Students face suits, probation after non-academic misconduct
With costly pranks in the dorms making headlines over the last few years, UW-Madison has increasingly invoked its non-academic behavior policy.
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
246 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
With costly pranks in the dorms making headlines over the last few years, UW-Madison has increasingly invoked its non-academic behavior policy.
The zombie invasion is inevitable, and only UW-Madison junior Emily Schmitt is truly ready for it. As a Witte housefellow, Emily has unique qualifications in controlling mindless hordes, and her upcoming certificate in criminal justice makes her the natural leader for the ragtag band of survivors. More than that, her enthusiasm for being Reader of the Day is unequaled in Cardinal history. Who else should be swinging the chainsaw at the front lines?
Residents of Ogg Hall mourned the loss of the 19-year-old UW-Madison freshman who fell to his death off the Frances Street parking structure across from Witte Residence Hall Tuesday afternoon.
The UW System consistently receives more funding and support under Democratic control, John Witte, professor of public affairs and political science in the La Follette School of Public Affairs, said Wednesday in a forum.
Tammy Baldwin, Madison's Democratic U.S. Representative, discussed the United States' current political climate Monday night in an effort to garner student support for the upcoming Congressional elections.
A Madison man arrested in the beating of a local nightclub owner with the butt of a sawed off shotgun was sentenced Wednesday to 30 months in prison, followed by three years of probation.
Second Witte Hall resident's diagnosis part of larger outbreak, UHS official says The recent outbreak of mumps at UW-Madison continued Tuesday, when a female undergraduate Witte Hall resident was confirmed to have the virus.
University health officials confirmed the first case of mumps in University Housing Friday, with the infection of a 19-year-old female in Witte. The case marks the second confirmed case of the disease on the UW-Madison campus.
The Badger Baloney is obviously fake news—merely a satirical commentary on life in Madison. Except in the case of public figures, the people are not real.
A 19-year-old charged with firing a sawed-off shotgun in a UW-Madison parking lot Wednesday night and using the gun to beat the owner of Club Majestic, 115 King St., appeared for the first time in a jailhouse courtroom Monday.
Blasts from a sawed-off shotgun resounded in a parking lot near Witte Hall early Thursday morning, jolting residents awake and prompting University Police to rush to the scene.
A call for censure issued by U.S. Sen. Russ Feingold, D-Wis., to formally reprimand President Bush over domestic wiretapping has been hailed as both unnecessary political grandstanding and an upholding of political integrity.
Referendums aimed at getting U.S. troops out of Iraq will be on ballots across the state April 4, but the ramifications of a yes or no vote on such resolutions remain unclear.
Wisconsin politicians on both sides of the aisle are denying potential conflicts of interest in state government. A recent example is the introduction of a bill by state Rep. Scott Gunderson, R-Waterford, that would lower the legal hunting age to eight.
In their first two games of the season, the Wisconsin men's basketball team (2-0 overall) found varying degrees of success; luckily, both resulted in victories in sunny St. Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands. In their first game of the Paradise Jam tournament on Friday, the Badgers cruised to an 80-51 victory over Norfolk State behind 23 points from sophomore forward/center Brian Butch steady shooting (31-of-63 for 49.2 percent) and out- rebounding the Spartans 43-26.
Men's Football
Cronyism is defined as \favoritism shown to old friends without regard for their qualifications, as in political appointments to office."" After the Hurricane Katrina disaster and the failure of management at all levels of government to respond, President Bush's cronyism has been exposed.
Recent surveys of Madison homeowners indicate that most households are unprepared for emergencies. To help residents prepare themselves, the Madison Fire Department has joined public health and safety partners in a program called People Responding to Emergencies Program, a year-long effort of informing the public through events.
Late in the evening and early into the morning, when only raccoons and the occasional badger roam the UW-Madison campus, the Waste and Recycling night crew makes its rounds.
So, apparently there is this event called the Witte Olympics, and a big part of the shebang is a scavenger hunt. They have do do things like \go on a date with Bucky Badger"" or ""find and publish lewd photos of your U.S. Representative."" Being The Daily Cardinal's Reader of the Day is 10 points. Not bad. But we think the devoted Cardinal readers of Witte 10A should get 10 points each. Oh, and we also think five points is a little low for ""strike peace accord in the Middle East.\