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University of Wisconsin-Madison Complete campus coverage since 1892 dailycardinal.com Weekend, March 2-4, 2012l
“…the great state University of Wisconsin should ever encourage that continual and fearless sifting and winnowing by which alone the truth can be found.”
The hunger gamesON CAMPUS
The La Follette School Student Association hosted a dinner to portay what it says is an inequality of wealth in the country. Attendees were randomly served meals ranging from very simple food to fine dining, with most receiving the former and a small percentage receiving the latter. +Photo by Abigail Waldo
Official: Ward feared lawsuit from adidasSaid the company threatened to sue if chancellor gave 90 days’ noticeBy Alex DiTullioThe Daily CarDinal
UW-Madison Chancellor David Ward decided to enter a negotiation period with adidas out of fear that giving the compa-ny a 90-day ultimatum to remedy its alleged labor violations would result in the company suing the university, according to Labor Licensing Policy Committee Chair Lydia Zepeda.
For the past two weeks, members of UW-Madison’s pri-mary licensing advisory com-mittee have criticized Ward’s decision to disregard its rec-ommendation to give adidas 90 days’ notice. This strategy, LLPC members said, would
pressure the company to pay workers laid off from an Indonesian factory contracted by adidas that closed in 2011.
In an e-mail to Zepeda Feb. 14, UW-Madison’s Senior Legal Counsel Brian Vaughan said adidas contested the applicabil-ity of the code of conduct—which outlines a company’s responsi-bilities in dealing with work-ers, factories and suppliers—to the issue of severance pay. Under such “unique” situations, Vaughan said the university is contractually obligated to medi-ate with the contesting party.
Zepeda said in recent dis-cussions with Ward, however, the chancellor offered a differ-ent motive for the decision. According to her, Ward said adi-das threatened to sue the uni-versity if it gave the company 90 days’ notice.
Zepeda and other members of the committee said putting
Officials look to change rules for moped parking on campus
Former UW-Madison Chancellor Biddy Martin will return to Madison March 3 to discuss the impact of new tech-nologies on university education and instruction.
Martin, who resigned from her position at UW-Madison last July, has since become the first female president of Amherst College, a liberal arts school in Massachusetts.
The Madison Civics Club is hosting the event, which
will take place at the Menona Terrace Convention Center at 11 a.m. Tickets will cost $20 for students and $30 for members of the public.
Founded in 1912 to promote woman’s suffrage, the MCC has invited other prominent female professionals to speak, most recently Washington Week Managing Editor Gwen Ifill and Department of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano, to cel-ebrate its centennial.
Martin returning for talk in Madison
Former Chancellor Biddy Martin will speak at an event hosted by the Madison Civics Club at the Monona Terrace Saturday.
MATT MArheiNe/CarDinal File PhoTo
Uncertain future for GOP mining bill
By Anna DuffinThe Daily CarDinal
UW-Madison Transportation Services is working on an ini-tiative that would discourage students from driving mopeds from class to class throughout the day, officials said Thursday.
Transportation Services Director Patrick Kass said part of the initiative includes a new policy for moped parking, where students would buy a permit for a specific lot rather than park-ing in the lot nearest to their destination. There would be sev-eral lots available across campus open to all permit-holders.
Kass said UW-Madison has the largest number of moped users of any college campus in the nation, with nearly 1,800 moped parking permits issued this school year.
The large ridership leads
to increased traffic, which Student Transportation Board member Laura Checovich said can be dangerous.
“I think the amount of conges-tion we see leads to very danger-ous situations,” Checovich said. “Getting mopeds off the streets during passing times will really improve what we see on campus.”
In the past year, there have been 96 reported accidents involving mopeds on campus, including one Monday involving a biker and a moped driver on the 1600 block of Linden Drive, resulting in the biker being sent to a nearby hospital.
But sophomore Wisconsin football player Michael Trotter said driving a moped is no dif-ferent from driving any other motor vehicle and as long as the driver is not reckless, it is not necessarily dangerous.
Trotter said the additional travel time required to walk to the designated moped lot could make it difficult for ath-letes to quickly get from class to practice or a meeting in a short time.
“At the end of the day, classes can end at 2:15 and we have to be at meetings dressed by 2:30, so we don’t really have time to walk to a lot that’s even just five to 10 minutes away,” Trotter said.
But Checovich said having a specific parking spot could help students better manage their time.
“I think once you have a set parking spot that you know you’re going to, you’re going to be able to plan better to make sure that you know where you need to be and when in order to get to all of your activities on time,” Checovich said.
By Adam WollnerThe Daily CarDinal
Wisconsin Republicans’ goal of passing a bill easing mining restrictions by the end of the legislative session could be in jeopardy after state Sen. Dale Schultz, R-Richland Center, said he would not support the most recent version of the legis-lation Wednesday.
State Sen. Alberta Darling, R-River Hills, and state Rep. Robin Vos, R-Burlington,
attempted to craft a compromise to appeal to Schultz after he raised concerns over the lack of environmental protections and public input in the Assembly’s version of the bill, which passed in January.
Republicans, who have argued changing regulations on mining in northern Wisconsin will create thousands of new jobs, need Schultz to vote for the bill because they only hold a one-seat majority in the Senate.
No Democrats support the bill because they say it does not allow for enough public input on mining activity and the lowered environmental regulations would threaten fragile ecosystems.
Darling and Vos said they believed their proposal struck the right balance by allowing mining to thrive in the state while taking environmental
mining page 3
adidas page 3
Ward’s ‘hairy’ situation
+PAGE TWO
The end is nearSeniors Jordan Taylor and rob Wilson will play their last regular-season game Saturday. + SPOrTS, page 8
An independent student newspaper, serving the University of Wisconsin-Madison
community since 1892
Volume 122, Issue 302142 Vilas Communication Hall
821 University AvenueMadison, Wis., 53706-1497
(608) 262-8000 • fax (608) 262-8100
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© 2012, The Daily Cardinal Media Corporation
ISSN 0011-5398
Corrections or clarifications? Call The Daily Cardinal office at 608-262-8000 or send an e-mail to [email protected].
