What About Ethics?
Each time I go to an information session or a job fair on campus, I find myself asking the same question:
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.
Each time I go to an information session or a job fair on campus, I find myself asking the same question:
Content warning: This story contains information about sexual assault.
Even for Robin Vos and Wisconsin Republicans, this might be a new low.
With the first two weeks of the semester under each student’s belt, it’s that time of year when students dread receiving those pristine white envelopes under their front doors, declaring their fate — also known as their rent renewal agreement.
On my second day of class, I found myself walking past the Starbucks on State Street. However, it wasn’t the enticing aroma of coffee that drew me but the scores of baristas rallying around the front door. They were armed with signs and powerful stories of working early mornings and long afternoons for a company working to restrict their healthcare and leaving them consistently understaffed.
When going out to restaurants, your local coffee shop, the nail salon or even the occasional shoe buff at the airport, the question must be asked: Is there a universal tipping standard that fits all types of labor?
Crafting a resume, creating a portfolio, networking and building connections, and learning communication skills — you’ll quickly learn that these are all essential parts of beginning your professional career during your time at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Hurricane season is upon us once again.
Republican candidates for president — minus the front-runner — jostled for position in the first debate of the 2024 Presidential cycle for two hours on Wednesday night in Milwaukee.
In the wake of the landmark Students for Fair Admissions, Inc v. President and Fellows of Harvard College case, race-based admissions within the bounds of affirmative action will cease to exist for colleges and programs around the country.
With the proposal to demolish Vintage Spirits & Grill and build a 33-unit luxury apartment building in its place, the Madison community is losing a family-owned business without gaining new affordable housing.
Editor’s note: Letters to the Editor reflect the opinions, concerns and views of University of Wisconsin-Madison students. As such, the information presented may or may not be accurate. Letters to the Editor do not reflect the editorial views or opinions of The Daily Cardinal.
There is nothing less vogue in today’s higher education stratosphere than the humanities major.
Although each student has a different idealized version of their freshman year, it’s crucial that all students allow themselves to make mistakes and let their freshman year follow its own course.
Learning through doing is learning that sticks. And upon entering 2142 Vilas Hall, that’s the first thing you’ll discover.
Students on the University of Wisconsin-Madison campus have mastered the idea behind the infamous “work hard, play hard” mentality — achieving academic success despite partying, sleep deprivation, substance abuse and suffering.
The Wisconsin Institute for Discovery was abuzz on April 13 and 14 as Transcend UW held their eighth annual Transcend Innovation Competition.
If you haven’t seen the commercials unsubtly played to the tune of the 1970s hit "It's Magic," you may recognize Ozempic from celebrity weight loss journeys. From Kim Kardashian to Elon Musk, some of pop culture's most influential figures have allegedly lost weight using Ozempic.
Almost everyone in Wisconsin was aware of the election on April 4. As a Madison resident, I was bombarded with calls, texts, YouTube advertisements and flyers on my door. All election media sent my way was either about the Supreme Court, or Madison mayoral and City Council candidates. I had not seen one piece of accessible, educational text referencing the referendums on the ballot.
Pepsi, Nike and Kellog are three major companies that have used celebrity endorsements for marketing purposes. Nike has even used celebrities as the face of their advertisements supporting equality in sports — including famous athletes Colin Kaepernick and Serena Williams. While they received backlash for these ads released in 2020, the company still made roughly $37.4 billion that year.