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Tag Research

Removing arsenic from water: faster, cheaper

December 10, 2002

Arsenic in drinking water is a problem just about anywhere in the world, particularly in developing parts of Asia. To ensure safer drinking water worldwide, researchers at UW–Madison have developed an adsorbent that can remove arsenic from water faster and more cheaply than current methods.

Milk-based material improves imaging

December 10, 2002

Milk does the body good, especially when it comes to detecting human ailments. In a new development by UW–Madison researchers, concentrated milk provides a tissue-mimicking material that could improve medical imaging.

Promising research makes its way into the world

December 10, 2002

WARF assists projects by filing for patents.

Undergrads share hands-on research

December 10, 2002

More than 70 UW–Madison students, mostly sophomores and juniors, will share findings from their mentored research projects this Thursday during a public poster session at Union South.

Self-employed health insurance higher for farmers

November 22, 2002

Following last issue's news that more than 40 percent of dairy farmers either have no health insurance or plans that don't cover all family members, a new study by UW–Madison sociologists shows that among the health care plans for the self-employed, farmers are the hardest hit.

Pregnant women still smoking

November 19, 2002

Despite the known health consequences of smoking during pregnancy, about 48 percent of women smokers continue to light up after learning they're pregnant, according to the second in a series of action papers published by the Center for Tobacco Research and Intervention.

Engine Research Center collaborates with GM

November 19, 2002

General Motors Corp. will fund a $5 million collaborative research laboratory at UW–Madison over five years to help develop cleaner, more efficient diesel and gasoline engines.

Study finds options to slow resistance to Bt corn

November 18, 2002

According to a study published in the current issue (Nov. 1, 2002) of the journal Ecology Letters, the current federally backed strategy to slow resistance to the Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) toxin could be altered to permit the normal application of pesticides to crop refuges without risking the overall resistance prevention strategy.

Registrar finalists named for UW–Madison

November 13, 2002

The university has narrowed the field of candidates for university registrar to four finalists.

New study open to men with advanced prostate cancer

November 12, 2002

Men with advanced prostate cancer that has become resistant to hormone therapy may be candidates for a new research study that seeks to determine whether a Vitamin D-like compound known as Hectoral enhances the impact of a chemotherapy treatment commonly known as Taxotere¨.

Dairy farmers face health insurance crisis

November 6, 2002

Although farming is one of the most dangerous occupations in Wisconsin, a new study from UW–Madison shows that more than 40 percent of dairy farmers either have no health insurance or have plans that don't cover all their family members.

Without fire, red pines could disappear

November 6, 2002

According to a new computer model, the towering groves of red pine trees characteristic of Minnesota's Boundary Water Canoe Area could completely disappear unless fire is reintroduced.

Researchers identify key to cancer cell mobility

November 6, 2002

In the race to cure cancer, researchers look for roadblocks that could stop cancer in its tracks, preventing it from spreading to other parts of the body. Scientists from UW–Madison may have found that blockade - an enzyme critical to the ability of cells to metastasize, a biological phenomenon by which cells migrate.

Test improves management of Johne’s disease

November 5, 2002

A professor at the School of Veterinary Medicine has developed a testing method that more precisely describes a cows's level of Johne's disease infection, thereby enabling farmers to make more informed decisions about disease management that could improve herd productivity.

Advances

November 5, 2002

Dairy farmers face health insurance crisis Although farming is one of the most dangerous occupations in Wisconsin, a new study from UW–Madison shows…

Two lectures address issues of equality

November 1, 2002

Two speakers will visit campus to discuss equality, class, race, gender, and privilege. The lectures, together entitled "Unveiling Inequality," are free and open to the public.

Holy hibernaculum, Batman!

October 30, 2002

Dave Redell, a researcher in the wildlife ecology department, spends his summer nights ÷ just like Batman ÷ patrolling dark streets, parking lots and mine entrances in search of bats.

Grant creates scholars program in health, society

October 30, 2002

In the last decade, the idea that the health of individuals and populations is determined by a host of factors has steadily gained credibility among the academic and policy-making community. Thanks to a $4.6 million grant from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, UW–Madison scholars will have an excellent opportunity to study this concept further.

The complexity of protest

October 30, 2002

Jeremi Suri, an author and a UW–Madison assistant professor of history, specializes in the study of interactions between states, peoples and cultures, and the ways social movements can profoundly influence leaders and institutions.

There was a young man who lived under a telescope

October 30, 2002

Sure, graduate students live in all sorts of places all over town, but probably only one lives underneath a big telescope. As part of his job through the Astronomy Department, Aaron Steffen gets to live an observational astronomer's dream: to spend each night beneath the giant dome of a working observatory.