For the record
Editorial BoardMatt Beaty • Nick Fritz
Kayla Johnson • Jacqueline O’ReillySteven Rosenbaum • Nico Savidge
Ariel Shapiro • Samantha Witthuhn
Board of DirectorsMelissa Anderson, President
Kayla Johnson • Nico Savidge Parker Gabriel • John Surdyk
Janet Larson • Nick Bruno Jenny Sereno • Chris Drosner
Jason Stein • Nancy Sandy
Editor in ChiefKayla Johnson
Managing EditorNico Savidge
l
page two2 Weekend, March 2-4, 2012 dailycardinal.com
SATuRDAy:mostly cloudyhi 36º / lo 23º
TODAy:rain/snow mix hi 40º / lo 26º
Chancellor Ward beginning to look curiously similar to GandalfBy Timothy McCorgiFake neWs Friday
A man seen Thursday after-noon, lounging on a bench patiently waiting for the 80 bus and sporting “the most awe-inspiring beard ever seen,” was confirmed by University Communications to be Chancellor David Ward.
Ward has not been seen in pub-lic since Feb. 2, where indeed the Chancellor saw his shadow much to the student body’s delight.
Press conferences have been attended by the Chancellor’s official body double. The resemblance is uncanny, but the double does have a mole on his left ear that makes the distinction quite easy.
What the Chancellor has been doing with his spare time has led to much speculation in the University’s tabloid paper, “The Badger Herald.” Some believed he may follow in the footsteps of Biddy Martin and seek to become the next presi-
dent of Amherst College. Others believed he was on a personal visit to Indonesia to personally inspect the Adidas situation.
However, the Chancellor sighting Thursday provided with the campus the answer they have been waiting for: he was growing a really sweet beard.
Onlookers report that the mustache portion of the beard resembled that of imperial offi-cers in the Napoleonic Age with an upward twirl.
Jeff Hanson, a UW-senior recounted that “the beard itself
just cascaded off his face like a waterfall of wisdom. I couldn’t handle it, I had to avert my eyes to keep myself from just standing there in awe.”
The beard effect wasn’t exclu-sive to Hanson. After sitting down for only five minutes, a small crowd formed around him keeping 15 feet away.
Chancellor Ward explained his motivation while sipping his afternoon tea. “I wanted to grow a beard, so I did. What are they going to do, fire me?” he said.
Park street sign becoming increasingly aggressive with innocent pedestrians
Despite what may have seemed like a normal day here at UW-Madison, Wednesday didn’t actually happen. Why? Because it wasn’t real.
Leap Day is a phenom-enon that occurs every four years, but somehow people manage to forget that Feb. 29 simply isn’t a real day. Dr. Barry Burns explained the phenomenon Thursday.
“When you think about it, though, its quite simple,” Burns said. “Look back at last year and the year before that, and you will see that Feb. 29 wasn’t a day. It just didn’t exist. So how can there be a Feb. 29 this year? It just logi-cally couldn’t have existed.”
Todd Stevenson, how-ever, was disappointed and taken aback by the news.
“But Wednesday was so happenin’! It was like totally the best day of the week!” Stevenson said Thursday in teary-eyed denial.
—Ivana Humpalot
SuNDAy:flurrieshi 33º / lo 19º
Doctor declares leap day not a real day
Ward spotted sporting a new do
PhoTo CourTesy of anonyMous onlooker
after weeks of wondering about Chancellor Ward’s whereabouts, students spotted him waiting for the 80 and sporting a new look.
The voice of the stop light on the corner of University and Park, known for alerting pedestrians that it is safe to cross Park Street, has been suspended until further notice after several incidents that have occurred during the past few days.
The voice had—up until recent-ly—only said that “the walk sign is on to cross Park”. Since last Monday, however, numerous people reported to have heard him insult-ing those around him and yelling obscenities at people who didn’t cross the intersection on time.
The victims of his rants include a freshman who still didn’t know where his classes were, as well as a group of coasties who were afraid to cross Park because the snow
drifts on the opposite sidewalk were, according to one of them, “like, supes big and scary OMGZ!”
The voice was also overheard rant-ing on Wednesday for nearly 15 minutes about a large group of hipsters com-ing from the Humanities building, all who refused to use the crosswalk like almost everyone else around them.
The final straw that result-ed in the suspension of the Park Street voice was Thursday night when he told a drunk soror-ity girl to walk into oncoming traffic.
“I’m not trying to be a dick, but I need some variety in my script,” said the voice, who in a recent inter-view claimed his name is actually Dave. “Nobody’s able to appreciate my natural eloquence and silky yet articulate tone if I only get to say the same eight words over and over.”
University officials have not decid-ed on the future of Dave the voice at press time. For the time being, Peter, the voice of the Route 80 bus who calls out the names of stops as they’re being approached, has taken time off from his regular position to act as a temporary replacement for Dave.
—Poops McGee
A bill is circulat-ing the state Senate this week that would require the state’s child abuse board to emphasize that single parents are more likely to abuse their kids than married parents.
State Sen. Glenn Grothman, R-West Bend, who introduced the legis-lation, said his support of traditional family values inspired him to write the bill that would make sin-gle parents more account-able for their mistreat-ment of their children.
“I dream of return-ing to a simpler time in American history, a time when adults understood the sanctity of marriage and the importance of proper childrearing,” Grothman told listen-ers at his press confer-ence he held in his West Bend childhood home.
He said he longed for the days when parents just gave their kids a good “smack and spank,” when most kids that popped out were of a “legitimate skin-color,” not that “weird tan color that I see so often now that makes me wonder if this kid’s parents don’t match.”
State Sen. Mary Lazich, R- New Berlin, is also cur-rently circulating a bill that would require the state’s women hygiene board to encourage sin-gle women to start using Modess Empress Belts used circa 1962 instead of modern-day women’s hygiene projects. Lazich said the belts “bring us back to a simpler time, when women refrained from shoving secular phallus-shaped cre-ations up their privates.”
—Yams McYummy M.D.
