Wisconsin Lawmakers? Debate Over Race in Student-Aid Program Was NeedlessNovember 3, 2011, 9:46 pmA bitter controversy on Tuesday night in the Wisconsin State Assembly over the use of race in a state student-aid program turns out to have been moot. Lawmakers were surprised when a Democrat proposed removing race as a factor that could qualify students for the program, which offers grants of up to $1,800. After a long debate, the measure received preliminary approval early Wednesday. But according to the Associated Press, the state agency that awards the grants no longer considers race as a criterion. Apparently no member of the Assembly was aware of the agency?s shift.
Author: jnweaver
Campus Connection: Practice of using race in grant program ended under Doyle
It appears a late-night debate earlier this week in the Assembly about a proposal to remove race as a qualifying factor in the awarding of a state higher education grant wasn?t really necessary. According to the Associated Press, a letter circulated Thursday indicates race hasn?t been used as a factor in awarding Talent Incentive Program grant money for more than a year — with the switch being made by former Democratic Gov. Jim Doyle?s administration.
Campus Connection: Walker appoints three to UW System’s Board of Regents
Gov. Scott Walker on Thursday announced the appointments of three people to the University of Wisconsin System?s Board of Regents. According to a press release from the governor?s office, Walker named Tim Higgins, Gary Roberts and Gerald Whitburn to the 18-member board which governs the UW System. The appointments must be confirmed by the state Senate.
Wrongful death suit filed against county, 911 center
On the third anniversary of their son?s death, the parents of a man who was beaten to death in an East Side park filed a wrongful death lawsuit Thursday against Dane County and the Dane County 911 center, alleging that their son might have been saved if dispatchers had sent police to the park in response to earlier calls from a neighbor.
….This is the second lawsuit against the 911 center in about three years. The parents of slain UW-Madison student Brittany Zimmermann sued the center and the county for allegedly mishandling a 911 call from Zimmermann’s phone shortly before she died in April 2008. The lawsuit was settled for a $5,000 contribution to a fund to help find Zimmermann’s killer and $2,500 to cover some lawyer fees.
2010 Wisconsin student debt 15th in United States (The Daily Cardinal)
College seniors who graduated from UW-Madison with debt in 2010 now owe an average $22,872 in student loans, a new study reports. The study, released Thursday by the Project on Student Debt, ranks Wisconsin 15th in the nation for highest debt. The $22,872 price tag puts UW-Madison slightly below the national average.
Student org reps join MCSC protest against SSFC (The Daily Cardinal)
Representatives from student organizations across campus attended a rally Thursday planned by the Multicultural Student Coalition to protest the Student Services Finance Committee decision to deny the group?s funding. As MCSC played music from loudspeakers in East Campus Mall, the group?s Executive Staff Member Nneka Akubeze said she was pleased with the variety of student representatives supporting them.
MCSC appeals SSFC denial of funding (The Daily Cardinal)
The Multicultural Student Coalition appealed the student government finance committee?s decision to deny them funding eligibility Thursday. The Student Services Finance Committee denied MCSC eligibility for funding because the committee said a majority of the group?s time was not spent directly serving students, failing to meet eligibility requirements. The group appealed SSFC?s ruling, saying the committee violated procedures in reaching the
Grass Roots: Occupy Madison holds on, hopes for more participants
The movement has stirred some action. Occupy protesters joined a rally at the Capitol on Oct. 15 by the national MoveOn political advocacy group. A week later a march in solidarity with Scott Olsen, the Onalaska-born Iraq War veteran seriously injured at Occupy Oakland, drew about 100 demonstrators. And a teach-in at UW-Madison on Wednesday attracted 35 participants, the Daily Cardinal reports. But overall, Occupy Madison has not attracted the numbers that state officials apparently were gearing up for at the outset of the encampment when they were talking last month about reinstating a police staging area at the Capitol. One noticeably low-profile contingent in the movement has been organized public workers, who attracted thousands of supporters who stood shoulder to shoulder with them against Walker earlier this year.
City officials warn bar owners that new ID policies could be discriminatory
Madison officials say bar policies that deny entry to anyone without a valid driver?s license or passport could be discriminatory, and the city is working on educating bar owners about what is and isn?t acceptable.
“It?s been clearly documented who does and doesn?t have driver?s licenses in the state of Wisconsin,” said Mark Woulf, alcohol policy coordinator for Madison, citing a vast divide between blacks and whites. “That alone raises eyebrows and could easily be determined to be discriminatory.”
