DW DAILYWILDCAT.COM Wednesday, July 27, 2016 VOLUME 109 • ISSUE 99
CAMPUS GUIDE 2016
The lowdown on living in Tucson and life at the UA
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2 • Campus Guide
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Wednesday, July 27, 2016
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Wednesday, July 27, 2016
A look inside
COVER PHOTO BY SYDNEY RICHARDSON/ THE DAILY WILDCAT
The five UA faces you should know
12 The greatest UA athletes of all time
14
SYDNEY RICHARDSON/THE DAILY WILDCAT
A guide to the campus art
32 Introducing: Our friend the streetcar
36
The resilient Rialto Theater
56
5 years of Greek Life trials and triumphs
SYDNEY RICHARDSON/THE DAILY WILDCAT
54 117 years of UA football SYDNEY RICHARDSON/THE DAILY WILDCAT
ABOUT THE WILDCAT
THE DAILY WILDCAT • SUMMER 2016
The Daily Wildcat Summer Edition is an independent student newspaper published weekly during the University of Arizona’s Summer term (June through August). It is distributed on campus and throughout Tucson with a circulation of 5,000. The function of The Daily Wildcat is to disseminate news to the community and to encourage an exchange of ideas. The Daily Wildcat was founded under a different name in 1899. All copy, photographs, and graphics appearing inThe Daily Wildcat or via DailyWildcat.com are the sole property of The Daily Wildcat and may not be reproduced without the specific consent of the editor in chief. A single copy of The Daily Wildcat is free from newsstands. Unauthorized removal of multiple copies will be considered theft and may be prosecuted. Additional copies of The Daily Wildcat are available from the Arizona Student Media office. The Daily Wildcat is a member of the Associated Collegiate Press, College Media Association and the Arizona Newspapers Association.
for corrections or complaints concerning news and CORRECTIONS Requests editorial content of the Daily Wildcat should be directed to the
editor in chief. For further information on the Daily Wildcat’s approved grievance policy, readers may contact Brett Fera, director of Arizona Student Media, in the Sherman R. Miller III Newsroom at the Park Student Union.
Editor in Chief Sam Gross editor@dailywildcat.com
News Editor Chastity Laskey news@dailywildcat.com
Arts & Life Editor Sean Orth arts@dailywildcat.com
Design Chief Laurel Reisch design@dailywildcat.com
Digital Editor Brenna Bailey digitaled@dailywildcat.com
Sports Editor Ryan Kelapire sports@dailywildcat.com
Opinions Editor Scott Felix opinion@dailywildcat.com
Photo Editor Sydney Richardson photo@dailywildcat.com
Copy Chief Daniel Crespo copy@dailywildcat.com News Reporters Michelle Jaquette Lauren Renteria Amanda Oien Meredith Morrissey Nicholas Johnson Michael Hernandez Shaq Davis Angela Martinez
Science Editor Bailey Bellavance science@dailywildcat.com
Megan Jacoby Hannah Bloom Arts & Life Writers Alec Kuehnle Kincaid Rabb Victoria Hudson Alfred Cirerol Max LeBaron
Photographers Nick Smallwood Jesus Barrera Courtney Talak Bandi Walker Carmen Valencia Darien Bakas Jen Pimentel
Visuals Editor Chris Delgado
Copy Editors Bailey Bellavance Jake Jaworski Stevie Walters Designers Diana Vasquez-Aliaga Candi Newell
NEWS TIPS: (520) 621-3193
The Daily Wildcat is always interested in story ideas and tips from readers. If you see something deserving of coverage, contact news editor Chastity Laskey at news@dailywildcat.com or call 621-3193.
Sports Reporters Ivan Leonard Saul Bookman Ben White Justin Spears Chris Deak Nathaniel Skinner Ezra Amacher
Columnists Rhiannon Bauer Tayla Jaffe Jackson Morrison Wyatt Connoly Connor Gilmore Cartoonist Ali Hashim Alzeen
Wildcat Newsroom (520) 621-3551
Advertising Department (520) 621-3425
Address 615 N. Park Ave., Room 101 Tucson, Arizona 85721 Science Reporters Alexandria Farrar Natalie Robbins Varuska Patni Marketing Manager Trevor Sherman Asst. Marketing
Manager Jonathan Quinn
Campus Guide • 5
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
NEWS
The five UA faces you should know Know the movers, shakers and changemakers that are leading your college community.
BY CHASTITY LASKEY @chastitylaskey
Kendal Washington White, dean of students and assistant vice president for student affairs
President Ann Weaver Hart Ann Weaver Hart became the first ever female president at UA when she was inaugurated in November of 2012. In her time here, Hart has implemented the Guaranteed Tuition Program, facilitated the Banner – UMC merger and created UA’s first strategic academic and business plan, Never Settle. Hart, who received criticism from the community after taking a board position with DeVry Education Group earlier this year, will not be renewing her contract when it ends in 2018.
Kendal Washington White, who has worked at the UA for over 20 years, has served as the dean of students and assistant vice president for student affairs since 2014. As AVP, Washington White provides leadership on several UA programs and initiatives like ASUA, GPSC, LGTBQ Affairs, Early Academic Outreach, UA Cultural centers and the Women’s Resource Center. Besides managing high profile projects within the Dean of Students Office, Washington White also manages disruptive and threatening student incidents.
Zachary Brooks, Graduate and Professional Student Council president
Michael Finnegan, Associated Students of the University of Arizona president
A graduate student in the Second Language Acquisition Ph.D. program with concentrations in cognitive science and management, Zachary Brooks is the 2016-2017 GPSC president. Brooks, who previously served as GPSC president for three years from 2012-2014, will represent graduate and professional students at the UA on a variety of issues including tuition, healthcare and fees. Brooks is putting a focus on helping GPSC refocus on it’s core goals of representing students by increasing transparency within GPSC.
A senior studying philosophy, politics, economics and law, Michael Finnegan is the 2016-2017 UA student body president. Finnegan, who has been involved with ASUA since his freshman year, was the former president’s chief of staff. In order to ensure students’ voices are heard, Finnegan has placed an emphasis on reaching out to different cultural centers and clubs on campus. He also hopes to continue ASUA’s efforts on projects like the Arizona Student Government Collaborative, an organization bringing together Arizona’s three public colleges’ student governments together.
Brian Seastone, University of Arizona Police Department Chief With the mission of providing a safe and secure environment where everyone can feel welcome and safe, UAPD is the UA’s campus police department. Brian Seastone has worked for UAPD since 1980 and has served as UAPD Chief since 2014. The chief, who has always had the mission of developing and maintaining a close relationship with the community, welcomes questions and visitors and will answer direct calls to his office. Seastone is in charge of providing strategic leadership for UAPD, emergency response management and crime prevention on campus.
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6 • Campus Guide
NEWS
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
UA’s free speech policy explained
BY CHASTITY LASKEY @chastitylaskey
Whether it’s graduate students protesting the president’s latest decision, faculty arguing for more pay or campus preachers yielding signs saying ‘you deserve rape’— the UA is no stranger to activism or free expression. As a student attending a public university, you will see not only the UA community come together to hold marches, protests, walk-outs and other rallies, but you’ll see community members and activist groups of all kinds utilizing the campus soapbox. Want to know what speech is considered protected and what is considered disruptive? Here’s the breakdown of your free speech rights at the UA . The campus use policy details the universities’ First Amendment guidelines and procedures. “The university is committed to protecting the free speech rights of students, faculty, staff and invited guests. The purpose of this policy is to respect the campus community’s rights to free speech and expressive
activity within public and designated public forums, while preserving public health, safety and welfare, the normal business uses of the campus, and the rights of others to legitimately use and enjoy the campus.” Kathy Adams Riester, associate dean of students, said public higher education institutions are really meant to be a marketplace of ideas. While the UA protects and encourages free expression, the primary purpose of the institution is to provide higher education. In order to prevent the disruption of the university’s educational and business functions, Riester said the university may place restrictions on the place, manner and time of free speech occurring on campus. Currently the UA doesn’t allow sound amplification outside the times of 12-1 p.m. and 5-7p.m., Monday through Thursday, from 5-10p.m. on Friday and all day on Saturday and Sunday. Places on the UA’s campus and properties are also qualified
FREE SPEECH, 11
SAM GROSS/THE DAILY WILDCAT
LEFT TO RIGHT TRINITY Goss and Kevyn Butler, co-chairs of the Black Student Union, lead protesters in a chant in front of Old Main on Tuesday, March 1. The Marginalized Students of the University of Arizona, the group that organized the protest, delivered a list of demands to the university during the demonstration.
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Campus Guide • 9
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
NEWS
How to get involved and find your niche
BY SHAQ DAVIS @Shaqdavis1
Want to discover your niche on campus? Here’s your guide to getting involved at UA: ASUA The Associated Students of the University of Arizona is one of the UA’s student government organizations along with Graduate and Profesional Student Council. Serving undergraduate students, ASUA offers a variety of programs and organizations for students to become involved with, as well as hundreds of clubs and leadership positions. ASUA’s goal is to be a resource for students to become engaged in their campus community. “Getting involved in clubs and organizations and finding that place here on campus is so important, because that will create a better experience for you as a student,” said Michael Finnegan, president of ASUA. Finnegan said that with over 42,000 students on campus there are tons of opportunities to be welcomed with open arms to the student experience you’ve been looking for.
Cultural Centers There are five cultural heritage centers on campus available and open for any and all students to visit and become involved with. The centers provide an outlet for students of different races and ethnicities to gather and have their own safe space. These cultural centers strive to support and foster diversity within the UA, by increasing awareness of different issues and needs surrounding the diverse communities within the UA population. The ASUA website details the purpose of each of the five centers as follows: • African American Student Affairs facilitates a support system that helps students achieve academic excellence and an enriching black cultural experience. • Asian Pacific American Student Affairs provides academic and personal support through program implementation, leadership opportunities and advocacy for APA student issues. • Chicano/Hispanic Student Affairs & Resource Center offers innovative
GET INVOLVED, 11
DARIEN BAKAS/THE DAILY WILDCAT
MADISON EICH, A MEMBER of the Wildcat Archery Club, aims down range on Saturday, Jan. 30 at PSE Archery. The UA offers hundreds of clubs for students to join.
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GET INVOLVED FROM PAGE 9
retention programs that encourage academic achievement, personal development and integration into the university academic community. • Native American Student Affairs recruits and transitions American Indian/Alaska Native students into the university by providing academic, cultural and personal support. • ASUA Pride Alliance, a resource center that offers a safe, supportive, social and academic environment tolesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and questioning students. Clubs At the UA there are over 500 student clubs and organizations, offering students a wide variety to pick from.
FREE SPEECH FROM PAGE 6
as everything from public forums to nonpublic forums, meaning they serve different purposes and allow different things For instance, public sidewalks which are owned by the city or state and open areas like the UA Mall are designated public forums, while the Student Union Memorial Center and classrooms are considered non-public forums. Riester said when it comes to regulating
Whether you’re trying to promote sustainability, watch anime or host fun events, there’s a club for almost everything, making it easy to find your place at the UA. Don’t worry, if you can’t find an existing club to join, you can always create your own. The ASUA governing body encourages students to take advantage of the club recognition and renewal period that starts Aug. 30 and ends Sept. 9. There is a three-step process detailed on the ASUA website, which allows new clubs to be recognized and existing clubs to continue their activities for the upcoming school year.
soccer, students of all levels can participate in recreational or competitive leagues. The UA which has 20 different sports leagues throughout the year, according to the official UA intramural website, also offers the UA community five divisions to chose from: men’s, women’s, co-recreational, Greek and open.
Intramural Sports Whether you played sports in high school or want to try something new, the UA offers students the opportunity to participate in intramural athletics. From three-on-three basketball to indoor
Greek Life There are 52 total fraternities and sororities at the UA. New and current students have a chance to find a fraternity or sorority that is just right for them by participating in Fall Rush coming up next month. The Panhellenic Formal Recruitment starts Aug. 13- Aug. 21 and requires women to register before Aug.1. Interfraternity Council Recruitment starts Aug. 15– Aug. 22 and also requires men register before Aug.1. Ian Barrie, Delta Sigma Pi president, said
speech the university primarily looks at whether speech is disruptive or not. “Our goal is not to stop speech but to make sure one person’s speech is not disrupting some other activity, the educational enviornment, another person’s speech or university business,” Riester said. Riester said if someone is amplifying sound so loud outside a building that the students inside can hear, they will typically ask that person to relocate to a different location on campus. In the past the university has seen a lot of complaints concerning campus preachers,
their signs and their speech. Riester said that there is always a dean on call, so if something is happening and someone has a complaint about what’s occurring, that dean will go outside, observe what’s going on, try to meet the person who complained and then determine if the speech counts as disruptive. More often than not, most examples of speech or demonstration will be considered protected, Riester said. Although the First Amendment gives the right to free speech and expression, many students come to the UA not knowing how
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joining a Greek program can help students find themselves. “I think joining a fraternity or sorority is a great opportunity to find your place in such a large university,” Barrie said. “After joining Delta Sigma Pi, I expanded the network of people I knew, and made a lot of great friends that I otherwise wouldn’t have gotten the opportunity to know.” Volunteer Want to make a difference and have an impact on the campus and in the Tucson community? ASUA’s VolunteerUA can help you out. While many UA clubs are centered around community engagement and service, students can also find volunteer opportunities on and off campus on ASUA’s VolunteerUA website, arizonavolunteermatch.org. The website allows students to search and/or be matched with volunteer opportunities.
free speech is used in different places. A hard reality is that the level of speech that can be tolerated is much higher at a public institution than it will be in high schools, since students are considered adults, Riester added. “I really appreciate that the UA does want to protect the free speech rights of students faculty and staff,” said Rasheda Poe, Associated Students of the University of Arizona university affairs executive director. “I think it’s great because it allows us all to be able to express ourselves, which is something that you generally don’t feel like you can do.”
