the daily cardinal - wednesday, september 30, 2009

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University of Wisconsin-Madison Complete campus coverage since 1892 dailycardinal.com Wednesday, September 30, 2009 l “…the great state University of Wisconsin should ever encourage that continual and fearless sifting and winnowing by which alone the truth can be found.” Mild salsa Some find UW mental-health care limited The first in a series on mental health examines UHS’ counseling services By Ryan Hebel THE DAILY CARDINAL Transferring to UW-Madison can be a stressful ordeal, but assimilating into Badger red when all you feel is blue is especially tough. UW-Madison senior “Michelle,” who, along with the other students quoted below, chose to remain anon- ymous because of privacy concerns, knows all about that. Two years ago, she came to UW-Madison as a junior looking for a fresh start after drop- ping out of an East Coast university because of chronic depression that led to a suicide attempt. She soon turned to University Health Services for anxiety counseling, where she met with a therapist throughout her first semester. Last year, about 10 percent of UW-Madison students sought treatment from UHS’ Mental Health Clinic for a total of at least 17,000 ses- sions in 2008, according to UHS Executive Director Sarah Van Orman. That’s at least 46 visits per day. Michelle’s UHS therapist helped her ease the transition, but Michelle knew it couldn’t last. By semester’s end, she was forced to find a new therapist because of a UHS policy that requires students be sent to out- side providers after 10 sessions in a year or 20 in their college career, and exceptions are rare. “The demand for sessions and services has been increasing ... so instead of serving fewer students with very long-term care, we want to serve more students with shorter-term care,” Van Orman said. Session limits vary across Big Ten schools, with six sessions offered at Purdue, 25 at Ohio State and 10 at Minnesota, but Van Orman said the policy satisfies about 90 percent of students looking for therapy. UHS has 31 counselors, or one for every 1,290 students, though many aren’t full-time and only seven prescribe medication. UHS’ current budget for men- tal health, Van Orman said, is between $3 and $4 million. Michelle is concerned more stu- dents are being deterred. “A lot of my problems came because I was bouncing between eight doctors and 12 therapists,” she said. “I was continuing to get worse until I was hospitalized that semester and had to drop all but one class, then left school for treatment.” Madison has many mental- health options, but students don’t enjoy the same exemptions from deductibles and other expenses as they do at UHS. “As a student, coming up each week with 20 percent of the $150 fee or something like that ... a lot of students say, ‘Forget it,’” Michelle said. “Nicole,” a UW-Madison law student, had just bought insur- ance through UHS when she found out her ADHD-fueled anxiety would need outside treatment since it couldn’t be cared for in 10 sessions. “It was the worst possible timing, because I went in when I was anxious about money in particular,” she said. “So to be told the $600 I paid wasn’t going Madison OUR AILING HEALTH CARE SYSTEM A collaborative reporting project of All Together Now, Madison, WI • ATNMadison.org R x DANNY MARCHEWKA/THE DAILY CARDINAL Participants practice their salsa dancing at a Beginning Salsa class in Memorial Union Tuesday night. Homeless advocates unnerved by proposed renovations to Peace Park By Maggie DeGroot THE DAILY CARDINAL Although the plans have yet to be approved, the proposal to renovate Peace Park has proven to be quite controversial. Some see the proposed reno- vation to Peace Park, located at 452 State St., as necessary, but others see nothing wrong with the park in its current state. At Tuesday’s neighborhood meeting concerning the pro- posed renovations, many people wanted to know how the renova- tions would impact the homeless population known to gather in the area. One female UW-Madison stu- dent spoke out and said that by renovating the park, the home- less would be driven out, no help would be provided to them and they would have nowhere else to go. The student also said she feared that if an ATM were installed in the proposed visi- tors center, which is part of the plan, then the homeless would be forced to panhandle farther away from the park because of a law prohibiting panhandling within a certain distance of an ATM. Ald. Mike Verveer, District 4, said he wants the new park to encourage more use because there are very few green spaces in the downtown area. He said the renovations would increase the number of people using the park instead of pushing them away. Another concern brought up By Caitlin Gath THE DAILY CARDINAL Madison has seen a string of recent robberies, prompting police to speculate on whether the incidents are connected. “We’ve seen five robberies in the last couple of days where the perpetrator’s description is some- what similar, so we’re looking into the possibility that they could be linked,” Joel DeSpain, public infor- mation officer for the Madison Police Department, said. DeSpain also said spikes in robberies are often the result of a person with a drug problem looking to get money for drugs. He added that such a situation is not unusual for Madison. Toppers Pizza, located at 1368 Regent St., was robbed late Monday night by a man carrying scissors. The suspect fled on foot with an undisclosed amount of money. Around 6 p.m. the same day, Jimmy John’s at 2807 University Ave. was also robbed. According to the police report, the suspect entered with a knife and fled on foot with an unknown amount of money. Sunday evening, a man claim- ing to have a gun robbed Miller’s Liquor on the 2400 block of University Avenue. Domino’s Pizza at 409 W. Gorham St. was robbed early Saturday afternoon. According to the police report, the suspect demanded cash and displayed a note stating he had a gun. Later on Saturday, a man displaying a knife robbed Greenbush Bakery on Regent Street. In all five cases, the suspect is said to be a white male in his early to mid-20s. He is between 5'10" and 6'1" with a thin build, blue eyes and a scruffy beard or facial stubble, according to the police reports. There have been no reported injuries resulting from the robberies. String of downtown robberies could be linked Tickets to Freakfest will go on sale Friday, Oct. 2, at 10 a.m. Tickets will be $7 in advance and $10 on the day of event, which is Saturday, Oct. 31. Tickets will be available: • Online at frankproductions.com • By phone at (800) 745-3000 • On State Street at University Book Store, Knuckleheads, Goodwill, Chin’s Asia Fresh and other locations Freakfest ticket sale update Joel DeSpain public information officer Madison Police Department “We’ve seen five robberies in the last couple of days where the perpetrator’s description is somewhat similar.” peace park page 3 mental health page 3 WOMEN’S HOCKEY LOOKS TO FILL VOID Without their head coach and top four scorers, the Badgers look to maintain dominance Tucker Max film drowns in intoxicated doses of debauchery and misogyny ARTS PAGE 5 l l SPORT S PAGE 8

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Page 1: The Daily Cardinal - Wednesday, September 30, 2009

University of Wisconsin-Madison Complete campus coverage since 1892 dailycardinal.com Wednesday, September 30, 2009l

“…the great state University of Wisconsin should ever encourage that continual and fearless sifting and winnowing by which alone the truth can be found.”

Mild salsa Some fi nd UW mental-health care limitedThe fi rst in a series on mental health examines UHS’ counseling servicesBy Ryan HebelTHE DAILY CARDINAL

Transferring to UW-Madison can be a stressful ordeal, but assimilating into Badger red when all you feel is blue is especially tough.

UW-Madison senior “Michelle,” who, along with the other students quoted below, chose to remain anon-ymous because of privacy concerns, knows all about that. Two years ago, she came to UW-Madison as a junior looking for a fresh start after drop-ping out of an East Coast university because of chronic depression that led to a suicide attempt. She soon turned to University Health Services for anxiety counseling, where she met with a therapist throughout her fi rst semester.

Last year, about 10 percent of UW-Madison students sought treatment from UHS’ Mental Health Clinic for a total of at least 17,000 ses-sions in 2008, according to UHS Executive Director Sarah Van Orman. That’s at least 46 visits per day.

Michelle’s UHS therapist helped her ease the transition, but Michelle knew it couldn’t last. By semester’s end, she was forced to fi nd a new therapist because of a UHS policy that requires students be sent to out-side providers after 10 sessions in a year or 20 in their college career, and exceptions are rare.

“The demand for sessions and services has been increasing ... so instead of serving fewer students with very long-term care, we want to serve more students with shorter-term care,” Van Orman said.

