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(03/03/15 7:51am)
Madison Mayor Paul Soglin and Ald. Scott Resnick, District 8, clashed Monday night over tackling the city’s racial and economic divides in the one of the first major one-on-one debates for the 2015 Mayoral Election.
(10/16/14 3:03am)
A Madison organization announced Tuesday it will provide $7.2 million of support for UW-Madison science, technology, engineering and math programs, according to a university press release.
(10/09/14 4:37am)
The transitive property: If a > b and b > c, then a > c. It’s one of the most basic tenants of mathematics and an idea that every person on Earth has used at one time or another, whether they’re aware of it or not. For our purposes, let’s talk about its use in the college football rankings, or at least in how the rankings are perceived.
(01/30/14 5:12am)
Police report four individuals stole a University of Wisconsin-Madison Football Offices sign from Camp Randall Stadium Sunday.
(11/14/13 8:23am)
A Sustainability Fair Thursday will include a keynote address by a geoenvironmental engineering expert and a discussion of the next steps to the “green fund.”
(11/11/13 6:48am)
Using the sound of Veterans, Educators and Traditional Students’ members voices honoring fallen soldiers from atop Bascom Hill, Cpl. Jake Beebe strives to ensure University of Wisconsin-Madison students are reminded of American heroes as they walk to class this Veterans Day.
(10/23/13 3:13am)
U.S. Sen. Tammy Baldwin, D-Wis., showed her support for university research and its contributions to economic growth while speaking with researchers, students and staff at the University of Wisconsin-Madison Tuesday.
(04/08/13 3:33am)
Kanopy Dance presented “Antigone” this past weekend at the Overture Center for the Arts. The show featured five main pieces. This first act was composed of pieces choreographed by members of Kanopy’s company and their current guest artist Maureen Janson, while the second act brought back two pieces choreographed by the Kanopy Dance directors, Robert E. Cleary and Lisa Andrea Thurrell.
(02/27/13 11:54pm)
The city declared a snow emergency in effect in Madison until at least 7 a.m. March 1.
(12/03/12 5:19am)
Here comes December—a month that (I think unanimously) evokes memories and emotions about one thing in particular: the holidays.
(10/25/12 7:17am)
A new committee designed to strengthen local food movements while promoting healthy lifestyles convened for the first time Wednesday.
(04/11/12 1:45am)
After the announcement of the June 5 gubernatorial recall election, Wisconsin voters may have a few more reasons to be upset with Gov. Scott Walker. Although I have felt indifferent and even somewhat annoyed by the recall talk throughout the state, recent legislation signed by Walker in secrecy throughout the past week has made me think otherwise.
(12/14/11 6:48am)
A UW-Madison student was robbed early Monday morning after
giving a man money to take the bus.
(05/04/11 6:00am)
Summer time: Warm breezes, cool drinks, friends and free time. It's
the perfect reward for an exhausting semester and a cold spring.
Summer is when I actually get around to finishing that one book I
didn't have time for, or watching that movie I meant to see. Like
others staying in Madison, it means going to work or an internship,
then coming home to nothing—that is, no piles of homework or the
stress of impending exams. But perhaps even better than that is the
reclaimed ability to explore the city without feeling like I'm
skipping out on some important assignment. Countless concerts,
gallery tours, new music, theatrical productions and movie theater
trips have taken a back seat to schoolwork during the semester.
Yet, sweet summer arrives! There are fewer excuses to stay home and
wait for the arts to come inside when the city bustles with
artistic expression and the warmth of pleasant Wisconsin
weather.
(04/20/11 6:00am)
As a UW-Madison student, I hear all about the university's
impressive research record. Billions of dollars in funding,
hundreds of talented faculty members, thousands of dedicated
graduate students, dozens of fantastic innovations that are
indubitably making the world a better, easier place to live. It's
hard not to feel proud when inundated with such strong statistics,
but I wonder how that attention to the ""hard"" sciences affects
me.
(04/13/11 6:00am)
(03/23/11 6:00am)
Out of the many, many things about Madison that make me feel warm
and fuzzy inside, the annual Wisconsin Film Festival is one that
generates special pride. One could say I am an amateur film buff; I
use my subscription to Four Star Video to watch cult classics,
foreign films and obscure British television shows as much as
possible. I've seen a very odd assortment of movies, so when the
Film Festival came to town last year, I realized how much I adore
Madison's cultural offerings. The overwhelmingly diverse and
interesting selections had me picking out a rather ambitious list,
though I only managed to make it to five or six films. However, two
of those instantly found themselves on my list of favorite
films—there's truly something for everyone at the festival.
(02/24/11 6:00am)
As a preface, I am not an artist. I am, however, an art
appreciator. Yes, to some extent, this means I'll be that person
museum-hopping and giving impromptu tours and opinions to anyone
brave enough to accompany me (usually my hapless, science-steeped
boyfriend). But that is not the limit of my artistic appreciation;
I look for the artistry, the aesthetic and symbolic beauty, in
every moment as I move through my surroundings. I fully believe
that one can find this artistry in anything and everything, if one
looks close enough. Perhaps this means I am a contemplative
observer of our visual culture––or just a sight junkie.
(11/30/10 6:00am)
As an avid participant in modern life, it can be very easy to
marvel at the swift progress of technology. I can take, edit and
post a picture on my phone as easily as I can send e-mails on my
computer, automatically record television shows on my satellite
receiver, play video games that look like movies on my PlayStation
and boil a whole pot of water in five minutes. But there was a time
in which I could do none of those things, a time when most people
were born and died within a ten-mile radius and all books were
handwritten and illustrated. The Middle Ages were such a time, and
on the surface it appears as if that period could not be more
disparate from our own.
(11/01/10 6:00am)
A UW-Madison student was sent to the hospital after being injured
in a hit-and-run collision near campus early Saturday morning.