12 • Campus Guide
SPORTS
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
The greatest UA athletes of all-time
BY JUSTIN SPEARS @JustinESports
Steve Kerr Steve Kerr is arguably the most successful Wildcat at not only the collegiate level, but also in life after his time at Arizona. During his time here, Kerr led the Wildcats to a Final Four in 1988 and also set an NCAA record for 3-point percentage in a season, going 114-for199 with 57.3 percentage. Kerr went on to win three championships with Michael Jordan and the Chicago Bulls as well as two championships with Tim Duncan and the San Antonio Spurs. Kerr has called the Bay Area home for the past two years as the head coach of the Golden State Warriors, where he’s lead the team to two NBA Finals appearances, an NBA championship and a 73-9 record in 2015-16— the best record in league history. It’s safe to say Kerr has, and always will, have an impact on the game of basketball. Tedy Bruschi Tedy Bruschi is a household name due to his imprint at the linebacker position. Bruschi attended the UA from 19911995, racking up 185 tackles and tied the NCAA record with 52 sacks at defensive end, becoming a two-time All-American as part of Arizona’s vaunted”Desert Swarm” defense. After college, Bruschi played 13 seasons for the New England Patriots, where he was a three-time Super Champion, a Pro-Bowler in 2004 and was eventually elected as a member of the Patriots’ Hall of Fame. Bruschi was elected into the College Football Hall of Fame in 2013. Kenny Lofton Before becoming one of the fastest and electric baseball players of all-time, Kenny Lofton was known for his role at the point guard position under Lute Olson with the 1988 Final Four squad and the 1989 Sweet Sixteen group. After college, Lofton would transition to baseball full-time and eventually became one of two players to play in a Final Four and an MLB World Series. When all was said and done, Lofton was
a five-time All-Star, a five-time American League stolen base leader and a four-time Golden Glove winner in 16 seasons in the big leagues.
MARK D. HUNDLEY/THE DAILY WILDCAT
ARIZONA’S SEAN ELLIOTT DRIVES to the basket in the first half of a game against Washington State in 1988. Elliott is UA’s all-time leading scorer.
Sean Elliott The new generation refers to people from Tucson as “T-Locs” and Sean Elliott is potentially the most successful “T-Loc” there is. He’s commonly seen as the best player to ever put on an Arizona basketball jersey, a noteworthy accomplishment considering the program’s rich history. Elliott cleaned house in 1989, winning every player of the year award—the John Wooden award, the Adolph Rupp trophy and the Associated Press Player of the Year award. The two-time All-American also broke Kareem Abdul-Jabbar’s Pac-10 Conference scoring record and went on to become an NBA Champion in 1999 with the San Antonio Spurs. He is still Arizona’s all-time leading scorer, and his No. 32 jersey has been retired by the school.
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Jim Furyk Jim Furyk was a two-time All-American as a member of Arizona’s golf team, and led the Wildcats to the program’s first and only national championship in 1992. After his time at Arizona, Furyk went on to have prolonged career in the PGA. In 2003, Furyk won the U.S. Open and has 27 professional wins thus far and was a top-10 golfer for 380 weeks from 1999 to 2015 in the Official World Golf Rankings. In 2010, he was the PGA Tour Player of the Year.
round of the Standard Register Ping Tournament at Moon Valley in Phoenix, the lowest score ever recorded by a female golfer in the LPGA Tour.
Terry Francona Terry Francona played in the MLB for nine seasons, but is mostly known for his time as a manager. He managed the Red Sox to two World Series titles in 2004 and 2007, breaking the 86-year old Curse of the Bambino and is now the manager of the Cleveland Indians, where he won the American League Manager of the Year award in 2013. But before his success running a team, Francona was a standout at Arizona. He lead the Wildcats to National Championship in 1980 and was named the NCAA Tournament’s Most Outstanding Player. He also won the Golden Spikes Award that season, an award given to the best amateur baseball player in the United States, as he had a .401 batting average with nine home runs and 84 RBI.
FRESHMAN PITCHER JENNIE FINCH practices her pitching as pitcher Becky Lemke looks on during practice in 1999. Finch is one of the best pitchers in NCAA softball history.
Annika Sorenstam Annika Sorenstam only played two seasons at Arizona and rightfully so, because she became one of the greatest golfers on the LPGA tour of all-time. At Arizona, Sorenstam was the 1991 NCAA Co-Player of the Year, a runner-up in the 1992 NCAA championship, a 1992 Pac-10 champion and a 1991–92 NCAA All-American. As a professional, Sorenstam ranks third alltime with 72 wins on the LPGA Tour and became a member the World Golf Hall of Fame in 2003. She retired in 2008 as the winner of a recordbest eight Player of the Year awards and six Vare Trophies—a trophy given to the player with the lowest scoring average. In 2001, Sorenstam shot a 59 in the second
Jennie Finch Jennie Finch is not only the best player in Arizona softball history, but one of the best pitchers in softball history period. Finch had a 119-16 record in four seasons in Arizona from 1999-2002, and had a 1.08 career ERA, while pitching 876.2 innings and striking out 1,028 batters for the Wildcats. She set an NCAA record by winning 51 games in a row during her time in Tucson, and helped lead the Wildcats to a National Championship victory in 2001. Finch left Arizona as the leader in strikeouts and shutouts and went on to win a gold medal in the 2004 Olympics. Her No. 27 jersey was retired in 2003.
ERIC JUKEVELICS/THE DAILY WILDCAT
Campus Guide • 13
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
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14 • Campus Guide
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
ARTS AND LIFE BY VICTORIA HUDSON @ torihudson_
Where to find cool campus art
The UA has a plethora of eye-capturing and abstract public art pieces all around campus. Some of these works are better known than others, but each piece adds meaning and beauty to our campus. With so many installations around campus, the public art can seem scattered and difficult to find, especially for new students. Kristen Schmidt, the registrar of the UA Museum of Art, told us about the top five most admired and talked-about artworks around campus. “Curving Arcades (Homage to Bernini) Designed by Athena Tacha, the “Curving Arcades,” is inspired by the work of Gian Lorenzo Bernini’s St. Peter’s Square. Schmidt describes the art piece as a “welcome to campus.” The piece, found at the beginning of the UA mall near north Campbell Avenue, captivates those who come into campus from the east side. “Wildcat Family” and “Wildcats” The “Wildcat Family,” designed by Nicholas Wilson and installed in 2004, represents the
the UA’s mascot. The sculpture, located at UA Alumni Plaza, is a popular photo-op spot for students, visitors, faculty and staff alike. . The “Wildcats,” designed by Mark Rossi and installed in 2001, also resembles Wilbur the Wildcat, similar to the “Wildcat Family” sculpture. Found at the north end of McKale Center, this sculpture embodies the spirit of the UA. “Border Dynamics” “Border Dynamics,” designed by Alberto Morackis and Guadalupe Serrano and installed in 2005, easily draws attention from passing students. Located outside of the Harvill building, this large art installation is visible from pretty far away. Schmidt said that “Border Dynamics” represents the tension that a wall brings at the border of Mexico and the United States and how it can divide people.
“UAspire #2 — U.S.S. Arizona Memorial” The “UAspire #2 — U.S.S. Arizona Memorial,” designed by Susan Gamble and installed in 2003, honors the U.S.S. Arizona battleship that sunk in the attack on Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941. The sculpture sits at the north end of the Student Union Memorial Center. Be sure to read up and check them (along with the dozens of other campus art installations) out with help from the interactive map below. For more campus-art information, schedule a guided tour here through the UA visitor center, use the UA Museum of Art’s interactive map or the UA app for a self-guided public art tour.
“25 Scientists” “25 Scientists,” designed by George Greenamyer and installed in 1992, represents the variety of sciences taught in the Henry Koffler building. The colorful arch located directly outside of Koffler incorporates elements of scientists, reflecting the part of campus it belongs to. This unique piece sticks out among the red-brick buildings that line the UA mall.
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16 • Campus Guide
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
Campus Guide • 17
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
SCIENCE
Under the Tucson sun Heat stroke, sunburn and heat exhaustion are just some of the dangers of Tucson but staying safe is possible
BY BAILEY BELLAVANCE @WCbellavance
Whether you’re from out-of-state or an Arizona native, if you’ve spent any amount of time here, you know that summers are hot. Temperatures reach an average 100 degrees Fahrenheit between June and July and it can stay that hot until 9 p.m. on most nights. But fear not, there are ways to beat the heat and protect yourself in the scorching Tucson sun. Tucson is often under an extreme heat advisory during the summer months, and for good reason. According to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention, there’s an average of 618 heat-exposure related deaths per year. When exposed to high temperatures, the human body increases respiration and sweats. However, the body only cools down when the sweat can evaporate, so when the sweat no longer evaporates the core body temperature rises. This can cause people to get heat exhaustion or heat stroke. Heat stroke is the most serious of all heat related illnesses. This occurs when body temperature is uncontrollable and when someone is exposed to extreme heat or not accustomed to the high temperatures Tucson offers. Symptoms include low blood pressure, cool and clammy skin, profuse sweating, hallucinations, chills, throbbing headache, confusion, dizziness and slurred speech. Heat stroke has a number of complications and if you suspect that a person has heat stroke the CDC recommends calling 9-1-1, moving the sick to a cooler area and soaking them and their clothes with water or fanning them. Another result of extreme heat and sun exposure, and something Arizonans know all too well, is sunburn. Too much sun exposure on a regular basis without sunscreen can result in burns, permanent skin damage and
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AN EGG COOKS ON a sidewalk in Tucson on Thursday, June 30. While this egg may be able to cook in the Tucson heat, you shouldn’t, avoiding heatstroke can be simple.
in some cases, skin cancer. Severe burns can even result in blistering of the skin, and after exposure, skin will begin to peel off. If you fall victim to sunburn, aloe or menthol gel, or a cold compress can provide relief. These heat related illnesses may seem like enough of a reason to avoid Tucson all together, but there are steps you can take to avoid falling ill. Simply wearing SPF 30 sunscreen when going outside can protect you from sunburn, as well as wearing long sleeve shirts and pants. Pain relievers such as ibuprofen and naproxen can also reducing swelling caused by the burn. While the sunburn is healing, it’s advised to say out of the sun. Protecting against sunburn can also help prevent heat stroke, as sunburn can hinder your body’s ability to cool itself. Wearing light weight and loose fitting clothes can help keep you cool, also, and take precaution with certain medications that may cause heat-related complications. Another vital step is to never leave anyone, especially animals, in cars during the summer. Above all else, limit your time outdoors during peak temperatures, take it easy when you go out and always have water on hand. ly
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18 • Campus Guide
NEWS
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
A beginner’s guide to getting around campus You’re new to the UA. You need to get around campus. Here’s how
BY ANGELA MARTINEZ @anmartinez2120
CatTran Shuttle
The CatTran is a free shuttle service offered to UA students that operates Monday through Friday from 6:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m., and from6 p.m. to 12:30 a.m.as the NightCat. The CatTran offers routes from Mountain Avenue to as far north as Fort Lowell Road and stops multiple times between Euclid Avenue and Campbell Avenue.
The CatTran runs everyday throughout the semester except for university holidays and winter recess. Hours during weekdays and the summer are limited. Find out more about the CatTran’s limited hours here. UA graduate Heather Lent, who works at the Bio5 building,said she rides the CatTran every day because it is the fastest and easiest way to get to work. “I don’t have to deal with lights trying to hit me,” Lent said. “I also ride a bike, but when it’s hot or for the first
few weeks of school when there’s a lot of other people, I just ride the CatTran.”PTS displays the CatTran’s location in real time on the Transloc Rider app to show riders when the shuttle will arrive at specific locations. “It’s fast and easy and all of the drivers are also super cool and nice,” Lent said. “During the school year [the CatTran] runs pretty late, so if I want I can stay and work until 1 a.m. and still ride it back to Sixth Street Garage.”
SYDNEY RICHARDSON/THE DAILY WILDCAT
Biking
UA PTS offers a variety of bicycle services to students. The League of American Bicyclists, an organization meant to educate people on bicycles, awarded the UA a gold ranking for being a bicycle-friendly university. “It’s easy, pretty quick and convenient,” said Harrison Heim, a senior studying pre-business and Spanish, who bikes every day. “You can lock it up anywhere you go.” Students and staff who have registered their bikes can park their them for free through the university Bike Valet Parking Service. The valet runs from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m., Monday through Friday. Tucson residents or UA students can complete bike registration online at the PTS website. Those looking for more secure places to park their bicycles can park at bike enclosures, which cost $35 a year through
PTS. Bicycle lockers are also available for $100 a year. Students and staff can also park their bikes in front of the Robert L. Nugent building at the Campus Bicycle Station, a services provided by PTS and Pima County. The station also offers a variety of free bike services administered by certified League of American bicyclists. Their hours are Monday through Friday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. If you need to use a bike but don’t have one, you can rent one through PTS’ Cat Wheels Bike Program. Cat Wheels has stations in the Sixth Street and Tyndall Avenue garages. To rent a bike, bring a CatCard and complete a registration online or in person at the cashier box. Bicycle brochures, campus routes, free safety classes and regulations can also be found on PTS’ website. SYDNEY RICHARDSON/THE DAILY WILDCAT
BRANDI WALKER/THE DAILY WILDCAT
Sun Link Tucson Modern Streetcar
The route can take you from Helen Street to Congress Street and stops frequently and the cars can transfer people directly to SunTran or Sun Shuttles at many of the stops. To pay for the streetcar, you need to buy a SunGO Card, ticket or SunGO transfer. Purchase these at any streetcar stop vending machine, online or at any SunTran transit center. A 24-hour SunGO ticket is $4, while a one-way full fare is $1.50 and a one-way economy fare is $.50. UA PTS offers a discounted streetcar pass—the U-Pass SunGO—for UA full-time students and staff.
SAVANNAH DOUGLAS/THE DAILY WILDCAT
REBECCA MARIE SASNETT/THE DAILY WILDCAT
SafeRide
SafeRide is run by the Associated Students of the University of Arizona and has existed as a student-run organization since 1981. The service, funded by ASUA, The University of Arizona Parents and Family Association and the UA Student Affairs fee, transports sober UA students safely to destinations around or near campus. From 2012 to 2013, SafeRide delivered 75,000 people safely to their destinations, according to the their website. To order a SafeRide, call (520) 621-7233, and check out pick-up and drop-off locations on their website.
