Halloween crowd rocks State Street
Between 60,000 and 70,000 goblins, ghosts and ghouls, fur traders in canoes, human beer kegs, walking soup cans and spandex-legged superheroes roamed the streets of downtown Madison to celebrate Halloween Saturday.
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
855 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Between 60,000 and 70,000 goblins, ghosts and ghouls, fur traders in canoes, human beer kegs, walking soup cans and spandex-legged superheroes roamed the streets of downtown Madison to celebrate Halloween Saturday.
The wide-open spaces of an American highway, the spot usually reserved for announcing the distance to the nearest Burger King, are now adorned with shimmering stars and stripes and a clich?? patriotic slogan. The far-reaching effects of recent events have truly sent shockwaves throughout the nation, a point that is hammered home by the first noticeable change to be permitted in Monroe, Wis., for more than two decades.
Barely five weeks after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks brought air travel in the United States to a sudden halt, a Dane County Regional Airport official said Thursday that air travel has been 'rapidly' increasing.
The town of Montrose failed again in its four-year quest to stop the construction of a WSUM student radio tower when a Dane County judge refused Friday to issue an injunction stopping UW-Madison from going ahead with the project.
Six people are dead and all Greyhound bus departures were halted at approximately 4:15 a.m. Wednesday, after a passenger of a Greyhound bus slit the bus driver's throat with a sharp object, possibly a box-cutter or razor.
Anyone who has gone for a run or a bike ride on the Lakeshore Path, taken a hike out to Picnic Point, played intramural soccer, walked up Observatory Drive between College Library and the Social Science building or spent any time at the Lakeshore residence halls has been in contact with some aspect of the Campus Natural Areas.
In 1881, America's 20th president, James Garfield, was shot and killed, famous cubist artist Pablo Picasso was born and construction of the Washburn Observatory of UW-Madison was completed. Today the same telescope that was used for research of the solar system until 1951 is open to the public and to university astronomy students to explore the universe.
A recently formed city subcommittee on alcohol issues met Monday as part of a series of 'stakeholder' meetings, in which committee members receive input from citizens with an interest in how alcohol is used in Madison.
In a bridge between the east and west Towers residence halls on State Street lies an office. It buzzes with people working hard to produce quality programming for WSUM, Madison Student Radio. Some UW-Madison students may find it surprising that their campus does, in fact, have an operating music station, because for several years it has been without a radio signal and has relied solely on Internet broadcasting from the station's Web site, http://www.wsum.wisc.edu . Over the four years that WSUM has been in existence, there has been a continuing struggle to implement radio broadcasting, although a license was given to the station by the Federal Communications Commission to allow for broadcast.
Search and rescue teams dug nine survivors out of the rubble of the World Trade Center towers Wednesday while federal investigators said they believe they have identified several of the men who hijacked four transcontinental flights and crashed three of them into New York's World Trade Center and the Pentagon, near Washington, D.C.
New embryonic cell lines beyond the 60 or so lines permitted by the Bush Administration to receive federal funds will be necessary in the future, the National Academy of Sciences said in a report released Tuesday.
With construction on a WSUM student radio tower expected to be completed this fall, the town of Montrose has again filed suit in Dane County Circuit Court to stop the project.
I got really excited when the popular food cart Buraka went indoors last year. Y'all know the lines Buraka attracts during the summer: at least 10 people anytime near lunch. This red cart has become a welcome fixture for those of us hungry for hearty eastern African dishes of meat, vegetables and rice.
If local developer Erik Minton achieves his goal, a 15-story mixed-use apartment complex may rise on land currently occupied by Casa Bianca, 333 N. Bassett St.