Senate bill says single parents more abusivethan married parents
DavePark street voice
“I’m not trying to be a dick, but I need some variety in
my script.”
Todd stevensonUW-student
“But Wednesday was so happenin’! It was like totally the best day of
the week!”
newsdailycardinal.com Weekend,March2-4,20123l
Stephanie Daher/thedailycardinal
Withitsrenovationproposal,echotaphopestolengthenitsoutdoorservicehours,thesizeofitspatioandtheadditionofa“smokingtent”forpatronsinthewinter.
Lt. Gov. Rebecca Kleefisch said Thursday her campaign will not challenge any of the approximate-ly 845,000 recall petitions filed against her, citing insufficient time to review the signatures.
Her announcement comes shortly after Gov. Scott Walker also said earlier in the week there was not enough time to review and challenge any of the one mil-lion signatures filed against him.
Kleefisch said in a letter to the Government Accountability Board while she will not challenge any signatures, she “demands that the GAB adhere to its prior public statements…to identify and strike duplicate names, identify and strike fictitious names, and identify and strike petitions were
GAB cannot determine that the signatory is a qualified elector.”
Former Dane County Executive Kathleen Falk and can-didate in the likely gubernatorial recall election said in a statement Thursday Kleefisch’s announce-ment should encourage the GAB to begin the recall election no later than the March 19 deadline.
“By not challenging the signa-tures, Gov. Walker and Lt. Gov. Kleefisch have admitted there are enough signatures to force this recall and it is time for the elec-tion to be called,” Falk said.
However, the GAB said Monday it needs more time to review the signatures and plans to extend the March 19 deadline.
— Mckenna Kohlenberg
Kleefisch will not challenge recall petition signatures
echo tap presents patio extension plans to neighbors
The Bassett Neighborhood Association met on the second floor of the Echo Tap and Grill Thursday to discuss the tavern’s newest proposals for expansion.
Its blueprints propped up between two dartboards, the proposal presented to resi-dents Thursday involves adding roughly 500 square feet to Echo Tap’s patio, extending patio usage hours and erecting an out-door “tent” for smoking patrons in the winter.
Last year’s plans included two-story addition to the 65-year-old bar at North Bedford and West Main Streets. However, the dis-covery of an adjacent building’s faulty foundation prevented that plan. Echo Tap instead adjusted
its request and built a patio.The bar’s owners hope to
extend its patio usage by one hour a day. Currently, the bar is only allowed to serve alcohol on the patio until 9 p.m. Sunday through Thursday and 10 p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays.
Residents expressed the most concern with the additional noise that increasing the patio’s operational hours could cause, despite assurances from Echo Tap co-owner Susan Bulgrin that unruliness and noise could be controlled.
“Its absurd to think that you can tell a bunch of adults with alcohol to quiet down,” Madison resident Nina Emerson said. “No matter how well you police
that…it’s just a fact.”None of the proposed chang-
es would increase the bar’s over-all capacity.
Additionally, Echo Tap must secure city approval for exte-rior remodeling that was differ-ent from the proposals that were initially submitted.
After taking neighbor-hood feedback into account, Echo Tap’s owners must sub-mit applications to the Madison Plan Commission and Alcohol License Review Committee.
Patrons requesting to use the dartboard, as well as shouting from the “Trivia Night” held on the first floor, briefly disrupted the meeting.
—Ben Siegel
adidas on notice would further pressure the company to pay its workers. But Vice Chancellor for University Relations Vince Sweeney said Tuesday the effectiveness of that strategy is up for debate.
“It’s all speculation as to what will resolve it the quickest and that’s what the chancellor has to decide,” Sweeney said. “You’re not going to get 100 percent agree-ment often times, but he’s in con-sultation with lots of people to try and do the right thing to get the right and quickest resolution.”
The university said Ward would not accept interviews on the subject and Sweeney could not be reached for a response to Zepeda’s allegations after busi-ness hours Thursday.
According to Student Labor Action Coalition Chair Jonah Zinn, adidas said in a state-ment that to follow the code of conduct, it is only required to end its relationship with the offending factory, not to rem-edy the violations.
“Instead of requiring the brand to fix these situations or requiring the brand to be responsible for the violations that happened, they say all they have to do, according to this con-tract, is leave,” Zinn said. “It’s just a complete violation of the spirit of the code.”
He said if UW-Madison gave adidas 90 days’ notice, the com-pany would sue the university for applying the code of con-duct incorrectly.
Zepeda said in various docu-ments adidas has affirmed that
it has a policy that it does not provide severance pay to work-ers. Because of this, she said she does not understand what the chancellor is expecting to accomplish through mediation with the company.
Mirroring Zepeda, Zinn said because adidas’ policies make it clear it will not concede to UW’s demands while mediating, the university should remain firm in giving adidas notice despite fac-ing a possible court case.
“What it comes down to is we need to stand up for not just these workers, but also our con-tract,” he said. “If we’re not going to enforce it, what good is it? If adidas is not going to play ball and wants to be so sover-eign on it, then I don’t think we should be afraid of going toe to toe with them.”
adidasfrompage1
concerns into consideration. “Wisconsin has a great tradi-
tion of mining and stewardship,” Darling and Vos said in a joint statement. “We are confident the compromise proposal offered to Senator Schultz achieves both of those goals.”
But Schultz said the environ-mental safeguards in the Darling and Vos proposal did not go far enough and called for a more open discussion on the issue.
“My conscience simply won’t
allow me to surrender the exist-ing environmental protections without a full and open public debate,” Schultz said in a state-ment. “To move mining reform forward, we need a full and open process on environmental law, with respected contributors at the table.”
Schultz introduced his own mining bill along with state Sen. Bob Jauch, D-Poplar, two weeks ago. However, Assembly Republicans quickly dismissed the proposal.
Jauch also criticized Darling
and Vos’ plan, saying the pro-posal did not address many of the public’s concerns and was not truly bipartisan.
“The public is starving for reasonable, bipartisan leader-ship to tackle the complicated issues of the day,” Jauch said in a statement. “The responses and rhetoric have fallen far short of the public’s expectations.”
