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Editorial portraits

31 images Created 12 Feb 2011

Editorial portraits
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  • Madison native Genevieve Custer stars as the lead character during a dress rehearsal of Madison Ballet's production of Cinderella at the Overture Center for the Arts in Madison, Wis., on March 30, 2007.
    MadBallet_Cinderella07_3124.jpg
  • On April 11, 2006, Brian Raffel, co-founder and studio head of Raven Software, is pictured in front of a projected video graphic from one of the company's games in the background. The video gaming company based in Madison, Wis.
    Raffel_Brian_Raven06_3925.jpg
  • Michael Brzezinski, 50, of Prairie du Sac, Wis., enjoys riding his Harley-Davidson motorcycle on a back road in Sauk County, Wis., during a sunny autumn afternoon on Oct. 3, 2007. Brzezinski, first diagnosed with type 2 diabetes 13 years ago, continues to manage his health condition and maintain an active lifestyle.
    21_Miller_8335.jpg
  • Prior to leading a noon-time Iyengar yoga class, 73-year-old yoga instructor Nicole "Nicky" Plaut warms up with an inverted pose in a yoga sling at the Mound Street Yoga Center in Madison, Wis., on May 15, 2003.  Plaut, a native of Belgium, has been practicing yoga for more than 50 years and teaches 14 inspired but humbling, yoga classes per week at several Madison-area locations.
    Plaut_yoga_invert03_1699.jpg
  • Attorney at Law Christopher Ochoa works in his office in downtown Madison, Wis., on Saturday, Dec. 1, 2007. In 1988, a then 22-year-old Ochoa confessed to rape and capital murder in Austin, Texas to avoid the death penalty. He also implicated his roommate. Both men were sentenced to life in prison. Twelve years later they were exonerated after another inmate confessed, and DNA evidence excluded them. Ochoa went on to earn a law degree from the University of Wisconsin, and is now a criminal defense lawyer in Madison.
    N1A_12OchoaChris07_9533.jpg
  • Veterinary ophthalmologist Dr. Katie Diehl performs an eye exam on a dog at Veterinary Specialty and Emergency Care in Madison, Wis., on Dec. 7, 2008. Diehl is a 1992 graduate of Hawken School, a private K-12 school in Ohio.
    Diehl_Katie_vet08_5090.jpg
  • Zev Mondry, 3, offers a cash donation while accepting a "Buddy Poppy," small paper flowers made by disabled veterans, from Elmer Cox, 90, during the Dane County Farmers' Market around Capitol Square in downtown Madison, Wis, on May 17, 2003. Cox is a member of Wisconsin V.F.W. 1318 and a veteran of both World War II and the Korean War.
    Market_veteran03_2575.jpg
  • Steve Van Dinter, regional director of media relations and public affairs for SSM Health Care of Wisconsin, is pictured on St. Mary's Hospital's rooftop helipad in Madison, Wis., during a foggy dawn morning on Aug. 14, 2008.
    VanDinter_Steve_heli08_9742.jpg
  • On March 4, 2009, part-time playwright Kurt Brown settles in to work on a manuscript as the last rays of sunlight shine into his home office in Madison, Wis. On weekdays, Brown splits his time working at the University of Wisconsin-Madison as communications director at the Land Tenure Center and senior editor at the Basic Research Program on Poverty, Inequality and Development.
    Brown_Kurt_home09_5075.jpg
  • Holding strands of loose native pondweed that floated to the surface, Steve Carpenter, professor of zoology and director of the Center for Limnology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, is pictured in Lake Mendota near the campus shoreline on July 29, 2009. Carpenter says that native pondweed -- an important fish habitat common in the early 1900s and almost lost by 1980 -- is now making a comeback. Most people are less aware of native pondweeds because the species grows far under the surface of the water. Native pondweeds should not be confused with the invasive Eurasian Watermilfoil, which grows on the surface of some Wisconsin lakes and interferes with boating, fishing and swimming.
    Carpenter_Steve_lake09_3352.jpg
  • Gabriela "Gabby" Cezar, an assistant professor of animal sciences at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, removes vials of frozen human embryonic stem cells from a liquid nitrogen storage tank in her research lab on April 2, 2007.
