This week on The OC
This is looking to be a very juicy season. A panel of parents at Harbor petitioned to have Marissa and Ryan expelled, but they settle on just Marissa.
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
362 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
This is looking to be a very juicy season. A panel of parents at Harbor petitioned to have Marissa and Ryan expelled, but they settle on just Marissa.
Sally hugged goodbye to her teary-eyed parents and watched their red minivan drive off down the street. It was her first time away from her small town on her own and she wanted her first experience at this new place to be truly meaningful. Suddenly, she was filled with questions, \Will I look like a freshman because I don't know all the words to ""On Wisconsin,"" even though most of the upperclassmen don't either? Will I survive complete freedom and independence while overindulging in heavy underage drinking?"" So Sally did what any young UW-Madison student does when faced with fear: she got drunk.
In 1989, a small group of activists united by causes ranging from nuclear disarmament to opposition to the South African apartheid, agreed to volunteer their time, and open their wallets, to create an alternative bookstore based on co-operative principals.
President Bush fired another shot in his ongoing war on journalism last week by denying investigators access to White House personnel in the Armstrong Williams scandal. Fortunately, this was only a metaphorical shot, unlike the shelling of foreign journalists in Iraq. Nonetheless, it reveals the deep and abiding commitment of this administration to keeping the public in the dark and controlling news coverage to promote its policies.
The Badgers ended their spring practices with the Cardinal and White battling to a 14-14 tie in the football team's annual spring game this past Saturday in Lussier Stadium at Madison La Follette High School.
Laura is in the Nursing School, and boy does she have it rough. With four hypochondriac L&S roommates, Laura finds herself diagnosing problems all the time. \What's this stuff coming out of my ear?"" ""Why won't my toenail grow back?"" After a while, Laura just started telling her roommates to have a beer and forget about it. Now that's responsible medicine.
What make of man runs our country? Apparently the make who thinks it is OK to exploit American Indians. Men like House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, R-Texas, and his associates-lobbyist Jack Abramoff and PR executive (also former DeLay press secretary) Michael Scanlon. Over the past year, Abramoff and Scanlon's dealings with various American Indian tribes have resulted in fees for their companies in amounts hovering between $60 and $80 million. This scandal has exploded in Indian Country media and, to a degree, inside the Beltway. Given the fact that Indian gaming is rising in Wisconsin, the story should get our attention. Moreover, the back-story of the white men involved provides a clear, comical and revolting picture of the state of American politics.
From the outset of their career, Daft Punk had the uncanny ability to attract a wide following from a rather specific genre. Their club-oriented debut Homework became a party staple not only for the club kids, but for music aficionados as well.
Pay-per-view has always been popular with humans interested in explicit material, but recent findings show that monkeys will also pay for a glimpse of power and beauty. Researchers have discovered that monkeys will forego valued treats for a glimpse of photographs of socially attractive peers or female hindquarters.
Madison Police held a community forum Wednesday night at Monona Terrace to address community concerns related to Tasers following the Jan. 21 Tasering of a 14-year-old Memorial High School student.
UW-Madison alumnus Graham Bernstein's lactose intolerance depressed him.
When Matthew Dowd, a leading Bush campaign strategist, forecasted in July 2004 the GOP would reap 38 to 40 percent of the Latino vote, the professional punditry responded with a chorus of scoffs and skepticism. But just three months later, Dowd's declaration was vindicated with the victorious cries of \??Felicidades President Bush!""
Downtown Madison's future drew discussion Thursday evening from the Downtown Coordinating Committee.
When an author with a cult following like Chuck Palahniuk shows his face in Madison, scores of fans emerge from UW-Madison's woodwork.
Students' college experience consists of more than just what they learn in the classroom. While academic achievement is what earns students degrees, the life skills they acquire exclusively through interaction with peers can be just as valuable in shaping their life. Years after graduation, they will be shaped more by their relation to others than by their ability to recall all the amendments to the United States Constitution in order.
Iincumbent Ald. Austin King, District 8, has two challengers for the upcoming alder election. The owner of the Kimia Lounge, 216 W. Mifflin, Kami Eshraghi and Ryan Corcoran have both filed to be on the ballot for the Apr. 5 election.
On Oct. 26, 2001, Lisa Zukowski, a former starter on the Wisconsin women's volleyball team, was forced to leave the game and season with an injury. Head Coach Pete Waite could not wait long to find a replacement, needing a capable athlete in a matter of seconds. He chose freshman outside hitter Jill Odenthal to take Zukowski's place. Waite chose well, as Odenthal has been a consistent starter and force since she was unexpectedly forced into the lineup three years ago.
Attorney and Green Party member Sally Stix debated Democratic incumbent Brian Blanchard at Edgewood College Thursday night for the Dane County District Attorney position.
Last Saturday night, filmmaker and left-wing advocate Michael Moore came to UW-Madison and publicly exercised his First Amendment rights. He championed mostly liberal causes, including universal health care for Americans, women's reproductive rights, same-sex marriage, and pulling American troops out of Iraq. He criticized President Bush and his Cabinet for promoting policies that favor the wealthy and alienate the poor and middle-class. He told the spectators \President Kerry"" sounds much better than ""President Bush.""