Session limits vary across Big Ten

schools, with six sessions offered at Purdue, 25 at Ohio State and 10 at Minnesota, but Van Orman said the policy satisfi es about 90 percent of students looking for therapy.

UHS has 31 counselors, or one for every 1,290 students, though many aren’t full-time and only seven prescribe medication. UHS’ current budget for men-tal health, Van Orman said, is between $3 and $4 million.

Michelle is concerned more stu-dents are being deterred.

“A lot of my problems came because I was bouncing between eight doctors and 12 therapists,” she said. “I was continuing to get worse until I was hospitalized that semester and had to drop all but one class, then left school for treatment.”

Madison has many mental-health options, but students don’t enjoy the same exemptions from deductibles and other expenses as they do at UHS.

“As a student, coming up each

week with 20 percent of the $150 fee or something like that ... a lot of students say, ‘Forget it,’” Michelle said.

“Nicole,” a UW-Madison law student, had just bought insur-ance through UHS when she found out her ADHD-fueled anxiety would need outside treatment since it couldn’t be cared for in 10 sessions.

“It was the worst possible timing, because I went in when I was anxious about money in particular,” she said. “So to be told the $600 I paid wasn’t going

MadisonOUR AILING

HEALTH CARE SYSTEM

A collaborative reporting project of All Together Now, Madison, WI • ATNMadison.org

Rx

DANNY MARCHEWKA/THE DAILY CARDINAL

Participants practice their salsa dancing at a Beginning Salsa class in Memorial Union Tuesday night.

Homeless advocates unnerved by proposed renovations to Peace ParkBy Maggie DeGrootTHE DAILY CARDINAL

Although the plans have yet to be approved, the proposal to renovate Peace Park has proven to be quite controversial.

Some see the proposed reno-vation to Peace Park, located at 452 State St., as necessary, but others see nothing wrong with the park in its current state.

At Tuesday’s neighborhood meeting concerning the pro-posed renovations, many people wanted to know how the renova-

tions would impact the homeless population known to gather in the area.

One female UW-Madison stu-dent spoke out and said that by renovating the park, the home-less would be driven out, no help would be provided to them and they would have nowhere else to go.

The student also said she feared that if an ATM were installed in the proposed visi-tors center, which is part of the plan, then the homeless would be

forced to panhandle farther away from the park because of a law prohibiting panhandling within a certain distance of an ATM.

Ald. Mike Verveer, District 4, said he wants the new park to encourage more use because there are very few green spaces in the downtown area. He said the renovations would increase the number of people using the park instead of pushing them away.

Another concern brought up

By Caitlin GathTHE DAILY CARDINAL

Madison has seen a string of recent robberies, prompting police to speculate on whether the incidents are connected.

“We’ve seen fi ve robberies in the last couple of days where the perpetrator’s description is some-what similar, so we’re looking into

the possibility that they could be linked,” Joel DeSpain, public infor-mation offi cer for the Madison Police Department, said.

DeSpain also said spikes in robberies are often the result of a person with a drug problem looking to get money for drugs. He added that such a situation is not unusual for Madison.

Toppers Pizza, located at 1368 Regent St., was robbed late Monday night by a man carrying scissors. The suspect fl ed on foot with an undisclosed amount of money.

Around 6 p.m. the same day, Jimmy John’s at 2807 University Ave. was also robbed. According to the police report, the suspect entered with a knife and fled on foot with an unknown amount of money.

Sunday evening, a man claim-ing to have a gun robbed Miller’s Liquor on the 2400 block of University Avenue.

Domino’s Pizza at 409 W. Gorham St. was robbed early Saturday afternoon. According to the police report, the suspect demanded cash and displayed a note stating he had a gun. Later on Saturday, a man displaying a knife robbed Greenbush Bakery on Regent Street.

In all five cases, the suspect is said to be a white male in his early to mid-20s. He is between 5'10" and 6'1" with a thin build, blue eyes and a scruffy beard or facial stubble, according to the police reports.

There have been no reported injuries resulting from the robberies.

String of downtown robberies could be linked

Tickets to Freakfest will go on sale Friday, Oct. 2, at 10 a.m.

Tickets will be $7 in advance and $10 on the day of event, which is Saturday, Oct. 31.

Tickets will be available:• Online at frankproductions.com• By phone at (800) 745-3000• On State Street at University Book Store, Knuckleheads,

Goodwill, Chin’s Asia Fresh and other locations

Freakfest ticket sale update

Joel DeSpainpublic information offi cer

Madison Police Department

“We’ve seen fi ve robberies in the last couple of days where the perpetrator’s description is

somewhat similar.”

peace park page 3

mental health page 3

WOMEN’S HOCKEY LOOKS TO FILL VOIDWithout their head coach and top four scorers, the Badgers look to maintain dominance

Tucker Max fi lm drowns in intoxicated doses of debauchery and misogyny

ARTS PAGE 5l l

WOMEN’S HOCKEY LOOKS TO FILL VOIDlSPORTS PAGE 8

Page 2: The Daily Cardinal - Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Corrections or clarifi cations? Call The Daily Cardinal offi ce at 608-262-8000 or send an e-mail to [email protected].

For the record

l

S ome apartments come with free furnishings, others with free cable. Much to

my dismay and disappointment, my new apartment on Gilman Street came with none of those things but it did offer one special feature. Free mice!

I’m not scared of mice per se, though they certainly can be star-tling. It’s more that they make me angry because they are invading my space and eating my food. And no one eats my food without my express permission.

To solve the problem, my boy-friend Jarred (or Stubby to those who know him/have ever met him) brought over a safe mousetrap and loaded it up with peanut butter. Then we waited. And waited.

Apparently, either the smartest mouse in the world or one with a nut allergy moved into our apart-ment. Great. So we called in the expert: the pest control guy. He came over, put out a bunch of traps and told us he would be back in a month to check them.

But instead of capturing

Franklin—he’s been with us since the day we moved in, so we thought it was appropriate to name him—the exact opposite happened. We met Tomás, Franklin’s best friend.

My friend Aime spotted a mouse dart out of our living room closet and towards the kitchen. I assumed it was just Franklin and ignored him because he’s practical-ly our fourth roommate. But then she saw another one. And while Franklin might be invincible and extremely clever, I highly doubt he has the ability to teleport.

This new mouse, Tomás, was not as smart as his counterpart. He hung out under the closet door for so long Aime and I were able to rearrange the traps in my liv-ing room into an arrangement he couldn’t avoid. And within 15 minutes of moving the traps, we got him.

This turned out to be an even bigger problem than fi nding him in the fi rst place because we used sticky traps, which I’m convinced are the most horrible things ever. Tomás was only stuck by his back legs and tried to run away, clearly unaware that I was trying to cap-ture/kill him.

Watching a cardboard box scoot around my living room while the mouse inside was making the most pathetic, heart-breaking crying

noise was just too much to handle. We tried to free him with a cook-ing oil/water solution and Q-Tips, but Tomás was stuck. Sadly, we decided the only humane thing to do was kill him.

None of us, however, had the balls to just step on him, and I most certainly did not want to prolong his pain or panic by leav-ing him in the box. It was decided that an instant and as-painless-as-possible death was in order for our most deserving mouse friend.

Stubby put little Tomás—box and all—under his right rear tire, got a little momentum going and poof! He was flat and in mouse heaven. Unfortunately, we knew Franklin was still inside and as bad as I feel about killing little mice, I feel worse knowing that they’re in my apartment and not paying rent.

So we decided to put out some old-fashioned instant kill traps, a few new-fangled ones that look like chip-bag clips and some mouse bait. Turns out the combination works really well. Exceptionally well.

Within less than 24 hours of laying the new traps, we had caught and disposed of Franklin. Overjoyed that the invasion had fi nally ended, I walked into my kitchen to get a celebratory beer

and frozen pizza. And that’s when I saw the third mouse: Stumby—not to be confused with Stubby.

