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.
(09/09/21 7:00am)
Study abroad — former college students have probably reminisced with you about it, sharing stories about how some of their craziest college experiences took place in a different country. Your friends have most likely been talking about it since the beginning of freshman year. Some of you have probably already sent in applications and been accepted to programs.
(09/09/21 1:00pm)
Disclaimer: I fully recognize that this fruit is as low-hanging as it gets, and frankly, it feels like cheating for me to use it as Almanac material. But I had writer’s block, and my only other idea involved vivid descriptions of Ruth Bader Ginsberg banging Antonin Scalia in the Afterlife, so you’re welcome.
(08/18/21 7:00am)
Camp Randall Stadium, like many of the other great venues in college football, desperately missed a key element during the 2020 season: a real crowd.
(06/07/21 7:00am)
Chris McIntosh has been selected as the University of Wisconsin-Madison athletic director following the announcement of the retirement of Barry Alvarez last April.
(04/29/21 7:00am)
Welcome Back
(04/29/21 7:00am)
Over the past three months, a lot has come out, a lot has charted, a lot has not, a lot has spoken to the moment and a lot has failed to do so. Looking back on this spring semester The Daily Cardinal is happy to share some of their favorite binges that have helped them navigate the crazy, tumultuous times of Spring 2021.
(04/27/21 8:45pm)
Every great musician is one of a kind, but the biographies of great musicians — or more precisely their biopics — end up looking pretty much alike. Childhood trauma is followed by success and its consequences, usually including addiction and love trouble. A chronicle of artistic triumph doubles as a cautionary tale, with ruin and redemption wrapped around each other. If all else fails, the soundtrack music offers occasional reminders of why we should care.
(04/20/21 2:46pm)
Wisconsin faced their toughest competition yet in Monday night’s elite eight match-up against Florida, which lasted almost three hours after going to five sets.
(04/18/21 10:20pm)
No. 1 Wisconsin (16-0) beat No. 16 Brigham Young University (17-3) in three sets (25-20, 25-17, 25-12) Saturday, showcasing the team's depth behind outside hitter Molly Haggerty. After beating the Cougars, the Badgers will advance to the Elite Eight for the third consecutive year.
(04/15/21 7:00am)
Aldo Leopold penned the foreword to his “A Sand County Almanac” on March 4, 1948, in Madison, Wis. In the closing essay, titled “The Land Ethic,” Leopold deemed the extension of ethics to the land a necessity in ecological decision making.
(04/15/21 7:00am)
Fifty minutes. That’s the amount of time that Sam Jorudd spent of his brief spring break in a meeting with the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s administration. As the Chair of ASM’s Grants Allocation Committee and a junior at UW, Jorudd had been working to ensure that the University properly allocated emergency relief grants to students. He and the UW BIPOC noticed that the University had received these funds, but not dispersed them.
(04/15/21 7:00am)
In a statement released Wednesday, fifth-year guard Brad Davison announced that he would be returning to the Wisconsin Badgers men’s basketball team for a final season. The 21-year-old Davison said “there is no place I would rather be than Madison,” and that he’s “grateful” to have the chance for one final season.
(04/08/21 11:00am)
(04/08/21 7:00am)
“The Father” drops your heart and lets it shatter into a myriad of pieces. As the credits begin to roll, each fragment begins to come to rest, far away from the others. The film ends with you in that state, heartbroken, reeling. You are left to attempt to gather all the shards and put them back together, but it is not easy. Writer-director Florian Zeller has created an ineffably powerful experience.
(03/28/21 7:00am)
Tomorrow the Wisconsin women’s soccer team will face their biggest test of the season when the Rutgers Scarlet Knights travel to Madison in the penultimate match of the 2021 Big Ten season. It will be a matchup loaded with implications- Rutgers needs a win to stay alive in their title fight with Penn State, and the Badgers need a win if they want to continue to control their destiny on their path to an NCAA tournament bid.
(03/25/21 11:33pm)
If you're considering enrolling in an MBA program, there are some things you'll want to consider. Taking time with researching top business programs and schools could help point you toward a program that will work for you and pay off. If you're thinking about becoming a business program applicant, read on for some things you'll want to know before beginning the application process.
(03/25/21 2:42pm)
Since COVID-19 forced businesses in downtown Madison to shutter their windows and doors, operations have been in a constant state of flux. Various lockdown orders and sustained financial stress have made it nearly impossible for many local business owners to stay afloat.
(03/25/21 2:00pm)
The most recent report from the Institute for Research on Poverty at UW-Madison, published in October 2020, showed 10.6 percent of Wisconsinites lived in poverty in 2018. That rate has not changed much from 11.1 percent in 2009, when the state was beginning to recover from the Great Recession.
(03/25/21 7:00am)
As education costs continue to skyrocket beyond the bounds of traditional inflation, more and more people fall behind and to the wayside, and the cycle of poverty and marginalization expands. The increase in college tuition is sometimes blamed on the usual inflation of U.S. currency, but in reality, tuition has increased at a rate that is twice that of USD inflation, according to Forbes.
(03/25/21 7:00am)
From unpaid to paid labor, our lives as college students revolve around work. Working to have enough money for weekly groceries, to pay tuition, to help make ends meet at home. Working to get “experience,” to build a resume, to get that dream entry-level job after graduation. Working to keep your GPA afloat and to get through yet another week of classes and midterms.