Tudor dinners offer season celebration
Enjoy a night of fine dining, Old English pageantry and rich choral presentations at the Wisconsin Union at the Tudor Holiday Dinner Concerts.
Enjoy a night of fine dining, Old English pageantry and rich choral presentations at the Wisconsin Union at the Tudor Holiday Dinner Concerts.
The Lenor Zeeh Pharmaceutical Experiment Station, a center of expertise serving faculty and the private sector, will hold a ribbon-cutting ceremony on Friday, Nov. 17, to dedicate its new laboratories.
New York Times environment reporter Andrew Revkin will give a free public lecture at 4:30 p.m. Monday, Nov. 20, in the Wisconsin Historical Society Auditorium.
Zachary Harrison, a UW–Madison junior from New York, has been selected as one of 11 students nationwide who will appear on a special College Week edition of the TV game show “Who Wants to Be a Millionaire” later this month.
UW–Madison has entered into a new three-year Desktop Campus Agreement with Microsoft, effective Nov. 1.
UW–Madison students have one of the highest loan repayment rates in the nation, according to an analysis by the Office of Student Financial Services (OSFS).
A search-and-screen committee is being formed for the next vice provost for information technology and director of the Division of Information Technology. The position previously was held by Annie Stunden, who retired last summer.
Join the UW Bicycle and Pedestrian Ambassadors for an introductory winter bicycle-commuting workshop at 7:30 p.m. today (Nov. 15) at Memorial Union (check TITU).
Raj Veeramani, an industrial and systems engineering professor, directs the University of Wisconsin E-Business Consortium (UWEBC), a university-industry initiative that offers its 70 member companies opportunities to share, explore and learn best practices in e-business.
To Kim Cridler, an assistant professor of art, the emotional power of objects drives her work as an artist. Through her work in metalsmith arts, Cridler seeks to recreate the feelings that are engendered by the meaningful artifacts of our past.
Ushering nutritional science into the biotech age, UW–Madison researchers are exploring the complex interactions between food and genes to uncover new modes of disease prevention, drug development and, eventually, personalized diet advice tailored to one’s DNA.
As wildfires put more human lives and property at risk, people are looking to fire managers for protection.
Zachary Harrison, a University of Wisconsin-Madison junior from New York City, has been selected as one of 11 students nationwide to appear on a special College Week edition of the TV game show “Who Wants to Be a Millionaire” later this month.
Solomon B. Levine, an emeritus faculty member and one of the nation’s foremost experts on Japanese labor relations, died last month at age 86.
The Community of Educational Technology Support (ComETS), an unofficial university grassroots organization with about 200 members, gives individuals from different areas of the university an opportunity to connect and pursue shared professional development. The group offers a chance to hear from authorities in technology fields, discuss new educational models and ultimately implement their ideas in special-interest groups.
A University of Wisconsin-Madison biological engineering team tweaked the standard system for measuring virus infectivity, digitized it, quantified it, analyzed it and discovered a method more than 10 times as sensitive.
By comparing influenza viruses found in birds with those of the avian virus that have also infected human hosts, researchers have identified key genetic changes required for pandemic strains of bird flu.
These folks means business, and will show you to what extent in their “Get Loud!”concert appearances Friday-Saturday, Nov. 20-21.
The Steering Committee of the Latina/o Faculty Staff Association (LAFSA) will host a conference, “Connecting Resources: the Latino/a community and UW-Madison,” on Thursday, Nov. 16, at the Memorial Union.
Judith Strand, director of the University of Wisconsin-Madison Connections Program, has been named assistant dean and director of the Adult and Student Services Center in the Division of Continuing Studies (DCS).