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Category: UW-Madison Related

Wheeler, Losey: Racial incident in wake of nearby Nazi rally no coincidence

Capital Times

Dear Editor: There has been much debate about how the community should react toward the Nazi rally, which took place on Saturday, Aug. 26. But on Sunday at 6:30 a.m. on the Memorial Union Terrace three men, emboldened by the rally in our Capitol Square, racially harassed a Memorial Union employee.

This employee was beginning her second day at the union and was walking toward the terrace stage when she heard “nigger” yelled at her.

State holds down costs for health insurance

Capital Times

State employees, retirees and dependents will continue to enjoy low-cost health insurance benefits, thanks to a combination of innovation and use of a reserve fund to help reduce increases.

The state Group Health Insurance Board today approved a health insurance program cost increase of 7.4 percent, most of which is paid by the state.

County rejects Extension funding cut (Oshkosh Northwestern)

Winnebago County’s University of Wisconsin Extension office won’t have to take a budget cut because of the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s controversial hiring of instructor Kevin Barrett, a Sept. 11 conspiracy theorist.

The Winnebago County Board’s legislative committee rejected Monday a resolution to cut the UW-Extension’s budget by $8,427 ââ?¬â?? the amount Barrett is paid. The resolution came to Winnebago County after originating in Ozaukee County.

Weekly laurels and laments

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

You’ve likely heard that Forbes.com has named Milwaukee the drunkest city in the country. Nothing anyone should be proud of. But if you’re looking for a Wisconsin silver lining of sorts, University of Wisconsin-Madison slipped from the No. 1 party school to No. 4.

Rob Schultz: College volleyball deserves so much more

Capital Times

The statement that best defines the problems facing college women’s volleyball was uttered Thursday by Geoff Carlston.

The Ohio coach lamented that ESPN televises “14 hours” of poker per day, “and we can’t get our championship on prime time.”

It’s the best sport nobody pays attention to.

Campus’ Christian group left hanging

Duluth News

Student leaders at the University of Wisconsin-Superior have a thorny question this fall.

Is the InterVarsity Christian Fellowship’s requirement that its student officers support Christian doctrines common sense or discrimination?

Woman badly beaten in assault

Capital Times

Police are trying to figure out what prompted a man to attack a young woman early this morning at her campus area apartment building.

The 20-year-old woman told police she was walking in the 100 block of Langdon Street about 1:15 a.m. when she noticed a man watching her. She avoided the man and crossed the street to get to a better-lighted area, then went to the apartment of a friend.

About 20 minutes later, she was again walking on Langdon Street. She didn’t see the man and safely entered her apartment building but, as she went up the stairs to her apartment, the man ran up behind her and punched her in the face several times.

Rash Of Thefts Plagues 2 Sites At University

Wisconsin State Journal

This year has seen a rash of thefts of electronics equipment, cash and other items at the UW-Madison Medical Sciences Complex and the Red Gym.
“To our knowledge, at this point it doesn’t appear any sensitive records were compromised,” said Sgt. Benjamin Newman of the UW-Madison Police Department.

UW diversity plan questioned

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Letter writer says people are not going to become more multicultural because their lab partner is Native American, because they stand next to a Hispanic student in choir or because an extra African-American student lives on their dorm floor. Would college students at Grambling or Morehouse become more multicultural because they helped pay to have 100 white students show up for classes this fall? Not a chance.

Randall lot to get a face-lift

Capital Times

Badger fans will be able to park behind Randall Elementary School – a stone’s throw from Camp Randall Stadium – this football season, but spaces are likely to become fewer after that.

UW Campus Thefts Under Investigation

NBC-15

The University of Wisconsin-Madison Police Department is investigating a series of thefts and burglaries that have happened on campus at The Medical Sciences Complex and more recently at the Red Gym.

There have been more than thirty thefts or burglaries since the first of the year, totaling a loss of more than $40,000 in cash and goods.

Get Your Halloween Tickets Soon

NBC-15

Halloween is still two months away, but Madison’s Parks Department is gearing up to sell tickets to the celebration on State Street.

Parks superintendent Jim Morgan says the city council still needs to approve plans to close State Street. That vote is expected on September 5th. Meantime, the department is preparing to sell about 50-thousand tickets.

Santiago’s Mission (Small Business Times)

Chancellor Carlos Santiago is trying to transform the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee from its long-time image as a commuter school into a more traditional college setting, where many of the students live on campus.