UA ZimRide and Zipcar
UA ZimRide is a way for people to join an existing carpool ride or make their own. This is only for UA students, faculty and staff and can be accessed online with your NetIDlogin. UA students, faculty and staff can also rent vehicles for up to one week through the campus Zipcar service. To rent a Zipcar, sign up online and download their app. “I usually use [Zipcar] to go to shopping once a month to do all of my errands, or if I have a doctor’s appointment,” said Katy Winmill, a business junior. Gas, miles and insurance are all included in Zipcars and their prices vary based on the time of day.
Campus Guide • 19
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
7 Wildcats to watch in 2016 These student-athletes are primed to do big things in the upcoming school year
BY JUSTIN SPEARS AND RYAN KELAPIRE @JustinESports @RKelapireUA
I
n recent years, the UA has showcased its talent at every level of athletics. The Wildcats put forth their best efforts every game to win. There are a select group of student-athletes that capture the spotlight every year, at not only the conference level, but nationally as well. This year, seven Wildcats will look to meet the high expectations placed on their shoulders. Gabi Stoian, Junior, Soccer Despite missing six games, Gabi Stoian led the Arizona soccer team in goals and assists with 6 and 8 respectively as a sophomore helping the team reach the Sweet Sixteen in one of the program’s best seasons. She was also named to the All-Pac-12 First Team. As a freshman in 2014, Stoian scored 13 goals and had seven assists, putting together one of the best individual seasons in program history. Currently, Stoian is fifth on the program’s all-time scoring list, and is 13 goals away
from tying Mallory Miller, who scored 32 goals as a Wildcat. Stoian is on pace to shatter Miller’s record and it could happen in the upcoming season. And when all is said and done, it’s possible Stoian graduates as the program’s best player of all time. Krystal Quihuis, Junior, Women’s Golf Women’s golf at Arizona is arguably the most underrated squad on campus. It doesn’t necessarily receive the fan appreciation the same way other major sports get, but the UA is a national contender year in and year out, nonetheless. Playing in the stacked Pac-12 can be difficult, but when the going gets tough, junior Quihuis has stepped up at every oppotunity since she arrived on campus. Quihuis didn’t become one of Arizona’s premier golfers until just last season, but her fifth place finish on the individual boards at the Pac-12 Championships proved that even though she’s young, she’s capable of coming through in crucial moments for head coach Laura Ianello.
of doing just that, posting a LaBrittney 2.61 ERA in 13 starts in the Jones, 2015-16 season. Senior, Making it back to Women’s the CWS Finals will Basketball be the team’s goal Incoming head once again, but coach Adia Barnes it’ll only get there if has her work cut out for Cloney can repeat— her in terms of rebuilding what if not improve on— has been a sluggish Arizona his performance this women’s basketball program, past season. and she will have to lean on leading scorer LaBrittney Danielle O’Toole, Jones. Senior, Softball Jones enters her final season After as the Wildcats’ leader in blocks advancing to with 23. She also had 28 steals, Super Regionals hitting 73.3 percent of her in 2015-16, the free throws and shooting 12.6 Arizona softball points per game. team is expected The three seasons she’s to do even played in Tucson are bigger things COURTNEY TALAK/ forgettable, but a stellar in 2016-17, THE DAILY WILDCAT senior season with a new given that the environment is possibly team returns most brewing. of its impact players. One of which is the team’s JC Cloney, Senior, Baseball ace—Danielle O’Toole. The Arizona baseball team O’Toole, a transfer from shocked the college baseball San Diego State, had a world this year. The team was strong junior season in predicted to finish ninth in the her first year with the Pac-12 Conference, but instead Wildcats. advanced all the way to the She posted a 2.17 ERA College World Series Finals. in 216 innings, along A big reason for the team’s with a Pac-12-high 26 success was its starting pitching wins. trio of Bobby Dalbec, Nathan Her excellence led Bannister and JC Cloney. her to be named to the Bannister graduated and All-Pac-12 First Team, the first Dalbec signed with the Boston Wildcat pitcher to do so since Red Sox, so Cloney will be 2010. tasked with being the team’s ace She then continued her in the 2016-17 season. dominance in the postseason. Cloney showed he’s capable The Wildcats swept the
Knoxville, Tennessee Regional and O’Toole pitched 19.1 innings and posted a 1.09 ERA in the team’s three wins. O’Toole will look to build off her success as a senior, and if she does, Arizona will be a force to be reckoned with in 2016-17. Allonzo Trier, Sophomore, Men’s Basketball It’s bizzare to say that a sophomore is the veteran presence of the Arizona basketball team, but considering the squad’s perceived stars are mostly freshmen, sophomore guard Allonzo Trier will be Sean Miller’s go-to player in the 201617 season. Trier is the Wildcats’ returning leading scorer, averaging 14.8 points per game in his freshman season. Trier possesses scoring abilities that only a few have, but he decided to forgo the NBA Draft to polish his all-around game at the UA instead, putting him in position to have a stellar sophomore season.
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Wednesday, July 27, 2016
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Wednesday, July 27, 2016
CAPS Counseling and Psych Services offers individual counseling services and psychiatric services to students. Accordingly, CAPS handles mental health, personal and crisis issues. “The main problems we tend to see in terms of symptom areas are anxiety and depression,” said Marian Binder, director of CAPS. According to data from Emory University, more than 1,000 suicides occur on college campuses every year. Binder said CAPS gets a lot of reports of students making threats, talking about or occasionally attempting suicide. “First and foremost, we’re trying to ensure that the student is safe and then we’re trying to determine the nature of those thoughts and whether there is intent to act on them and how to get the person in a place where they can cope better with life without feeling that’s their best solution,” Binder said. Binder said students should not assume they have to have a huge problem before they can come into CAPS. As soon as students notice they’re not themselves, she said they should talk to someone. “The best time to handle a problem and to help it not to become a really disabling problem is to talk about it and get some help and get some skills when the problem is small,” Binder said. CAPS offers a number of programs for those concerned about a student’s mental well-being, including Call and Consult, Parents Matter and Friend 2 Friend, which allow friends, faculty and doctors to consult CAPS about how to best help a student in need. Students don’t need to have campus health insurance in order to use its services—they can charge all services to their bursar’s accounts. The fees are billed
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Wednesday, July 27, 2016
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Campus Guide • 23
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
NEWS
Stress less with help from academic resources
BY LAUREN RENTERIA @lauren_renteria
Having academic problems? The UA’s got your back. Check out some of the key resources the university offers to alleviate some of that college student stress. University Information Technology Services A malfunctioning computer is every college student’s nightmare, but with the help of staff and students from UITS, a computer crash can be turned into a breeze. The department offers an abundance of services for students and faculty alike through their techsavvy program. “What we do for the university is provide basic support services for faculty, staff and students,” said Manuel Castro, an IT Support Center specialist. “We support [the university’s] computers. If it is software related or hardware related we will troubleshoot it as best as we can.” Computers are not the only facet of technology UITS can handle, if a student or faculty member has
issues with their CatMail account, D2L or UAccess login information, you can give UITS a call at (520) 626-8324. They’ll give you live instructions on how to address most any technical issue. The student-fee-funded program has staff on call 24/7 to take care of emergency tech needs. If the problem requires in-person assistance, students and faculty can visit UITS in the Martin Luther King, Jr. building just across the street from the Student Union Memorial Center. “We have our service desk area which we focus on issues that we can resolve over the phone,” Castro said. “Sometimes we get faculty and students [who] ask us about a problem and sometimes, if it’s a quick fix, we resolve it over the phone. If it’s something where we need to get more involved we ask them to come into our walk-in area.” Campus Advisors The path to graduation is a long one, but luckily UA students don’t have to go it alone. Advisors can offer a professional perspective in helping students reach their goals or constructing them altogether.
Senior Academic Advisor, Daniel Gonzales, said the many students who come to the UA as undeclared majors are placed in the College of Letters, Arts and Science. “We actually house a lot of students who are kind of exploring and don’t have a major,” Gonzales said. “We [advisors] are big resource for the students.” While many students enter the UA with a specific major in mind, Gonzales said one of the biggest misconceptions about college is a students need to have a definite plan. Gonzales said college advisors are there to help students better understand themselves. “I think that what a student needs to know is that they don’t need to know everything,” Gonzales said. “I think they come in anxious thinking that they are the only one on campus that doesn’t have a major. To me, all students come in undecided, even the students who do have a major—a lot of them end up switching anyway.” Students with an undeclared major in the College of Letters, Arts and Sciences are required to take a major exploration class for credit.
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TUTOR ALBERTO CARAZO DIAZ, left, looks on as fellow tutor Jared Irwin, right, tries to work out a step by step method to solve a five part calculus II problem at the Think Tank in Bear Down Gym on Monday, July 18. There are five Think Tank locations throughout campus in Bear Down Gym, Park Student Union, Student Rec Center, Manzanita-Mohave (Manzi-Mo) Hall and Coronado Hall.
Gonzales said that this program encourages students to talk and meet with people from other colleges and areas of academia. Think Tank Whether you’re a new student
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Wednesday, July 27, 2016
ACADEMIC RESOURCES FROM PAGE 23
The Bear Down Gymnasium is home to all of the Think Tank tutors during the summer. But during regular sessions there are four sites across campus, that students can visit for academic help. There is also an online version
CAPS & FRIENDS FROM PAGE 21
as a general student health charge, so there’s a sense of confidentiality if you want to visit Campus Health to get STD testing or birth control. A detailed list of visit prices can be found on the Campus Health website. CAPS’ staff consists of licensed counselors, psychologists and psychiatrists, as well as specialists for eating disorders, body image, substance abuse and sexual assault and trauma–related issues. Their OASIS Sexual Assault and Trauma Services serves those affected by sexual assault, domestic violence and stalking. “We have a licensed mental health counselor who provides individual counseling to students,” Binder said. “Primarily they’re there to provide emotional support
of the Think Tank. Students can get help in almost any subject by tutors who are certified through the International Tutor Training Program Certification, according to Laisa Neuner a Think Tank office specialist. If a student is looking for quick help on an assignment, the Think Tank offers free dropin tutoring and fee based tutoring is available
and help the person with whatever coping skills they need to be able to deal with the assault and move on from it.” CAPS is also trying to find more ways to extend services to students who would rather deal with issues on their own. They are launching an online service and phone app in the fall called WellTrack, which will provide access to therapeutic tools for managing anxiety, stress and depression, remotely. Other services offered UA Stressbusters is a program where student volunteers are trained to give five-minute back rubs. Students can receive free back rubs during various events across campus throughout the school year. Campus Health also gives vaccinations and prescribes
for more in depth help. “We have a variety of programs that help especially first and second year students’ workload,” Neuner said. “We have science courses, business courses and we have a writing center where you can take not only written papers but also writing projects, grad school applications and any sort of writing help.”
medications. Their pharmacy has more than 600 prescriptions available and more than 250 over-the-counter items, all which student’s can bill to their bursar’s accounts. Recent UA graduate Emily Franklin graduated this past spring with a B.S. in veterinary science and is headed to veterinary school at Tufts University in Massachusetts. She said Tufts required her to get vaccinated before she arrived and when her primary care provider wasn’t able to see her for another week or two, she went to campus health and was able to be seen right away. “I was at campus health getting my set of three rabies shots, which is really nice because my PCP doesn’t carry those,” Franklin said. “It’s nice to know that I can get them at campus, and they’re expensive but I’m really glad
REBECCA NOBLE/THE DAILY WILDCAT
MULTIPLE EXPOSURES OF THE Campus Health complex on Monday, July 25, 2016. Campus Health is located in the Highland Commons along the south edge of campus.
someone in town carries them.” Franklin said incoming students should take advantage of events
Each room features:
SEE WHAT WE HAVE TO OFFER clas.arizona.edu • facebook.com/uaclas • twitter.com/ua_clas
Majors & Minors
Services For All Students
Coming Up Fall 2016:
Majors General Studies Global Studies Undecided in CLAS
Minors Medieval Studies Thematic Minor Pre-Health Thematic Minor Pre-Law Thematic Minor
Major Exploration To help you find the right fit Pre-Health Professions Advising If you’re considering a career in the health professions
Pre-Law Advising If you’re thinking about law school
Meet Your Major Fair 11:00-2:00 Wednesday, October th Student Union Ballroom Meet with advisors from academic units across campus to find the right major for you!
The Think Tank has also started Supplemental Instruction courses that are free of charge and provide scheduled outof-class sessions that are taught by other students that previously took the class and earned an “A” or “B”. The sessions are held at least three times a week and include review lectures, practice tests and help on developing test strategies.
~ Kitchen or kitchenette, stocked with breakfast items ~ Private entrances, most with access to “world’s greatest porch” ~ Hot/cold water for supplied teas, cereals ~ Air ozone purifiers ~ Hardwood floors ~ LCD TVs w/300 digital channels
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26 â&#x20AC;¢ Campus Guide
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
Campus Guide • 27
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
SPORTS
Basketball is the UA’s Proud Tradition
BY SAUL BOOKMAN @Saul_Bookman
Arizona basketball is a tradition that truly took form in the 1980s when a white-haired gentleman by the name of Lute Olson turned the Wildcats into a perennial national power, reaching the Final-Four four times in two decades—1988, 1994, 1997 and 2001. Olson was the coach of Arizona’s only national championship in 1997 and is revered around Tucson for making the UA basketball program what it is today. Lute stepped down from the position in 2009, and then-athletic director Jim Livengood hired a little known basketball coach by the name of Sean Miller from Xavier University. The Miller era Miller has carried on Olson’s legacy, reaching the Elite Eight three times out of his first six seasons. Unlike Olson, Miller is still seeking his first Final Four and has been painfully close. Under Miller, Arizona has lost in the Elite Eight three times—a two-point loss to Connecticut in 2011, a one-point overtime loss to Wisconsin in #1 in Customer Service
2014, and a seven-point to loss to Wisconsin, again, in 2015. That said, it is not a matter of if Arizona will reach a Final Four under Miller, but when. For all his work, Miller has consistently praised the ZonaZoo, deeming that the UA’s roaring student section has created a significant advantage in recruiting and production on the court — a benefit Miller continuously uses to his advantage. The good, the bad and how the Wildcat’s will shape-up this year The 2015-16 version of the Wildcats were an inconsistent bunch, riddled with injuries and without a true leader on the floor. Though the season ended in a 25-9 overall record, the team’s chemistry could never get sure footing and it led to a first round exit at the hands of Wichita State in the NCAA Tournament. It was the first time in the Miller era that Arizona has been bounced in the first round. But despite the setback, the future continues to look bright for Arizona basketball. This year’s roster appears to have a depth that is unchallenged by most programs.
