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Members of the student government evaluated budgeting for transportation services at the University of Wisconsin in a meeting Tuesday night. During last night’s Student Transportation Board meeting, representatives of UW Transportation Services presented their proposed 2013 fiscal year budget to the board. A main point addressed during the meeting focused on the inclusion of paying for new bus shelters in the overall bus budget of about $1,777,299. Commuter Solutions Manager for Transportation Services Dar Ward said over an eight year period, all bus shelters on campus will be replaced with new ones. She said the $40,000 amount for the item in the budget reflects how Transportation Services has been budgeting for four shelters each year, with each costing about $10,000 to allow for building new cases and benches. She the current year is the fourth or fifth year of the eight-year period. Student Transportation Board member Laura Checovich asked about the inclusion, and said she wondered if it would be appropriate to make students pay for a capital purchase item. “My concern was only because students were not part of the decision-making process to even renew them, and it seems unusual that we would be asked to pay for something we were not consulted on,” she said. Transportation Administrator Gordon Graham said in the past there has not been a hard and fast policy for who pays for the bus shelters, since some end up being negotiated so as to be a After a tumultuous year of union relations at the state level, Dane County officials approved an agreement with county workers Tuesday that will alter a union contract to diminish wages and thus save the county nearly $2 million next year. Members of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees stood behind Dane County Executive Joe Parisi as he signed a resolution that would alter an existing union contract to temporarily reduce workers’ wages and require them to contribute toward their retirement in 2013, among other provisions. Under a legislative provision, existing union contracts can be negotiated within a 90-day window to allow concessions or changes within the contract, Parisi said in a news conference. Once the time period has ended Feb. 28, any changes made to the contract would render the entire document void. Parisi cited issues such as severe cuts to the Dane County budget by the state Legislature and an ailing economy that has consequentially raised the need for public services to justify the need for the resolution. “By sitting down and problem solving together, the county and its public employees have negotiated agreements that will save county taxpayers nearly $2 million, protect vital public services and help out workers and their families adjust to the ill-advised actions of our state primary elections is usually quite low. There are not many “names of interest” to voters on the ballot, and the elections are non-partisan, so party politics only play a small role, he said. Associated Students of Madison Legislative Chair Hannah Somers said student turnout is expected to be low as well. “I voted at 10:30 this morning, and I was the first voter,” Somers said. “No voting place has been above about 10 [students] right now, so I’m guessing © 2012 BADGER HERALD Your guide to the 2012 Academy Awards ArtsEtc. presents an in-depth look at the biggest, most glamorous night of the year in entertainment ARTS | 8 THE UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN’S INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER SINCE 1969 www.badgerherald.com Wednesday, February 22, 2012 Volume XLIII, Issue 91 INSIDE All the world’s a stage ... OPINION | 4 But should the UW have a separate School for the Arts? Ryan Rainey and Adelaide Blanchard weigh in. A local liquor store has seen a rash of thefts NEWS | 2 MPD reports thieves took more than $2000 in merchandise from University Avenue store While the spring primary race was generally projected for low turnout, city officials had the chance to implement Wisconsin’s voter ID law during a period of little voter traffic. Despite low numbers on campus and at downtown polling areas, one Madison official said verifying a correct ID is still a lengthy process. Matt Hintz The Badger Herald Voter ID sees primary debut With expectations of low voter turnout for the statewide spring primary, the first election requiring photo identification from voters at polling places was held Tuesday in a primary for an open Dane County Circuit Court seat. According to the Wisconsin Department of Transportation, voter ID forms accepted at polls on Tuesday included not only a state-issued driver’s license or identification card, but also receipts of purchase for either form. Andrea Kaminski, chair of the Madison Election Advisory Committee, said few problems were projected with accepting IDs at the polls, but the process was slowed significantly. “I don’t expect there will be many problems,” Kaminski said. “But I noticed when I went in to vote this morning, the voter ID process certainly slowed things down. It took me longer to check in than it did to vote.” Municipal Clerk Thomas Lund said provisional ballots for the primary election, provided to voters who forgot to bring identification to the polls with them, were issued only three times. Provisional ballots are not counted the day of the election and instead are returned to the city clerk’s office. Voters have until Friday to present identification to the office for their ballot to be counted in the election, Lund said. Kaminski, who is also the executive director of the League of Women Voters in Wisconsin, added the list of acceptable IDs for voting in Wisconsin is the most restrictive in the country, and therefore it may be possible for some voters to come in with some sort of photo ID that is not acceptable at the polls. The primary election was called because there are three candidates running for the same seat on the court, Kaminski said. The three candidates, Roger Allen, Ellen Berz and Francis Sullivan, are running for the position on the circuit court. “The two candidates that get the most votes Tuesday will be the winners of the primary, and they will be the two candidates on the ballot on April 3,” Kaminski said. According to University of Wisconsin political science professor Barry Burden, turnout in February Katie Slavin Herald Contributor VOTER ID, page 2 UHS will expand to Lakeshore area Officials announce plans for satellite clinic in new dorm, set to provide basic services When students return to school in fall, they will find a new University Health Services clinic in place, which would accommodate students in the university’s Lakeshore residence hall neighborhood. The new UHS satellite clinic will be located within the new Lakeshore residence hall, Brendon Dybdahl, director of marketing and communications for university housing, said. He said the clinic will be one of many new services, offices and resources housed there. UHS executive director Sarah Van Orman said UHS facilities have historically been located inside residence halls, and the closing of the Sellery Hall clinic led UHS to move its full laboratory services from one side of campus to a more central location. “We always envisioned we would have another location,” Van Orman said. Van Orman said with the current location at 333 East Campus Mall, UHS does receive a lot of traffic from students, but students on the west side of campus have a long haul to make -- especially when sick. Adding a clinic location to the Lakeshore residence hall will provide students with more access to UHS, Van Orman said. She also said the idea has been in the works for a while. Open to all students, the added clinic will also help with the rising need for UHS services, according to Van Orman. “We have seen a significant growth in student demand for services,” Van Orman said. The proposal for the clinic Alyssa Smith Herald Contributor UHS, page 2 Reps criticize shuffling costs for building bus shelters onto students UNIONS, page 3 Dane Co. unveils plan with unions Parisi says agreement will save citizens tax dollars by lowering wages for employees Leah Linschied City Life Editor BUS SHELTERS, page 2 Transportation board proposes budgets for new amenities, SAFEride Katie Caron Higher Education Editor During first elections since new law, reports suggest longer processing times at precincts, few problems 8 University of Wisconsin
Transcript
Page 1: 2012.02.22

Members of the student government evaluated budgeting for transportation services at the University of Wisconsin in a meeting Tuesday night.

During last night’s Student Transportation Board meeting, representatives of UW Transportation Services presented their proposed 2013 fi scal year budget to the board.

A main point addressed during the meeting focused on the inclusion of paying for new bus shelters in the overall bus budget of about $1,777,299. Commuter Solutions Manager for Transportation Services Dar Ward said over an eight year period, all bus shelters on campus will be replaced with new ones.

She said the $40,000 amount for the item in the budget reflects how Transportation Services has been budgeting for four shelters each year, with each costing about $10,000 to allow for building new cases and benches. She the current year is the fourth or fifth year of the eight-year period.

Student Transportation Board member Laura Checovich asked about the inclusion, and said she wondered if it would be appropriate to make students pay for a capital purchase item.

“My concern was only because students were not part of the decision-making process to even renew them, and it seems unusual that we would be asked to pay for something we were not consulted on,” she said.

Transportation Administrator Gordon Graham said in the past there has not been a hard and fast policy for who pays for the bus shelters, since some end up being negotiated so as to be a

After a tumultuous year of union relations at the state level, Dane County officials approved an agreement with county workers Tuesday that will alter a union contract to diminish wages and thus save the county nearly $2 million next year.

Members of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees stood behind Dane County Executive Joe Parisi as he signed a resolution that would alter an existing union contract to temporarily reduce workers’ wages and require them to contribute toward their retirement in 2013, among other provisions.

Under a legislative provision, existing union contracts can be negotiated within a 90-day window to allow concessions or changes within the contract, Parisi said in a news conference. Once the time period has ended Feb. 28, any changes made to the contract would render the entire document void.

Parisi cited issues such as severe cuts to the Dane County budget by the state Legislature and an ailing economy that has consequentially raised the need for public services to justify the need for the resolution.

“By sitting down and problem solving together, the county and its public employees have negotiated agreements that will save county taxpayers nearly $2 million, protect vital public services and help out workers and their families adjust to the ill-advised actions of our state

primary elections is usually quite low. There are not many “names of interest” to voters on the ballot, and the elections are non-partisan, so party politics only play a small role, he said.

Associated Students of Madison Legislative Chair Hannah Somers said student turnout is expected to be low as well.

“I voted at 10:30 this morning, and

I was the fi rst voter,” Somers said. “No voting place has been above about 10 [students] right now, so I’m guessing

© 2 0 1 2 B A D G E R H E R A L D

Your guide to the 2012 Academy Awards ArtsEtc. presents an in-depth look at the biggest, most glamorous night of the year in entertainment ARTS | 8

THE UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN’S INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER SINCE 1969

www.badgerherald.com Wednesday, February 22, 2012 Volume XLIII, Issue 91

INSIDE

All the world’s a stage ...

OPINION | 4

But should the UW have a separate School for the Arts? Ryan Rainey and Adelaide Blanchard weigh in.

A local liquor store has seen a rash of thefts

NEWS | 2

MPD reports thieves took more than $2000 in merchandise from University Avenue store

While the spring primary race was generally projected for low turnout, city offi cials had the chance to implement Wisconsin’s voter ID law during a period of little voter traffi c. Despite low numbers on campus and at downtown polling areas, one Madison offi cial said verifying a correct ID is still a lengthy process.

Matt Hintz The Badger Herald

Voter ID sees primary debut

With expectations of low voter turnout for the statewide spring primary, the first election requiring photo identification from voters at polling places was held Tuesday in a primary for an open Dane County Circuit Court seat.

