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Category: UW-Madison Related

10 Best Non-MCU Series On Disney+

CBR

Big Shot is a comedy-drama starring John Stamos as coach Marvyn Korn. After being fired from the University of Wisconsin as their men’s basketball coach due to controversy surrounding his temper, he relocates to California to coach a girls high school basketball team. Soon after, his daughter joins him in California, and Korn adjusts to coaching girls while trying to manage his temper on the court.

Who Are America’s Missing Workers?

The New York Times

Yasmin Schamiloglu, 25, doesn’t know when her case of long Covid will allow her to return to work.

She contracted Covid in January and had relatively mild symptoms. She was able to do her job helping researchers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison with community engagement remotely for a while, and then started trying to go back into the office. Her managers were understanding, but every hour at work was exhausting, and the fatigue soon became too much to bear.

Millions of monarch butterflies are passing through Chicago as part of their annual 3,000-mile migration

Chicago Tribune

There are many ways to experience the phenomenon. You can follow the monarchs’ surge at the Journey North website, a project of the University of Wisconsin at Madison Arboretum. You can also keep an eye out for orange wings when passing flowering plants such as zinnias, visit a nature preserve with monarch-tempting wildflowers or attend one of the region’s many monarch festivals.

Big Shot Season 2 Trailer Shown at D23 Ahead of Disney+ Premiere

Collider

The new trailer gives us our first look at the continued work of Marvyn Korn (Stamos) the hot-tempered former University of Wisconsin basketball coach who, after having been fired from his high-stakes job, finds a chance at redemption coaching high school basketball at an all-girls school. The first season explored Korn’s relationship with his daughter, who is also one of his new pupils, as well as his journey to self-improvement as he learns to coach on a smaller scale.

Ho-Chunk Nation launches online dictionary to breathe new life into endangered Ho-Chunk language

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Noted: “We don’t like to speak about mortality, but it’s a fact of life,” said Henning, who has worked in language preservation for his tribe since graduating from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 2003 with a bachelor’s degree in linguistics. “We’re going to get to a situation where I’m going to be saying, … ‘I wish I would have asked when they were here.’ “

Student loan forgiveness could aid over 700,000 in Wisconsin

The Capital Times

For tax associate Kai Brito, the $20,000 in forgiveness would completely wipe out the debt he owes for the bachelor’s degree he earned at UW-Madison in 2017. Even with a Pell Grant and other scholarships, Brito took out about $22,000 in loans to pay for college. After paying some of the outstanding balance during the student loan moratorium, Brito has $13,000 remaining in debt.

What’s a Pell Grant? How it affects student loan forgiveness

CBS News

Lynn Hunt, a data analyst in Portland, Oregon, is a Pell Grant recipient who borrowed somewhere around $45,000 to $50,000 to attend the University of Wisconsin and has paid back about $15,000 but still owes $70,000 because of interest.

Poem: Lipstick Elegy

New York Times

Poem by Paul Tran, a poet and an editor whose debut collection, from which this poem is taken, is “All the Flowers Kneeling” (Penguin Books, 2022). They are an assistant professor of English and Asian American studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

As the midterms approach, six Wisconsin voters worry about partisanship, the economy and our state’s future

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

As Wisconsin heads into the 2022 midterms, the Wisconsin Main Street Agenda project is trying to get past soundbites and polarizing political coverage  go straight to voters to see what is on their minds.

In that spirit, we recently spoke with six voters from across the state to get a sense of their concerns.

This project is a collaboration between the USA TODAY NETWORK-Wisconsin, Wisconsin Public Radio and the La Follette School of Public Affairs at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

Lack of nurse educators fuels Wisconsin’s nursing shortage

The Capital Times

Without enough teachers, nursing schools are unable to enroll more students, said Susan Zahner, associate dean for faculty affairs at the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s School of Nursing. On top of that, classroom space is often limited due to budget constraints, and schools are struggling to provide enough clinical sites to train students.

Lin-Manuel Miranda, ‘Let It Go’ songwriter join UW prof on new podcast

The Capital Times

Barbara Ames didn’t write “Hamilton.” She hasn’t won the EGOT. And she didn’t create the upcoming podcast “Arts Educators Save the World.”

Without Ames, though, the world may not have the Lin-Manuel Miranda, Robert Lopez and Erica Halverson that did.

Ames taught each of the three renowned artists when they attended New York’s Hunter College Elementary School. Halverson, a University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Education professor who is an expert in how people learn through the arts, is hosting the new podcast.

Chef and author Abra Berens talks artisan grains and recipe rules

The Capital Times

Q: How does Farm to Flavor fit in with that?

A: I’m so excited about this event in Madison — it’s one of the most producer-oriented events that I’ve been a part of. It’s really exciting to have that conversation between growers and end users, like chefs or manufacturers … or direct to consumer, to be breeding plants with an emphasis on flavor.

University of Wisconsin has been leading that charge for so long. And it’s really just inspiring to see how it’s growing and continuing.

 

Roth Burns to make history as first female judge on Oneida County Circuit Court

Northwoods Star Journal

Noted: Burns lives in Rhinelander and is a graduate of the University of Wisconsin – Madison, New York University and the University of Wisconsin Law School. She has deep ties to the community, having raised her family in Rhinelander, served on the boards of the Northern Arts Council and ArtStart, and volunteered for many local organizations.

Our ancestors created Social Security. Ron Johnson’s idea would destroy it, and Medicare along with it.

