The Hangover
Dear Hangover ~
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Dear Hangover ~
Over the past year, UW-Madison has received a considerable amount of bad press. From the UW's reputation as the No. 1 party school to its lack of diversity, criticism of the university is the highest it has been in recent memory. However, lost among all of the negative media coverage are the students themselves and the extraordinary efforts they are making to correct these stereotypes.
These days it seems like if you want to listen to a current band outside the Top 40 spectrum, there's a one in four chance that any album you'll end up listening to is best described by terms such as revival,\ ""New Wave"" and ""post-punk."" Also, that album is probably created by a band that spends equal time refining its meticulously devil-may-care appearance as its music.
Q: Are you introducing any films at the festival this year?
A 19-year-old charged with firing a sawed-off shotgun in a UW-Madison parking lot Wednesday night and using the gun to beat the owner of Club Majestic, 115 King St., appeared for the first time in a jailhouse courtroom Monday.
I can't hold it in any longer. Here's why. It was nearly in the 60s Thursday. I grilled out for dinner—brats and dogs. I had a cold beverage or two as well. It's that kind of weather, that kind of behavior, that kind of beverage that just brings out the best in any red-blooded American guy. All these signs point to one simple thing: it's baseball time.
The two cases proceeded similarly in the beginning. In both events, a 20-year-old student disappeared, last seen on a surveillance video leaving a residence building. Each student departed without a wallet, purse or proper attire for the weather. Neither gave any indication of a planned destination.
Eight points in a span of 8.9 seconds. That phrase is maybe the worst thing I could hear in the world of sports other than, Andreas Helmigk has the ball in the high post.\ In 8.9 seconds, my nearly 11-year-old world was turned upside down, and a villain—challenging the infamous ranks of such rogues as Snidely Whiplash and the Iron Sheik—was born.
The Daily Cardinal's Les Chappell spent an afternoon with the Madison Hash House Harriers and shares his experiences with these quirky, thirsty runners.
When you grow up in New York rooting for the right team—not the we haven't won a championship in six years and that's supposed to be upsetting and our first baseman was juicing and he cried and apologized so it's OK when he hits home runs now\ Yankees, you learn something real fast: Don't get your hopes up.
Madison's art scene achieved a new level of class with the opening of the Slingshot Gallery, 330 W. Lakeside St. Slingshot opened its doors Feb. 17 drawing local collectors, students and art fans alike to view the gallery's inaugural exhibition.
Madison's art scene achieved a new level of class this past month with the opening of the Slingshot Gallery, 330 W. Lakeside St. Slingshot opened its doors Feb. 17 drawing local collectors, students and art fans alike to view the gallery's inaugural exhibition.
With the Torino Olympics over, the two-week stretch where people pretend that they are sports fans can officially come to a close. The people that 'oohed' and 'ahhed' at Shaun White on his snowboard can go back to watching the X-games and people that cried along with figure skater Sasha Cohen after her silver medal-winning falls can return to their daily soaps.
On Feb. 5, 2006, ABC's coverage of Superbowl XL made the news for its censorship of the Rolling Stones' half-time performance. (The initial broadcast also aired before an audience of around 90 million. I hear the Steelers won.) The resulting controversy has paled in comparison to the infamous 'Wardrobe Malfunction' of 2004 (experts cite Janet Jackson's much higher sex appeal as compared to that of Mick Jagger singing about dead men coming).
Many movies originate from another source: books, stage productions and occasionally even video games. So prevalent is the trend to base a movie on a previously existing story that screenplays for these movies have come to be recognized by their own Academy Award. And when judged against original cinematic ideas, these adaptations have faired quite well. Except for those movies based on games.
If one were to conjure up an image of a stereotypical Christian music group, the band Payable On Death would not fit the description. Clad in black and covered in tattoos, the members of P.O.D. are a far cry from clean-cut golden boys. Additionally, one can hardly describe lead singer Sonny's shrill voice as being angelic, nor does P.O.D.'s hard and heavy sound fit the mold of typical worship music.
State lawmakers addressed the ramifications of the Taxpayer Protection Amendment before the Joint Finance Committee Wednesday, a proposal some experts say could greatly affect the UW System.
After Beth Orton's less than successful collaboration with Ryan Adams and The Chemical Brothers on 2002's Daybreaker, it's great to see her on her feet again on the long-awaited follow-up, Comfort Of Strangers. Producer Jim O'Rourke, who has worked with a vast array of musicians from Wilco to Sonic Youth, gives the album a feeling of grand intimacy and manages to deliver Orton back to the sparse, dreamy sound of her masterpiece debut, 1996's Trailer Park.
Intelligent design resurfaced in Wisconsin politics last week when Rep. Terese Berceau, D-Madison, proposed a bill to ban its teaching in public schools in Wisconsin.
This week several European newspapers reprinted offensive cartoons of Mohammed from Denmark's Jyllens-Posten that were originally published on Sept. 30, 2005. Crude cartoons met crude reactions: Muslims in Beirut, Dubai and Damascus burned all things Danish; Iraqis, Indians, Indonesians and Iranians rallied; Hamas called for executions; and NATO soldiers killed Afghan rioters. Clearly, free expression'whether in Jyllens-Posten, Washington Post, or The Daily Cardinal'can be offensive. Fittingly, the Vatican commented: 'The right to freedom of thought and expression cannot entail the right to offend the religious sentiment of believers.' But the Holy See's idea is wrong. Freedom of thought and expression must entail the freedom to offend.