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Author: jnweaver

UW advances to Frozen Four

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

While playing youth hockey in his hometown of Neenah, Wisconsin forward John Mitchell no doubt dreamed of playing for the Badgers someday. But itâ??s unlikely he envisioned leading them to a chance to win a championship at a football stadium in Detroit.

On Saturday, Mitchell did exactly that, scoring twice in Wisconsinâ??s 5-3 win over St. Cloud State in the title game of the NCAA West Regional.

When Mitchell and his mates next take to the ice, it will be April 8 inside Ford Field in Detroit. The Badgers will play Rochester Institute of Technology in a Frozen Four semifinal game.

Madison company seeks piece of isotope market

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

When he founded Phoenix Nuclear Labs LLC five years ago, Greg Piefer wanted to do something simple – like detect nuclear weapons.

But a worldwide shortage of a radioactive isotope used in medical imaging tests has drawn the 33-year-old nuclear engineer, who holds a doctorate in nuclear engineering from UW-Madison, to a more complicated task.

Congress gives college aid a boost

WKOW-TV 27

WASHINGTON (AP) – More needy college students will have access to bigger Pell Grants, and future borrowers of government loans will have an easier time repaying them, under a vast overhaul of higher education aid that Congress passed Thursday and sent to President Barack Obama.

The legislation, an Obama domestic priority overshadowed by his health care victory, represents the most sweeping rewrite of college assistance programs in four decades. It strips banks of their role as middlemen in federal student loans and puts the government in charge.

UW steady as McDonagh goes

Madison.com

ST. PAUL, Minn. â?? After every meal with his teammates on the University of Wisconsin menâ??s hockey team, Ryan McDonagh does the same thing.

Whether itâ??s a breakfast on the road or a dinner after practice at the Kohl Center, the junior defenseman and tri-captain walks over to Mike Cerniglia, the oft-harried director of hockey operations, shakes his hand and says thank you before leaving the room.

Itâ??s a daily display of respect and appreciation that doesnâ??t happen everywhere and doesnâ??t surprise anyone who knows McDonagh.

Chinese Olympic champs to study at UW-Madison

Eleven Chinese student-athletes, including two Olympics gold medal winners, will be coming to study at UW-Madison this summer and fall.

The first-of-its-kind collaboration between UW-Madison and the Beijing University of Sport is being announced on Saturday by UW-Madison Chancellor Biddy Martin and Yang Hua, head of the Beijing University of Sport.

Guest column: How to tackle alcohol abuse on campus

Wisconsin State Journal

Weâ??ve got to do more to save our young people from alcohol abuse. Itâ??s a killer.

More than 1,800 college students die each year from alcohol, and 500,000 students are injured by it, according to the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism.

By day, these students have curious, textured, challenging minds. By night, too many are getting black-out drunk, mixing shots with potent drugs, and randomly hooking up.

Editorial: Congress must find solution to issue

Green Bay Press-Gazette

Mentions a study, released last year by the University of Wisconsin-Madison Program on Agricultural Technology Studies, that states that Wisconsinâ??s dairy industry is “undergoing notable structural changes” in that its farms are declining in number, yet getting larger and producing more

Herman Felstehausen: Shoreland zoning a plus, not a minus

Capital Times

Dear Editor: Having taught environmental management at the University of Wisconsin for 30 years, I was concerned to see comments from Greg Hull and other County Board candidates opposing the concept of shoreland zoning. Critical claims that property values and tax base are reduced completely miss the point.

(Felstehausen is a UW-Madison professor emeritus of urban and environmental planning)

Rick Marolt: UW should quantify the costs, benefits of monkey experiments

Capital Times

UW-Madison has assured citizens recently at a public meeting and on public radio that experiments on monkeys are ethical because the benefits of the experiments exceed the costs. But an inquiry has revealed that the committees responsible for approving experiments cannot compare costs and benefits of an experiment because they have no method for quantifying them, and that there is little or no evidence that the committees even discuss costs and benefits.

