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UW In The News

  • Big Question: Is Justice Department Right To Close Privately-Run Prisons?

    WPR August 25, 2016

    Noted: Interview with Professor Cecelia Klingele. Private prisons are less safe and less effective than government-run prisons, according to the United States Department of Justice, and will soon no longer be used by the federal government.

  • Eyes in the sky

    Isthmus August 25, 2016

    A new generation of satellites is sending back an unheralded amount of data, measuring air pollution, pollen, smoke and much more. But is anyone paying attention? And is the data even available? NASA recently tapped Tracey Holloway, a UW-Madison environmental studies professor, to make sense of the data.

  • Jorgensen dominates Olympic triathlon: Badgers alumna wins as favorite

    Duluth News Tribune August 22, 2016

    Hot favorite Gwen Jorgensen produced the perfect race to win the Olympic women’s triathlon gold on Saturday, the American unusually staying with her rivals on the bike before surging clear of defending champion Nicola Spirig-Hug on the run.

  • Berquam: UW program benefits all students

    Milwaukee Journal Sentinel August 22, 2016

    Christian Schneider’s Aug. 12 column dismissing the value of programs promoting cultural understanding at universities read like it was inspired by the sort of touchy-feely “diversity training” lampooned on TV shows like “The Office.”What we’re actually doing at the University of Wisconsin-Madison this year is quite different. The issues we’re addressing are real and the new Our Wisconsin program is a rational, evidence-driven response to them.

  • Inside the epic quest for a more perfect taffy

    Washington Post August 19, 2016

    If you’re hitting the beach this August, you may find yourself indulging in one of those characteristic treats of America’s boardwalks: saltwater taffy, made by a process conventionally known as “pulling” taffy. But if you’re a fluid dynamics professor at the University of Wisconsin, you might prefer to characterize it as “mixing” — mixing air with sugar, essentially. And you might start to get curious about the mesmerizing spirograph patterns traced by the rods on those taffy machines, and wonder, above all else, if there isn’t a more efficient way to achieve that silky result.

  • UW-Madison lab partners with teachers to create educational video games

    Capital Times August 19, 2016

    Field Day Lab, a team of developers, researchers and engineers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s Wisconsin Institute for Discovery, wants to change that. By working with middle school science teachers across the state, the team developed nine video games, released this week, that better suit student and teacher needs.

  • Olympics: Former UW runner Evan Jager earns silver medal in steeplechase with ‘perfect race’

    Wisconsin State Journal August 18, 2016

    Evan Jager knows steeplechase history about as well as anyone.

  • ESPN GameDay to kick off at Lambeau Field

    Milwaukee Journal Sentinel August 18, 2016

    ESPN College GameDay will kick off the 2016 season at Lambeau Field.

  • D’Amato: Ex-Badger Evan Jager wins steeplechase silver

    Milwaukee Journal Sentinel August 18, 2016

    The steeplechase has carried the stigma of being a last resort for American distance runners who can’t quite cut it in the faster 1,500 meters or the nobler 5K. Few actually aspire to run the 3,000-meter race, with its 28 leg-sapping barriers and seven water jumps. It’s always tough. It’s seldom pretty.

  • Why making a backup plan may set you up to fail

    The Washington Post August 18, 2016

    Landing your dream job is a daunting prospect for anyone. So you might be forgiven for thinking that the smartest thing to do when pursuing an ambitious career is also thinking up a Plan B, in case your Plan A goes wrong. Right?

  • Random Lake lawyer to feature in UW campaign

    August 18, 2016

    Come Sept. 5, a billboard featuring attorney John Hawley will be erected on 14th Street and Niagara Avenue in Sheboygan.

  • UW-Madison study looks at concussions effect on academics

    WISC-TV 3 August 17, 2016

    A new study being conducted by the University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Nurses and the School of Medicine and Public Health will look at how concussions affect student athletes when they return to the classroom.

  • Fontes: The Demise of a Prison Lord

    New York Times August 17, 2016

    On July 18, Guatemala’s most infamous — and powerful — prisoner, Byron Lima Oliva, was shot to death in the Pavón prison outside Guatemala City. While it was a fellow prisoner who, the authorities said, put two bullets in Mr. Lima’s head, in all likelihood the intellectual authors of the killing hail from the highest echelons of the state and the moneyed elite. In Guatemala, it is often impossible to tell where the state ends and the underworld begins.

  • How to Ease the Tensions in Milwaukee

    Time.com August 17, 2016

    Noted: Fascinating research by psychologist Patricia Devine from the University of Wisconsin deals with breaking the prejudice habit. She explains how even people who hold beliefs and attitudes that are opposed to prejudice can act in discriminatory ways. This essentially happens because of implicit biases, automatic processes we all hold.

  • Wisconsinites Know More Than They Think About Financial Issues

    WisContext August 17, 2016

    In recent years, communities, schools and families have sought to help people be better able to avoid money troubles by promoting financial literacy and, in turn, financial capability. A new national study shows these efforts are finding success in Wisconsin.