According to the Wisconsin Department of Transportation, voter ID forms accepted at polls on Tuesday included not only a state-issued driver’s license or identification card, but also receipts of purchase for either form. Andrea Kaminski, chair of the Madison Election Advisory Committee, said few problems were projected with accepting IDs at the polls, but the process was slowed signifi cantly.

“I don’t expect there will be many problems,” Kaminski said. “But I noticed when I went in to vote this morning, the voter ID process certainly slowed things down. It took me longer to check in than it did to vote.”

Municipal Clerk Thomas Lund said provisional ballots for the primary election, provided to voters who forgot to bring identifi cation to the polls with

them, were issued only three times. Provisional ballots are not counted the day of the election and instead are returned to the city clerk’s office. Voters have until Friday to present identification to the office for their ballot to be counted in the election, Lund said.

Kaminski, who is also the executive director of the League of Women Voters in Wisconsin, added the list of acceptable IDs for voting in Wisconsin is the most restrictive in the country, and therefore it may be possible for some voters to come in with some sort of photo ID that is not acceptable at the polls.

The primary election was called because there are three candidates running for the same seat on the court, Kaminski said. The three candidates, Roger Allen, Ellen Berz and Francis Sullivan, are running for the position on the circuit court.

“The two candidates that get the most votes Tuesday will be the winners of the primary, and they will be the two candidates on the ballot on April 3,” Kaminski said.

According to University of Wisconsin political science professor Barry Burden, turnout in February

Katie SlavinHerald Contributor

VOTER ID, page 2

UHS will expand to Lakeshore areaOffi cials announce plans for satellite clinic in new dorm, set to provide basic services

When students return to school in fall, they will find a new University Health Services clinic in place, which would accommodate students in the university’s Lakeshore residence hall neighborhood.

The new UHS satellite clinic will be located within the new Lakeshore residence hall, Brendon Dybdahl, director of marketing and communications for university housing, said. He said the clinic will be one of many new services, offices and resources housed there.

UHS executive director Sarah Van Orman said UHS facilities have historically been located inside residence halls, and the closing of the Sellery Hall clinic led UHS to move its full laboratory services from one side of campus to a more central location.

“We always envisioned we would have another location,” Van Orman said.

Van Orman said with the current location at 333 East Campus Mall, UHS does receive a lot of traffic from students, but students on the west side of campus have a long haul to make -- especially when sick.

Adding a clinic location to the Lakeshore residence hall will provide students with more access to UHS, Van Orman said. She also said the idea has been in the works for a while.

Open to all students, the added clinic will also help with the rising need for UHS services, according to Van Orman.

“We have seen a significant growth in student demand for services,” Van Orman said.

The proposal for the clinic

Alyssa SmithHerald Contributor

UHS, page 2

Reps criticize shuffling costs for building bus shelters onto students

UNIONS, page 3

Dane Co. unveils plan with unionsParisi says agreement will save citizens tax dollars by lowering wages for employeesLeah LinschiedCity Life Editor

BUS SHELTERS, page 2

Transportation board proposes budgets for new amenities, SAFErideKatie CaronHigher Education Editor

During fi rst elections since new law, reports suggest longer processing times at precincts, few problems

8

University of Wisconsin

Page 2: 2012.02.22

part of other projects, and some do not.

He said the inclusion of the shelters in the costs paid for by students is something being put on the table, but said he thinks the university will certainly not pay for the cost and he cannot think of who else would.

The campus taxi program section of the budget, which totals $120,973 as proposed, was also considered at the meeting. Like all other items on the overall budget, the Associated Students of Madison cost totals half of the amount

listed.Graham said the

$74,000 students would pay is about the same as budgeted for last year, and that the budget for the service tends to be very cyclical and adjustments often need to be made.

He said right now, students seem to be using the SAFEride cabs less.

“We may have reached a tipping point where students are seeing the program as not for just convenience but as a safety net,” he said.

Ward agreed and said since the switch was made to providing six cabs a semester, students seem to be saving them and using

them as a back-up rather than as a more regular transportation service.

With this, student board member Chase Wilson asked if it would be prudent to budget less than proposed for the cab service.

Graham said Transportation Services will refund ASM if the budget exceeds actual costs and that he thought it might be wise to still allow for the higher budget rather than run into under-budgeting problems.

The board will meet again next week, and discussions on the budget will continue.

In the Feb. 21 story “SSFC hears budget pro-posal for health services,” the article incorrectly stated the satellite clinic was opening in the “Lake House” area . The story should say the Lakeshore area. We regret the error.

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began about four years ago when University Housing officials approached UHS with the idea. Van Orman said allowances in the UHS budget as well as open space in the new residence hall have made this idea a reality.

The Lakeshore clinic will be staffed by a nurse practitioner who will primarily provide small services such as pregnancy tests and treatment for ailments such as sore throats, sinus infections and small rashes, Van Orman said.

The clinic will not include a full lab, so students experiencing more serious problems will be referred to

the UHS East Campus Mall location since that location contains a lab where further testing can be done.

Van Orman said she expects costs for the facility to be minimal, since funding will be provided by University Housing and its budget for the Lakeshore residence hall. UHS will provide staffing for the clinic by rotating its current employees.

Inside the new clinic, Van Orman said students can expect to see a small waiting room and exam room. She said she believes it will be a nice space located in a common area of the building shared by fellow university services.

In addition, Dybdhal said

the clinic is only one part of all the new additions of the Lakeshore development, and it will be located on the east side of the area.

On top of its new dining facility, named the Lakeside Market, the Lakeshore residence hall will include other features such as a convenience store, coffee house, conference and multi-purpose room, classroom space, technology learning center, and an on-site Cross-College Advising Service center, Dybdahl said.

Construction on the Lakeshore residence hall has begun and completion is expected by early fall 2012. Students of the 2012-2013 school year will act as the hall’s fi rst residents.

UHS, from 1

turnout is going to be kind of low.”

Somers said Dean of Students Lori Berquam sent a campus-wide email drawing students’ attention to the primary election. The email included a video instructing students how to obtain an additional ID card, Somers added.

After the state Legislature passed the new law that required a form of ID to be shown at voting polls, UW decided to issue a card at no cost to enrolled students, Wiscard Program Manager Jim Wysocky said.

“This card is really only of value to people who do not have a Wisconsin driver’s license or a U.S. passport,” Wysocky said. “If you need

to use the voter ID, then you also have to provide proof of enrollment.”

The campus-issued voter ID cards are valid for two years from the day of issuing, and students must maintain their enrollment to be able to use it, according to Wysocky.

Berz led the run for Dane County Circuit Judge with just above 43 percent of the vote.

VOTER ID, from 1

CRIME in Brief LANGDON STREETDrunken Driving A 20-year-old man was arrested last Saturday for fl eeing an offi cer, resist-ing arrest, obstructing and drunken driving, accord-ing to a Madison Police Department report. The man was reported to be driving wildly on Gorham Street when an offi cer attempted a traffi c stop on the suspect, who then began racing down Langdon Street. The driver ran out of his car and attempted to fl ee at the corner of Lake Street and Langdon Street, the report said. The offi cer caught up with the subject, who was attempting to enter a residence on North Blake Street. “He resisted arrest, and an electronic control

device was used on the man,” MPD spokesperson Joel DeSpain said. “He was arrested for his sec-ond drunk driving charge.” A crowd of about 15-20 people surrounded the area and refused to move away, the report said. The offi cers used a form of pepper spray to disperse the crowd and safely move the subject to the vehicle. The suspect hit multiple parked cars before the offi cer fi rst observed his driving, the report said.

UNIVERSITY AVENUERetail Theft More than $2,000 worth of liquor has been stolen from a local store during a rash of thefts, DeSpain said. University Liquor, located

at 525 University Ave., has had a number of smaller thefts throughout the past few weeks, he said. MPD has obtained surveillance photos of two suspects from a theft occurring the afternoon of Feb. 14, DeSpain said. Anyone with information on the two men is encouraged to call Madison Area Crime Stoppers at 608-266-6014.

WEST JOHNSON STREETBattery A 23-year-old woman was struck, thrust to the ground and kicked Satur-day evening on the 400 block of West Johnson Street, according to a report. “The woman was punched at about 7 p.m.,”

Ald. Scott Resnick, District 8, said. “However, no serious lacerations or any other serious bodily injuries occurred. This was an isolated incident, and the Madison Police Depart-ment is working on strate-gies to alleviate these incidents in the future.” According to the report, the victim was unable to explain what her attacker looked like. DeSpain said it was unusual for such an attack to occur at 7 p.m. because he said there are typically many people out in the area.

KOHL CENTERInjury This past Saturday, a student’s life was saved at the Kohl Center when they went into cardiac

arrest. A University of Wiscon-sin Police Department statement released yesterday said offi cers received report of an individual in the student section having a medical issue during a hockey game at the Kohl Center. When offi cers as-signed to the section lo-cated the individual, they attempted to provide medical aid when the subject went into cardiac arrest, the statement said. Paramedics from the Madison Fire Depart-ment arrived and used a defi brillator to revive the individual, and accord-ing to the statement, the quick actions and fast response from offi cers and paramedics saved the student’s life.

BUS SHELTERS, from 1

Page 3: 2012.02.22

The Badger Herald | News | Wednesday, February 22, 2012 3

leaders,” Parisi said in a statement.

According to AFSCME Local 65 President Arlyn Halvorson, union members will receive a 1.25 percent cut in hourly wages, which will save the county approximately $1.2 million in one year.

Halvorson said the cuts are important not only to preserve a good relationship between Dane County and its employees, but also to continue to provide county citizens with vital public services.

“It is all of our objectives to give services and maintain services to the public,” Halvorson said. “It’s our livelihood, and it’s [the public’s] value that they should be receiving. Unforeseen cuts from the Legislature to the county puts them in a tough spot … We’re doing what we think is right.”

Halvorson said this is not the first time county officials and employees have come together to create solutions. He added union members have taken leave voluntarily and given up work hours in the past to help Dane County with budgetary concerns.