At the Chazen Museum, a provocative sculpture goes on display

Capital Times

When artist Beth Cavener Stichter visited the Chazen Museum of Art this month to introduce her sculpture, installed on the fourth floor of the museum, the crowd was tiny. But museum officials anticipate the installation â?? a provocative rendering of two aroused male goats in an intimate embrace â?? may start to attract more attention.

Museum director Russell Panczenko has agreed to conceal the bottom half of the sculpture when student groups visit.

Haitian UW student Gergens Polynice heads home to help with ongoing earthquake recovery

Isthmus

As spring break approaches, many college students will head to the beach for fun in the sun.However, University of Wisconsin-Madison student Gergens Polynice has a different plan. Polynice will visit his home country of Haiti to assess the damages caused by the devastating earthquake that struck on Jan. 12.

â??My goal is to make a difference in the lives of some people in Haiti,â? Polynice says, a graduate student in Latin America, Caribbean and Iberian Studies.

Holocaust denial ads spurs student activism (The Wisconsin Jewish Chronicle)

University of Wisconsin-Madison may no longer be a hotbed of 1960s student activism but recent actions by a campus student newspaper spurred a wave of student engagement and protest and led to campus debates about free speech, anti-Semitism, offensive speech and the responsibilities of the press.

The situation began on Feb. 8, when the independent Badger Herald published an article about an unruly party held by AEPi, a campus fraternity.

Posted in Uncategorized

Art Display At Museum Raises Eyebrows

WISC-TV 3

MADISON, Wis. — A new piece of artwork on display at a museum in Madison is raising some eyebrows. Some say the piece has crossed a fine line between artistic expression and being offensive, but officials at the University of Wisconsin-Madisonâ??s Chazen Museum of Art said it is a beautiful work expressing human emotion.

Grass Roots: Greenbush Days a taste of new day in grand old neighborhood

Capital Times

Greenbush Day had to have plenty of food: crisp sesame biscotti, savory hush puppies, spicy egg rolls – to represent the Italian, African-American and Asian communities who live there. There was music, too, at the celebration of the storied neighborhood hosted Tuesday by UW-Madison.

….A prominent presence, too, at the celebration was the university, whose expansion has been a second transformation of a neighborhood first remade by urban renewal projects of the 1960s.

Today UW is working partnerships with community organizations to make the â??Bush a learning laboratory that benefits both students and other residents.

Campus Connection: Sweet 16 … of tough graders

Capital Times

The Sweet 16 of the NCAA menâ??s basketball tournament tips off Thursday night.

In the spirit of March Madness, UW-Madison graduate Stuart Rojstaczer put together a group of 16 colleges and universities — from public commuter schools to elite privates — that grade tougher than their rivals. The post also includes a chart on grade inflation by athletic conference.

Conservation in search of new model

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

The continentâ??s leading natural resources managers have migrated this week to Wisconsin, the state well-associated with one of their heroes, to discuss how to keep one of Americaâ??s landmark wildlife achievements from dissolving into 21st century irrelevancy.

Aldo Leopold, the former University of Wisconsin professor and internationally revered conservationist, is credited along with the likes of Teddy Roosevelt and George Bird Grinnell for developing the North American Model of Fish and Wildlife Conservation.

Posted in Uncategorized

Marquette, UW law grads retain diploma privilege in Wisconsin

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

For now, the diploma privilege remains exclusive to graduates of Wisconsinâ??s law schools and no others. The privilege, unique in the nation, allows graduates of the stateâ??s two law schools to join the state bar without taking the exam required of new graduates from all other law schools.

Put the student first

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Cornell, Duke, Butler, Xavier and Purdue are proof that schools can have it both ways. These teams made it to the Sweet 16, and all graduate more than 60% of their basketball players. (Marquette Universityâ??s rate is 100%, and the University of Wisconsin-Madisonâ??s rate is 78%.)

Perhaps schools could offer kids who donâ??t make the cut in the NBA a chance to return to school to earn their degrees at a reduced cost.These players work hard on the court for their schools. Their schools owe them a chance at a life after their playing days are done.