The Joint Finance Committee will vote on the Assembly’s ver-sion of the mining bill Monday morning, even though the Senate is unlikely to pass it.
miningfrompage1
ProtestsfollowedWard’sdecisiontonegotiatewithadidasratherthangivethecompany90daystopayitsemployees.
Stephanie Daher/cardinalFilePhoto
While the presidential elec-tionmaybemonthsaway,twotopcampaignofficialsforthecampaigntoreelectPre-sidentBarackobamawillbeontheUW-MadisoncampusWednesday.
The Obama campaign’s National Field Director Jeremy
Bird and Wisconsin Field Director Michelle Kleppe will speak and take questions from students.
The event is the national kick-off for Barack Obama’s 2012 Own Your Vote youth program and will be streamed live to UW campuses throughout the state.TYler NicKersON
Obama campaign to visit Madison
Senate committee passes wolf hunt billA wolf hunt in Wisconsin is one
step closer to becoming a reality, as the Senate Committee on Natural Resources and Environment passed a bill Thursday that would legalize a hunt.
The bill is now ready to face a full Senate vote. If the state Assembly also passes the bill and the governor signs it, Wisconsin would institute a hunting and trapping season from mid-Octo-ber through the end of February.
Licensing limitations dis-tributed by the Department of
Natural Resources would regu-late the number of wolves that could be killed.
An Assembly committee passed a similar bill through Monday in a 13-1 vote, where it too will face a full house vote before this legislative session ends on March 15.
The gray wolf was removed from the federal endangered spe-cies list in Wisconsin, Michigan and Minnesota last year, allowing for the states to take measures to control the wolf population.
Officials meet to dis-cuss campus heating
and cooling plant
Story online atdailycardinal.com
l4 Weekend, March 2-4, 2012 dailycardinal.com
And the Oscar goes to...the wrong galBy Ariel ShapiroThe Daily CarDinal
This year’s Oscars ceremony was not a particularly exciting one. Everyone knew “The Artist” would win, whether it deserved to or not, and Billy Crystal’s solid, if lackluster, performance brought some stability back to the ceremony. There were no scan-dals, no inebriated hosts (cough, James Franco, cough), and only one upset: Meryl Streep’s win for “The Iron Lady.”
Now, Streep clinching a Best Actress award does not seem to be much of a surprise. She is, after all, the greatest actress of her generation, with two Oscars (three, including “Iron Lady”) and 17 nominations to boot. Streep is not a star, she is a legend. She can pull off any part, any accent and bring legitimacy to even the dumb-est films (i.e., “Julie and Julia,” “Mamma Mia”). However, this should not have been her year. This year’s Best Actress award belonged to Viola Davis.
On the surface, Davis’s perfor-mance in “The Help” and Streep’s in “The Iron Lady” have a lot in common. They were both the stand-out components of two deeply flawed movies and both were nuanced takes on roles that could have easily become carica-tures. Davis took on the role of Aibileen Clark, a grieving black maid in 1960s Mississippi widely
and character criticized by some as a typical “Mammie” role. However, if “The Help” as a novel failed in its attempt at humaniz-ing such a stock character, Davis, who played Aibileen with such depth, despair and hope, not only achieved it, but has the Screen Actor’s Guild award to prove it.
Streep also had a significant challenge in portraying polariz-ing former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. Thatcher was so distinctive in her speech, style and take-no-prisoners politi-cal conviction that it would be hard for any actress to pull it off, but Streep certainly managed to do so. She did a truly excel-lent impression of Thatcher, but that’s about it. And while you can fault the script, which was full of anachronisms and dodged politi-cal issues for the sake of mar-ketability, for not giving Streep enough to work with, the perfor-mance was neither her personal best nor better than Davis’s.
Why Streep won is really just a matter of Academy politics.
Conventional wisdom was that Davis would win because of her SAG award, but Streep had sev-eral factors working in her favor. She has gone three decades without a win, and so perhaps the Academy thought she was due one. And unlike the Screen Actors Guild, which represents a wide array of ethnicities and age groups, the Academy is a select group of several thousand guys, most of whom have an AARP card. A study by the Los
Angeles Times shows that the Oscar voting block has a median age of 62, only 14 percent of the voters are under 50, and less than a quarter of voters are women. It makes sense that an older, less diverse voting block would go for a more traditional-ly acclaimed actress in a biopic of a well-known politician. It is just a shame that the demo-graphics of the Academy are not more reflective of the industry or film-going audiences.
Perhaps this whole debacle shows that you cannot place too much emphasis on such an arbi-trary award. “The Iron Lady” will likely become just another so-so political biopic, while “The Help” will continue to be a fan favorite. I have no doubt that Davis will get her Oscar some day and that Streep will win again for a truly deserving performance, but it would have been gratifying, for Davis and her fans, to see her bring home the statue.
The many realms of fiction literature; fantasy v. magic realism
M ost people are famil-iar with the standard fantasy paperback: It
appears to be a cheaply-printed book, with glossy covers featur-ing a scantily clad female bar-barian felling dragons, or epic battles on the back of bear cav-alry. Y’know, impossible things.
That’s what makes it fantasy.On the other side of the
store, however, tucked in the Fiction and Literature section, are books often referred to as “magical realism.” Like a real-istic book about life in a New York apartment, except the narrator can talk to pigeons and there are trolls in the sub-way. You may read this book and think, “Why isn’t this in the fantasy section?”
There is, of course, a clear difference between fantasy and
magical realism. Fantasy func-tions, primarily, on a suspen-sion of disbelief: you walk into a work of fantasy knowing noth-ing in it is real e.g. it’s nothing like the world we live in.
Magical realism, on the other hand, relies on fantastical ele-ments employed in a realistic (if not real) world. One of the most famous examples is Gabriel Garcia Marquez’s “One Hundred Years of Solitude.” Toni Morrison’s “Beloved,” an otherwise straight-forward slave narrative, promi-nently features ghosts. Author Haruki Murakami’s work takes contemporary Japan—by his esti-mation a rather strait-laced and dull place—and enlivens it with talking cats, otherworldly hotels and heroic 6-foot frogs. Günter Grass’s The Tin Drum takes World War II Germany and filters it through the eye of a self-willed, 3-foot-tall dwarf drummer. Even Henry James, a devotee to societal drama, wrote ghost stories.
