Tour of L&S, engineering facilities highlights need for new buildings Chris Bruhn (left), assistant dean of Facilities and Space Assignment in the College of Letters and Science, talks with Interim UW System President Tommy Thompson (center right), UW Chancellor Rebecca Blank (right) and Eric Wilcots (center left), dean of the College of Letters and Science, as they take a tour of the Humanities Building. Photo by: Bryce Richter Blank speaks to the media about the need to fund capital building projects on the UW campus following a tour of the Humanities Building. Photo by: Bryce Richter Blank (back to camera) speaks with Thompson (right), along with Wilcots and Bruhn. Photo by: Bryce Richter
Dire shape : UW-Madison pushes for money to replace Humanities Building | State and Regional journaltimes.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from journaltimes.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Citizens attended public hearing in Whitewater and demanded legislators support a wide range of reforms. //end headline wrapper ?>Wisconsin State Capitol. File photo by Dave Reid.
As the weather warms up, the grass turns green and daffodils explode in a cheerful yellow riot, spirits are rising.
All over our state and our nation, people are emerging from a long hibernation, getting their vaccines, and beginning to imagine what life could be like without the oppressive weight of the pandemic and the ugly, divisive politics of the last year.
Optimism is as unfamiliar as the warm sun on your shoulders on these suddenly balmy days. But the vision for recovery and improvement laid out in budget proposals floated by President
UW s 2021-22 academic year set to begin during Rosh Hashanah, Jewish students describe frustrations dailycardinal.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from dailycardinal.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Wisconsin Examiner
Spring at the Capitol by Josh Puetz CC BY-NC 2.0
As the weather warms up, the grass turns green and daffodils explode in a cheerful yellow riot, spirits are rising.
All over our state and our nation, people are emerging from a long hibernation, getting their vaccines, and beginning to imagine what life could be like without the oppressive weight of the pandemic and the ugly, divisive politics of the last year.
Optimism is as unfamiliar as the warm sun on your shoulders on these suddenly balmy days. But the vision for recovery and improvement laid out in budget proposals floated by President Joe Biden and Gov. Tony Evers is stirring hopes of better days.