Virent launches plant to create gasoline from plant sugars

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Virent Energy Systems has reached a milestone in its quest to create a better biofuel.Madison-based Virent announced Tuesday that it has opened the first biogasoline plant, creating gasoline from plant sugars. The company was formed in 2002 to deploy technological innovations developed at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

‘Angelology’ author Danielle Trussoni connected with angels at convent (Dallas Morning News)

Dallas Morning News

Danielle Trussoni and her novelâ??s main character, Evangeline, both had their lives changed by angels and convents.

In Trussoniâ??s case, she was doing research at a convent in her home state of Wisconsin when she stumbled on angel lore so compelling that the celestial beings became the centerpiece of Angelology, which was released earlier this month to glowing reviews. Trussoni is a UW-Madison graduate.

Health issues are at heart of raw milk debate

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Points out that the University of Wisconsin has not done comparison tests of raw and pasteurized milk because the testing would cost several hundred thousand dollars, would take several years to complete, and no one has asked for it. Story also quotes Rusty Bishop, director of the Center for Dairy Research at the university.

Big show planned here as Earth Day turns 40

Capital Times

When a “day” gets noted in day planner organizers, such as Christmas Day, Memorial Day, etc., itâ??s definitely a big deal. Such is the case with Earth Day, which is celebrating its 40th anniversary on April 22 with one of the bigger gatherings in the country happening in Madison two days before the anniversary.

“Earth Day at 40: Valuing Wisconsinâ??s Environmental Traditions, Past, Present and Future” will be a two-day conference hosted by the University of Wisconsin-Madisonâ??s Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies on April 20-21 at Monona Terrace.

Hmong clan friction surfaces in fight over relief agency

Capital Times

….The Madison Hmong community today is dividing along clan lines over control of United Asian Services, the local nonprofit organization that for 26 years has been the first stopping place for refugees seeking a foothold in a new world. A bitter dispute with allegations of misconduct, incompetence and unbridled ambition is pitting the Vang and Thao clans against each other in a clash one close observer likened to â??the Hatfields and McCoys,â? the bloody feud of American folklore.

….Marlys Macken is a UW-Madison professor of linguistics whose interest in the Hmong community led her to join a Dane County task force preparing for the new arrivals from Thailand in 2004. Macken, brainstorming with others, came up with the idea to use university language teaching capacity and a store of cast-off university furniture to develop a program to teach the refugees English while employing them in a furniture-refinishing enterprise. She secured $100,000 in private funding for the Hmong Literacy, Language and Jobs Program, which would be funneled through United Asian Services, where she served on the board of directors.

Campus Connection: UW mock trial team wins national title

Capital Times

Not every UW-Madison team struggled over the weekend. The University of Wisconsin Law Schoolâ??s mock trial team defeated Georgetown Sunday to win the championship at the National Student Trial Advocacy Competition, which was held in New Orleans. Itâ??s the first national title for the team, which was captained by Andrew Rima.

Precise tectonic plate model created

United Press International

The project, which took 20 years to complete, is said to describe a dynamic three-dimensional puzzle of planetary proportions. The model was created by University of Wisconsin-Madison geophysicist Chuck DeMets, Richard Gordon of Rice University and Donald Argus of NASAâ??s Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

Mom: Daughter Dies On Spring Break Trip in Florida

NBC-15

HOBART, Wis. (AP) â?? The family of a 21-year-old Wisconsin woman says she died in her sleep while on a spring break trip to Florida.

Marie Sumnicht says her daughter, Julia Sumnicht of Hobart, died this week while visiting Miami.The Green Bay Press-Gazette says tests to determine the cause of death could take several weeks. Julia Sumnicht was a junior at the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse.

What Makes A Poll Partisan? (National Journal Online)

National Journal

Charles Franklin, a political scientist at the University of Wisconsin, studied publicly released horse race surveys from the 2000 and 2002 elections and found that polls identified as partisan by The Hotline tended to skew in favor of their candidate by about 2.9 percent and against their opponent by roughly the same amount.

Taking the field for the Milwaukee Brewers

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Mike Boettcher grew up on his familyâ??s 100-cow beef farm in Fairchild, so heâ??s used to working outdoors.

As a student at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, Boettcher had intended on a career in animal science. But on a whim, he decided to take a class in horticulture. Today, he is the landscape manager for the Milwaukee Brewers under head groundskeeper Gary Vanden Berg.