To improve the school and extend its impact on the community, Santiago wants to increase UWM�s annual spending on research from about $30 million now to about $100 million by 2015. However, instead of trying to duplicate the bio-technology research done at the University of Wisconsin in Madison, Santiago says he is more interested in partnering with Milwaukee area businesses, focusing on research that can be used by existing corporations.

Police Investigate Rash Of Campus Burglaries

WISC-TV 3

MADISON, Wis. — University of Wisconsin police are investigating a series of burglaries at campus buildings in recent months.

There have been 31 separate reports of theft since the start of the year, police said. Most of the incidents were reported in the medical sciences complex, where a total of $38,000 worth of property has been stolen, WISC-TV reported.

Editorial: Golden intentions but . . .

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

There is little doubt that the University of Wisconsin System needs to increase the diversity of its campuses. But a plan approved by the system’s Board of Regents last week represents a surrender flag of sorts.

Mark Supanich: TAs are neutral on Halloween plan

Capital Times

Dear Editor: As the TAA representative who signed the open letter to Mayor Dave Cieslewicz regarding his proposed plans for State Street on Halloween that was discussed in your Aug. 9 article “Halloween plan gets thumbs up,” I must clarify that the Teaching Assistants’ Association has taken no position on Mayor Dave’s Halloween plans.

Paying for Diversity (Inside Higher Ed)

Inside Higher Education

On Thursday, the Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System approved a plan that would increase tuition for all students at the university�s La Crosse campus by a total of $1,320 over three years to diversify the student body there.

Regents OK tuition raise for diversity

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Madison – The University of Wisconsin-La Crosse would charge students $1,320 over three years on top of annual tuition increases to expand and diversify its student body under a pilot program approved Thursday by the UW System Board of Regents.

Open house Saturday at UW’s experimental plots

Wisconsin State Journal

Gardeners have traveled back in time in preparation for Saturday’s public open house at the large and lush UW-Madison experimental plots.

Vegetables grown from seeds handed down from native people in the arid Southwest are among the crops on display at the West Madison Agricultural Research Station.

UW System lays out budget request (AP)

Duluth News

MADISON – University of Wisconsin leaders laid out a wish list on Thursday that includes increasing enrollments and improving research while holding the line on tuition.

University of Wisconsin System regents voted 15-2 on Thursday to approve a two-year budget request that would add 2,000 students to the 160,000 student system, increase tuition by an average of 2.5 percent each year and fund goodies such as a new research initiative at UW-Milwaukee.

2.5% hikes in UW tuition

Capital Times

University of Wisconsin Regents were poised today to approve what officials called the smallest tuition increase in the past 25 years, but students say it’s still too much.

“We’re fired up, can’t take it no more,” chanted a group of about 35 UW students from the Oshkosh, Madison and Milwaukee campuses as they held signs outside Van Hise Hall this morning.

Daniel P. Kunene: UW provost’s order to Barrett comes close to censorship

Capital Times

Dear Editor:

….Farrell, who previously endorsed Barrett as being qualified to teach his course despite his beliefs, now states that he sent Barrett a letter warning him to stop associating himself with the school while promoting his beliefs and to stop seeking publicity for his views. Farrell said he will reconsider his decision to allow Barrett to teach unless Barrett complies with his requests.

….I certainly hope the University of Wisconsin is not succumbing to the pressure from some nervous individuals to suppress one of its most fundamental assets, the freedom of its employees, from the president to the dustman, to express their views on matters of public interest.

The university is a place where all ideas are welcome and subjected to the scrutiny of all who care to engage in debate. The University of Wisconsin prides itself in its commitment to “sifting and winnowing.” Anything that stands in the way of this can only be considered a negation of freedom of speech and thought. Nothing could be more stifling in an intellectual environment.

CIO Leadership Series: Bruce Maas, UWM

Wisconsin Technology Network

Milwaukee, Wis. – When it comes to finding information technology workers, Bruce Maas feels the pain of his private-sector counterparts, but his very public employer has found a way to address the problem – embracing diversity.

Doctor using new media to break down barriers

Wisconsin Technology Network

A University of Wisconsin-Madison professor and physician with ties to the entertainment industry is developing a software product to train medical students. The ultimate objective of Fred Kron, proprietor of Medical Cyberworlds, is to transform the doctor-patient relationship.

