THE UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN’S INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER SINCE 1969 Volume XLIV, Issue 18
Friday, September 28, 2012
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Supreme Court declines voter ID case Polo Rocha State Legislative Editor The Wisconsin Supreme Court will not consider lawsuits against the stat’es voter ID law until after the Court of Appeals decides on them, meaning voters will likely not have to show a photo ID in the November elections. The Court decided to
delay taking on the case, saying the motion to bypass the appeals court is “premature.” One of the plaintiffs, Latino advocacy group Voces de la Frontera, was pleased with the ruling. Voces spokesperson Joe Shansky said the Supreme Court decision to wait is an indication of the law being “unconstitutional and
immoral.” “If it was in place for the election, it would have been blocking people who have every right to exercise their democratic right to vote from doing so,” Shansky said. Attorney General J.B. Van Hollen asked the court to join the two state lawsuits and bypass the appeals court. By doing so, Van Hollen said he hoped the
high court would remove the two injunctions placed on the law that have barred it from being in place in every election since February. “The voter ID law protects the integrity of our elections,” Van Hollen said in a statement released after the decision. “The result is that the injunctions against the voter ID law remain in effect and will,
in all likelihood, be in effect for the upcoming November elections. Despite this setback, I continue to believe that the voter ID law is constitutional and I will continue the battle to have the law upheld.” The law’s author, Rep. Jeff Stone, R-Greendale, thanked Van Hollen for trying to have the law implemented for the presidential election.
He criticized the two judges who placed injunctions on the law for being from Dane Country — the part of the state regarded as most politically liberal — and said the law will eventually be validated by the courts. “A duly enacted law of the state of Wisconsin
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Ethnic studies may see change Committee in talks with UW to alter requirement for first time in 10 years Lauren Tubbs Reporter
Jeff Schorefeide The Badger Herald file photo
Community members mourn the loss of Brittany Zimmermann at a memorial event. Zimmermann was murdered in her home in April 2008, and since then Dane County and UW have taken proactive measures.
Zimmermann legacy lives on Tahleel Mohieldin Herald Contributor More than four years ago, University of Wisconsin student Brittany Zimmermann was murdered in her apartment on Doty Street, leaving the campus and city communities shaken. While many of the students attending UW at the time of the homicide have since graduated, Zimmermann and her legacy live on. Zimmermann was 21 years old when a still atlarge assailant entered her apartment and killed her during her junior year. Medical reports revealed she died from multiple stab wounds and strangulation. As part of a three-yearlong tradition, the campus community and friends of the Zimmermann family are preparing to come together this weekend to remember her life via the Brittany Zimmermann 5K Run/Walk. The walk benefits the Madison Area Crime Stoppers, a branch of a national organization which aims to solve and prevent crimes by offering cash rewards for anonymous and
confidential tips. Rewards for tips can be up to $1,000 — depending on the impact of the tip on the investigation. UW Dean of Students Lori Berquam said the annual event came together because so many of the Madison police and members of the community felt compelled to get involved, and they, along with the family, wanted to give back and help keep Zimmermann’s memory alive. As one of the event’s many participants, Berquam said the run is a great family event. Last year’s run drew nearly 300 participants, and Crime Stoppers Coordinator Rodney Wilson said he expects an even larger turnout this year. Crime Stoppers is planning on having the third annual run this year this Saturday at 9 a.m. Following Zimmermann’s death, controversy and confusion surrounded the way Dane County’s 911 Center handled her call. The center received a call from Zimmermann’s cell phone sometime during the incident, but upon answering the call, the dispatcher was met with silence and did
not alert the police. The Zimmermann family later followed with a wrongful death lawsuit. Since the incident, the 911 Center has made several policy changes and implemented a number of new services to improve the center. Specifically, the center has implemented a “When in doubt, dispatch” policy. “We track various performance measures to ensure we’re continuously striving for excellence, … including tracking all abandoned calls to ensure that all are dealt with in accordance with our policy,” Dane County ENP Director John Dejung said. The center has adopted a nationally recognized call-taking protocol for law enforcement, and the program is overseen by the National Academies of Emergency Dispatch, he added. The center has also formalized a Support Services staff to oversee training and quality assurance of all 911 calls. The 911 response time has improved, as 95 percent of 911 calls are answered in 15 seconds or less, Dejung said.
The center has also lengthened the time the dispatcher spends on the line with each citizen to ensure protocol is completely followed. “Any changes that can help save a life — though it didn’t help Brittany — can give us some comfort,” Brittany Zimmermann’s mother, Jean, said of the improvements at the call center. Since the homicide hit campus, UW has worked on several safety-related improvements. “Brittany’s death reaffirmed a commitment to doing whatever we can to keep students safe. … That’s part of what we want to have as a university value,” Associate Dean of Students Kevin Helmkamp said. WiscAlerts, a measure that was in the works prior to Zimmermann’s death, was implemented following her murder. WiscAlerts is a campus-wide text message system designed to provide the campus with information in an emergency. This, among other safety measures, was intended to
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Student government officials are beginning to express interest in proposing changes to the University of Wisconsin’s ethnic studies general education requirement. Mia Akers, the chair of the Associated Students of Madison’s Diversity Committee, said the committee’s interest in changing the ethnic studies requirement comes from the desire to make the ethnic studies courses more applicable to the lives of students at UW. “We are looking to change the requirement so it’s more reflective of our climate and diversity here at UW,” Akers said. Akers said they hope to enhance the requirement by making
the ethnic studies classes more open to discussion among students in the hope students will better understand each other. She also added she wanted the ethnic studies courses to have a greater focus on racial situations in the United States rather than focusing on racial roles in the international environment. “We would like the classes to deal more with race relations in the U.S. so the things discussed can be applied to situations on campus,” Akers said. According to Vice Provost for Diversity and Climate Damon Williams, the parties involved with the changes have not yet decided on a concrete plan for the development of the changes. However, Williams said
ETHNIC STUDIES, page 2
Student arrested for dorm thefts Julia Skulstad Campus Life Editor A University of Wisconsin student was arrested for alleged theft in university housing residence halls including Cole Hall and Sellery Hall. According to a statement from the UW Police Department, investigators identified a suspect involved with the recent university housing thefts Wednesday. Nicholas Suarez, a student at UW but not a campus housing resident, confessed to investigators he committed the crimes, the statement said. He was then admitted to the Dane County Jail. UWPD requested charges for burglary, theft and disorderly
conduct from the Dane County District Attorney’s Office. UWPD Sgt. Aaron Chapin said theft is the number one crime on campus and the office receives somewhere between 300-400 cases of it per year. “Occasionally it does lead to arrest, but a lot of thefts are very difficult to investigate, and there is not a lot of evidence that ends up helping us make arrests,” Chapin said. Chapin said Suarez’s potential consequences include a conviction for criminal charges and other possible criminal consequences. He added the university also may take disciplinary action as well.