Stumby was no ordinary mouse, he was a three-legged mouse smart enough to work his way out of whatever trap it got into and was now dragging itself across our kitchen fl oor. I’m not sure who this upset more, me or him. I started to cry almost instantly because it was the most heartbreaking thing I’d ever witnessed.

Hearing my cries, my room-mate Kristina came into the kitch-en to help me get Stumby out of the house. As we pushed him onto a paper plate and into his fi nal rest-ing place—an empty Miller Lite box—Kristina offered this warn-ing: “Let this be a lesson to the rest of you! Leave this apartment or you will end up dead in a beer box too!”

Apparently when it comes to killing mice, threats are more effective than traps because we haven’t seen once since then. Now that the ordeal is over, I certainly feel more sanitary but I’ll admit it gets a little lonely not hearing the pitter-patter of little feet in the pantry late at night.

Have any foolproof mouse-removal techniques? Want some food for your snake? Let Jillian know [email protected].

JILLIAN LEVYone in a jillian

2 Wednesday, September 30, 2009 dailycardinal.com/page-two

An independent student newspaper, serving the University of Wisconsin-Madison

community since 1892

Volume 119, Issue 212142 Vilas Communication Hall

821 University AvenueMadison, Wis., 53706-1497

(608) 262-8000 l fax (608) 262-8100

News and [email protected]

Editor in Chief Charles BraceManaging Editor Justin StephaniCampus Editor Kelsey GundersonCity Editor Caitlin GathState Editor Hannah Furfaro Enterprise Editor Ryan HebelAssociate News Editor Grace UrbanOpinion Editors Anthony Cefali

Todd StevensEditorial Board Editor Qi GuArts Editors Kevin Slane

Kyle SparksSports Editors Scott Kellogg

Nico SavidgeFeatures Editor Diana SavageFood Editor Sara BarreauScience Editor Jigyasa JyotikaPhoto Editors Isabel Alvarez

Danny MarchewkaGraphics Editors Amy Giffi n

Jenny PeekCopy Chiefs Kate Manegold

Emma RollerJake Victor

Copy Editors Kathy Dittrich, Alex KuskowskiCaitlin Furin

Business and [email protected]

Business Manager Alex KustersAdvertising Manager Katie BrownBilling Manager Mindy CummingsAccounts Receivable Manager Cole WenzelSenior Account Executive Ana DevcicAccount Executives Mara Greenwald,

Kristen Lindsay, D.J. Nogalski, Jordan Rossman, Sarah Schupanitz

Online Account Executive Tom ShieldWeb Directors Eric Harris, Dan HawkMarketing Director Mia BeesonArchivist Erin Schmidtke

The Daily Cardinal is published weekdays and distributed at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and its surrounding community with a circulation of 10,000.

The Daily Cardinal is a nonprofi t organization run by its staff members and elected editors. It receives no funds from the university. Operating revenue is generated from advertising and subscription sales.

Capital Newspapers, Inc. is the Cardinal’s printer. The Daily Cardinal is printed on recycled paper. The Cardinal is a member of the Associated Collegiate Press and the Wisconsin Newspaper Association.

All copy, photographs and graphics appearing in The Daily Cardinal are the sole property of the Cardinal and may not be reproduced without written permission of the editor in chief.

The Daily Cardinal accepts advertising representing a wide range of views. This acceptance does not imply agreement with the views expressed. The Cardinal reserves the right to reject advertisements judged offensive based on imagery, wording or both.

Complaints: News and editorial complaints should be presented to the editor in chief. Business and advertising complaints should be presented to the business manager.

Letters Policy: Letters must be typewritten, double-spaced and no longer than 200 words, including contact informa-tion. Letters may be sent to [email protected].

© 2009, The Daily Cardinal Media CorporationISSN 0011-5398

Furry critters unite in Jillian’s apartment

TODAY:partly sunnyhi 55º / lo 34º

the daily cardinal makes fun of you

Alex Doubek Party in the USA - Miley Cyrus So hott right nowYear: Wisconsin ’10

Most Embarrassing Item: Well, you’ve done all the work for us with your most recent status update about Miley Cyrus (hint: she’s 16). No one should really be surprised by your status, especially when you have “conversations about 13-year-olds” listed in your interests. Speaking of your interests, this is one of the few times we’ve seen “crashing bachelorette parties” listed in a serious context. Now, we’d hate to speculate, but you’re sure that wasn’t a Miley Cyrus concert pre-party full of 13-year-old girls and their parental chaperones that you “crashed” last summer?

Stupid Fact About Your Hometown: Waukesha was once famous for having “healing” spas capable of curing indigestion, bladder problems and even chronic diarrhea.

Missed Opportunities: If only we could see more examples of you striking out with women. We’re positive your profi le picture is just the tip of the iceberg in terms of your problems with the opposite sex.

Saving Grace: Finally, someone else who is a Pastafarian. You’ve seen the light, brother. Let’s spread the good word about carbohydrates and the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster.

Want your Facebook profi le to be made fun of? Join the group “The Daily Cardinal Makes Fun of You.”

Hometown: Waukesha, WI

Political Views: Work Less Party

Religious Views: Pastafarian

Activities: Competition

Interests: Conversations about 13 year olds, awkward boxer mornings, crashing bachelorette parties, hanging out with homeless dudes at subway, hiding frozen pizzas in fake trees, throwing phone-books in fountains, getting into fights with midgets at Brothers

Favorite quotes: “Kill off all my demons, and my angels might die too”

No means no bro! She’s already dressed in sweats and ready for bed for crying out loud... just give it up for another day

Board of Directors Vince Filak Alex Kusters

Nik Hawkins Jason Stein Jeff Smoller Janet Larson Chris Long Charles Brace

Katie Brown Benjamin Sayre Jenny Sereno Terry Shelton

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Editorial BoardCharles Brace Anthony Cefali

Qi Gu Jamie StarkTodd Stevens Justin Stephani

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page twoTHURSDAY:PM showershi 59º / lo 48º

Page 3: The Daily Cardinal - Wednesday, September 30, 2009

newsdailycardinal.com/news Wednesday, September 30, 2009 3l

was the impact of a proposed police workstation. Some said that the workstation, as well as the overall police presence, were unnecessary.

However, Cpt. Mary Schauf of the Madison Police Department said there have been multiple crimes reported near the Peace Park area and the presence of police officers would not be excessive.

The proposed renovations include the rebuilding of the entire park and the addition of a visitors center. The current design of the new park would include an amphitheater, chess tables and lighting improve-ments. The proposed version of the visitors center would include an information desk, public rest-rooms and an ATM.

Milwaukee was the 11th-poorest city in the nation in 2008, accord-ing to a U.S. Census Bureau report released Tuesday.

The report showed 23.4 percent of people in Milwaukee lived in pov-erty in 2008. In Madison, 17.7 per-cent of people lived in poverty, and in Wisconsin as a whole, the poverty rate declined to 10.4 percent in 2008 from 10.8 percent in 2007.

The census estimate report examined U.S. cities with high poverty rates and populations of 250,000 or more. Detroit ranked as the poorest city in the nation, with a poverty rate of 33.3 percent in 2008. Cleveland ranked second, with 30.5 percent of the population living in poverty.

Glen Cain, UW-Madison pro-fessor emeritus of economics, said the primary reason for Milwaukee’s low per-capita income is the “tre-mendous” number of manufacturing

company shutdowns and the loss of other industrial jobs.

According to Cain, Milwaukee’s high minority population and “white flight” trends have con-tributed to Milwaukee’s steadily increasing poverty level.

“It’s been gradual ... I would say particularly the lowered status of blacks has been a 20-year decline. But again, that is very much associ-ated with the loss of relatively high-paying blue-collar jobs.”

