News
Authors, groupies to attend Wisconsin Book Festivals
By Ben Schultz | Oct. 8, 2004Downtown Madison is once again the stomping ground of numerous bookworms, wannabe poets and published authors as the third annual Wisconsin Book Festival comes to town. The festival, which started ' ¦'
Sex activists put pro-choice agenda on top
By Dan Causier | Oct. 8, 2004Em and Lo: Put your minds in the gutter
Earlimart latest trembles with emotion
By Beth Wick | Oct. 8, 2004Earlimart (Palm Pictures) Not many albums capture the full spectrum of emotions from love to hate and sorrow to happiness. Earlimart's latest album does just that. The artwork on the ' ¦'
Cake, sounds good, tastes good
By Matt Hunziker | Oct. 8, 2004Cake (Columbia) \Stay the course"" seems to have been more or less Cake's unofficial modus operandi for the past decade. Ever since the 1994 release of Motorcade of Generosity on ' ¦'
Education should be top priority in the U.S.
By Nick Barbash | Oct. 7, 2004Before he became occupied with other concerns, President Bush enjoyed referring to himself as the \education president"" and before that, the ""education governor."" His predecessor, Bill Clinton, also used both ' ¦
Has campaign finance reform made incumbents unbeatable?
By Paul Pryse | Oct. 7, 2004Republican candidate for U.S. Senate Tim Michels remarked in a recent interview with The Daily Cardinal that his opponent's, Sen. Russ Feingold, D-Wis., $8 million campaign war chest is a ' ¦
State continues to display lack of concern for the university
By Travis Bird | Oct. 7, 2004Last month, Gov. Jim Doyle told a group of students who asked him to make the University of Wisconsin more affordable that they \must be living in a dream world."" ' ¦
A visionary sings out
By Iris Brey | Oct. 7, 2004Blind UW-Madison student navigates pitfalls of freshman year'
A State Street popularity contest
By Morgan Brickley | Oct. 7, 2004Have you ever been walking downtown and smelled something like delicious popcorn? That's because there is delicious popcorn... in fact, it's all over State Street. Unbeknownst to many students, there ' ¦'
Redevelopment plans might give the boot to Essen Haus
By Maureen Backman | Oct. 7, 2004Residents also may not be able to 'Come Back In'
A visionary sings out
By Iris Brey | Oct. 7, 2004Blind UW-Madison student navigates pitfalls of freshman year'
F.H. King looks ahead to sustainable food future
By Ben Schultz | Oct. 7, 2004There is a place on this campus, away from the buzzing noise and dull concrete, that's both a sanctuary and an experiment. Far from the bells, libraries and Bascom Hill ' ¦'
To the guy at the To La Tengo show...
By Beth Wick | Oct. 7, 2004People, it seems, have completely forgotten and are clueless to the implied ules"" of concerts. The goal of live shows is for everyone to have a good time, so don't wreck it for everyone else. Just follow these basic rules, and you will have fun.
Student government outlines Halloween, diversity goals
By Andy Berens and Leah Leonidas | Oct. 7, 2004In its \Need to Know"" press conference Wednesday, Associated Students of Madison announced goals for campus diversity, Halloween safety and shared governance. Halloween safety was the most immediate of the ' ¦
Ride the bus, Bush and Kerry
By Harlen Johnston | Oct. 7, 2004As the election draws near, I think I have finally found the solution to decide which candidate to vote for, a sort of exam to test their qualifications for president. ' ¦
UW police nab teens after crime spree
By Alex Balistreri and Jon Spike | Oct. 7, 2004University police arrested two alleged perpetrators Tuesday in connection with 80 recent campus crimes. A police investigation following an incident in Lot 60 Sunday, in which 19 vehicles and two ' ¦
Verveer proposes increasing fines for landlord violations
By Maureen Backman and Dimitri Syrkin-Nikolau | Oct. 7, 2004In an effort to keep tax levels low and keep pace with Mayor Dave Cieslewicz's 2005 Capital Budget, Ald. Mike Verveer, District 4, plans to introduce a series of city ' ¦
Naked wrists battle trendy cancer fight
By Amos Posner | Oct. 7, 2004Everywhere you go these days, a yellow menace can be seen, spreading further across the cultural landscape with each passing week. Kids are pretending they care about the sport of ' ¦'



