Mad City or Madtown might appear to be just plays on its name, but it also says something about its quirkiness. This is a town, after all, that has a National Mustard Museum and named the plastic pink flamingo as its city bird. The latter happened after the University of Wisconsin’s quad was plastered with a thousand plastic pink lawn flamingos overnight in 1979. That flamingo-bombing became an annual tradition and the city’s official bird.
Author: gbump
China’s Great Leap Backward: So much for the next dominant superpower
To make matters worse, if that seems possible, all these numbers rely on official Chinese statistics, and the government has likely been overstating them. According to an extensive examination of different sets of books by University of Wisconsin Prof. Yi Fuxian, it’s possible to find the “fudging” effects by comparing local and provincial data to that published at the national level.
What’s Next after Creating a Cancer-Prevention Vaccine?
I see you studied molecular biology as an undergrad at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. Did you always want to work on vaccines?
-No, absolutely not. When I first started out I was an academic purist and thought you should study knowledge for its own sake. I was fascinated by molecular biology.
Mavis Hetherington
During 39 years of teaching first at the University of Wisconsin and later at the University of Virginia, she dazzled undergraduates in always-packed introductory courses with humour-filled lectures and she trained generations of psychologists who now occupy positions in academia, private practice, and government service.
Tom Still: A tale of two cities: One seeks to grow and prosper
The Superior Entrepreneurship Center will be joined soon by the latest branch of the WiSys “VentureHome” project, a University of Wisconsin System initiative to combine statewide and local resources to help launch and grow young companies — often building off campus-based technology.
Preseason poll picks Wisconsin volleyball to take Big Ten once again
The University of Wisconsin volleyball team was picked to win its fifth-consecutive Big Ten Championship and several Badgers were awarded preseason individual honors with less than a month until the start of the 2023 volleyball season.
Wisconsin coaches rack up more than $650,000 in bonuses in 2022-23
Conference championships and individual honors in the 2022-23 season meant extra bonuses for University of Wisconsin cross country and track and field coaches.
OUR VIEW: Women shoot, score, inspire, bring pro teams to Madison
Wisconsin sports fanatics are hearty and a little nuts. Moreover, UW-Madison is the only school in the country to draw more than 8,000 fans for three different women’s sports programs. That includes 16,833 people at the Kohl Center last fall for volleyball.
Darryl Lee Craig
A Wisconsin farm kid that became an accounting professor, Darryl taught managerial accounting at the Pennsylvania State University, then at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee in the Executive MBA program. He later led a nationally recognized distance learning program for engineering executives at the University of Wisconsin–Madison.
Ronald L. Numbers
In 1974, Ron came to the University of Wisconsin, where he spent almost 40 years of his academic career. He retired in 2013, as the William Coleman Professor of the History of Science and Medicine emeritus.
It’s camp for Wisconsin football but exposure for UW-Platteville
Officials at UW-Platteville think University of Wisconsin football players will be surprised to see what kind of facilities they’ll be using when they arrive for camp Tuesday.
Once a UW-Madison Posse mentor, new program director is back to guide more students
Marla Delgado-Guerrero has been counseling undergraduate students since she was one herself.
UW Health to expand 2 hospitals
The first project at University Hospital would add a six-story building that with 22 emergency rooms, 22 flexible care beds and 48 inpatient rooms. The new space at will be located between the UW Medical Foundation Centennial Building, 1685 Highland Ave. and University Hospital.
‘It’s a really fun sort of social dance’: Free swing dancing class held at Memorial Union Terrace
Many let loose at a free swing dancing class at the Memorial Union Terrace in Madison Sunday night.It featured large group lessons by the Wisconsin Union Directorate (WUD) Music Committee, the Hoofer Sailing Club and the Madison Swing Social Dance Club. The dancing was set to live swing music by All That Jazz Little Band.
UW Health board approves major expansions
UW Health plans to add a new six-story building to its main hospital in the coming years, while its one on Madison’s east side will see its own expansion.
UW Health board announces major expansion projects at University Hospital and East Madison Hospital locations
The expansion at University Hospital will include 22 emergency department rooms, 22 flexible care beds and 48 inpatient rooms and will be located between the UW Medical Foundation Centennial Building, 1685 Highland Ave., and University Hospital, according to a press release from UW Health. The East Madison Hospital expansion will include six operating rooms, 40 recovery rooms, 20 rooms for post-anesthesia care, 14 flexible care rooms, 20 emergency department rooms and four care rooms that can be shared between the emergency department and medical imaging.
Does social media polarize voters? Unprecedented experiments on Facebook users reveal surprises
Michael Wagner, a social scientist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison who was asked to observe the work and wrote a commentary accompanying the Science papers , says Meta’s business interests may have influenced the project at some points. For instance, he says Meta researchers believed that the experimental studies changing users’ feeds were unlikely to show any big effects—and they pushed to get these papers done first. “You could read it as ‘the big splash is going to be that there aren’t huge effects that are so deleterious to democracy that we need to have a bunch of new regulations on our platform.’”
