Innovation awards go to biochemist, micro-engineer at UW–Madison
Two University of Wisconsin–Madison researchers have received the prestigious National Institutes of Health Director’s New Innovator Award.
Two University of Wisconsin–Madison researchers have received the prestigious National Institutes of Health Director’s New Innovator Award.
Alumni will make a red-carpet entrance this October as they celebrate University of Wisconsin–Madison alumni and traditions at the Red Tie Gala, the capstone event of the Wisconsin Alumni Association’s 150th anniversary.
A progress report compiled following the second year of the university’s five-year strategic framework highlights accomplishments in several areas.
It’s the time of year when campus buildings start to transition from a need for air conditioning to heat. What does it take to make the seasonal switch?
Two campus governance groups have asked interim Chancellor David Ward to consider extending his tenure beyond next summer, as previously planned.
A University of Wisconsin-Madison engineer is collaborating with a Wisconsin entrepreneur to produce a diesel engine that could be a quieter, more efficient power source for a variety of household and industrial applications, including lawn equipment and electric generators.
For the second time in three weeks, the U.S. Department of Justice has awarded a grant to the Wisconsin Innocence Project at the University of Wisconsin Law School’s Frank J. Remington Center.
William Courtenay, University of Wisconsin–Madison Hilldale Professor and Charles Homer Haskins Professor Emeritus of History, has been elected a corresponding fellow to the British Academy.
In the summer of 2007, University of Wisconsin–Madison economist Menzie Chinn was among those who started to think something was amiss with the U.S. economy.
Speaking from Varsity Hall in Union South on Sept. 16, 2011, Department of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano responds to audience questions after delivering remarks highlighting innovative ways to encourage the best and brightest international students to study and remain in the U.S., and announcing a new government website to serve as a one-stop resource …
On Friday, Sept. 16, U.S. Department of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano will deliver remarks at UW–Madison highlighting innovative ways to encourage the best and brightest international students and scholars to study and remain in the U.S.
Dear members of the campus community, Many of you have been involved this week in an important debate about diversity at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. I want to again say that the university remains firmly committed to enrolling a highly diverse student body — that means recruiting not only students from ethnic minorities, but those …
The genome of even a single organism is packed with information. A new paper, building on recent advances in sequencing capability, now reports the complete genomes of 17 different strains of mice, creating an unparalleled genetic resource that will aid studies ranging from human disease to evolution.
Here’s a challenge that’s easy to undertake: connect with the University of Wisconsin-Madison, the Wisconsin Alumni Association, or both, on Twitter and Facebook and help students.
Eric G. Williams has joined the Office of the Vice Provost for Diversity and Climate, where he is expected to play a critical role in helping the university drive a cohesive, integrated diversity agenda.
Here’s a challenge that’s easy to undertake: connect with the University of Wisconsin-Madison, the Wisconsin Alumni Association, or both, on Twitter and Facebook and help students.
The campus community will have an opportunity to extend a welcome back to Interim Chancellor David Ward and his wife, Judith, on Wednesday, Sept. 21 in the Main Lounge of the Memorial Union.
Three decades of academic leadership is not how a farm boy from Minnesota imagined his career unfolding.
Pro bono work performed by attorneys as a service for the public good has a long tradition in American law.
Here is the text of a memo sent by UW–Madison Interim Chancellor David Ward to all members of the state Legislature regarding a bill that would ban the acquisition and use of fetal tissue in scientific research.