Make Way for Tomorrow
June 17, 2021
Beulah Bondi and Victor Moore in Make Way for Tomorrow.
UW Cinematheque kicks off its summer series of free film screenings at 4070 Vilas Hall with Leo McCareyâs
Make Way for Tomorrow. In the 1937 American drama, a couple (Victor Moore and Beulah Bondi) facing homelessness are forced to seek financial help from their adult children. Close to 16 months after Cinematheque halted screenings due to the pandemic, it returns to in-person screenings Wednesday, Thursday and Friday evenings through August 6. Seating for these free screenings will be socially distanced in accordance with UW-Madison policy, and to help make up for space constraints most films will screen twice an evening. See the full schedule at
From Noon Till Three
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The Impostor
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Mr Majestyk
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By Adam Duxter
Apr 24, 2021 8:23 PM
MADISON, Wis. – In one of the first campus events since the beginning of the Coronavirus pandemic, UW-Madison took a step towards creating visible spaces for Black involvement on campus.
Chancellor Becky Blank joined student leaders from within the National Panhellenic Council in breaking ground on what will become a plaza to honor the Divine Nine, or the nine black fraternities and sororities within the organization.
The plaza, located between East Campus Mall and Vilas Hall, is expected to be complete by the fall of 2021.
“This space is going to anchor one of the busiest corridors as you can see on campus,” Chancellor Blank said in front of an invite-only crowd Saturday afternoon. “Thousands of people who pass through here are going to learn about the history and impact of NPHC chapters.”