When I bring these distinc-tions up, it’s not with the pur-pose of tearing down the barrier between these two or exposing the “lie” of magical realism. Rather, I submit that fantasy and magical realism are two separate genres. They do, however, share many common characteristics, as well
as under-appreciated nuances.Magical realism, while it
attempts to eschew the fan-tasy label, contains more fan-tasy than it cares to admit. Traditionally, writers of this genre take fantastic elements and weave them into realistic narratives, sometimes with the intention of stating some-thing new about a particular situation, sometimes with the intention of making a political critique. It is, if nothing else, an interesting way to conceive a world. But the magical ele-ments are always presented as something real e.g. not fantasy, not fake. However, at the end of the day, these fantasy hold-overs are fantasy, and no mat-ter of detached irony or blasé will change that.
Fantasy, of course, does not have this same realistic ballast as magical realism. There’s no New York City any-where. Authors often start from scratch when making worlds and plot lines—which include fantastical elements. If a fantasy author wants magic, they just need to know how to explain it. They’re making most (if not everything) up.
You would think this distin-guishes fantasy from magical realism, perhaps even clearly marks the demarcation. But people who advocate/admire magical realism (in lieu of fan-tasy) don’t make the observa-tion that fantasy novels/stories are real, in the context of the story. Everything that happens between the covers of a fantasy novel happens in the world of the story. The characters don’t
often get the same suspension of disbelief as the reader—what’s happening to them is real. Our magic is their realism.
In some cases fantasy nov-els can have almost luridly real worlds. Remember J.R.R. Tolkein, who wrote an entire language, entire races and entire worlds for his narrative. Terry Pratchett’s “Discworld” series thrives off the principle of a fully-fleshed world where-in all manner of antics, pathos, drama, and action occur.
I’m not suggesting fantasy has gotten the short end of the stick, whereas magical realism has acquired all the respect due to fantasy. And I’m not suggesting fantasy is an inherently superior genre compared to magical real-ism. There’s a lot of bad fantasy works out there (written by bad [and inexplicably rich] authors). There’s a lot of bad magical real-ism too. But no matter how you cut it, magical realism and fanta-sy employ much of the same tech-nique and style when it comes to writing narratives.
Do you think the blurry genre line between books like “The Lord of the Rings” and “Harry Potter” warrants more dissucsion? Ask Sean for clarification at [email protected].
SeAn ReichARdyour raison d’être
Magical realism, while it attempts to eschew the fantasy label, contains
more fantasy than it cares to admit.
Fantasy functions, pri-marily, on a suspension of disbelief: you walk into a work of fantasy knowing
nothing in it is real.
On the surface, davis’s performance in “The help” and Streep’s in
“The iron Lady” have a lot in common.
GRAphic By dyLAn MORiARTy
arts
comicsGetting down with yo bad self
© Puzzles by Pappocom
Eatin’ Cake Classic By Dylan Moriarty [email protected]
Caved In By Nick Kryshak [email protected]
Solution, tips and computer program available at www.sudoku.com.
Fill in the grid so that every row, every column and every 3x3 box contains the digits 1 through 9.
Today’s Sudoku
FIST WAGGLE
ACROSS 1 Give away the ending 6 Ready for the
operating room, briefly
10 Centers of activity 14 Feet in some meters 15 Hold in abomination 16 An egg in Caesar’s
salad 17 Cranium’s contents 18 “___ Country”
(Churchill novel) 19 “... ___, whatever will
be ...” (Doris Day lyric)
20 Beachfront building? 22 “What’s your sine?”
subj. 23 Be a borrower 24 “Ditto!” 25 Bull’s-eye, for one 29 Bug-repelling wood 32 “___ Melancholy”
(Keats) 33 Rookie 37 Banquet posting 38 Dainty table
decoration 39 Popular cookie 40 Stardom? 42 Ringmaster 43 Wall Street
transaction 44 Acts stealthily 45 Machine shop tool
48 ___ du Flambeau, Wisc.
49 Collection of miscellaneous pieces
50 Place to stay in central London
57 Deported Pakistani in a “Seinfeld” episode
58 “In ___ of flowers ...” 59 Friendless 60 “My Cup Runneth
Over” singer Ed 61 Entrance for a collier 62 Computer geeks 63 By ___ (from memory) 64 Beige and ecru 65 “To your health!” is
one
DOWN 1 A boy and his sis 2 “Legal” opener 3 “Toe” of the Arabian
Peninsula 4 “Bartlett’s” abbr. 5 Coin portrait since
1909 6 “Terrible Twos,” for
one 7 Balsa boat 8 “Along with all the
rest” abbr. 9 Parisian pop 10 Place for Hollywood’s
Jodie? 11 Above-board 12 Knickknack shelf item 13 Grown-up bug
21 Astonishment 24 Creation on the sixth
day 25 Hospitalized patient’s
state, perhaps 26 “Beware the ___ of
March!” 27 Lease 28 Place of many trials 29 Breaking and
entering, e.g. 30 Challenging to corner 31 “L.A. Law” star Susan 33 Well-mannered 34 Predatory dolphin 35 Cause a stench 36 “Nay” and “uh-uh” 38 A type of evidence 41 A lode off one’s
mine? 42 Cast a spell over 44 Utter 45 Type of pneumonia 46 1836 Texas siege site 47 Dalai Lama’s country 48 Clumsy oafs 50 Bed-frame crosspiece 51 1871 Verdi opera 52 Blood carrier 53 Another word for
margarine 54 One-third of a WWII
film title 55 Airs the final episode
of 56 “___ we forget”
Answer key available at www.dailycardinal.com
Today’s Crossword Puzzle
Scribbles n’ Bits
Except maybe “zxcvbnm”... There is no English word
you can spell with the keys in the bottom row of the keyboard.
