The brita experiment: Part II
I hate you. I hate you so much. Oh God, I'm going to puke.\ Laura Manson, a close friend of mine and a UW-Madison junior, had just taken her second shot of vodka and was looking a bit… ill.
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Daily Cardinal's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query. You can also try a Basic search
40 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
I hate you. I hate you so much. Oh God, I'm going to puke.\ Laura Manson, a close friend of mine and a UW-Madison junior, had just taken her second shot of vodka and was looking a bit… ill.
I'm a journalist. Want to go on a date so I can interview you?\ It's not the best pickup line I've ever used, but it's the best I could come up with without compromising that whole ""journalistic ethics"" thing and blatantly lying to everyone I was meeting online.
UW-Madison graduate Lindsay Barone gets a lot of laughs when she drives through campus. But Barone usually laughs right along. After all, she usually drives a 27-foot-long hot dog.
At first, Melissa (identifying details, including her name, have been changed in light of ongoing litigation) and her five roommates thought the letter was a bad joke. The vague legal document in front of them stated that their Internet Service Provider was being subpoenaed and all the Internet usage records on their computers were subject to seizure and review. Upon calling their ISP, the UW-Madison students learned the very unfunny reality of their situation: They had just been sued by the Recording Industry Association of America, the legal trade group representing 90 percent of the U.S. recording industry.
As classes begin again, many students feel overwhelmed by paper deadlines and huge exams. Whenever UW-Madison senior and Army National Guard Specialist Amy Jagielski, 24, feels like coursework is overwhelming her, she only has to think back to February 2004 in Iraq to provide her with some much-needed perspective.
Bears versus Packers. Capulet versus Montague. GI Joe versus Cobra. Scorpion versus Mongoose. In recent years, another spectacular rivalry has arisen that overshadows these meager attempts at contention. The masses have chosen their respective sides and the opposing armies have gathered on the plains of war to settle this conflict once and for all: Beer Pong or Beer Bong?
I sipped my second beer and started to relax. So far my second trip to the biker bar was uneventful. Spotted Cow was on tap, \Hell's Bells"" was blasting from the ceiling and I was chatting up a retired Army captain. I saw the photographer, Lauren, take practice photos of the bar and laugh at something a biker said from across the room.
Move over David Copperfield-there's a new magician in town. But this trick doesn't involve any mirrors or smoke. Using a Brita filter and a bottle of liquor, I attempted to magically transform one of the worst drinks in Madison into a high-quality, cheap alcohol alternative. Would this research succeed-opening the floodgates for a slew of broke students to enjoy cheap liquor without gagging or choking?
It's that time of year again. The Super Bowl has arrived, and it seems as though everyone on the UW-Madison campus is being sucked into the vortex that is one of the biggest events of the year. Students are planning where to put the keg so as to not block the television, betting pools are already forming by the hundreds and girlfriends across the campus are rolling their eyes as their boyfriends get that glazed look in their eyes that usually only \Halo 2"" brings out.
It's that time of year again. The Super Bowl has arrived, and it seems as though everyone on the UW-Madison campus is being sucked into the vortex that is one of the biggest events of the year. Students are planning where to put the keg so as to not block the television, betting pools are already forming by the hundreds and girlfriends across the campus are rolling their eyes as their boyfriends get that glazed look in their eyes that usually only \Halo 2"" brings out.
It is the beginning of December, and to many, the pressure to rent an apartment seems to be mounting.
It is late December, 2004. More than half the student population at Madison has left the city. Some head for warm beaches, others return home to spend time with family and friends. This raises the question: In a city largely dependent upon students for both work force and commerce, how do local Madison businesses fare when the student body leaves?
As the sun set over the Capitol Wednesday, Monique Wilson and Earline Bridges relaxed with their children at the Young Women's Christian Association, 101 E. Mifflin St., the largest provider of affordable housing to women in Dane County.
More important than the economy, terrorism and health care, the most crucial term of the 2004 election seems to be \moral values."" In what has become one of the most important exit poll questions of 2004, analysts around the United States are asking themselves what ""moral values"" stand for and why the majority of the American public said it was the most important issue in the recent elections.
Mayor Dave Cieslewicz held a public meeting at Monona Terrace Monday in front of approximately 200 people to introduce his idea of a city-wide electric street car system.
On the weekend of Oct. 31, Madison will be anything but ordinary. However, the city is doing everything in its power to make sure that just because the weekend will not be normal, it does not mean it has to be dangerous.
One action can be interpreted many different ways. Wisconsin's U.S. Senate election is no different. On the topic of the USA Patriot Act, what one campaign is harking as a candidate's brave defense of civil liberties is being counter-portrayed as a crucial failure in leadership.
One block down, five to go.
Although former Army Airborne Ranger Tim Michels emerged as the victorious Republican senatorial nominee Tuesday, the real battle for the U.S. Senate position has just begun.
The City Council voted Tuesday to revoke a voluntary drink special restriction that sparked controversy and even an antitrust lawsuit in recent months.