Madison Athletic Department will be hosting "Wisconsin's Rose Bowl Celebration -- A Salute To Our Team and Its Fans" on Saturday, February 6, at the Kohl Center. The festivities begin at noon. Read More
Textile exhibit features UW faculty
Textile arts faculty from UW–Madison, UW-Milwaukee and UW-River Falls will present new works in State of the Art, on exhibit at the UW–Madison Gallery of Design through Friday, Feb. 26. Read More
Movies’ cultural role to be examined
Scholars from around the world will investigate film's mission as cultural amusement through a three-day symposium at UW–Madison Feb. 4-6. Read More
Biochemistry art installation wins national honor
"Biotechnology Waltz" seems to have "floored" judges of the 1998 National Terrazzo and Mosaic Association Honor Award. Read More
Campus bus routes change Monday, Feb. 8; ride free Feb. 7-13
Campus transportation officials and Madison Metro are gearing up for changes to the weekday campus bus routes that begin this month. Read More
Transportation Services sets aside parking for arts events
To better balance competing demands for parking between sports fans and arts patrons, Transportation Services has designated several areas for theater and arts parking on campus. Read More
Campus officials release 10-year diversity plan
Motivating the entire university community to help improve campus diversity is the thrust of UW–Madison's plan to increase the number of minority students, staff and faculty by 2008. Read More
Sesquicentennial concert Feb. 7 to recall landmark visit by Ellington
As part of his week, Ellington composed "The U-Wisc Suite," which the UW Jazz Ensemble will perform as part of the university's 150th Anniversary Concert Sunday, Feb. 7 at 1 p.m. Read More
Sesquicentennial snapshot
UW-Madison will commemorate its 150th anniversary and 15 decades of service to Wisconsin and its citizens starting next month. Read More
ISIS transition continues through spring
The implementation of the new student records system at UW–Madison continues as planned and should be completed by late spring. Read More
New exhibition celebrates UW art faculty’s diversity
A stroll through the 1999 art faculty exhibition, opening at the Elvehjem Museum of Art Saturday, Jan. 30, will reveal virtually the entire scope of late 20th century American art forms. Read More
Research describes human origins debate before Darwin
When Charles Darwin's Origin of Species was first published in 1859, the intellectual and spiritual controversy that colors nearly any discussion of where humans come from was already a two-decade-old phenomenon in the United States. Read More
Flu season arrives on campus
Influenza season is here officially, now that the University Health Services and the Wisconsin State Laboratory of Hygiene have recently confirmed a case of influenza in a UW–Madison student. Read More
Oscar Mayer creates business scholarships for students of color
The Oscar Mayer Division of Kraft Foods Inc., has given the School of Business $40,000 to help recruit, retain and educate students of color. Read More
Tickets available for sesquicentennial gala
Tickets are still available for the Sesquicentennial Scholarship Gala, a grand event planned for Saturday, Feb. 6, that will feature original performances, fine dining and dancing until midnight. Read More
Quality child care can carry social benefits for kids
If the quality is there, children in all varieties of child care show greater confidence with peers and more compliance with adults, according to one of the most expansive studies ever of child care in America. Read More
Distinguished psychologist Robert Goy dies at 74
Robert W. Goy, administrator, educator and pioneering investigator of the origins of sex differences in behavior, died Jan. 14 from cardiovascular and metabolic complications. He would have been 75 on Jan. 25. Read More
History department plans to honor Mosse
Plans are pending in the UW–Madison Department of History for a memorial recalling the life and scholarship of George Mosse, the department's Bascom-Weinstein Professor of Jewish Studies. Mosse died Friday, Jan. 22 from liver cancer. Read More
Future of West tied to saving, not extracting, the land
The road to economic stability for the west today, argues a UW–Madison rural sociologist, is one that takes an ironic twist to the frontier axiom that "all wealth comes from the land." Read More