Ryan Evans
Junior forward Ryan Evans led the team in scoring with 17 points. This was not enough, however, for the Badgers to win.
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Junior forward Ryan Evans led the team in scoring with 17 points. This was not enough, however, for the Badgers to win.
For the Badgers to come away from this weekend with a pair of wins, Wisconsin’s goal-scorers including sophomore forward Mark Zengerle will have to find a way to put the puck in the net.
Senior forward Carolyne Prévost will one of many Badgers playing their final regular season home game this weekend.
Thuptan Phuntsok's voice cracks as he yells with all his might in Tibetan through the megaphone. One overarching theme on Wednesday was the use of Tibetan as the primary language of the protestors in almost all of their events. Though the few who did not speak Tibetan remarked that they started the day often confused, but the atmosphere was contagious and overcame the language barrier.
The day culminated in members of the Tibetan group being forced off the Iowa State Capitol steps 45 minutes after the time that had previously been agreed upon as the end of their demonstration there. Emotions that were high during the day boiled over as one man was detained and many others were briskly and deliberately corralled off the steps by approximately 30 Iowa State Troopers. Many in the crowd cried as the group was forced away during their peaceful protest.
One protestor, a part of the Occupy movement in Chicago who was hitch-hiking across the country, was briefly detained by Iowa State Troopers. He was released without charges, on the understanding that he leave the protests immediately and not return. He quickly disobeyed those orders and returned to the gathered group stationed behind barriers near the capitol.
Twenty-four placards were displayed, remembering each of the self-immolated Tibetans over the past two years. Additionally, the coffins, covered in Tibetan flags and strips of cloth, served as a strong visual reminder of their sacrifice.
Though still filled with emotion, Tenzing Rabtan gathered himself to continue to lead the group in cheers for a free Tibet.
Ngawang Chodon joins the other Tibetans in prayer at the steps of the Capitol in Des Moines, IA.
A young girl stands peering over the Tibetan flag. People of all ages gathered in Iowa for these protests, including Taiwanese-Americans who traveled from across the midwest to support both Tibetan and Taiwanese independence.
Three Tibetan women remember the 24 self-immolated Tibetans by participating in a ritual in which strips of cloth are laid over the coffins as a blessing.
Lobsang Rabtan leads the group in cheers for a Free Tibet on the steps of the capitol in Iowa. A mixture of anger, hope, and extreme sadness fueled cheers throughout the day, only stopping for speeches, usually in Tibetan.
Emotions ran very high as chants and prayers turned into tears from some of the group on Wednesday. Lobsang Rabtan, who just seconds earlier was leading the gather hundreds in cheers, broke down.
Here, Rabtan can be seen, minutes later, with a single tear rolling down his face as he holds a picture of the Dalai Lama.
Protestors cross the bridge in downtown Des Moines. A common sight along the protest route were Des Moines citizens taking time out of their day to observe the march. Though many didn't know much about the Tibetan cause, leaders of the group said that part of their success on the day was putting the idea of Tibet in the back of people's minds.
Ngawang Chodon, a Tibetan monk was one of the few leading the group in their march around downtown Des Moines, holding a photo of one of the self-immolated monks who survived his burns.
An Iowa state stands watch at the Iowa state capitol. The police spent a large amount of the day stopping traffic for the Tibetan protestors who marched a few miles around Des Moines.
UW-Madison student and member of Students for a Free Tibet, Louis Martino, carries a mock casket in memory of those who died because of self-immolation or oppression at the hands of the Chinese government.
Members of the Tibetan community gather in prayer around caskets to memorialize those who have died at the hands of the Chinese or chose to self-immolate in protest of oppression.
Those gathered together started their day in front of the World War II memorial near the Iowa State capitol, with the eternal flame standing as an eerie symbol of those who died or are in critical condition after self-immolation.