AFSCME Local 1871 President Andy Heidt expressed his gratitude toward Dane County for the compromises it was able to reach.

“On behalf of the unions, we extend our thanks to Dane County,” Heidt said. “[Gov. Scott] Walker’s budget has put us in a straightjacket, and we’ve been able to come together and work in the Dane County way to come up with the best solutions.”

Heidt asserted the importance of being able to preserve public services through the negotiations made in the resolution.

Parisi said the budgetary successes stemming from discussion and compromise between Dane County and its workers is an example of why collective bargaining should be reinstated.

“I hope this can be used as a model to point to why we should reinstate collective bargaining and have everyone come together to solve our problems collectively,” Parisi said. “The success we’ve been able to have shows collective bargaining is a good thing.”

According to Parisi, AFSCME and county officials reached a tentative agreement on the resolution’s provisions several weeks ago. The Dane County Board authorized Parisi to sign the agreement at its Feb. 17 meeting.

UNIONS, from 1

Homeless shelter sparks community complaints

Spring cannot come soon enough for residents living near the Daytime Resource Center, a temporary homeless shelter located on East Washington Avenue.

A collection of complaints have been voiced by the community regarding homeless people wandering streets in the residential area and causing conflicts, Ald. Bridget Maniaci, District 2,

said.“I’ve heard from a

number of neighbors who do not feel comfortable in the neighborhood or the park,” Maniaci said. “I’ve had to convince a friend of mine not to move out of her apartment.”

The Daytime Resource Center is a project launched by Porchlight, a nonprofit organization dedicated to decreasing homelessness. The center was created in November to offer shelter to those who are homeless in the frigid winter months.

Maniaci said the plan was developed after two places regularly housing the homeless during the day restricted their access. The Capitol building barred public entrance to its basement, and the

Central Library is currently under renovation.

The shelter offers access to the Internet, telephones, housing, assistance with employment and a limited supply of food every day from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., according to Porchlight’s website.

The problem in the neighborhood is the people who are not properly using the shelter to seek help and are instead roaming the neighborhood intoxicated, Maniaci said.

Richard Freihoefer, an area representative for the Tenney-Lapham neighborhood, said unseasonably warm weather has made intoxicated shelter residents a cause for concern in the neighborhood.

“It’s been a problem pretty much since it opened,” Freihoefer said. “But the main problem is that it hasn’t gotten cold here, and when the temperature is high, people hang out, get drunk and cause problems.”

Freihoefer said owners of businesses in the area have called the police because intoxicated citizens from the shelter come into their store, disrupting the business and customers.

Maniaci said these occurrences have demonstrated there is a need for Dane County Board of Supervisors to work with homeless service providers to create a more “legitimate” homeless shelter for Dane County.

“I’m definitely hearing from residents that they

want to be accommodating, but the overfl ow issues that have arisen have shown that the residential area is not the appropriate location for this,” Maniaci said.

She suggested one solution to the problem would be to move the shelter to a more commercial location, as opposed to the residential area where it currently resides.

Freihoefer said the shelter will never reopen in the same neighborhood again.

Madison Police Department Lt. Dave McCaw said there has been an increase in calls for service in the area near the East Washington Street shelter. Complaints have been made by area

residents about possessions stolen out of cars, houses and porches. There have also been complaints regarding noise, fights, public urination and trespassing, he added.

According to McCaw, opinions on the homeless shelter are varied among the community. Some residents are upset because they did not intend to live near a homeless shelter when they purchased their homes, but others are tolerant and understanding of the situation.

Although there likely will not be any immediate changes, as the shelter closes on March 15, discussions on homeless accommodations will be a recurring theme when winter weather returns in November, Maniaci said.

Alder: Neighbors uneasy going to local parks, individuals not using center properlySam SchmittReporter

• $2 million in taxpayer savings

• Contributions from Dane County

• employees toward their retirement starting 2013

• 3-day county govern-ment shut-down

• Temporary across-the-board wage cuts

Contract AmendmentHighlights

SOURCE: Channel 3000

Camille AlbertHerald Contributor

Page 4: 2012.02.22

OpinionOpinion

Your OpinionYour Opinion · Send your letters to the editor and guest columns to [email protected]. Publication is based on space and takes into account relevance and quality. Letters should be sent exclusively to the Herald. Unsigned letters will not be published. All submissions may be edited by the Herald for length and style. Reader feedback on all articles and columns can be posted at badgerherald.com, where all print content is archived.

Editorial Page EditorTaylor [email protected]

The Badger Herald | Opinion | Wednesday, February 22, 20124

I hate to disappoint you, but if you have read this far looking for the rogue Badger Herald columnist to go on a tirade about how much they hate interpretative dance and post-modern surrealism, you have come to the wrong place.

I am suspicious of the proposed College of the Arts not because I detest high culture, but because I don’t think it will change how arts is taught at the University of Wisconsin, and a new centralized structure may leave the arts vulnerable to budget cuts.

Imagine you are a Republican legislator or a more conservative Regent looking to make cuts in the next biennium budget. Where would you fi rst look to cut? The “College of the Arts” makes for a neat line item to take a red budget pen to.

It’s happened before, not necessarily at Wisconsin, but elsewhere: the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, in Minnesota and the University of Texas at Austin.

Interestingly enough, the UT campus rallied from budget cuts in a way similar to the proposed College of the Arts at UW — they combined resources in their Women and Gender Studies, Asian Studies and African Studies Departments, according to the Daily Texan. The partnership grew organically from interested parties within the departments because each department shared course material.

That process cannot be directly transposed on the College of Liberal Arts. At UT, the departments combined forces to survive and pool money, but at UW, it is unclear if budgets will be shared, according to a UW statement. UT’s partnership also yielded interchangeable faculty and classes. Dance, art history and music are all art, but they are hardly interchangeable.

One potential outcome of the college would be “streamlining” art programs, according to a statement from the university. The only possible instance of that I gleaned would be administration and faculty. The proposal does not call for more funds, according to the statement, and the different departments have their essential equipment dispersed around campus, ruling out actual physical streamlining.

Each department still needs to agree to the proposal, according to the statement. This indicates the proposal was most likely not a grassroots idea among the parties it would affect, but rather an administrative top-down effort. Additionally, if one department decides the hybrid college wouldn’t be a fi t for them, arts at UW would still be disjointed.

If the switch to the College of the Arts at UW merely consists of the gathering administration and department heads, the process’s public vetting seems like much ado about nothing.

Adelaide Blanchard ([email protected]) is a junior majoring in journalism.

Try wrapping your head around this: The University of Wisconsin’s departments of dance and art currently reside in the School of Education. This means that to become professional artists, many UW students need to go through the same program application process their colleagues who want to be calculus teachers go through.

That doesn’t make much sense considering UW’s mammoth scale and calls to diminish the bureaucracy that comes with it. According to the university’s news release last week announcing the beginnings of a plan to consolidate (I love that word) different arts-related departments into a College for the Arts, the proposal to merge the different departments is not a new one. Given the lack of administrative organization in UW’s arts departments, a more unifi ed approach in the future might, in fact, give the arts the recognition they have deserved for decades but have not received.

This is why I don’t buy Addie’s argument that the proposal would not cause any change and, even worse, negatively affect the budgetary standing of arts departments at UW. Administrators or even students will say the university’s most important fuel is morale. If that’s the case, arts departments currently are running on vapor.

Just look at how the arts compare to the monolithic departments and colleges at UW like engineering, business, or even journalism. Those institutions are some of the university’s brightest stars, bringing in heavy donations and positive press attention. The scattered arts departments never have this luxury. As a good friend of mine in the School of Music told me yesterday: “We’re sort of the black sheep of Letters & Science.”

As journalism students, both Addie and I have seen what can happen when a small and collaborative faculty’s members work well together. Despite sitting in the College of Letters & Science, journalism students see a degree of autonomy and high morale that I can envision being highly effective for the arts. With less red tape and a highly effi cient administrative operation, arts professors won’t have to deal with the frustrations that come with being part of a large college, perhaps fi nally allowing them to reach the level of reverence they have anticipated for years.

In fact, a more autonomous College for the Arts would give UW more power to resist the cuts to higher education with which we’ve grown familiar. Future generations would benefi t from a more recognized arts faculty like the one at Indiana University’s Jacobs School of Music, which has arguably the best reputation of all public music schools in the nation. According to a 2009 report in the Indiana Daily Student, IU’s music and theatre programs appear to have avoided the recession’s most destructive consequences.

Conservative legislators always will make a point to strike their red pen through any sort of budget for the arts, regardless of if they stand alone in a college or hide in a university’s liberal arts college. With so much apocalyptic rhetoric about the future of UW, I fi nd it promising to see the administration promoting placing arts on equal footing with their would-be peers in the rest of the university. If consolidation be the food of a better arts program, play on.

Ryan Rainey ([email protected]) is a junior majoring in journalism and Latin American studies.

POINTCounterpoint

To be or not to be? Why collectivize? There’s strength in numbers and a budget cutting legislature looking to thin the herd.

I want to break free; artists will fl ourish when allowed to move up and strike out on their own.

Adelaide BlanchardEditor-at-large

Ryan RaineyManaging Editor

Rep. Cale Plamann, a member of SSFC, voted against vague budgets for the Wisconsin Union and Rec Sports.Andy Fate The Badger Herald

Taylor NyeEditorial Page Editor

Budgets done rightHerald Editorial

Editorial Board opinions are crafted independently of news coverage.

More often than not, this board takes issue with the proceedings of the Associated Students of Madison student government. However, two recent moves on budget allocation made us reconsider. Student Council’s decision to pass Student Service Finance Committee’s General Student Services Fund that SSFC vetted last semester, and SSFC’s decision to reject the budgets for Wisconsin Union and Rec Sports were even-handed displays of responsibility.

Last semester, SSFC had tensions with the Multicultural Student Coalition over missed deadlines and failure to meet eligibility criteria. The confl ict escalated, and eventually MCSC fi led suit against SSFC, saying they violated viewpoint neutrality and purposely shifted the criteria needed to obtain student segregated fees. Student Judiciary eventually overturned the claim and vindicated SSFC.

