A guide to non-revenue sports
Yesterday, a column ran shedding light on the non-revenue sports on this campus. It discussed their importance to UW and suggested fans should broaden their horizons when it comes to attending sporting events.
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Yesterday, a column ran shedding light on the non-revenue sports on this campus. It discussed their importance to UW and suggested fans should broaden their horizons when it comes to attending sporting events.
Make that left turn from Verona Road onto Allied Drive during the summer and a lazy, yellow haze settles in on everything and everyone. The branches from parched willow trees slip into the ground, unable to tolerate the burning sun. Despite the heat, Madison's most beleaguered neighborhood is much more appealing than Magazine Street right now.
What the Croc?
Where we left off: At the close of season two, Ryan was still unaware his ex-girlfriend Theresa was carrying his child. Caleb's funeral sent Kirsten into her worst alcoholic binge, leaving Sandy considering treatment centers. To top it off, Marissa shot Trey to protect Ryan.
The university has played a cruel trick on the unfortunate souls who leave Madison for the summer months after classes have ended. This trick, of course, is having built the Wisconsin Union Terrace on campus.
MEN'S SOCCER
The Best...
It was an up and down day for the No. 14 women's rowing team at the Big Ten Rowing Championship Saturday in Bloomington, Indiana. With the NCAA Central/Southern Regional on the horizon, this would be one of the last two opportunities for the Badgers to make their case that they deserved to compete in the 2005 NCAA Rowing Championships.
Iregained consciousness on a rocking ship. I was cold, I was wet and I didn't remember my name.
At least 235 boats and team members from over 35 universities were sent home from Lake Wingra Saturday due to the cancellation of the 33rd annual Midwest Rowing Championships. The tournament was cancelled as a result of severe weather conditions.
\Raise the bar,"" Schultze (Horst Krause) shouts at the train station attendant. As a dumpy, old man squatting on his bicycle, Schultze's complaint seems misplaced in the first five minutes of ""Schultze Gets the Blues,"" a film now showing at the Orpheum Theatre, 216 State St.
The ice has melted, the sun has come out and the lakes in Madison are finally ready to race. All day Saturday the Wisconsin men's and No. 14 women's crew teams will test the waters of Lake Wingra as they participate in the 33rd annual Midwest Rowing Championships.
No one ever expects to catch fire during surgery.
The video \Affluenza,"" which critiqued, analyzed and outlined the uniquely American obsession with greed, speaks to a disturbing trend. While it was made in 1997, the materials presented in it are still quite pertinent as the American Dream ethos and dogma are pervasive in nature.
Picnic Point is an accessible natural area all of the campus can enjoy. On any given afternoon, students arrive at the natural area by foot, bike and boat from across University Bay. As a peninsula in a city on an isthmus, Picnic Point's allure is its accessibility.
It's five o'clock in the morning. The sun is nowhere to be found, yet I am forced to get up by the sound of my blaring alarm. I climb out of bed trying not to wake up my roommate who probably just went to sleep about an hour ago and I get myself ready for the morning.
Even though the weather is warming up in Madison, the women's rowing team will head out west to California this weekend for competition in the Windermere Cup.
Updating a work of classic literature into a modern setting has proven a tricky endeavor. The '90s have seen mottled incarnations of everything from a gun-wielding \Hamlet"" to Alicia's Silverstone's version of Emma in ""Clueless.""
The Statue of Liberty gained its place as a true Wisconsin monument, just before a flock of pink flamingos descended on Bascom Hill. Sound like the beginning of a wild piece of fiction? Nope, just a couple days in the life of some UW-Madison legends.
If it was M. Ward's goal on his second Merge Record album, Transistor Radio, to draw attention to the increasingly homogeneous and trite horizons of commercial radio by crafting a piece of revisionist history harkening back to better times when he was successful. If he aimed to make an album that begins with a cover of the Beach Boys' \You Still Believe in Me"" and ends with J.S. Bach's ""A Well-Tempered Clavier,"" but still retains an organic unity, then he was successful. He transcends these aims though by creating an album of continuously flowing, perfectly executed ideas.