Medical Sciences Orchestra keeps music alive on campus
By Avery Chheda | Dec. 1The group brings together students, faculty, staff and alumni of the School of Medicine and Public Health through classical music.
The group brings together students, faculty, staff and alumni of the School of Medicine and Public Health through classical music.
Daily Cardinal staff writer Avery Chheda joins Student Dive host Paige Armstrong in a discussion of the effects AI data centers have on Wisconsin communities.
Artificial intelligence companies have flocked to the Great Lakes region to build data centers because the region provides the freshwater needed to cool AI data centers, but locals and environmentalists are concerned with energy use and water consumption.
Wisconsin soccer player Matthew Zachemski details how he balances his small business Organic Scent with athletics and academics.
While not the typical cat-owners, University of Wisconsin-Madison students are increasingly adopting cats, touting the benefits of cat ownership.
Climate activists lead rally to promote environmental justice, academic freedom and democracy for the first Wisconsin climate rally in President Donald Trump’s second term.
Hundreds of community members gathered at the Wisconsin State Capitol on Labor Day for the nationwide “Workers Over Billionaires” rally, calling for wealth redistribution, stronger worker protections and accountability from elected officials.
Kane Funmaker, a member of the Ho-Chunk Nation, leads the First Nations Cultural Landscape Tour on the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s campus, teaching guests about Native American history, mound preservation and the enduring legacy of the Ho-Chunk people on their ancestral land.
Starting April 12, vendors from around Wisconsin gather on Capitol Square Saturdays from 6:15 a.m. to 1:45 p.m. for the nation’s largest producer-only farmers market.
While headlines focused on the record-breaking Wisconsin Supreme Court race this April, University of Wisconsin–Madison students overlooked the quieter names further down the ballot — uncontested candidates whose decisions may shape campus life just as much as any high court ruling.