REBECCA NOBLE/THE DAILY WILDCAT
ARIZONA FANS VIE FOR camera time during ESPN’s College GameDay live broadcast from McKale Center on Feb. 21, 2014. Arizona has finished in the top 25 in the nation in attendance in 31 consecutive seasons.
Sophomore guard Allonzo Trier will look to continue his scoring from a year ago and sophomore big man Chance Comanche will look to gain a starting role this season. In addition, the return of forward Ray Smith—who sat out his freshman year with an ACL tear—is expected to be a major contributor on the wing. Senior point guard Kadeem Allen, junior center Dusan Ristic and junior point guard Parker JacksonCartwright will once again be
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contributors. As always, the Wildcats are not just looking to who is coming back, but also to who is coming in. The program is set to feature highly-touted freshmen plus a few transfers. The biggest name to keep an eye on is Lauri Markkanen, a 7-foot, do-it-all big man from Finland. Markkanen is expected to compete for a starting role immediately along with fellow freshman guard Kobi Simmons—a McDonald’s All-
American—and guard Rawle Alkins. Both are top-20 prospects in their recruiting class. The Wildcats also landed Denny Talbott, a transfer from Lipscomb, and Keanu Pinder, a transfer from Hutchinson Community College. As a whole, the program appears to be in good hands as Miller has proven to be rigorous on the recruiting trail. During the Miller era, players like T.J. McConnell, Derrick Williams, Aaron Gordon, Stanley Johnson, Solomon Hill and Rondae HollisJefferson have played in the NBA, continuing a long trend of Arizona basketball players in the association. Aside from the players Miller has produced, UA already had a track record of sending its alumni to the NBA. Steve Kerr, Andre Iguodala, Luke Walton and Bruce Fraser all represented the Golden State Warriors in the 2016 NBA Finals, while Richard Jefferson, Channing Frye and Bret Brielmaier ended the season hoisting the hardware with the Cleveland Cavaliers. All in all, the so-called “Player’s Program” has a rich past, a strong current roster, and an alwayspromising future.
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28 • Campus Guide
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
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Campus Guide • 29
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
UA Softball oozes consistency
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losing series to Oregon, Washington and UCLA. Arizona finished the season 36-19 and found itself in an unfamiliar situation -- the Wildcats were an unseeded team headed to Knoxville, Tennessee for their regional. Arizona defeated Ohio State 2-0 in the first game of the regional, and took out host Tennessee in game two of the regional, 4-0. O’Toole was nearly unhittable in the first two match-ups, and the Wildcats were suddenly a hot team. They defeated Tennessee 4-3 in the regional final on the back of another fantastic O’Toole performance, and earned a trip to Auburn, Alabama for a Super Regional.
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ARIZONA SOFTBALL ATHLETES CELEBRATE outflieder Alexis Dotson (2) as she races toward home plate during Arizona’s 7-4 victory over Houston on April 9.
After yet another dominating performance from O’Toole, Arizona took game one from Auburn and had themselves one win away from heading back to the WCWS. O’Toole was carrying the team on her shoulders, but it couldn’t be sustained. The Wildcats were unable to generate enough runs in the final two games of the series, and fell to the Tigers in three games. Arizona will lose only one player, senior catcher Lauren Young, and will have the expectation of taking that next step to the Women’s College World Series next year. Individually, the Wildcats had three players make the first team All Pac-12 squad -- leadoff hitter Mandie Perez, cleanup hitter Katiyana Mauga and ace O’Toole. Mo Mercado made the second team and freshman Taylor McQuillin made the third team in her impressive rookie campaign. Heading into the 2016-17 season, the Wildcats are a team knocking on the door. They will have one of the nation’s best pitchers, along with one of the top sluggers in the nation in Katakana Mauga. Mauga is the only player in NCAA history to hit 20 or more home runs in each of her first three seasons. Mauga and O’Toole are potential first team pre-season All-Americans, and together they will have Arizona highly-ranked in preseason polls.
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The Arizona softball team began the 2016 season with the expectation that this was the team that could bring the storied program back to the Women’s College World Series. But it came up just short, losing two out of three to the fourth-seeded Auburn Tigers in a Super Regional matchup. The Wildcats’ final record, 40-21, marked the 28th time the program has reached the 40-win mark . The season also marked the third straight year the team won a regional series, but also marked the sixth straight year the program came up short of a trip to the Women’s College World Series . The Wildcats had a promising start to the season, winning their first seven games, including a victory over No. 4 LSU . It looked like the emergence of transfer pitcher Danielle O’Toole could make the Wildcats a perpetual top-10 team for the entire season. However, when the team entered its eighth game -- a match-up against unranked Central Michigan -- it foreshadowed the theme of its season -- inconsistency. Arizona lost to unranked Central Michigan, scored a victory over No. 15 UCF shortly thereafter, then lost to unranked Cal Poly all in the same weekend. Early season errors cost the Wildcats games they should
of won, including when they committed four errors in their 4-3 loss to then-No. 4 Alabama. The team’s toughest non-conference matchup was a two-game home series against No. 10 James Madison. Madison boasted two of the top pitchers in the nation, and closely resembled the Wildcats’ style of play. Arizona struggled to plate runs in the series, losing both games and teams started to avoid pitching to the top half of the Wildcats’ lineup. Arizona’s lineup was very top-heavy throughout the season and head coach Mike Candrea structured the bottom of his lineup in a variety of ways throughout the year. Heading into conference play, Arizona knew it would have to hit to survive the brutal Pac12 Conference schedule. Conference play opened with a threegame series against rival ASU and Arizona got off to a hot start in the conference, taking two out of three games against the team from up north and followed that up with another series victory over Utah. The true strength of the team lied with the pitching staff. Freshman Taylor McQuillin and redshirt junior Danielle O’Toole were dominant throughout the season, and took their games to another level during conference play. However, the team struggled to overcome their thin lineup and struggled against the top teams in the Pac-12
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30 • Campus Guide
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Campus Guide • 31
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
OPINION
The trouble with UA roommates
BY TALYA JAFFE @Taylaj4
A
s if moving out of your parents’ house isn’t enough of a shock, many freshmen also have to deal with the adjustment of living with a complete stranger in a room that may not be much bigger than your average walk-in closet. There is often an unspoken expectation that whoever you room with will be your first and most automatic friend in college, but this isn’t always the case. I too fell victim to this assumption and was sorely disappointed. To be fair, I didn’t end up with some psychopathic roommate who stole from me, screamed at me or fought with me. I ended up with a roommate who simply put, did not want to be friends. She was neither mean nor rude to me—she merely never spoke to me. I was extremely confused by this situation, as everyone else I knew had instantly become inseparable friends with their roommate. When I asked my roommate to do laundry with me in the
at the very least, she successfully shared a second week of school and she said “no dorm room with me. thank you.” She was far from antisocial — I share this anecdote in hopes that it she had tons of friends, was in a sorority and knew many people at the UA from high may ease the mind of any new freshmen school, but for some reason that I still don’t who encounter a similar situation as I did and begin to wonder if know, she just had no there is something wrong desire to even speak, let with them. Quite frankly, alone be friends with me yes, there may in fact be right from day one. We didn’t something wrong with By the second you—you could smell bad, semester, I had come speak or share be obnoxious or perhaps to terms with this and I just painfully annoying—I wasn’t even upset by it anything, have no clue. The reality anymore. I understood of the situation is, if you that we were just very but we were cannot pinpoint any different people and interaction that could for some reason, we also perfectly have possibly turned your were not destined to roommate off from you, be friends in any way, civil with one the two of you are going shape or form. It was at to have to make your goal that point that I realized another. coexisting rather than it was perfectly okay friendship. The sooner you to just coexist with accept that fact, the better. someone. While it is entirely feasible We didn’t speak or to be friends or at least friendly with a share anything, but we were also perfectly roommate who is very different from you, civil with one another, and I conceded to there are situations where it’s simply not that being enough for me. She was not a going to happen. malicious person but she didn’t even say I spent much of my first semester of goodbye to me before she moved out and freshman year feeling like I had missed out I’m honestly still baffled as to why. I’m not on a major part of college that everyone angry or bitter toward her though, because
around me seemed to have—a friend in their roommate. But then I started hearing the stories of people who’s roommates had sex while they were in the room, a girl who’s roommate threw a TV at her in anger or people who stole constantly from their roommate, etc. The list of college roommate horror stories has never ceased, and I became grateful for what I had—a roommate who simply didn’t want to be friends. On a campus with over 30,000 undergraduate students, don’t sweat it when one person doesn’t want to be your friend. There are plenty of other wildcats in the desert! We have learned our whole lives that communication is the key to everything, but what are you to do when someone just doesn’t communicate? It goes back to the concept of coexisting, which is entirely possible sans communication (sometimes difficult, but undoubtedly doable). So, freshmen—come to college with an open mind and a desire to be friends with your roommate. It will make your early college life far simpler and more comfortable. But for those of you who end up with the roommate you can’t be friends with, accept it, don’t fret over it and merely resolve to peacefully coexist with him or her.
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32 • Campus Guide
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
Introducing: Our friend the streetcar University Boulevard/Tyndall Avenue
EMILY MOORE/THE DAILY WILDCAT
Campus Guide • 33
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
KYLE WASSON/THE DAILY WILDCAT
University Boulevard/Third Avenue
Fourth Avenue/Seventh Street
SAVANNAH DOUGLAS/THE DAILY WILDCAT
BY SEAN ORTH @seanaustinorth
If you’ve stepped foot on the UA campus in the past couple of years, you’ve probably witnessed the transportation marvel that is the Sun Link Tucson Modern Streetcar. The streetcar has come to define the UA, as it runs right through the middle of campus and connects students to downtown Tucson and beyond.For students that rarely leave campus, the streetcar may seem to serve no purpose aside from making noise outside of classrooms and catching bicycle wheels in its tracks (this is a real issue, newbies, so watch out). However, the streetcar acts as the gateway to some of the coolest things that Tucson has to offer. The 3.9-mile line runs through several districts of Tucson and runs until midnight on the weekends. While this article can’t cover everything, here’s a rundown on the best of the best along the streetcar line.
REGAN NORTON/THE DAILY WILDCAT
SALLY LUGO/THE DAILY WILDCAT
REBECCA NOBLE/THE DAILY WILDCAT
Filled with bars, cafes, unique restaurants and shops, Main Gate Square is where non-academic life happens on campus. Don’t make the rookie mistake of eating at the Student Union Memorial Center when your parents move you in — head to Gentle Ben’s or Illegal Pete’s instead. Pitaya and Grand Central Clothing sells girl boutique fashions and are some of the most popular clothing stores along University Boulevard. If these stores don’t vibe with your style, don’t fret — a two-story Urban Outfitters will greet you with its doors wide open, just waiting for you to drop $70 on a paisley shirt.
Just one stop away from Main Gate Square sits Time Market. This grocer/cafe/restaurant/bar/bakery fits right into its historic neighborhood, West University. Time Market’s laid-back environment is the perfect place to enjoy an espresso or one of its famous slices of pizza. Just a block west of Time Market you’ll find another super chill eatery, Epic Cafe. As a self-proclaimed antiestablishment, this cafe is as real as they come. Epic freshly bakes their own pastries every day and serves up amazing espresso drinks. Friendly folks of Tucson frequently sit outside and are always ready to strike up a conversation. The cafe stays open until midnight, serving as a perfect place for nighttime study sessions.
Tucson loves nostalgia, and walking into Hippie Gypsy feels like stepping into a time machine headed back to the summer of love. Located in the heart of Fourth Avenue, Tucson’s quirky shopping district, Hippie Gypsy sells everything we’ve come to know and love about counterculture, including tapestries, incense and Janis Joplin T-shirts. The store also has an 18+ up section in the back where you can buy locally crafted bongs, ahem, I mean water pipes. Generation Cool offers an equally nostalgic experience, but centered around the 1980s and ‘90s. Looking for a throwback jersey, some Nintendo 64 games or a “Space Jam” shirt? You’ll find it here — Generation Cool has more memorabilia laying around than your stoner uncle’s garage. Forget Portland, the ‘90s is alive in Tucson. There’s even MORE nostalgia just around the corner at D&D Pinball. This old-school arcade claims to be dedicated to preserving the art, fun and sport of pinball. Open until 11 p.m. on the weekends, D&D has 30 classic pinball machines and an area where you can hang out in between crushing pinballs.
Congress Street/Sixth Avenue
South Avenida del Convento/ Congress Street
Granada Avenue/Cushing Street
DARIEN BAKAS/THE DAILY WILDCAT
The SunLink Streetcar, Tucson’s newest installment of public tranportation, takes UA students on a magical journey through the dirty T
Downtown Tucson might not be as fun for the under-21 crowd, but there’s still plenty going on down there. The Rialto Theatre has awesome acts come through their doors all the time and anchors the fun and lively scene happening on West Congress Street. Hotel Congress sits right across the street from the Rialto. Opened in 1919, Congress gained notoriety as the place where John Dillinger’s gang was caught. This painfully cool hotel has live music every night at their downstairs club, as well as a fantastic restaurant called Cup Cafe where breakfast is served until 4 p.m. Batch Cafe & Bar specializes on small batch food & drink (get it), particularly whiskey and donuts. This unlikely combination brings patrons in from brunch time up until last call at 2 a.m. For those (probably most of you) who aren’t big kids yet, it’s still worth a visit to try their artisanal doughnuts — especially their signature item, The Stud. What more could you want than a doughnut topped with chocolate frosting, bacon and filled with bourbon maple Bavarian cream?
ALEXANDER PLAUMANN/THE DAILY WILDCAT
If you’re adventurous enough to take the streetcar all the way to the end, you’ll run into Mercado San Agustin, or “the Mercado” for short. This plaza has several restaurants and shops, including Seis, home to the best carnitas tacos you’ll have this side of the border; and La Estrella Bakery, a Mexican bakery that sells all kinds of pastries including delicious one-dollar empanadas. So remember, the streetcar is your friend. There may be times it’ll blatantly close its doors and drive away as you chase after it, but the next one is only just 10-15 minutes away. Pass on that surge-price Uber and take the streetcar downtown instead (with help from the map below) — 24hour passes cost only four dollars. Rolling up right to your destination is dope, but figuring out public transportation is even doper.