Changing Facebook’s algorithm won’t fix polarization, new study finds
“It’s a little too buttoned up to say this shows Facebook is not a huge problem or social media platforms aren’t a problem,” said Michael W. Wagner, a professor at the University of Wisconsin at Madison’s School of Journalism and Mass Communication, who served as an independent observer of the collaboration, spending hundreds of hours sitting in on meetings and interviewing scientists. “This is good scientific evidence there is not just one problem that is easy to solve.”
Facebook opened its doors to researchers. What they found paints a complicated picture of social media and echo chambers.
Still, collaborations with platforms may not be the model for research going forward and perhaps it shouldn’t be, according to Michael W. Wagner, professor in the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s School of Journalism and Mass Communication, who served as the collaboration’s independent rapporteur.
Facebook’s Algorithm Is ‘Influential’ but Doesn’t Necessarily Change Beliefs, Researchers Say
The work was not a model for future research since it required direct participation from Meta, which held all the data and provided researchers only with certain kinds, said Michael Wagner, a professor of mass communications at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, who was an independent auditor on the project. The researchers said they had final say over the papers’ conclusions.
Score one for ‘the algorithm’
“Meta set the agenda in ways that affected the overall independence of the researchers,” wrote Michael Wagner, a professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s School of Journalism and Mass Communication.
How Facebook does (and doesn’t) shape political views
And despite valid concerns from many of the researchers involved, in the end Meta did grant them most of the independence they were seeking. That’s according to an accompanying report from Michael W. Wagner, a professor of mass communications at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, who served as an independent observer of the studies. Wagner found flaws in the process — more on those in a minute — but for the most part he found that Meta lived up to its promises.
Some Wisconsin employers say finding seasonal help was easier this year than last 2 summers
That comes as the state’s labor force participation rate — a measure of people working or looking for work — among teens aged 16 to 19 declined from 66.5 percent in 2000 to 56.5 percent in 2022, according to research from the University of Wisconsin-Extension. That still exceeded the national rate in 2022 of 36.8 percent among teens.
Wisconsin’s real-life ‘Barbenheimer’
Miss America 2023 talks about her experiences in pageantry and nuclear engineering studies at UW-Madison relate to the cinematic phenomena that fans are calling “Barbenheimer.”
Luke Fickell’s first eight months as Wisconsin’s football coach ‘by far exceeds’ his expectations
Preparing for his first full season as Wisconsin’s head coach after leading the Cincinnati program for the last six seasons, Fickell addressed reporters Thursday morning at the Big Ten preseason meetings.
Bill would preserve 137-year-old farm training program that was cut from state budget
The bill would provide $372,980 over the next two years for the Farm and Industry Short Course, which provides instruction for farmers outside of a traditional degree program. The program will now be hosted at UW-River Falls after UW-Madison stopped offering the residential program two years ago.
Bill would mandate housing and dining refunds for UW students during campus closures
The bill, co-authored by Sen. Steve Nass, R-Whitewater, and Rep. Shae Shortwell, R-Two Rivers, would prohibit the UW Board of Regents and UW institutions from offering housing and meal plan contracts without a stipulation to refund students if university officials require them to leave campus. Students would not receive refunds if asked to leave campus for disciplinary or misconduct reasons.
UW Health to expand University Hospital, East Madison Hospital amid rising demand for services
University Hospital, 600 Highland Ave., will add a six-story structure planned to include 22 emergency department rooms, 22 flexible care beds, and 48 inpatient rooms. The new space will be located between the UW Medical Foundation Centennial Building, 1685 Highland Ave., and University Hospital.
Judy Woodruff, Al Hunt, David Maraniss, and a worthy cause
Maraniss will talk with Woodruff and Hunt in the ornate and intimate setting of Tripp Commons inside the University of Wisconsin-Madison Memorial Union, on Thursday evening, Sept. 21.
The annual downtown Madison move-out is quickly approaching. Here’s what you need to know.
The University of Wisconsin-Madison’s Office of Sustainability recommends downtown residents pack smart, using things like suitcases or reusable containers to store and move belongings rather than buying new cardboard boxes. Clothing and other fabric items can serve as packing material for fragile items, and kitchen items should be packed last to avoid creating waste from additional takeout meals.
Why Luke Fickell is keeping a close eye on Wisconsin football players
Luke Fickell wasn’t sounding any alarms, but he sees an area for improvement in his program when it comes to player discipline. The University of Wisconsin football coach has had three players in legal matters this summer, though just two remain with the team.
