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  • Posted on December 29, 2005
    Wisconsin School for Cut Flower Growers will debut this February

    Are you interested in turning your passion for growing flowers into a small business? Do you wonder which varieties to grow for florists or farmers’ market customers? Are you curious how much labor and money are needed to start a cut flower business? The Wisconsin School for Cut Flower Growers is a two-day workshop designed to help new and beginning growers learn the ins and outs of growing and marketing cut flowers.

  • Posted on December 22, 2005
    Short Course alumni reunion to be held January 28

    The annual University of Wisconsin-Madison Short Course Alumni Reunion is scheduled for Saturday, Jan. 28 at Pooley’s Restaurant and Sports Bar on the far east side of Madison. The event will begin at 12:15 p.m., preceded by a social hour beginning at 11:30 a.m. As usual there will be ample door prizes donated by many agri-business companies.

  • Posted on December 21, 2005
    120 years of Short Course

    Graduate from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in just 17 weeks!

  • Posted on December 15, 2005
    Wisconsin 4-H Dairy Bowl experts compete in national contests

    Young dairy experts had the thrill of advancing to two national contests this fall to represent Wisconsin at this year’s National 4-H dairy bowl contests. Vernon, Door, and Richland counties topped the Wisconsin competitions last January, earning them the privilege of competing at the national level.

  • Posted on December 13, 2005
    UW SCIENTISTS TEAM UP TO BATTLE FOOD-BORNE ILLNESSES

    According to estimates from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, food-borne pathogens account for 76 million illnesses, 325,000 hospitalizations and 5,000 deaths in the United States each year. As the food industry continues to globalize, food safety is expected to remain a significant public health issue.

  • Posted on December 7, 2005
    School for Beginning Market Growers set for January 20-22

    Which is more difficult: growing a great crop of heirloom tomatoes, or pricing and selling them in order to make a profit? How do you control the flea beetles in the cabbage and the cucumber beetles in the melons? How do you build fertile soil using organic methods? How much can be earned from an acre of fresh vegetables, and how hard will you have to work to grow and sell them? These and many other issues will be front and center at the 2006 Wisconsin School for Beginning Market Growers.

  • Posted on December 2, 2005
    When the whole is greater than the sum of the parts

    When Murray Clayton reads news stories about College research or browses through the CALS Quarterly, he often has a unique perspective on the science being covered: for many of the stories reported, he and his colleagues played a critical role in sorting out the t-tests, X-bars and Z scores that transform raw data into meaningful interpretation.

  • Posted on December 1, 2005
    Richard Barrows, CALS Associate Dean and agricultural economist, to retire

    Richard L. Barrows, Associate Dean for Academic Student Affairs in the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s College of Agricultural and Life Sciences and professor of agricultural and applied economics, will retire from the university after the end of the academic year.

  • Posted on November 16, 2005
    Scientists Map One of Biology’s Critical Light-Sensing Structures

    Scientists have obtained a detailed map of one of biology’s most important light detectors, a protein found in many species across life’s plant, fungal, and bacterial kingdoms.

  • Posted on November 15, 2005
    James W. Crowley Management and Extension Fund supports valuable internship experiences for UW-Madison students

    With college students starting their search for summer internships, it’s nice to know that there are positions available to give students a chance to see what a career is like. The James W. Crowley Management and Extension Fund supports experiences like that every summer.