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Council extends collective bargaining rights for union Camille Albert City Hall Editor In an emergency City Council meeting Thursday, the City of Madison came to an agreement with a local union that allowed the two parties to continue collectively bargaining until March 2015. The Council voted unanimously to approve the agreement to extend the former March 2014 deadline
for collective bargaining with the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees Local 60. AFSCME represents 1,100 city employees. Ald. Mike Verveer, District 4, said the agreement between the City of Madison and the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees Local 60 Union extends the former March 2014 deadline for collective bargaining
an additional 12 months. AFSCME represents 1,100 city employees. The majority of AFSCME agreed with this decision, with 73 percent of its members voting in favor of the compromise with the city, according to Verveer. According to Mayor Paul Soglin, if the two parties had not come to this compromise, in March 2014 bargaining
COUNCIL, page 3
TJ Pyzyk The Badger Herald
Labor Relations Manager Greg Leifer addresses City Council in its emergency meeting Thursday. Council voted to extend AFSCME’s collective bargaining rights. © 2012 BADGER HERALD
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The Badger Herald | News | Friday, September 28, 2012
Events today 6-8:30 p.m. Shabbat with Hillel
TODAY
TOMORROW
SUNDAY
MONDAY
TUESDAY
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mostly sunny
partly cloudy
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partly cloudy
sunny
UW Hillel 611 Langdon St.
9:30 p.m. WUD Film Presents: “21 Jump Street” The Marquee Union South
Events tomorrow 9 a.m. Third Annual Brittany Run 5K Lot 60/Temin Lakeshore Path
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State criticized for handling of grants WEDC receives criticism from federal government, confusion arises when aide fails to inform board of directors Polo Rocha State Legislative Editor The Wisconsin Economic Development Corporation received criticism in a letter from the federal government, but the agency’s board of directors did not know about it until yesterday. The federal government sent a letter to the state’s Department of Administration Aug. 16, criticizing its failure to adhere to federal and state laws in giving out grants. The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development said in its letter to the state’s Department of Administration the WEDC gave out around $9.6 million in funds “without the appropriate authority.”
Gov. Scott Walker replaced the state’s Department of Commerce with WEDC, a semi-private agency. DOC’s economic development portion became part of WEDC’s responsibilities in July 2011, but according to HUD, the new agency did not have the authority to give out grants until this March. The administration of grants given out by WEDC in those times will be transferred to DOA, according to DOA’s reply to the federal agency earlier this month. WEDC’s board of directors did not find out about the letter to DOA until the Wisconsin State Journal reported on the issue Wednesday, which led to a few board members publicly expressing their
disappointment. DOA Secretary Mike Huebsch said in a board meeting Thursday he regrets his decision to not inform WEDC board members about the letter, according to The Associated Press. His reasoning for his decision was DOA and HUD discussed the recently established WEDC often. One of the board members, FluGen Inc. President and CEO Paul Radspinner, wrote a letter to Walker expressing his “deep concerns” about not being informed on the issue. “It is unconscionable the WEDC staff would consider this issue not important enough to share with the board at the June meeting let alone last week’s meeting,” Radspinner said in his letter.
oversight for the agency comes from the board but cannot occur when the board is not informed of “extremely significant correspondence.” Julie Laundrie, spokesperson for Sen. Jon Erpenbach, D-Middleton, said Walker did not give enough time for the WEDC creation to be well thought out. “Clearly, there may have been some issues with the speed of which WEDC was created, and we are seeing the ramifications of that now,” she said. “Ultimately, government is responsible for where taxpayer money is spent, and it’s essential that the checks and balances are used in the way that is intended.” The Associated Press contributed to this report.
As a business owner, Radspinner said he always informs the board immediately of any problems so “there are no surprises.” Another board member, Assembly Minority Leader Peter Barca, D-Kenosha, was also unhappy about not being informed of the letter, Barca spokesperson Melanie Conklin said. “When HUD sends a letter saying state grants awarded may have been done in an illegal fashion, that is something that should certainly be shared with the board,” Conklin said in an email to The Badger Herald. “One would hope such a letter is out of the ordinary and not merely ‘routine’ correspondence from a federal agency.” Conklin said legislative
Panel addresses energy issues Tara Golshan Higher Education Editor A principal adviser to President Barack Obama joined a roundtable discussion on national energy policy Wednesday on the University of Wisconsin campus to speak on the policies, technologies and incentives influencing the future of energy. Nancy Sutley, chair of the Council on Environmental Quality and Obama’s principal environmental policy adviser, was featured on a panel of UW professors and Wisconsin energy researchers in an event co-sponsored by the Nelson Institute and the UW Office of Sustainability. Sutley, who laid the work of the Obama administration, emphasized the president’s understanding of energy issues in the United States. “The president understands the integral nature of our energy economy to our larger economy overall,” Sutley said. “We can really lead the world in clean energy and how important it is for us as a country to invest in clean energy here in the United States.”
Sutley added by 2025, American consumers will be able to experience the significant strides made in clean energy under the Obama administration. By 2025, it is expected consumers will save trillions of dollars at the pump, she said. However, despite this progress, Sutley said there is still a lot of work left. According to her, Congress is an essential tool in moving forward with clean energy jobs in the United States. “We feel there is a lot we have done,” Sutley said. “But there is still a lot we have left to do, and the president has been calling on congress to act to invest in clean energy in manufacturing and creating jobs at home.” UW Engineering and Physics professor Michael Corradini agreed with Sutley on the importance of Congress. Policy and economics and societal impact play large parts in this challenge, Corradini said. According to Sutley, Obama encouraged Congress to pass production tax credit to support jobs in manufacturing, specifically the wind industry, an area where she said there is a lot of
Jill Peters The Badger Herald
Council on Environmental Quality Chair and Policy Adviser to the President Nancy Sutley speaks to a crowd. She said a lot of progress needs to be made in clean energy. growth. The panel, which was titled “All of the Above,” also highlighted the importance of working on all sources of energy in the short term in addition to focusing on the alternative sources. “We need to develop these new sources of energy,” Sutley said. “We need this diverse supply of energy, and we need to do all of these things at once, and that is something the president believes we can do.” In response to the high
levels of U.S. greenhouse gas emissions in relation to the world, assistant professor of public affairs and environmental studies Gregory Nemet said although the United States is the second largest emitter of greenhouse gases in the world, levels have actually been leveling off and going down. Nemet said this can be explained in part by the “new, cheap and plentiful” natural gas in the U.S. According to Sutley, this
“relatively cheap” energy is putting a lot of Americans in the manufacturing industry back to work. Sutley also emphasized the world relies on American green technologies, like those discovered in Wisconsin research institutes. According to Nemet, the clean energy debate requires sustained effort, innovation and a diverse “all of the above” portfolio. The 2012 Madison Energy Summit will be held Oct. 30.
