Ideas and discoveries
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Bridging theory, reality of high-stakes corporate finance
May 8, 2008
As vice president and chief financial officer of Plexus, a global electronics manufacturing corporation in Neenah, Wis., Ginger Jones was skeptical. She wasn't sure college students could come up with sound, practical advice her business could use.
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Virus mimics human protein to hijack cell division machinery
May 8, 2008
Viruses are masters of deception, duping their host's cells into helping them grow and spread. A new study has found that human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) can mimic a common regulatory protein to hijack normal cell growth machinery, disrupting a cell's primary anti-cancer mechanism.
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Web tool puts wildlife diseases on the map
May 7, 2008
A new online map makes it possible, for the first time, to track news of disease outbreaks around the world that threaten the health of wildlife, domestic animals, and people.
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Spiraling nanotrees offer new twist on growth of nanowires
May 1, 2008
Since scientists first learned to make nanowires, the tiny wires just a few millionths of a centimeter thick have taken many forms, including nanobelts, nanocoils and nanoflowers.
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Students embrace Arabic in new International Learning Community
May 1, 2008
Arabic script runs along the dormitory hall of the third floor in Adams Hall. To an outsider it looks like an intricate design flowing among the plaster, but to the residents it provides direction and introductions to their fellow floormates.
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Wisconsin biomedical engineering students design meaningful medical solutions
April 30, 2008
When University of Wisconsin-Madison junior Claire Flanagan graduates in May 2009 with bachelor's degrees in biomedical engineering (BME) and biochemistry, she might display her diploma next to an equally prestigious document: a patent from the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.
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‘Life During Wartime’ will build innovative curriculum around American war history
April 30, 2008
A new Wisconsin project funded by the U.S. Department of Education will feature an unprecedented partnership among public school teachers, university and technical college faculty, and the Wisconsin Veterans Museum to invigorate the teaching of American history.
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With cell as muse, art fuels scientist’s quest
April 28, 2008
For Ahna Skop, the tipping point to a career in science was a dance and a food fight.
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The Circus is in Town: Please direct your attention to the center ring
April 24, 2008
The joyous, colorful, energetic and out-of-this-world spectacle of the circus can’t help but capture an artist’s imagination. That exuberance will take center ring in the Chazen Museum of Art when it presents two circus-themed exhibitions: “Ringmaster: Judy Onofrio and the Art of the Circus,” and “Harry A. Atwell, Circus Photographer.”
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Rethinking disaster management by focusing on development
April 23, 2008
How we think about a disaster stems from the origin of the word itself: "Disastro" is the Latin word meaning "from the stars." Yet the idea that a disaster is an uncontrollable, divine event is something Don Schramm, director of UW-Madison’s Disaster Management Center, does not accept.
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UW’s computing research prowess brings Microsoft to Madison
April 23, 2008
Microsoft, the world's largest computer software company, will open an advanced development laboratory in Madison later this spring, helping expand on a highly productive 20-year research and alumni relationship between the company and the University of Wisconsin-Madison computer sciences department.
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Professor blends ecology, history
April 21, 2008
As a University of Washington graduate student in the late 1980s, Nancy Langston traveled to a national park in Zimbabwe to study an endangered bird. She came back with a resolve to know more about people.
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Director cultivates a mile-high appreciation of Wisconsin
April 10, 2008
From his 12th-floor office, Sam Batzli has a view of nearby Lake Mendota and Madison's downtown punctuated by the state Capitol. But instead of looking out the window, Batzli looks at Madison and the rest of Wisconsin from much higher altitudes.
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Director cultivates a mile-high appreciation of Wisconsin
April 10, 2008
From his 12th-floor office, Sam Batzli has a view of nearby Lake Mendota and Madison's downtown punctuated by the state Capitol. But instead of looking out the window, Batzli looks at Madison and the rest of Wisconsin from much higher altitudes.
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Negligent, attentive mouse mothers show biological differences
April 9, 2008
In mice, child neglect is a product of both nature and nurture, according to a new study. Researchers from the University of Wisconsin-Madison describe a strain of mice that exhibit unusually high rates of maternal neglect, with approximately one out of every five females failing to care for her offspring.
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Digital project puts Aldo Leopold papers online
April 8, 2008
The project to digitize the University of Wisconsin-Madison Archives' complete collection of materials from conservationist Aldo Leopold has made its first installment of online materials available to the public.
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Using street theater to channel the lessons of molecules
April 7, 2008
A novel project by a collaboration of scientists and educators from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and the Madison Area Technical College (MATC) is making molecules and atoms the stars of a project to use theater to teach children the basics of science.
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Money doesn’t grow on trees, but gasoline might
April 7, 2008
In 2003, University of Wisconsin-Madison graduate student George Huber and colleagues made hydrogen from plant sugars using nickel-tin alloy catalysts in the lab of Chemical and Biological Engineering Professor James Dumesic.
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Watching the birds: Agri-tourism could help save colorful prairie chicken
April 7, 2008
In terms of entertaining courtship rituals, few animals can hold a candle to Tympanuchus cupido -- the drummer of love, commonly known as the greater prairie chicken.
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Professor strengthens math, science education
March 26, 2008
For well over a decade, mathematics professor Terry Millar has worked to improve math and science instruction for students at all levels by bringing together the knowledge of university mathematicians and scientists with the teaching and curricular expertise of educators.
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