Cain said the shutdown of breweries and diminishing con-struction jobs added to the rising number of layoffs in Milwaukee. He said prospects of increased government spending on food stamps and income transfer pro-grams are bleak.

“They are really struggling to stay at their existing levels, let alone be increased,” he said.

—Hannah Furfaro

The Wisconsin Public Interest Research Group encouraged students to take action against global warming Tuesday at its “sustainable semester” kickoff on Library Mall.

Big Red Go Green, WISPIRG’s global-warming campaign, and WISPIRG’s Conservation and Recycling Efforts campaign hosted the event in an effort to encourage stu-dents to use sustainable resources and to contact U.S. Sen. Russ Feingold, D-Wis., who currently remains on the fence about the American Clean Energy and Security Act.

According to Laura Goldberg,

Big Red Go Green global warming solutions coordinator, if the act were passed by the Senate, it would create more “green” jobs and require 25 per-cent of our electricity to be provided by renewable energy sources.

WISPIRG members provided UW-Madison students with letters and postcards to sign and send to Feingold to encourage him to sup-port the act.

Goldberg said members also provided students with information and tips on how they can have an impact on reducing global warming in Madison.

“We want America to be a leader in energy efficiency,” Goldberg said. “To have this liberal campus and to have so many great professors here, we really want to show that Madison itself can be a leader in the U.S. with energy initiatives.”

According to Goldberg, 185 UW-Madison students participated in Tuesday’s event.

“The main point of the day was to get people excited about being sustainable throughout the semester,” she said. “But we also had some suc-cessful grassroots action as well.”

—Kelsey Gunderson

Domestic-violence-related homi-cides in Wisconsin declined slightly in 2008, according to a report released Tuesday by the Wisconsin Coalition Against Domestic Violence.

The Wisconsin Domestic Violence Homicide Report showed 46 deaths related to domestic violence occurred in 2008, compared to 49 in 2007. Thirty-six were homicide victims, and 10 were perpetrators who committed suicide in conjunc-tion with a homicide.

According to the report, per-petrators of domestic violence in 2008 were predominantly male, with males committing 97 percent of the homicide incidents. Two-thirds of the victims were female.

According to the report, 17 of the 36 homicides resulted from

the use of a gun.The report showed half of vic-

tims had left or been attempt-ing to leave the relationship. Patti Seger, executive director of WCADV, said leaving a perpetra-tor does not “guarantee safety.”

She said 40,000 individuals in Wisconsin receive domestic-violence victim services each year and said the programs were criti-cal to helping victims transition out of abusive relationships.

“The [report] provides an opportunity to mourn the loss of domestic-violence victims, reflect on the cost of domestic violence in our communities and articu-late and advocate for policies that will prevent violence in future years,” Seger said in a statement.

—Hannah Furfaro

WISPIRG encourages students to help fight global warming

Census Bureau finds Milwaukee was 11th-poorest city in 2008

Report reveals decrease in domestic-violence-related homicides in 2008

The number of students reporting flu-like symptoms has decreased for the second week in a row, officials from University Health Services said Tuesday.

According to UHS, 94 UW-Madison students contacted them with flu symptoms during the week of Sept. 20-26, compared to the 168 students evaluated by UHS the previous week.

Those cases made up 7.1 percent of the total visits to the UHS primary care clinic, according to UHS.

According to Dr. Sarah Van Orman, UHS executive director, the cause of the decrease remains uncertain.

However, she said students seem to be more aware of the

H1N1 virus and have been taking extra precautions to keep them-selves protected.

“We are seeing that people are doing the right things with this, so I wouldn’t discount that as a factor,” she said. “Students are taking it seriously.”

Van Orman said although it is difficult to predict the future of the virus’ impact on campus, it is still possible another surge may occur.

She said it is crucial for stu-dents to continue to practice good hygiene despite the recent drop in numbers.

“We are still seeing more cases of the flu now than we typically see during our flu season,” she said. “So people should absolutely be aware that it’s still there and that we need to continue hand-washing and staying home when they themselves are sick.”

According to Van Orman, a seasonal flu vaccine is now avail-able free of charge for all UW-Madison students, and she predicts an H1N1 vaccine will be available within the next few weeks.

—Kelsey Gunderson

H1N1 cases down for second straight week on UW campus

Sarah Van Ormanexecutive director

University Health Services

“We are still seeing more cases of the flu now than we typically

see during our flu season.”

Ken Saiki, an architect on the Peace Park renovation project, responds to a questioner at a neighborhood meeting Tuesday night.

DANNY MARCHEWKA/THE DAILY CARDINAL

to solve my problems, that they weren’t even going to help me and I had to pay another $250 to see somebody outside plus another 20 percent after I fin-ished paying that deductible ... I’m flabbergasted.”

Nicole was also frustrated because, though she had evi-dence diagnosing her with ADHD since grade school, UHS psychiatrists refused to prescribe her Adderall because, she said, they want to make sure stu-

dents aren’t abusing or selling the drug.

“They said they needed to look into school records and my whole history,” she said. “I mean, I grad-uated top-5 percent of my class undergrad ... That’s not going to show them anything.”

“We see a lot of students with attention deficit, and we do pre-scribe a lot of stimulants,” Van Orman said, adding they also “follow a very structured process for making sure we’ve correctly established the diagnosis.”

Van Orman stressed that

UHS’ nationally accredited men-tal-health services, while imper-fect, provide many options for students, which UW-Madison senior “Danielle” said she appre-ciated when she sought counsel-ing earlier this year.

“I really like their variety of options,” she said. “I currently attend yoga classes to deal with anxiety, and I know they also have meditation classes and sup-port groups.”

Students can call 265-5600 for counseling services and can press ‘9’ for the mental crisis hotline.

peace park from page 1

mental health from page 1

ALISON BAUTER/THE DAILY CARDINAL

As part of WISPIRG’s ‘sustainable semester’ campaign, UW-Madison students sent letters and postcards to U.S. Sen. Russ Feingold, D-Wis., asking him to support the American Clean Energy and Security Act.

Page 4: The Daily Cardinal - Wednesday, September 30, 2009

opinionSeek to raise awareness about domestic violence

4 Wednesday, September 30, 2009 dailycardinal.com/opinionl

Cardinal View editorials represent The Daily Cardinal’s organizational opinion. Each editorial is crafted independent of news coverage.

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loss of dna samples shows incompetenceU p to 3,000 convicted

felons who perhaps should still legally be

in prison may be wandering the streets of Wisconsin. That’s a comforting thought, isn’t it?

This month, during the investigation of a Milwaukee murderer, the Department of Justice uncovered missing or faulty DNA data for thousands of prison inmates. The actual failure is more extensive than 3,000 people. An estimated 12,000 DNA samples are mis-matched, incorrectly filed or missing from the databank of 128,605 samples.

Gov. Jim Doyle described the situation as “very troubling.” Given the possible risk to people’s safety, that is quite an understatement. This is simple downright incompetence. While we recognize that government is not always the most clean and innocent enterprise, we at least hope that the people we put there know what they’re doing. It’s not a terribly high standard, but somehow the Departments of Justice and Corrections have failed to reach it.

To prevent such enormous errors in the future, the lines of communication between the Department of Justice, run by Republican J.B. Van Hollen, and the Department of Corrections, under the Democratic governor’s office, need more efficient, func-tioning lines of communication. Only the Department of Justice had access to the two DNA databases in question, despite how closely the two depart-ments should work together. Particularly in this post-Katrina world where the consequences of poor communication between government entities are obvious, it is inexcusable that these two units can’t get together for such a simple public safety issue.

Doyle announced on Sep. 27 the creation of a task force that will be dedicated to track-ing down the estimated 3,000 felons on probation or parole who do not have DNA samples with the Department of Justice. Members of the task force will include retired police officers.

