Phi Beta Kappa inducts 129 new members
On Saturday, April 25 the Alpha Chapter of Wisconsin Phi Beta Kappa at the University of Wisconsin-Madison inducted 129 students into membership in a ceremony at Union South.
On Saturday, April 25 the Alpha Chapter of Wisconsin Phi Beta Kappa at the University of Wisconsin-Madison inducted 129 students into membership in a ceremony at Union South.
From studying the linguistics of Wisconsin dialects to the after-effects of traumatic brain injury, the dozens of students honored at Monday’s Chancellor’s Undergraduate Awards Ceremony encompassed the principles of teaching, research, outreach and public service that underlie the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s mission.
For most doctoral students, finishing the dissertation is an all-consuming task. But even as Kelly Hiser was wrapping up her thesis on early electronic musical instruments this past year, she was co-founding a company: Rabble, a digital platform where third-party music libraries can collect, license and exchange creative work within their communities.
Most people try to get out of doing dishes. Not Paul Sprunger.
Patrick J. Sims, interim vice provost and chief diversity officer at the University of Wisconsin-Madison since 2013, has been named to the role on a permanent basis.
The Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity chapter at UW-Madison has been terminated as a student organization for violations of Student Organization Code of Conduct policies.
The University of Wisconsin-Madison is a campus full of memorable spaces, from Library Mall to the Memorial Union Terrace, from Picnic Point to the lush green rise of Bascom Hill. Each evokes a sense of place — an intimate and profound connection— that draws us to them and gives them meaning.
A live stream will be available at 1:30 p.m. central time Thursday of University of Wisconsin-Madison Chancellor Rebecca Blank delivering the Daniel Patrick Moynihan Lecture on Social Science and Public Policy at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C. The lecture is given each year by the winner of the Moynihan Prize, which is awarded by the American Academy of Political and Social Science.
The campus will remember University of Wisconsin-Madison students who passed away during the past summer and academic year 2014-15 during a brief ceremony on Friday, May 8 at 1 p.m. at the Carillon Tower.
Fans chanting “Badgers, Badgers!” can often be heard at the Kohl Center, but on Wednesday the refrain could be in the halls of the State Capitol as UW basketball players Josh Gasser and Nigel Hayes stopped in for a visit.
UW students Chelsea Sheedy (left), Bethany Rahja (center) and Mariel Lopes (right) compete in a race on the moon-walker bungee run during the Bucky’s Day Off event, part of the All-Campus Party held on Library Mall at the University of Wisconsin-Madison on April 30, 2015. Photo: Bryce Richter UW students write on a Why I …
UW-Madison faculty, staff and students representing more than two dozen programs will visit the Capitol on Wednesday, May 6, to show how the university brings the Wisconsin Idea to life across the state.
The suspicion that the federal Affordable Care Act reduces options for patients to choose their health care providers proves to be true, according to a new study co-authored by David Weimer, a professor with the La Follette School of Public Affairs at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. However, the quality of hospitals in insurance exchange networks was as good or better than those in commercial insurance networks.
A series of conversations is taking place across campus over the next two weeks focusing on how to make UW–Madison a more welcoming place for students, faculty, staff and the public.
In 2012, when UW–Madison music Professor Laura Schwendinger started working on her second string quartet — one that is her response to species extinctions — the Javan Rhino was considered endangered. Now it is the most threatened of the five rhino species, with just 35 remaining in Java, Indonesia. That, says Schwendinger, highlights “just how pressing the issues I wish to present with my quartet are.”
Artist Alfredo Jaar has produced more than 60 monumental public interventions that confront political violence, poverty, exploitation and imbalances of power. Photos: Sarah Morton MacArthur Award-winning artist Alfredo Jaar spoke to students, faculty and members of the public Friday as part of the Humanities Without Boundaries lecture series from the Center for the Humanities, a …
As with rivers, civilizations across the world rise and fall. Sometimes, the rise and fall of rivers has something to do with it. At Cahokia, the largest prehistoric settlement in the Americas north of Mexico, new evidence suggests that major flood events in the Mississippi River valley are tied to the cultural center’s emergence and ultimately, to its decline.
The University of Wisconsin–Madison Entrepreneurial Achievement Awards this year honor a graduate of the Department of Computer Sciences who co-founded the company that’s now WebMD, and a Department of Animal Sciences professor who has turned his patented technologies into startup companies.