The events made Student Council uneasy, and general sentiment was that, due to the fracas, SSFC might meet

opposition from Council when it tried to have its own budget ratifi ed. ASM stood by the initial recommendations, and we commend the members for being able to move the budget forward.

On Feb. 17, SSFC was presented with proposed budgets from non-allocable organizations, or those that SSFC has advisory control over what student seg fees they receive. Again, what tripped up the committee was requests for funds the non-allocables did not clearly specify what they would be used for. SSFC Rep. Justin Gerstner said the Union did not provide detailed enough information about where it would spend the $9 million it requested, and it has a reputation for being evasive on its use of student fees. And Rep. Cale Plamann said he believed the budget for Rec Sports was clear on where the money would be spent, but lacked other information.

For now, at least, ASM and SSFC have shown us they can maturely handle budget review. Let us hope the trend continues.

Signe BrewsterEditor-in-Chief

Alex BrousseauEditorial Board Chairman

Adelaide BlanchardEditor-at-Large

Ryan RaineyManaging Editor

Jake BegunEditorial Board Member

Reginald YoungEditorial Page Content Editor

QUOTE OF THE DAY

“He didn’t want to report a crime and said it wasn’t a big deal.”

-JOEL DESPAIN, POLICE SPOKESPERSON

On Saturday night, a man was admitted to the hospital with what he didn’t think was a major injury. DeSpain continued, “A doctor said the wound appeared to have been caused by a screwdriver.” If the man from the story is not Ron Swanson in the fl esh, we will be genuinely surprised. Crying: acceptable at funerals and the Grand Canyon, and apparently not after being stabbed.

Students deserve close budgetary review power

Every semester, full-time students on this campus pay $539.52 in segregated fees. Multiply that by all of the students on campus, and nearly $42 million was collected this year. Seventy-eight percent of those fees go to facilities over which students have little oversight. On a campus where shared governance has a strong history, it is a terrible circumstance that students are being ignored in the process of allocating their own money. The Student Services Finance Committee is a board of the Associated Students of Madison that allocates student fees to many student groups on campus, as well as to the four units over which we have limited purview: the Wisconsin Union, University Health Services, Child Care Tuition Assistance and Rec Sports.

Last week, the SSFC voted not to recommend the budgets of Rec Sports and the Wisconsin Union to the chancellor as they were presented to us. We wish to make it very clear that the SSFC wholeheartedly supports the funding of all these units. Rec Sports and Wisconsin Union are vital to this campus, both in the services and employment they provide. However, as stewards of student segregated fees, we are charged with ensuring that

students’ money is being spent in the most responsible way possible. If we are not provided the necessary information, we cannot fulfi ll this duty. This accountability is imperative, especially in budgets that include millions of student dollars. Without a detailed description of the usage of our segregated fees, these units cannot possibly be held accountable to the students that fund them. Therefore our vote to reject the proposed budgets and recommend that segregated fees remain at the same level as last year only refl ects our view of the process and not of the groups.

In early December, we entered into good faith negotiations with the chancellor’s offi ce and the units in question, and so far we have failed to reach a resolution regarding how SSFC will be able to receive more information in the future. We suggested a collaborative reevaluation of the current accounting practices so that SSFC can more accurately track where student money is being spent. In response to each separate unit and UW administration declining our request, the SSFC rejected these budget proposals, as a part of our responsibility as stewards of segregated fees.

As we watch further cuts being made to the funding of our education on the state level, we fi nd it impossible to remain voiceless on this issue.

Students must have purview over their money, and we must not be ignored in our request to see that our money is being spent responsibly. It is not acceptable to hold bodies receiving the same kind of funding to different standards. In other facets of our fee allocations, student organizations are held to very high accounting standards. It is unreasonable that UW administration has asked us to turn a blind eye to the co-mingling of student segregated fees and other revenue streams that the university takes in. Students deserve better, and it is time that this university stopped asking us to accept any less.

This column was approved by Student Services Finance Committee and authored by the following members:

Sarah Neibart ([email protected]) is a sophomore majoring in political science. She is the chair of Student Services Finance Committee.

Laura Checovich ([email protected]) is a senior majoring in political science. She is a representative on Student Services Finance Committee.

Ellie Bruecker ([email protected]) is a junior majoring in political science and sociology. She is the secretary of Student Services Finance Committee.tee.

Sarah Neibart, Laura Checovich and Ellie Bruecker

Page 5: 2012.02.22

CLASSIC MR. WIGGLES NEIL SWAAB www.neilswaab.com

BUNI RYAN PAGELOW [email protected]

RANDOM DOODLES ERICA LOPPNOW [email protected]

CLASSIC PRIMAL URGES ANDREW MEGOW [email protected]

MODERN CONSERVATIVE MOVEMENT DENIS HART [email protected]

THE SKY PIRATES COLLIN LA FLEUR [email protected]

The Kakuro Unique Sum ChartCells

2222

3333

4444

5555

6666

7777

888888888

Clue341617

672324

10112930

15163435

21223839

28294142

363738394041424344

Possibilities{ 1, 2 }{ 1, 3 }{ 7, 9 }{ 8, 9 }

{ 1, 2, 3 }{ 1, 2, 4 }{ 6, 8, 9 }{ 7, 8, 9 }

{ 1, 2, 3, 4 }{ 1, 2, 3, 5 }{ 5, 7, 8, 9 }{ 6, 7, 8, 9 }

{ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 }{ 1, 2, 3, 4, 6 }{ 4, 6, 7, 8, 9 }{ 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 }

{ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 }{ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7 }{ 3, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 }{ 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 }

{ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 }{ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8 }{ 2, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 }{ 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 }

{ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 }{ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 9 }{ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9 }{ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 9 }{ 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9 }{ 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 }{ 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 }{ 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 }{ 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 }

HERALD COMICS PRESENTS K A K U R O

DIFFICULTY: “It’s people. The Badger Herald is made of people!”

DIFFICULTY RATING:“Look, you want

‘em to just lie in the dump, rotting?”

WHAT IS THISSUDOKU

NONSENSE?Complete the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 box contains 1, 2,

3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9.What? You still don’t get it? Come, on, re-ally? It’s not calculus or anything. Honest-ly, if you don’t know how to do a sudoku by now, you’ve prob-ably got more issues than this newspaper.

HOW DO IKAKURO?

I know, I know. Kakuro. Looks crazy, right? This ain’t no time to panic, friend, so keep it cool and I’ll walk you through. Here’s the low down: each clue tells you what the sum of the numbers to the right or down must add up to. Repeating numbers? Not in this part of town. And that’s that, slick.

MADCAPS MOLLY MALONEY [email protected]

C’EST LA MORT PARAGON [email protected]

CLASSIC YOURMOMETER LAURA LEGAULT [email protected]

TWENTY POUND BABY STEPHEN TYLER CONRAD [email protected]

WHITE BREAD & TOAST MIKE BERG [email protected]

Across 1 Places for

fl ocks 5 Some sporty cars 8 Sandbox

retort13 Pizza topping15 Wide shoe

spec16 Like a perfect game,

of a sort17 Nabisco

wafer18 Monopolist’s

clothing accessory?20 Teen idol

Efron21 Like a poor

attendance23 Crewman

on the Jolly Roger

24 Designers for Microsoft Windows?

27 Blow it28 “Do Ya” rock grp.29 Blow it31 Refs. for Web

site newbies34 Brewer’s

equipment

38 Oil well fi refi ghter

Red ___41 What Martian

invaders may be intent on?

44 Martian, e.g.45 Viral phe-

nomenon on the Web

46 Assemble-it-yourself chain

47 Sleepaway, e.g.

49 Young ’un51 Really get to53 What the

backer of a failing busi-ness may do?

60 License prerequisite, often

62 “Take your time!”

63 ___ chi64 Trunk item

… or what has been put on 18-, 24-, 41- and 53-Across?

66 Moves fi rst68 King who

had the

Labyrinth built

69 Trail the pack70 “Love Train”

singers, with “the”

71 Become, eventually

72 Th at, in Toledo

73 Cause to roll in the aisles

Down 1 Schemer

called to mind by the Madoff swindle

2 Univac I predecessor

3 Word after “roger,” to a radioer

4 G, in the key of C

5 Insinuate 6 Country

singer Clark 7 Dr. for kids 8 Tiny colonist 9 Pitchfork-

wielding groups

10 Disney development

11 Gretzky, for many years

12 Bewhiskered frolicker

14 Like some French vowels

19 Where props are seen

22 Bit of math homework

25 Lipton competitor26 Beanery side

dish30 Emphatic

assent31 Monk’s title

32 WWW giant33 Stuff that can

give you a sinking

feeling?35 ___ Inside

(store sign)36 Th at ship37 “Tiny” boy39 ___ de la

Cité40 Nutritionist’s

fi g.42 Words of

generosity43 Hawks48 Huff and puff 50 It may elicit a

blessing51 Words after a knock52 Adjust, as a

corsage54 Upholstery

fabric55 Polonius’s

hiding place56 “Hasta ___”57 Item at a

95% mark-down, say

58 Country singer Tucker

59 He-man’s opposite

61 Drop ___ (moon)

65 Eerie gift67 Sleepover attire, for

short

HERALD COMICS PRESENTS

Get today’s puzzle solutions at badgerherald.com

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

13 14 15 16

17 18 19

20 21 22 23

24 25 26 27

28 29 30

31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40

41 42 43

44 45 46

47 48 49 50

51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59

60 61 62 63

64 65 66 67

68 69 70

71 72 73

Puzzle by Chris Handman

CROSSWORD

HERALD COMICS PRESENTS S U D O K U

ComicsComicsThe Badger Herald | Comics | Wednesday, February 22, 20125

Noah J. [email protected]

This Page Printed on 100% Recycled Children

Page 6: 2012.02.22

ClassifiedsClassifiedsTo place an ad in Classifieds:Roshni [email protected] ext. 311

The Badger Herald | Classifieds | Wednesday, February 22, 20126

SO to the UW plant transportation ve-hicle by almost run-ning me over twice this week, by fl oor-ing it up on to the side walk. easy now, there are plants in there.