    Cezar_Gabby_LiqNitro07_3632.jpg
  • Unfazed by urban life during the winter, falling snow begins to coat Thomas Garver, a liaison for the Friends of the University of Wisconsin-Madison Libraries, as he stands outside on Library Mall at UW-Madison on Jan. 20, 2005. Garver will soon be taking a week off and traveling to New York City to volunteer at an information center for Christo and Jean-Claude's new environmental art installation, "The Gates," in New York's Central Park.
    Garver_Thomas_snow05_0545.jpg
  • A student cast member sings "The Age of Aquarius -- a classic song that predates her age by more than a decade -- during the University Theatre's production of the musical "Hair" at the University of Wisconsin-Madison on April 11, 2009.
    HAIR_stage_rehearsal09_8388.jpg
  • Pictured on Nov. 2000 at the age of 88, Herbert Howe, emeritus professor of classics at the University of Wisconsin Madison, continues to swim daily at the Southeast Recreational Facility swimming pool on campus.
    Howe_Herbert_swimmer00.jpg
  • Genetics graduate student Amy Hubert is reflected in a research lab cabinet containing glass beakers at the Genetics-Biotechnology Center at the University of Wisconsin-Madison on Feb. 12, 2008. Hubert is one of several graduate students who, in September 2006, brought to light information regarding claims -- later substantiated by a university investigation -- that former UW-Madison genetics professor Betsy Goodwin misrepresented scientific data about her research in an application for federal funding.
    Hubert_Amy_portrait08_8403.jpg
  • On Aug 15, 2005, Stanley Kutler, professor of law and history at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, stands in a dark parking garage in a scene reminiscent of meetings a Washington Post reporter once held with a source known as Deep Throat, Watergate's legendary leakster. Author of the 1997 book "Abuse of Power," Kutler is an expert on President Nixon and the 1972 Watergate scandal.
    Kutler_Stanley_park05_11399.jpg
  • On Aug 15, 2005, Stanley Kutler, professor of law and history at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, stands in a dark parking garage in a scene reminiscent of meetings a Washington Post reporter once held with a source known as Deep Throat, Watergate's legendary leakster. Author of the 1997 book "Abuse of Power," Kutler is an expert on President Nixon and the 1972 Watergate scandal.
    Kutler_Stanley_park05_11410.jpg
  • On April 19, 2010, graduate student Jenna Eun leads a group of visiting elementary school students on a tour of a research lab in Biochemistry at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. The students, known as MicroExplorers, were touring several research facilities on campus as part of an after-school science outreach program run in collaboration with the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
    MicroExplorers10_0128.jpg
  • Keeping his eyes on the weather, Tim Olander, a research scientist with the Cooperative Institute for Meteorological Satellite Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, is portrayed on Aug. 7, 2006, with a computerized satellite image showing graphic data of the wind patterns projected onto his face.
    Olander_hurricane06_0181.jpg
  • Pictured on an overhead video display, Michael Pollan, author of the book "In Defense of Food," is seen speaking to a crowd of nearly 7,000 people during a free lecture at the Kohl Center at the University of Wisconsin-Madison on Sept. 24, 2009. Pollan's book, which addresses the American food landscape, was selected for the university's Go Big Read common-reading program.
    Pollan_lecture_Kohl09_4742.jpg
  • Michael Rothschild pictured in the back seat of a Road Crew limousine parked outside Dino's Bar and Grill in Dodgeville, Wis., on Oct. 24, 2004. Rothschild, an expert in social marketing and emeritus professor in the School of Business at the University of Wisconsin, led an effort to develop an alternative ride program targeting bar patrons. The program, piloted in several Wisconsin communities, aims to change social behavior and reduce instances of drunk driving by offering patrons stylish, low-cost rides to, from and in between local taverns.
    Rothschild_M_limo04_9479.jpg
  • David C. Schwartz, a professor of chemistry and genetics who specializes in genomic research at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, peers through a nanoarray cube on Jan. 18, 2005. The transparent chip is used to separate and sort injected strands of DNA into channels smaller than the human hair, helping to align the material for analysis under a powerful microscope.
