Campus news Latest News
Alumna’s film scheduled for Madison showing
“Side Effects,” an independent film written, directed and produced by UW–Madison alumna Kathleen Slattery-Moschkau, is returning to Madison for a Friday, Dec. 9-Sunday, Dec. 11, premiere at the Marcus Westgate Art Cinemas. Read More
Synchrotron Radiation Center launches new Web site
In an effort to offer easy access to research-related information to its users and guests, to provide general synchrotron information to the public and to offer access to educational programs, the Synchrotron Radiation Center (SRC) has launched a redesigned Web site. Read More
Partners in Giving pledge forms due by Dec. 14
Partners in Giving officially ended Nov. 30, but it is not too late to make a contribution. If you wish to give through the convenient payroll deduction option, you should turn in your pledge form to your campaign coordinator no later than Wednesday, Dec. 14. Read More
Applications available for undergraduate research scholarships
UW-Madison offers undergraduates great opportunities to engage in collaborative research with faculty or instructional/research academic staff. Read More
Study: Job satisfaction varies between independent and organization-hired doctors
Wisconsin family physicians employed by large health care organizations are less happy on the job and more likely to want to leave than those in independent practice, according to a study published in the Dec. 6, 2005 issue of the Annals of Family Medicine. Read More
Assistant dean urges connections among community
Connie Wilson spent the past 34 1/2 years coming to Bascom Hall every morning as an assistant dean of students Read More
Librarian leads ‘double life’ as singer at Tudor dinners
Sylvia Edlebeck’s life is the stuff of fairy tales. For most of the year she’s an acquisitions librarian and Web master at the Memorial Library. However, come November and December, she performs with the Philharmonic Chorus of Madison at the Wisconsin Union’s Tudor Dinners. Read More
LUNAFEST benefits breast cancer fund
LUNAFEST, a one-night- only film festival celebrating women Read More
Reminder of inclement weather guidelines
The chancellor is responsible for determining if, for the safety and welfare of students and staff, classes will be postponed or some services suspended due to inclement weather. Read More
University focuses on energy conservation
Faced with rising energy bills, UW–Madison plans to do what many Wisconsin families will do this winter: conserve energy in an attempt to hold down costs and safeguard the environment. Read More
Employee Matters
Domestic Partnership Coverage Read More
Volleyball advances to NCAA Regional
Senior co-captains Aubrey Meierotto and Sheila Shaw both had double-figure kills in their final home match as 13th-ranked Wisconsin defeated 16th-ranked California 30-23, 30-22, 30-25 in the second round of the NCAA Tournament Saturday night at the UW Field House. Read More
New maps reveal the human footprint on Earth
As global populations swell, farmers are cultivating more and more land in a desperate bid to keep pace with the ever-intensifying needs of humans. As a result, agricultural activity now dominates more than a third of the Earth's landscape and has emerged as one of the central forces of global environmental change, say scientists at the Center for Sustainability and the Global Environment. Read More
Scientists seek clear-sky definition of clouds
Atmospheric scientists - Earth's professional cloud-gazers - have learned a great deal about clouds over the decades, particularly with the advent of satellites during the 1960s and 70s. But despite years of research and the emergence of increasingly sophisticated tools, scientists are still at odds over one of the most basic issues of all: how to define a cloud. Read More
The cold truth about climate change and snow
What would the Earth be like if one fine day all the snow melted away? For one, global temperatures would likely spike by about eight-tenths of a degree Celsius — an increase that represents as much as a third of the warming that climate change experts have predicted. Read More
Badger fans invited to bowl in sunny Orlando
The official University of Wisconsin Capitol One Bowl Tour is headed to sunny Orlando on Dec. 30, 2005. Hosted by the Wisconsin Alumni Association (WAA), the four-night tour offers round-trip charter air travel from Madison and Milwaukee, accommodations at the Badger team hotel, and a game ticket in the Wisconsin section. Read More
Barrows, CALS associate dean, to retire
Richard L. Barrows, Associate Dean for Academic Student Affairs in the University of Wisconsin–Madison’s College of Agricultural and Life Sciences and professor of agricultural and applied economics, will retire from the university after the end of the academic year. Read More
National experts to examine public campaign funding
Campaign finance experts from around the nation will meet at UW–Madison Jan. 28-29 to gauge how well public election funding programs work and whether clean election programs increase competition, reduce the influence of special interests or change government policy. Read More
UW-Madison, WARF rank third in 2004 license income
Driven by the discovery of promising new drugs, agricultural products and biotechnologies, UW–Madison and its technology transfer arm, the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation, generated more than $47.5 million in licensing revenues last year. Read More
Water main leak damages high-tech engineering centers building
An estimated 30,000 gallons of water were released early this morning when a pair of chilled water coils, one in each of two parallel air-handling systems, froze up, flooding the top floor that houses mechanical systems for the Engineering Centers Building. Read More