JORDAN GLENN/THE DAILY WILDCAT
UA students should check out the Tucson Convention Center for its great educational and insightful conventions year-round. Nah, just kidding — the reason it made this list is because the TCC’s Arena hosts the UA’s ice hockey team. Despite the absence of any actual cold weather, Wildcat hockey games are arguably some of the most fun sporting events in Tucson. Tickets only run $10 for students and the streetcar drops you off right in front of the TCC. The arena holds large shows and concerts as well, including Twenty One Pilots in February!
34 • Campus Guide
APPAREL & ACCESSORIES A—Store American Apparel Ben’s Bells Open Studio Boutique 816 Campus Athletic Collette Grand Central Clothing Ooo! Outside of Ordinary Pitaya Swindlers Urban Outttters CAFÉ’S, DESSERTS & COFFEE Caffé Lucé Campus Candy & Yogurt Dunkin Donuts/Baskin Robbins Espresso Art Jamba Juice Scented Leaf Tea House & Lounge Starbucks Coffee Wilko Woops! BakeShop ELECTRONICS, BOOKS & OFFICE SUPPLIES A—Store My Gadget Gear Posner’s Art Store ENTERTAINMENT Auld Dubliner Irish Pub Espresso Art Fox in a Box Frog & Firkin Gentle Ben’s Brewing Co. Illegal Pete’s FINANCIAL OneAZ Credit Union Wells Fargo ATM GIFTS & SPECIALTIES A—Store Ben’s Bells Open Studio Campus Athletic Campus Candy & Yogurt Collette Main Gate Collaborative Art Studio My Gadget Gear Ooo! Outside of Ordinary Posner’s Art Store Sanctity Tattoo Scented Leaf Tea House & Lounge Sonoran Cycles Tucson Urban Outttters Hazelwoods Gift Shop (Marriott) GROCERY CVS Pharmacy
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
HEALTH & BEAUTY & SALON SERVICES Aveda Institute of Arizona Beach Bunnie Tanning Blades Hair Design Cost Cutters CVS Pharmacy Sp Spring Nail Salon Style America HOME FURNISHINGS & ACCESSORIES Collette Ooo! Outside of Ordinary Urban Outttters HOTEL Marriott Hotel PHARMACY CVS Pharmacy RESTAURANTS Auld Dubliner Irish Pub Chipotle Mexican Grill Cup It Up American Grill Eat–A–Pita Frog & Firkin Fuku Sushi Gentle Ben’s Brewing Co. Jimmy John’s Kababeque Indian Grill No Anchovies Oriental Express Paradise Bakery Pasco Kitchen & Lounge Pei Wei Asian Diner Pelio Grill Red’s Smokehouse & Tap Room Saguaro Grill Saigon Pho Sinbad’s Restaurant The Fix Wilko SERVICES Main Gate Square Info Center Marine Officer Selection Office Sanctity Tattoo That’s The Spot SPECIALTY FOOD, WINE & BEER SHOP Bear Track U Campus Candy & Yogurt Red’s Smokehouse & Tap Room Scented Leaf Tea House & Lounge Woops! BakeShop TEAM BUILDING Fox in a Box TUTORING / TEST PREP Wildcat Academics
Bear Down Fridays: Spirit party and pep rally every Friday before UA Football home games!
PARKING IS FREE IN THE TYNDALL GARAGE M - F 5PM TO MIDNIGHT WITH MERCHANT VALIDATION. PARKING IS FREE ON SATURDAYS AND SUNDAYS (EXCEPT FOOTBALL GAME DAYS).
Campus Guide • 35
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
SCIENCE
4 places to get your study on at UA
BY VARUSKA PATNI @varzi1010
Bored of always studying at the library, and need a new place to be productive? Remember, changing where you study can help with retention. With that in mind, here are some great places on campus to get your work done: Top floors of the Gould-Simpson building Fully constructed in 1985, the GouldSimpson building has 10 floors and is one of the tallest buildings at the UA. With an elevator ride to the top floors of the building, students can get a breathtaking view of the campus and the mountain backdrop. Although it houses the department of geosciences and the department of computer science, many UA students—both undergrads and graduate students go to the top floors where there are seats— available to enjoy the view and study. Environment and Natural Resources 2 (ENR2) building The newly constructed ENR2 building is intended to look like a slot canyon commonly found in the Southwest. The building represents the UA’s commitment to better understanding climate change, wildlife and land conservation, energy and water resources. There are benches for studying and there is even the Slot Canyon Cafe where
students can study or grab something to eat . “I enjoy how [the ENR2s] slot canyon combines the outside aspect of Tucson with it’s beautiful views of the mountains and desert-like terrain,” said Alexa Wong, an ecology and evolutionary biology senior. Starbucks on University Boulevard For those who like studying inside a coffee shop, the Starbucks on University Boulevard offers places for students to work inside. Students can also use the chairs and tables outside for group projects and studying. This Starbucks location is slightly more spacious compared to the Main Library location, so some students may find it easier to be productive. “I love the atmosphere here. It’s really nice and inviting and the staff is amazing,” said Tianna Urrea, a elementary education senior. “It’s a great space to be if you want a relaxed environment to get some work done with the benefits of a barista right at your fingertips.” Behind the Modern Languages building This site is one of the least busiest areas of the entire UA campus. This is a great spot for quick, last minute cramming for an exam or finishing up an assignment. It’s a more peaceful part of campus as well so it serves as a great place to relax from the busy day.
SYDNEY RICHARDSON/THE DAILY WILDCAT
DARIEN BAKAS/THE DAILY WILDCAT
THE 10TH FLOOR OF the Gould-Simpson building on Tuesday, July 26. Studying with a view of the UA campus is hard to pass up.
THE ENVIRONMENT AND NATURAL Resources 2 building on Friday, July 22. ENR2 is a great area to relax, grab a bite and study outside.
SYDNEY RICHARDSON/THE DAILY WILDCAT
OUTSIDE OF THE STARBUCKS on University Boulevard on Tuesday, July 26. Starbucks can be a great place to study if you’re looking for a new spot.
SYDNEY RICHARDSON/THE DAILY WILDCAT
CONCRETE BENCHES OUTSIDE THE Modern Languages building on Tuesday, July 26. Studying outdoors can help you focus and get a nice dose of vitamin D.
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
The resilient RIALTO
The history of the Rialto runs deep but the iconic theatre is thriving more than ever—hosting a variety of concerts just a walk away from the UA
BY SEAN ORTH @seanaustinorth
Vaudeville, furniture sales, pornography and Español. Much like your attention-seeking little sister, The Rialto Theatre has gone through many distinct phases. The iconic theater originally opened in 1920. Built in conjunction with its neighbor Hotel Congress (which opened a year earlier), had acts the likes of Ginger Rogers and the original black minstrel band to grace its stage. The Rialto went through several reiterations, including a stint
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as a pornographic theater that showed the original screening of “Deep Throat.” The 1970s really epitomized the “Dirty T” for Tucson — contrary to present day, downtown was not the place to be. The Rialto had a bad reputation and the theater was on the verge of being torn down to become a surface parking lot. Ironically, it took a boiler fire explosion to save the theater from being repurposed. The theater shut down after the explosion in 1984 and remained abandoned until 1995. It wasn’t until 2005 that the Rialto reopened as a non-profit theater, part of the Rio Nuevo downtown revitalization project.
Through ticket and membership sales, The Rialto Foundation just recently gained enough funds to purchase the theater back from Rio Nuevo, and now it’s thriving more than ever. “We estimate that we bring 150,000 people downtown each year,” said Julie Ragland, Rialto’s development director. “That’s got a huge economic impact of the downtown area.”. The Rialto plays a huge role in the music and arts scene in Tucson. With musical acts ranging from Tyler the Creator to the Indigo Girls, the theater attracts every type of music fan possible. “Keep in mind that any act is on the table for us,” Ragland said. “We do a lot of rock and roll, electronica, blues, Americana, laser light shows, a lot of hip hop.” The Rialto Foundation has partnered the theater with other live music venues around downtown, including the equally-asiconic Fox Tucson Theatre. Sitting on opposite ends of Congress Street, Ragland said that these theaters were originally built to book-end downtown Tucson. With its fixed seats and upscale decor, the Fox tends to cater to an older demographic. Concerts at the Rialto on the other hand are usually standing room only affairs, allowing patrons to dance their hearts away in a more unrestricted environment. In addition to being the hub for live music downtown, the Rialto proudly displays visual and contemporary art in and outside the theater. Local artist Joe Pagac regularly paints murals of incoming musical acts on the west side of the building. On the other side of the theater, a new mural was just unveiled of exNBA player/Pac-12 Conference basketball analyst Bill Walton riding a jack rabbit (it’s a Tucson thing). “We incorporate a lot of those more cutting edge, contemporary art pieces,” Ragland said. “We’re also still of course, and as part of our mission, committed to preserving and improving the historic theater.” Downtown has gone through a serious facelift in the past decade and the Rialto Theatre has stayed right in the middle of it, acting as the artistic and cultural epicenter. With the implementation of Tucson’s modern streetcar, getting to a show at the Rialto is easier than ever for UA students.
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Wednesday, July 27, 2016 Ragland said that with big bars and housing moving to their part of downtown, it’s more than just students frequenting the theater—more of everyone is coming to the Rialto. The Rialto’s calendar, as usual, is packed this fall— Ziggy Marley, The Silversun Pickups and Michael Franti & Spearhead all headline the theater in late August alone. “We’re always adding new shows so sometimes we’ll have shows we’ll book a week or two out,” Ragland said. UA students should always keep an eye out for new shows—The Rialto often pulls artists touring in Phoenix down to Tucson. Though many touring acts actually prefer to perform in Tucson when they come to Arizona, because everything from the music scene to the size of the venues can feel more intimate. Intimacy is perhaps the most enticing thing that the Rialto offers concert-goers. Seeing a performance from a band with just 1,000 other fans before they make it big and headline an arena the next year is truly a memorable experience.
Tucson may be a college town at heart, but we have an amazing music scene, and the Rialto Theatre serves as a loud and dazzling symbol of this city’s artistic soul. There will be plenty of concerts and shows happening on campus this year—most will probably focus on forming a tight UA community. Escape from that UA bubble for a night, though. Take a walk under the Fourth Avenue underpass to see the bright Rialto marquee illuminating downtown and you’ll experience a more profound sense of community—one that bonds over good music and dances until midnight together. Welcome to Tucson, Wildcats, and rock on.
COURTNEY HELMAN/THE DAILY WILDCAT
YANNIS PHILIPPAKIS, GUITARIST for FOALs, strums out notes at The Rialto Theatre in Tucson on Tuesday, April 19. The Rialto serves as an excellent venue for high-energy, intimate rock concerts.
DARIEN BAKAS/THE DAILY WILDCAT
THE RIALTO THEATRE LIGHTS up Congress Street in downtown Tucson on July 9. The historic theater puts on live music shows and special events throughout the year.
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Campus Guide • 39
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
OPINIONS
Why is Tucson the Dirty T?
BY RHIANNON BAUER @rhiannon_bauer
When I finally made the decision to attend the UA, I never could’ve predicted what Tucson had in store for me. I come from a town with a population of about 10,000 and much of that town lived in smaller suburbs just outside the city limits. There are two main roads in the town - you drive down one, take a right onto the other one and you’ve driven through the whole thing. When I discovered that new place I would be calling home had a population 50 times greater than where I grew up and spread over a much larger area, I was a little overwhelmed. I couldn’t help but form some expectations of the city. I figured it would have this constant big-city feel, that it’d be hard to find elements of nature without hiking miles away from civilization. And that the heat and crowds of people wouldn’t be worth my time studying at the UA. Suffice to say, I was skeptical. I can’t begin to describe how wrong I was. After adjusting for a couple weeks, I learned that Tucson doesn’t feel like New York City or Los Angeles or any other big city in the way I was expecting. Though some areas—like downtown—are bustling with people maneuvering among skyscrapers and shopping complexes, the entire city can’t be characterized that way. Sure, there are plenty of people and places to go, but the buildings aren’t cramped together and people aren’t packed like sardines walking down the street. This unique feeling made my adjustment to the big city so much easier for someone who lived in a small town for 18 years. I was doubly wrong about the amount of nature I’d encounter. Desert plant life is scattered all over the place, outside of parking lots, in front of buildings and of course on campus. The fact that I could step out of my classroom and into a patch of greenery was
ALI ALZEEN/THE DAILY WILDCAT
completely unexpected but highly welcomed. You never feel like you’re buried in development and industry in Tucson. Those things are ever-present, but nature always peeks through to remind you that Tucson is beautiful. Unbeknownst to me was the vast amount of things there are to do in Tucson. Excluding everything that students can do on campus through the UA, residents can spend their time hiking up numerous mountains and along trails that feature the desert landscape, experience incredible cuisine of all kinds at various restaurants and so much more. I’ve lived here for over a year, and I haven’t even made a dent into my Tucson bucket list. After destroying those initial misconceptions and learning all I could about my beautiful home, I realized that it wasn’t going to take much time for me to fall in love with Tucson. But when it came to describing
the city, I was at a loss. Friends who had never visited would ask what it’s like and I wouldn’t know what to say. It has a unique feel that isn’t easy to explain with words—it’d be much easier for them to just come experience Tucson for themselves. But then I picked up on a little phrase that students were tossing around about my beloved Tucson. Every now and then, I’d hear someone affectionately refer to the city as the “Dirty T.” As a casual lover of slang terms, I immediately absorbed the title into my vocabulary and incorporated it into my descriptions of the Old Pueblo. Obviously, slang rarely describes things accurately. I certainly would never describe Tucson as an actually dirty place to live. But the city has character unlike that of any other place. It’s infectious. There’s something here in the “Dirty T” for everyone, and plenty of happy and fulfilling ways for people to
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spend their time. Students especially have a lot to gain; Tucson could be the dictionary definition of “college town”. UA ads and references are scattered all over town—they exist more densely the closer you get to campus, but posters and people saying “bear down” can be found more than 30 miles away. The UA is everywhere around town, and Wildcats are welcome all throughout city limits. There’s no better way for me to describe Tucson than by calling it the “Dirty T.” I’m on a nickname basis with this town that I love, and I couldn’t be happier about it. Dirty, in this case, is far from meaning it’s bad. It means the place where I can work hard and unwind, where I can go out and live out my dreams, where I can do anything I put my mind to. The “Dirty T” will never just be a city in my eyes, it’s home.
