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(10/12/15 3:33am)
Recently, I spent a night doing the following: I came home from a long day of classes, did some online shopping, made myself some dinner, finished up some homework assignments and was in bed by 11 p.m. Pretty standard weeknight right? That is if this scenario had occurred on a weeknight. But, my fellow Badgers, this was on a Friday.
(09/22/15 5:30am)
Sometimes the grass is actually browner on the other side. This may be the case for the new lawns of former Wisconsin head football coaches Gary Andersen and Bret Bielema. Bielema and his gut left for Arkansas in 2012, while Andersen bolted for Oregon State just two years later. Both moves seemed puzzling at the time, so allow me to explain why staying at Wisconsin would have been the wiser choice.
(10/11/12 5:15am)
(10/04/12 7:56am)
Just five days after Nebraska’s second-half comeback left the Badgers reeling, Wisconsin is looking to regain some of the bravado that put it on the map as a perennial Big Ten contender and catapulted it to two consecutive Rose Bowl Games.
(10/26/10 6:00am)
(03/23/09 6:00am)
Madison police released a sketch Thursday of a suspect involved
in a 2005 sexual assault on Madison's east side after the victim
was able to provide new details on the man's appearance.
(04/22/08 6:00am)
At last, at long last, the icy clutches of winter are fading
away and the warm tendrils of spring are spreading over our campus
like just-thawing molasses. Spring brings many things with it:
warmer temperatures, inexpressible urges to throw around ovoid
leather objects and a variety of fantastic creatures that will
wreak havoc on my psyche. Creatures like mosquitoes (Culiseta
melanura), hornets (Vespa dentate) and centipedes (Keatonae
scareshitlessi).
(12/12/06 6:00am)
Numerous Madison groups, including the Madison Police
Department, assembled Monday night in an attempt to counter the
problem of crime and violence in the downtown area.
(12/04/06 6:00am)
Video games are central to the lives of thousands of UW-Madison
students, and the introduction of two highly anticipated systems
last month has meant big business for EB Games, 640 State St.
(11/27/06 6:00am)
Free burritos and tacos have sent students flocking to Chipotle
in recent weeks.
(11/21/06 6:00am)
The University Avenue bike lane-turned sidewalk is causing a
commotion among bikers and pedestrians.
(11/14/06 6:00am)
Walgreens on State Street has served students for over six
decades, but a negative attitude towards the store has evolved over
the years.
(10/24/06 6:00am)
Police are leaving many questions unanswered about this year's
Halloween celebration on State Street this Saturday.
(10/10/06 6:00am)
Madison officials have already sold more than 1,000 Halloween
tickets that give buyers the right to enter State Street Saturday,
Oct. 28. However, the city has yet to announce any plans for the
traditionally calmer Friday night festivities.
(10/03/06 6:00am)
Three U.S. school shootings in the past week, one of which
occurred only an hour away, have put Madison schools on edge.
(09/26/06 6:00am)
The latest phase of State Street's long-term facelift ended
Monday in a ceremony marking the end of construction on the 300
block.
(09/20/06 6:00am)
Halloween on State Street will be different in 2006, due to
measures passed in an 18-2 vote by the Madison City Council on
Tuesday.
(08/30/06 6:00am)
Standing on the steps of the Capitol, behind several barricades
and dozens of police in full body armor, 64 members of the neo-Nazi
National Socialist Movement declared victory Saturday. To the
approximately 800 protesters in attendance, the results of the
Minneapolis-based group's rally were not so clear-cut. Protestors
greeted the neo-Nazis with cheers such as, ""Racist, sexist,
anti-gay, neo-Nazis, go away"" and signs reading, ""Follow your
leader, Kill yourself."" The announced purpose of the rally was to
denounce illegal immigration and the U.S. ""open borders policy,""
but the underlying theme was little different from that of every
neo-Nazi gathering. Most of the rallying National Socialists wore
brown long-sleeved shirts and red swastika armbands reminiscent of
Adolf Hitler. For protestors of the rally, who tried to shout down
the National Socialists from nearly a block away, Saturday offered
a chance to rally the troops. ""We are coming to show with our
numbers and with our voices that their kind of hate is not welcomed
in Madison,"" said Jesse Zarley of the No Nazis in Madison
Coalition. ""We are standing up for the communities they are
targeting, and the main message is to drown out their message of
hate."" Neo-Nazis were scant among the general crowd, but one
supporter of the rally argued with protestors, screaming, ""This is
my home too."" Although some protesters opposed the neo-Nazis
receiving a permit to rally, most believed it was their First
Amendment right and were instead protesting the views of the
Socialist Movement. ""Denying them a permit makes them free speech
martyrs,"" Zarley said. ""Since they have the free speech to say
what they are saying, we have the free speech to say that we don't
agree."" The rally wavered between serious and comical and, at one
point, a group of men dressed in pink rabbit costumes began
protesting. ""We figured that when else can pink bunnies walk
around the Capitol and not be the most ridiculous group there,""
said Mike Quieto, who was in full costume. According to the Capitol
Police, which staffed more than 300 uniformed officers, the rally
had the potential to turn violent, but ended in only five arrests.
""From a police-perspective this event was a tremendous success,""
Capitol Police Chief David Heinle said. ""The event started and
ended on time, and we have no reports of personal injury or
property damage.""
(06/01/06 6:00am)
Just following the end of the school year for many UW-Madison
college students, four muggings occurred in a single weekend in the
area surrounding the UW-Madison campus. This follows many other
incidents that have been seen sporadically throughout the school
year.
(05/01/06 6:00am)
A Day Without Immigrants was the theme of Monday's immigration
rally at the Wisconsin State Capitol. Roughly 1,000 people marched
up State Street to promote a change in national immigration
policies.