Construction at Library Mall to end in mid-December
The construction that has obstructed much of Library Mall for more than two years will finally be coming to a close in mid-December when ongoing utility replacements and upgrades are complete.
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The construction that has obstructed much of Library Mall for more than two years will finally be coming to a close in mid-December when ongoing utility replacements and upgrades are complete.
Members of UW-Madison's Phi Gamma Delta (Fiji) fraternity began the first leg of a 268-mile philanthropic run from Camp Randall to the University of Minnesota's TCF Bank Stadium Thursday.
Under a new policy passed Monday UW-Madison employees are prohibited from carrying concealed weapons while working on campus.
Native American environmental activist Winona Laduke promoted how environmental sustainability and awareness of indigenous faith can benefit American society in a speech at UW-Madison Thursday.
There is something to be said about slow and steady. The Notwist will no doubt have a poor showing in any artist of the decade lists, but they still deserve recognition for being a pinnacle of steadfast quality and craftsmanship in music. The six year gap in between their first release, Neon Golden, and the experimentally orchestrated The Devil, You + Me only serves to underscore the quiet mystique around the band. Before the recording of the elegiac and pensive Neon Golden, the Notwist found footing in myriad genres, each one providing a new perspective that found its way into this decade.
He likes to party. That's an easy and totally accurate way to describe Andrew W.K. But the full truth of the man as an artist and performer is delightfully layered. After all, it's hard to define a guy who combines his classically trained piano skills with his love of heavy metal and Max Martin's productions of Backstreet Boys music. How many artists would hit themselves in the face with a brick for their album cover photo? How many artists can go from Ozzfest to the motivational speaking circuit? How many artists' debut albums could feature songs called ""It's Time to Party,"" ""Party Hard,"" and ""Party Til You Puke""? W.K. peaked with that anthemic first album, 2001's I Get Wet, as his follow-up, The Wolf, was redundant and disappointing. His most recent album, 55 Cadillac, is a collection of car-themed piano instrumentals. But as a man who really knows his way around music and studio recording and is hell-bent on making party music, and as an energetic performer so fiercely affectionate to his fans that he famously signed autographs from the ambulance after breaking his foot onstage, he is easily among the most interesting and memorable artists of the decade. Party hard, Andrew W.K.
I stayed in Madison for spring break, and besides having a very wonderful and relaxing break, I was first exposed to Chocolate Shoppe ice cream. You know, the place on State and Gilman with the crazy cow in its emblem.
As its monocle-with-top-hat mascot suggests, the New Yorker is a snooty magazine. Its weirdly avant-garde comics suggest sophisticated"" humor beyond the comprehension of us normal plebes, and its densely written theater reviews add a touch of bourgeois to any magazine rack.
UW-Madison will host Thomas Beaumont, chief political reporter of the Des Moines Register, and Charles Fishman, author and senior editor at Fast Company magazine, as writers in residence this spring.
Recent years have witnessed a disturbing trend in the brewing world. In an effort to market to a younger generation raised on sugary diets of candy and soda, brewers have created a new abundance of sweet malted drinks and flavored beers.
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.
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.