2013.02.28

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Nap time

We know you hated naps in pre-school but love them now. Should we put nap stations on campus? OPINION | 4

THE UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN’S INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER SINCE 1969 Volume XLIV, Issue 85

Thursday, February 28, 2013

www.badgerherald.com

UW's SEARCH FOR A NEW LEADER: PART FOUR OF FOUR

Candidate emphasizes liberal arts Chancellor finalist stresses breadth of education, value of collaboration at UW Muge Niu Higher Education Editor University of Wisconsin chancellor search finalist Nicholas Jones, the current dean of the Johns Hopkins University Whiting School

can compare and contrast the ways they operate. He said the biggest challenge facing UW’s new leader in the next decade is figuring out how to sustain and grow its academic programs while continuing its educational missions with diminishing revenues. “I spent quite a bit of time in fundraising, which I see as a good way to support a school’s educational mission,” Jones said of his experience as

of Engineering, is no stranger to UW or Badger sporting games. Jones said he gained exposure to UW and its sports secondhand when he worked as the Civil and Environmental Engineering Department Chair at the University of Illinois. Sports aside, Jones said his work experience at both private and public institutions has taught him great lessons because he

the Dean at Johns Hopkins. “I see great potential in working with the University of Wisconsin Foundation… they are a big possibility for Madison.” While the expectations for UW to be a contributor to the state’s economy are very reasonable given the investments the university receives, the university is much more than a generator of jobs, according to Jones. “It has a mission that

transcends simply job creation and there are many more things that the institution does,” Jones said. “Certainly contributing economic vitality is important and should be a focus but other missions of the university are important as well.” One of these missions is liberal arts education, Jones said. Jones said he has been a

Jones

CANDIDATE, page 3

Revelry event details emerge Muge Niu Higher Education Editor The student leaders behind Revelry, the student body’s first official end-of-the-year celebration, announced Wednesday the musical event will take place at Engineering Mall and Union South Plaza from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. on May 4th, the same day as the Mifflin Street Block Party. Revelry will be a ticketed music festival featuring artists that cater to a large student audience, according to Bess Donoghue, Revelry spokesperson. Donoghue said the festival is not anti-Mifflin although both events share the same weekend. “It is the last weekend of the academic semester, so that’s just the day [Revelry] fell on,” she said. Tickets for the festival are tentatively scheduled to go on sale April 8. The price for University of Wisconsin students will fall in the range of $5 to $10, according to Revelry Executive

Committee Director Sarah Mathews. “The primary audience for this event is UW-Madison students,” Mathews said. “We are structuring everything ... entry and ticket pricing to [target] students.” The event’s planning committee has not formally decided whether to allow nonUW students at the event and whether the ticket price would be significantly higher for people outside of UW should they attend the event. According to Mathews, one potential model is requiring student to present their ID at entry but allowing them to also sponsor college-age guests. The committee will announce the musical lineups four to five days prior to ticket sale. The committee is in the process of negotiating offers with musicians. There will also be other art-related activities at the festival, Donoghue said. Mathews said the committee aims to encompass a wide variety of music genres at the

White Swan A model gazes down the catwalk Wednesday as part of the inaugural “Strut: Madison Fashion Series” which continues all week. See page 3 for more.

REVELRY, page 3

Ian Thomasgard The Badger Herald

Senate narrowly approves contentious mining bill Despite Republican lawmaker breaking ranks, legislation passes by 17-16 vote Noah Goetzel State Politics Editor After 10 hours of grueling debate, Wisconsin’s Senate passed a bill Wednesday by a single vote to make changes to Wisconsin’s iron ore

mining regulations. Sen. Dale Schultz, R– Richland Center, was the lone Republican to cross party lines and vote against the bill, which passed 17-16. “We are one vote short of restoring the Wisconsin state Senate back to the one that respects…a legacy of fairness, a legacy of preservation, and a legacy in which we make decisions that aren’t good for the short-term, but are good for the long-term,” Sen. Bob Jauch, D-Poplar, said.

“Nobody wins tonight.” If the Republicancontrolled Assembly passes the bill, the first bill introduced in the 20132015 legislative session will be forwarded to Gov. Scott Walker, who will very likely sign it into law. Sen. Robert Cowles, R– Green Bay, could have been the last senator standing in the way of the bill’s narrow passage because he said he was concerned about the measure’s environmental

impact groundwater. However, he said that amendments and work on the bill during the last session had addressed his concerns. Schultz said he voted against the bill because its detrimental ramifications on the mining area outweighed political policy interests. “It is important for us to remember in this day and age, when I think virtually everyone has a conscience about our environment that we don’t willy-nilly wander

into a test stage that will have long-term ramifications on our environment because of partisanship,” Schultz said. The mining bill, which was introduced in the previous session but failed to pass, eases iron ore mining restrictions and paves the way for Gogebic Taconite to open a large-scale mine in northern Wisconsin. Republicans have said the proposed mine in Ashland and Iron Counties will create hundreds of jobs for the state.

Sen. Tom Tiffany, R-Hazelhurst, co-sponsored the bill and said the legislation will not only stimulate the economy but also avoid serious environmental damage. He added legislators often reduce the bill to a choice of jobs or the environment. “The point I’m making to you is we can have both,” Tiffany said. “The technology we have is completely

MINING, page 3

Students clash with ASM INSIDE over conservative event Alice Coyne Reporter University of Wisconsin student organizations spoke out against the student government’s decision to use segregated fees to fund a student trip to a conservative political conference at an open forum Wednesday evening. The Conservative Political Action Conference is a national conference held in March in Washington, Chris Lotten The Badger Herald D.C. sponsored by the In an Associated Students of Madison meeting, students leaders met to address conflict over the body’s American Conservative choice to fund a trip for several members attending the Conservative Political Action Conference. Union. The conference

will feature Republican speakers including Gov. Scott Walker and U.S. Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Janesville, according to the conference website. The Associated Students of Madison will reimburse several students attending the event for hotel and airfare costs and CPAC registration fees. The students attending will be representing various groups and committees within ASM. ASM heard from a variety of leaders of College Democrats of Madison as well as the

© 2013 BADGER HERALD

Vice Chair of Young Progressives. Both organizations argued this funding violated ASM’s mission and the Wisconsin Idea, while ASM committee members defended their decision to support students’ professional development. “ASM supports a variety of organizations. We support students with ideas across the spectrum,” Rep. Jamie Wheeler said. College Democrats Chair Chris Hoffman said ASM leaders refused

EVENT, page 2

Bo Knows: UW head coach deserves COY

Senior writer Ian McCue argues that Badgers’ leader best of the best in toughest conference

SPORTS | 8

Walker sees approval rating drop Public Policy Polling data shows slight dip in numbers since November

NEWS | 2


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