SO to Spongebob’s face when he fi nds out Squidward likes Krabby Patties. Priceless!

SO to the guy who yelled “It’s actual-ly a guy!” when the white van turned the wrong way onto John-son Friday night. Hilarious.

SO to the poor soul who after warning us not to cut through Pop’s, ran headlong into a traff ic sign. DSO to him then yelling “that was epic!” Way to shake it off man.

SO to now accepting applications for a dirty dancing fuck fest shower party.

ASO to the UW Foot-ball player who popped my birth-day balloon friday night. You are an asshole. Way to set an example for UW Athletics. And you consider yourself a Badger.

ASO to the random guy last night who asked me how long we’d have to be dat-ing before he could touch my nose ring, FROM THE INSIDE! Sorry, no, asking to pick my nose is not an appropriate pick-up line.

SO to that slip-pery ice patch this morning on Bascom. I watched you take out three people in less than two minutes. I guess even our ice patches are over acheivers.

SO to watching Chicken Run after getting back Friday night. Who knew Mel Gibson voiced the rooster? Dirty bird

SO to the guy who was pretending the protesters were celebrating Friday. You made my day. DSO to you being really cute

SO the girl eating a block of cheese on her way to class to-day. You, my friend, are a true Wiscon-sinite.

SO to the hottie who works a Bob’s Copy Shop. I plan on buy-ing a new copy of my course reader every week just to see you bend overto pick it up.

SO to walking to class a little de-hydrated and trying to catch snowfl akes in the air with my tongue. Don’t stare at me please, I was thirsty.

SO to the guy catch-ing snowfl akes on his tongue in front of union south. You sir, are adorable :)

SO to the phrase “you do you.” I’m happy to say that my new year’s reso-lution to use that phrase more often has been very suc-cessful.

ASO to people who blow their nose in the shower. That shit echoes.

SO to liking my TA way more than my professor. DSO to the fact that my TA doesn’t seem to like my professor very much either.

SO to the guy on the bike path to-day around 12:30 who stopped to move a catipiller off of pavement. It was such a cute gesture, and you made me smile mid-run.

HMFASO to this week being so shitty it should go climb Bas-com hill, slip on a chunk of ice, slide all the way to the fucking bottom, fall into the street, get run over by a Bad-ger Bus, then be discarded in Lake Mendota never to be seen again!!!

Page 7: 2012.02.22

The Badger Herald | Classifieds | Wednesday, February 22, 2012 7

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Co-ed YMCA summer camp 45 minutes east of Madison is hir-ing college students to work with youth in beautiful camp setting. Salary, room, board provided. Male counselors/Lifeguards preferred. June 11 - August 24. Great chance to gain experi-ence working with kids. Contact: Paul, YMCA Camp MacLean, Burlington, WI 847-410-5340 or [email protected]

Johnny O’s now accepting appli-cations. Experience not manda-tory. Apply in person Thursdays between 11- 3pm.620 University ave. [email protected]

STUDENTPAYOUTS.COM. Paid Survey. Takers Needed in Madison. 100% Free to Join. Click on Surveys.

EMPLOYMENT

EMPLOYMENT

Spacious 3 bedroom apartment. Nice kitchen with lots of cup-board space. 1 block off state and 2 blocks from Humanities/ Vilas. $1500/ month includes heat and water. Quiet building with laundry/ parking available. Available 8/15/12. Call Susie 608-256-0525.

FOR RENT

DOWNTOWN/CAMPUS PARK-ING: Above and Underground Parking located on Spring, Mills, Randall, Orchard, Fahrenbrook. Flexible terms, great rates. Call 255-3933 or [email protected] today!

SO to the trio of freshman girls on the 28 this after-noon. Yes, you need a bus pass to ride any route that is not in the 80’s. Also, it was cute the way you stood in front of the back door waiting for it to magically open. At least you all looked good doing it...

ASO to the cats I hear calling to me from the future. Why you gotta be like that?

SO to ‘Dancing Dan’ aka the kid who always walks down University in shorts and a t-shirt and is rocking out to his music. You simul-taneously brighten my day and make me jealous because i don’t have that kind of confi dence.

ASO to the girl run-ning around grand central in just a towel because she “cut her leg shav-ing and had to get a band-aid from her friend’s room”. Se-riously? Put some clothes on. I remem-ber the 1st time I shaved my legs...

ASO to my broken whack-off chair. Sad day.

SO to the car on University that was blasting porn at the stop and go light.

ASO to gurgling stomachs. JG. (So Awkward)

SO to the guy walk-ing home with a case on mills st getting hit by a car, roll-ing off the hood, and getting up fi ne... without drop-ping the case. Nice.

SO to the mustache. You can only pull it off if you look good in one... especially if you’re a woman. DSO to Prof Downs.

ASO to the clocks on library mall... are any of you ever right?!?!

SO to the 3 guys i saw running to get their mail just for SI: Swimsuit. Enjoy ;)

SO to my roommate for getting a legit mullet, you are go-ing to be one hell of a wingman.

(A?)SO to the fact that it is not even 8:00 am yet and I have pretty much decided that I am going to skip most (all) of my classes today. DSO to not really caring.

Page 8: 2012.02.22

9The Badger Herald | Arts | Wednesday, February 22, 20128

Th e most famous movie stars, the biggest entertainers and the most coveted statuette all converge Sunday night for the 84th Academy Awards. Whether you made it to all of these movies in 2011 or just

tune in for the dresses, Lin and Allegra have you covered.

Imagine, for a moment,

that the Academy Awards didn’t exist. And imagine, though this might be even more of a stretch, that no other awards show — real or imagined —

popped up to fill what would admittedly be a gaping

void in the entertainment

capitalist complex. No premier red carpet event of the year for actresses

to show off their absurdly expensive gowns. No venue for overheated E! reporters to shout excitedly into the camera,

“I’m here with Topher Grace!” as if that were the crowning achievement of their journalistic careers. No sinking feeling that, well, that actually might be

the crowning achievement of their journalistic careers. No follow-up questions like, “And we hear you have some exciting news for us tonight,” as if the very thought didn’t completely blow the entire cover off the fraud that is entertainment reporting. No wondering whether the paparazzi are the ones doing it right; after all, they occasionally get original, unregurgitated stories.

No bad jokes by the irrelevant hosts during years in which the host is irrelevant; no watered-down ones during years in which the host is edgy. No reaction shots

of a best actor nominee weakly faking laughter as if he’s a community theater newbie. No suffering through the comedic shoehorning of an entire year of movies into a couple flippant comments about industry trends. No award presenters of questionable reading ability. No follow-up jokes at Scarlett Johansson’s expense. No weirdly calm voice-over reminding us that this is

Scorsese’s fi rst win. No desperate fast-talking over the swelling orchestra. No little statues made out of, what else, gold, to remind viewers just how much more famous and rich and happy and successful everyone who has even made it into that auditorium is than everyone else watching at home, and damn it, maybe if they offered solid gold awards for elementary school teaching, little Timmy wouldn’t be working as a temp and could afford to send a little

something home to his mother now and then.Yeah, that world sounds like an all-right place to be. But here’s the thing: Never in the 84-year history of the

Academy Awards has anyone been forced to watch. OK, maybe for a job. But even that, I would guess, is rare, and furthermore, those lucky enough to be paid for

consuming entertainment are really in no position to question the societal value of

that entertainment — the effectiveness of it is up for evaluation, to be sure, but claiming

that the Oscars is some sort of mirror that refl ects the ugly, stupid face of our irreparablyably rably perverted society by way of highlighting ing its ng itsrough yet gilded edges is an argument that seems like the type of smart, easy, home-run contrarian viewpoint that oh-so-rarely presents itself but then peters out into a collection of narrowly avoided run-on sentences once the writer starts to unspool the logic behind the claim.

So I won’t do that.Here’s what I’ll point out instead. Art

has an important function in our society, as does entertainment. The two don’t always coincide, but one place where they often do is the feature-length Hollywood movie. Where art’s purpose is mercurial — it captures an era or a feeling;

it provokes emotion or action; it demonstrates talent or mastery — emonstrates talent

is self-defined. entertainment’s iiit’s incredibly easy And as such, itit’

sizable budget) to (given a sisizod entertainment that create goodod

tistic value. Millions of lacks artirti will pay $12 dollars a seat people we w

n hour and a half of the stuff, for an hn hthe return on investment is and tth

tually guaranteed.virturtuThe outlook for highly artistic fi lms

and performances is much less certain, aanespecially when the entertainment value of said films is not immediately apparent. Knowing nothing other than these descriptions, which would you rather see: a new installment in a highly-successful series of edge-of-your-seat thrillers that, thanks

to a special pair of glasses, appears to protrude from a screen into the theater, or a black-and-white callback to a presumed obsolete technology that eschews spoken words for mood-setting orchestrals? I only ask because “Saw 3D” had twice the box-office take of “The Artist.”

And if not for shows like the Academy Awards,

that disparity would probably be even higher. For all its oddities and absurdities, for its multitude of problems, America’s most

talked-about awards show serves a very important function — it often manages to highlight Hollywood movies (not, generally, indies or smaller-scale production, but then, that’s not really its role) that have a higher

degree of artistic achievement than their equally entertaining peers.Imagine, for a moment, that there were no recognition for that ambition. No challenging roles taken on by

the brightest acting talents. No tricky camera shots attempted by an imaginative crew. No big event to get people talking about movies that broke that mold, to maybe encourage them to head to theaters seeking something other than surround sound, stale popcorn, random gunshots and re-hashed storylines.

What I’m saying is: The Academy Awards aren’t perfect, but they are better than the alternative.