ETHNIC STUDIES, from 1 he hopes UW will obtain a broader and more valuable curriculum in the process of discussing potential requirement changes. “Given how the world continues to evolve, it may be time for us to
“It may be time for us to look at how we could embrace an even broader and more learning-centered requirement in the curriculum.”
Damon Williams
Vice Provost for Diversity and Climate
Ryan Rainey Vice Chairman
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look at how we could embrace an even broader and more learningcentered requirement in the curriculum that might contain not only a focus on ethnicity, but other dimensions of difference,” Williams said in an email to The Badger Herald. According to Akers, the ethnic studies requirement has not been updated since 2002 because people tend to think of diversity as something stagnant, when in reality it is constantly changing. Akers added this common perception reflects the need to
include diversity-based discussions in the ethnic studies courses UW students can apply to their lives on campus. “We need to think of [diversity] as a changing environment and make changes to [the curriculum requirements] that allow students to recognize the diversity we have,” Akers said. Williams said changes that will make the ethnic studies curriculum more specific to the UW environment will not only help the development of students now at the university, but also in the students’ future lives. According to Williams, by creating a set of “powerful learning goals,” a newer curriculum will also add to the leadership development of students and position them to better to engage on and off campus. Williams added the process of changing the curriculum would involve many UW faculty members but should also require the recommendations of students. “I think a number of individuals on campus would have a lot of keen insights that could help the faculty as they consider ways that we create curricular experiences to prepare students for the world they live in today,” Williams said in the email.
The Badger Herald | News | Friday, September 28, 2012
ZIMMERMANN, from 1 improve communication to the campus and inform students of risks, Helmkamp said. He said Zimmermann’s death has had significant emotional and psychological impacts on the campus, making it all the more important measures be put in place to prevent further tragedies from striking the campus. “One of the things I would say about university campuses, and particularly true about this place, is they are typically places of great hope, and to have someone who by all accounts exhibited the hope for the future universities pride themselves on taken so violently was a real shock to the campus,” he said. Earlier this year, the Zimmermann family also held the Brittany Zimmermann Memorial Microchip Clinic to honor their daughter. Her parents, Kevin and Jean Zimmermann, donated money to the Portage County Humane Society for homeless animals. Zimmermann’s love for animals motivated their involvement with the Humane Society, Jean said. She had three cats she shared with Jordan Gonnering, her fiancé at the time of her death. One of the cats, Felix, Brittany adopted from the humane society with a microchip. After Brittany’s death, Gonnering gave their
cats to the Zimmermann family. “He wanted us to have a part of Brittany,” Jean said. Among their many efforts to keep their daughter’s memory alive, the Zimmermann family also established the Brittany Zimmermann Scholarship Fund. Jean Zimmermann said they wanted to help her memory live on, and the scholarship seemed to be a good way to do so. The scholarship is awarded annually to a UW student planning to go into the medical field from Marshfield, Wis., Zimmermann’s hometown. Jean Zimmermann said her daughter valued education and cared about helping people be better human beings. Her major was medical microbiology and immunology. Zimmermann worked since she was 16 years old. During the summer before beginning her academic career, she worked three jobs so she could afford to go to college. As an incoming UW student, she had enough credits from high school for sophomore status, Jean added. “She honestly tried her best — she was a very bright and giving student; I want people to know hard work goes a long way,” she said. Zimmermann’s case still remains active. Though not all the information has been made available to the public
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THEFTS, from 1
is being delayed from its inevitable implementation by activists courts in Dane County,” Stone said in a statement. “I remain confident that this law will ultimately be found constitutional and that it will be fully re-instituted.” The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and Voces sued against the law, saying the requirement to have a photo ID at the polls is unconstitutional. The League of Women Voters of Wisconsin also challenged that provision in another lawsuit. Both won their cases in circuit courts earlier this year. Wisconsin’s voter ID law is the most restrictive in the country, Common Cause in Wisconsin Executive Director Jay Heck said. He said he was not surprised at the high court’s decision and added the court would need more time to evaluate the case and an overturning of the decision so close to the election would cause confusion. “I’m not surprised the Supreme Court didn’t take the case because there are some very deep and very strong constitutional issues here that have to be sorted out,” Heck said. He said people should know only the photo ID provision will not be in place, so changes such as residency requirements will still be in place.
Chapin also said students should lock their dorm rooms even if they are inside them and to make sure they are not letting anyone into the residence halls they do not recognize. Ald. Scott Resnick, District 8, said stealing is not uncommon in UW housing on campus and individual cases like this usually occur every semester. Resnick said individuals are caught
or the Zimmermann family, developments in the case continue. Madison Police Department spokesperson Joel DeSpain said MPD currently has detectives assigned to the case and is prepared to add resources to the investigation if needed. The Zimmermann family has not let go of hope yet, either. “We have to hope any new information, big or small, will ultimately contribute to finding her killer,” Jean Zimmermann said. “I don’t know if [he or she] will ever tell us why [he or she] did it — we don’t know why anyone would do something like that.” Jean Zimmermann said while her daughter’s killer is still unknown, she is thankful people are still talking about her and keeping her memory alive. According to DeSpain, in addition to the Crime Stoppers reward, the private reward fund being offered for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the person or persons responsible for Zimmermann’s death now sits at $14,000 and continues to grow. “We are still confident that we will find Brittany’s killer and bring justice for her and her family,” DeSpain said. Anyone with information regarding Zimmerman’s death should contact the Madison Area Crime Stoppers.
through a variety of measures such as cameras, people turning themselves in and conversations between the UWPD and the Madison Police Department. Resnick said he agrees students living in the dorms should lock their doors even if they are in their rooms during the day and at night. “Be diligent even if you are leaving for the bathroom,” Resnick said. “Burglary can happen in a matter of seconds.”
