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(04/04/19 2:12pm)
When the seven members of the Madison Metropolitan School Board gather to discuss their plans for the future after the April 2 election, there will be one noticeable change — everyone seated at the table will be a woman.
(03/25/19 11:56pm)
SHANGHAI — The Chinese New Year, also called the Spring Festival, is an annual holiday in China that celebrates the end of one lunar year and the beginning of another. The Lunar Calendar has a twelve year cycle with one of twelve animals being the animal of the year. 2019 is the Year of the Pig, symbolizing wealth. The celebration, which includes families gathering together, special meals eaten on specific days, and religious traditions, lasts for fifteen days. A large amount of people leave the big cities to join family in their hometowns resulting in what is known as the largest human migration on the planet. An estimated three billion trips were made this year. Though many left the massive metropolis for the week, I arrived in Shanghai, a city that in recent years has seen a large population increase and rapid development, for the first several days of the Spring Festival.
(03/07/19 4:46pm)
UW-Madison’s Memorial Union auditorium buzzed with hundreds of students, faculty and community members who awaited Tarana Burke, the founder of the Me Too movement, to speak.
(02/28/19 2:00pm)
In 2019, a woman’s place is not in the kitchen nor in a daycare center, but wherever she wants to be. At UW-Madison, there are thousands of female students succeeding in academics as well as professors and researchers who continue to contribute to campus and the community.
(02/27/19 7:38am)
Cries of outrage echoed through the Madison Board of Education meeting room as a passionate crowd of students, parents, faculty and community members listed their concerns about racism in schools and listened to board members discuss funding yesterday.
(02/15/19 10:12pm)
In the year since a gunman killed 17 students at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, activists — many of whom are high school students themselves — have marched, petitioned and voted for tighter gun laws across the country.
(02/14/19 3:53pm)
Less than a minute after student protesters draped their hand-painted banners over the second floor railing at Union South, campus security forced the small group to roll up its flags and issued some of the demonstrators warnings.
(02/07/19 2:00pm)
Reaching out to UW-Madison’s mental health services can be a challenge for students. But when none of the counselors look like you, booking an appointment can be even harder.
(01/23/19 2:00pm)
As the semester begins and the federal government enters its 33rd day of a record-long partial shutdown, The Daily Cardinal is bringing you stories about what the shutdown looks like on campus and around the community. Certain government agencies have been closed since Dec. 22 and will only reopen once Congress and President Trump can reach a compromise over a $5 billion border wall.
(01/22/19 4:00pm)
Last year, UW-Madison faced a decision: what to do with spaces in the Memorial Union named after key alumni who were also members of a former powerful fraternity named “Ku Klux Klan.”
(12/07/18 2:00pm)
International students, many of whom made journeys halfway across the globe, have been enrolling and teaching in high numbers at universities across the nation.
(11/29/18 2:00pm)
Few band directors get the chance to teach the children of former students. Even fewer directors have conducted their students’ grandchildren, maintaining leadership long enough to influence decades of performers.
(11/16/18 6:00pm)
Growling stomachs in the middle of exams. Spacing out during lectures. Struggling to fall asleep at night. Symptoms like these plague students on campuses across the nation who struggle with food insecurity.
(11/15/18 5:26am)
Empty plates are negatively affecting UW-Madison students' physical and mental health.
(11/15/18 5:08am)
Chris Hubbard has been selling Street Pulse Newspaper for five of his eight and a half years living on the street.
(11/15/18 4:00pm)
The streets of Madison are lined with sleeping bags pushed against cement walls and bodies huddled against the biting Wisconsin cold — people without a place to call home.
(11/08/18 4:00pm)
Reaching out to mental health services on campus proves difficult for many people, especially if there isn’t a counselor who speaks their native language. But for Mandarin-speaking students at UW-Madison, that barrier is one step closer to being broken.
(11/01/18 2:00pm)
Though they’re far from the Supreme Court in Washington, UW-Madison students have a lot to say about recently confirmed Justice Brett Kavanaugh, and it’s dividing campus based on political ideologies.
(11/01/18 2:58am)
Students have shown both disdain and support for Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh.
(10/18/18 3:00pm)
Walking into Gordon Dining & Event Center, you are inundated with smells of omelettes, burgers and stir fry. As you pull out your Wiscard to pay, a fresh waffle on your plate, you wonder, “where do all those ingredients go at the end of the night?”