UW hockey shows no mercy
Although they did not quite get off to the start they wanted Friday night, the Badger men's hockey team finished strong and skated away with a weekend sweep of the Mercyhurst Lakers.
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
422 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Although they did not quite get off to the start they wanted Friday night, the Badger men's hockey team finished strong and skated away with a weekend sweep of the Mercyhurst Lakers.
As with the start of the 2003-'04 season, the Wisconsin Badgers will open the 2004-'05 campaign with a team they know very little about. Last year it was Quinnipiac, this year it is the Mercyhurst Lakers, from a small east coast conference called Atlantic Hockey. However, as the Badgers found out a season ago, teams from this conference are certainly not pushovers, and Mercyhurst will not be a cake walk.
Have you ever walked to a party and wished you were instead going over to your grandma's to hear about how much friendlier people used to be? If you're spending most of Intro to Psych wishing the professor was wistfully and slowly narrating how he used to be able to take his girl out on the town for less than a quarter, then Rick McKay may have a solution to your problems.
I am quite disappointed in Wisconsin Badger sports.
The men?s and women?s track and field teams proved this past weekend why Wisconsin is consistently one of the top track programs in the nation. Both teams excelled in the Loras Open on Saturday in Dubuque, Iowa, while the men also competed in the prestigious Drake Relays in Des Moines, Iowa.
The Alcohol License Review Committee held a public forum Wednesday to discuss the possibility of a Visual and Performing Arts License, a move that would give underage students the ability to go to clubs with live music, according to committee member Stephanie Rearick.
Today is a nationally recognized Day of Silence, part of a larger month-long event seeking to raise awareness about gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender individuals. Especially now, at a time when gay individuals' rights are being legislated away, people need to understand that discrimination toward gays is something that continues and something that needs to stop. However, the Day of Silence is ineffective in practice, especially in a society where it is all right to be overtly and outspokenly hateful and homophobic.
Gov. Jim Doyle announced Friday two companies participating in Wisconsin's trade delegation to China have signed agreements to begin providing services there.
For one night, the Madison music community came together in a symphony of thanks, cooperation and support. The first Madison Area Music Awards honored the city's best and most creative Sunday night at the Orpheum Theatre, 216 State St.
Gov. Jim Doyle and Wisconsin's trade delegation, which includes UW-Madison representatives, recently completed a successful stop in Beijing, China, where they discussed importation of Wisconsin products.
Last Sunday, the most meaningful meaningless match occurred down in Florida. A game so shallow in importance yet so self-important that fans paid up to $500 (that's 100 double Jack and Cokes at the Plaza on a Thursday night) just to see two bitter enemies, for all intents and purposes, take batting practice and stretch on the same field. To the untrained eye, this was just an overhyped exhibition game between the Boston Red Sox and the New York Yankees. But to the learned, this was a chance for the fans themselves to train their minds, bodies and souls alongside their teams. For each fan needs a little spring training in order to cheer for their team in their own way.
The Alcohol License Review Committee's Nightclub Subcommittee met Friday afternoon to discuss a proposal that would make it easier for downtown venues serving alcohol to allow those under the age of 21 to enter.
Broadway producers Rocco Landesman and Rick Steiner explained the challenges of producing Broadway musicals Wednesday as part of a series of talks through the Communication Arts Department connecting students with successful UW-Madison alumni in the entertainment industry.
It has now been 17 years for Rick Valentin, his wife, Rose, and their band, the Poster Children. After nine studio albums, one live album, seven drummers and well over a thousand shows, the Poster Children gear up for yet another tour-bus ride to Madison from their hometown in Champaign, Ill.