This is a step in the right direc-tion, but it does not make up for the fact that the failure occurred in the first place.

Politics almost certainly played a part in this fiasco. Doyle and Van Hollen’s offices are literally right next to each other in the Capitol. Yet the two men have severely differ-ing political persuasions. This cannot be the most conducive environment for interdepart-mental cooperation. Van Hollen in particular has shown that he has no reservations about let-ting a political squabble inter-fere with his duties, such as in his recent decision to not repre-sent the state of Wisconsin in a lawsuit regarding its domestic-partnership registry.

Resolving the situation may prove tricky as the state govern-ment must protect the rights of people while trying to collect DNA samples. The task force cannot force people to submit to DNA sample collection unless they are a convicted felon, or on parole or probation.

According to the law, all convicted felons since 2000 are required to have DNA samples in the database. From now on, state government needs more cooperation and efficiency so those samples are collected properly before prisoners are released and Wisconsinites are unsure about their safety. Wisconsin shouldn’t be crippled just because its government officials are avoiding talking to each other like 14-year-old girls fighting over who gets to date that football player in their Spanish class. This state’s citi-zens deserve competent leader-ship and when events like this occur, it is difficult to believe we have that.

By Sapir SassonPROMOTING AWARENESS, VICTIM EMPOWERMENT

This week The Daily Cardinal is introducing a new series called the Student Organization Neighborhood. Biweekly we will be inviting contributions from various student groups across campus, advo-cating for issues important to their mission. Our first editorial comes courtesy of Promoting Awareness, Victim Empowerment, in anticipa-tion of Domestic Violence Awareness Month. Look for further editorials from other organizations in the coming weeks.

PAVE, Promoting Awareness, Victim Empowerment, is a stu-dent organization dedicated to preventing sexual assault and dat-ing/domestic violence through education and activism. PAVE’s work is prevention-based, mean-ing that we work to stop sexual assault and dating/domestic vio-lence before it happens. We chal-lenge the cultural norms and atti-tudes that encourage and support multiple forms of sexual assault and dating/domestic violence.

October is a very important month to PAVE’s work, as it is Domestic Violence Awareness Month. Domestic/dating vio-lence is an ongoing pattern of behavior in which one person exerts power and control over another—this can happen in any type of intimate partnership, not just marriages or heterosexual relationships. In fact, 11 percent

of women and 23 percent of men in homosexual relationships report being raped, physically assaulted, and/or stalked by their intimate partner according to a 2009 National Center for PTSD Fact Sheet, 2009. Domestic/dat-ing violence is more than physi-cal violence. It can take the form of emotional abuse, interference with other positive relationships and other controlling behaviors.

The implications of domes-tic/dating violence are severe. Whenever a man is violent against a woman, it perpetuates the image of all men as brutes who misuse their physical power to prey on the vulnerable; the majority of men are not abusive. Statistically, men are more often the perpetra-tors of domestic/dating violence, but that is not to say that men cannot be victims and that women cannot be perpetrators.

Domestic/dating violence issues are ongoing and quite com-mon. In 2000, 1,247 women and 440 men were murdered by an intimate partner according to a 2003 report from the U.S. Department of Justice. Figures from 2005 show that in 21 per-cent of college relationships, one of the parties involved is being abused. These numbers only reflect the reported crimes; as Justice Department research from 2000 shows that only one-quarter of all domestic violence incidents are reported to the police.

Given how prevalent these issues are, we urge you, as stu-dents and concerned citizens, to take action against dating/domes-

tic violence. You can speak out publicly against these issues, reach out to support someone who you believe is a victim, or even offer support to domestic violence counseling programs and shelters. Domestic Abuse Intervention Services, the domestic violence shelter for Dane County, offers a wide range of support services to domestic violence victims. If you or someone you know is experi-encing any form of domestic/dat-ing violence, do not hesitate to call their confidential, 24-hour helpline at 608-251-4445. Also, if you are looking for a way to get involved, they are always looking for volunteers!

Make it clear amongst your friends that any form of dat-ing/domestic violence or sexual violence is unacceptable and will not be overlooked. We need to protect each other and ourselves. If we see a situation that looks unsafe, we need to intervene or report it. Taking these steps will help ensure a safer and more supportive community for all of us. If you want to show your sup-port and speak out against these issues, PAVE encourages you to attend one or more of the events that PAVE is hosting for DVAM.

Get involved. Get consent. Create a world without sexual assault and dating/domestic violence.

Sapir Sasson is the media advocate for PAVE. This article was written as a collaboration of PAVE staff. If you have any questions, please contact [email protected] or stop by the PAVE offi ce at the Student Activity Center, offi ce #3147.

Domestic/dating violence is more than physical violence.

Given how prevalent these issues are, we urge you as stu-dents and concerned citizens to take action against dating/

domestic violence.

We need to protect each other and ourselves. If we see a

situation that looks unsafe, we need to intervene or report it.

It is inexcusable that these two units can’t get together

on such a simple public safety issue.

National Day of UnityMonday, Oct. 5 from 8am to 4pm on Bascom Hill and Library Mall

In collaboration with Domestic Abuse Intervention Services, PAVE will create a Bascom Hill display and will table on Library Mall with other student organizations to raise awareness about dating/domestic violence on our campus. Stop by to learn more about domestic violence issues and show your support.

“I Am Domestic Violence”Tuesday, Oct. 6 at 7pm in the Morgridge Auditorium in Grainger Hall

Wambui Bahati’s “I am Domestic Violence” is an electrifying presentation in which she takes on the characters of Domestic Violence and the men, women and children affected by it.

Healthy Relationships PanelMonday, Oct. 12 at 7pm in offi ce 4213 in the Student Activity Center

PAVE, the Campus Women’s Center and Sex Out Loud host a discussion about what makes a healthy relationship.

For more information on these events, visit PAVE’s website at uwpave.rso.wisc.edu.

PAVE Events for Domestic Violence Awareness Month

Feeling the urge to opine?Write for the Daily Cardinal

opinion page!

Contact [email protected] for more information

Page 5: The Daily Cardinal - Wednesday, September 30, 2009

artsldailycardinal.com/arts Wednesday, September 30, 2009 5

PHOTO COURTESY FUELED BY RAMEN

This is no day at the beach for the feisty frontwoman of MTV-rockers Paramore.

Film Maxes out on misogynyBy Caitlin FurinTHE DAILY CARDINAL

Tucker Max is an asshole. In fact, he is probably the biggest asshole to ever walk the face of the earth. He does whatever and whoever he wants whenever he wants. He enjoys getting excessively drunk, throw-ing insults left and right and manipulating hundreds of women into sleeping with him. That’s right, hundreds. Although a man like Tucker Max might seem like a waste of human intelligence, his stories have topped the bestseller list, and he has now set out to conquer the box office.

“I Hope They Serve Beer In Hell,” loosely based off Max’s book of the same name, is hardly a motion picture master-piece. But the movie isn’t stupid and will surely cause fits of laughter throughout. Max, played by Matt Czuchry, and his friends Drew (Jesse Bradford) and Dan (Geoff Stults) take a road trip to find the mother of all strip clubs in order to celebrate Dan’s last night as a bachelor. In true Tucker Max fashion, the trip includes lots of booze, boobs, hook-ups and a prison fight. Unfortunately Max’s antics get him uninvited to Dan’s wedding and he is forced to spend a night out alone, which ends with him in a very shitty (liter-ally) mood. Later, Max apologizes to Dan in a surprisingly sincere way and then runs off to hit on Dan’s cousin, leaving movie viewers with a smile and some laughter left in their throats.