Gary Hebl: Professor Epstein’s dedication to his students is an unforgettable legacy

Capital Times

Dear Editor: It is with great sadness that I write this letter in honor of the passing of professor Leon Epstein. I was struck with great pain that his obituary read he left no survivors. Although Epstein may not have had any biological heirs, he certainly had many survivors who fondly remember his magnificent teaching ability.

….Epstein was one of the many people at the UW-Madison who had a great effect on me. With their influence, one cannot help but develop a great affection for such a great institution of higher learning.

A regional workforce (Channel3000)

WISC-TV 3

One of the most promising developments in the Collaboration Council’s move toward a regional economic development entity is the engagement of a broad spectrum of partners in the process. For example the U-W’s influential Center on Wisconsin Strategy has had a seat at the table and has made a significant contribution.

State Journal editor, Behnke, retires after 40 years

Wisconsin State Journal

UW-Madison journalism alumnus Cliff Behnke returned to his student paper, The Daily Cardinal, in a new role in the 1990s, joining the board after the paper encountered a financial crisis. Behnke and others tackled the demanding and time-consuming job of restoring the Cardinal to stability and assuring its future as a training ground for college journalists, said Jeff Smoller, a fellow board member. “The Daily Cardinal is there today in large part due to Cliff Behnke’s steadfastness and caring,” he said.

Uncivil liberties are not protected

Wisconsin State Journal

When six members of the UW-Madison student government denounced Mayor Dave Cieslewicz this week for violating students’ First Amendment right to freedom of assembly, were they:
A. Angry that the mayor had denied a permit for an anti-war march down State Street?

B. Upset that police broke up a demonstration against tuition increases?

C. Mad that they cannot use the Monona Terrace Convention Center to rally against world hunger?

The answer is “none of the above.” The reason the student leaders got their dander up was — They don’t want to pay $5 a head to get into the annual Halloween bash on State Street.

Your Views: Matc Transfers

Wisconsin State Journal

While I appreciate the State Journal’s attempt to present both sides of the MATC-to-UW transfer agreement debate, I believe that Forum columnist Mac Verstandig’s opinions demonstrate an academic elitism that ill serves UW-Madison and Wisconsin as a whole.

The truth seldom is as easy or as exciting as fiction

La Crosse Tribune

Let�s suppose for a moment that the United States was behind the attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, as a few theorists want us to believe. As awful � and crazy � as such a suggestion might sound, it does take a complex geopolitical problem and turn it into a much simpler narrative: corrupt and self-serving politicians.

Woman robbed near zoo

Capital Times

An armed man robbed a Madison woman near Henry Vilas Zoo early Sunday morning.Madison police responded at around 2:40 a.m. to the robbery.

According to police, the 22-year-old victim was walking on the 300 block of South Randall Avenue when a man exited a dark-colored, newer vehicle and ran up to her. He displayed a handgun and took her purse before returning to the vehicle to flee the scene. The victim was uninjured.

Efficiencies and the UW system (Beloit Daily News)

THE BATTLE LINES already are being drawn. Gov. Jim Doyle is asking the University of Wisconsin system to hold tuition increases at or below the prevailing rate of inflation over the next budget period. That would be quite a change from the double-digit increases of recent years.

David Hammond: Check actual facts of 9/11 conspiracy: There’s something fishy going on

Capital Times

Dear Editor: Grad student Patrick Michelson’s July 13 guest column denouncing instructor Kevin Barrett is perfectly indicative of the myriad challenges facing the 9/11 truth movement.

His ridiculous statement that Barrett’s assertions “have no grounding in reality, forensic evidence or common sense” is precisely the sort of inane drivel that we most often hear from those who have (quite obviously) never examined the arguments behind this growing viewpoint.

Sex assault suspect charged

Wisconsin State Journal

Brian C. Carley, 30, was charged Wednesday with 27 misdemeanors – nine counts of disorderly conduct, nine counts of bail jumping, five counts of lewd and lascivious behavior and four counts of fourth-degree sexual assault. At least one reported incident occurred at UW-Madison’s Union South.

Wray wants to add patrols to quell rising crime Downtown

Wisconsin State Journal

It’s been a while since Noble Wray has worked the streets like a regular cop, but one thing is clearly different, he said.
On Downtown ride-alongs he took this summer to get a handle on rising crime, the Madison police chief spotted something out of place: groups of older teens, too young to drink, milling around the bar area late at night with no apparent destination or purpose.