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Author: jplucas

Focus on presidential race intensifies in Wisconsin

Wisconsin Radio Network

Quoted: UW-Madison journalism professor Mike Wagner says the many visits in the state provide an opportunity for voters to learn more about the candidates, and to press them for details on some of the sweeping plans Republicans in particular have touted on the campaign trail. “One thing that Wisconsin voters are famous for wanting to know are the details, and so an opportunity is before them to demand these details from the folks who want to be the next president,” he says.

Congressional inquiry seeks the names and identities of fetal tissue researchers

Inside Higher Education

Scholars are expressing concern about government and other third-party inquiries targeting researchers working in controversial fields. The alarm grew on Thursday with the disclosure that a special House committee investigation is seeking the names of researchers and graduate students working with fetal tissue — including that obtained via abortions.

Slaughter at the bridge: Uncovering a colossal Bronze Age battle

Science

Quoted: Retired University of Wisconsin, Madison, archaeologist Doug Price analyzed strontium, oxygen, and carbon isotopes in 20 teeth from Tollense. Just a few showed values typical of the northern European plain, which sprawls from Holland to Poland. The other teeth came from farther afield, although Price can’t yet pin down exactly where. “The range of isotope values is really large,” he says. “We can make a good argument that the dead came from a lot of different places.”

Yi Fuxian, Critic of China’s Birth Policy, Returns as an Invited Guest

New York Times

BEIJING — Eight thousand miles is a long way to fly someone so he can tell you you’re wrong. That’s what awaits Chinese officials on Friday when Yi Fuxian, a scientist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, speaks at a panel on China’s population policies at the Boao Forum, an annual gathering of hundreds of politicians, businesspeople, opinion leaders and journalists.

Great Lakes Could Be in Big Trouble Thanks to Tiny, Hungry Flea

The Weather Channel

A tiny flea with a massive appetite is causing big trouble in the Great Lakes. Researchers from the University of Wisconsin-Madison Center for Limnology say that the invasive spiny water flea could leave lakes choked with algae and cost billions of dollars in cleanup efforts.

Trump Still Leads Wisconsin Polls — Even Without Major GOP Endorsements

Wisconsin Public Radio

Quoted: Mike Wagner, an associate professor in the School of Journalism and Mass Communication at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, said it’s very unusual for a presidential frontrunner to be short on endorsements in any given state. He said he thinks the lack of endorsements for Trump in Wisconsin could be chalked up to the state’s ties to the “upper echelons” of national Republican politics, where Trump isn’t very popular.

They’re here!

Isthmus

Quoted: Barry Burden, a UW-Madison political science professor, agrees that Madison is key to Sanders’ chances here. “Sanders managed to turn out thousands of people for a rally in Madison last summer,” he says, referring to Sanders’ appearance last July at the Veterans Memorial Coliseum. “His supporters in the area are already organizing to turn out progressives on primary day. He will need to run especially well in the district if he is going to win the statewide vote.”

How New Yorker cartoons could teach computers to be funny

CNET

Luckily, a computer program has swooped in to save Stokes and his sense of humor. With the help of computer scientists from the University of Wisconsin at Madison, The New Yorker for the first time is using crowdsourcing algorithms to uncover the top captions. The magazine quietly started using the algorithms a few months ago, testing them out on past caption contest winners and finalists. On Wednesday, The New Yorker revealed the tool publicly and is now inviting all of us to vote for our favorite captions.

Joy Cardin: University Officials And Students Address #TheRealUW

Wisconsin Public Radio

After University of Wisconsin-Madison students return from spring break, a university-wide town hall will be held to address issues regarding the number of reported incidents of race and bias on campus.  Joy Cardin’s guest reporter discusses the recent string of cases and how UW officials and students are reacting, including the use of the social media hastag #TheRealUW.  Then, she talks with UW-Madison’s chief diversity officer about the concerns and additional steps the university is taking to address the campus’ cultural climate.  She also hears from a UW-Madison student about her on-campus experiences with racism as a Latina.

Police respond to mental illness crisis

Madison Magazine

Noted: The relationship between city police and area social services agencies is hardly new. But there was a time “when if a police officer showed up at the mental health clinic, they were the enemy,” says Ronald Diamond, a University of Wisconsin–Madison professor of psychiatry and former medical director of Journey (then called the Mental Health Center of Dane County).

Electronic Records Offer A Chance To Ensure Patients’ End-Of-Life Plans Aren’t Lost In Critical Moments

Kaiser Health News

Quoted: Also, older patients, who are increasingly likely to have a directive, often get treatment from varied sources — surgeons, hospitals, nursing homes, primary physicians. That increases the odds of unaligned systems, said Dr. Irene Hamrick, who directs geriatric services in family medicine at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

Oscar ‘Spotlight’ falls on producer from Madison

Wisconsin Gazette

While Madison has lately been gripped by basketball fever, one Badger has already won a competition that rivals any NCAA tournament. Former University of Wisconsin-Madison student Nicole Rocklin received an Oscar for producing Spotlight, named the best picture of 2015 by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.

Big Ten’s Freshman Proposal Splits Universities

New York Times

College hockey appears to be in great shape. With three first-time champions in the last three years, Arizona State having completed its first season in Division I, and the highest graduation success rate among men’s major sports, it is poised for further growth.