COUNCIL, from 1 rights would no longer exist and the city would be in a position to make reductions in wages or benefits to city employees as it saw fit. A strong bargaining unit is in the interest of union members and management, Soglin said. He said if the collective bargaining rights expired in 2014 as previously scheduled, the city would be forced to make more cuts and reductions. “By having this agreement, we can sit down with the workers who provide the service to the city to figure out what is in everyone’s best interest,” Soglin said. “We can do it as a team as we have done for decades, rather than make decisions unilaterally.” Verveer said this decision came about after Dane County Circuit Judge Juan Colás declared Gov. Scott Walker’s Act 10 that banned collective bargaining for public
unions unconstitutional. The ruling only applied to local governments and school districts, not state employees. Soglin said the bargaining units have shown great maturity because although they have faced 8- to-10 percent losses in income as a result of Act 10, they continue to work with the city to figure out how to serve the community. The union members have agreed to a 3 percent pay cut, which could save the city millions of dollars, according to Verveer. Verveer also said this extension of collective bargaining rights is currently taking place in Dane County and the Madison Metropolitan School District as well to keep the union voice in the workplace. Staff Representative for AFSCME Jennifer McCulley said she wants to thank the city for supporting unions. “Madison leaders understand you can’t have
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quality service without quality workers, and employees need a voice in the workplace,” McCulley said. In the 2013 operating budget that Soglin will reveal next week, the city will go into its reserves to continue city services as a one-time event. He added without these agreements, the city would not be able to justify making the decision in such a “rational and sound” manner. Verveer said he is in strong favor of this agreement with union workers. “I very much have seen first-hand over the years the value of workers having a formal voice in the workplace,” Verveer said. “It’s quite helpful and provides for a better delivery of city services to our community.” If Colás grants the city more time, it will adopt some additional union contracts at the City Council meeting next Tuesday, Verveer said.
Opinion
Editorial Page Editor Reginald Young oped@badgerherald.com
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The Badger Herald | Opinion | Friday, September 28, 2012
WEDC spending wasteful blunder Taylor Nye Managing Editor Today, the Department of Administration received a strongly worded letter from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development telling it to quit writing checks it couldn’t cash. As Gov. Scott Walker’s administration plays the finger-pointing game, it’s unclear what the funds in limbo will mean for the Wisconsin public. The DOA oversees a newly formed corporation (yes, corporation) called the Wisconsin Economic Development Corporation. Did I mention it’s a corporation? Near the beginning of his administration, Walker created WEDC as a halfprivate entity to absorb the former Department of Commerce. This already makes me want to tear my hair out. I want to separate big business and government like you’d separate two kids pinching each other in the backseat of a car. And surprise surprise: Apparently this restructuring has lead to some snags. In a
May 17, 2012, letter, the Feds warned WEDC’s powers must be limited because the attorney general could not even certify that it was an “instrumentality of the state.” This little hang-up would make me happy, except that the WEDC had already handed out $9.6 million in grants. Whoops! Most of us would not spend that much money if we didn’t know we had it, but that didn’t stop the Walker administration. The funny thing is, though, that the Feds outlined 15 more problems with WEDC in this strongly worded letter. And not even just little problems: They’re critical problems. Furthermore, the CEO of WEDC jumped ship to become president of a Madison-based nonprofit. Coincidence? My mom says not to believe in coincidences. The best thing for WEDC and Walker to do in a situation where $9.6 million is just kind of missing is hang their heads low, eat crow and try to work it out quietly before anyone notices. That’s what I, ahem, had to do when I spent the money my parents gave me for textbooks on cute swimsuits. But is that what Walker is doing? Not a chance. “Routinely, the federal government sends letters back to every state
THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE BITCHY
Zhao Lim The Badger Herald file photo
A recent letter from DOA to WEDC concerning questionable spending reflects a continual lack of follow-through for Gov. Scott Walker’s administration. government about a variety of things, back and forth, and the Legislature doesn’t convene a special session on those, nor do other entities,” Walker said, according to WisPolitics. If anything, he makes it sound as if his administration and the federal government are grade school pen pals sending letters. Somehow, even though Walker is not concerned, everyone else is. Sen. Julie Lassa, D-Stevens Point, said in a Wednesday statement it was “inexcusable that this
In response to the 9/23 column:
Affirmative action enrollment policies reinforce racism John Waters Columnist Hark! The annual Badger Herald “white people have it so hard” editorial has arrived.
That’s some high-level discourse. An insightful comment, really. One could almost respond “Hark! The daily pointless comment that lacks anything even remotely insightful while trying to make someone else feel like shit.” In the time it took you to read that comment, I bet the average high school student could have actually come up with a real argument. Solid rhetoric, really. It changed the opinion section editors’ lives. In response to the 9/23 column:
Affirmative action enrollment policies reinforce racism Caroline
The groups that you mentioned that could add “diversity” to campus (identifying as athiest, religious, Democrat, Republican, etc.) are
department,” reported WisPolitics. But I’m not even most concerned about the questionable legality of this entity. Nor am I most concerned DOA’s website looks like something a fifthgrader made in an HTML summer school class. What I’m most concerned about is something I’m becoming acutely aware of in college: The money has to come from somewhere. WEDC is funding some great stuff. But I’d hate to see the Global Business Development Program or
the Hispanic Chamber of Commerce see their money trickle away because Walker didn’t do his homework before he decided to wipe out an entire branch of government and turn it into a corporation. And unfortunately, as we continue to see in this administration, Walker’s lack of follow-through is to the detriment of Wisconsinites. Taylor Nye (tnye@ badgerherald.com) is a senior majoring in archaeology, biology and Latin American studies.