Unfortunately, Tucker Max comes up short in achieving his goal of taking over

the box office. The acting leaves a bit to be desired, but in all reality the actors chosen fit in very well with the story. The character of Drew (known as Slingblade in the book) is played exceptionally well: his degrading comments toward women are sure to encourage laughter out of even the most reserved. Czuchry fails to give Max’s character the certain “charm” that entertains readers throughout the pages of the book, but that might be because the story in the movie isn’t told in Max’s first-person view as it was in the book.

Overall, “I Hope They Serve Beer In Hell” is not the worst film ever made. It in no way does justice to Max’s recollec-tions in his book, but for a movie about three friends taking a road trip to get drunk and go to a strip club, it’s pretty good. If you would like a night filled with inappropriate humor and offensive dialogue, this movie is for you. As far as Tucker Max is concerned, writing stories about these deranged, absurd endeavors is his forte; making movies about them is not.

Stop couch surfing and hop on the Reading Railroad

A s I announced in my pre-vious column, I’m on a one-woman crusade to see

everyone on this campus with a book in their hands. Be it “Crime and Punishment” or a princess coloring book that you bought at Walgreen’s and color in during class instead of listening to the English 100 professor (you know who you are).

Well as you probably didn’t know, the university obviously saw my little column and decided to run with it. They created this whole program, Go Big Read. Somehow anticipating my thought process they have been working on promoting it for months, maybe you’ve seen the posters lying around in Helen C.? Seriously, they’re right next to the computers you were using to stalk celebrities

instead of researching the nutri-sci reading you haven’t done. They picture what I know is every liter-ate undergrad’s dream of reading a book with Bucky on Bascom. All that’s missing is a beer pyramid.

Unfortunately the university and I seem to have gotten our signals crossed. Twisting a mag-nificent idea of mine, they are pro-moting an “academically focused reading experience.” To which I say, “Knock it off!”

“What!” You say in a horrified voice. Our literature columnist isn’t for reading? The world must be ending. It’s like “The Day After Tomorrow” and “Invasion of the Body Snatchers” rolled into one.

No worries my young padawa-ns. What I’m actually looking for from this campus is un-academic, un-focused reading, and none of this “experience” stuff. Enough academically based reading is going around for any one who isn’t a literature major to happily crawl into the black hole of (gasp) science or even worse... math. I

know it’s a tough pill to swallow, but my solution (drum roll please) is to read for fun.

Now I know what you’re think-ing. Something along the lines of, “Who has time for stuff like that? I got to practice for Thirsty Thursday.” Probably with more vulgarity added in.

My simple solution is to a) choose something super easy to read (pictures allowed) or b) pick a movie you think you’d like and read the book instead. Seriously, practi-cally every movie you didn’t go see this year is actually a book too. Remember “Angels and Demons?” Dan Brown’s book is actually per-fect for those of you to whom the thought of looking at Tom Hanks for another two hours of your life is nauseating and need something word wise you can’t put down. Alternately as a vicarious high for all you coasties put on a budget, Sophie Kinsella’s “Confessions of a Shopaholic” is not just a movie with that crazy chick from “Wedding Crashers.” Even that superhero flick

“Watchmen” is a book, with pic-tures no less, so that should cover even the functionally illiterate read-ers (read: majors in the sciences) of my column as well.

Now I have covered both the university’s mistakes and (yet again) suggested great books for

those pesky picky readers. No need to stop me on the street to thank me or anything, it’s no problem, I’m just super fantastic like that.

Think Alex is a liar liar pants on fire about that Go Big Read and being super-fantastic? E-mail her at [email protected].

ALEX KUSKOWSKIThe Big Bookowski

Arrested on counts of overacting, Tom Hanks’ snoozer of a Dan Brown film gave another reason why books are way better than movies.

PHOTO COURTESY COLUMBIA PICTURES

By Blake RhinerTHE DAILY CARDINAL

In 2007, Paramore’s single “Misery Business” burst onto the MTV scene. Propelled by the song’s success, Paramore’s brand of emo-tinged pop rock went on to capture the hearts of teen-age girls around the globe. But a successful single by a mainstream pop-rock band is no indication of their musical quality. With their third full-length album, Brand New Eyes, the boys and girl of Paramore prove they offer more than a few catchy songs.

I didn’t expect much from my first listen of Brand New Eyes. I had never given into the hooks of Paramore’s previous singles and had all but writ-ten the band off as radio rock mediocrity. I judged the book by its cover so to speak, and as the album’s leading single, “Ignorance,” states, ignorance was “my new best friend.” However, by the closing notes of the album my preconceptions had been all but shattered.

The most prominent aspect of Brand New Eyes is the vocal work from Hayley Williams. It is undeniable that Paramore receive attention due to their fiery redhead front, but it is ignorant to believe that this attention is warranted solely for the niche role that a girl fronting a band may or may not fill. Hayley Williams is not a niche in the marketplace of the music world; she is, in a word, ferocious. Like Kelly Clarkson with sharper teeth, Williams is an absolute beast. From the album opener, she howls, “You can’t be too careful anymore / when all that is waiting for you / won’t come any closer / you have to reach out a little more.” Consider this your warning: this girl is predatory.

She is no brute, however, and like any cun-ning predator, she is capable of lulling her prey into a false sense of security. The subtle ballad “The Only Exception” does just this, showing the real range of the vocalist and introducing the listener to a vulnerability that can only be called sweet. The album closes with a bang, as Williams’ unaccompanied voice soaring to unthinkable heights. To call her vocal work on this album anything short of incredible is an injustice.

With Williams at the front, it’s no wonder that Paramore are often identified by their singer. However, the boys of Paramore deserve a lot of credit. While many pop releases provide a simple wash of sound for the sing-er to work over, the instru-mental work on Brand New Eyes is very tasteful and engaging. The drumming is cacophonous and, in

conjunction with the steady bass lines, hits the listener in the chest, creating a heavy vibe throughout the album. The guitars slash and dance around Williams’ vocal work, filling out every last bit of sonic space. Even the distinctive backup vocals by lead guitar player Josh Farro are well done. Although Williams might be the most recognizable face of Paramore, on Brand New Eyes, the boys prove to be more than figures in the background.

Brand New Eyes is a great pop-rock album. Unfamiliar with Paramore and coming in with low expectations, I was floored by the album’s depth. It offers more than one catchy single and flows nicely through its eleven tracks. For fans of pop-rock and girls with incredible vocal range, Brand New Eyes is one of the best releases of the year.

PHOTO COURTESY RUDIUS FILMS

This smile promptly undressed six adjacent females and convinced four others to buy him another drink. Tucker Max, depicted here by Matt Czuchry, just has that charm.

Para‘Bore’ no more

Brand New EyesParamore

CD REVIEW

“I Hope They Serve Beer in Hell,” loosely based off Max’s book of the

same name, is hardly a motion picture masterpiece.

Page 6: The Daily Cardinal - Wednesday, September 30, 2009

6 Wednesday, September 30, 2009 dailycardinal.com/comics

comicsl

TV show starring Patricia Arquette© Puzzles by Pappocom

Classic Angel Hair Pasta By Todd Stevens [email protected]

Sid and Phil By Alex Lewein [email protected]

The Graph Giraffe By Yosef Lerner [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

BUSINESS AS USUAL

ACROSS 1 Downy mass 6 Take measures 9 Cooking or sewing

term 14 Fine-twisted thread 15 Cigarette ingredient 16 Change 17 Domestic donkeys 18 Prospector’s interest 19 Number-match game 20 Go different ways 23 Visibly agree 24 Four-footed lowlife 25 Yeats heroine 27 Incidentally (Var.) 32 “Dukes of Hazzard”

deputy 33 Bucolic setting 34 City near Assisi 36 Social blunder 39 They were once

completely nuts 41 Nasal speech pattern 43 Extract venom from 44 Like some thrills or

shots 46 Hog enclosures 48 Fish spawn 49 Creole cooking staple 51 Valued, as a colleague 53 Mario Puzo character 56 Shade from the sun? 57 “___ Wiedersehen”

