Summer India study program suspended
In response to a U.S. State Department travel warning to Americans in India, the university will not proceed with a 10-week summer study abroad program in the state of Kerala. Read More
Partnerships to be recognized
The university will honor a dozen partnerships with local communities for innovative approaches to education and community service over the last year. Read More
New budget plan offered
Assembly Republican shave offered "a streamlined solution" to the state's current fiscal crisis that is expected to be discussed by a committee trying to reach a legislative compromise on state budget cuts. Read More
Atlas guides readers to food
The new "Farm Fresh Atlas" includes descriptions and locations of 50 farms and food-related businesses that sell their products directly to customers in southern Wisconsin. Read More
Fulbright visiting scholars announced
Six visiting international scholars will be in residence during the 2002-03 academic year under the Fulbright Visiting Scholars program. Read More
Students to work on voting rights museum, institute
On May 31, UW–Madison students and staff will embark on a journey to Selma to renovate and develop educational projects for the National Voting Rights Museum and Institute. Read More
Humanities center plans a busy year
The Center for the Humanities will feature six prominent speakers in its 2002-03 Humanities Without Boundaries Lecture Series. The center also will present panels on 'Women and Science' and 'Rembrandt and the Jews.' From April 7-13, the center will sponsor lectures, performances and events commemorating the centennial of 'The Souls of Black Folk' by W.E.B. Du Bois. Read More
New office ready to answer questions about UW–Madison
The recently created Campus Information and Visitor Center's primary goal is to answer questions about the UW–Madison campus from members of the campus community, prospective students and their families, and the general public. Read More
Campus ’empire builder’ retires
One of Bruce Braun's first projects after he retires June 30 will be to help his son-in-law build a shed in his back yard. It hardly seems like a major task for the retiring assistant vice chancellor for facilities, planning and management, who oversees what Braun calls a 'vast empire' of buildings and equipment, likely valued at more than $5 billion. Read More
Agency’s aggressive patent management protects public, professors
The Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation has been patenting and licensing UW research for more than 75 years. Today, WARF has one of the most envied file cabinets in science, with about 1,700 active patents ÷ including not one but two patents resulting from James Thomson's stem-cell work. Read More
Program seeks to assist women business owners
The School of Business is recruiting a third class of established women business owners to participate in a groundbreaking program that creates volunteer advisory panels to help them grow their businesses. Read More
Budget talks find some agreement
The Assembly and Senate appear to have reached agreement on nearly two-thirds of their differences over the state budget adjustment bill. Read More
Public forum on breast cancer
A free public forum discussing key issues in the fight against breast cancer is planned 7-9 p.m. Wednesday, June 5. Read More
After the punch line: What jokes tell us
As director of UW–Madison's folklore program, Jim Leary is possibly Wisconsin's best repository of the state's ethnic history and heritage. And he can tell a mean farmer joke. He knows hundreds, gathered from his many travels around the state. Most of them are rare artifacts, plucked from the brains of elderly farmers, tavern owners and townsfolk whom Leary has met over the years. To him, those jokes are to be cherished as much as any fine work of art. Read More
SSEC aids severe storms study
Two university research centers will support a massive field experiment to better measure humidity, rainfall and overall moisture in the air and how it all changes. Read More
Online program honored
UW-Madison programs recently were recognized by the University Continuing Education Association for excellence in university outreach. Read More
Polygon honors teachers
Polygon Engineering Council, the School of Engineering's council of student organizations, announced its annual teaching excellence awards April 28. Read More
Iwanter Prize announced
Jyoti Raghu is the winner of the second annual Center for the Humanities Iwanter Prize for excellence in interdisciplinary humanities scholarship for her senior thesis, 'Piers Plowman and Fourteenth Century England.' Read More
Professor is an advocate for improving end-of-life care
To social work professor Betty Kramer, pondering how you'll leave this world isn't especially morbid or ghoulish. As an expert in the field of end-of-life issues, including grieving and palliative care, she's spent much of her career thinking about how people can prepare for death. Read More
Study reveals anticancer activity
A potential new treatment for patients with metastatic prostate cancer has demonstrated anticancer activity in some patients in a clinical trial. Read More