Polzin: How Marisa Moseley is navigating Wisconsin women’s basketball rebuild
It was mostly quiet in the Kohl Center last week as University of Wisconsin women’s basketball coach Marisa Moseley addressed the state of affairs within her program.
Federal grant to fund training aimed at deterring sexual assault in Downtown Madison
The initiative is headed by an advisory council consisting of officials from Public Health Madison and Dane County, members of UW-Madison Student Services, nonprofit leaders, business owners and city officials. It combines Safer Bars training with increased surveillance, better lighting in the city-owned Buckeye parking lot and other safety measures.
University of Wisconsin celebrates 175 years
“It’s going to be a great day [Wednesday],” said Charles Hoslet, UW-Madison’s Vice Chancellor for University Relations. “We’re having a big event at the Memorial Union Terrace … We’re going to have live music and fireworks at the end of the evening.”
Student-led food pantry collects donations at 175-year celebration
“We have weekly deliveries of fresh produce, fresh eggs and milk as well as shelf-stable donations,” Nicole Giuliani, Outreach Director for the Open Seat Food Pantry, said. “Then, every week we go to the Eagle Heights Community Center and have a weekly distribution there.”
Mallards, Wisconsin Alumni Association announce ‘On Wisconsin Night’ at Warner Park
The Madison Mallards and the Wisconsin Alumni Association are teaming up to bring “On Wisconsin Night” to the Duck Pond on Aug. 10. The first 1,000 fans through the gates at Warner Park will get a reversible hat with the Mallards and UW-Madison logos. In addition to the giveaway, there will also be appearances from Bucky Badger, the UW Spirit Squad and the UW Marching Band.
Can you say demisemiseptcentennial? UW-Madison kicks off 175th birthday celebration
The state of Wisconsin’s flagship university celebrates its 175th anniversary this year; it was founded in 1848, the same year as both the state and the city of Madison.
Report: NBC set to air three Wisconsin football games this season
Several Badgers games will air on NBC this season, a trusted NBC15 source confirms Wednesday.
Students, alums celebrate UW-Madison’s 175th anniversary
Many students and alums took part in the kick-off event. For Dave Arneson, Wednesday’s celebration created a memorable moment. Arneson played football for the Badgers as a tight end back from 1982 through 1984.
Dual enrollment among state high schoolers doubles over past decade
The study analyzed data from the University of Wisconsin System and the Wisconsin Technical College System (WTCS), finding that the majority of students participate in dual enrollment at their high schools and learn from high school teachers who are approved by colleges. Most of the students earn the credit through WTCS, though the UW System also offers dual enrollment.
High court doesn’t understand higher education — Mick Maier
Letter to the editor: The quality of education and the standards for grading differ drastically from state to state and school to school forcing college admission offices to rely heavily on standardized tests like the ACT and the SAT. What most people fail to understand is that those popular measures are biased in favor of the majority American culture.
NBC broadcasting 3 Wisconsin football games in 2023, report says
Luke Fickell’s first season has been met with high expectations and the program is expected to have three league games on NBC, Action Network’s Brett McMurphy reported. Those games include 2:30 p.m. Oct. 14 vs. Iowa, 6:30 p.m. Oct. 28 vs. Ohio State and 6:30 p.m. Nov. 18 against Nebraska.
In a fast-evolving city, Madison considers changes to map that guides growth
“Smart Growth believes there are many areas in and near Downtown and near the UW-Madison campus where it would be appropriate to encourage greater housing density and taller buildings than was contemplated in the Comprehensive Plan and earlier neighborhood plans,” executive director Bill Connors said. “Those earlier plans were adopted before it was fully apparent that Madison has a persistent housing shortage, which is causing rents and house prices to skyrocket.”
Newest Bucky on Parade statue offers an abstract take on UW-Madison’s 175 years
The statue, named “Honor the Air, Land and Water,” was unveiled Wednesday at Memorial Union to mark UW-Madison’s 175th anniversary. The 6-foot-tall badger is meant to represent the university’s past, present and future.
UW-Madison celebrates 175th birthday
“For the past 175 years, UW–Madison has been a place where extraordinary ideas become life-changing realities, where we honor traditions of the past while also continuing to propel Wisconsin forward,” says Chancellor Jennifer Mnookin. “In the year ahead, we’ll celebrate many of the people, events and important advancements that have made UW–Madison one of the most respected institutions in the nation.”
Bielema hires Jim Leonhard for Illinois coaching staff
On Tuesday, the University of Illinois revealed former University of Wisconsin defensive coordinator Jim Leonhard would join head coach Bret Bielema’s staff in Urbana as a Senior Football Analyst.
Madison police don’t know the name of a man arrested at a fraternity house
According to the MPD statement, someone who lives at the fraternity house, which is in the 200 block of W. Lakelawn Place, called police about a stranger watching television in the living room. Officers arrived around 11 p.m., found the man still there, and took him into custody.
