Skip to main content

July 17, 2026

Higher Education/System

UW-Madison water main break fuels Regents’ concerns over system’s aging infrastructure

Wisconsin State Journal

UW-Madison’s June water main break that continues to disrupt campus air conditioning has prompted broader concerns from the UW Board of Regents about the aging infrastructure at the state’s 13 public universities.

Several Regents at a virtual meeting Thursday said the Universities of Wisconsin needs to plan for fixing other potentially failing campus infrastructure.

 

Homeland Security caps international student stay to four years

The Daily Cardinal

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security announced today that international students will now only be allowed to stay in the United States for four years under their visa.

The new ruling will officially be published in the Federal Register tomorrow, July 17. The ruling guts a 1978 policy, known as ‘duration of status,’ that allowed international college and university students to stay in the U.S. until their program ended.

Campus life

Athletics

UW’s Luke Fickell impressed with sincerity, authenticity of AD Shawn Eichorst

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Shawn Eichorst and Luke Fickell are still getting to know each other, but a couple of things stand out to Wisconsin’s football coach about the new athletic director.

“Since the time he’s walked in, since the time I talked to him on the phone, since the time I met with him, there’s a sincerity, there’s a authenticity that I would say is really easy to figure out,” Fickell said July 16.

Wisconsin men’s basketball coach ‘fired up’ that Shawn Eichorst is back

Wisconsin State Journal

Shawn Eichorst wasn’t far during the origin of University of Wisconsin men’s basketball coach Greg Gard’s coaching journey. The new Badgers athletic director graduated from UW-Whitewater in 1990 — three years before Gard joined Bo Ryan’s staff at UW-Platteville while still a student in 1993. In some respects, they just missed each other: Eichorst’s first major athletic administration role as the Director of Athletics at  UW-Whitewater in 1999 was Gard’s first year with Ryan at Milwaukee.

UW Experts in the News

Danger not over as wildfire smoke gives Madison first-ever ‘hazardous’ air quality

Wisconsin State Journal

Dane County has seen more frequent air quality warnings over the past decade, but the area had yet to experience hazardous levels. That was until Thursday.

As more than 100 wildfires burn in Canada and northern Minnesota, southeast winds carried smoke across the Midwest this week. Shortly before noon on Thursday, a monitor in Madison recorded an air quality index of 450.

The science behind the smoke: What’s driving wildfires that are sending thick smoke to Wisconsin

ABC 27

The smoke blanketing Wisconsin Thursday wasn’t subtle. You could see it, smell it and sometimes feel it while breathing. It was the product of wildfires burning in northern Minnesota and Ontario. Dr. Mayra Oyola, an atmospheric scientist at UW-Madison, said dry and windy conditions are fueling those fires. Typically, rain is helpful to fight fires, but Oyola said storms can pose a new challenge: lightning. Lightning strikes can ignite more fires.

UW-Madison Related

AC/DC plays Madison’s Camp Randall Stadium this weekend; time, tickets

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

An iconic rock ‘n’ roll band is coming to Wisconsin this weekend during the final leg of its stadium tour.

AC/DC is playing at Madison’s Camp Randall Stadium Sunday, July 19 as part of its PWR UP Tour.

The stadium tour is named after the 2020 AC/DC album of the same name and has been going on since 2024. The rock band’s website describes the tour as “powering up for the last time!” though it’s unclear if it’ll actually be AC/DC’s final tour.

Tom Still: State’s fusion energy future hinges on mix of old and new

WisPolitics

The company, a UW-Madison spinoff courted by several other states, will occupy part of the massive former Oscar Mayer plant on Madison’s northeast side – itself a symbol of the old and the emerging new. Private investors, the governor, state legislators, the state’s economic development arm, local officials, university leaders, utility experts and technology advocacy groups were all part of advancing the deal.