Reaction to call shows hypocrisy
A roundup of some of the more thought-provoking (or thoughtless) comments left on badgerherald.com
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letter was not shared with WEDC Board at its meeting last week, even though the administration received it in August.” Assembly Minority Leader Peter Barca, D-Kenosha, pointed out in the same statement that “the Republican Legislature made the hasty decision to create WEDC without having a business plan in place.” Even WEDC CEO Paul Jadin, now an ex-employee, said he was concerned about “the fact that someone could do that without the leadership signing off from either
This week, Wisconsin once again found itself in the middle of a union labor dispute. This time it was about referees, not teachers, and the people getting screwed were our favorite millionaires, not our children. After the “Inaccurate Reception” ruined my Monday night, it managed to bring the country together on labor issues. Because we might not be able to decide if teachers are “union thugs,” we sure as hell can tell the difference between catching a ball and catching a guy holding a ball. So, after weeks of ineptitude, the consensus was clear: The referees’ union was right, and the referees deserved whatever they wanted just so long as we got our football back. I know these are different labor situations. One is about a multi-billion dollar company watching its
hardball negotiating tactic backfire with a wave of bad national press when referees from the Lingerie Football League couldn’t handle professional athletes. The other relates to a government facing a deficit trying to find a way to get employee wages and benefits under control. Still, when both President Barack Obama and Gov. Scott Walker come out on the same side of a labor issue, it’s at least got to pique your curiosity. A lot of the issues in both cases are similar, and it’s interesting that on one hand we have the human Hercules NFL referee Ed Hochuli being petitioned by just about everyone to receive the benefits his union sought, while on the other hand teachers face a very vocal group that thinks the teachers not only don’t have the right to collectively bargain, but they are also essentially more interested in living off the government than educating their students. Look at the biggest issues in both cases: The NFL wanted to change the pension package the referees received into a 401(k), create a new system under which they could pay
for performance and change the overall pay structure; the state wanted to change how much teachers were paying into their pension and health care benefits, have the flexibility to start paying for performance and control the overall pay structure. In one case, the employers got everything they wanted, in the other the workers essentially got everything they wanted. Why? I don’t think they are equal situations, but it’s interesting to me that we as consumers of football never questioned the referees’ right to fight for what they thought was adequate compensation; in fact, we were the driving force behind them getting it. But as consumers of education, we absolutely questioned the teachers right to unionize and bargain. In Wisconsin, we took it away from them altogether until the recent Dane County court ruling and were able to save money as a state. Certainly a valuable goal, but also very similar to the goals of the NFL ownership. The NFL ownership has been blasted for allowing the replacement referees to operate, which only happened because at the end of the day the NFL
wanted to save money. We recognize in this country we need to be able to educate better, just as clearly as we saw the quality of officiating under the replacements was unacceptable. We demanded the NFL pay these referees to give us the quality we wanted. Yet for education we cut the budget by $900 million. A recent report by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities said “Teacher quality is the most important school-based determinant of student success.… Recruiting, developing, and retaining high-quality teachers is … critical to improving student achievement. But these tasks are more difficult when school districts are cutting their budgets.” We chose the priority of saving money over the priority of improving the system. I think the NFL learned the hard way you get what you pay for with the replacement referees. I wonder if there will be an “Inaccurate Reception” moment in education before we realize the same lesson. John Waters ( jkwaters@ wisc.edu) is a junior majoring in journalism.
NOT SYSTEMATICALLY OPPRESSED BY U.S. INSTITUTIONS. Minority racial and ethnic groups are subject to forms of oppression that whites (especially white, upper-middle class white males) will never experience, and which effects their access to quality education.
First, universities without affirmative action policies don’t “systematically oppress” minorities. At any given university, yes, there is the possibility a student belonging to a minority group will be subject to some form of the term because of prejudice, but how many times does the conservative side of a conversation get ignored because of political prejudice in the University of Wisconsin’s student culture? And if a university rejects an applicant who’s not a minority student but has a better application in place of a minority student, isn’t that one of the forms of “racial oppression” to which the commenter refers? In sum, affirmative action has no easy answer.
Sarah Witman The Badger Herald
Your Opinion · Send your letters to the editor and guest columns to oped@badgerherald.com. 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.
Comics
Alreaby Drungk Noah J. Yuenkel comics@badgerherald.com
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The Badger Herald | Comics | Friday, September 28, 2012
WHAT IS THIS
SUDOKU
HERALD COMICS
PRESENTS
S
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U WHITE BREAD & TOAST
toast@badgerherald.com
MIKE BERG
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, really? It’s not calculus or anything. Honestly, if you don’t know how to do a sudoku by now, you’ve probably got more issues than this newspaper.
TWENTY POUND BABY
DIFFICULTY RATING: No. Shuddup. YOU’RE drunk, thas you
HERALD COMICS
CLASSIC MADCAPS PRESENTS
K
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baby@badgerherald.com
STEPHEN TYLER CONRAD
madcaps@badgerherald.com
MOLLY MALONEY
HOW DO I
KAKURO?
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.
C’EST LA MORT
paragon@badgerherald.com
PARAGON
The Kakuro Unique Sum Chart Cells Clue 2 3 2 4 2 16 2 17
DIFFICULTY: Whatta you mean I gotta leave hey pal I’ma payin’ cussama
MOUSELY & FLOYD
NOAH J. YUENKEL
Possibilities { 1, 2 } { 1, 3 } { 7, 9 } { 8, 9 }
3 3 3 3
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{ 1, 2, 3 } { 1, 2, 4 } { 6, 8, 9 } { 7, 8, 9 }
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6 6 6 6
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nyuenkel@badgerherald.com
BUNI
pascle@badgerherald.com
RYAN PAGELOW
HERALD COMICS 1
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random@badgerherald.com
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Puzzle by Mark Diehl
BEADY EYES
YOUR COMIC
BRONTË MANSFIELD
YOUR NAME
comics@badgerherald.com
comics@badgerherald.com
38 Storybook pirate
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Get today’s puzzle solutions at badgerherald.com
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seller 45 Onetime landers at LAX 46 “Before ___ you go …” 47 Old comics dog 48 Classic Memphisbased record label 49 “I’m history” 51 “Got ya!”
Rocky the Herald Comics Raccoon™
Tomorrow it’s husk or be husked. Shuck or be shucked. What I’m really saying is POP THAT CORN!
ArtsEtc. Editor Allegra Dimperio arts@badgerherald.com
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The Badger Herald | Arts | Friday, September 28, 2012
Greensky Blue- The Head and the Heart grass
Laetitia Sadier
Friday, 10 p.m.
Saturday, 9:30 p.m. $ FREE!
$ $13 Majestic Theatre M
Friday, 8 p.m.
$ $25 Capitol Theater
ArtsEtc.