Campus Connection: Walker appoints three to UW System’s Board of Regents
Gov. Scott Walker on Thursday announced the appointments of three people to the University of Wisconsin System?s Board of Regents. According to a press release from the governor?s office, Walker named Tim Higgins, Gary Roberts and Gerald Whitburn to the 18-member board which governs the UW System.
UW Law school incorporates neuroscience into curriculum
(MADISON)- Some law students at the University of Wisconsin?s Law school have begun taking a closer look at how new brain scan research might change the way criminal sentences are handed down. The UW-Madison Law school?s new double major in law and neuroscience is challenging future lawyers to use new discoveries on how the brain works to make punishment more effectively fit the crime. They?re looking at new research from the Macarthur Foundation Research Network on law and neuroscience.
Chinese Students Prove a Tricky Fit on U.S. Campuses
….The students, mostly from China?s rapidly expanding middle class, can afford to pay full tuition, a godsend for colleges that have faced sharp budget cuts in recent years. But what seems at first glance a boon for colleges and students alike is, on closer inspection, a tricky fit for both. Colleges, eager to bolster their diversity and expand their international appeal, have rushed to recruit in China, where fierce competition for seats at Chinese universities and an aggressive admissions-agent industry feed a frenzy to land spots on American campuses.
UW football: Big Ten teams hit road blocks
University of Wisconsin senior quarterback Russell Wilson is similar to many competitive college football players in that he loves the challenge of playing on the road. After half of his first Big Ten Conference season, Wilson has made trips to Michigan State and Ohio State, losing both games. But those experiences, especially the 33-29 loss Saturday night at Ohio Stadium, will forever remain among his cherished college experiences.
Seely on Science: A precarious time to be a bat
Bats, already maligned enough in movie and myth, are facing a tough time in real life these days. The state?s cave bat populations are being closely monitored for signs of white-nose syndrome, the fungal disease that has already wiped out untold numbers of bats in the east. And now, researchers at the UW-Madison have learned more about how bats are dying on wind farms. David Drake, a UW-Madison wildlife ecology professor, and former masters student Steven Grodsky, teamed with the UW-Madison School of Veterinary Medicine to study the carcasses of bats found near wind turbines.
Tech execs say more needs to be done to help firms, keep them in Madison
It isn?t hard to find skilled scientists and engineers in Madison or to bring them here from other parts of the country. It isn?t even much of a problem to land $1 million or so to start a company here. But what is very difficult is bringing in enough money to take a company beyond the startup stage, and that?s where the state needs to step in. That was the message from executives of several of the Madison area?s most successful tech companies at a panel discussion Wednesday at the Early Stage Symposium at Monona Terrace.
Law student helps man out of apartment fire (The Daily Cardinal)
When an apartment fire broke out on the 2600 block of Pheasant Ridge Trail Sunday night, second-year law student Rocco DeFilippis came to the rescue, UW news reported Wednesday. Fire officials said the apartment?s resident was asleep while the stove was on just before 6 p.m. Hearing there were children in the apartment, DeFilippis acted to ensure no one was hurt.
ASM leaders return to seats (The Daily Cardinal)
After being selected by the Nominations Board, two chairs of student council who had been removed from their seats resumed their positions Wednesday. Nominations Board Chair Niko Magallon and Associated Students of Madison Vice Chair Beth Huang were removed from their positions in September after the Student Judiciary ruled they failed to complete required service hours on time.
Chris Rickert: There are better things to struggle for than door-buster deals
People lucky enough to live in America?s major metropolitan areas have the chance this month to witness two key manifestations of our newly invigorated class war.
….Some retailers can do between 25 percent and 40 percent of their annual sales during the holiday shopping season, according to the National Retail Federation. Indeed, Black Friday takes its name from all the black ink needed to record profits during the holidays, according to Jerry O’Brien, executive director of the UW-Madison Center for Retailing Excellence.
Panel defends athletes, says NCAA reforms not good enough
WASHINGTON — Officials from the National Collegiate Athletic Association last week had an unusually long opportunity to brag; with several changes to eligibility standards and scholarship rules making headlines all week long, words like “historic,” “unprecedented” and “profound” became standard rhetoric. Here?s hoping they enjoyed it, because they?re about to go back on the defensive.
