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(11/17/19 2:00pm)
Disney’s streaming service has finally launched, and with it comes “The Mandalorian” — one of this year’s most anticipated shows. Though it has a few kinks that need to be worked out, the pilot episode presents a fun and promising adventure with plenty of exciting elements for fans to look forward to.
(11/12/19 5:03pm)
Seventh Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals three-judge panel found Attorney General Josh Kaul suitable to litigate in a lawsuit against Planned Parenthood the same day the State Assembly passed a bill to increase birth control access.
(11/11/19 12:20am)
The Wisconsin Assembly passed a resolution last month supporting F-35 fighter jets in Madison, which may have large effects on the city’s noise levels — and lasting health consequences for those in the affected area.
(11/11/19 1:21am)
Acknowledging the right to carry, Sen. Lena Taylor, D-Milwaukee, believes Republicans should have at least held discourse during the special session on gun control last Friday to give the public an opportunity to learn both sides.
(11/07/19 2:00pm)
It’s officially November, and autumn is quickly transitioning into the frigid Wisconsin winter that we all know and love. Students are starting another round of midterms, and many are preparing to go home for the holidays. Holiday breaks are a great time to catch up on all the things that have gotten pushed to the side during the busy semester, including books you’ve been meaning to read but just haven’t gotten around to yet. You might want to pick up a book on a niche topic that a professor mentioned during a lecture, a book recommendation from a friend or maybe your favorite author just published a novel. However, if you are at a loss for leisure reading material, I’ve compiled a list of some distinctive November reads to fill your holiday break.
(11/04/19 1:11am)
Seven-time Emmy award winner and best selling author John Quiñones will share his childhood experiences with poverty to making it big in national television.
(11/04/19 1:34am)
Organizations and legislators band together to promote the importance of child caregivers’ roles across the state after Gov. Tony Evers declared November “Family Caregiver Month” in recognition of the current shortage.
(11/01/19 5:59pm)
A bipartisan group of lawmakers are working on a bill that would allow college athletes to profit from their status and hire outside agents beginning in 2023.
(11/04/19 1:00pm)
In the late 1960s and early 1970s, the University of Wisconsin–Madison was shaken by a series of student protests against the Vietnam War and the use of force by responding authorities. In 1967, students amassed to protest the recruiting efforts on campus of the Dow Chemical Company, which made napalm that the United States used on the battlefield. What began as peaceful civil disobedience turned violent as city police officers with riot sticks forcibly removed students from today’s Ingraham Hall. The clash involved thousands and injured dozens. And in 1970, a bomb exploded next to Sterling Hall aimed at destroying the Army Math Research Center, killing a university physics researcher. These events hardened campus relationships and emboldened a new generation of steadfast pacifists.
(10/29/19 1:50am)
John Brady, a graduate Engineering student died by suicide in 2016 after spending seven years in a toxic lab environment under Akbar Sayeed.
(10/27/19 9:43pm)
“Milwaukee, like so many cities in the Rust Belt, built its identity as a home to manufacturers, a growing immigrant community, and booze. Over the last half century, as jobs disappeared, so did the dreams that came with them.” This is how Tim Hennessy, editor of the anthology titled “Milwaukee Noir,” begins his introduction.
(10/28/19 1:00pm)
Deborah Blum — author of this year's Go Big Read book — begins her novel by stating that we “romanticize the food of our grandparents.” The reader is then given an expose about the food of the past that, no matter what your opinion is on the food of your grandparents, is likely to surprise you. Blum reports that food products of all kinds were preserved with things such as Formaldehyde, Salicylic acid or Borax, and most products were cut heavily with cheaper additives, meaning consumers had very little insight into what they were eating.
(10/29/19 12:00pm)
Earlier this month, the UW homecoming committee published a video which sparked one of the most interesting controversies I’ve seen in my 3-and-a-half years as a student here. Admittedly though, that wasn’t my first thought when I saw the headlines – that thought was closer to: “There’s a video for that? I don’t think I know what homecoming is.” And indeed, I didn’t. “Homecoming” occupied a space in my brain loosely linked to memories of toilet paper and bad dances, so perhaps you can imagine my confusion when I found out it wasn’t the white people who were outraged that they were the only ones in it.
(10/24/19 2:00pm)
The sharp racial disparity in homelessness has quickly become a prominent issue in Madison politics — and city officials offered varying explanations and solutions for the imbalance.
(10/24/19 3:00pm)
Rock County Christian School is a private college preparatory school in Beloit, Wisconsin. It teaches kindergarten through 12th grade and is operated by a nonprofit, interdenominational, evangelical Christian parent support organization. The school aims to allow students to thrive spiritually, academically, socially and physically, according to their website.
(10/23/19 8:43pm)
Between the years 2000 and 2017, the Wisconsin suicide rate spiked by 40 percent — 50 percent of which are committed by firearm.
(10/17/19 3:02pm)
Students, professors debate the benefits of breadth requirements
(10/16/19 6:44am)
Deborah Blum, UW alumna and author of this year’s Go Big Read selection "The Poison Squad," engaged students on scientific and governmental standpoints of her work Tuesday.
(10/15/19 1:00pm)
It’s been six years since we said goodbye to Jesse Pinkman, the guilt-ridden, meth-dealing anti-hero of the hit series “Breaking Bad.” Last we saw of Jesse, he and his partner-in-crime Walter White seemed to make amends before taking down the show’s final villains. Pinkman was last seen smiling and laughing as he drove away, leaving his life of crime behind him as he headed towards a new life.
(10/10/19 3:11pm)
One of the most anticipated films of 2019 and without a doubt the most controversial, the infamous Clown Prince of Crime has gotten yet another film, this time in “Joker,” a stand-alone film dedicated solely to the character examination of this iconic villain.