WEEKEND CONCERT
Union Terrace Un
Ty Segall
Saturday, 9:30 p.m. $12 in advance, $ $14 at the door
The Dirty Projectors
Hospitality
Saturday, 11 p.m. $ $33
$ $10
Majestic Theatre M
Sunday, 8 p.m. High Noon Saloon H
High Noon Saloon H
ARTSETC. PRESENTS GET TO KNOW YOUR VENUES
Majestic Theatre: the story behind the stage Erik Sateren ArtsEtc. Staff Reporter This is the first in a weekly series of features introducing you to Madison’s music venues. Nestled comfortably on King Street in the shadow of the Wisconsin State Capitol lies the Majestic Theatre. From the exterior, the Majestic could be any concert venue. A simple, unobtrusive marquee greets passersby, and for the ignorant folks unfamiliar with the goings-on inside, the only attention-grabber is the building’s pair of large, well-lit signs, boldly proclaiming the word “MAJESTIC.” This simple adjective is entirely sufficient in describing the interior; step into
the lobby of the 106-year old theater, and the significance of its name becomes obvious. The Majestic — large enough to house 600 energetic concertgoers but small enough to feel intimate and welcoming — is, in a word, beautiful. The sleek, black surfaces of the modernist bar area complement the extravagant, antiquated architecture that frames the beautiful, century-old stage. The Majestic’s balcony, with noteworthy stadium seating, overlooks the large, wellpolished dance floor that juts out from the stage. Maroon walls provide a beautiful contrast to the neon blue lights which cut across the theater. This is the stuff concertgoers’ dreams are made of.
The Majestic opened at the turn of the century as a vaudeville theater, showcasing silent films and magic acts, Harry Houdini included. Over the century, the theater underwent myriad transformations, as it turned into a movie theater, then a porno movie theater (ah, the seventies) and finally a hip hop club — “Club Majestic.” The club ran into some issues with its liquor license, and the city eventually shut it down, leaving the Majestic vacant and owner-less. Enter the master concert-planning duo of Matt Gerding and Scott Leslie. After college, the two Midwesterners found themselves living in Los Angeles, Leslie working as a musician, Gerding as a booking agent. Through mutual friends, the two met, ended up living together and began attending concerts regularly. “After attending so many shows, finally it was like, we have a very unique skill set for two people,” Leslie recalled, “and this was the experience of knowing what artists want on the road and what agents are looking for in offers.” Gerding and Leslie realized live music could be
turned into a career. The duo discovered promise in the then-vacant Majestic, fell in love with Madison and decided to put their skill set into action. One thing led to another, and, in 2007, the Majestic opened as a fullfledged live music venue. Initially, the challenge of opening a theater for popular music was exactly that: challenging. “It took a while to start getting the artists that we wanted,” Gerding said. “The music industry, like a lot of industries, is a relationship game. We had some key relationships that helped us get started,” he said. “It took a while to build up our reputation. It’s definitely been a process.” For the “new” Majestic’s grand opening on Sept. 29, 2007, singer-songwriter Mandy Moore performed. “It was great and everything went smooth,” Gerding said, “but, you know, I’d be lying if I said she was number one on our list for our grand opening.” Fast-forward half a decade, and for the Majestic’s fiveyear anniversary, Gerding and Leslie have convinced the Hold Steady to play a celebration concert on King Street — for free. In just five years, the Majestic Theater has established
itself as the premier live music venue of Madison. Bassnectar, Sufjan Stevens, Dropkick Murphys and The Bouncing Souls are among hundreds of bands that have graced the Majestic stage, and the venue’s fall calendar promises more great nights of music to usher in the winter season. (The Dirty Projectors, Dinosaur Jr., G. Love & Special Sauce and Sleigh Bells are all scheduled to perform this autumn.) Inevitably, the theater’s 600-person capacity puts some restrictions on which bands can play. “Coldplay or Bruce Springsteen are never going to come here,” Leslie conceded. Instead, the Majestic focuses on exposing up-and-coming bands. Last year, the Majestic sold 6,000 tickets for the Bassnectar show at Exhibition Hall, three years after he played for a crowd of 250 in the Majestic. “We’ve been able to grow with those artists,” Gerding said. “That’s kind of the goal, moving forward.” And this is precisely what the Majestic Theatre strives for: to introduce people to new artists, and in doing so, make people happy. “Something we’ve tried to instill in Madisonians is to come down and take a chance on artists sometimes,”
Gerding said. “Take five minutes to go to our website and listen to an artist’s music. You might hear something that you like,” he said. “We always try to persuade people to discover and experience new music.” Speaking from the experience of a college graduate, Leslie said, “The nights you spent at the Majestic drinking with your friends, seeing a band on stage, are the nights you’re going to remember. You’re not going to remember, you know,’x’ night on State Street, where you went to this or that bar. You’re going to remember seeing this or that show, and those are going to be the memories you have from college.” “We’re lucky enough that our job involves making people happy. People come here because a band that they love is playing onstage. When your job involves making people happy, it tends to make you a little bit happier as a person, too.” The Majestic will celebrate its five-year anniversary this weekend with performances from The Dirty Projectors, Hannibal Buress and The Hold Steady. For information on showtimes and ticket cost, visit majesticmadison.com.
Hiatus no detriment to The Killers Nick Bauman-Martin ArtsEtc. Reporter With the release of their fourth studio album, Battle Born, The Killers have moved into a new stage in the band’s lifetime — middle age. But they’ve averted crisis this time; it’s the same old Brandon Flowers and company delivering anthems, ballads and powerful guitar movements. Battle Born is somewhat of a departure from previous endeavors — although it retains many of the characteristics Killers fans have become used to — and it delivers on all fronts. This is not the radio rock of Hot Fuss, nor is it the gloves-off crunch of Sam’s Town or the space-ier Day & Age. Battle Born is both a return to roots and an amalgamation of past efforts. Battle Born (a phrase which appears on the state flag of Nevada, the band’s home state) marks the end of the band’s four-year hiatus, but
The Killers appear to have come together quite nicely to put this record together. In fact, their break may have been a nice breather; the band seems loose and fresh in this recording. It makes sense considering their productivity — after the release of Day & Age in 2008, they had released three studio albums and a compilation album all in fewer than five years. The album’s main theme is one of toughness and perseverance. On the title and final track, Flowers sings, “You’re up against the wall/Something dying on the street/When they knock you down/You’re going to get back on your feet,” suggesting the tried and true “back on the horse” ideas are in full force here. It’s not the most creative moral, but for The Killers it certainly works, and, more importantly, it sounds good. The album kicks off with “Flesh and Bone,” a track that asks the essential
question, “What are you made of?” and answers it with “flesh and bone.” It serves as a steady reminder that we are basically walking bags of meat — something of a return to basics philosophically before diving into the rest of the album. The following track is the album’s first single, “Runaways,” a predictably catchy tune — standard Killers fare. The next two, “The Way it Was” and “Here with Me,” are reliable Flowers ballads, built around uplifting chord progressions and the keyboard work. The album picks up significantly on “A Matter of Time,” which changes form multiple times but is solid throughout, especially in the last two minutes, where Flowers writes of a relationship that has bitten the dust: “It was a matter of time/Can’t you see that it’s tearing me up inside?/Look what’s laying at our feet/That’s the wreckage of broken dreams.” But the makers of Battle
Born make it clear grit and resolution are to be praised here. On the next track, “Deadlines and Commitments,” Flowers sings, “If you should ever tire/Or if you should require/A sudden simple twist of fate/Don’t hide away/ There’s something to be said for pushing through.” These lines demonstrate Battle Born’s theme to the core. The track itself is a classic Killers jam, with a throbbing bass solo and ‘80s-sounding anthemic choruses. The rest of the album proves to be well worth the wait. “The Rising Tide,” “Heart of a Girl” and “Battle Born” are all especially worth listens and are standouts on the already stacked album. The final track ties together the album’s theme and provides a radical conclusion to an album that is somehow both classic Killers and something new.