(German goodbye) 58 Display care 64 Top-notch, in slang 66 Fold or mutilate 67 Brief star appearance 68 Like a practical-joker’s

party punch 69 Quid-quo connector 70 An anagram for

“times” 71 Mournful piece 72 Fell trees 73 “Shop ‘til you drop”

trip

DOWN 1 Do a Chicken Dance

move 2 Co-star with Courteney

and Jennifer 3 “Miracle on Ice”

opponent 4 Chevy Chase comedy 5 Some lawn grasses 6 Molecular component 7 Complain gratingly 8 Radial pattern 9 Treating very gently 10 Some pint contents 11 Refuses to budge 12 Baritone’s little

brother 13 Create chasms 21 Comet’s path 22 Aid in alumna

identifi cation

26 Buffalo may do it 27 Congressional group 28 Slangy “sure” 29 Start serving one’s

electors 30 Berry-bearing

evergreens 31 Maternally related 35 American cuckoos 37 Chunk of sea ice 38 ___ out a living

(barely scraped by) 40 H.H. Munro’s pen

name 42 “By the Time I ___

Phoenix” 45 Science of

versifi cation 47 Soul-searching

sessions? 50 Wood used to make

baseball bats 52 Pitch one’s tent 53 Furniture wood 54 Of the ear 55 Robust quality 59 “Hard,” “fl at” or “soft”

ending 60 Cornfi eld pest 61 Arab chieftain 62 Network of veins, e.g. 63 Margin of victory,

sometimes 65 “Agnes of God”

actress Tilly

Answer key available at www.dailycardinal.com

Today’s Crossword Puzzle

Charlie and Boomer By Natasha Soglin [email protected]

Mega mall! The Mall of America in Bloomington, Minnesota is the size of 78 football fi elds or 9.5 million square feet.

Evil Bird By Caitlin Kirihara [email protected]

You Can Run By Derek Sandberg [email protected]

Page 7: The Daily Cardinal - Wednesday, September 30, 2009

ldailycardinal.com/sports Wednesday, September 30, 2009 7 sports

Brian Bultman has been an

important part of Wisconsin’s

defense, which has

shut down top teams this

season.

LORENZO ZEMELLA/CARDINAL FILE PHOTO

Badgers prepare for midweek match against Illinois-Chicago

ule, Wisconsin has Iowa, Purdue and Michigan.

Purdue is a program on the downswing, and should not be a problem for the Badgers. Iowa and Michigan will be more treacherous opponents, but the Badgers always have to feel comfortable in the con-fines of Camp Randall.

The three non-conference victo-ries were reassuring, but they didn’t prove much. The Big Ten opener against Michigan State, however, gives Badger fans reasonable grounds to believe the team has improved from its 2008 campaign.

There is the possibility that the 1-3 Spartans just aren’t that good this year, but Wisconsin still conquered Michigan State in basically all facets of the game against a team picked by sportswriters to finish toward the top of the Big Ten. The 38-30 final score makes the game appear to be a close one, but the Badgers had the game well in hand at the beginning of the fourth quarter.

I don’t want to be one of those guys that looks deep down the schedule and predicts games, but excluding the Badgers’ meeting with Ohio State, it’s difficult to see

Wisconsin losing close to as many games as it did last season.

Worst case scenario, maybe the Badgers fall to Minnesota this week-end, the Buckeyes the next and also end up splitting their home games against Iowa and Michigan.

Honestly, can you see Wisconsin falling at home multiple times again this season, or falling to the likes of Indiana or Northwestern?

Best case scenario, Wisconsin still comes up short in a tough game in Columbus, but takes down Minnesota the weekend before, doesn’t screw up any of its other road games, takes care of business at home and finishes 12-1 with a chance at playing in a BCS Bowl Game.

Although the season is still young, Wisconsin should improve drastically on its 7-6 record in 2008.

The encouraging signs we’ve seen from Wisconsin, especially at its quarterback position and perhaps more importantly with its favorable schedule, mean the Badgers should return to a New Year’s Day Bowl game this season, if not an even big-ger postseason appearance.

Do you think the Badgers can challenge for the Big Ten title this year? E-mail Scott at [email protected].

schedule from page 8

Improving offense will be key after tough home lossBy Parker GabrielTHE DAILY CARDINAL

The Wisconsin men’s soccer team continues its stretch of strong opponents tonight as they travel to Chicago for a non-conference matchup with the University of Illinois-Chicago.

The Flames advanced to the Round of 16 in last year’s NCAA Tournament and are the fourth con-secutive 2008 tournament team that the Badgers have faced. That streak will climb to six when the Badgers face Michigan and Michigan State in the next two weeks, but for now the Badgers attempt to rebound from a tough loss against Indiana in their Big Ten opener.

The Flames (2-3-2) and the Badgers (1-2-4) are off to similar starts this season.

Both teams have been tough to score on despite playing qual-

ity opponents. The Flames have allowed just eight goals through their first seven matches. The Badgers, aside from a rough weekend in California, have been formidable on the back-line.

In the last 10 days, Wisconsin has faced two of the most explosive offenses in the country, UC-Santa Barbara and Indiana, and yielded just one goal to each. Senior defend-er Brian Bultman played a big role in both efforts, but thinks there is still room for improvement.

“We’ve always been a con-fident group,” Bultman said. “There are still things we can do to get better as a whole. We’re looking for shutouts.”

Both UIC and Wisconsin have had some problems generating goals on the offensive end as well. The Flames have scored just seven times so far this season, and have struggled to create scoring opportunities.

For the Badgers, the problem is not finding opportunities, but cap-italizing on them. Although they generate chances, the Wisconsin offense has not found a way to put the ball in the back of the net on a

regular basis. The Badgers moved the ball

forward and created several dangerous situations on Friday night against Indiana, yet they only managed two shots on goal. Against a defense as good as UIC, being assertive with the ball will be key for the Wisconsin attack.

“We need to take a few more shots and be aggressive,” senior midfielder Jon Rzepka said. “We maybe make the extra pass a little too much.”

This is the first Wednesday night match for the Badgers this season. While the quick turnaround and mid-week road trip is tough on many teams, Bultman said his team felt up for the challenge.

“We’re an experienced group,” he said. “I’m looking forward to it, especially getting back out on the field sooner rather than later after a tough loss.”

The Badgers return to Big Ten action after playing UIC but remain on the road, visiting Ann Arbor to take on the No. 18 Michigan Wolverines Sunday. The next home game for Wisconsin is Sunday, Oct. 11, against Michigan State.

Men’s Soccer

she will try to bring the same intensity, now that she is one of the team leaders.

“It’s definitely an honor to have received the ‘C’ but I’m not going to change anything,” she said. “I’m going to play just as hard.”

DeKeyser praised Giles’ leader-ship skills, saying she and other returning players have stepped up to help the transitioning team.

Another point of contention for the Badgers will be the team’s start-ing goaltender. Although McCready backed up Vetter last year, DeKeyser said she has still not picked out

a starter between McCready, red-shirt freshman Nikki Kaasa and true freshman Becca Reugsegger.

“We’ve left it open, it’s up for grabs and the ones that perform the best are going to get the nod,” she said.

DeKeyser said the goaltender for the team’s series against North Dakota will be determined based on who performs best in practice this week.

So while the 2008-09 season was all about a veteran squad run-ning away with the national title, this year’s team will have a much tougher road to that success. The puck drops on the 2009-10 season at the Kohl Center Friday at 7 p.m.

hockey from page 8

the 119th playing of the Border Battle for Paul Bunyan’s Axe.

As a Minneapolis native and the son of former Minnesota wide receiver Melvin Anderson, this week’s game at Minnesota will sure-ly be extra special for the junior.

