49 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
(02/13/15 8:51am)
Welcome back for another episode of Cardinal Zone podcast. This week Jack and Jim compare Jahlil Okafor and Frank Kaminsky's NBA draft stock, the passing of Dean Smith and UW-Madison Men's Hockey teams continued woes with beat writer Andrew Tucker.
(02/10/15 7:39am)
Over the weekend, Hoofer Ski and Snowboard club hosted their 6th Annual Rail Jam competition on Observatory Hill next to Elizabeth Waters residence hall. The event is sponsored by DOC 360 and Tyrol Basin, who provided the rails and snow. Check out our video of the event!
(02/09/15 4:00am)
Get caught up on the news from last week with news columnists Jen and Annie. This week's review continues the coverage on Scott Walker's state budget proposal looking at reactions of school officials and organizations and the proposed change to the Wisconsin Idea. They also discuss the robbery that occured last Wednesday at the U.S. Bank on East Campus Mall. Lastly, they highlight the Founders' Day events on campus celebrating the 166th anniversary of classes beginning at UW-Madison.
(02/06/15 6:26am)
Check out The Daily Cardinal's podcast with Jack Baer and Jim Dayton along with Women's Ice Hockey columnist Lorin Cox. Plenty on tap today as they discuss the Badger Football's fall recruitment class, Men's Basketball statistical rankings and Women's Ice Hockey's upcoming series against the University of Minnesota-Duluth Bulldogs.
(02/03/15 3:47pm)
This weekend Anthony Sanders and Daniel Radovanovic stopped by to chat and perform a couple songs for us here at the Nest on Saturday afternoon. They discussed everything from the wacky descriptions given to their main band, The Island of Misfit Toys, by promoters to how their involvement in poetry motivated them to finish high school.
(11/14/14 4:25am)
The Associated Students of Madison Shared Governance Committee learned about strategies to fairly divide profits and attention throughout different sports on campus during a presentation from the UW Athletic Board Chair Thursday.
(02/05/14 8:45am)
Few college-aged students have the opportunity, much less the ambition, to tackle the daunting task of changing state legislature. But University of Wisconsin-Madison junior Morgan Rae will get the chance to see a bill that she initiated, which targets underage drinking laws, presented before a Senate committee Wednesday.
(01/21/14 6:49am)
Before we get into the dirty details of Tinder, let us first explain the app itself for those who are unfamiliar with it. Tinder is not a dating app. Rather, Tinder is an app used to meet people in your area. By annonymously likeing or rejecting profiles, only shared likes of one another can interact. This annonymous judgment essentially does away with open rejection because you can’t ever know if that “perfect ten” swiped a nope or they simply haven’t had the priviledge of finding you in the Tinder universe yet. It can essentially be used to date, hook-up, befriend, or form any type of relationship you’d like to form with those nearby. The creators of Tinder call it “the new way everyone is choosing to meet new people,” and the New York Times went as far as to say “The application is clearly addictive.” We are conflicted as to how we feel about it, so we have decided to create an open forum of debate which may be able to help you decide to Tinder or not to Tinder. Tinder has different reputations among different people. Which one does it deserve? Tell us what you think of Tinder.
(11/06/13 7:23am)
Madison’s Common Council voted to approve the proposed 2014 Capital and Operating Budgets Tuesday, totaling approximately $224.5 million and $272.6 million respectively.
(10/30/13 5:06am)
On Dec. 22, 2013, I will be walking down the aisle in the Kohl Center wearing a sort of dress, shaking hands, smiling for pictures and mostly just being happy for being done. Don’t get me wrong, I’ve loved my three and a half years here at the university, but when the finish line is so close, it’s tough not to salivate at the chance to cross it.
(10/25/13 4:09am)
Ruth Ozeki, author of this year’s Go Big Read Book, “A Tale for the Time Being,” will visit the University of Wisconsin-Madison Monday to meet with students and give a public lecture as part of the Distinguished Lecture Series.
(10/22/13 6:45pm)
Locate recent crimes around the University of Wisconsin-Madison campus and the city of Madison from the week of Oct. 15-Oct. 22, 2013.
(10/03/13 1:00am)
A former adviser to Richard Nixon during the Watergate era will deliver a lecture Friday on the second floor of the Gordon Dining and Events Center.
(11/08/12 6:20am)
(09/24/12 5:05am)
(02/28/12 4:46am)
Here in the land of the Packers and Badgers, it’s not often that we cast a sympathetic eye toward the land of 10,000 lakes. Now might be a good time to start, though, as the Minnesota Vikings seem to have taken a literal understanding of their mascot and are in the process of pillaging our neighbors to the northwest.
(10/24/11 6:00am)
Does this work? {kl_php} global $database, $mainframe; echo
'Choose Author\\'s Name: '; echo ''; echo ''.$by_line.'""; echo '';
echo """";
(10/09/11 6:00am)
The populist revolution has swept across the Atlantic and stoked
the flames of discontent in several American cities, most notably
New York. From the Egyptian struggle against oppression that echoed
loud from Tahrir Square to the heroic standoff at
Benghazi, and from a Hazare-led fasting against
corruption in India to the Greek protests against austerity
measures, the world's population has been fighting against
oppression in all shapes and sizes. A commonnality
exists among these seemiingly varied movements—most of
these revolutionary events have been populist in nature,
representing the majority population against a minority of
extremely powerful people who call all the shots. It may be the
first time in history that a number of localized revolutions have
had such a common defining character.
(04/07/11 6:00am)
The Student Judiciary heard a complaint Wednesday that two newly
elected student council representatives broke campaign rules ahead
of the Associated Students of Madison spring elections.
(03/09/11 6:00am)
When her first album, Let Go, hit shelves in 2002, Avril
Lavigne became a household name. Her pop-disguised-as-punk style
was a much-needed relief from the Britney phase of pop music, but
was still delivered in a clean-cut, teen-friendly package, and I
will admit, as a 15-year-old girl, I loved it. It was perfect
anthem music for teens who didn't know why they needed an anthem,
just that they did. Now, nine years later, Avril Lavigne brings us
her fourth album, Goodbye Lullaby, a title that can be
viewed as just that: a goodbye to the sugary, teenage pop-punk of
her first few albums and an introduction to an Avril that has been
married, divorced and significantly tattooed since we first heard
Let Go.