Minority Grant Changes Get Preliminary OK
The state Assembly has given preliminary approval to a surprise proposal introduced by a Democrat, and backed by Republicans, to eliminate race as a factor in college grant applications. The proposal, made around 11 p.m. Tuesday, elicited a furious response from Democratic opponents who prolonged debate until about 8 a.m. on Wednesday. Democrats used a procedural move to block final approval until Thursday.
Campus Connection: Assembly backs proposal to eliminate race as factor in a grant program
A proposal to eliminate race as a factor in a college grant program passed the Assembly Wednesday morning, the Associated Press reports. The surprise proposal was made about 11 p.m. Tuesday by Rep. Peggy Krusick, D-Milwaukee, and backed by Republicans. It passed around 8 a.m. Wednesday, with all Democrats except Krusick voting against it. A procedural move by Democrats, however, will block final passage until Thursday. The Senate, however, probably won?t decide whether to take up the measure until 2012.
Quoted: Sara Goldrick-Rab, a UW-Madison associate professor of education policy studies and sociology.
Obituary: Patrick J. “Pat” Kennedy
Patrick J. “Pat” Kennedy, age 80, passed away on Monday, Oct. 31, 2011, at his home in Madison. He worked for the University of Wisconsin Press for 30 years, retiring in 1988.
Tom Oates: Fun has just begun in Big Ten football race
This year was supposed to provide rare clarity for Big Ten Conference football. Nebraska became the 12th team, the Big Ten split into divisions and a conference championship game was instituted. Unlike five of the previous nine years, there would be no shared Big Ten title and thus no debate over which team should represent the conference in the Rose Bowl. Instead of clarity, however, the Big Ten has produced chaos.
Seely on Science: The travels of a widely used weed killer
The weed-killer Roundup gets used for everything from killing dandelions to painting the stumps of invasive species such as buckthorn. As pervasive as its use, however, may be the growing presence of the herbicide in our environment, according to recent studies, including some by UW-Madison professor Warren Porter, who specializes in environmental toxicity and zoology.
From docs to med students, new UW Hospital simulation center gives practice time
When Sim Baby?s oxygen level drops, its mouth turns blue. METIman groans and coughs from heart failure. TraumaMan?s neck can be punctured to create a tracheostomy, or hole for breathing. The high-tech manikins ? anatomical models used in health care, as opposed to storefront mannequins ? are among the stars of UW Health?s Clinical Simulation Program, featuring a new $6 million facility on the first floor of UW Hospital.
TIF approved for University Crossing
Madison will deliver $1.37 million in public assistance to the developers of the $21.9 million University Crossing mixed-use project on the West Side. The City Council voted unanimously on Tuesday to approve the tax incremental financing (TIF) loan to GI Clinic LLC, which is building a 60,000-square-foot digestive health clinic and 265 parking stalls on the former Erdman properties at University Avenue and Whitney Way. The clinic and parking will be leased by the UW Hospital and Clinic Authority.
Electrician safety revised (The Daily Cardinal)
UW-Madison recently began to review safety procedures on campus in response to the findings of an investigation into the death of a university electrician last July. Brad Krause, an UW electrician, was electrocuted while working on repairs to the attic of Mills Concert Hall in the Humanities building.
UW Professor Dan Banda paving road to knowledge with new documentary (The Daily Cardinal)
Everyone knows about issues like fair-trade coffee and blood diamonds, according to UW filmmaker Dan Banda, but very few people have heard about conflict minerals. His documentary, “A Road from Lubumbashi,” seeks to change this.
Union changes influenced by student vote (The Daily Cardinal)
The Memorial Union Reinvestment Project Design Committee met Tuesday to discuss changes to the proposed renovations in wake of the recent Associated Students of Madison referendum and budget cuts facing the university. The proposed addition to the Play Circle lobby, one of the project?s major components and the source of recent controversy, was recently rejected by student voters, with 50.24 percent of voters saying they did not support the addition?s design.
Sam Mills: Badgers waste opportunity of a lifetime
Dear Editor: Badgers win the lottery ? flush the season. Quarterback Russell Wilson arrives, and the coaching staff has no idea how to utilize his talents. A cheap nonconference schedule gets them ready for nothing. What a waste of the opportunity of a lifetime.
Affirmative-Action Critics See Texas Case as a Vehicle for a Supreme Court Victory
Leading critics of affirmative action say they are optimistic that the U.S. Supreme Court will take up a lawsuit challenging the race-conscious admissions policies of the University of Texas at Austin and hand down a ruling that curtails, or even ends, the use of such admissions preferences by colleges around the nation.
