High school student allegedly sexually assaults teacher
A Lafollette High School student was arrested after allegedly sexually assaulting a female teacher Friday morning.
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A Lafollette High School student was arrested after allegedly sexually assaulting a female teacher Friday morning.
Looking out the window and watching the snow circle to the already-white ground invites me to blissfully reminisce about the sense of triumph, giddiness and playfulness last year's snowday created. Like yesterday, I felt like a kid again. And judging by the thousands of Badgers who ran amuck through
It's a familiar scenario: After a rough break-up, your ex-boyfriend or girlfriend repeatedly sends you unwanted text messages and shows up unannounced in unexpected places. Soon, this behavior makes you feel uncomfortable, but you shake it off and probably do nothing about it. Although this situation is considered common, what most people do not know is that this type of behavior, a course of conduct directed at a specific person that would cause a reasonable person to feel fear, is a form of stalking and is illegal in all 50 states.
It is very difficult to make a film full of Anne Hathaway's naked breasts and Jake Gyllenhaal's bare butt unpleasant, but director Edward Zwick (""Glory"") finds a way to do so with ""Love and Other Drugs.""
The Student Services Finance Committee voted to increase funding to the proposed budgets of Promoting Awareness, Victim Empowerment and decrease funding for Wisconsin Student Lobby Monday.
The owners of Madison's Lucky building, one of the most prestigious and expensive private apartment buildings on campus, announced Monday that the interior lobby will soon be outfitted with a human staircase while the elevators undergo much-needed repair.
When picturing McDonald's, I think of greasy (yet delicious) cheeseburgers, my kindergarten birthday party, kids meals, obesity, fruit smoothies and of course—golden arches. However, these blazing yellow beacons for a fast food empire have apparently been wronged by our beloved city, and McDonald's wants Madison to pay for it in the only way a corporation that owns over 31,000 restaurants worldwide can find justice—in cash.
A Madison West High School graduate was found dead in a park in Evanston, Illinois early Tuesday morning.
The scene was the summer after my junior year. I had just completed another day sitting at the Terrace, collecting abandoned pitchers until I had enough to buy a pitcher of Miller Lite with the $1 refund per pitcher returned. It wasn't glamorous, but for a broke college student like me, such was life. But after the Future Business Leaders of America kicked me out of their meeting for taking six slices of free pizza and smelling like a mix of Ale Asylum and urine—the latter an unfortunate side effect of the wrestling match I had with a homeless man on State St. over approximately $1.65 worth of empty cans—I decided my life needed to change.
In a brash and controversial move regarding tomorrow's Mifflin Street Block Party, the school's favorite binge-drinking holiday, the city of Madison has banned the sale of alcohol from today through Sunday. The decision, based on the standard fears of arrests, vandalism, deaths and injuries related to mass alcohol consumption, will certainly have severe implications toward the partygoing community. Ned Cheever, 87, of City Hall, one of the people who voted for this year's drying-out of Mifflin, explained their decision.
As Lathrop Hall, one of the most historically important structures on campus turns one-hundred years old, it seems a suitable time to reflect on the history, comical ironies and astounding change which has surrounded the record of women on campus.
Today, tomorrow and Saturday the Madison Museum of Contemporary Art will host an event that, despite being an annual occurrence, has a relatively small profile amongst even the film-savviest Madisonians: The Romanian Film Festival. The emergence of the so-called Romanian new wave, a young cinema born nearly 30 years after similar movements popped up throughout eastern Europe, is one of the more curious developments in recent film history. Whether ""new wave"" is the best name for this movement remains open for debate; the first film screening in the festival is a French documentary, ""The New Wave of the Romanian Cinema"" (screens 6:30 p.m. Thursday), whose title seems to imply that the movement itself has embraced its contentious moniker.