Baseball gears up for limelight
This year more than others in recent memory, the National League race will be characterized by a rich mixture of old post-season powers and up and coming franchises.
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This year more than others in recent memory, the National League race will be characterized by a rich mixture of old post-season powers and up and coming franchises.
I signed a lease for an apartment the other day. Nice place--over on Wisconsin Avenue.
As most protesters made their way down Bascom Hill en route to the state Capitol early Wednesday afternoon, one assemblage of approximately 35 people went against the grain--up the hill and into the chancellor's office.
The Madison-Dane County Tavern League will be out in full force at tonight's Madison Public Health Commission meeting to protest a proposal that would force a number of bars to become smoke-free establishments. The meeting will take place at 6:30 p.m., in room 201 of the City-County Building, 210 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd.
In an effort to further diversity on the UW-Madison campus, Provost Peter Spear has instituted a new Associate Vice Chancellor position to handle campus-wide diversity issues. The position is a part of Spear's effort to reorganize and expand upon the duties and responsibilities of the three UW-Madison Associate Vice Chancellors.
As Sept. 11, 2002 approaches, people need to remember what happened to our country a year ago through the inspirational and motivating tales of bravery and courage of those who redefined what it means to be a hero. But beyond that, I hope that people will seek out the more poignant images: those of pain and destruction. We should remember the nausea we felt as we watched footage of passenger filled vehicles colliding into towers of concrete and steel, and civilians leaping out of 110-story buildings because they thought their free fall would give them the best chance of survival. To those who say that we should give Iraq another chance to cooperate, I ask why this tragedy must be repeated before we take action.
In the spirit of the temporarily merged Arts and Food sections of this newspaper, a rare analysis of pizza-eatin' music is certainly in order.
The Aviation and Transportation Security Act, passed last week by Congress, got President Bush's signature in a Monday morning speech at Reagan National Airport in Washington, D.C.
E-6. D-11. F-17.
The question of who owns Bucky Badger faces both the owners of the recently opened Bucky's Char Haus, 35 University Square, and UW-Madison officials who say the Badger-themed eatery may be infringing on university copyrights.
Madison liquor stores would have to get more personal information from keg-buying customers if a proposed law introduced to the City Council this week passes through the Council and the city's Alcohol License Review Committee.
Although anthrax is now on the radar screens of many Americans for the first time, Madisonians of a different era had a brush with the disease-causing germ nearly a century ago.
A Halloween open house scheduled for Oct. 19 to 20 and Oct. 31 at the Stock Pavilion has been canceled in the wake of an E. coli infection outbreak linked to a recent event at that facility, University Communications reported Wednesday.
Dry martinis and live jazz quintets could join state statute volumes and roving Supreme Court justices in the new Risser Justice Center, 17 W. Main St., if a proposal to open a restaurant, wine bar and nightclub on the building's first floor wins support from city officials.
President Bush urged governors to call up National Guard units to protect U.S. airports while putting the federal government in charge of airport safety and pledging $500 million to upgrade security features on airplanes in a Thursday address at Chicago's O'Hare International Airport.
In the wake of last week's terrorist tragedies, local Madison businesses are taking steps to aid in relief efforts by donating portions of their proceeds to charities through special promotions.
The day after terrorist attacks stunned the United States, media critics and scholars largely praised the broadcast and print media outlets that presented the crisis to the nation Tuesday.
A 91-year-old Monona Bay boathouse, long in disrepair, will be resurrected in a slightly different location under a plan spearheaded by the Camp Randall Rowing Club.
Newly arrived Badgers already looking to cure cases of dorm fever can make plans to attend some or all of the Wisconsin Welcome activities beginning tonight.
Dotty Dumpling's Dowry, 116 N. Fairchild St., must vacate its current site within three months, according to condemnation papers recently filed by the Community Development Authority.