Andy Baggot: New $2,000 stipend will only add to disparity in college athletics
First impressions, second thoughts and the third degree: Giving student-athletes an extra $2,000 per scholarship is fine by me, but the NCAA is doing every one of its Division I members a disservice by making it an elective instead of a required course of action. It?s up to the conferences to decide, and those that can afford it will absolutely pony up. We?re talking most, if not all, of the six Bowl Championship Series affiliates.
UW men’s basketball: Taylor lone senior on AP preseason All-America team
Expectations for Jordan Taylor?s final season with the University of Wisconsin men?s basketball program are through the roof. On Monday, Taylor was named to the Associated Press preseason All-America team, the latest in an impressive list of accolades heading into the star point guard?s senior season. The only other player in UW history who was named to the AP preseason team, which started in 1986-87, was Michael Finley in 1994-95.
Madison360: NC State alum misses Wilson like ‘childhood Christmas’
A North Carolina State alum emailed me after I blogged about how the Badgers may be wasting their one-year opportunity with Russell Wilson, the transfer quarterback from that school. “You couldn?t be more correct on this!” he opined.
Worker Hit Trying To Stop Runaway Truck
One man was injured after police said his truck rolled down a hill on the University of Wisconsin campus and pinned him to a light pole. The incident happened Monday about 4:40 p.m. on the corner of Charter Street and Linden Street. According to police, a landscaper was contracted to do work at UW and was driving a truck carrying a load of sod. He parked the truck near the corner of Charter and Linden, but the truck began rolling down a hill. Police said the landscaper tried to stop the vehicle, but he was injured after he was pinned between the truck and a light pole. The driver suffered some broken bones and was kept in the hospital overnight for observation.
Madison’s Freakfest Attendance, Arrests Down
Freakfest, Madison?s annual downtown Halloween party, attracted at least 5,000 fewer people this past weekend, but still got approval from the event?s organizer. Frank Productions, the company that operates Freakfest, sold 26,000 tickets to Saturday night?s event held on State Street. Various factors influenced this year?s attendance, but fewer ticket sales don?t mean the company will stop running the event, said Charlie Goldstone, of Frank Productions.
$4.6 million grant will help Stratatech start clinical trials of skin substitute
Madison-based Stratatech Corp. is getting a $4.6 million grant to help fund the start of clinical trials of ExpressGraft, a skin substitute designed to heal diabetes-related foot ulcers. Founded in 2000 based on discoveries at UW-Madison, Stratatech makes tissue products described on the company’s website as “nearly identical” to human skin. The company has 32 employees and will likely add more staff in 2012, Allen-Hoffmann said, but she could not yet estimate how many.
Local stores move opening hours earlier for Black Friday shopping
Waking up early for some of the best deals of the holiday shopping season may be on its way out. Now, it?s a matter of staying up.
“It’s a huge day,” said Jerry O’Brien, executive director of the Center for Retailing Excellence at UW-Madison. “There’s too much risk for a retailer not to jump on board (a midnight opening) right now.”
Driver injured when he tries to stop runaway truck
Halloween was no treat for a contractor at UW-Madison who tried to stop his runaway truck from rolling downhill and got caught between the truck and a light pole. The unidentified driver was hospitalized with broken bones after the incident that was reported at about 4:40 p.m. at Charter and Linden Streets, according to a news release from the UW-Madison Police Department.
Madison360: Wasting the season of Russell Wilson?
As a 30-year Camp Randall season ticket holder, I witnessed the program as a take-it-or-leave-it distraction on autumn Saturdays in which the marching tubas in the fourth quarter were easily heard because the game itself was so dead. Now every UW football game is an event, from “Jump Around” to the rendition of “Build Me Up Buttercup.” Oh yeah, and then there is the excellent, winning football. That?s why I write more with remorse than irritation that I fear UW has pretty much wasted the potential of quarterback Russell Wilson.
Campus Connection: Student-athletes nationally graduating at record levels
More than four out of every five student-athletes who play sports at the NCAA?s highest level now graduate within six years, according to an annual report released this past week by the college sports oversight body. A formula used by the association indicates a record 82 percent of NCAA Division I student-athletes who entered school in 2004 earned a degree within six years. That figure is three percentage points higher than last year and eight points above the graduation success rates (GSR) first collected by the NCAA with the entering freshman class of 1995. Of the student-athletes who entered UW-Madison in 2004, the NCAA reports 81 percent graduated within six years. Not all the news at UW-Madison is so rosy, however….
