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THE UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN’S INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER SINCE 1969 Volume XLIV, Issue 115
Tuesday, April 30, 2013
www.badgerherald.com
Taylor Frechette The Badger Herald
Students and other activists gathered outside Bascom Hall to protest the university’s ties with the pizza company they say violated UW’s code of conduct. UW student Maxwell Love was arrested after refusing to leave the chancellor’s office. Love was cited for criminal trespassing and resisting arrest.
Students sit in to protest Palermo’s tie Bryan Kristensen Reporter More than two hundred people gathered outside of Bascom Hall Monday as a group of students staged a sitin in the chancellor’s office to protest the university’s continuing contract with Palermo’s Pizza, which prompted the chancellor to issue a statement saying cutting ties with the company
is “not warranted based on the facts.” UWMad@Palermo’s is a coalition of students that has been protesting UW’s contract with the Milwaukee-based pizza company for about 220 days, starting when student leaders in the coalition heard about the Palermo’s alleged violations of worker’s rights. The protest came on the same day the National Labor Relations Board sided with
Palermo’s and against its workers union in a decision, saying the company did not commit labor law violations when it fired 75 workers last year. Palermo’s has a sponsorship contract with UW Athletics and the Wisconsin Union and is a supplier of Roundy’s Supermarkets Inc., which allows the Bucky Badger logo on pizzas. In November, an advisory committee
recommended Interim Chancellor David Ward cut ties with the company in response to allegations regarding issues with union formation, health and safety violations and the firing of workers on strike. The student protesters, who have led multiple protests calling for Ward to cut the contract, organized a rally for 4:30 p.m. on Bascom Hill Monday, but 12 students
started the protest early by staging a sit-in at Ward’s office. The students entered the Office of the Chancellor around 2:30 p.m. and demanded Ward cut the contract, saying they would not leave the office until this happened. More protesters congregated outside of the chancellor’s office, and as more students came into the building, UW Police Captain
Reilly to alter reserve policy Noah Goetzel State Politics Editor In light of reports revealing a more than $1 billion dollar surplus in the University of Wisconsin System’s assets, the system president said he would push to enact new cash reserve policies. UW System President Kevin Reilly said on WISN-TV’s “UpFront with Mike Gousha” he realizes the system will have a tuition freeze and he would discuss potential reserve policy changes with legislators and Gov. Scott Walker. The state’s nonpartisan Legislative Fiscal Bureau recently discovered more than $1 billion dollars in total balances and $648 million in unrestricted appropriations as of last June. UW System spokesperson David Giroux said campuses statewide have funding plans for $441 million of the unrestricted asset totals.
“That is one of the big misnomers of this whole issues that somehow there is one pot of money somewhere with one billion dollars in it,” Giroux said. He said the overwhelming majority of these funds are already held at the campus level and within particular department divisions at each college and university. Giroux noted regents approve these appropriations annually when they vote on the UW System’s operating budget. Giroux said the goal of the policy reforms Reilly will bring to the Board of Regents in June is to boost transparency regarding balances and reserves. “President Reilly has been quite consistent the past week saying we need a policy on what our program revenue balances and our reserves should be going forward,” Giroux said.
REILLY, page 2
Higher Education Editor Three University of Wisconsin professors and a former UW faculty member are the finalists set to compete for the position of dean of the College of Letters and Science, the largest college at UW. The finalists are John Coleman, David McDonald, John Scholz and Jane Tylus. Three of the four finalists are current UW professors and all have department leadership experience within the College of Letters and Science at UW. A 17-member search
and screen committee recommended the finalists to Provost Paul Deluca and Interim Chancellor David Ward, according to a UW statement. Coleman is the current chair of the political science department and the chair of the Curriculum Committee of the College of Letters and Science. McDonald chaired the history department until 2010 and chaired the search committee that selected incoming chancellor Rebecca Blank. Scholz is the current chair of the economics department and the former director of the
PALERMO’S, page 3
Mifflin budget to fund projects Sarah Eucalano City Hall Editor
parking spaces, he said. “We’re really excited to present this project tonight,” Brian Munson, principle for Vandewalle & Associates, Inc. a project partner with Core Campus, said. “[It is] really a vibrant addition to the State Street area.” The proposal would call
Madison Mayor Paul Soglin upped the ante for good behavior at this weekend’s Mifflin Street Block Party, announcing in a meeting with city officials any unused funds from the police budget for the event would go to funding summer youth programs. Soglin said the 2012 Mifflin event cost $190,000 for the Madison Police Department and the budget will remain the same this year. He urged students to act responsibly on Saturday and said any unused portion of the $190,000 budgeted to police for the event will be allocated for youth programming. Soglin emphasized the meeting was called for more than just going through the projected budget of the block party. He said it is important the people responsible for the block party know about the consequences
DEVELOPMENT, page 3
SOGLIN, page 3
TJ Pyzyk The Badger Herald
Developers heard feedback on a proposal for a new mixed-use development at the corner of State and North Frances Streets Monday evening.
Business owners give input on State Street development Stephanie Awe Reporter Local business owners and city residents voiced concerns over a proposed development at the corner of State Street and North Frances Street at a neighborhood meeting Monday. The mixed-use development, proposed
by the Mullins Group and Core Campus of Chicago and called “The Hub,” would be one to four stories on State Street and increase up to 12 stories away from the street, according to Ald. Mike Verveer, District 4. The building would include 200 to 300 apartment units, retail space, office space and 150 to 200
Four finalists selected for Letters and Science dean Muge Niu
of Field Services Johnnie Diamante notified them they were committing unlawful assembly within the building and could be arrested if they did not leave voluntarily. People eventually began to move outside of Bascom Hall to begin the planned rally, and speakers urged the crowd to focus on the goal to cut the Palermo’s contract even
Institute for Research on Poverty. Tylus, the only finalist not currently on staff at UW, is a professor of Italian studies and comparative literature and former vice provost at New York University. She taught at UW from 1985 to 2003, chaired the department of comparative literature and the Divisional Committee for the Arts and Humanities before moving to New York. Jeff Hardin, zoology department chair and professor, chaired the search committee and said the new leader will face many challenges. “Letters and Science is
a huge part of the UWMadison system as far as teaching, administration and research goes, and whoever is at the helm of that is going to need to be an impressive leader,” Hardin said. McDonald said budgeting is the greatest challenge facing the new leader of the College of Letters and Science. “It [College of Letters and Science] is such a complex unit…the next leader has to have a good understanding of the governance culture of the university and honor that,” McDonald said. All the candidates are scheduled to give public
© 2013 BADGER HERALD
presentations from May 9 through May 16. Students and faculty can fill out surveys, with all feedback to be submitted to Ward, DeLuca and Blank on May 20. The candidate selected will succeed current Dean Gary Sandefur, who announced his decision to step down and return to the faculty last year. “I have done my part as dean long enough, and I’m ready to resume my life as a faculty member,” Sandefur said. All four candidates have at least 18 years of teaching experience at UW.
FINALISTS, page 3
INSIDE Student section attendance not on par with sales Sports Content Editor Nick Daniels investigates the ticket figures of Wisconsin’s top teams.
SPORTS | 8
DUIs: culture to blame for state offenses Charles Godfrey weighs the pros and cons of a new proposal to curb drunken driving.
OPINION | 4