Madison Starbucks workers strike in nationwide protest for better pay, working conditions
Employees of the Starbucks located on Capitol Square went on strike Wednesday as part of a nationwide protest to push for better pay and working conditions.
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
1000 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Employees of the Starbucks located on Capitol Square went on strike Wednesday as part of a nationwide protest to push for better pay and working conditions.
Six months ago, University of Wisconsin-Madison senior Jack Turco decided his diet was too strange and unique not to be shared online. At that time, Turco was strictly carnivorous, eating raw and cooked meats, and animal products exclusively while simultaneously performing at peak physical condition in his sport. Turco was previously a member of the Wisconsin men’s rowing team.
Even though snow flurries are still falling upon students in March, there is a light at the end of the tunnel, and we can start daydreaming about the beautiful springtime. A Wisconsin winter is a long one, so it’s normal to think of warm nights and flowers blooming. As the sunshine reemerges, perhaps one of the most refreshing things to do is to connect with nature.
Doug La Follette, Wisconsin’s longest serving Secretary of State, resigned Friday after winning 11 consecutive terms in the position.
Organizers with March of Dimes met with lawmakers Thursday at the Wisconsin State Capitol as a part of a national lobbying effort advocating for better infant and maternal health care.
August Wilson’s shocking drama “Fences” opened with a home run last weekend in the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s Mitchell Theatre.
Dominick Mersch stared down at the concrete floor of the Kohl Center as a sea of media personnel engulfed him. On Saturday, the fifth-year captain played his last game for the Badgers — a 7-4 loss to the No. 4 Michigan Wolverines in the Big Ten Tournament Quarterfinals. Two days later, he learned his longtime coach would be leaving the university with him.
It’s both hilarious and ridiculous that Cory Wong’s March 2 show at the Sylvee opens with the main theme of the “Halo” video-game soundtrack, an artifact of meme culture that’s circulated around so ironically that it was the last thing I expected to hear in a packed concert venue. Somebody standing behind me asked, “Is that what I think it is?”
Last month, the University of Wisconsin-Madison community mourned the passing of Chancellor Rebecca Blank, who led the university from 2013 to 2022. Hundreds of community members filled the First Congregational United Church of Madison on Saturday to celebrate her life and legacy.
Rep. David Murphy (R-Greenville) and Sen. André Jacque (R-De Pere) proposed a bill on Tuesday that would limit the increase in University of Wisconsin System tuition to no more than the rate of inflation.
From the moment he stepped on stage at the Sylvee on Feb. 28, Bob Weir invited his audience to “enjoy the ride,” and for three hours and two sets I did just that.
Close, but not close enough — a phrase that encapsulates the 2022-23 Wisconsin Badgers men’s basketball season, including Thursday’s game against No. 5 Purdue, all too well.
There’s a scene in “Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania” where our hero Scott Lang is caught in a “probability storm.” Thousands to millions of Ant-Man clones pop into existence around him, representing every possible choice he could make at each moment. Despite being the manifest of infinite possibilities, the clones invariably have one thing to say upon appearing: “What the hell?”
The Black Legislative Action Coalition of Wisconsin (BLAC-WI) hosted the 2023 Black Advocacy Day at the Wisconsin State Capitol on Tuesday in celebration of Black History Month.
A new student-run podcast, which launched this February, aims to give a platform to Madison residents in marginalized communities. "The process of getting here has been one filled with learning and excitement," said Mina Yildiz, a first-year University of Wisconsin-Madison student and the host of the Collective Impact Podcast, which released its first non-demo episode on Feb. 21.
The Dane County Farmers’ Market, the largest producer-only farmers’ market in the United States, has been a Saturday tradition in Madison since 1972. Shoppers flood the market on the Capitol Square in the spring, summer and fall, savoring fresh, in-season and local produce.
The University of Wisconsin-Madison is one of 20 schools across the country with food-delivering robots rolling around its campus. Formally called Starships, the six-wheelers with an orange flag waving above began navigating around campus in 2019 to deliver food right to students' dorms. Students can use the Starship app connected with the university’s dining service to get freshly-made meals delivered straight to them in times of inclement weather, in the middle of studying or when feeling especially lazy.