Obituary: David Prosa
David A. Prosa, age 67, passed away on Thursday, Oct. 27, 2011, at Middleton Village Nursing Center. He worked for UW Transportation Services for 32 years prior to his retirement.
Obituary: John Henry Torphy
John Henry Torphy died Oct. 2, 2011, in Tucson, Ariz. A memorial gathering will be held on Nov. 10, 2011, at the Memorial Union, 800 Langdon St., Madison, from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. There will be a program at 4 p.m.
Big Ten cross country: Ahmed powers nearly perfect Badgers to 13th straight title
URBANA, Ill. ? Behind the record-setting race of junior Mohammed Ahmed, the University of Wisconsin men?s cross country team grabbed its 13th straight Big Ten Conference championship on Sunday. The Badgers easily distanced themselves from the field by placing five runners in the top six for a team score of 17 points ? 43 points ahead of runner-up Indiana.
Jeff Kleiman: Why are lawmakers attacking the university that helped them?
Dear Editor: Why are the GOP politicians so set on destroying the University of Wisconsin when they benefited so much from it? The current plan imposes a 38 percent cut on a state asset that consumes only 7 percent of resources. Nobody seriously disputes that the UW System should share the impacts in revenue shortfalls for the coming biennium. Yet why impose so grotesque a burden? The UW System has been attacked by the governor and other GOP stalwarts with the attempt to strip away the flagship campus.
Ask the Weather Guys: What is typical Halloween weather?
A. We tend to remember those Halloweens with bad weather. Slogging through rain or snow in costumes with trick-or-treat bags is tough. But according to Dr. Ed Hopkins of the Wisconsin State Climatology Office, in the last 30 years (1981-2010), Madison has had only 10 Halloween days when measurable precipitation (0.01 inches or greater) fell, which translates to a probability of 33 percent that rain falls on that date.
Curiosities: Why do fruits such as peaches and melons stop ripening when they are cut open?
A. Cutting fruit damages cells and removes the protective peel, exposing the flesh to the environment and altering its chemistry. Some fruit does actually continue ripening. However, it also starts to rot much faster, said Rebecca Harbut, an assistant professor of horticulture and fruit expert at the UW-Madison.
Madison 360: Our horrible year at the Capitol had roots in 1990s
The year-in-review stories are nearly two months away, but I think we can already recap state politics in 2011 as Wisconsin?s “annus horribilis,” which translates to “horrible year.” The Latin isn’t mine. Todd Berry, president of the Wisconsin Taxpayers Alliance, used “Wisconsin’s annus horribilis” as his title to put the state budget in context in a recent lecture to retired UW-Madison employees.
….And Walker has taken a meat cleaver to the University of Wisconsin System, most recently by imposing, without explanation, a disproportionate share of “lapse” budget reductions to the campuses. He also socked it to cities on shared-revenue payments and has proposed major reductions in health care coverage.
Socratic Backfire?
Some students didn?t take well to Steven Maranville?s teaching style at Utah Valley University. They complained that in the professor?s ?capstone? business course, he asked them questions in class even when they didn?t raise their hands. They also didn?t like it when he made them work in teams. Those complaints against him led the university denying him tenure ? a decision amounting to firing, according to a lawsuit Maranville filed against the university this month.
Quoted: Michael Apple, UW-Madison professor of curriculum and instruction.
UW researchers to study, address global health problems
Mangoes are Haiti?s largest export, but the country imports mango juice.
“It doesn?t make sense,” said Gergens Polynice, a UW-Madison research assistant from Haiti. “How can we process the foods in Haiti and take advantage of the local market?” Polynice and other campus researchers will explore that question in one of eight projects to win grants through the university?s new Global Health Institute, launched Thursday at the Wisconsin Institutes for Discovery.
Campus Connection: Former UW-Richland student jailed in Bahrain is freed
A former UW-Richland student who had been imprisoned in Bahrain since Sept. 8 has apparently been set free. The Cap Times reported on the plight of Ali Almajed earlier this month. On Tuesday, former UW-Richland international student adviser Kathy Neckar, who has stayed in close contact with Almajed?s wife, sent an email stating she had just gotten word that Almajed is out of jail.
