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
230 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
(09/06/05 6:00am)
Congratulations, Badgers: We guzzled, gulped, groped and gagged
our way to an honor never yet realized in the history of our
beer-blooded student body. We received Princeton Review's highest
honor as the No. 1 party school in the nation. Like a fly preserved
in a jello shot, frozen in time, our alma mater will go down in the
history books as the school that always parties and never sleeps.
Except during lecture.
(09/06/05 6:00am)
Bill Murray sits silently in a darkened room. A vacant stare
remains on his face as he contemplates life-his successes, his
failures and his romances. This scene could describe \Lost in
Translation,"" or maybe parts of ""Rushmore,"" but it actually
comes from his latest, ""Broken Flowers.""
(08/31/05 6:00am)
Bill Murray sits silently in a darkened room. A vacant stare
remains on his face as he contemplates life-his successes, his
failures and his romances. This scene could describe \Lost in
Translation,"" or maybe parts of ""Rushmore,"" but it actually
comes from his latest, ""Broken Flowers.""
(08/31/05 6:00am)
Congratulations, Badgers: We guzzled, gulped, groped and gagged
our way to an honor never yet realized in the history of our
beer-blooded student body. We received Princeton Review's highest
honor as the No. 1 party school in the nation. Like a fly preserved
in a jello shot, frozen in time, our alma mater will go down in the
history books as the school that always parties and never sleeps.
Except during lecture.
(05/05/05 6:00am)
Over the past decade, Weezer frontman Rivers Cuomo has
frequently strung his audience along on a rollercoaster of emotion,
refusing to let them off until his wish for salvation, redemption,
revenge or whatever mood of the moment is fulfilled.
(04/29/05 6:00am)
On the eve of the Mifflin Street Block Party, Pulitzer Prize
winner Eric Newhouse spoke about alcoholism and its effects, a
topic that drove him to write his award-winning series of articles.
(04/21/05 6:00am)
Black Sheep Boy, Okkervil River's fourth full-length release,
opens with a cover of Tim Hardin's \Black Sheep Boy"" and quickly
evolves into a thematic concept album of staggering skill.
Appropriating the emotion of Hardin's song, frontman Will Sheff
puts on a songwriting clinic, expanding the black-sheep theme into
a rollicking album of allegory and emotion.
(04/21/05 6:00am)
(04/06/05 6:00am)
When a debut becomes a hit, the next major feat is coming up
with the follow-up sophomore album. The second album proves if a
band deserves success or if their debut was a fluke.
(02/23/05 6:00am)
Fighting the competition from such radio-crowding rockers as
Franz Ferdinand or the Killers, Hidden in Plain View has the
ability to prolong the attention span of the suburban masses who
have found solace in pop punk with their latest album Life in
Dreaming.
(02/03/05 6:00am)
UW-Madison scientists have found all animals evolve due to
changes in the genetic switches that control how genes work,
according to a new report in the journal Nature.
(01/28/05 6:00am)
Bright Eyes
(10/20/04 6:00am)
Successfully covering a song is not a simple task. It is easy to
re-record a song and have it sound exactly the same, but that
defeats the whole purpose of a e""make. The beauty of a remake
comes when a band brings the song to another level, introduces it
to a new audience or generation and most importantly, fools people
into thinking the remake is the original.
(10/13/04 6:00am)
Thomas Frank, a native son of Kansas, has returned to his home
state to understand its afflictions and writes about them with
conviction and candor in his latest book, \What's the Matter with
Kansas: How Conservatives Won the Heart of America.""
(10/01/04 6:00am)
(09/29/04 6:00am)
The Madison newspaper community got a little bigger earlier this
month with the introduction of Core Weekly. The Daily Cardinal sat
down with Editor Nathan Comp to discuss the mission of the
newspaper and issues surrounding the new project.
(09/27/04 6:00am)
Who are the next great directors in American film? There's a
fresh crop of quality filmmakers who have emerged in the last five
or six years, but the real question is that of who will go the
distance. The following are five directors who are on track to
become key players in Hollywood's future, and who will come to be
viewed in the same vein as Martin Scorsese or Frances Ford Coppola.
(09/23/04 6:00am)
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.
(08/30/04 6:00am)
As summer winds down, we now enter a relatively unexciting movie
release period that will probably last until Thanksgiving. As
usual, sequels were the big breadwinners this summer (\Shrek 2,""
Spider-Man 2""), although there were a few little guys making big
noise at the box office (""Dodgeball,"" ""Fahrenheit 9/11""). If
there's anything to be learned from this summer, it's that felines
desperately need a better agent (""Garfield,"" ""Catwoman"").
Here's a rundown of some of this summer's releases:
(08/30/04 6:00am)
As summer winds down, we now enter a relatively unexciting movie
release period that will probably last until Thanksgiving. As
usual, sequels were the big breadwinners this summer (\Shrek 2,""
Spider-Man 2""), although there were a few little guys making big
noise at the box office (""Dodgeball,"" ""Fahrenheit 9/11""). If
there's anything to be learned from this summer, it's that felines
desperately need a better agent (""Garfield,"" ""Catwoman"").
Here's a rundown of some of this summer's releases: