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Recent sightings

October 18, 2005

Bird’s-eye view Perched atop a tower made of scaffolding, UW Marching Band director Mike Leckrone oversees a band practice at… Read More

Almanac

October 18, 2005

Ask Bucky Do you have questions? We have answers! Ask Bucky is a service provided by the Campus Information and Visitor Center, your… Read More

Employee Matters

October 18, 2005

Employee Reimbursement Accounts (ERA) program Read More

Campus car-sharing service to expand fleet

October 18, 2005

UW-Madison transportation officials have agreed with Community Car representatives to expand the car-sharing service on campus, providing more access to another alternative means of getting around. Read More

Mellon, Paulnock named to Graduate School posts

October 18, 2005

Donna Paulnock, a professor in the Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, has been named associate dean for the biological sciences, and William Mellon, a professor and former chair of pharmaceutical sciences and associate dean for graduate affairs and research in the School of Pharmacy, has been selected to fill the post of Graduate School associate dean for research policy. Read More

Book Smart

October 18, 2005

You have met the ancient Greeks, and they are you. Culturally speaking, anyway. In his general study of the ancient Greeks, Powell… Read More

New sculpture, ‘Nail’s Tales,’ to be installed as Camp Randall Stadium landmark

October 18, 2005

A 48-foot-tall sculpture by internationally acclaimed artist Donald Lipski will be installed this week as a fanciful finishing touch to the renovation of Camp Randall Stadium Read More

New York Times writer to give two lectures on international issues

October 18, 2005

Award-winning New York Times foreign correspondent Howard French will deliver two public lectures on Thursday and Friday, Oct. 27-28, as part of a continuing lecture series on international issues sponsored by UW–Madison. Read More

In technology and talent, Gates explores next generation

October 18, 2005

During his public presentation before 200 UW–Madison undergraduates, Microsoft CEO Bill Gates enlisted gung-ho alumni, eye-popping gadgetry and a video with hipster-dork character Napoleon Dynamite to make a point to his youthful audience: What could be cooler than a career in computers? Read More

Engineers help turn science into interactive exhibits

October 17, 2005

As part of a new National Science Foundation-funded network, UW–Madison engineering faculty, staff and students will work with some of the nation's top science museums to create hands-on exhibits about technology so small that even the tiniest human fingers can't touch it. Read More

Reading Recovery Center opens its doors at UW–Madison

October 17, 2005

The UW–Madison School of Education will launch its Reading Recovery Program with a reception and ribbon-cutting ceremony at the new Reading Recovery Research and Learning Center on Tuesday, Oct. 18, at 2 pm. The new center - the first of its kind in Wisconsin - will support the training of Reading Recovery teacher leaders, who will spend an academic year at UW–Madison. Read More

Fundraiser to benefit earthquake victims

October 14, 2005

UW-Madison's Muslim Student Association will hold a fundraiser at 8 p.m., Tuesday, Oct. 18, in 1651 Humanities to benefit the victims of the recent earthquake in Pakistan, India and Kashmir. Read More

Flu virus reported to resist drug envisioned for pandemic

October 14, 2005

An avian influenza virus isolated from an infected Vietnamese girl has been determined to be resistant to the drug oseltamivir, the compound better known by its trade name Tamiflu, and the drug officials hope will serve as the front line of defense for a feared influenza pandemic. Read More

Agronomist to explore balance between agriculture, environment

October 14, 2005

An internationally known agronomist who has devoted his career to ensuring adequate food supplies for all while enhancing environmental quality worldwide will give a free public lecture at 5 p.m. Monday, Oct. 17, at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. Read More

Stainless steel design techniques could translate to biological world

October 13, 2005

A tool normally used to improve stainless steel and other metal alloys has now found application to a decidedly non-metallic substance: protein. Read More

Seminar series looks at public policy, science, democracy

October 13, 2005

Researchers in public policy, natural and social sciences, engineering and medicine are mixing it up this year at the Science, Democracy and Public Policy Seminars. Read More

Fact sheet: University of Wisconsin Nuclear Reactor

October 13, 2005

Built in 1960, the university’s 1 megawatt reactor is about 1/3000 the size of a commercial reactor and is used for… Read More

Background on the UW–Madison Nuclear Reactor

October 13, 2005

For nearly 50 years, the research reactor at UW–Madison has been operated and maintained in a consistently safe and secure manner. Public research universities are by their nature open scholarly environments where knowledge is shared, and the research reactor lab at UW–Madison is no exception. Read More

Bill Gates surprises students as “stand in” professor

October 12, 2005

Microsoft chairman and chief software architect Bill Gates visited UW–Madison today (Wednesday, Oct. 12) as part of his 2005 College Tour, designed to promote greater youth involvement in technology careers. Read More

mtvU brings Microsoft chairman to computer science class

October 12, 2005

The 24-hour college network, mtvU, brought its popular "Stand In" series today (Oct. 12) to campus by hosting Bill Gates, Microsoft Corp. chairman and chief software architect. Read More