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The Badger Herald | Classifieds | Friday, September 28, 2012
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Sports UNDERDOG, from 8 season, but on 11 rushing attempts this season, he’s racked up 187 yards and three touchdowns. “You’ve got to play sound,” junior linebacker Chris Borland said of UW’s rush defense, which has allowed only one touchdown in 2012. “You’ve got to be in the right place when you’re supposed to be there and then you’ve got to tackle. … They’re a great group of players so you’re going to have to do both your scheme and play well.” For the first time
MARTINEZ, from 8 send the safeties and cornerbacks at Martinez on selective plays, but as Southward pointed out, the defense will exchange missed sacks for blown coverage. “When you’re playing some quarterbacks who just sit in the pocket and [are] just sitting ducks, you go crazy, you get up the field and you try to get those guys,” Southward said. “But we have [to be] a little [smarter] when it comes to those type of things.” With a more poised Martinez, one confident
this season, Wisconsin hits the road as a true underdog. From the short history between both teams and Wisconsin’s recent stumbles, odds are against the Badgers as they travel to Nebraska. “For us it just comes [down to] doing what we do,” Frederick said. “Coming out and practicing the way that we do all week and hopefully going out and playing the game as well as we have played — obviously taking a step forward. I think it comes down to just being who we are.”
in making his reads down the field, lining up across from them, the Badgers’ maxim is to avoid a crippling big play. Defending the new and improved Martinez is a game of containment, for attempting to shut down Nebraska’s top playmaker could cost Wisconsin dearly. “All around college football people are giving up big plays — it’s what the game is today,” Strickland said. “So our job is to limit those, and make sure we’re in the right spots so we’re challenging those when they do come.”
Ryder Cup as good as golf gets Sean Zak Zak It To Ya The setting is perfect. For the game of golf, the Ryder Cup is as good as it gets, and I had the pleasure of witnessing it Thursday. The Ryder Cup, for those who may not know, is sort of like the Olympics for professional golfers. The event is played once every two years, pitting the best 12 golfers from the United States against the top 12 golfers from Europe. Competition ensues in one of the world’s favorite games. The Ryder Cup has never been as close to home as it would be this week, so I had to be there. Yes, I shirked my responsibilities as a student but honored my responsibilities as a golfer. I owed it to myself to attend a major golf event, something I had yet to treat myself to. After entering a lottery two summers ago, I was able to purchase a pair of tickets to the Thursday round.
I found it fitting to bring along my grandfather, the man who taught me the game of golf. It was like attending a Wild Card playoff football game at Lambeau, spectacular in its own sense. My budget as a college student limits my spending habits — many times with good reason — so the weekend rounds slipped away from my grasp. But it didn’t even matter that I was just attending a practice round. Even if every putt didn’t count for points in the event, everything great about the world’s biggest golf event was on stunning display. Immaculate is the only term that can rightfully describe Medinah Country Club. Located just west of Chicago, everything imagined beautiful about one of the best U.S. cities doubles in beauty at Medinah. As expected, the course is in impeccable shape — it’s the Ryder Cup, so it better be. Medinah challenges golfers in a different way than most other courses. The course doesn’t contain any super tight, hit-it-and-pray tee shots on the course. The fairways are lined with a sprinkling of oak trees, which, giving the young season of fall, give this weekend the setting all fans
dream of. The players cannot be crazy about it, though. Find the rough and they’ll find four-to-five inches of heavy grass. A body of streams bend and extend throughout the course, visible on 10 of the 18 holes. Golfers love to say “More of the drink, the more we will think.” The more water, the more pressure, and there is no bigger stage than the Ryder Cup. More than 100 years have passed since golf was a sport at the Summer Olympic Games. Although golf will return in 2016, the 2012 Ryder Cup is widely considered an extension of the 2012 Olympics. Over the past few weeks, Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy have been the pair stirring the pot of professional golf. They both play great golf; Tiger gets compared to Rory, Rory gets compared to Tiger. You could call them a couple — they’ve been acting like BFFs. Not this week, though. This week, Tiger is an American competitor and Rory is a European competitor, as are the rest of their teammates. There are two driving ranges at Medinah — one for America, one for Europe. There is no prize money
awarded, making the players completely patriotic in their pitches, chips and sand shots. If the players seem patriotic, the fans trump them fashionably. Red, white and blue are visible in polos, slacks, hats and visors, with the occasional pair of America-styled Zubaz being flaunted. But the fans don’t stop with their apparel. The “U-S-A” chants demonstrated in London will be matched in Medinah. While the chants won’t be nearly as deafening as they were this summer, the fact there are chants is pretty awesome in itself. If you weren’t able to figure out Ryder Cup plans early enough and missed it this time around, don’t worry. The event returns to the Midwest in 2016 at Hazeltine National Golf Club in Minnesota before Whistling Straits gets its chance. On Sunday, the match play will end and the chants will cease. It will be far too early to make plans for a future Ryder Cup, but it is never too early to start thinking about it. Join me — I’ll be there. Sean is a junior majoring in journalism. What are your thoughts on the Ryder Cup? Tell him on Twitter at @sean_zak.
