For party hosts, some weekends risk $73,500
Students who decide to throw massive house parties are also throwing the metaphorical dice. Sometimes, they end up rolling well and cashing in. Other times, the house takes them for $73,500.
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Students who decide to throw massive house parties are also throwing the metaphorical dice. Sometimes, they end up rolling well and cashing in. Other times, the house takes them for $73,500.
With nearly half a million copies sold, \He's Just Not That Into You"" is well on its way to becoming the Bible for women in sub-par relationships. Authors of this popular ""how-to"" manual-""Sex and the City"" consultant Greg Behrendt and writer Liz Tuccillo-advise women to stop excusing their man's inattentiveness. Instead, as the title states, it's time to realize ""he's just not that into you.""
In an amazing show of politics trumping common sense, the Internal Revenue Service announced last year it was investigating the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People with an eye toward revoking the storied organization's tax-exempt status due to allegedly politically partisan remarks made by Chair Julian Bond.
UW-Madison Transportation Services became over a million dollars richer last year, the result of nearly 53,000 paid parking citations it issued throughout the year.
Members of the Joint Southeast Area Campus Committee met Monday to discuss plans to replace Ogg Hall with a new 600-bed residence to be built on Dayton Street, across from Sellery Hall.
After having a week to recover from the election, Americans are now wondering what the next four years will bring.
Ineed a good fake ID. Not necessarily for liquor purchases or going out to the bars, but because concerts here in Madison almost exclusively cater to the 21-plus crowd. This fact hinders about three-quarters of the undergraduate college population from seeing good bands performing live. So far during my college experience, many acts came through Madison, leaving us underagers begging to get into the show at the door, being rejected and reading the positive reviews the following day.
Madison's famed piccolo player Tom Ryan will go to court today to contest a noise violation citation issued last June, a citation that is becoming all too familiar for the musician who has been tried on similar violations several times in the recent years.
When Madison City Clerk Ray Fisher decided to extend office hours on the day of Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry's Madison rally, Republicans cried foul.
The Washington Post
Halloween revelers will not go hungry if the university has its say.
With his new film \Code 46,"" maverick director Michael Winterbottom proves that he not only shuns the idea of working in the same genre twice; he flat-out refuses to take his audience to the same place again.
The presidential debates will be partially governed by an extremely detailed, legalistic 32-page contract this year. This document was negotiated by the Democratic and Republican campaigns, and dictates all manner of minutiae.
Fans must now rely a little more on their love for Bucky to keep warm while sitting out for sports tickets after the induction of a new campus police initiative.
As many students have read, been told and repeatedly reminded, the use of empty alcohol containers as room decoration by underage residents of UW-Madison Housing is no longer permitted. Although the campus staff may have had the best intentions in mind while devising this new policy, the only noticeable changes will be superficial at best. In most regards, the new policy is a questionable premise for punishment that is extremely difficult to enforce, and does nothing to change the drinking habits of underage residents.
Much has changed at UW-Madison since the Vietnam era. Bandanas have gone from helping protesters brave tear gas clouds on Library Mall to adorning the hair of coeds. Bob Dylan has gone from an emblematic musician to a creepy old man from Victoria's Secret commercials. But through it all, a penchant for political expression among UW students has endured.
We have heard the warnings, we sympathize for those negatively affected, and some of us have even suffered the consequences, so why have we refused to put an end to music piracy? The fact of the matter is many of us download free music files without a second thought because the act has simply become so familiar and ordinary. The number of people who download has only increased despite efforts by the Recording Industry Institute of America and some college campuses to scare students away from the habit. What explains our continued support of this so-called stealing, despite all of the attempts of artists, songwriters and production companies to stop us?
UW-Madison student Anthony Gallagher was charged in Dane County Circuit Court Monday with obstructing an officer following a police investigation since April 2003. Police found he and an individual identified as Nate Grede had been placing fake parking tickets on windshields and collecting payments for approximately six weeks.