Playing it safe
By Ryan Byrne | Sep. 10, 2001Avoiding campus crime is easy with a variety of resources'
Avoiding campus crime is easy with a variety of resources'
Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson returned to Madison Friday to celebrate the groundbreaking ceremony for the $65.9 million Health Sciences Learning Center. The new facility, on the west ' ¦
UW administrators confident in spite of Georgia ruling
Data released Friday placed the nation's unemployment rate at 4.9 percent for August 2001, marking a half percentage point jump in the last month and a nearly four-year high, but ' ¦
Volleyball suffers rare home defeat
Globalization benefits seen through IMCs Unfortunately for the sake of Michael Hsu's interest in foreign affairs ('U.S. media lack coverage of engaging global affairs,' Sep. 7-9, 2001), knowledge does not ' ¦
Saturday, live band hip-hop descended on the Barrymore Theatre, 2090 Atwood Ave. The Youngblood Brass Band headlined an evening that brought underground hip-hop and live instruments together. Underappreciated, independent rap groups The Micranots and Mission opened for the popular Youngblood Band.
Administrators explain race as acceptance criterion
Following a year with losses totaling more than $1 million dollars, the Student Health Insurance Plan provided to domestic students through University Health Services has introduced a new insurance plan ' ¦
Songbook concert showcases series of songs and poems'
As subscribers of digital cable may know, the Pulitzer Prize-winning play 'Dinner with Friends' is currently an HBO original movie. Receiving the usual amount of hype an HBO movie can expect, HBO subscribers are treated to brief specials of the premiere parties in both L.A. and New York, with flattering comments provided by the cast of 'Sex and the City.'
Tension between a gathering of anti-abortion protesters and student onlookers resulted in a fight and two arrests on Library Mall Thursday afternoon. Aaron Beay, 17, of Fond du Lac, Wis., ' ¦
Ed Thompson, brother of former Gov. Tommy Thompson, Libertarian candidate for governor in 2002, and mayor of Tomah, Wis., visited Memorial Union Thursday. The Daily Cardinal had a chance to ' ¦
The popular sports magazine Sports Illustrated produced a pretty interesting piece the other week.
Wisconsin looks to ground Fresno State???s aerial attack
Sen. Russ Feingold, D-Wis., told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Wednesday that he will go on a 'listening tour' of college campuses to encourage the nomination of a 'progressive' Democratic presidential candidate in 2004.
I'm sitting here in my homie's dorm room listening to The Blueprint and thinking about some of the things that passed through my mind over the course of the summer. It's amazing how hip-hop has gone from what was supposed to be a fad that ended in less than five years to one of the United States' most lucrative money-making machines. The music is only 25 or 30 years old, depending on who you ask. Nowadays, your music isn't pop unless you have visible elements of hip-hop in it. A truly gifted hip-hop artist can make it into constant rotation on the mutually owned MTV or BET, and 'true hip-hoppers' refuse to give respect to the artist. Even worse, they refuse to respect the music. What's that? Comedy, that's what that is. Another thing, what's the deal with all the emcees and rappers we are losing to R&B and soul? As you can see, my mind wandered a lot this summer. So let's talk about some of this.
I wasn't out for sadistic pleasure Wednesday at College Library. I wasn't titillated watching 30 unlucky recipients squirm after I handed them the poppiest of pop quizzes on foreign affairs. ' ¦