Softball comes home from Florida winners
By John Leppanen | Mar. 19, 2007The UW softball team won three of five games over the weekend in Florida.'
The UW softball team won three of five games over the weekend in Florida.'
In a tiny two-room office plastered with old political posters, Jay Heck works tirelessly at Common Cause Wisconsin's headquarters nearly every day. '
Catch up on the NCAA basketball highlights.'
Junior Justin Ostrowski decided to hang up his spikes Monday after a series of nagging knee injuries.'
Excess amounts of squishy fat, teethless little mouths with drool leaking out and the fresh smell of baby powder left me horrified in the past. But things have changed and my maternal extinct has finally started kicking in. Yes, everyone, I love babies.
Is it possible to laugh your way to a longer life? According to a newly released Norwegian study that chronicled the lives of nearly 55,000 subjects over a course of seven years, people who easily find humor in everyday life are likely to live longer than'
ST. PAUL, Minn.—The UW men's hockey squad finished the 2006-'07 season with a winning record but no invitation to the NCAA Tournament. A 4-2 loss to the eventual Western Collegiate Hockey Association Broadmoor Trophy winner Minnesota Friday night in St. Paul, Minn., ended the Badgers' hopes of defending their sixth national championship.
In Wisconsin — where a minimum wage increase would be hotly opposed in the Republican-controlled Assembly — Democrats need to use their political capital on the aspect of minimum wage that matters most, wage indexing. '
To claim that a white person using such language ""[demonstrates] both an awareness of and some measure of respect for contemporary black culture"" displays true misunderstanding of American history. When the oppressor uses the language of the o'
Three percent. Of the 41,169 students on campus, that is only 1,235. Just 1,235 students felt compelled to make it to the polls to vote in the spring Associated Students of Madison election last year.'
""Premonition,"" Sandra Bullock's new domestic psychodrama, proves to be a failed hybrid. Bullock plays a housewife with two children and a handsome husband—a seemingly perfect life. Her world turns upside down upon hearing that her husband died in a fatal car crash. Her world continues to spin, as each day she discovers her husband is actually alive.
After a record-breaking regular season, the Wisconsin Badgers' men's basketball team's postseason ended prematurely.'
Normally, I equate gambling with taking a giant crap on my money. My trips to the casino involve sitting at the nickel slots with the old ladies in their white gloves. But come March, I catch the wagering fever. No form of betting promises more entertainm'
The Wisconsin women's hockey team finished its dominant 2006-'07 campaign with another national championship, beating the Minnesota-Duluth Bulldogs 4-1 Sunday for its second straight NCAA title in Lake Placid, New York. '
UW's Final Four goal fell short at the United Center Sunday, but afterward no one could discredit the accomplishments of the 2006-'07 Wisconsin Badgers.'
After a 16-day break and a first-round bye, the Wisconsin women's basketball team kept its WNIT championship hopes alive by defeating Arkansas State in the second round Sunday night at the Kohl Center 77-45.'
In what has seemingly become a weekly occurrence, another UW athletic squad has performed very well in their respective national tournament. This time, the UW wrestling team finished 13th overall in the NCAA championships and one Badger, junior Craig Henn'
Where old age meets fulfillment, friendship meets love and sea foam meets the shore, Roger Michell's ""Venus"" stands with frank, exquisite beauty. Peter O'Toole's Oscar nomination came well-deserved for his portrayal as Maurice, an aging veteran actor with a lumpy prostate and particular taste for pleasure.
The Wisconsin women's hockey team looks to capture its second consecutive NCAA championship this weekend at the Frozen Four in Lake Placid, New York.