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Gen eds: A big waste of our time Gen eds do nothing but waste time and discourage, argues Jackson Morrison their field specific classes and will instead choose the easiest ones they can find with the intention of helping their GPA. While this practice undermines the purpose of Gen ed requirements, it does BY JACKSON MORRISON not seem inherently damaging to students. @DailyWildcat After all, in today’s society many students will continue their education past a bachelor’s General education requirements do degree, and a student’s GPA is often one nothing but discourage people from of the key factors in getting into a graduate considering a different field of education and program. However, I pad out the GPA for the believe that Gen ed general population at requirements can the UA. actually be harmful According to the UA College is a time to the general student the purpose of Gen ed body. requirements is to help for you to find Often Gen ed “ ... students attain the classes are watered fundamental skills and out what to do down versions of broad base of knowledge comparable major that all college-educated with your life. specific classes. adults must have.” The While a slower pace current Gen ed system at Jackson Morrison is often appreciated the UA fails to do this. for students looking While the goal of to simply pad their providing students with GPAs, it can be a general skill set to be excoriating for those paired with the more who genuinely find specialized skills they the subject material interesting and were develop within their major is an admirable considering changing their major. College is one, the broad selection of general education a time for you to find out what to do with your classes often leads students to choose the life. You’ll likely be exposed to many fields classes which they believe to be the easiest. you haven’t previously been exposed to and When a student works hard to earn an it’s likely you’ll change your major. However, “A”on a difficult, major specific, class they if you are forced to take a Gen ed class which do so because they understand there is a is at least tangentially related to the major long term pay off for their efforts. Perhaps by you are considering, and that class is simply studying hard now they will not have to study a tedious, slow paced, watered down version this information for a future class; maybe the of what you would actually experience it is skills they are developing will help them in likely you will be completely turned off from the professional world and may help them studying a field that you may of actually loved. secure a higher income. For Gen ed courses, Ultimately Gen ed requirements do more there is not a promise of long-term pay off. harm than good. While the goal of creating Given the overwhelming number of choices students of the world is admirable and worth for Gen ed requirements it is unlikely that being pursued, the current Gen ed system any two of your Gen ed courses will test you simply causes lazy students to pad their on the same material. It is also unlikely for GPA and discourages curious students from those skills to be useful in a professional studying a field they may have enjoyed. environment, for an engineer will not advance his career by understanding ancient Greek philosophy. As a result, a student does not have the same motivations to seek out difficult classes and master the material as they do with
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
OPINION
Gen eds: Culture and perspective Expand your educational horizons and prowess with the UA’s gen eds, says Rhiannon Bauer students shouldn’t choose these classes based strictly on their difficulty, since this isn’t the only benefit to Gen ed courses. They also present a unique opportunity for students to learn about a topic of interest that doesn’t BY RHIANNON BAUER fall within their major. It can be a struggle @rhiannon_bauer deciding on just one field of study when you have interests in all kinds of subjects and a A full college course load is never a walk desire to learn about everything. Gen eds through the park. Every could be the only way to major comes with plenty satisfy that desire; they of strenuous courses provide a little taste of the and being a student can topic without requiring a become highly stressful student to study it constantly Learning about and mundane very for the entirety of their quickly. education. different people, But students can By doing this, students find sanctuary — or at not only get the satisfaction cultures and least a slight break — in of learning new things, but their general education they also become a little perspectives on classes. more well-rounded in the These Gen ed classes process. Taking a class on the world can are similar to high school a completely new subject electives. Students can can also spark new interests better inform choose from a variety and therefore provide great of courses on topics a student’s satisfaction. To testify, I outside of their majors was never as intrigued or to fulfill their Gen ed opinions. as challenged to think for requirements. Those myself in my chemistry or requirements vary a bit calculus classes as I was in depending on major; for my introductory philosophy example a biology major Gen ed. If it weren’t for that does not have to take any Gen ed requirement, I would natural science Gen eds since the major itself have never ended up in the most intriguing covers science extensively. But other than and thought-provoking class I’ve ever taken. slight differences in requirements, students And while some college kids are capable from various disciplines could be found in the of making friends virtually anywhere, a same gen ed classes. particularly easy place to meet people is Gen eds are usually less rigorous than a within a gen ed classroom. Other students student’s class in their major. Though some in the same Gen ed course are likely to have view this as a downside, most students common interests despite the likely difference generally appreciate the break from their in major. otherwise difficult schedules. Whether it’s a Sure not every Gen ed is the absolute most matter of fewer tests or papers, less studying interesting course offered at the UA, but if required, or generally simpler concepts to when selecting your schedule you choose swallow, it’s almost a guarantee that a Gen ed your gen eds by keeping more than just the course isn’t as tough as classes required for desire for an easy “A” in mind, the experience most majors. could be highly rewarding to both you and Not only does this give students a chance your GPA. General education requirements to breathe, it can also help them boost or are arguably the most pleasant requirements maintain their GPAs. Since these classes aren’t to fill, since students can learn interesting as difficult, it’s easier to get a good grade that things outside of their major and get a slight balances against maybe a not-so-good grade break from their other difficult classes. That’s in a class within major requirements. why I think it’s important that they should Despite the potential for a GPA boost, remain a part of our college curriculum.
Campus Guide • 41
42 • Campus Guide
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Campus Guide • 43
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
NEWS
Campus admin improve UAlerts
BY MEREDITH MORRISSEY @DailyWildcat
Students and parents concerned about the dangers present on college campuses can look to UAlert, the university’s emergency text messaging alert service, for notifications about immediate safety issues. The alerts are administered by members of the UA’s Campus Emergency Response Team to provide safety information to any students, family members, faculty and staff that sign up to receive the alerts. Melissa Vito, senior vice president for student affairs and enrollment management and senior vice provost for academic initiatives and student success, is the chair for the UACERT. Vito said UAlerts provide information on issues that may impact the UA community, ranging from power outages and street closures to violent crimes. “It cuts across a broad array of potent topics, but the goal of it is to try to give members of the community some brief information to give them a little bit more knowledge or a stronger sense of safety,” Vito said. Mario Hernandez, a math and computer science sophomore, said he thinks UAlert is a valuable tool for ensuring students’ safety on campus. Hernandez said he was grateful for UAlert last year when it notified him of a gas leak near his residence hall. “I took the long way to class instead of where the gas was, and I wouldn’t have known without UAlert,” Hernandez said. University of Arizona Police Department Chief Brian Seastone said the alerts may also be utilized for more urgent threats, as they were in May when a shooting occurred at the Bio5 building. “Once we got the information and confirmed the shooting, a
message went out,” Seastone said. Seastone said UAlerts also contain instructions for how community members should proceed in avoiding dangers as well as updates on the actions taken by police. The UAlert system was first implemented in response to the 2002 shooting at the College of Nursing, said Dean of Students and Assistant Vice President for Student Affairs, Kendal Washington White. “Prior to that incident, there was no central way to notify the campus community of emergencies occurring on campus,” White said. White said she was working on campus during the time of the shooting and only learned of the incident when a colleague living in Texas called to make sure she was okay. “My friends and colleagues across the country knew what was going on and I had no idea,” White said. Though the UAlert service is supposed to make disseminating information to the campus community more efficient, the system has not been entirely free of controversy. Some students were upset last year when a suicide occurred on campus in the Koffler building because they weren’t notified by UAlert, according to White. White said the decision not to send out an alert came from the fact that data shows that reporting suicides can sometimes inspire other suicides. “It was decided in conjunction with our counseling center not to send out a UAlert because no one was in danger necessarily and it wasn’t an emergency,” White said. White said that the upset over a lack of alerts following a shooting close to campus in February caused them to reevaluate their borders for sending out UAlerts. “What we decided to do is expand it, because if something
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happens right across the street from our campus property, I think people still need to know,” White said. Vito said she recommends students sign up for UAlert as well as download Livesafe, a mobile app that provides students with additional safety tools, such as the ability to anonymously report tips to UAPD or allow a friend to track their location while they walk home. “It takes multiple things to help keep a campus safe and help students feel safe,” Vito said, “There isn’t any one thing that’s going to completely ensure 100 percent safety, but we need a variety of different ways that we address it.”
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Wednesday, July 27, 2016
WE BRING THE WORLD CLOSER TO YOU. AFRICANA STUDIES EAST ASIAN STUDIES FRENCH & ITALIAN GERMAN STUDIES RELIGIOUS STUDIES & CLASSICS RUSSIAN & SLAVIC STUDIES
Your future knows no boundaries. The School of International Languages, Literatures, and Cultures (SILLC), within the College of Humanities, graduates global citizens who are prepared to enter any profession. Our students adapt and function well in new environments and situations. They communicate effectively with people from diverse cultural backgrounds, and they negotiate difficult tasks with creativity and an acute sense of initiative. Students may opt for a double major, dual degree, or thematic minor within SILLC’s six departments and programs or in combination with any other majors/degrees on campus. Our study abroad programs and internships help students gain experience in a real-world setting for cultural awareness development.
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Visit sillc.arizona.edu to set up an advising appointment. Photo by Study Abroad student Tatyana Ray, “Intercultural Exchange with an Ndebele Artist”. Winner of the University of Arizona Global Initiatives 2014 photo contest.
Campus Guide • 45
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
SCIENCE BY NATALIE ROBBINS @natpatat11
Ditch retail and work in a lab
For many students, working a part-time job allows them to have extra spending money or the chance to pay off some debt. Students often look for jobs in food service or retail, but at the UA, employment options aren’t limited there. Students can get paid for their passions, too. Students can find jobs that provide a rewarding experience, life-long memories and the chance to make some extra cash through the vast network of on-campus research labs. From cognitive studies to microbes and permafrost, the UA’s on-campus labs have something for every scientific mind. Microbiology senior Kevin Ackman works on-campus in Dr. Michael Riggs’ Immunoparasitology Lab. The lab is developing a more effective drug treatment for the waterborne pathogen Cryptosporidium. He first heard about the opportunity to be a lab assistant through emails his academic advisor sent out on a regular basis. Although
he was initially hoping to volunteer in a lab, Ackman jumped at the opportunity to be paid to participate in research. In the year that Ackman has worked in the lab, he said he gained valuable experience that helped him grow as a microbiologist. “I’ve learned techniques that are the everyday life of a microbiologist,” Ackman said. “The techniques most valuable go past just the data collection, DNA isolation, fluorescent analysis, etc. I feel like I’ve already started my career in this lab and that’s what I love the most.” Ackman said becoming an undergraduate researcher has been valuable in helping prepare him for job-hunting after college. “If you are looking for a certain kind of career and you have the opportunity to do that kind of work here on campus there is no reason you should pick the retail job,” Ackman said. Rose Vining, an environmental sciences senior, works in the Saleska Lab in Biosciences West. She is comentored by UA Soil, Water and Environmental Science affiliate, professor Virginia Rich.
She decided to apply after watching a presentation about the program her freshman year and was accepted into the program the summer before her sophomore year. At the lab, Vining started out by analyzing data on microorganisms of the Great Barrier Reef. She thought the work was interesting, but soon realized it was not her forte. “[My mentor] told me about the permafrost project she was working on with permafrost thaw gradients,” Vining said. “She gave me the option to work with either viruses or plants, and I chose plants because I felt that it would be a totally different change for me.” In the summer of 2015, Vining traveled to Abisko, Sweden to conduct fieldwork thanks to the funding from the Biomedical Research Abroad: Vistas Open!, or BRAVO!, program within UBRP. “I had to make a case in front of a bunch of scientists,” Vining said. “At first they were a little bit nervous about funding me because I am younger, but ultimately they were able to do it.” While in Sweden, Vining waded through knee-high freezing water to
DARIEN BAKAS/THE DAILY WILDCAT
ROSE VINING, AN ENVIRONMENTAL sciences senior, grinds plant samples in one of Bio Sciences West’s research labs on July 7. Many labs on campus offer positions for undergraduate research assistants to help students gain real-world experience while getting a bachelor’s degree.
take plant biomass samples. Currently, Vining is working on a data analysis of the samples she collected in Sweden. With in the next year she hopes to have published her findings together with her direct supervisor and partner, Ph.D. student Moira Hough.
“There was that moment when my data popped up on the screen after years of working on this so hard [and] seeing that data pop up and knowing that it is our data that we worked for—quite literally with our blood, sweat and tears—which was fantastic,” Vining said.
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Wednesday, July 27, 2016
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Campus Guide • 47
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
Meet the UA’s top head coaches
SPORTS BY RYAN KELAPIRE @RKelapireUA
Sean Miller Men’s Hoops
The University of Arizona is home to some of the nation’s top athletic programs, and these head coaches are a big reason why.
Jay Johnson Baseball
STAN LIU / ARIZONA ASTHLETICS TYLER BAKER/THE DAILY WILDCAT
Entering his eighth year as Arizona basketball’s head coach, Sean Miller took over the program after the retirement of legendary Hall of Fame coach Lute Olson in 2009. While now a different era, Miller has successfully been able to continue to keep Arizona among college basketball’s elite. The Wildcats have a compiled a 18861 record under Miller—a .755 winning percentage—and have made it to the Sweet Sixteen five times and advanced to the Elite Eight three times. Plus they’ve won the Pac-12 Conference three times as well. And due to Miller’s consistent success landing top-flight recruits, a steady flow of top-tier talent arrives in Tucson each year, allowing the Wildcats to be a dominant program year in and year out. Miller is still seeking his first Final Four appearance, but it’s a matter of when it will happen, not if, given the quality of the rosters he has been able to put together each season.
Mike Candrea Softball
JESUS BARRERA/THE DAILY WILDCAT
Mike Candrea will be entering his 32nd year as the head coach of Arizona softball when the season begins in the spring. He was hired in 1986, and built Arizona softball into one of the best program’s in the NCAA. The program has won eight national championships and over 1,468 games in
Candrea’s tenure, making him the sport’s all-time leader in Division 1 wins. Not only has the program been dominant, it’s been consistent too. Under Candrea, the UA softball team hasn’t had a losing season and has won nearly 80 percent of its games. It also made the College World Series 22 times in 23 seasons, from 1988 to 2010. Candrea, 60, also served as head coach of the United States softball team in 2004 and 2008, where the team won gold and silver medals, respectively.
