Peter offers love, fettuccini to Paris
Dear Paris,
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
70 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Dear Paris,
Because I am bestowed the honor of writing the last column before Thanksgiving break, I feel that it is my duty, my obligation, to provide you with an article inspired by the most delicious of holidays. Plus, writing about secular holidays is really, really easy-I'm already two for two on the year!
Being the type of person who likes to benefit mankind through my own observations, and also as a way to satisfy the public service aspect of my plea bargain with the state of Wisconsin over the charge that I sold cigarrettes to middle-school kids on 27 non-consecutive occasions, I present to you The Long and the Short of It Mini-Guide to Apartments, Houses and Leases.
\Lights, Camera, Homecoming!"" Alright, the theme for last weekend's Homecoming celebration made about as much sense as the Big Ten hiring two insane asylum escapees to ref the Purdue game.
The column I had originally intended to run today was centered completely on my loathing of the UW-Madison system of football voucher turn-in.
Last May was a rough time for your favorite daring college journalist. My final week was being its usual insidiously inconsequential self, more a gauntlet of endurance than a survey of my gleaned knowledge in any given class. On top of the finals debacle, I was forced to say goodbye to the best nine months of my life up to that point-my freshman year at college.
You can imagine my indefatigable exhilaration last Saturday morning around 3 a.m. when I realized that I didn't have to get up five hours later to do a power hour or a few beer bongs to get properly lubricated for the game.
Light up your menorah and grab the communion wine-The Associated Students of Madison made it easier to worship God!
As per my Friday evening routine of writing while drinking a whisky sour and listening to Sports by Huey Lewis and the News followed by 1984 from Van Halen, I had the first draft of this week's column done and looking good.
Tomorrow is my birthday. Usually, Sept. 10 is a day I look forward to; calls from family and friends, cards, presents and parties-all that good stuff. This year, however, I'm avoiding my birthday like a 40-year-old.
The Madison City Council Tuesday night voted 11-2 to \defend the equal protection of international students"" and denounce the pending fee levied by UW-Madison against international students for a mandatory student-visa surveillance program.
The city-wide hiring freeze instituted by Madison Mayor Dave Cieslewicz during his first days in office will not affect potential student summer positions, at least for the time being.
District 8 candidate Austin King had reason to revel in the jubilant celebration that took place at Luther's Blues, 1401 University Ave., Tuesday night after he bested the campaign of opponent Jeff Erlanger with 763 votes to Erlanger's 394.
Affordable housing, transportation and regional cooperation highlighted the major issues in the mayoral debate between candidates Dave Cieslewicz and Paul Soglin Tuesday night.
Although bullets shattered glass and tore up upholstery during a shooting at Stillwaters, 250 State St., early Monday morning, many say the Madison-area hip-hop scene took the most shrapnel from the incident.
The Plaza Tavern and Grill is changing ownership this weekend, but everything area patrons love about the establishment will stay the same. The Plaza, 319 N. Henry St., a long-time staple of the State Street area bar scene, is transferring hands this weekend, signifying the end of almost four decades of service to the downtown Madison community by owner Tom Huss.
Rumors of Osama bin Laden's continued existence flourished Tuesday afternoon when the Arabic television network Al Jazeera presented a 16-minute audio tape with a vocal likeness of the al Qaeda leader.
Tuesday night, the Madison City Council failed to pass a proposal to call on the president and members of the U.S. Congress to study the effects of slavery, discrimination and racism on black citizens and the overall culture of the nation.
President Bush stuck to his increasingly hard-line position on Iraq Tuesday night in his 2003 State of the Union Address before a joint session of Congress, citizens of the United States and governing bodies and their denizens around the world.
The Alcohol License Review Committee, the city council group in charge of reviewing all applicants for liquor licenses for the city of Madison, recently added Ald. Judy Olson, District 6, to its list of members.