The Badger Herald | Sports | Friday, September 28, 2012
Ian McCue, Sports Editor | sports@badgerherald.com
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Gus McNair The Badger Herald Design
After routing Nebraska 48-17 in 2011 under Camp Randall lights, Wisconsin underdog in 2012 rematch year after Big Ten debut Kelly Erickson Senior Sports Writer Three hundred and sixty four days ago, Camp Randall roared. The normally solid red bowl was freckled black. Nebraska was finally in town. But little to its knowledge, Nebraska was about to receive one of the worst welcomes to the Big Ten it could have feared. It was highly touted as one of the biggest matchups in the Big Ten last year, but when the final score flashed on the scoreboards, the 48-17 decision seemed more like an ass-kicking rather than a battle of epic proportions.
After quarterback Taylor Martinez threw three interceptions and Montee Ball scored four touchdowns, the Cornhuskers faced embarrassment as they were largely expected to run the conference slate in their move from the Big 12. With Nebraska playing host to the rematch this season, the Badgers are excited to get their first chance to play in Lincoln in an atmosphere that’s said to rival Madison’s. “I’ve heard there’s a really great atmosphere there,” junior center Travis Frederick said. “I hear they do things a little bit different than other teams, but I’m excited to
get down there. I heard it’s a great stadium, a great atmosphere, a great crowd. Obviously they’re going to be loud and its kind of fun to play road games.” After a solid 210-yard passing performance last week, redshirt freshman Joel Stave will start under center in the conference opener. Senior running back Ball also said there was “no doubt” he will play this week despite sitting out most of the UTEP game after sustaining a concussion near the beginning of the second quarter. “I know I don’t want to sit out of the game,” Ball said. With 213 yards on the
ground against UTEP, the offensive line and the running game finally looked like they were starting to gel — elements that had been missing in the previous three weeks. With a stronger looking offense in its final nonconference game, Frederick feels the O-line — despite all its drama previously this season — is ready for what lies ahead. “I think that we’ve taken several good steps and I think we’re working in the correct direction,” Frederick said of the offensive line. “If we continue to take those steps — I think we are going to take a step this week — we’re definitely
going to be ready for the Big Ten season.” While the Badgers hope their new-found offensive vibe finds its way to Lincoln, the Huskers are optimistic quarterback Taylor Martinez will continue his stellar season. Martinez, a dual-threat quarterback, reworked his throwing motion in the offseason and has seen it pay dividends through the nonconference season. The 6-foot-1, 200-pound junior has thrown for 878 yards and nine touchdowns, with only one interception, this season. Wisconsin’s defense is aware of Martinez’s revamped game but still remains confident it will be
able to test him. “We just have to keep our eyes on him and know whether it’s a pass, and if it’s a pass he could take off and run and get our eyes back on him,” senior linebacker Mike Taylor said. “If he breaks out, breaks contain, we’ve got to have good pursuit and get to the ball.” While Martinez has overhauled his game, Wisconsin is also keying in on Nebraska’s run game, which has scored 14 touchdowns this season. Central to that running game is senior Rex Burkhead. Burkhead has missed a few games this
UNDERDOG, page 7
With another season under his belt, Huskers’ dual-threat quarterback Martinez presents Badgers’ D with new challenges through air Ian McCue Sports Editor One year ago, Nebraska quarterback Taylor Martinez fell apart under the lights of Camp Randall. He threw three interceptions and connected on just half of his 22 passing attempts. He served as the microcosm of a Cornhuskers team that looked overmatched in its Big Ten debut. But it’s a new season, and Martinez has looked like a different quarterback, the efficient passer of which he had shown promising flashes but never sustained. Through four games, Martinez is throwing for an average of 219.5 yards per game and nine touchdowns, a total countered by a single
interception. It doesn’t take more than a few snaps of observation to realize how much more composed the junior quarterback looks sitting in the pocket and slinging back his arm to launch a pass into the hands of his intended target. “He’s staying in the pocket a lot more; he’s not rolling out and trying to make as many plays with his feet, even though obviously he can,” junior free safety Dezmen Southward said. “His throwing motion looks a lot better, he’s hitting a lot more guys and he’s a little more accurate this year.” And his ability to move the ball and extend collapsing plays with his own legs is as strong as ever, ranking third on the team
with 191 rushing yards on the season. Always a threat as a runner — he ran for 874 yards in 2011 after gaining 965 as a freshman — Wisconsin (3-1) must now show equal respect for his competence through the air. UW players and coaches emphasized their top priority Saturday — their first trip to Lincoln since 1973 — is stopping the ground attack by clogging any and all holes along the line of scrimmage. It’s the smart approach for a Huskers (3-1) team that ranks third in the nation with 317.5 rushing yards per game. With not only Martinez, but also running backs Rex Burkhead and Ameer Abdullah, anchoring
a traditional Big Ten offensive attack, points come through physical, grinding drives for Nebraska. But with Martinez’s newfound ability to open it up through the air, the secondary has to be wary of getting caught up in the run game. “You can’t be lulled to sleep with all the diff running they do — the option, old running style that they have,” senior cornerback Devin Smith said. “ [We] can’t be lulled to sleep, and when they have play-action and stuff you can’t be looking at the backfield [from] the secondary.” Though the Badgers’ defense has faced its fair share of dual-threat quarterbacks in the Big
Ten — Terrelle Pryor, Denard Robinson, Braxton Miller and MarQueis Gray come to mind — the only signal caller UW has faced comparable to Martinez this season was Utah State’s Chuckie Keeton. Keeton gained 75 yards on the ground, but none of his runs went for more than 12 yards, and he averaged just 5 yards per carry. He certainly found holes in the Wisconsin defense, but secondary coach Ben Strickland would be satisfied with a similar performance against the Huskers. “Those two guys (Keeton and Martinez) have the ability with their feet to make plays, and so there’s got to be an awareness in the pass rush and then to
coverage,” Strickland said. “We got to make sure that we plaster the guys in our zone if he’s scrambling and make sure that they get nothing cheap.” Southward added the defensive backs need to “match routes as aggressively as we always do,” but the linebackers and secondary will need to keep strong discipline to successfully contain Martinez. Defensive tackles Beau Allen and Ethan Hemer — two of the strongest points of this team through four games — will carry much of the load of bottling up the Big Ten’s top rushing attack. Co-defensive coordinator Chris Ash will surely
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