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February 14, 2006

Moved by music Graduate student Ina Selvelieva, a native of Bulgaria, performs a piano solo during a UW Symphony Orchestra… Read More

Five Questions With…

February 14, 2006

Todd Friske is a project manager for the Division of Information Technology (DoIT). He works with financial systems, including the shared financial system… Read More

Virologist Kenney to join UW School of Medicine and Public Health

February 13, 2006

Shannon C. Kenney, the Sarah Graham Kenan Professor of Medicine and Microbiology and Immunology at the University of North Carolina (UNC) School of Medicine, will join the faculty of the UW–Madison School of Medicine and Public Health (SMPH) in July. Read More

Wisconsin scientists find a way to make human collagen in the lab

February 13, 2006

A team of scientists at UW–Madison reports the discovery of a method for making human collagen in the lab, opening the door to broader medical applications. Read More

Concentrating solar collector earns first place in creativity competition

February 10, 2006

An inexpensive, modular solar-energy technology that could be used to heat water and generate electricity won $12,500 and took first place in both the Schoofs Prize for Creativity and Tong Prototype Prize competitions during Innovation Days, held Feb. 9 and 10 by the University of Wisconsin–Madison's College of Engineering. Read More

UW-Madison releases 2006 Status of Wisconsin Agriculture report

February 8, 2006

The 2006 edition of the Status of Wisconsin Agriculture, which is available online this week, is produced by agricultural economists and other faculty at the University of Wisconsin–Madison College of Agricultural Life Sciences. Read More

Study explains unexpected conductivity of nanoscale silicon

February 8, 2006

When graduate student Pengpeng Zhang successfully imaged a piece of silicon just 10 nanometers-or a millionth of a centimeter-in thickness, she and her UW–Madison co-researchers were puzzled. According to established thinking, the feat should be impossible because her microscopy method required samples that conduct electricity. Read More

World’s fastest image processor aids search for elusive form of matter

February 6, 2006

How do scientists drill down to the fundamental units of nature and sample conditions that existed right after the Big Bang some 15 billion years ago Read More

Engineering ‘Innovation Days’ set for Feb. 9-10

February 6, 2006

Throughout the fall semester, 52 UW–Madison undergraduates have learned to make their most creative ideas come to life. Read More

Like their pregnant mates, primate dads-to-be pack on pounds

February 1, 2006

Confirming what many have long suspected, scientists have found that male monkeys of two different species get heavier when their mates are pregnant. Read More

Business professor launches corporate reporting study

February 1, 2006

Lori Holder-Webb, an assistant professor of accounting and information systems at the University of Wisconsin–Madison School of Business, is part of a four-person research team recently awarded a grant to research corporate reporting. Read More

Evidence unearthed of earliest African slaves in New World

January 31, 2006

Digging in a colonial era graveyard in one of the oldest European cities in Mexico, archaeologists have found what they believe are the oldest remains of slaves brought from Africa to the New World. The remains date between the late-16th century and the mid-17th century, not long after Columbus first set foot in the Americas. Read More

Almanac

January 31, 2006

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

January 31, 2006

This is the second in a series of three articles on retirement. This article will focus on health insurance and how sick- leave credits and Medicare come into play. Read More

Study: ‘Resume padding’ prevalent in college-bound students who volunteer

January 30, 2006

Although the rates of volunteerism among high schoolers appear to be healthy, a study by a UW–Madison researcher suggests that "resume-padding" - not simple altruism - may be the driving force. Read More

From 2D blueprint, material assembles into novel 3D nanostructures

January 27, 2006

An international team of scientists affiliated with the UW–Madison Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center has coaxed a self-assembling material into forming never-before-seen, three-dimensional nanoscale structures, with potential applications ranging from catalysis and chemical separation to semiconductor manufacturing. Read More

Fresh approaches needed to activist-academic alliances

January 27, 2006

Blending research with grassroots advocacy sounds like a smart idea. But in practice, says a sociologist at UW–Madison, partnerships between the worlds of academia and activism often end up lopsided. Read More

Canine cancer vaccine shows early promise

January 26, 2006

It wasn't publicized, other than by word of mouth, and still the UW–Madison School of Veterinary Medicine was overwhelmed with requests. Since 1998, the school's oncology department has been producing an anti-cancer vaccine for dogs diagnosed with melanoma. Read More

Survey analyzes Wisconsin, Upper Peninsula logging sector

January 26, 2006

Private woodland owners provide the majority of timber harvested in Wisconsin and Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, and most owners choose to selectively cut, rather than clearcut, their woodlands, according to a study by researchers at the University of Wisconsin–Madison and Michigan State University. Read More