BEST WRITING

(ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY)

VEGAS ODDS FAVOR: Midnight in Paris

It seems incredible that a movie that features an extended sequence involving bad Brazilian food, stomach discomfort in an elegant formal-wear store and, ultimately, diarrhea in the center lane of a crowded city street could be nominated for an award honoring the script writing, but here we are. “Bridesmaids,” the movie acclaimed as much for its gender boundary-bending antics as the actual comedy it contained, has secured writers Annie Mumolo and Kristen Wiig a chance at taking home a statuette in the Academy Awards’ Best Writing (Original Screenplay) category.

Wiig, a veteran of “Saturday Night Live,” has a brief list of writing credentials. In fact, “Bridesmaids” is the fi rst wide-release movie script to hit theaters for both her

and writing partner Mumolo. But they’re far from the only nominees with a short writing resume: According to IMDB, the writers of “Margin Call,” “The Artist”

and “A Separation” are each similarly inexperienced in writing feature-length American movies. Perhaps it’s no wonder, then, that none of those four

is considered the award’s frontrunner: Their inexperience in the fi eld stands in stark contrast to Woody Allen (for “Midnight in

Paris”), who has been cranking out about a script a year since the early ‘70s and has earned 15 screenplay

nominations from the Academy for his work. — L.W.

Sigrid Hubertz The Badger Herald Design

BEST PICTURE

VEGAS ODDS FAVOR: “The Artist”

If there’s a motif to this year’s Best Picture nominees, it’s movies set in the past. Of the nine nominees, only two — “The Descendants” and “Midnight in Paris” — are set in the present (and “Midnight in Paris” evokes time travel). “The Descendants,” which was filmed on location in Hawaii is an exploration of the condition of the modern family; it’s rooted in everyday drama; each of the rest are tethered to some event in (or, at least, aesthetic of) the past.

World War I is our starting point: “War Horse” is set at the outbreak and over by the time the 1920s begin. That decade brings “The Artist,” which not only locates itself in dying years

of the silent movie era but is actually about that Hollywood transition as well. “Hugo” is set in Paris, pre-World War II, and presents quite an interesting juxtaposition when

its portrayal of childhood is compared to the 1950s life in “Tree of Life” (which, speaking of past, famously fl ashes back to the beginning of the universe). A

look into race relations lets “The Help” takes care of the ‘60s, and then there’s a little jump forward to “Extremely Loud & Incredibly

Close” — set in the aftermath of September 11 and “Moneyball,” which chronicles the 2002

Oakland A’s. — L.W.

BEST DIRECTOR

VEGAS ODDS FAVOR: “The Artist” Michel Hazanavicius

Although Michel Hazanavicius’ “The Artist” likely will be the major winner of the night, at fi rst glance it seems the director just got incredibly lucky with the screenplay. The

Parisian writer/director had only three feature fi lms under his belt before taking on “The Artist,” and they weren’t exactly fi lms worth boasting about. Hazanavicius’ previous claim to fame was the OSS 117 series, two “Austin Powers”-esque spy fi lms featuring none other

than the suave Jean Dujardin as the karate-chopping, bon mot-dropping OSS 117. Both fi lms (“Cairo, Nest of Spies” and “Lost in Rio”) are, in a word, ridiculous, and a far cry from the “wonder of the age” the Los Angeles Times proclaimed “The Artist” to be.

So how could Hazanavicius have achieved such success with his latest film? By writing a screenplay without spoken dialogue. Had “The Artist” not been

a silent film, Hazanavicius could never have used French-speaking Jean Dujardin alongside the incredibly American John Goodman, nor, I

daresay, would an American audience have had any desire to sit through a foreign fi lm. But Hazanavicius found success with

“The Artist” because it had just the amount of French Americans like: thin moustaches, berets and

melodrama. — A.D.

BEST ACTRESS IN A

LEADING ROLE

VEGAS ODDS FAVOR: Viola Davis in “The Help”

Based on the number of “Viola should have won” tweets after the Golden Globes, fans of the actress from “The Help” will rejoice should she take home the Oscar. If the Academy caves to popular sentiment and declares Davis the Best Leading Actress, her Academy Award nominations-to-wins ratio will be 2:1. But should Davis win this year, Meryl Streep’s Academy Award nominations-to-wins ratio will be 17:2.

Although Streep has been resoundingly declared the best living actress and has received a record number of both Academy Award and Golden Globe nominations, she has not taken

home the Oscar since 1982. After awarding her Best Actress for “Sophie’s Choice,” it seems the Academy felt that nominations were reward enough: Streep was nominated for

a whopping 13 awards after that year and didn’t win a single one. This year she’s nominated for playing Margaret Thatcher in “The Iron Lady,” and although her

portrayal is uncanny, the unpopularity of her subject and too-sweeping nature of the screenplay may damn her to yet another polite

consolation smile. Particulars aside, it’s high time the Academy put its money where its mouth is and give the poor

woman the award she deserves. — A.D.

BEST WRITING

(ADAPTED SCREENPLAY)

VEGAS ODDS FAVOR: “The Descendants”

The writing process for “The Ides of March” must have seemed like two projects in one. The fi rst, a traditional movie script for a tense thriller set in the well-trod trenches of the battleground state primaries, was credited as an adaptation of the play “Farragut North.” In a 2008 review, a reviewer for The New York Times called the play “predictable but enjoyable,” and wondered whether the trite dialogue was an intentional nod to the fact that politicians and their campaign supervisors are themselves continuously trying to fit a mold. That question is rendered a little moot by the second facet of Clooney, Heslov and Willimon’s script: sweepingly overt nods to Barack

Obama’s campaign strategies — a populist outsider persona familiar right down to the high contrast poster.

That script is just one of two appearances in the best adapted screenplay nominees for Clooney, but the other comes in the style of a cameo. Clooney is

the lead in category frontrunner “The Descendants,” a performance for which he’s nominated for the best actor statuette. That fi lm, as well

as the other four, were each adapted from books, with dark horse pick “Moneyball” the sole entry from a work of

non-fiction (Michael Lewis’ 2003 book of the same name). — L.W.

BEST ACTOR IN A

LEADING ROLE

VEGAS ODDS FAVOR: Jean Dujardin in “The Artist” Although many may know Gary Oldman only as Sirius Black in the “Harry Potter”

series or as James Gordon in “Batman Begins” and “The Dark Knight,” the British actor enjoyed a whirlwind career in the ‘90s, playing such roles as Sid Vicious in “Sid and Nancy,” Lee Harvey Oswald in “JFK” and Ivan Korshunov in “Air Force One.” The actor has appeared in more than 40 movies but is just receiving his fi rst Academy Award nod with a nomination for Best Leading Actor for the role of George Smiley in “Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy.”

And does he deserve it. Although audience members may not agree on what actually happened in the hazy novel-based spy thriller, they did agree

that Oldman’s performance was one for the books, with The New York Times hailing the actor’s role of Smiley as “played with delicacy and

understated power.” Oldman was nominated for 17 different best actor awards for the role, but he was only awarded by two

organizations thus far. With the Academy Awards as the fi nal pending nomination, Oldman is likely ready

to have saved the best in his 30-year career for last. —A.D.

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thththththtOOObObObO

cocoooo

nnnnnn

ANDSUPPORTING ACTOR -

SUPPORTING ACTRESS - FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM - ANIMATED

FEATURE - DOCUMENTARY (FEATURE) - DOCUMENTARY (SHORT) - LIVE ACTION

SHORT - ANIMATED SHORT - ORIGINAL SCORE - ORIGINAL SONG - SOUND EDITING - SOUND MIXING - ART DIRECTION - MAKEUP - FILM EDITING - CINEMATOGRAPHY - COSTUME DESIGN - VISUAL EFFECTS

6:00 p.m. Sunday on ABC

Demián Bichir in “A Better Life”

George Clooney in “The Descendants”

Jean Dujardin in “The Artist”

Gary Oldman in “Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy”

Brad Pitt in “Moneyball”

Lin WeeksArtsEtc. Editor

“The Artist”

“The Descendants”

“Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close”

“The Help”

“Hugo”

“Midnight in Paris”

“Moneyball”

“Tree of Life”

“War Horse”

Glenn Close in “Albert Nobbs”

Viola Davis in “The Help”

Rooney Mara in “The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo”

Meryl Streep in “The Iron Lady”

Michelle Williams in “My Week with Marilyn”

“The Artist” (Michel Hazanavicius)

“Bridesmaids” (Annie Mumolo and Kristen Wiig)

“Margin Call” (J.C. Chandor)

“Midnight in Paris” (Woody Allen)

“A Separation” (Asghar Farhadi)

“The Artist” Michel Hazanavicius

“The Descendants” Alexander Payne

“Hugo” Martin Scorsese

“Midnight in Paris” Woody Allen

“The Tree of Life” Terrence Malick

“The Descendants” (Alexander Payne, Nat Faxon and Jim Rash)

“Hugo” (John Logan)

“The Ides of March” (George Clooney, Grant Heslov and Beau Willimon)

“Moneyball” (Steven Zaillian and Aaron Sorkin, story by Stan Chervin)

“Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy” (Bridget O’Connor and Peter Straughan)

Page 9: 2012.02.22

The Badger Herald | Sports | Wednesday, February 22, 201210

that advantage.”Perhaps knowing

the fact that they have been mathematically eliminated from finishing in the top six will take the pressure off of the Badgers, no longer needing to play catch up from so many points back in the standings.

“You have to be in that mindset, it’s do or die as an underdog,” Little said. “Most people have heard that analogy of a dog kind

of backed into a corner and you do everything you can to fi ght and claw your way out. I think you might have a little more fight to you when you’re the underdog.”

While Eaves doesn’t shy away from using the underdog label he also wants to make sure his team doesn’t abandon principle and still recognizes the value of working to improve game by game.

“There is a mindset of being a spoiler but

really it’s the way you’re perceiving it.” Eaves said. “This group of young people and the coaching staff, they know where they have come from since the beginning of the year. They know the direction in which they are going, and that excites them. That is what keeps pushing us to come out here and bury ourselves on the ice and battle with each other because we still have a sense that we know we’re becoming a better team day by day.”

UW set for matchup with in-state rival MU

Fredrik Ask leads the Badgers singles play with a 2-0 record at the No. 1 singles spot and holds an overall 2-1 record. Ask pairs up with Billy Bertha in doubles play where the duo is currently undefeated with a 3-0 record.