    Schwartz_D_nanoarray05_0192.jpg
  • Major League Baseball Commissioner Allan H. "Bud" Selig is pictured during an interview in Selig's office in Milwaukee, Wis., on Nov. 15, 2010. Selig earned his bachelor's degrees in history and political science from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 1956.
    Selig_Bud_interview10_1358.jpg
  • Kannitha Sith, a Cambodian Posse student from Chicago and undergraduate at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, is pictured on April 22, 2005. The Posse Foundation identifies, recruits and trains youths with leadership skills from urban public high schools and places them in academically supportive, multi-cultural teams (posses') at top colleges and universities.
    Sith_Kannitha05_4667.jpg
  • Medical terminology identifies the features of a human skull on a teaching skeleton seen during a gross anatomy class lab in the Medical Sciences Center at the University of Wisconsin-Madison on Sept. 28, 2007.
    anatomy_lab_skeleton07_1501.jpg
  • Stopping to look at her reflection in an adjacent mirror, Katelyn Alain, a graduate student pursuing a master of fine arts degree in painting, works on a self portrait in her studio space in the Mosse Humanities Building at the University of Wisconsin-Madison on Nov. 8, 2007.
    art_paint_Alain07_5237.jpg
  • Undergraduate student Brittany Wittmann, center, practices during a modern-dance class, taught by Dance Program professor Li Chiao-Ping, in Lathrop Hall at the University of Wisconsin-Madison on March 2, 2009.
    dance_class_Li09_4690.jpg
  • While some people commemorate the United States flag as part of National Flag Day each June 14, others continue to honor the flag during the course of their day's work. Such is the case for Ral Seches, a custodian for the past 35 years with the Division of Facilities Planning and Management at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. One of Seches' responsibilities at his workplace, Bascom Hall, is to periodically check the American and state of Wisconsin flags that flutter from the building's rooftop, and lower them to half-staff when called upon by state order. To access the flags, Seches must climb up a series of ladders into the building's dusty attic, and then work through a hatch in the building's roof to adjust the pulley-controlled flagpole ropes. Seches is pictured here on June 4, 2009.
    flags_Bascom_Seches09_5965.jpg
  • Rhesus monkeys, left to right, Canto, 27, and on a restricted diet, and Owen, 29, and a control subject on an unrestricted diet, are pictured in temporary holding pens at the Wisconsin National Primate Research Center at the University of Wisconsin-Madison on May 28, 2009. The two are among the oldest surviving subjects in a pioneering long-term study of the links between diet and aging in Rhesus macaque monkeys, which have an average life span of about 27 years in captivity. Lead researcher Richard Weindruch, a professor of medicine in the UW School of Medicine and Public Health, and co-author Ricki Colman, associate scientist at the Wisconsin National Primate Research Center, report new findings in the journal Science that a nutritious, but reduced-calorie, diet blunts aging and delays the onset of such aged-related disorders as cancer, diabetes, cardiovascular disease and brain atrophy.
    monkey_diet_study09_1615.jpg
  • On June 11, 2008, University of Wisconsin-Madison mechanical engineering graduate students Eric Foltz, left, and Nick Newman, right, and faculty adviser Tim Osswald, center, peer through the honeycomb pattern of an early prototype for non-pneumatic tire they helped create. As part of a $6 million, three-year grant from the U.S. Department of Defense, the three are working with Resilient Technologies of Wausau, Wis., to design and develop an airless vehicle tire for military use.
    nonpnuematic_tire08_2849.jpg
  • On Aug. 21, 2011, Joe Conway, Jr., a lieutenant with the Madison Fire Department and union advocate, stands amid his collection of vintage fire trucks and engines stored in an overgrown lot behind his father's tavern, Joe's Fire House, in Monona, Wis. Conway is president of the International Association of Fire Fighters (IAFF) Local 311. (Photo by Jeff Miller for Governing Magazine)
    Conway_Joe_firetruck11_9070.JPG
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