Anderson starred in football and track at The Blake School in Minneapolis and set the Minnesota Class A record for the 100 meter dash in 2005 before deciding to attend Wisconsin in the fall of 2006. Although both parents starred in athletics at Minnesota (his mother Lisa was a member of the track team), Anderson said he never

considered being a Gopher, instead choosing to blaze his own trail in Madison. But the decision did not come without plenty of criticism from up north.

“Just being a guy from Minnesota playing at Wisconsin, a lot of people like to say a lot of things,” Anderson said. “But it’s definitely just another opportunity to go out there and showcase your ability, and it’s defi-nitely just a great opportunity to play a game.”

If Anderson continues to show-case his abilities the way he has so far this season for the remainder of his career at Wisconsin, he may be looking into another great opportu-nity: playing in the NFL.

anderson from page 8

Page 8: The Daily Cardinal - Wednesday, September 30, 2009

sportsl8 Wednesday, September 30, 2009 dailycardinal.com/sports

With easy schedule, Badgers could be headed for big bowl

I hate to jump the gun and turn into one of those overex-cited fans, but if you’re look-

ing at what Wisconsin has done so far, and looking ahead at its schedule, there’s a strong possibility the Badgers could be headed for a major postseason date in January.

Even before the season began for Wisconsin, one could see by its schedule that the team had a good chance to improve on its seven-win season in 2008.

As usual, the Badgers’ non-conference slate didn’t possess any tough challenges.

Wisconsin knew it would be favored in its first two contests against Northern Illinois and Fresno State, two teams coming out of mid-major conferences who combined to lose 13 games in 2008. The opposition would only drop from there with a home date against FCS opponent Wofford.

Wisconsin’s only remaining non-conference game is on the road, but the opponent shouldn’t scare Wisconsin too much.

Ever since Hawaii’s undefeated regular season in 2007, the program has been on a free fall. Head coach June Jones departed to Southern Methodist, and the Rainbow Warriors lost seven games in 2008, including one against a Utah State team that went 3-9.

Turning to the Badgers’ Big Ten schedule, Wisconsin again has a favorable lineup. It dodges an enor-mous bullet by not facing defend-ing Big Ten champion Penn State.

Although Wisconsin will have to take a trip to Columbus to take on Ohio State, that game may be the only one Wisconsin enters as an underdog.

The Badgers’ other three road games come against the mid- to lower-tier of the conference. The toughest one may be Wisconsin’s rivalry game with Minnesota, but it’s a fixture the Badgers have domi-nated, taking Paul Bunyan’s Axe in 12 of the 14 most recent contests, and the last five meetings.

A road date with the Gophers won’t be easy, but it’s a matchup the Badgers should enter with confidence.

Another road game for the Badgers will be the meeting between Wisconsin and Northwestern.

The Wildcats showed improve-ment last season, but are still an opponent the Badgers should beat.

The Big Ten has some intimidat-ing road venues, but Ryan Field in Evanston isn’t one of them. Wildcat fans rarely fill the seats, and you can expect loads of Badger fans to make the short trip down.

The other road contest is at Indiana, another favorable matchup for Wisconsin. Last season, even dur-ing a down year, the Badgers went to Bloomington and blew the Hoosiers out of the water with a 55-20 win.

The home slate is tougher, but playing well in Camp Randall is something the Badgers have made a habit of. In his four years at the helm of the Wisconsin program, head coach Bret Bielema has only lost twice in Madison.

In its remaining home sched-

Anderson taking bigger role with tight ends unitBorder Battle means heading home for son of former GophersBy Justin DeanTHE DAILY CARDINAL

Junior wide receiver Isaac Anderson didn’t have to wait long for his time to shine in 2009.

After losing a year to injury and receiving erratic playing time in his other two years at Wisconsin, Anderson scorched the Northern Illinois secondary on the Badgers’ first offensive play this season and streaked into the end zone for an 80-yard touchdown that injected Camp Randall Stadium with a jolt of energy not felt since the begin-ning of last season.

Still, seemingly lost amid break-out seasons by junior quarterback Scott Tolzien and sophomore wide receiver Nick Toon has been Anderson’s emergence as an explo-sive, dependable deep threat. The 5-foot-10-inch junior ranks third

on the team with 10 receptions, and with 236 yards he shares the lead for receiving yards with Toon.

“The philosophy has been this year, just play consistent—do it again—over and over [and] definite-ly to make plays from Scott Tolzien throwing the ball,” Anderson said. “And when the opportunity’s there, take advantage of it.”

There’s no doubt Anderson has taken advantage of his opportunity this season, as his true impact has come through his ability to reign in the deep ball. He is averaging 23.6 yards per catch, best on Wisconsin by a long shot and good for 11th best in all of Division I-A football.

Not surprisingly, wide receiv-ers coach DelVaughn Alexander believes Anderson’s ability to har-ness his blazing speed has been the key to his success so far this season.

“He’s one of our fastest guys at the position and he’s playing that way, and that’s the thing that he’s really improved on over the last two years is playing as fast as he can play,” Alexander said.

Anderson, however, credits his strong relationship with Tolzien both on and off the field for helping

him elevate his game this season. “Scott, definitely this year is

real confident and [there’s been] a lot better communication this year with Scott, and definitely a lot more chemistry off the field as far as watching film together on a

daily basis and things like that,” Anderson said.

Anderson and Tolzien hope to continue that chemistry Saturday as Wisconsin meets Minnesota for

Both of Isaac Anderson’s parents were athletes at Minnesota, and he will try to keep his strong play going against their alma mater.

ISABEL ÁLVAREZ/CARDINAL FILE PHOTO

After dream season, Badgers looking to rebuild

SCOTT KELLOGGthe cereal box

By Nico SavidgeTHE DAILY CARDINAL

When a team spent its last year dominating all of its competition, losing just two games all year on the way to a third national champi-onship in four years, it’s reasonable to expect an equally dominant sea-son from them the next year.

For the Wisconsin women’s

hockey team, there is little guaran-tee that the 2009-10 season will be the dominant romp last year was, even though the team earned a preseason No. 1 ranking.

The Badgers’ top four scor-ers will not play this year, as Erika Lawler and Angie Keseley graduated and Hilary Knight and Meghan Duggan will spend the

year on the U.S. Olympic Team. Dominant goaltender Jessie Vetter and defender Rachel Bible also graduated in the spring, meaning Wisconsin has big skates to fill on both offense and defense.

Add to that the year-long sabbatical of head coach Mark Johnson, who left to lead Team USA at the 2010 Vancouver

Olympics, and there have been some major shakeups that could threaten the Wisconsin women’s hockey dynasty.

Interim head coach Tracey DeKeyser said the team’s first game, against North Dakota Friday, will help show how much the team has changed.

“With the number of new peo-ple we have in the program this year and the new staff members, I know we’re all excited to get started and just kind of see where this team shakes out with the competi-tion,” DeKeyser said.

The summer has not been all bad news for Wisconsin, as the Badgers welcomed highly touted freshman Brianna Decker to the team. Decker was named WCHA Preseason Rookie of the Year, and senior goaltender Alannah McCready praised the skill she will bring to the Wisconsin offense.

“She’s a goal-scorer,” McCready said. “We’re lucky to have her.”

Rebuilding the offense will be crucial if the team wants to rep-licate its success from the 2008-09 season. Senior forward Jasmine Giles said returning players will have to produce in the place of offensive powers like Knight, Duggan and Lawler.

“Having the opportunity to just get out there even that little bit more on the ice, you’ll defi-nitely see people step up and get more goals than they did last year,” Giles said.

Giles, who was named team captain over the summer, said

With 45 points in the 2008-09 season, senior Jasmine Giles is one of Wisconsin’s top returning scorers. She is also team captain, and will try to lead the Badgers to another national championship. schedule page 7

Football

Women’s Hockey

DANNY MARCHEWKA/CARDINAL FILE PHOTO

hockey page 7

anderson page 7