Alvarez mostly approves NCAA reforms, but has some concerns
Barry Alvarez is on board with most of the major reforms approved Thursday by the NCAA, but the University of Wisconsin athletic director has his objections and concerns. Alvarez endorsed proposals to increase the Academic Progress Rate ? schools that fail to reach the new benchmark will be ineligible for postseason play, including football ? and to bump academic eligibility requirements for incoming freshmen from 2.0 to 2.3.
On Campus: Small changes could save University of Wisconsin-Madison up to $8.5 million, report finds
UW-Madison uses more than 72 e-mail systems and buys more than 250 types of black pens. A new report found that the university could save money – up to $8.5 million – by centralizing and standardizing some of these administrative functions. (And yes, the report found that UW-Madison could be more fiscally responsible with black pens.) The suggestions are the initial results of an external review by Huron Consulting Group, hired by the university to look for areas of efficiency.
Kate Werning: Wisconsin should have a heart when it comes to in-state tuition for immigrant students
The University of Wisconsin-Madison?s all-campus read for this year is “Enrique?s Journey,” the story of a young Honduran boy who makes the harrowing trip to the United States to reunite with his mother. The book shines a light on the hardships immigrants will endure in search of a better life and to maintain family ties, and comes at a time when Wisconsin is limiting opportunities for young residents to pursue a college education….As the campus community discusses “Enrique’s Journey” and as the state gears up for a recall of Gov. Walker, we hope that Wisconsinites and gubernatorial candidates find that they do, indeed, have a heart.
LifeGen Technologies to be sold to Utah company
LifeGen Technologies, a Madison company studying the genes associated with aging, will be purchased by Nu Skin Enterprises, of Provo, Utah, for $11.7 million. The letter of intent announced Thursday includes LifeGen?s genetic research, patents and tissue bank and says the transaction is expected to be completed before the end of 2011. UW-Madison School of Medicine professors Richard Weindruch and Tomas Prolla founded LifeGen in 2000.
Housing specialists: MPM policy illegal (The Daily Cardinal)
Tenants? rights experts labeled Madison Property Management?s new Freakfest weekend policy illegal Thursday, saying the limits imposed violate tenants? leases, as well as state law.
Derek Popp: Paul wrong about ending student loans
Republican presidential candidate Ron Paul is calling for an end to the federal student loan program, saying the program (or more specifically, government) is responsible for soaring tuition costs. I like Paul on many of his positions, but he is dead wrong on this one.
Biz Beat: School cuts were big piece of job losses
“Clearly, the recovery has lost some of the strength seen in early 2011, when jobs grew steadily through the first six months of the year,” says a new report from the Center on Wisconsin Strategy, a UW-Madison think tank. The COWS report notes Wisconsin now has a jobs deficit of 195,300 — the difference between the number of jobs Wisconsin has now and what it needs to return to pre-recession levels.
“The jobs deficit should be a national and state priority,” the group says. Whether Republican, Democrat or Wall Street occupier, nobody is arguing that point.
Go Big Read author wants to shed light on immigration.
A decade ago, when journalist Sonia Nazario found out her housekeeper, Carmen, left four children behind in Guatemala and hadn?t seen them in 12 years, she was pretty judgmental, she told a Madison audience Thursday night.
?What kind of a lousy mother leaves her children?? Nazario wondered. It was a question that would eventually lead her on a harrowing journey. The Pulitzer Prize winner talked about her 2006 book, ?Enrique?s Journey,? before a rapt hall of 1,000 people at Union South. The nonfiction story of a Honduran boy who made eight attempts to reach the U.S. in search of his mother was this year?s pick for Go Big Read, the UW-Madison?s common-reading program, now in its third year.
Judge Says U. of Wisconsin Does Not Have to Give Student-Fee Money to Conservative Group
In a ruling released on Wednesday, a federal judge said he would not force the University of Wisconsin at Madison to award money from mandatory student fees to a conservative student group called Collegians for a Constructive Tomorrow, the Wisconsin State Journal reported. The group, known as CFACT, sued in 2009, saying the university had veered from a policy of awarding funds on a ?viewpoint neutral? basis when it denied the conservative organization?s request, while at the same time awarding funds to the Wisconsin Public Interest Research Group. CFACT argued that the two groups were essentially identical, but that WISPIRG was politically liberal while CFACT was politically conservative.