Washington and the Bear By Derek Sandberg [email protected]
Crustaches By Patrick Remington [email protected]
Evil Bird By Caitlin Kirihara [email protected]
By Melanie Shibley [email protected]
dailycardinal.com Weekend, March 2-4, 2012 • 5
opinion
S ince I’ve come to Madison it’s seemed to me that there was a concerted
effort, whether conscious or subconscious, to reign in the school’s traditional charac-ter. I’m sure many of us who are Wisconsin residents have heard about Madison, or some sort of UW history, like I have. My mom and some relatives have either graduated from UW-Madison or at least attend-ed it at some point in their lives. The infamous Mifflin Street Block Party, whether some people want it gone or not, is indistinguishable from the uni-versity’s public image, some-thing that the majority of the community would agree on.
I would even be as so bold to say that the block party is actually a factor kids consider when applying to our univer-sity. When someone makes the choice to attend a university for four years of their life, you can absolutely bet that that individ-ual partially makes their deci-sion based on the overall scene it has to provide.
Lucky for us, UW has no shortage of interesting cultural history, for both staunch aca-demics and the more social stu-dent. UW-Madison is a great community where everyone can get something out of the experience and I am extremely proud of that.
As an iconic event, the Mifflin Street Block Party is so prominent in the minds of so many who attend here, as well as those who have attended here in the past. I know it’s unfair to generalize my views for that of the entire student body, but I really can’t help but feel that Mifflin is ingrained into our own identities as UW students. Who hasn’t had friends over to partake in festivities in their time here, honestly?
Last year’s Mifflin, I’ll be the first to admit, was brazen in the amount of public debauch-ery, but to say that it was the “worst” Mifflin, in terms of crime, is just wrong. The two stabbings were indeed shock-ing, but when you consider the overall scale of the event, those incidents really pale in com-parison to what you’d expect from such a raucous event. Some estimates place the crowd at well-over 10,000 people, and with almost all of those attendees inebriated. With that
continued that state of mind all day, while being squeezed into a small area, you’d think that there would be more crime occurring than just two major incidents. I’m not trying to downplay the crimes that did occur because they were indeed disgusting acts.
While the local press might have had it easy making the generic “Mifflin goes bad” head-lines, most students were ready for Mifflin 2012. That brings me to my overall point, which is the city of Madison is being smart by not shutting it down. The city already tried to do that in the past which resulted in student riots in the 1960’s. This isn’t a positive reflection of the university. It must have seemed fairly obvious to the city that they could possibly be dealing with another violent riot if they
attempted to go after the event.
The party has gone on with-out major violence before and can do so again, with or without police cooperation. The police and other interests do serve an important role and I definite-ly am not against their pres-ence at the event, since some-thing is guaranteed to require police assistance. What should never be done though, this year including, is cracking down on the party to make it an example
for students or some sort of self-righteous statement about the true values of a college educa-tion. When you’re in the prime of your life, some things have different values than others.
The city is smart to realize this and to not cause a larger problem than there inevitably would be if the event ceased to continue. I’m glad to see this tradition live on and I look forward to bright, sunny and refreshing Mifflin Street Block Party as we humans possibly live our last year of existence. See you there Madison!
Matthew Curry is a junior majoring in political science and environmental studies. Do you think that the Mifflin Street Block Party is an essential part to the UW identity? Please send all let-ters and feedback to [email protected].
6 Weekend, March 2-4, 2012 dailycardinal.coml
Backing off Block Party a wise decision Matthew Curryopinion columnist
I really can’t help but feel that Mifflin is ingrained
into our own identities as uw students.
the party has gone on without major violence
before and can do so again.
the infamous Mifflin Street Block Party is indistinguish-
able from the university’s public image.
Mark kauzlarICh/daily cardinal File Photo
the city of Madison decided to let the tradition of the Mifflin Street Block Party continue to be a part of the UW experience.
l
By Adam Tupitzathe daily cardinal
The familiar Wisconsin vs. Minnesota rivalry made its way to Indianapolis for the first round of the Big Ten Women’s Basketball Tournament Thursday. A Minnesota team eager to avenge a home loss to the Badgers in the regular season left no doubt about who would advance to the second round, ending Wisconsin’s season with a 81-49 romp.
The ninth-seeded Wisconsin (5-12 Big Ten, 9-20 overall) faced the eighth-seeded Golden Gophers (7-10, 15-16) only once in the regu-lar season, defeating them 78-72 at Williams Arena Jan. 26. This time around, the Gophers used a 14-0 run to take a 28-15 lead in the first half and never looked back.
“We really struggled to score,” head coach Bobbie Kelsey said. “We struggled to pass. We struggled to do a lot of things. But it wasn’t for lack of effort, and it’s just one of those nights where we couldn’t really get it going in our favor.”
The Gophers were not content with a 39-23 halftime lead, and they continued to pour it on in the second half. A jumper by sopho-more forward Micaëlla Riché gave Minnesota a 39-point lead with 3:35 remaining in the game. If not for two three-pointers by Wisconsin junior guard Kelly Supernaw in the final minute of the game, the Badgers would have suffered the largest defeat in the history of the Big Ten Women’s Tournament.
“We didn’t quit,” Kelsey said. “We played all the way to the end. I was very proud of the team. They didn’t give up.”
A balanced offensive attack by Minnesota had four players finish with double-digit points, but no player shined brighter than guard Kiara Buford. The senior scored 19 points on 8-for-10 shooting in only 25 minutes of action. Big Ten Freshman of the Year Rachel Banham recorded a double-double in the game, finishing with 11 points and 10 rebounds.
The Badgers shot 50 percent
from the field in their regular sea-son victory over the Gophers, but could not get much to fall this time, shooting a season-low 27.5 percent on field goals. Minnesota turned up the ball pressure and kept the Badgers from getting into an offen-sive rhythm. The Gophers also dominated on the glass, finishing with a 51-24 rebounding advantage.
They picked up their defense intensity,” junior guard Taylor Wurtz said. “But we had open looks. We just have to be able to hit those. And obviously tonight they weren’t falling.”
