Off-campus celebrations offer students an escape
Only in Madison do students have not one, but two large scale parties in an academic year.
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Only in Madison do students have not one, but two large scale parties in an academic year.
A 20-year-old UW-Madison student fell from a Palisades apartment balcony and suffered numerous injuries, police said.
The grilling season has dawned on UW-Madison, and for every juicy burger flipped, a grilling hazard awaits.
The UW-Madison Faculty Senate approved a resolution Monday that could require new and current university employees moving to positions of trust to submit to criminal background checks starting July 1, 2007.
With education and a strong desire for world peace, eventually society could literally change.
The Mifflin Street Block Party started out as a protest to the Vietnam War in 1969 and has evolved into a nationally acclaimed event on the outskirts of the UW-Madison campus.
You will be ticketed if you break the clearly-defined rules of the Mifflin Street Block Party.
The Wisconsin football team concludes its spring season with the annual Spring Game Saturday at Camp Randall Stadium. To prepare football-hungry Badgers fans for the clash of red versus white, The Daily Cardinal presents its first segment of Five Things to Watch in 2007.
The Holocaust Remembrance Day Coalition's Art and Poetry exhibit opened up Thursday night at the Red Gym.
Wisconsin students and residents could stop unwanted phone calls from telemarketers on their cell phones under new legislation.
Over the years, especially the most recent ones, violence in action movies has become a lot more brutal and a lot less fun. Thanks to this decade's two most influential action-oriented narratives—the TV blockbuster ""24,"" which features Jack Bauer torturing the shit out of nefarious people for the greater good, and ""The Bourne Identity,"" which revels in nasty bouts of hand-to-hand combat—the line between ""hard R"" action and formerly neutered PG-13 action blurs more every day. In this present environment, when little differentiates an R-rated action movie from Monday night's primetime lineup, where does a meat-and-potatoes guy movie like ""Shooter"" fit in?
Actor and activist Danny Glover was the keynote speaker at Saturday's immigrants' rights demonstration. Protesters marched down Washington Avenue to the Capitol.
The No. 48 UW men's tennis team snapped a four-match losing streak Wednesday after dismantling in-state rival Marquette (0-2 Big East, 9-6 overall) 7-0 at Nielsen Tennis Stadium.
When the sun goes down, stay clear of the unlit Lakeshore path. That's the consensus among both administration and students.
When the sun goes down, stay clear of the unlit Lakeshore path. That's the consensus among both administration and students.
U.S. Sen. and presidential hopeful Barack Obama is committed to making sure college students are part of the 2008 election, said Bill Burton, Obama's Campaign National Press Secretary, in a teleconference Thursday.
John Keats famously wrote, A thing of beauty is a joy forever; its loveliness increases; it will never pass into nothingness."" Ali Selim seems to have taken these words to heart in his first feature film, ""Sweet Land."" Set in 1920s rural Minnesota, the film is a study in beauty, wearing its nostalgia on its sepia-toned sleeve. All the elements are there: rustic baseball games, an old victrola pouring waltzes over the corn fields, midnight walks beneath the aurora borealis and a local priest who quotes""well""Keats of course. It's unfortunate that in a film of almost painterly beauty, Selim's narrative should plod along at such a glacial pace, making for a viewing experience that, appropriately enough, is about as interesting as watching paint dry.
In his State of the State address, Gov. Jim Doyle praised the ""sweeping ethics reform"" that established the Government Accountability Board. Still, many—including Doyle—believe more reforms must be passed before Wisconsin's political environment can call itself clean again.
Days following the March for Peace protest in Washington, D.C., members of the International Socialist Organization gathered to debate ongoing questions involving the war in Iraq.
The sky screamed blue on an unseasonably warm January day as thousands upon thousands gathered within blocks of our nation's capital were just moments away from screaming for immediate peace in Iraq.