  • Sotomayor coming to Madison

    Isthmus August 17, 2016

    Sonia Sotomayor grew up in a housing project in New York City. The daughter of native Puerto Ricans, her father died when she was just 9 years old. He never learned English. Her mother, an orphan, raised Sotomayor and her brother in the Bronx, in a neighborhood plagued by poverty and violence. Nevertheless, Sotomayor was always at the top of her class. In 2009, she became the first Latina and the third woman to be confirmed as an associate justice to the U.S. Supreme Court.

  • A Look At Student Moving Days Past

    Wisconsin Public Radio August 17, 2016

    When it opened on the University of Wisconsin-Madison campus in 1851, North Hall contained classrooms, offices, and housing; for four years, it was the entire university in a single building. About 30 students lived there with three faculty members and a janitor.

  • Can curiosity help us make healthier choices?

    Toronto Star August 16, 2016

    Noted: With fortune cookies in hand, American researchers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and Northwestern University approached 100 people and offered them the choice between the plain cookie and the chocolate-dipped one, at first without the promise of a revealing fortune. In this control group, the less-healthy cookie was far more tempting — with around 80 per cent of participants picking it.

  • Editorial: UW System budget request reasonable

    Eau Claire Leader-Telegram August 15, 2016

    Years of budget cuts under both Republican Gov. Scott Walker and his predecessor, Democrat Jim Doyle, have made for a lean UW System.

  • If You Rely Too Much On Plan B, It Might Ruin Your Plan A

    Lifehacker.com August 15, 2016

    It’s good to have backup plans in case your goals don’t work out in your career or life. However, if you spend too much effort on figuring out the details of your backup plans, it can make you less likely to really pursue your first plan.

  • UW ranks 7th worldwide in US patents issued to universities, report says

    Wisconsin State Journal August 15, 2016

    UW-Madison is one of the top universities in the world when it comes to getting patents for the work done here, according to a report released Friday.

  • Finding treasures among the discarded

    WKOW-TV 27 August 15, 2016

    For those in the midst of moving days in downtown Madison, there is a place where one person’s junk can become another person’s treasure. That place is the UW-Madison We Conserve program’s temporary drop-off donation site located on Lot 45 at 165 N. Mills Street.

  • Wisconsin ranked 24th all-time among college football programs

    Milwaukee Journal Sentinel August 12, 2016

    It’s a good day to be a Badger.The University of Wisconsin-Madison football team was recently ranked 24th in the Associated Press’ all-time Top 100 rankings. The AP has been ranking college football teams since 1936 and determined its top 25 of all time by counting how many times a team appeared on the poll (one point), the number of No. 1 rankings (two points) and AP championships (10 points).

  • Daily Beast Removes Article on Gay Olympians in Rio

    New York Times August 12, 2016

    Quoted: Robert Drechsel, who retired last week as the James E. Burgess Chair in Journalism Ethics and director of the Center for Journalism Ethics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, described the article as “thoughtless, insensitive and unethical.”

  • Legal Help for Returning Wisconsin Veterans

    Public News Service August 11, 2016

    Veterans coming home from overseas wars face challenges in adapting to life as a civilian, and many of those challenges involve legal questions. That’s why the UW Law School opened the Veterans Law Center in 2012. Today, at the Appleton Public Library, the Center has a mobile unit staffed with attorneys, paralegals, and volunteers to help veterans with their legal questions.

  • UW research fuels mini solar cells

    Milwaukee Journal Sentinel August 11, 2016

    Imagine a smartwatch that’s powered by the sun rather than a lithium-ion battery. Or a contact lens that taps solar energy to adjust its focus automatically to help you see better.

  • Search for sterile neutrino goes dark

    Milwaukee Journal Sentinel August 9, 2016

    On the frigid central plain of Antarctica, where the sun rises only once a year, a set of 5,160 light sensors encased in a cubic kilometer of crystal clear ice sits poised to register the flash of passing quantum particles.

  • Homelessness on College Campuses

    August 9, 2016

    On a frigid seven-degree night last year, Brooke Evans, 23, entered the University of Wisconsin library in Madison, stomping her feet in her worn Adidas to get the feeling in her toes back.

  • UW-Madison to include digital records in national online library

    Wisconsin State Journal August 9, 2016

    About 400,000 records kept by UW-Madison Libraries will be available online to students, genealogists and researchers as part of a nationwide digital collection.

  • Merging Medicine and Entrepreneurship: UW Health Docs Share Lessons

    Xconomy August 8, 2016

    By the time Hans Sollinger helped launch a company for the first time, in 2004, he had performed hundreds of pancreas transplants. In the process, he had built a reputation as a prolific surgeon whose experience few of his peers could match. Sollinger, who practices at the University of Wisconsin Hospital and Clinics, also known as UW Health, said that the high demand for his services over the years made his first foray into entrepreneurship somewhat jarring.

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