Wurtz led the Badgers in scoring with 13 points, the only Wisconsin player to finish with double-digit points. In her final game as a Badger, senior forward Anya Covington drained her first career three-pointer and finished with nine points.
Kelsey ends her first season as Wisconsin’s head coach with a 9-20 record, leading the Badgers to a ninth-place Big Ten finish in the regular season. As is often the case
when a coaching change is made, there were some growing pains in the first year with the new regime. The returning players are already focusing on how they need to pre-pare in the offseason with the ulti-mate goal of winning more games
next season.“We’ve got to go into the offsea-
son everyday valuing every minute that we get and getting up shots and working on our ball handling so next year, we can make a run in this tournament,” Wurtz said.
Although, with the way Illinois is had been playing recently, they might have been able to get away with it. Since pulling off an upset victory over then No. 5 Ohio State, Illinois has fallen off the face of the earth, losing all but two of their next 11 games. The losing streak took an emotional toll on
the Illinois players, even causing 7-foot-1 sophomore center Meyers Leonard to break into tears with his head under a towel on the bench as the Illini were being blown out by the Nebraska Cornhuskers on Feb. 18.
Leonard and the rest of the Illini were able to exorcize some of their demons by beating Iowa in their most recent game and
were visibly relieved that had won again. Leonard was able to redeem himself, leading the way for Illinois with 22 points and 14 rebounds in the victory. With the win over Iowa, Illinois still has a very tiny possibility of getting into the tour-nament, but it will most likely have to get wins over both Michigan Thursday night and Wisconsin Sunday to even have a chance at an
at-large bid. Once again, Wisconsin will be
playing against a team that has its back against the wall and is looking for any scent of momentum. It will be very important for the Badgers not to repeat their first-half perfor-mance against Minnesota, or they might be giving the barely breath-ing Illini a chance at resurrecting their hopes of a tournament berth.
“They have been struggling but they have a lot of talent over there. It is a game we have to go in and play with more energy,” junior for-ward Mike Bruesewitz said.
If history is any indicator, head coach Bo Ryan will definitely have his team ready to close out the season. Wisconsin has won all 10 Senior Day games under Bo Ryan’s tutelage.
By Matthew Kleistthe daily cardinal
The Badgers have been here before.
The No. 1 team in the coun-try, WCHA regular season cham-pions and first overall seeded Wisconsin women’s hockey team (23-3-2 WCHA, 31-3-2 overall) enter the Final Face-Off with a target painted on their back.
Wisconsin will try to repeat as WCHA playoffs champi-ons this weekend, traveling to Duluth, Minn., to face the con-ference’s best competition. The Badgers join Minnesota, North Dakota and Minnesota-Duluth at AMSOIL Arena.
The Badgers have the difficult task of facing Minnesota-Duluth (15-12-1, 20-13-1) in front of its home crowd.
Playing on the road in the WCHA is not an easy task, and when it comes to the playoffs, the energy a team gains from play-ing at home is crucial. Wisconsin, however, is no stranger to this situation. The Badgers hoisted the WCHA trophy last year at Ridder Arena in Minneapolis, Minn. after defeating Minnesota in overtime to win the championship.
Despite past successes in the postseason, this is a new year and a new season. The Wisconsin skaters are trying to look only at
the game ahead. “Focusing on our own team,”
junior forward Brianna Decker said. “Not worrying about where we’re playing and who we’re play-ing. We just need to focus on our-selves and worry about the game we’re going to bring Friday.”
A large part of the game that Wisconsin will bring to Duluth is the play of sophomore goaltender Alex Rigsby.
The Delafield, Wis. native has been the most consistent player on the Badgers roster this year. Rigsby has played a total of 2,109 minutes this season. Not only has she logged the most game time out of any goaltender in the WCHA
and second in the nation, but she leads all of D-I women’s hockey in goals-against-average (1.34) and save percentage (.952).
“I’ve been a lot more aggressive this year, battling for every puck,” Rigsby said about her play this season. “A lot of it is preparation, being focused.”
Both Rigsby and head coach Mark Johnson place a lot on the experience that the young netmind-er gained from her freshman year.
“The difference is the experi-ence that she gained last year,” Johnson said. “What she gained last year, especially the second half of the year when she played so well and seemed comfortable and seemed confident, that’s in the back of her mind.”
Usually when they come into that sophomore year, if they had a good experience their freshman year, they take off pretty quick,” he added.
For the Badgers, their success this season has not been because of Rigsby’s play. It has been a team effort by Wisconsin that has got-
ten it this far.In the spirit of complete team
play, Wisconsin’s freshman have stepped up their intensity going into the postseason.
“They’ve been playing with a lot of confidence,” Decker said. “That’s huge when you come into postsea-son. It’s huge that [Katy] Josephs stepped up last weekend and I know Blayre [Turnbull] and Karley [Sylvester] played really well.”
“They’ve gotten better all sea-son,” Johnson said. “They seemed to be comfortable in their first playoff series. They played well and gave us the added punch you need in the playoffs.”
The Badgers have already passed their first test of the play-offs. Now an even tougher one awaits them in Duluth. For Wisconsin to repeat as WCHA champions, they will have to face the most difficult competition of the year.
“It’s a new season,” Johnson said. “When you play one and down as we are this weekend, you got to play to win.”
dailycardinal.com Weekend, March 2-4, 2012 7 sportsWomen’s Hockey
Badgers to take on Duluth to begin Final Face-Off
Junior forward Brianna decker was announced as a Patty Kazmaier finalist thursday along with senior forward hilary Knight. they look to lead the Badgers to another Wcha championship.
MArK KAuzlAricH/cardinal file Photo
Women’s Basketball
Wisconsin loses big to Minnesota, knocked out of Big Ten Tournament
mbball from page 8
Four Badgers were honored thursday night at the Wcha awards ceremony in duluth, Minn.
