Jumping into the history of ‘Jump Around,’ other Badger songs
“Get up, stand up, c’mon throw your hands up!” All true Badgers know these words by heart and are immediately sent into a frenzy whenever they hear that beginning fanfare.
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“Get up, stand up, c’mon throw your hands up!” All true Badgers know these words by heart and are immediately sent into a frenzy whenever they hear that beginning fanfare.
As the climate crisis escalates, the Associated Students of Madison (ASM) Sustainability Committee and the University of Wisconsin-Madison Office of Sustainability seek increased student input for this upcoming school year.
Braving the exhaustive rain, an exhilarated crowd of fans flocked to The Sylvee to see rapper and singer Bryce Vine’s long-awaited return to Madison last Thursday.
A faulty server caused four days of Wi-Fi outages for the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s “UWNet” network, which is now stable after repairs.
Eclectic writer and director Wes Anderson added science fiction and western to the vast list of genres he mastered with his newest film “Asteroid City” when it released on June 22. Filled with Anderson’s unique style, humor and ability to stack a cast, “Asteroid City” is rich in emotion, relatability and even a bit of existentialism.
"Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse" lives up to the high bar set by "Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse" released in 2018. The movie is a dazzling spectacle with fantastic voice acting, animation and writing which culminates in one of the best multiverse stories played out on screen in modern cinema.
The Wisconsin Union Directorate (WUD) hosted a screening Monday evening of the critically acclaimed 2019 film “Booksmart,” directed by Olivia Wilde, on the iconic Memorial Union Terrace.
The 2023 Wisconsin Film Festival's series of short films titled “Experiments,” shown at the Chazen Museum of Art earlier this month, demonstrated the power of short form film. While the featured shorts required extensive effort to achieve their visions through mediums such as stop motion, animation, 3-D rendering and film, their timestamps left audiences infatuated and curious.
Wisconsin Softball (23-16, 8-7) lost two of three versus Nebraska (32-14, 12-5) last weekend in Lincoln.
Have you ever wondered what it'd be like to eat a bug? The notion may seem strange, but on Saturday, 300 people gathered at The Crossing to do just that.
The Wisconsin Badgers (15-9, 2-1) began 2023 conference play this weekend with a pair of wins and a loss at Michigan State (10-14, 1-2).
The "Hand Made in America: Contemporary Custom Footwear" exhibition within the School of Human Ecology honors 11 different shoemakers' functional, undying artistry. Curator Amara Hark-Weber's background as a professional shoemaker distinguishes the space, where viewers can interact with the shoemaking process from conceptualization and construction to completion.
Wisconsin residents spent $121 million in 2022 on cannabis sales in neighboring Illinois, a recent report finds. Requested by Sen. Melissa Agard (D-Madison), the report conducted by the nonpartisan Legislative Fiscal Bureau studied neighboring dispensaries, uncovering $36.1 million in taxes that Illinois collected from Wisconsin residents on cannabis sales.
The Wisconsin Badgers softball team (13-8) went 3-2 at the Bevo Classic in Austin, Texas this weekend.
A majority of English speakers have most likely read or — at the very least — heard of William Shakespeare. Whether it was reading Romeo and Juliet in class or partaking in a discussion of his impact on the modern playwright, almost every student has encountered Shakespeare in an educational setting.
The Business Improvement District (BID) is hosting the Madison Night Market for its sixth consecutive year. It will feature various art vendors, pop-up restaurants and live music beginning in May.
A merging galaxy pair cavort in this image captured by the NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope. This pair of galaxies, known to astronomers as II ZW 96, is roughly 500 million light-years from Earth and lies in the constellation Delphinus, close to the celestial equator. As well as the wild swirl of the merging galaxies, a menagerie of background galaxies are dotted throughout the image.The two galaxies are in the process of merging and as a result have a chaotic, disturbed shape. The bright cores of the two galaxies are connected by bright tendrils of star-forming regions, and the spiral arms of the lower galaxy have been twisted out of shape by the gravitational perturbation of the galaxy merger. It is these star-forming regions that made II ZW 96 such a tempting target for Webb; the galaxy pair is particularly bright at infrared wavelengths thanks to the presence of the star formation. This observation is from a collection of Webb measurements delving into the details of galactic evolution, in particular in nearby Luminous Infrared Galaxies such as II ZW 96. These galaxies, as the name suggests, are particularly bright at infrared wavelengths, with luminosities more than 100 billion times that of the Sun. An international team of astronomers proposed a study of complex galactic ecosystems — including the merging galaxies in II ZW 96 — to put Webb through its paces soon after the telescope was commissioned. Their chosen targets have already been observed with ground-based telescopes and the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope, which will provide astronomers with insights into Webb’s ability to unravel the details of complex galactic environments. Webb captured this merging galaxy pair with a pair of its cutting-edge instruments; NIRCam — the Near-InfraRed Camera — and MIRI, the Mid-InfraRed Instrument. If you are interested in exploring the differences between Hubble and Webb’s observations of II ZW 96, you can do so here.MIRI was contributed by ESA an
As Wisconsin heads into budget season flush with $7.1 billion in surplus funds, Republican lawmakers are once again looking to reshuffle and slim down the state’s tax structure.