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June 1, 2026

Higher Education/System

State news

Agriculture

New app helps dairy farmers tackle summer heat stress on cattle

Wisconsin State Farmer

Dairy producers across Wisconsin now have a new tool to help manage one of summer’s biggest challenges: heat stress. It costs the U.S. dairy industry significantly each year through reduced milk production, lower fertility, and added health expenses. At the same time, the cost of running the fans and ventilation systems that prevent those losses keeps rising, making smart decisions on the farm matter more than ever.

Community

Madison teachers, parents push for tougher cellphone ban in high schools

Wisconsin State Journal

The two are also concerned that the district could ignore some of the equity and teacher well-being issues raised in a report led by a group of students from UW-Madison’s La Follette School of Public Affairs, which found that teachers felt burnt out by monitoring phone use and want more district support, and that low-income Black and Latino students in the Madison School District face disproportionate levels of device-related discipline.

Athletics

Business/Technology

UW-Madison to debut METAL, ACE manufacturing workforce hubs

The Daily Cardinal

The University of Wisconsin-Madison plans to debut public, free-of-charge metals casting and CNC machining Wisconsin Hubs this summer in partnership with the U.S. Department of War (DOW).

Metallurgical Engineering Trades Apprenticeships & Learning (METAL) and America’s Cutting Edge (ACE) are Department of War-sponsored hubs offering free, hands-on workforce development courses. ACE’s bootcamps focus on introductory CNC machining, a process involving a computer-controlled machine that carves material into a user-designed part. METAL’s offerings focus on introductory metals casting and forging.

UW Experts in the News

UW-Madison Related

From campus sisters to community leaders: AKA chapter celebrates 50 years in Madison

Spectrum News Milwaukee

Inside the Black Business Hub, members of the chapter gathered to prepare for their upcoming Golden Anniversary Homecoming Weekend — while reflecting on decades of mentorship, leadership and community impact.

The chapter’s youngest Madison member, Natalie McDonald, snapped photos of older sorority sisters on her iPhone for an upcoming article in Umoja Magazine.

McDonald said documenting the women who helped shape the chapter — and Madison itself — felt deeply meaningful.