Most new Madison apartment buildings are unaffordable to average renter, analysis shows
Considering those factors, Madison needs to build its way out of the housing crisis, experts said. That means building units at all price points to stabilize rent prices, said Kurt Paulsen, urban planning professor at UW-Madison.
“It’s a hard sell, but it works,” Paulsen said. “Housing is mostly a private business. We cannot force a developer or a landlord to provide low-cost affordable housing.”
GOP measure would eliminate sales taxes for strollers, other baby products in Wisconsin
The economic impacts of the proposal could be significant because parents typically buy baby items right before and right after birth, which is around the time that parental income falls the most, said Jessica Pac, a UW-Madison assistant social work professor.
“If you spend $100 per month just on diapers, and you remove this 5% sales tax, that would be $5 per month, which alone amounts to $60 per year,” Pac said. “But then when you consider all the items covered in the proposal that are purchased in the same time period, it would modestly offset expenses in the first few years of life.”
Madison’s mental health crisis team can’t keep up with its own success
University Health Services in fall 2020 started its own mental health response team called the co-responder program. The University Police Department contacts Health Services for calls related to mental health, and the team will send two counselors to join UW officers at the scene.
Sarah Nolan, director of UW Mental Health Services, said that program has made a big difference on campus but is challenged by limited hours of service: from 2 p.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday.
Ketamine is promising but pricey for Madisonians
That’s a problem, said UW-Madison assistant professor Dr. Christopher Nicholas, who researches how psychedelics and other psychoactive compounds can be used to treat addiction, trauma, chronic pain and depression. “Trauma doesn’t discriminate … and those who are suffering often don’t have the resources to pay for ketamine,” Nicholas said.
Wisconsin has $125 million to fight PFAS. Here’s what’s next.
Gavin Dehnert, emerging contaminants scientist with the University of Wisconsin-Madison, helped write the Wisconsin Department of Health Services’ statewide PFAS standards in drinking water. He told the Cap Times the bill provides much-needed funding for testing and cleanup efforts in both public and private water sources.
“Before we can actually remediate it, we have to know where it is,” Dehnert said. “This does a pretty good job at saying, ‘OK, here is where the PFAS are. Let’s find out where the PFAS are so we can go about doing our best to remediate it.’”
A heat wave is hitting Wisconsin. Here’s what to know
Limnology experts will pay especially close attention to algae growth in Madison’s lakes this week, according to Emily Stanley with the UW-Madison Center for Limnology. Excessive heat and calm water are both good ingredients for algae blooms, she said.
Stanley is expecting algae and weeds to get “slightly greener” but isn’t anticipating anything extreme. The lack of rain has slowed the growth of algae blooms this summer, so a few hot days shouldn’t make much of a difference.
Lake Monona redesign, Madison apartment tower face open forums
Core Spaces said the Johnson & Broom project will include affordable student housing in the same style as another project Core is building on State Street called oLiv Madison.
The oLiv project will have 386 units with over 1,000 beds, and 10% of the beds will be set aside for discounted rates for students receiving financial aid, through an agreement between Core Spaces and the University of Wisconsin.
UW logistics expert explains what UPS strike could mean for U.S. economy
A strike could cost the U.S. economy more than $7 billion, according to research firm Anderson Economic Group, and it would have negative impacts across southern Wisconsin, University of Wisconsin-Madison distinguished lecturer Peter Lukszys said.
Exclusive first look: Newest ‘Bucky’ statue reflects on time, community
The latest statue, called “Honor the air, land and water,” will be on public display at Memorial Union Wednesday night.
UW’s Fickell faces new realities in return to Big Ten Media Days
When the Big Ten conducts its 2023 Media Days on Wednesday and Thursday at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis, there will be only three holdovers from that ’11 gathering: Ferentz in his 25th season at Iowa, Bielema in his third season at Illinois and Fickell in his first season at Wisconsin.
Irwin Smith
A graduate of West High School and the University of Wisconsin-Madison (BS ’62, MBA ’64), he had a successful career in investment management that allowed him to share his love of the work and his insights both through meeting with and teaching business students, and in supporting and advising the Applied Security Analysis Program (ASAP) in the Wisconsin School of Business.
Top 10 UW sports moments needed more women — Daniel Grant
Letter to the editor: The football program understandably garners a large amount of attention and has had significant past success, of which UW fans can be proud, similar to men’s hockey. But when transitioning men’s teams overshadow equal or greater success by women’s team, as well as the individuals and coaches on those women’s teams, it seems like a missed opportunity.
Tom Still: Fusion energy has strong toehold in Wisconsin
UW-Madison has produced at least 485 doctoral degree graduates with research related to plasma physics (a fundamental study) and fusion energy since 1965. The nuclear engineering department within the College of Engineering is one of the nation’s best.