In 2016, Amato and the Wildcats will look to continue to keep their momentum going, emphasizing the program has a “new standard” of winning.
Adia Barnes Women’s Hoops
Tony Amato Soccer
Jay Johnson took the reigns of the Arizona baseball program in 2015, replacing long-time head and national champion coach Andy Lopez, and the hire immediately paid dividends for the Wildcats. Despite being picked to finish ninth in the Pac-12, Johnson led Arizona to a third place finish, compiling a 49-22 record, and ultimately made it all the way to the College World Series Finals, where it’d finish as the runner-up to Coastal Carolina University. Johnson uses a small-ball approach, emphasizing bunting and timely hitting instead of power, and it proved to be the right approach in Arizona’s home ballpark—Hi Corbett Field.
Rich Rodriguez Football
TOM PRICE/THE DAILY WILDCAT ZI YANG LAITHE DAILY WILDCAT
Tony Amato has been the head coach of the Arizona women’s soccer team for three seasons, and quickly turned the program around from being a bottom-feeder in the Pac-12, to one of the conference’s better teams. Arizona soccer didn’t have a single winning season from 2006 to 2012, but Amato took over in 2013 and has had a winning season in all three years at the helm, compiling a 3421-8 record. In 2014, Amato’s second year, Arizona made it into the NCAA Tournament for just the third time in program history— eventually advancing to the Round of 32. Then in 2015 Amato led the team to another NCAA Tournament appearance, and this time it’d advance to the Sweet Sixteen for the second time in program history. It marked the first time in program that Arizona soccer won an NCAA Tournament game in consecutive seasons.
Adia Barnes, who is widely considered to be the best women’s basketball player in UA history, is entering her first season as the women’s basketball head coach of her alma mater. The UA alumna played for the Wildcats from 1994-1998, and is the program’s all-time leading scorer. In 1998, she led Arizona to its only Sweet Sixteen appearance and won the Pac-10 Player of the Year Award. Barnes, 39, played in the WNBA for seven seasons with four different teams. The UA women’s basketball program hasn’t had a winning season since 2010-11, so Barnes, who is planning to implement an uptempo style of basketball, has her work cut out for her to make Arizona women’s basketball a formidable program. However, the athletic director Greg Byrne feels the first-time head coach is the right person to do so.
REBECCA NOBLE/THE DAILY WILDCAT
Known for his fast-paced spread offense, Rich Rodriguez is entering his fifth season as the head coach of the Arizona football team following stints as the head coach at West Virginia and Michigan. The Wildcats have a 33-20 record in Rodriguez’s tenure, including a 10-4 record in the 2014 season that led to a Pac-12 Championship Game as well as an appearance in the Vizio Fiesta Bowl. It was just the second time in program history that Arizona has won 10 games in the regular season. Historically, Arizona’s football program hasn’t been a dominant one, and it would be unjust to expect the team to win 10 games every year. But to Rodriguez’s credit, he has proven he can get the most out of his players.
48 • Campus Guide
OPINIONS
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
A guide to staying healthy in the dorms
BY JACKSON MORRISON @DailyWildcat
I
f you live in the dorms, maintaining your health without the resources you’ve previously enjoyed can be difficult. However, with a carefully planned diet, routine gym visits and a willingness to either work out at dusk or dawn, you can stay in shape. There are going to be three major obstacles to maintaining your physical form. The difficult access to healthy options which is both tasty and affordable, the difficulty in balancing your social life with trips to the gym and the extremely crowded nature of the Student Recreation Center. Many of us enjoyed home cooked meals prepared either by family or ourselves prior to living in the dorms, but that all changes around the time your resident assistant starts trying to organize community events, also known as day one. Your dorm will have a kitchen and fortunately they are rarely crowded and access is easy. Unfortunately, the grocery stores are too far away to reasonably walk and if you or
one of your friends has a car, you can count yourself among a privileged few. Many freshmen at this point fall into the trap of only eating at campus eateries, and while there are healthy meal options you’ll quickly grow tired of them. Fortunately, the university provides students with a transportation service known as SafeRide which will take students to and from various locations on and off campus including grocery stores. This free service is rarely used to its maximum potential and waiting times are never too long that SafeRide becomes unfeasible. Your next major obstacle is finding time in your chaotic schedule to routinely work out. Many freshmen follow no schedule besides the one that their classes demand and some don’t even follow that. Academic work will be done on a whim and the prevalence of social activities often engulfs a student’s free time. The best way to work around this is to turn going to the Rec Center into a social activity. I’m not advocating for a Rec Center based drinking game — although I’m sure one exists. I am rather suggesting that you bring your friends to work out. Perhaps some guy or gal has caught your eye and you’re hopping to get to know him/ her better — take them to the Rec Center. If you have a friend that you’ve been too busy to hang out with invite them to go lifting with
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you. Not only will you push each other to be better, but during the down time there will be plenty of time to joke and share in each others company. The final obstacle in obtaining the body you’ve always wanted while living in the dorms is the Rec Center itself. We attend a very large university and while our Rec Center is top-notch with plenty of machines and a dedicated staff, there are simply too many students looking to work out. A 30-minute workout in your hometown gym could turn into an hour between waiting for machines and allowing people to work in-between sets. The simplest way to work around this is to
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go at unusual times. During the fall and spring semesters, the Rec Center opens at 6 a.m. and closes at midnight. If you’re an early bird or a night owl it might be worth getting your workout in at the crack of dawn or near the stroke of midnight. If you take anything away from this, just make sure to remember that it’s very possible to stay in shape while living in the dorms. While the Rec Center is what most of us use, there are of course alternatives such as running around campus, joining a sports team, or anything thing else you can think of make sure you stay healthy.
Campus Guide • 49
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
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50 â&#x20AC;˘ Campus Guide
SCIENCE
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
Frolic to Flandrau & feel the magic
BY PRIYANKA HADVANI @DailyWildcat
The University of Arizonaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s campus is full of unique and exciting buildings, but only one boasts a collection of minerals, interactive exhibits and a laser light show. At the Flandrau Science Center and Planetarium, you can travel through the incredible story that ties together the history of the United States, the history of planetary science and the history of the UA. The first display as you step into Flandrau shows the minerals of the Harvard Universityâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s collection, with hundreds of unique stones and minerals shining for your attention. The museum boasts nearly 2,000 minerals in itsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; basement Mineral Museum. A mere fraction of the 26,000 specimens in the UA Mineral Museumâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s entire collection . â&#x20AC;&#x153;At a time where so many universities are losing their collections of minerals to other places, the UA has not only kept
DARIEN BAKAS/THE DAILY WILDCAT
FLANDRAU SCIENCE CENTER ON the corner of University Boulevard and Cherry Avenue on July 12. Flandrau offers a wide variety of exhbits and shows available to the public during the summer and academic year.
its collection intact but has also diligently put together the Tucson Gem and Mineral Show,â&#x20AC;? said Shipherd Reed, marketing and communications manager at Flandrau. Visitors and students of all ages are able to go down to the
basement and not only take a look at the minerals, but also the multitude of fossils. Kids in particular tend to be fans of the interactive games, especially those that are near the fossil exhibits, Reed said. Flandrau is full of science,
technology and art exhibits all designed to engage visitors. Flandrauâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s newest interactive math exhibit, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Puzzles, Proofs and Patterns,â&#x20AC;? is full of handson puzzles and games that will tickle your brain and show how math touches everything around, according to a press release from the museum. â&#x20AC;&#x153;From Tucson to the Moonâ&#x20AC;? is another exhibit, built around a scale model of the moon which â&#x20AC;&#x153;tells the story of the UAâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s pivotal role in the space race and how we helped to land a man on the moon,â&#x20AC;? according to the UA visitorâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s guide. Many more exhibits are available to tour including several coming this coming Fall, such as a display with scale models of the planets and one on NASAs OsirisREx mission. A renovation project has caused the planetarium shows to be closed for the summer months. A gift from The EOS Foundation will help to renovate the theater, including new seat and seating layout, enhanced lighting and a new acoustic wall
treatment, according to a press release from the museum. The press release also stated that summer visitors will receive a 50 percent discount coupon for the planetarium theater so that they can return in the fall to enjoy the new experience. The new theater will be open starting Aug. 27, showcasing brand new fulldome programs. â&#x20AC;&#x153;No matter where you turn your head [in the planetarium], you will see the image displayed by the high resolution digital projection system,â&#x20AC;? Reed said. If you happen to fall in love after visiting the Flandrau Science Center and Planetarium, you may be in luck come the academic year. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Students can apply to work at the front desk and guide school groups through exhibits and scavenger hunts,â&#x20AC;? Reed said, adding that â&#x20AC;&#x153;interested student workers can train to become planetarium operators.â&#x20AC;? For more information about Flandrau Science Center and Planetarium, visit their website or call (520) 621-4516.
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Campus Guide • 51
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
52 • Campus Guide
SPORTS
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
6 Gameday Traditions to Know
BY JUSTIN SPEARS @JustinESports
UA is a land inundated in tradition. Here are seven important ones you need to know.
1
Wildcat Walk A football tradition that started during the infamous Mike Stoops era in 2010 has formed into one of Arizona’s richest traditions. The Wildcat Walk is designed for the fans that are either tailgating or preparing for the matchup at Arizona Stadium to greet the players before they get taped up and warm up. The players depart from the team hotel on a bus and are dropped off at the corner of Cherry Avenue and University Boulevard two hours before kickoff, where the band meets them and leads the way into Arizona Stadium. Players and coaches walk into the stadium past thousands of fans offering support and luck. Some lucky fans even get to exchange a high-five with players and coaches.
2
v
‘Zona Sway The 2014 football season introduced the “Zona Sway”, which the ZonaZoo performs before football games specifically right after the coin toss. All 10,000 students grab shoulders and sway back and forth like they’re singing kumbaya, but instead of “kumbaya” they sing “Zo-na”. Athletic director Greg Byrne implemented the Zona Sway because “it [looked] really cool and help increase the energy for the early part of the game.”
3
Jingle all the way/hit squad Depending on who wins the coin toss, the ZonaZoo (and the rest of Arizona Stadium) follows up with a pre-kickoff ritual. If the Wildcats elect to receive the football, then the fans at Arizona Stadium pull out their keys, hold them high to the sky and jingle them until the ball is kicked off, signifying the start of a drive. If Arizona elects to kickoff, then Arizona Stadium holds their arms above their head forming an ‘X’, while banging their wrists together. The kickoff unit is known as the “hit squad” and the fans in Arizona Stadium stand behind them at all costs.
4
Stand up, McKale! Arizona basketball has many program traditions, but the fans have to follow their own traditions to ensure that McKale Center is one of the most treacherous college basketball environments in the country, opponentwise. One of the oldest traditions is standing up until the opponent scores its first basket. It may take a few minutes to sit down when Arizona plays lesser teams, but the more your feet hurt the better— that means Arizona is keeping the other team off the scoreboard.
5
Play-by-play from ZonaZoo Head coach Sean Miller started this tradition upon his arrival in Tucson. It involves the ZonaZoo describing exactly what the player is doing with the basketball. For example, if an opposing player dribbles the ball four times and then decides to shoot it, the ZonaZoo would yell, “boing, boing, boing, boing, brick!” It sounds annoying at first (and it’s supposed to be!), but it only lasts for the first four minutes of each half.
6
3-2 winner rally towel A new head coach means new traditions, and Arizona baseball head coach Jay Johnson brought with him from the University of Nevada “3-2 winner” rally towels. The team believes winning 3-2 counts is vital for the team’s success, so it encourages fans to help them do so. Whenever the Wildcats are in a 3-2 count, fans at Hi Corbett Field spin white towels around their head, urging their Wildcat player on for the upcoming pitch. Given the team’s success in Johnson’s first season—an appearance in the College World Series Finals—the rally towels have indicatively helped.
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54 • Campus Guide
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
117 YEARS
AND COUNTING From 1899 to today, a guide to the turbulent and hopeful past, present and future of Arizona football BY NATHAN SKINNER @DailyWildcat
rizona football may not have the pedigree of Notre Dame, nor the championship count of Alabama, but the Wildcats have thrilled fans and inspired a region for 117 years and counting. The history of Arizona football features a multitude of legendary players, coaches and moments. The Wildcats have and will continue to serve as a rallying point for the university and the city of Tucson. The Varsity era Arizona football started in 1899, and the Varsity— as the team was called at the time—played to a 1-1-1 record. Arizona slogged along during the early part of the 20th century as a program without an identity. Then, following a tough loss to favored Occidental College in 1914, the Varsity was noted as having “the fight of wildcats.” An identity was formed, and the Arizona Wildcats slowly started their march out of obscurity. By 1921, the UA had become one of the better programs in the west with Harold “Nosey” McClellan leading the nation in scoring. The year also marked the first time the Wildcats played in a postseason bowl game.
FILE PHOTO/THE DAILY WILDCAT
That changed in 1929 as Arizona Stadium opened with a capacity crowd in attendance. The 1930’s were frustrating years for the Wildcats as McKale retired from the head coach position. The “Blue Brigade” Arizona was unable to build momentum until Gerald A. “Tex” Oliver assumed control of the program in 1933. Oliver founded the legendary “Blue Brigade”, and led them to a 32-11-4 record over five seasons. During Oliver’s tenure, the Wildcats never had a losing season, won two Border Conference championships and produced the program’s first All-American in quarterback, Ted Bland. Following Oliver’s departure in 1937, the UA football program regressed under Orian Landreth, who was fired after a 3-6 season.
