Bo Ryan is Wisconsin basketball's Barry Alvarez
Early Monday afternoon, Badgers fans received news that they had long feared—the Bo Ryan era in Madison is coming to an end.
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Daily Cardinal's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query. You can also try a Basic search
52 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Early Monday afternoon, Badgers fans received news that they had long feared—the Bo Ryan era in Madison is coming to an end.
Democratic state legislators scheduled an April 23 budget hearing in Madison to hear public opinion on Gov. Scott Walker’s biennial budget.
Even with a few weeks to go in 2012, it is pretty safe to say that people will look back at this year and realize that it was one hell of a time for movies.
The term ""mountain biking"" can be deceiving.
On Oct. 18, 1967, more than 500 UW-Madison students staged a sit-in in Ingraham Hall because they were disgusted that the Dow Chemical Company—the main producer of a chemical liquid used in warfare—was recruiting on campus.
This spring, the UW-Madison history department will welcome a new professor. The position is for U.S. military history, a professorship that has been open for 15 years and is being filled just six months after a conservative journal said: ""Wisconsin doesn't actually want a military historian on its faculty.""
The currently unfilled position was vacated by Edward ""Mac"" Coffman, who taught ""U.S. Military History"" at UW-Madison every semester from 1961 until 1992. Col. James Seidule, chief of the military history division at the United States Military Academy in West Point, N.Y., told The Daily Cardinal that Coffman led one of the top programs in the country.
The currently unfilled position was vacated by Edward ""Mac"" Coffman, who taught ""U.S. Military History"" at UW-Madison every semester from 1961 until 1992. Col. James Seidule, chief of the military history division at the United States Military Academy in West Point, N.Y., told The Daily Cardinal that Coffman led one of the top programs in the country.
Charlie Mohr, a UW-Madison senior and Olympic prospect on UW's boxing team, took a hard hit during the NCAA middleweight championship on April 9, 1960. He lost the match, retreated to the locker room, suffered a brain hemorrhage and slipped into a coma.
From 1933 to 1960, the UW nighttime hotspot wasn't Langdon Street, where popular late-night formal dances were routine. It also wasn't the Plaza Bar and Grill off of State Street or the Memorial Union Terrace.
Former Wisconsin football standout Dave Schreiner was a modest man, nervously blushing for pictures, whether as a young boy or a star athlete on the field.
Robel Teklemariam is self-admittedly crazy.
Saturday night's game between Wisconsin and Michigan may have only lasted three hours and 45 minutes, but in that short time, the Badgers matured into a dominant football team, the primary reason for their 23-20 victory.
I probably looked like Don King after a rough night.
Student Services Finance Committee member and UW-Madison senior Brad Vogel resigned Monday night, citing his disgust with the current allocation of segregated fees as his primary reason for leaving.
One would think that when a fourth-string, walk-on running back who has never played a down as a Badger (Dywon Rowan) scores a touchdown in his first game on only his second carry, he would be the feel-good story du jour for writers to fawn over. In a 65-0 rout, a player would have to do something ridiculous-like score three touchdowns from an unlikely and traditionally unsung position without even playing in the second half-to steal the spotlight. Senior tight end Owen Daniels must have really wanted his name in the paper.
Brian Calhoun is fast. The Badger's junior running back is fleet-footed, as he was timed running 40 meters in 4.29 seconds in spring 2004. He was also part of the Badgers' Big Ten championship 400-meter relay team last spring.
UW-Madison shot its way to the title as the nation's top party school Aug. 22 by consuming more shots, beer and marijuana than any other school in the country, according to The Princeton Review's 2005 annual rankings of the \Best 361 Colleges.""