Generation 9/11
For Generation 9/11, there was a time Before everything changed. Then there was the time After. There exists that dividing line in our lives.
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For Generation 9/11, there was a time Before everything changed. Then there was the time After. There exists that dividing line in our lives.
If you didn't play with Derek Boogaard on your team, chances are good you thought he was an asshole.
For a guy who runs the NFL, Roger Goodell doesn't seem to know very much about it.
The Government Accountability Board outlined rules Monday for the state-wide recount of votes from the April 5 Supreme Court election.
I should probably start today's column with a quick apology.
When Zion I and The Grouch take the stage at the Majestic Friday night, it'll be safe to say the building will not be lacking energy.
If you love hockey, this is probably your favorite time of the year.
It would be interesting to count up how many gallons of ink were used over the past two weeks so writers could wax poetic about the beauty and majesty of baseball's opening day.
MADISON (AP)—As the dust settles on the Student Services Finance Committee election that polarized UW-Madison and ignited fierce debate across campus, students are still reeling from the shocking upset in which Matt Manes' beard was not voted on to the committee.
He was diplomatic about it at the Frozen Four last weekend, but Wisconsin women's hockey head coach Mark Johnson hinted at some of his frustrations with the tournament once the Badgers were back on home soil.
ERIE, Pa.—Regular-season conference champions, conference playoff champions, winners of 37 games, a team led by the nation's most valuable player and now, after one of their best games of the season, national champions.
To win a national championship this year, the Wisconsin women's hockey team knew it would have to beat Minnesota-Duluth. When the NCAA tournament kicks off for the Badgers this weekend, they will have to do just that, albeit a week earlier than they thought they would.
The Johnson family has made a habit of building college hockey programs in Madison, and now Wisconsin women's hockey head coach Mark Johnson has a chance to do that again. This time, though, he'd be shaping the team hundreds of miles from the UW campus.
Two periods into Friday night's first round WCHA playoff game between Wisconsin and St. Cloud State, there was still a chance the impossible might happen.
In theory the Wisconsin women's hockey team does not have much to play for this weekend, while its opponent, North Dakota, has a lot at stake in the series.
It's easy to see why the hype is building around the UW men's hockey team.
Shouts of jubilation echoed up and down State Street and University Avenue after the score went final, as thousands of fans knew their dream had become a reality.
Win and it's yours.