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Noted: When President Franklin Roosevelt worked with his New Deal team to design Social Security, our forebears — Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins, Secretary of Agriculture Henry Wallace and Emergency Relief Administrator Harry Hopkins — looked especially to Wisconsin for help. Their top aides included University of Wisconsin professor Edwin Witte and UW graduate Arthur Altmeyer.

When a second generation of New Dealers in Congress created Medicare in 1964, Wisconsin also played a decisive role. Milwaukee-born Wilbur Cohen, another UW graduate, was among Medicare’s lead architects.

Orrin Rongstad

Wisconsin State Journal

Orrin took a position at UW in the Department of Wildlife Ecology, serving as advisor, teacher, researcher and department chair.

UW-Madison law professor and novelist Steven Wright seizes the issues of our day to write unconventional thrillers

Isthmus

Peripatetic, or traveling from place to place, aptly describes Dre’s life, as it does his creator’s. In his zig-zagging career, Wright, now a clinical associate professor at the University of Wisconsin Law School and a former co-director of the Wisconsin Innocence Project, has seldom taken the safe route and has been, literally and metaphorically, all over the map.

Kathleen Gallagher: How a Madison area non-profit is accelerating demand for psychedelic mushrooms used to treat mental illness

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Noted: Beyond Usona, the Midwest has been waking up to psychedelic medicine’s potential. UW-Madison and University of Michigan both started research centers for psychedelic drugs in 2021. Ohio State launched such a center earlier this year. University of Chicago has a leading researcher in the field in Harriet de Wit. And the Medical College of Wisconsin has one of the best serotonin-based pharmacology researchers in John McCorvy.

UW-Madison 15th Red Shirt winner announced

NBC-26

The votes are in, and the winning design for the 15th annual The Red Shirt competition features Bucky flashing the iconic “W” gesture … Every purchase of The Red Shirt will go to support students on campus by funding scholarships for need-based students.

 

A Navajo scientist couldn’t translate his work to his family. Now, because of a UW-Madison project he co-founded, he can.

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

That’s when Martin and his colleagues — Joanna Bundus, a biology post-doctoral fellow at UW-Madison, and Susana Wadgymar, an assistant professor of biology at Davidson College in North Carolina — founded Project ENABLE (Enriching Navajo As a Biology Language for Education), an online dictionary of biology terms translated from English to Diné Bizaad, a Navajo language.

Madison Chamber’s first economic inclusion manager sees empathy, listening as key

Wisconsin State Journal

She was also a project assistant with the university’s RISE program, which still runs to this day. The program creates an employment pipeline for UW-Madison students of color seeking internships. Assefa went on to serve in various directorial and advisory roles for UW-Madison, all in an effort to promote DEI on campus.

Most notably, Assefa was previously the director of the African American Student Academic Services department and an adviser to the First Wave Hip Hop and Urban Arts Scholarship program out of the Multicultural Arts Initiatives office, where she eventually became the director.

Wisconsin ‘trial college’ gives Indigenous advocates the skills to work in tribal courts

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Padron and 27 others just graduated with certificates in tribal court legal advocacy from the National Tribal Trial College. They’re now scattered across the country to litigate cases ranging from divorce to domestic violence to child support.

The six-month program that concluded last week at the University of Wisconsin Law School is the only one of its kind in the country, according to National Tribal Trial College dean Hallie Bongar White.

UW students show their kindness — Linda Johnson

Wisconsin State Journal

Letter to the editor: I recently experienced the fortunate happenstance to cross paths with several college students on the path to Picnic Point on the UW-Madison campus. As an older active woman walking the path with my husband, I fell. Not only was there a physicians assistant who had been traveling through Madison with his family immediately checking on me, but several other young male students jogging through the trail also stopped to offer aid and support.

‘Heat’-ing up: Michael Mann writes sequel-prequel ‘Heat 2’

The Washington Post

“Heat 2” is the first of three planned novels (one of which may be related to “Heat”), and an ambitious literary beginning for a man who had never attempted a work of fiction before. He majored in English at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, with thoughts of becoming a teacher, but decided that would be “really immensely boring.”

‘Heat’-ing up: Michael Mann writes sequel-prequel ‘Heat 2’

Washington Post

Noted: “Heat 2” is the first of three planned novels (one of which may be related to “Heat”), and an ambitious literary beginning for a man who had never attempted a work of fiction before. He majored in English at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, with thoughts of becoming a teacher, but decided that would be “really immensely boring.” Asked to cite literary influences, he mentions John le Carre, but otherwise says he doesn’t read crime fiction. Instead, he looks to “primary sources,” the various killers, crooks, law enforcers and government agents he has met and befriended and whose stories he adapted for “Heat,” “Thief” and other films.

Maine Med doctor donates kidney to former patient in Wisconsin

Portland Press Herald

Noted: Djamali became a nephrologist himself and spent more than two decades practicing at the University of Wisconsin Health Transplant Center in Madison.

That’s where he met Jartz, among hundreds of other patients.

Late last year, Djamali decided to leave the UW Health Transplant Center to take a job at Maine Medical Center. But he made another decision around the same time. He would donate his kidney to Jartz.

National acclaim and a Wisconsin retrospective for Ho-Chunk artist Tom Jones

Wisconsin State Journal

Jones, a photography professor at UW-Madison, is having an especially big year. This summer alone his artwork — steeped in his perspective as a member of the Ho-Chunk Nation — is part of exhibitions at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City and the Museum of Contemporary Photography in Chicago. On Saturday, the Museum of Wisconsin Art in West Bend will celebrate the opening of his first major retrospective, “Tom Jones: Here We Stand,” featuring some 130 works from 16 series that span his career.