Cardinalscopes: How you will contract coronavirus based on your sign
Aries (March 21 - April 19)
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.
Aries (March 21 - April 19)
Still recovering from the fallout of her aunt’s suicide several months earlier, Megan Nedden knew she needed to find a way to incorporate mental health care work into her campus activities when she arrived at UW-Madison as a freshman in 2016.
Karen McSmith — styled as @ksmizzy on Instagram — made waves last evening with clips she posted on her Instagram during the afternoon. Known to her millions of adoring fans — popularly called the Smizzy Army — as an influencer, she took to social media to address them during these uncertain times.
As our news feeds are oversaturated with DIY mask tutorials and troll-worthy conspiracy theories fill the spaces previously occupied with dog videos and food-based ASMR, we need high-quality and empathetic journalism more than ever.
Amidst the most deadly and widespread pandemic in over a century, Wisconsin proceeded with an in-person election.
The Dane County Medical Examiner’s Office identified a UW-Madison doctor and her husband Wednesday as the two victims of a double-homicide at the UW Arboretum earlier in the week.
With President Trump’s announcement Sunday that social distancing guidelines will continue until at least April 30, the country is preparing for another month of movies, puzzles and board games — and studying of course! But social distancing does not have to mean social isolation. Here is a list of five easy ways to stay social while social distancing.
Laying bedridden and alone in her Madison apartment one March evening, Amy Shircel believed she was on the brink of death.
The “until tomorrow” challenge has taken Instagram by storm, but before long, activity on the app hit a standstill when @covid_19 joined in on the trend.
Wednesday, March 11, 2020 will always be remembered as a defining moment in the history of UW-Madison, for this was the day a pandemic resulted in an unprecedented move to online instruction and partial shutdown of residence halls. The days that followed since have seen increased closures and expanded restrictions, both by the university and the state of Wisconsin.
Discriminatory chalk writing that appeared late Wednesday night sparked frustration and fear among UW-Madison’s Asian and Asian-American community — and prompted the university to again emphasize its stance against racist actions.
“Are the kids alright?” is a question every generation seems to ask. People love to point fingers at the latest cohort of children and their idiosyncrasies: their TikTok dances, their e-cigarettes, their drug use, their protest movements. It seems that the “kids these days” are always misbehaving, in some form or another.
Following Gov. Tony Evers' order Tuesday to close all nonessential businesses and gathering places in an attempt to slow the spread of the novel coronavirus, state health officials warned that more than 20,000 Wisconsinites could contract COVID-19 if the edict is not followed.
Gov. Tony Evers declared a public health emergency in the state of Wisconsin Thursday morning in response to the coronavirus outbreak.
It’s extremely difficult to explain exactly why, but this Badger team feels like a Team of Destiny.
The first female chancellor in the 129-year history of UW-Stout assumed her role Sunday — the first day of Women’s History Month.
Over two weeks after he was last seen, police continue to search for UW-Milwaukee freshman Sean Baek who disappeared after he and another student took LSD in the early hours of Feb. 14.
High school is a fundamental aspect to every student’s education.
The educational pipeline is a period of exploration of one’s identity, place in society and their academic interests. It is a phase where opinions are like clay in its initial stages — if well-shaped it can make a beautiful pot, but mishandling can result in long-lasting effects. The curriculum taught to children in school defines the opinions formed at this “early clay” phase but also sets them up for future academic exploration.
While the days of taking notes by hand may seem long forgotten, the practice is making a reappearance at UW-Madison, with lecture halls across campus implementing “screen bans.”