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(04/16/07 6:00am)
In the 1992 classic ""Glengarry Glen Ross,"" Alec Baldwin's
character informed three beleaguered real estate salesmen that
first place in the company's sales competition received a Cadillac.
""You want to know what second place is?"" Baldwin asked. ""Second
place is a set of steak knives. Third place is you're
fired.""
(04/12/07 6:00am)
Antonio L. Pope, the man accused of committing two sexual
assaults last semester in the campus area, is set to begin a series
of court cases over the next week, beginning Friday.
(03/29/07 6:00am)
In just her fourth year at the helm with a squad that does not
feature a single senior, UW women's basketball coach Lisa Stone is
just one win away from snagging her first postseason championship.
In front of a crowd of just under 5,000, the Badgers beat Western
Kentucky 79-72 in a Final Four match of the Women's National
Invitational Tournament to advance to the championship game on
Saturday against Wyoming.
(03/28/07 6:00am)
Months after closing its doors, the new owners of Club
Majestic—Matt Gerding, Scott Leslie and Bryan Ellefson—announced a
new title and outlook for the music venue. The rechristened
""Majestic Theater,"" aims to provide community events and avoid
the violence and bar fights that precipitated the venue's closing
last fall.
(03/28/07 6:00am)
(03/28/07 6:00am)
The Wisconsin Supreme Court agreed to hear a price-fixing
lawsuit that has been brewing in lower courts since March 2004.
Filed by two former UW-Madison students, the lawsuit asks the court
to eliminate the ban on drink specials and create a class of
persons eligible for damages.
(03/28/07 6:00am)
Anyone who follows Wisconsin politics knows that Dave Obey has a
notoriously short fuse. Anyone who follows Wisconsin politics also
knows that the 18-term congressman from Wisconsin's 7th District is
one of the most principled and authentic public servants in the
country. Thirty-seven years in the U.S. House of Representatives
may not have softened his legendary temper, but neither has it
eroded his dogged commitment to building a more responsible and
transparent federal government.
(03/21/07 6:00am)
The Recording Industry Association of America sent another batch
of pre-litigation letters Wednesday in order to warn UW-Madison
students who download and share music illegally. However,
UW-Madison is still refusing to distribute the letters to the
students.
(03/19/07 6:00am)
Seasons end. That's what they do. And sometimes they end
prematurely.
(03/13/07 6:00am)
(03/11/07 6:00am)
Some movies are simply made to be enjoyed at the theater. They
are not films—they will not woo critics with their nuanced
storytelling, nor garner attention with controversial subject
matter. They are indeed movies, not films, and they exist solely to
entertain, nothing more. Zack Snyder's movie adaptation of Frank
Miller's ""300"" is a fine example of an excellent movie when taken
for what it is.
(03/11/07 6:00am)
STOP THE MADNESS. Wait, what madness, stop March Madness? No,
""STOP THE MADNESS"" is the slogan of a new advertising campaign
that reprimands universities for allowing major alcohol
corporations to advertise during collegiate athletics. The advocacy
ads state the commercials derail attempts to curb high-risk
drinking among American youth.
(03/07/07 6:00am)
Gov. Jim Doyle defended the money his campaign received from
indicted businessman Dennis Troha and said he will wait until
Troha's court case to decide whether or not to return the cash in
an interview with WISC-TV Wednesday.
(03/05/07 6:00am)
Well, I don't really know how to say this, so I'm gonna say it
quick. Pull it off like a Band-Aid—painful, but with no lasting
scarring.
(02/28/07 6:00am)
Marcie Benson's Feb. 26 article, ""A nonviolent response to
boiling Iran strife"" calls the United States to avoid bloodshed by
pursuing a policy of ""patience, tact and open communications""
with Iran.
(02/27/07 6:00am)
Whether they were tears of disappointment or tears of anguish,
there was certainly sadness in the Polar Bear's face Sunday
afternoon in Columbus.
(02/25/07 6:00am)
It seems like Lucinda Williams has been in a constant process of
getting over failed relationships for the last decade, and her
latest album hasn't come around to change that—thematically, the
songs on West detail Williams' intensely personal attempts to deal
with the disappointment of love, which is standard turf for her.
But in terms of music, West is an effortlessly perfect combination
of country, folk, blues and rock that neither she nor many others
has ever achieved.
(02/22/07 6:00am)
There are good movies, there are bad movies and then there are
movies like ""Ghost Rider,"" which is so unbelievably,
inconceivably, jaw-droppingly bad that it defies categorization.
(02/20/07 6:00am)
It was supposed to be a quick, easy road trip—back in no time at
all. At least that's what I was told.
(02/19/07 6:00am)
Last May, Gov. Jim Doyle signed a Republican-sponsored bill
requiring post-release global position system tracking of certain
serious sex offenders. The law—which received almost unanimous
bipartisan support—mandates lifetime GPS tracking for anyone
convicted in Wisconsin of intercourse with a child less than 12
years old or forcible intercourse with a child under 16 years.