Weekend, January 28-30, 2011 - The Daily Cardinal

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Need a cure-all for the winter blahs? Try the What’s In The Fridge recipe for spicy vegetarian coconut curry LIFE AND STYLE

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Fifth album from The Get Up Kids falls flat on the floor ARTS

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Complete campus coverage since 1892

Soglin polkas his way into mayoral race By Grace Gleason The Daily Cardinal

Paul Soglin’s campaign for Madison mayor got off to a rowdy start at a private fundraiser kickoff that included close to 100 friends and residents showing support for the Democratic candidate at the Essen Haus Thursday. Soglin has held the mayoral position for more total years than anyone in the city’s history. He served as mayor from 1973 to 1979 and again from 1989 to 1997. Many attendees of the kickoff cited his accomplishments during past terms—including the construction of State Street Mall, Monona Terrace and a bike path around Lake Monona—as reasons to support him in the upcoming election. “He’s done a great job in the past and I think we need him to keep moving forward,” Madison resident David Shepard said. Soglin said he plans to use models of his previous projects as mayor to guide new projects, such as using the Monona Terrace Commission as a model for the Overture Center Foundation. A number of long-time Soglin supporters attended the event, hoping to rewrite the results of Soglin’s loss in the 2003 race against incumbent Dave Cieslewicz this time around. Newer supporters also agreed they turned to the candidate after dissatisfaction with the decisions of Cieslewicz. “I think [Cieslewicz] is very repressive and controls people ... specifically the control he exercises over

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dailycardinal.com

Rockin’ the suburbs

Paul Soglin candidate Madison Mayor

Matt Marheine/the daily cardinal

Ben Folds performed at the Overture Center Thursday night.

Senate passes job creation tax credit bill The state Senate passed a bill Thursday that will grant tax credits to businesses based on how many jobs they create. This bill marks the latest in a series of “business friendly” legislation created and passed since the new Republican legislature took over Jan. 3. Democrats have criticized this bill and others for wasting state money on initiatives that they say will not actually create jobs. “It’s a sad commentary on the lack of success in the ‘Jobs’ special session that the Republicans’ proposals have done more to increase the budget deficit than create jobs,” Senate Minority Leader Mark Miller, D-Madison, said.

However, Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald, R-Juneau said the criticism is unwarranted. “It seems like every time the Democrats say ‘you’re not doing anything about jobs,’ we pass another jobs bill,” Fitzgerald said in a statement. “They were out of touch in the majority, and now they’re out of touch in the minority.” Gov. Scott Walker praised the bill as an important step in his administration’s effort for job creation. Walker also signed the partypolarizing tort reform bill into law, which will decrease business liability in the state. —Ariel Shapiro

Morgridge Center matches grants to support civic engagement, service

Kathryn Weenig/the daily cardinal

Weekend, January 28-30, 2011

Journalist denounces link between vaccine, autism The Daily Cardinal

“We’re going to provide the opportunity for all of you to solve the city problems.”

Mayoral candidate Paul Soglin kicked off his campaign with many long-time supporters Thursday at the Essen Haus.

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By Ben Siegel

all the alders,” said Dolores Kester, a Madison resident since the 1960s. “If they don’t agree with him, he won’t appoint them to committees.” The Greater Madison Chamber of Commerce Board of Directors announced their endorsement of Cieslewicz Thursday.

Soglin supporters at the kickoff said they believe his history of listening to citizens about issues facing Madison will garner him votes in the primary election Feb. 15. “He’s proven his ability to work with a lot of different people, which is huge in government,” attendee Terry Bowes said. “Being able to listen to everybody, that’s the biggest thing.” The candidate also emphasized inclusiveness of citizens as a tenet of his approach to being mayor. “We’re going to provide the opportunity for all of you to solve the city problems,” Soglin said. “The role of the mayor is to open the doors, get everyone in the same room, provide them the information ... so that eventually the elected officials can make a wise decision.”

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The UW-Madison Morgridge Center for Public Service has given $334,739 to UW-Madison education, environment and health faculty through 11 matching grants. The Morgridge Match Grant Program is an initiative that matches 50 percent of grants awarded to campus individuals or groups for projects that support civic engagement and community-based learning at UW. The fall 2010 grant cycle produced funding for projects including an educational program for Latino immigrant parents of children with Autism and a program for senior

capstone students to promote healthier lifestyles on Wisconsin American Indian reservations, among others. The Morgridge Center for Public Service aims to advance “the Wisconsin Idea by developing and promoting civic engagement, strengthening teaching and learning and facilitating collaborative partnerships through community-based research, academic service-learning, public service and engaged scholarships,” said the website. The application for spring grants is due April 27.

After facing airplane delays and a bout of food poisoning, journalist Seth Mnookin eventually found his way to UW-Madison Thursday to denounce the proposed link between autism and the Measles, Mumps and Rubella vaccine. Mnookin’s book, “The Panic Virus,” discredits a 1998 British medical study that claimed a link between the MMR vaccine and the development of autism in children. “The Panic Virus” traces the spread of public skepticism with child vaccinations, questioning the ethics of both the scientific and journalistic communities who he believed perpetuated the concern. Mnookin said he is shocked that young, affluent and wellread parents were debating the merits of child vaccinations. “I was surprised that some people I knew were not making these decisions based on analysis of the evidence.” Mnookin said. “There seemed to be this great disconnect to me.” Mnookin said he had two goals for “The Panic Virus.” One was to explore the reasons behind the debate about the possible danger of vaccines, dangers that he said in some cases, such as autism, were fabricated. “It seems clear to me that this wasn’t a case where there was a legitimate debate about where the eviautism page 3

Man sentenced to 25 years in prison A Dane County Circuit Judge sentenced a 39-year-old Madison man who shot his girlfriend and their two children to 25 years in prison Thursday. In Nov. 2009, Donte Beasley shot his girlfriend Zenolia Rice, 42, and their children, 8-year-old Destiny and 7-year-old Donte Jr., in their home on the 1400 block of Loreen Drive, according to Madison Police. Beasley was intoxicated when he started the confrontation, which led to the shooting, police said. Beasley shot Rice then shot Destiny after she came to her mother’s aid. Beasley then Donte Jr. after he begged Beasley to stop shooting, police said. Rice suffered multiple bullet wounds and Beasley caused self-inflicted wounds to his neck. Rice was able to get to a neighbor’s house to call for help, police said. Beasley was expected to serve no more than 25 years in prison because of a plea bargain.

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


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