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Friday, November 20, 2009 |  Madison, WI: 44.0° F  
The Paper
Friday, November 6, 2009 | Vol. 34, No. 45

FEATURED STORY

Madison Pop Explosion: The '00s were a revolution in Madison music

The music of Madison was transformed this decade in ways that mirrored broader changes in the identity of the city itself. >More

NEWS

Inside agitator: Star UW history professor Jeremi Suri wants to shake things up

Jeremi Suri wants the UW-Madison, where he's a rising-star history professor, to be bolder, more daring, more adept at reaching out. Unafraid of controversy. More, come to think of it, like Suri himself. "We should be a place that takes risks [and] pushes boundaries between disciplines and in the way we teach." >More Taking stock of Lee Enterprises' ups and downs
Cap Times, WSJ co-owner is on 'deathbed,' making a comeback

It's hard to get a handle these days on the fortunes of Lee Enterprises, the Iowa-based half-owner of Capital Newspapers, whose products include The Wisconsin State Journal and The Capital Times. Staffs, resources and compensation have been cut at both papers, as throughout the Lee chain and most of the newspaper industry. Morale has suffered, and the newsrooms are hard-pressed to keep up with print and online coverage demands. >More Prof renews psychology controversy
Paper charges that therapists are ignoring clinical research

Timothy Baker has a problem with psychology today. He thinks it bears a dangerous resemblance to the medicine of yesteryear: anecdotal, unscientific, as likely to hurt as help. "[D]espite compelling research support for the merits of specific interventions for specific problems, clinical psychology, as a field, has failed to embrace these treatments," writes Baker, a professor of medicine at the UW-Madison's School of Medicine and Public Health, in a paper that's generating national attention and controversy. >More Green Northeast Madison neighborhood gets green light
Unanimous passage of Northeast Neighborhood plan

Madison Mayor Dave Cieslewicz is pleased with how it all turned out: "I got less resistance than I thought I would." The mayor is referring to the recent unanimous passage of his Northeast Neighborhood plan, which includes design features aimed at achieving a 25% reduction in the use of vehicles, water and energy. >More

MUSIC

Beyond 9 to 5: Some Madison musicians are weekend warriors

Almost everyone who's tried to make a living as a musician has heard the old adage: "Don't quit your day job." The thing is, lots of local musicians have great day jobs that they wouldn't dream of ditching, and plenty have found a way to rehearse, perform and create while the rest of us sleep, watch TV and play Wii. We're a town of weekend warriors when it comes to music making. >More The Sounds' tenacity yields success
The hardest-working band in Helsingborg

The Sounds didn't just wait patiently for success. They've earned it through years of long, hard touring that most rock bands would never endure. >More Cash Box Kings: Cuttin' Heads at the Cuda Cafe
(Blue Midnight Records)

Blues is one of those musical genres best experienced live, and the tunes of Madison's Cash Box Kings are no exception. The evidence is the group's new CD of nine live performances from the now-defunct Cuda Cafe in Deerfield. >More

OPINION & COMMENTARY

Cracking down on sales to chronic drunks is misguided strategy
Address problem, not providers

I've been thinking a lot lately about how Wisconsin deals with citizens who abuse alcohol. With our dismal drunk-driving statistics, arguments over whether or not to allow children into bars with their folks, and proposals on everything from the size of liquor bottles that may be sold to the taxes placed on beer, the regulation of alcohol is a hot topic these days. >More UW females dress up when the sun goes down
Ladies of the night

Dear Tell All: Sorry, but I have to correct your assessment of fashion or the lack thereof among University of Wisconsin-Madison students. First, you are correct about UW students dressing like total slobs -- during the day. >More

AT A GLANCE

ARTS

Carlota Santana brings flamenco to the concert stage
Beyond nightclubs

Flamenco's a cultural expression born of poverty, sex and violence in the medieval merchant ports of southern Spain. Culturally it's Spanish, Jewish, Moorish, Romani. As an art form it has churned for centuries on the rocks of politics and fashion. Flamenco's run the gamut of venues from street corners to taverns and proscenium arch theaters. >More SpongeBob SquarePants celebrates 10 surreal years
God of the sea

It's official: Everybody loves SpongeBob SquarePants. You can tell by all the stars who line up for cameo appearances in the cartoon's 10th anniversary special, including Robin Williams, Pink, Tina Fey, Will Ferrell, Craig Ferguson, LeBron James and Rosario Dawson. >More Ratchet and Borderlands: Good, but not for me

Just because I don't want to play a certain video game very much doesn't mean I hate it. To the contrary, two new video games are quite good, objectively speaking (they're entertaining and impressive), but simply aren't my cup of coffee. >More

MOVIES

Saving the planet, one film festival at a time
Green screenings

Gregg Mitman thought Tales from Planet Earth would be a one-shot deal. The UW-Madison history of science professor and interim director of the Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies was a principal organizer of the 2007 environmental film festival. "Opening night, there was a line two blocks long waiting to get into the Orpheum," he remembers. He had anticipated 500 people might show up the first night. Instead, more than twice that number turned out. By the end of the festival, total attendance was estimated at 3,500. >More The Men Who Stare at Goats: Psychic spies
Psychic spies

The Men Who Stare at Goats is one odd duck. A title card reads "More of this is true than you would believe," but it's impossible to tell what's factual in this fictionalized take on Jon Ronson's book about Army experiments in the paranormal because it all sounds so deeply ludicrous. >More
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ARCHIVE

EATS

Oysy Sushi and Seafood Buffet is an exercise in abundance
Piled high

Sushi is the kind of food you can't really, in good faith, dumb down. In an age when elitism has become the dirtiest word, it remains an unapologetically elitist specialty. And that's justified. Genuine sushi chefs, the kind who turn the tradition into an art form, train for years to do justice to one piece of perfect yellowtail sashimi. >More Hy-Vee is a supermarket and a cafeteria
Tray chic

The new Hy-Vee, at 3801 East Washington Ave., was crowded on its grand opening Friday, Oct. 30. Madison schools had the day off, so kids trailed moms and dads pushing carts; plus there were lots of seniors, because who else would be grocery shopping at 10:30 a.m.? There were armies of staff, too, asking shoppers how they were doing, and mobile cashier stations to ease checkout congestion. >More

SPORTS & RECREATION

Tuning in, turning on baseball vs. football

Game Four of the World Series on Sunday drew an average TV audience of 22.8 million viewers. That was the highest among the first five games and the largest baseball audience since 2004, when an average of 25.4 million people watched the Red Sox sweep the Cardinals for Boston's first title since 1918. >More
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