Junior forward Brianna decker walked way with the big one, being named the Wcha Player of the year by coaches.
the Wcha defensive Player of the year award went to Junior defender Stefanie McKeough while sophomore goaltender alex rigsby earned Wcha Goaltending champion.
decker, along with senior forward hilary Knight were named to the all-Wcha first team. the pair were also announced as finalists for the Patty Kazmaier Memorial award earlier in the day. McKeough and rigsby were all-Wcha Second team and senior forward Brooke ammerman made all-Wcha third team.
to cap the night, head coach Mark Johnson was named the Wcha coach of the year.
Taking home the hardware
Junior guard taylor Wurtz scored a team-high 13 points in Wisconsin’s 81-49 loss to Minnesota in the Big ten tournament.
MArK KAuzlAricH/cardinal file Photo
Sports DailyCarDinal.Com
By Ted Poraththe daily cardinal
The No. 14/15 Wisconsin men’s basketball team (11-6 Big Ten, 22-8 overall) will close out its regular season Sunday at the Kohl Center against the Illinois Fighting Illini (6-10, 17-12).
For seniors Rob Wilson and Jordan Taylor Sunday, will be both a special and emotional day as it is Senior Day and both will be playing their last game in front of the Kohl Center’s Grateful Red.
Sunday will also be special for Badger fans as it will be the last time they will see one of the great-est players in UW history take the court in Madison.
Point guard Jordan Taylor is one of the most decorated players in Badger history. Taylor is ranked ninth all-time on Wisconsin’s all-time scoring list and is second all-time in assists. He has also been a model of efficiency, coming into the year on pace to shatter the all-time assist-to-turnover ratio.
Taylor is also a two-time final-ist for the Bob Cousy Award, a 2012 preseason first-team All-American and is one of the 30 finalists for the 2011-2012 Naismith Award. Taylor has represented the UW with great poise and has set a great example for future Wisconsin basketball players to follow.
To send off Wilson and Taylor with a victory in the regular sea-son finale, the Badgers will have to come out with much more energy and execution than they did in the first half of their last game against Minnesota. In a lacklus-ter first half at the Kohl Center
Tuesday night, the Badgers made just four of 21 shots (19 percent) and finished out the half with just 16 points. Wisconsin came out and played much better in the second half.
“The first half, it was ugly. Coach [Ryan] gave us a good speech at halftime. We wanted to come back and bounce back. I am just glad we got the oppor-
tunity to go back out there and do it again,” junior forward Ryan Evans said after Tuesday’s win against Minnesota.
Wisconsin will definitely be fooling themselves if they think they can start games with such poor offensive execution and still win games.
weekenD marCh 2-4, 2012
men’s hockey men’s Basketball
Minnesota native and sophomore forward tyler Barnes is looking forward to the opportunity to play in his home state.
mark kauzlariCh/cardinal file photo
Badgers saved best for lastWisconsin on the road at rival Minnesota to end regular seasonBy ryan evansthe daily cardinal
In its last series of the regular season the Wisconsin men’s hock-ey team (10-14-2 WCHA, 15-15-2 overall) is looking to continue building on its current momen-tum as it travels west for a match-up with its bitter border rival No. 4 Minnesota (19-7-0, 23-11-1).
The Badgers are currently riding a three-game winning streak, tied for their longest of the season, after sweeping Bemdji State last weekend and thereby tripling their road win total for the year. As Wisconsin enters its final regular season weekend head coach Mike Eaves like the direction his team’s play is trending.
“We’ve got to keep banging the drum here and play the way that we are playing,” Eaves said. “We’ve got some work to do, no question. But the fact is that we made noise [against Bemidji], and we need to continue to make noise as we go along here.”
Eaves is hoping the momen-tum the Badgers have built dur-ing their modest winning streak is enough to carry the team to a deep postseason run. Wisconsin will begin the playoffs on the road in the first round of the WCHA playoffs next weekend, and will get a taste of what a road playoff atmosphere will feel like when it visits Minneapolis this weekend.
There are plenty of postsea-son implications on both sides of the St. Croix River in this series. Wisconsin—currently sitting in ninth place in the WCHA—can still finish anywhere from a tie for seventh place to 11th place in the conference based on this weekend’s results, and the Gophers can clinch the WCHA
regular-season title with three points against the Badgers.
Wisconsin has the opportuni-ty to spoil Minnesota’s hopes for its first MacNaughton Cup in four seasons, a role that the Badgers say they are eager to play.
“Anytime you go into Minnesota, you want to beat them, it’s a big rivalry and you never want to lose that one,” sophomore forward and Eagan, Minn. native Tyler Barnes said. “Being able to take their title hopes away would definitely be a pleasure.”
Adhering to the mantra of every opposing team this season, Minnesota head coach Don Lucia said this week his strategy against Wisconsin will be to try to shut down the Badgers’ dual offen-sive threat of sophomore forward Mark Zengerle and junior defen-seman Justin Schultz.
Zengerle and Schultz have accounted for a huge chunk of Wisconsin’s offense this year, with 44 and 42 points respec-tively—far and away the two highest totals on the team—but the key for the Badgers’ suc-cess, both this weekend and beyond, will be to get second-ary scoring contributions like they got in Bemidji.
Against the Beavers, Wisconsin’s fourth forward line recorded four points and sopho-more forward Ryan Little scored his first career goal, but its second line has also held its weight offen-sively in recent games, especial-ly sophomore forward Michael Mersch, who has six points in the Badgers’ last three games.
“It’s a huge bonus when you have guys chipping in on the third and fourth lines,” Mersch said. “I think if we can add onto the scor-ing that the first couple lines are producing, and have those third and fourth lines chip in to its going to help us win games.”
To Barnes, the importance of offensive depth moving forward is simple.
“Secondary scoring is what wins championships,” he said.
The face off in Minneapolis for the border battle on ice is 7 p.m. both Friday and Saturday.
Tyler Barnessophomore forward
Wisconsin meen’s hockey
“anytime you go into minnesota, you want to
beat them.”
Wisconsin ready for season finale
Sunday’s game against illinois will be an emotional game for senior guard Jordan taylor, who is playing his last home game.
mark kauzlariCh/the daily cardinal
mbball page 7