UA heads to war, team struggles Miles Casteel arrived in Tucson from East Lansing, Michigan, where he had been a valued assistant at Michigan State. Casteel proved to be a great fit at the UA, winning the Border Conference title in 1941. Arizona didn’t field a team in 1943-1944 due to World War II, but was a perfect 5-0 in 1945. In 1949, the Wildcats were once again bowling as they played in the now defunct Salad Bowl, where they lost to the Drake Bulldogs. Casteel left Tucson in 1948 and the program entered its next period of glory under former Hardin-Simmons coach, Warren Woodson. Woodson’s teams were rarely on the national radar, but star halfback Art Luppino certainly was. The “Cactus Comet” ran roughshod through the Border Conference and the nation, finishing as the nation’s leading rusher in 1954 and 1955. Luppino was more than a running sensation, he was a scoring machine setting an NCAA record for points in 1954. The Wildcats, however, weren’t able to immediately build upon Luppino’s stardom and once again were relegated to an insignificant program. In 1961, that started to change as Jim LaRue’s Wildcats
“... tell the team to bear down” In 1925, starting quarterback John “Button” Salmon was mortally injured following a car accident on a return trip from Phoenix. In his final hours, the signal caller and student body president told head coach J.F. “Pop” McKale to relay a message to his comrades. The message: “Tell the fellas ... tell the team to bear down.” The final words inspired Salmon’s teammates, and wound up sticking as the UA’s motto. Despite Arizona becoming a regional power, it didn’t have a permanent home.
REBECCA NOBLE/THE DAILY WILDCAT
Campus Guide • 55
Wednesday, July 27, 2016 finished 17th in the Associated Press poll with an 8-1-1 record. The Wildcats had outgrown their home in the Border Conference, and joined the Western Athletic Conference in 1962. Farewell Border Conference The WAC proved to be a good home for the UA, as it competed against some of the best schools in the Southwest. Darrell Mudra took the Wildcats to the Sun Bowl in 1968 after completing an 8-3 campaign. Unfortunately, Mudra left the program and accepted a job at Western Illinois, leaving the UA in turmoil. In 1973, Jim Young arrived in Tucson a first time head coach, but he had worked alongside Bo Schembechler at Michigan. Young immediately turned Arizona around, going 8-3 his first season. The Wildcats posted a pair of 9-2 records in 19741975, with both seasons ending with the team ranked in the polls. By this time, WAC powers were frustrated at a lack of national exposure, with few conference teams being invited to major bowl games. As a result, the WAC schools came together and formed the Fiesta Bowl, a bowl game that would feature the conference champion against a nationally ranked opponent. Despite the Fiesta Bowl eventually becoming a New Year’s Day staple, the Wildcats along with rival Arizona State decided to join the Pacific-8 Conference in 1978.
“Desert Swarm” Tomey led Arizona to their first Pac-10 championship in 1993, finishing 10-2 and ranked in the top 10. The magical season ended in high style, as Arizona demolished the Miami Hurricanes in the Fiesta Bowl. The Wildcats mauled opponents behind a defense that became known as the “Desert Swarm”. Defensive tackle Rob Waldropled the fierce unit, and remains the most decorated Wildcat in program history. Waldrop won the Outland Trophy in 1993, establishing him as the finest interior lineman in the country, offense or defense. The dominant mauler also was a two-time consensus All-American, and the 1993 Nagurski Trophy winner. “Desert Swarm” was more than Waldrop— future NFL stars Chris McAlister and Tedy Brusc+hi also took their first steps toward stardom as members of the tenacious defense. In 1998, Tomey’s Wildcats were one of the best teams in the country. Arizona dominated the Pac-10, going 12-1 with a loss to UCLA being the only blemish. The Wildcats were slated to play in the program’s first Rose Bowl, but UCLA’s lateseason loss to Miami kept the UA from making history. However, Arizona rebounded and soundly defeated the defending national champion Nebraska Cornhuskers in the Culligan Holiday Bowl. The Tomey era ended in 2000, when the coach resigned under pressure. In his 13 years in Tucson, the Wildcats won 95 games, had 20 All-Americans, 43 All-Pac-10 selections and five first round NFL draft picks.
Joins the Pac-10 Arizona struggled in its first years in the newly-named Pacific-10, failing to make much “Stooped” down a level Replacing a legend is difficult, and the of an impact in the standings. The lone bright spots were quarterback Tom Tunnicliffe and Wildcats struggled to replace Tomey. Both John Mackovic, 2001-2003, and Mike linebacker Ricky Hunley. Tunnicliffe left the UA Stoops, 2003-2011, were unable to replicate as the program’s all-time leading Tomey’s success, with the high point being passer, and Hunley was a twotwo 8-5 seasons under Stoops. time consensus All-American. Despite their individual accomplishments, the RichRod comes to town Former Michigan and West Virginia Wildcats were mediocre. head coach Rich Rodriguez took over Larry Smith, formerly after Stoops was dismissed midway of Tulane, was hired as through the 2011 campaign. head coach in 1980, Following two 8-5 bowl seasons and started to pull in 2012 and 2013, Rodriguez’s the Wildcats out of the Wildcats made their way to the conference cellar. 2014 Pac-12 Championship Arizona upset topgame, ultimately falling to the ranked USC in 1981, and Oregon ducks, setting up a date started to consistently with the Boise State Broncos in beat ASU. Smith’s that year’s Vizio Fiesta Bowl. best years came in In four seasons under 1985 and 1986, as the Rodriguez, the Wildcats have Wildcats went a combined 17-6-1. reached the postseason each The 1986 Aloha Bowl victory over and every year, and have won North Carolina was Arizona’s first three bowl games in four years, postseason victory, and capped a 9-3 while compiling a 33-20 overall record. record. Following the triumph in It’s one of the winningest Hawaii, Smith resigned and stretches in Arizona took a head coaching job with football history, and the USC Trojans. the program will look Dick Tomey assumed RENEE GAUMOND/THE DAILY WILDCAT to continue its recent command following Smith’s exit success in the upcoming in 1987, and not only did the CONSENSUS ALLAMERICAN RICKY season. Wildcats continue their upward Hunley in 1983. Hunley became the first trajectory, they finally emerged Wildcat to be enshrined in the College Football Hall of Fame. as a national power.
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56 • Campus Guide
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
5 years of Greek Life trials and triumphs
NEWS
January 22, 2011
BY SHAQ DAVIS @shaqdavis1
Pi Kappa Alpha raises aid for victims of Jan. 8 shooting
Over the past years Greek programs have had their share of trials and triumph. Here are some of the significant events that occurred at the UA in the last five years. UA Greek Life which first appeared on campus in 1915 celebrated its over 50,000 alumni and 100 year anniversary last year. The Kappa Sigma fraternity was the first to appear in 1915, but over time UA has housed at least 90 different organizations. “The University is supportive of the goals and ideals of the fraternity and sorority community, which are expressed in the four pillars: Academic achievement, leadership, service, and citizenship,” according to the UA greek program website.
Fraternity members began handing out the water bottles for free at around 1 p.m., to the 27,000 people waiting in line to attend the memorial service on Jan. 12. Members asked only for voluntary donations to be forwarded to the Tucson Tragedy Victims’ Fund.
April 3, 2011
FIJI member found dead at chapter house Wilson Forrester, from Nashville, Tennessee, a sophomore member of the fraternity, was pronounced dead by Tucson Fire Department. According to police, there was no indication of foul play or an on-going threat to the community.
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Sororities welcome largest pledge class in UA history More than 1,200 women rushed to join a sorority and about 79 percent were given a bid, or an invitation to join a sorority, according to Jenny Nirh, a senior coordinator for sorority programs at the UA.
January 26, 2013
February 21, 2013
UA sororities donate prom dresses to Cinderella’s Closet UA sororities gave back to the community through a clothing donation project.
April 16, 2013
PIKE donates thousands to UA Cancer Center
UA fraternities struggle with hazing allegations
The Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity, Gamma Delta Chapter of the UA presented a check for $14,500 to the UA Cancer Center.
In January 2012, Phi Kappa Psi lost recognition after repeated instances of hazing over a period of time, according to a media statement. Next was Delta Chi in April 2012, Tau Kappa Epsilon in August 2012 and most recently, Pi Kappa Phi in 2013.
Campus Guide • 57
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
July 1, 2014
Fraternities become the focus of a sexual assault crack-down The UA has dealt with its share of fraternal misconduct, including fraternities holding events in which alcohol was served to minors and reports of hazing, resulting in four chapters losing recognition in the three years prior to 2014 alone.
March 29, 2016
October 22, 2015
Say goodbye to serenades as you know them
Greek life and campus organizations float their way to victory
Fraternity serenades will now have a different look than usual to those familiar with seeing them during Monday night chapters. The UA Panhellenic Council passed a resolution on March 22 that changes fraternity serenades from their current dancing form to their more traditional and ritual songs.
As the university celebrated homecoming, the UA’s Greek Life celebrated 100 years of existance. Many sororities, fraternities and clubs highlight their creative sides by constructing extravagant Homecoming floats
April 6, 2014
Greek Life members stay “Up Til’ Dawn” for fundraiser A national collegiate fundraising program for St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, the program is the UA’s annual greek-wide philanthropy event, according to Madison Kurz, a physiology junior and director of public relations for the Up ’til Dawn executive board.
March 6, 2016
Greek programs try to combat assault and alcohol abuse Earlier this year, the UA Women’s Resource Centercollaborated with Fraternity and Sorority Programs on holding workshops that plan to host registered events during the upcoming fall semester. Chapters must register events such as date dashes and philanthropy events, two weeks prior to the event date.
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Wednesday, July 27, 2016
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Campus Guide • 59
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
OPINIONS
Through the shot glass: A closer look at the party culture
BY TALYA JAFFE @DailyWildcat
As freshmen living in the dorms without a car, many students’ only option for partying is at fraternity parties. This was the situation I found myself in as a freshman last year. Despite my repeated negative experiences with frat parties, and my disgust for the entire general ambiance of them, I still found myself giving in and attending them once in a while simply because I felt trapped into doing so. There was nowhere else for me to go—I am an out-of-state student, I didn’t yet have an established friend group, and I wasn’t about to walk or Uber alone to an off-campus party I knew nothing about. The entire ordeal of fraternity parties—from getting ready to leaving the party—is loathsome. First, nearly everyone puts on minimal black clothing, with no clear differentiating features from one dress to the next. Running out of black clothes? Borrow from your roommate! She’s not the same size as you? Use saran wrap, masking tape, or hairspray to make everything stay in place!Yes, I have witnessed the uncanny usage of all of these products in the interest of cramming body parts into spaces they simply do not fit in. Then, it’s time to move on to shoes. There is more opportunity for variation in this area; the only
requirement is that you should not be able to walk straight in them even while sober, let alone while intoxicated. Time for the party! Before you leave, most people insist on taking some pre-game shots because it’s a generally accepted fact that it’s impossible to have fun at these parties unless you not only get drunk while there, but also arrive with a baseline level of intoxication. Due to the aforementioned shoe situation, walking there is usually not an option, so spending money on an Uber ride just to get there—as well as to get back later—is often inevitable. Directions are not typically necessary; all the driver has to do is follow the giggling hoards of black-clad girls, driving slowly to avoid running one of them over as she wobbles off the sidewalk and falls into the road while laugh-screaming “OMG I’M NOT EVEN THAT DRUNK!” As you approach the gates of horny hookup Hell, smug fraternity members welcome you graciously into their house of puking pestilence. However, this warm welcome is reserved exclusively for females. If you dare approach with a male in your group, he will probably be unceremoniously shunned and told to leave. God forbid he might speak to a girl at the party, statistically lowering the potential amount of sex that the frat members might have that night. After eliminating any threats to the members’ dominance over that night’s hookup sphere, girls are allowed to enter. The room is a claustrophobic
ALI ALZEEN
person’s nightmare, teeming with females who mostly all look like they were cloned in a petri dish and dropped from the heavens into the party. The hunt for alcohol begins instantly. Girls everywhere are in an animalistic dash to find the rooms with bars in them. The term “bar” is used quite loosely here. Giant orange Gatorade coolers still haunted with the Hawaiian Punch and Everclear of three weeks ago are set out on tables, filled with mysterious intoxicating liquids. There are a plethora of bottles around too, each one probably having touched the mouths of at least 200 people in a night; a glass bottle museum of colds and cold sores waiting to happen. After enough sketchy alcoholic beverages have been choked down, it’s time to discuss the purpose of the party, which is … oh, wait. What exactly is it? It could be dancing, but with no room to move or breathe because finding
enough room to dance is out of the question. You could stand and wait for a fraternity member to sneak up behind you, harshly grab your hips and start trying to grind with you, but then again, there is about a 10:1 girl-to-guy ratio so dancing with a guy is not always feasible. Perhaps the purpose is to meet new people and make new friends? That would be nice, but would also require someone to have the voice of Shia LaBeouf in motivational mode in order to be heard over the volume of the music and the din of girls screaming. So, realizing the lack of purpose and feeling overwhelmed from all the drunk robots everywhere, you decide to go get a breath of fresh air outside. After having to violently shove through avalanches of sweaty bodies, reaching the door is a relief. You slip past the door-guard, who yells after you that you have to leave out the back door so as not to attract police attention. This makes perfect
sense, because, of course, when there is a giant house with blaring music, stumbling girls spilling in and out of it for hours on end, and Uber drivers lining the entire block, one sober girl stepping outside for fresh air is clearly what’s going to catch the attention of the police. As you stand outside, refusing the incessant hounding of the “brothers” to go back inside, it dawns on you that you can’t even hate them, you can only pity them. Some of them genuinely believe their house, their party and their general existence, are God’s gifts to Earth. They cannot fathom it to be any other way. You leave and return home, feeling both emotionally and physically drained, and praying some other sort of party option presents itself next weekend so you can keep a vow to never return to such a cesspool for the rest of your college career.
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60 • Campus Guide
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Campus Guide • 61
Classifieds • Wednesday, July 27, 2016
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62 • Campus Guide
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
$200–$400
leasing
special you won’t get this in the dorms... fully furnished apartments | individual leases | walking distance to campus | pet friendly | free parking | free shuttle with wifi | pool and spa billiards and movie room | 24-hour fitness center including fitness on demand private bedrooms and baths **vary by property
520.624.3450 Live8thStreet Live8thStreet Campus8thStreet
520.623.2415 LiveStarPass LiveStarPass StarPassTucson
520.791.7017 LiveUHeights LiveUHeights CampusUHeights
LiveCATucson.com *Offer varies by property: Prices starting at $320
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5/16/16 3:34 PM
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
Expires 8-31-16
Campus Guide â&#x20AC;¢ 63
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Wednesday, July 27, 2016
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