UW Athletics

The Badgers will try to snatch their fi rst win since January as they face the Marquette Golden Eagles Feb. 22 at the Nielsen Tennis Stadium.

The Badgers got their season off to a fast 2-0 start but have been winless in their last three matches. Although all three of their recent opponents have been ranked in the top 30, Wisconsin sits at 2-3 heading into its meeting with Marquette.

Head coach Greg Van Emburgh is confident that Wisconsin will stay positive heading into the match. His team has narrowed the gap in each of its losses since they were shut out against a talented Notre Dame squad Feb. 10.

“It seems like we’ve improved; I know we’ve improved a great deal from playing Notre Dame to now playing our last match against Georgia Tech,” Van Emburgh said. “I think we’re right on track, and I think we’re starting to play better and starting to realize that we have the potential, and we’re gaining the confidence for the match against Marquette.”

A consistent bright spot for the Badgers this season has been the play of the doubles teams. Wisconsin has secured the doubles point in four of five matches this season and is looking to translate that success into the singles matches as well.

Junior captain Billy Bertha and sophomore Fredrik Ask have been the backbone of the doubles

teams, winning all five of their matches this season. The duo most recently defeated Georgia Tech’s Kevin King and Juan Spir, the No. 2 doubles team in the nation.

Ask arrived in Madison just last January from Oslo, Norway, but that has not stopped him and Bertha from accumulating victories. When questioned about the team’s success, Bertha attributed it to chemistry.

“I think we mesh well

together,” Bertha said. “He’s a lefty, I’m a righty. We’re friends off the court. I think both of our games complement each other well.”

“I think we have a good chemistry on the court,” Ask added. “We have different strengths. We’ll see how far we can go.”

Although the Badgers are excelling in doubles, the opposite can be said about their singles play, as the team has recorded just two

singles victories during their current three-match losing streak.

Wisconsin should be especially alert for its matchup against Marquette freshman Cameron Tehrani. The Arizona native has posted seven straight victories in singles play and currently owns a 10-4 overall record through the early part of the season.

Van Emburgh expects Wisconsin to make the most of its singles opportunities against Marquette.

“I’m really hoping that everybody comes out with a strong desire to win some singles matches tomorrow,” said Van Emburgh. “That’s the one thing we’ve been stressing

a lot in our team meetings and in practices — to start finishing those singles matches when we’re in a position to win.”

Home court advantage means a lot to both teams. Both Marquette and Wisconsin are undefeated at home, but have yet to earn a win outside their respective stadiums.

Van Emburgh said playing at home should allow the Badgers to regroup after a tough weekend on the road.

“I think it’s always great to play here on your home court,” Van Emburgh said. “Obviously we were away playing a couple of away matches, so we’re glad to be back.”

Marquette should not pose as looming a

threat as the previous opponents. While the Golden Eagles are 5-3 on the season, none of those wins are against ranked teams.

Playing an in-state rival may provide additional incentive for Wisconsin, especially given the team’s previous successes against Marquette. The Badgers have yet to fall to the Golden Eagles since the 2001-2002 campaign, as UW has recorded four shutouts over MU in that span of time.

Ask was not hesitant to verbalize his thoughts on his next opponent.

“We should probably try to beat them as much as possible,” Ask said. “We don’t like them too much.”

UNDERDOG, from 12

Struggling singles play will prove important against 5-3 Golden EaglesLee GordonSports Writer

Page 10: 2012.02.22

The Badger Herald | Sports | Wednesday, February 22, 2012 11

While the UW women’s hockey team has the Western Collegiate Hockey Association’s best scoring offense to hang its hat on, it also boasts a stingy defense that will be a crucial piece on its journey to repeat as NCAA champions.

Despite giving up a season high-four goals on Saturday to Ohio State, the Badgers’ defense normally doesn’t make life easy for opposing teams. The team has the No. 2 scoring defense in the WCHA with 50 goals allowed and a penalty kill percentage of 88.6 percent, good for first in the conference.

Sophomore defenseman Kelly Jaminski, who has played in all 34 games this season, attributes the defense’s success to the depth and chemistry of the squad.

“We have depth on defense, which is great, and we all have really great chemistry as a defensive unit,” Jaminski said. “To have the extra help with the girls that we have when we are all healthy really helps.”

The Badgers boast nine defensemen on their roster, all of whom have played in at least 20 games this season.

The defense’s depth became more pronounced Feb. 11, as junior defenseman Stefanie McKeough returned to the depth chart at St. Cloud after being sidelined by an injury since the end of January.

Head coach Mark Johnson is happy to have McKeough back in the lineup and is equally

Saige Pacholok has only missed four games this season, but boasts a plus-22 on the ice combined with 32 blocked shots. Pacholok only has three points this season on one goal and two assists.

Noah Willman The Badger Herald

Badger ‘D’ no longer unheralded heroineGoing largely unnoticed, as any good defense does, extreme depth on defense key to Wisconsin’s success

Wisconsin sideline with his always-entertaining faces.

But there’s just one problem. As Wisconsin faces unfamiliar teams from conferences like the ACC and Big East with entirely different styles of play, its ability to defend the shot will probably be a greater challenge. Additionally, post powers such as Michigan State’s Draymond Green and Ohio State’s Jared Sullinger have confi rmed Badgers fans’ fear that their team has no answer to high-percentage scorers who get their points near the hoop.

Wisconsin has managed to eek out wins when the shots aren’t falling — against Minnesota (35.8 percent), Nebraska (31.3) and Penn State the fi rst time around (35.4) — but it’s no coincidence that those squads stand respectively at No. 9, 11 and 12 in the Big Ten race. It remains impressive and serves as a testament to Ryan’s coaching that, even without the much-anticipated scoring output from preseason All-American Taylor, UW remains in the conference title race this late in the year.

It’s been a season of highs and lows, with nights of stellar shooting and ones where it seemed like a plastic shell guarded the rim. Such streaky shooting teams simply aren’t the ones that fi nd themselves on historical, thrilling rides in the NCAA men’s basketball tournament.

Ian is a junior majoring in journalism. Think he’s nothing more than a pessimist who sees the worst in every Badgers’ team, regardless of sports? Let him know by tweeting @imccue.

MCCUE, from 12

shots — whether for themselves or a teammate.

“It doesn’t necessarily mean you’ve got to shoot it, but if you’re a threat or you make other things happen, you can get other guys better shots,” Close said.

Perhaps the biggest benefactor of the more aggressive mindset was Josh Gasser. UW’s fifth-leading scorer in conference play with 7.3 points per game, the sophomore guard hadn’t scored more than nine points since mid-January prior to Sunday. Gasser also endured three straight games where he shot less than 37 percent from the fi eld.

Nevertheless, Gasser caught fire quickly against the Nittany Lions, scoring 11 points before halftime and finishing with a team-high 15. All but one of his shots came from behind the 3-point arc,

from where he was 3-for-5 on the night. Collectively, Gasser’s effort seemed to be contagious

“I think once [Gasser] got hot, other guys started knocking down shots,” guard Ben Brust said. “Sometimes all it takes is one person to get it going. You kind of feed off it.”

Gasser also finished a perfect 6-for-6 from the free throw line, and his vigor in getting there also struck a chord with his teammates. Foul shooting has fallen in line behind 3-point marksmanship on the list of Wisconsin’s recent inconsistencies, but not by way of percentages. Sometimes, the Badgers just don’t attempt many.

In that loss to Ohio State Feb. 4, Wisconsin was forced to play from behind for much of the game. Consequently, Taylor carried the team, but he took only three free throws. Taylor made all of them, but the fi rst he attempted didn’t come until 6:46 remained in the game and UW was trailing by six points.

The good news for the

Badgers is that in the three games since that loss, they’ve attempted no fewer than 14 in each.

“In a lot of cases, you have to take what the defense gives you,” Close said. “If the defense is just going to sag all the way around the basket and give you open shots, then you’re going to have to make some to make them come out and create lanes to drive. But we’ve always wanted to be not only a balanced team inside and out, but also a balanced team with a lot of guys scoring. When we are, we’re a little more effective.”

DIVIDENDS, from 12

Spencer SmithSports Writer

pleased with the play of the defense through the regular season, crediting the play of the entire team with its defensive success.

“It was good to get her back and get her in tune with her game,” Johnson said. “Certainly she has been a big part of our success, so to have her back is a real bonus.

“Usually when you have good defense, it’s a combination of a team effort: the forwards’ willingness to back check, the defensemen doing a lot of little things right and the consistency at the goaltender position.”

Along with the chemistry and depth that the defense has in its arsenal, most of the defensemen have the experience of playing the best teams and on the biggest stages in women’s

hockey. Seven of the nine current defensemen were on the roster on the championship team last year.

The experience from last year’s success plays as an advantage for the Badgers going into this year’s playoffs.

“Playing against the top girls like Boston University was great for us,” Jaminski said. “The experience has definitely carried over this year. We know what it takes and how hard we have to work.”

Wisconsin is coming off a rare loss against Ohio State this past Saturday, a game where the team gave up four goals — tied for the most they have given up all season.

Junior defenseman Saige Pacholok said she hopes that the loss will give them

something to build off of going into the playoffs this coming weekend.

“I think [the loss] will humble us a little bit,” Pacholok said. “I think it kind of wakes us up and says we have to work hard for every game and be ready for every game.”

Wisconsin kicks off the postseason this weekend with a best-of-three series against Minnesota State.

With only three wins this year, Minnesota State sits in last place in the WCHA. The Mavericks have lost to the Badgers four times this season by a combined 17 goals.

After giving up only three goals in those four games to MSU, the Badger defense hopes to keep up their success against the Mavericks this weekend.

Pacholok, however,

knows it won’t be easy.“In the playoffs, people

will be coming a lot harder,” Pacholok said. “[Minnesota State] will be playing for their lives this weekend.”

While the outstanding play of the defense this year may have been overshadowed by the Badgers’ high-powered offensive attack and the great season that Alex Rigsby is having tending goal, the defensive unit doesn’t mind being the unsung heroes of the team.

