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For the record

September 6, 2005

Wisconsin Idea Endowment Call for Proposals The Office of the Provost is soliciting proposals from faculty, staff and students for the fourth annual…

Art, science make ‘Starry Transit’ in historic observatory

September 6, 2005

What artist Martha Glowacki sees in the night sky is a larger cycle of life, death and transformation, she says. Consequently, her new multifaceted, multidisciplinary installation, “Starry Transit,”is about different takes on the natural world.

The World’s Tiniest Badger?

September 6, 2005

NanoBucky, created in the research lab of UW–Madison chemistry professor Robert Hamers, is composed of tiny carbon nanofiber “hairs,”each just 75 nanometers in diamete

Center for the Humanities begins project exploring Don Quixote

September 6, 2005

The Center for the Humanities is preparing to begin one of its most ambitious projects to date: Don Quixote in Wisconsin.

UW Cancer Center forms new partnership in Fox River Valley

September 6, 2005

An affiliation among Wisconsin’s only comprehensive cancer center and two of the Fox Cities’ leading hospitals will offer a new level of care to the area’s cancer patients.

UW-Madison Sources for Continued Hurricane Coverage

September 2, 2005

With the death toll estimated in the thousands and New Orleans in a state of emergency, Hurricane Katrina's devastation will continue to have an enormous impact on the Deep South and the nation. The University of Wisconsin–Madison has experts who can offer useful perspectives to media on health, economic, psychological and rebuilding issues.

A single gene controls a key difference between maize and its wild ancestor

August 31, 2005

One of the greatest agricultural and evolutionary puzzles is the origin of maize - and part of the answer may lie in a plot of corn on the western edge of Madison, where a hybrid crop gives new life to ancient genetic material. A UW–Madison genetics team has demonstrated that a single gene, called tga1, controls kernel casing in maize — evidence that modest alterations in single genes can cause dramatic changes in the way traits are expressed.

The World’s Tiniest Badger?

August 29, 2005

A team of chemistry researchers at UW–Madison has put a new twist on an old philosophical riddle: How many Bucky Badger mascots can you fit on the head of a pin? The answer: 9,000, with a little help from nanotechnology.

Scientist wins major grant to study immune cells

August 26, 2005

An immunologist at UW–Madison is one of 15 U.S. researchers this summer who were named 2005 Pew Scholars in the Biomedical Sciences. Jenny Gumperz, an assistant professor of medical microbiology and immunology, will receive $60,000 per year for the next four years from the Pew Charitable Trusts, an independent nonprofit organization that annually funds innovative research projects in the fields of science and technology.

Red Carpet back for second season

August 23, 2005

After a successful inaugural campaign, UW–Madison will be "Rolling Out the Red Carpet" for a second time. The award-winning partnership between University Communications and the Athletic Department was designed to help create a fan-friendly environment at all UW Athletics events.

For the Record

August 23, 2005

Wisconsin Idea Endowment call for proposals The Office of the Provost is soliciting proposals from faculty, staff and students for the fourth annual…

UW dairy center helps with champion cheeses

August 22, 2005

Mike Gingrich’s Uplands Cheese Co. worked with the Center for Dairy Research at UW–Madison for advice on how to make their cheese and operate a cheese-making business.

Despite gains, women still face bias in science careers

August 18, 2005

Despite gains in the training of women scientists and the implementation of programs to help women overcome ingrained barriers, the career path of most women scientists at universities remains a difficult trek, fraught with roadblocks of bias, a sometimes chilly campus climate and the challenge of balancing family and work.