Berquam for dean of students
Interim Dean of Students and former Associate Dean of Students Lori Berquam confirmed to The Daily Cardinal her intentions to pursue the open seat for dean of students. We could not be more pleased.
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
173 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Interim Dean of Students and former Associate Dean of Students Lori Berquam confirmed to The Daily Cardinal her intentions to pursue the open seat for dean of students. We could not be more pleased.
In the minds of most beer-drinking, Terrace-going, Midwestern-bred Badgers running around campus, the vast majority of the world's conflict and change is witnessed through sporadic run-ins with a news anchor or camera lens.
The neo-Nazi rally at the Capitol Aug. 26 displayed an extreme example of the group's First Amendment rights. Events like this remind us of the importance to maintain the right to freedom of speech even when we decry the message. All opinions deserve to be heard no matter how unpopular they may be. The Daily Cardinal Editorial Board, comprised of staff members with ranging political persuasions, will present stances on salient issues every day on the opinion page. The board will strive to present opinions to its readership without fear or favor. Since political debate is a fixture on campus it may just be the case that one day you find yourself on the unpopular side of an issue. In accordance with the UW Regents, this board will boldly engage in the ""sifting and winnowing by which alone the truth can be found.""
On Monday, Feb. 21, 2005, The Daily Cardinal editorial board issued a call to action. Because the scheduled date for the Mifflin Street Block Party fell on the eve of finals, the board advised, It is now up to the students who are most affected, those who live on Mifflin Street, to take responsibility and get the city in line with moving the party up a week to April 30.\ And so, the students mobilized.
Yesterday's Daily Cardinal editorial, Wording Detracts from Referendum,\ falls short of solid analysis on numerous counts. The referendum on our April 4th ballot calling for immediate withdrawal is not representative of an ""ultra-left"" political agenda, nor do the organizers behind this initiative hold any delusions about its influence on foreign policy.
Students need a Dane County Board Supervisor focused on accomplishing the day-to-day administrative duties that keep essential county services working. Students need a technocrat. They need to cast their vote for UW-Madison junior Sean Cornelius Tuesday.
On Nov. 21, the Daily Cardinal Editorial Board declared, 'TAA Surrenders.' They made serious factual errors, and the TAA would like to set the record straight: In the 2003-2007 tentative agreement, TAA members have made real gains, despite a tough political and economic climate. The Editorial Board's opinion is out of touch with UW-Madison's workers and students and the economic realities of the state budget.
Pel'meni, the unique hole-in-the-wall Russian dumpling restaurant, may be forced to prematurely close its doors. But this Madison and student favorite is not the stereotypical small business victim. There is not some bigger, corporate mass-produced dumpling house driving them out with lower prices and better hours. Instead, as reported yesterday in The Daily Cardinal, Pel'meni is the victim of a strange legal strongarm tactic, and will likely result in, either a whole shutdown of the restaurant or a change in management. If the latter becomes the case, this editorial board must insist anyone who currently enjoys the delicious dumplings boycott the restaurant.
On June 2, 1947, I completed my move from the humble Daily Cardinal office to the imposing Milwaukee Journal newsroom on Journal Square. I felt comfortable in my new surroundings. The Journal was a lot like the Cardinal, just bigger. Little did I suspect that six months later, something would happen that would end an era of complacency for newspapers in Wisconsin.