“They always say if you’re not noticed as a defense, that’s probably a good thing,” Pacholok said. “That means we are doing our job and taking care of the puck. It’s great that we don’t have too much of the spotlight. We are strong as a core, and that is all that matters to be successful.”

Page 11: 2012.02.22

In a sport as fickle as basketball, where shot attempts customarily rim in and out, lengthy discussions of inconsistent shooting efforts don’t come often.

Sometimes, the shots fall. Other times, they don’t. For the Wisconsin men’s basketball team, coached by the whimsical Bo Ryan, the dialogue rarely extends further than that.

“[We have a] lot of shooters,” Ryan said before cracking a brief half-grin. “It’s the makers that are hard to fi nd, sometimes.”

Proverbial as that soundbyte sounds, Ryan’s words accurately depict Wisconsin’s offensive production through the majority of Big Ten play. The Badgers, en route to their current fourth-

place conference standing entering Thursday’s road trip to Iowa, have had games featuring both offensive bliss and downright puzzling ineffi ciency from the fl oor.

In the Big Ten opener Dec. 27, Wisconsin made more than 50 percent of its shots from both overall and from 3-point range. Four days later, while hosting those very Hawkeyes they’ll face Thursday night, the Badgers shot just 34.8 percent from the floor and made only three of their 28 3-point attempts.

The up-and-down offensive efforts have UW ranked 11th of 12 teams in the Big Ten in field goal percentage (42.3 percent) but fi fth in 3-point shooting (35.7 percent).

Against the Hawkeyes — the conference’s worst defense in terms of both points allowed (72.1 per

game) and opposing field goal percentage (45.4 percent) — the Badgers are obviously eyeing a strong offensive showing. But alas, the last time they faced Iowa — at home, no less — they shot just 34.8 percent from the floor and needed 69 shot attempts to score 65 points.

“Shooting’s a funny thing,” Ryan said. “But if you’re on the court and they’re open, you’ve got to take them.”

After last Sunday’s victory over Penn State, Wisconsin’s players were lauding exactly that — a renewed focus on not passing up open shots out of fear of a miss. The Badgers shot 42.6 percent from the floor against the Nittany Lions and made half of their 3-point attempts, while also adding 14-of-17 shooting from the free throw line to the mix.

According to assistant coach Gary Close, the hesitancy — which most recently reared its head in losses to top-10 teams Michigan State and Ohio State — sometimes stems from the Badgers falling into the trap of merely watching their scoring leader and point guard, Jordan Taylor.

“I thought we did a better job of being a little more aggressive offensively,” Close said of the Penn State game. “When you have a great point guard like we got, sometimes — not even planned — you kind of stop and take a look and watch. You’ve got to try to get away from that. I thought we moved the ball better and cut a little better.”

The result, Close said, was the Badgers creating more high-percentage

ice teams will want to play us if we get hot because we can be dangerous, and I don’t think our standing has showed what we are as a team.”

But being the lower-seeded team isn’t always a bad thing. It offers all kinds of incentives to win that

a first place team never has the chance to revel in. If anything, the top-seeded teams are expected to win and if they don’t, the season is viewed as a disappointment.

“Personally I like [being the underdog],” junior forward Ryan Little said. “It

gives you that little extra fire and maybe the chance a team takes you lightly. I like being in that spot as opposed to being expected to win.”

Playing as the underdog also has a unique set of emotions of its own.

“In one sense it can fire

up your own team, and kind of gives you a little more determination and desire,” Zengerle said. “In the other spectrum, maybe a team will go in taking us lightly, especially in their own rink and they think they have

SSPORTSPORTSSports EditorElliot [email protected]

The Badger Herald | Sports | Wednesday, February 22, 201212

No need to fear, underdog is here

Mark Zengerle and the rest of the Badgers have found themselves eliminated from home ice in the playoffs, but believe their underdog mentality will make them a dangerous team to host.

Noah Willman The Badger Herald

UNDERDOG, page 10

DIVIDENDS, page 11Ben Brust made a name for himself early in the season, coming off the bench and providing UW with some much-needed offense. Brust averages 8.2 points per game, good for fourth on the team.

Megan McCormick The Badger Herald

Aggressive shooting pays dividends

The role of underdog is a precarious one at best. At worst, the underdog loses like it’s supposed to, maybe blown out by a superior opponent. But at its best, the underdog is the role that movies are made of, the Cinderella that everyone hopes will show up and perform the unexpected.

Some underdogs carry more weight than others and are remembered as legends for eternity, while some are appreciated for a moment and forgotten.

The Wisconsin men’s hockey team isn’t going to upset the Russians in the Olympics like Team USA did in 1980 and have Disney buy the movie rights, but regardless of what is to come for the Wisconsin men’s hockey team, it is officially in the underdog role for the fi nal two regular season series at Bemidji State and Minnesota, as well as the WCHA playoffs.

The Badgers have won just one road game all season, but with Saturday’s win over No. 10 Denver, Wisconsin has six victories against teams that are ranked -- or have otherwise received votes in this week’s

USA Today or USCHO.com’s national rankings -- and is confident heading into the final stretch of the season.

“As a player and coach you find yourself in this role at some point in your career, and it’s one that you watch these kids practice today and what they sensed on Saturday and what they felt as a team,” head coach Mike Eaves said. “It’s just, maybe we are starting to play our best hockey of the year. Then we have to take that into some tough environment and win on the road. There is just the thought that our best hockey is yet to come.”

The underdog role isn’t completely unfamiliar for this team. Just a season ago the Badgers finished seventh in the WCHA standing, just one point behind Colorado College and the top six spots that earn a home ice playoff series in the first round of the WCHA playoffs.

The Badgers managed to steal game one against Colorado College 3-1 and held third period leads in game two and three before falling in overtime in each. This season, Wisconsin is tied for 10th place in the WCHA standings and has already been eliminated from home ice contention.

“We were a good team [last year]; we were pretty dangerous, and it’s kind of similar to this [year],” sophomore center Mark Zengerle said. “I don’t know if one of those home

Embracing longshot status, UW hopes to get hot in fi nal 2 series of season

Brett SommersStatistics Editor

Badgers shed hesitancy en route to offensive awakening after string of inconsistencies

Streaky shooting dangerous trend for March Madness

Something strange happened Sunday on the Kohl Center fl oor as Wisconsin brought down a pesky Penn State squad 52-46.

The rare and recently absent occurrence was that the Badgers fi nally proved they hadn’t completely lost their stroke. They could still hit 15-footers from the fl oor and build a lasting rhythm from beyond the 3-point arc. While Wisconsin fans may have released a long sigh of relief after the Badgers netted 48 percent of their shots in the fi rst half from the fl oor and 42.6 percent

in the game, it cemented the fact that UW will only go as far as its shooting takes it as March Madness grows nearer.

The solid shooting performance against the Nittany Lions followed a fi ve-game stretch during which Bo Ryan’s squad averaged a fi eld goal percentage a hair under 37 percent. That undesired run was capped by a beatdown in East Lansing at Michigan State when Wisconsin sunk just 34 percent of its shots. If fans learned anything in these games when they weren’t busy throwing objects at their televisions, it was the vulnerability that any team that relies so heavily on outside shooting suffers from.

Although the Badgers are well on their way to another overachieving season — locking up their 20th victory Sunday and currently sitting at

fourth in the Big Ten standings — don’t expect a deep tournament run. An opening round win is nearly a sure bet, as Wisconsin is projected by ESPN’s Joe Lunardi to earn a No. 4 seed and likely won’t be any lower than a fi fth seed. However, its streakiness shooting the rock will likely spell doom in the one-and-done NCAA Tournament.

Perhaps the hot shooting against Penn State — which included fi ve straight 3-pointers by the Badgers midway through the fi rst half — was just the beginning of a hot-handed run that will have Jordan Taylor & Co. dancing through one of the most unpredictable events in sports. But count me out of that optimistic group.

Unless Taylor channels last year’s “let me take care of this one, fellas” mentality and starts once

again hitting outrageous threes with a defender in his face, the quality teams the Badgers are bound to face in March know the key to shutting down the Wisconsin offense is to take away open outside looks. The only way to avoid such a fate is if a player like Ryan Evans or Mike Bruesewitz rediscovers an offensive rhythm and proves they are a consistent, dangerous threat from outside.

If history is any indication of how Wisconsin will fare in the all-important season fi nale, then Ryan’s team is bound to have a night where the net eludes them and his team struggles through costly scoring droughts. Since the Badgers started playing competitive teams, which, by my estimation, started with Bradley (sorry Kennesaw State), they have never managed to string together

more than four games in a row shooting at least 40 percent from the fi eld. That stretch itself came against the rather underwhelming likes of UW-Milwaukee, Savannah State, Mississippi Valley State and Big Ten bottom-feeder Nebraska.

Even more disheartening is that, since conference play began Dec. 27, the Badgers have not put together more than two consecutive games where they nailed at least 40 percent of their jumpers. And it’s not like sinking four out of every 10 shots is a proven formula for victory. It’s respectable, but not exactly lighting up the court (for comparison, Creighton leads the nation with a stellar 51.1 percent clip from the fl oor).

What’s kept Wisconsin in the top 25 polls this season is something that has become a staple of

Ryan-coached teams — defense. More specifi cally, refusing to give up easy, uncontested looks to opponents and forcing gritty, often ugly defensive battles. After leading the nation in fi eld goal percentage defense for much of the year, the Badgers currently rank fi fth by holding opponents to a 37.4 conversion rate and also lead the nation in scoring defense.

The ability to slow down even the most fl eet-footed of offenses can be credited to ability of players like Evans and Jared Berggren — who leads the team with 45 blocks on the year — to step up on the defensive end of the fl oor. Defense is an aspect of the game UW fans have learned to respect after seeing their team appear in the NCAA tournament all 10 seasons Ryan has colored the

Ian McCueRight on Cue

MCCUE, page 11

Mike FiammettaSenior Sports Writer