Mass Incarceration

Wisconsin Public Radio

The U.S. practices mass incarceration more than any other country in the world.  In this hour, four members of UW’s School of Human Ecology approach the problem of mass incarceration, looking at the design of prison spaces, the impact on families of those behind bars, and the involvement of communities….

‘Zootopia’ writer reflects on growing up in Neenah

We Are Green Bay (WFRV TV)

The hit Disney animated movie Zootopia has shattered box office records, and the movie’s writer grew up in our own backyard. “Neenah, Wisconsin – I haven’t lived there in over 20 years but I still think of myself from being from Neenah when I close my eyes, it’s still what I picture as home,” said Phil Johnston.

Study details high cost of invasive species in lakes

Minnesota Public Radio News

A new study says invasive species in lakes cause significant economic damage. The study examined the spiny water flea invasion of a single Wisconsin lake and calculated the damage to the lake’s water quality at $140 million. While the study focused on one lake, it points to the need for more data about the economic impact of invasive species, said study author Jake Walsh, a Ph.D. student at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

Do Trump Rallies Trample on Protesters’ Free Speech?

American Prospect

Quoted: Pamela Oliver, a University of Wisconsin sociologist who studies social movements, agrees that if Trump becomes the GOP’s nominee this fall, it will further galvanize minority voters and civil-rights activists. But she warns that the racially tinged conflicts at Trump rallies have a dark side that could backfire on protesters. When majorities whip up racial animus, she says, “it often ends very badly for minorities.” If the skirmishes, violence, and clashes with law enforcement continue, Trump’s campaign could also end badly for some legally vulnerable police officers.

In California, Poisonous Death Cap Mushrooms Are The Forager’s Bane

NPR News

Quoted: The death caps arrived in California from Europe as early as the 1930s and ’40s, says Anne Pringle, a biologist at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. She discovered this timeline through genetic testing of death cap samples collected in California during this era. She says death caps likely sneaked into California from Europe attached to the roots of imported plants — and they got really comfortable, spreading all over the state.

Government’s Data-Driven Frenemies

Governing

Quoted: “You could look at the history of program evaluation and performance measurement as a cautionary tale of two children who were brought up in the same house but were raised by different tribes and aren’t so friendly with one another,” says Don Moynihan, a professor at the La Follette School of Public Affairs at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. “The [split has become] institutionalized in government.”

Wisconsin leads the way in the art of glass

Big Ten Network

It’s hotter than molten lava, constantly moving and requires artisans to work in a careful precision with their tools, their space and each other. It’s glass, and no other university has shaped its future as an artistic medium longer than the University of Wisconsin.

Taking the online medicine

The Economist

“Never tried sharing data like this before,” said the tweet. “Feels like walking into a country for the first time. Exciting, but don’t know what to expect.”David O’Connor of the University of Wisconsin-Madison was announcing his decision on February 14th to post online data from his laboratory’s latest experiment.

With Rubio out, some Wisconsin Republicans look for new candidate

WISN-TV, Milwaukee

Noted: The shift is natural, and University of Wisconsin-Madison professor Kenneth Mayer said he expects more changes. “One would expect Rubio supporters to recalibrate,” he said. “It’s going to be interesting to see. “Mayer said it’s unclear exactly how that reshuffling of support among Wisconsin Republicans will play out before Election Day, but he said he expects it to start happening soon.

Shifting terrain

Isthmus

Between late April and the end of summer, lucky birders might catch sight of the elusive hooded warbler on Picnic Point, where at least one has been spotted in the last few years. Or they might do better venturing into Kettle Moraine State Forest’s thick understory, where the warblers nest in greater numbers.

Madison’s Atlantis: The Lost City

Madison Magazine

The peaceful atmosphere of the UW–Madison Arboretum seems an unlikely site for a city rocked by scandal, war and nature’s cruel grip. Yet tucked within the Arboretum is Madison’s own Atlantis, its lost city.

Is Agent Orange Still Causing Birth Defects?

Scientific American

Quoted: Vietnam claims its data are sound, but the disagreement has sustained tension for years, particularly about effects that might be passed down to subsequent generations. Although U.S. laboratory tests in animals show that genetic damage caused by dioxin can be passed on to offspring, susceptibility varies widely by species, and no studies have been done in humans. Whether animal findings reflect the human experience “would be notoriously difficult to prove,” cautions Robert Moore, a toxicology researcher at the University of Wisconsin– Madison.

Financial Literacy Poses Lifelong Challenges

Wisconsin Public Radio

Noted: Knowing what one should do is different from actually doing it, though. That difference is why financial security scholar J. Michael Collins, a University of Wisconsin-Extension family and consumer economics specialist, prefers the concept of “capability” over “literacy.”

Nosy fish inspires help for the eyes

Gizmag

Presbyopia is a common visual condition, in which the eye’s lens stiffens to the point that it can’t focus on close objects. Glasses, surgery and regular contact lenses do help, but they also cause a loss in contrast, sensitivity and night vision. That’s why scientists from the University of Wisconsin, Madison are developing an alternative – self-focusing contacts that are inspired by a fish.

Handful of Biologists Went Rogue and Published Directly to Internet

New York Times

Quoted: And many #ASAPbio supporters retweeted John Hawks, a paleoanthropologist from the University of Wisconsin, who found himself recently at an African university where a paper on African genomes was unavailable because it could not pay the fee for the journal where it was published, and no preprint was available. He expressed his frustration with a profanity.