Cornell’s offense torches Wisconsin

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

The Ivy League champions were the better team from the start and thoroughly outplayed the fourth-seeded UW men’s team on both ends of the floor en route to administering an 87-69 butt-kicking in the second round of the East Region.

Jaclyn Friedman: On rape, no more campus confidential

Capital Times

….Stopping rape on campus may require a few extraordinarily strong survivors to file Title IX charges against their schools. It will require visionary campus administrators who care more about the safety of students than they do about their public image. It will require parents, students and alumni to demand real change. We will all need to recognize that, because the veil of silence must be pulled back for the real work to begin, the campuses we love may have to suddenly appear less safe if theyâ??re going to actually become safer.

Prayer death case headed to state Supreme Court, experts say

Capital Times

The case of a young Wisconsin girl who died in 2008 from untreated diabetes after her parents opted for prayer rather than medical care is likely headed to the state Supreme Court, say Constitutional experts and others, with the UW-Madison Law School representing the mother in the appellate process.

Quoted: Howard Schweber, UW-Madison associate professor of political science and legal studies, and Byron Lichstein, director of the UW Law School’s Criminal Appeals Project

Arnold Harris: Train station should be close to downtown

Capital Times

Dear Editor: Regarding the location of the Madison station for the coming Amtrak high-speed train to Milwaukee and Chicago, I agree totally that the facility must be located as close to downtown Madison as possible. That location simultaneously serves as the center of activity of state government and is close to the UW-Madison and the great medical complex west and south of that campus.

Plain Talk: Ada Deerâ??s still working hard to make a difference

Capital Times

March is National Social Workers Month, so I wasnâ??t surprised when my favorite social worker, Ada Deer, stopped by the office recently to make sure I didnâ??t forget.

Ada has always been proud of her chosen profession and the wide variety of services that it provides everyone from the very poor to the frail elderly and all walks of life in between.

Theory meets practice in entrepreneurial bootcamp

Wisconsin Technology Network

A program meant to help students explore the riggers of business startups will take place the week of June 20 on the UW campus. Due to generous donations from program sponsors, there is no cost to participants. From new fuel alternatives to embryonic stem cells, the University of Wisconsin-Madison is an international leader in scientific research.

Medical College to commit $8.2 million to stem youth violence

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Money for the initiative comes from the Healthier Wisconsin Partnership Program, which is financed with income from one of two endowments set up when the former Blue Cross & Blue Shield United of Wisconsin converted to a for-profit company. One of the endowments went to the University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Medicine and Public Health, which announced last month that it is committing $10 million over the next five years to finance projects designed to lower infant mortality.

Energy waste creates hydrogen fuel

United Press International

U.S. scientists say they have created a simple and cost-effective technology that uses small amounts of waste energy to turn water into usable hydrogen fuel. University of Wisconsin-Madison Assistant Professor Huifang Xu, who led the study, said his team grew nanocrystals of two common crystals — zinc oxide and barium titanate — and placed them into water. When pulsed with ultrasonic vibrations, the nanofibers flexed and catalyzed a chemical reaction to split the water molecules into hydrogen and oxygen.

Madison doctor was improperly sanctioned, judge rules

Wisconsin State Journal

The state Medical Examining Board improperly sanctioned a Madison physician last October after he was accused of fondling female patients, a Dane County judge ruled Tuesday.

The board suspended Frank Salvi for 90 days and required him to undergo a mental evaluation and five years of supervision. Four female patients accused Salvi of fondling them, charges Salvi vigorously denied and successfully defended against in a peer review at his then job at UW Hospital.

Judy Miner: Events Friday and Saturday will recall â??shock and aweâ?? and call for peace

Capital Times

Dear Editor: Friday, March 19, will mark the seventh anniversary of the â??shock and aweâ? bombing campaign that began the U.S. invasion of Iraq. Each year since 2003, Americans have gathered to remember the terrible costs of war and to call for peace. Wisconsin has led states many times its size in the number of events held on the anniversary.

This year is no exception. Nineteen Wisconsin events are among more than 70 planned nationwide, and include roadside vigils, marches, public prayers and a teach-in at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.