Performing as the legendary mascot is a high-pressure gig that — if all goes well — pleases a stadium’s worth of UW fans.
Spring 2025
Download Spring 2025 PDF
Stories
Renowned cookbook author Patricia Wells MA’72 went to France to learn haute cuisine and developed a signature taste steeped in simplicity.
The UW’s first prolific inventor was also a visionary businessman and humanitarian with an outsized impact on the world around him.
A UW veterinary clinic provides affordable care for owners experiencing hardship.
Our fantasy lineup of Wisconsin’s gridiron greats.
Siblings get financial help from the UW’s new Wisconsin Tribal Educational Promise Program.
Professor Brian Burt addresses the underrepresentation of Black men in STEM fields.
Transplants might become a thing of the past.
Erin Warner helps students navigate an increasingly challenging housing market.
Bryce Richter
UW–Madison plays a leading role as a research and education partner for national cybersecurity. Last semester, the university welcomed a delegation from the United States Cyber Command, which is responsible for the Department of Defense’s cyberspace capabilities. They participated in talks, visited research labs, and…
UW research helps clear the way for travel to Mars.
A new plan will boost entrepreneurship at the UW.
Campus makes it easier to find locations for prayer and reflection.
UW paleontologists adjust the reptile timeline — by a few million years.
Nature Calls in Nancy Nicholas Hall is a stream-like, dreamlike experience.
A UW effort will help oncologists and their patients make better-informed decisions.
Self-guided tours share Indigenous history with the UW–Madison community.
The Chazen Museum of Art owns what might be the earliest photograph of a First Lady.
Sarah Franklin x’25 isn’t just a star on the court. She’s a star on ESPN, too.
The popular song “It’s Dark on Observatory Hill” immortalized a campus hot spot.
For a university situated on an isthmus, transportation is no easy matter.
These former Badgers haven’t let their careers get in the way of love.
Gabriela Cezar PhD’02 takes UW breakthroughs from bench science to business.
A culinary icon’s Provençal menu was right at home on my Wisconsin table.
Carrie Lowry Schuettpelz MFA’18 investigates an identity crisis in The Indian Card.
In I Am Nobody’s Slave, Lee Hawkins ’01 recounts his family’s tradition of resilience despite generations of racial violence.