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Taxi cab confessionals
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Students from the Center for Academic Success visit the Flandrau Science Center on Friday to learn about noble gases.
STEM center looks to grow new initiatives By Brenna Goth DAILY WILDCAT
personalized service J.J. insists on offering, with no meter and no middle man. “I am far from being a cab driver,” J.J. said, adding that he doesn’t like to associate with many cab drivers here in Tucson. “I don’t agree with their mentality,” he said, and the way some are merely looking for profit. J.J.’s closely connected to the Greek system, and tends to support it, especially during philanthropy events by shuttling people back and forth to Pi Phi Pizookie, Delta Delta Delta DHOP, and Kappa Alpha Theta Burrito Breakfast to name a few. But J.J. is also a big supporter of his dance department clients. He wants to buy season tickets this year after he received tickets to one dancer’s showcase performance last semester. “These are people I know, because I treat everyone like my
A new center housing some of the UA’s research and outreach initiatives aims to foster collaboration, attract grants and improve education. Administrators from several colleges are heading plans for the UA STEM Learning Center. STEM fields, or science, technology, engineering and math, have been the focus of national attention as professionals seek to increase the number of teachers who go into the areas and improve education. The UA has many STEM resources for students, teachers and the community, said William McCallum, head of the math department and co-director of the center. But people don’t always know where to look for them. A physical location would give community members a place to start, as well as allow more collaboration between colleges and faculty, McCallum said. “It will be a central clearing house,” he said. “Our efforts can be promoted. It could really help us produce more energy.” Conversations about the center began less than a year ago, said Elliott Cheu, associate dean of the College of Science. A steering committee will meet this month to determine its visions for the center. The Flandrau Science Center could be the new home of the STEM center because it is already a hub of outreach activities, Cheu said. Having a staff familiar with the UA’s resources will be helpful for teachers or community members looking for programs. “Most people in the community have had an experience at the Flandrau Center,” Cheu said. “We want to keep that
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J.J., a UA alumnus and owner of J.J.’s Shuttle and Taxi Service, gives students a ride down University Boulevard on Thursday night. J.J. has been providing UA students with taxi and shuttle rides for the last seven years.
By Cecelia Marshall DAILY WILDCAT
O
ne ride in J.J.’s shuttle is like stepping into a different world, one where J.J. has created a reputation as one of the first numbers some freshmen program into their phone. They call him by name and he knows all his customers by name as well. When J.J., a UA alumnus, first started J.J’s Shuttle and Taxi Service seven years ago with only three cabs, it was prompted by his desire to spend more time with his own children. But soon his business began booming, pushing him to adopt shuttles for his clients instead. J.J. described seven years of shuttle nights as “so hilarious” with “one thing after another” occurring. Seconds after jumping into the shuttle, J.J. receives a call on his cellphone and exclaims, “We’re off!” The 14-passenger van he usually drives has held three times that many people — but that’s all part of the
COMMENTARY
Stoops era on edge with UA in basement A
rizona’s 2011 season is lost. If head coach Mike Stoops can’t stop the bleeding ASAP, he might be the next to go. The hot seat is scorching, and time is running out. Sure, Stoops took Arizona football from rags to riches. The Wildcats were in shambles
WORTH
NOTING
Fan throws weiner at Tiger Woods >> A man was arrested after throwing a hot dog at golfer Tiger Woods who was lined up to putt on Sunday at the Frys.com Open.
time in the history of the program. But in a business where the pressure to win never ends, none of that matters if the Wildcats aren’t competitive. For the last 345 days, they haven’t even been close. Mike Schmitz Face it: Arizona football is on the DAILY WILDCAT decline. A fourth consecutive bowl game isn’t in the cards. The Wildcats before his arrival from the University are a sinking ship in a conference of Oklahoma in 2004. They won only that’s rising as a national entity. Just two games in 2003 and hadn’t been look at the facts. to a bowl game since 1998. The Wildcats haven’t won an FBS The defensive guru gave Arizona game since Oct. 30, 2010. They’ve football an identity, and eventually been consistently one of the nation’s brought the Wildcats to three consec- worst defenses, and currently rank utive bowl games for only the second 115th in the NCAA in total defense.
QUOTE TO
NOTE
“
While injuries and inexperi“The estimated $85.7 million ence have North End Zone project is next ... decimated the Wildcats’ does that make sense for a Pac-12 defense, Stoops bottom feeder?” is a defensive coach — the and 136-51 in the first half. A winless defensive Oregon State team pasted 27 secondcoordinator on the 2000 Oklahoma quarter points on the Wildcats as National Championship team. Yet, Arizona fell 37-27 in Corvallis, Ore., his defensive unit has become the on Saturday. Pac-12 punching bag. That lack of fight and fire falls on Worst of all, the Wildcats have shown no signs of life early in games. the coaching staff. They’ve been outscored 55-3 in the STOOPS, 3 first quarter of their last five games,
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Researcher gets caught in the Web By Stewart McClintic Daily Wildcat
The Internet could be faster, more reliable and use less energy. The UA, along with eight other universities, is doing research using optics to make this possible. “We are not taking advantage of the full potential of the Internet,” said Nasser Peyghambarian, a professor of optical sciences and director of the Center for Integrated Access Networks. The Internet is set up with an electrical node on either end of the system with fiber optics running in between, Peyghambarian said. Though a computer’s download speeds may be a few megabits per second, the Internet itself is actually much faster, potentially by hundreds of gigabits per second. Optics, though, is much faster than electronics, so that is what the research team is using to try and increase Internet speeds, and with a lower rate of energy consumption. Peyghambarian said that, by using optics instead of electronic nodes at the ends of the equation, the electrical efficiency of a connection would rise by a factor of two. It is hard to tell exactly how much energy each kind of module will
Kevin Brost/Daily Wildcat
Nasser Peyghambarian, director of the Center for Integrated Access Networks, discusses Internet speed and energy consumption through light communication inside of the “test bed” in the Meinel Optical Sciences building on Thursday.
use because each individual one can vary, he said. Peyghambarian coordinates all nine universities working on the project. The goal of the center is to solve the data crisis by bringing optoelectronic technology, devices
that source, detect and control light, to its full potential. According to its website, “The vision of CIAN is to create transformative technologies for optical access networks where virtually any application requiring any resource can be seamlessly
and efficiently aggregated and interfaced with existing and future core networks in a cost-effective manner.” The project is now in its fourth year of a five-year, $18.5 million contract from the National Science
Foundation. Peyghambarian said the project will be given another five years and another grant that will put the total cost at about $40 million. Massoud Karbassian, a research associate in the College of Optical Sciences, explained exactly what was going on in the test lab at the UA, which hosts research by all nine universities. “We’re dealing with the problem meeting electronics with optics,” he said. He explained that what they can currently do is put a computer chip into a device, shoot a laser through it, and transmit the information on the chip over a small-scale Internet model in the test lab. Peyghambarian said the Internet is a device that has changed people’s lives since its existence and that the research lab is doing everything it can do to make it better. Psychology freshman Travis Delly said he has problems with the Internet in his dorm room in Hopi Lodge Residence Hall. He said sometimes the Internet will randomly disconnect while playing video games. “I think this is a very worthwhile project,” Delly said, “because without Internet, how are we going to get our work done?”
State examines a rail New center opens alternative to the I-10 for fever research UA expands its Valley Fever Center to Phoenix St. Joseph’s hospital
By Kyle Mittan Daily Wildcat
The possibility of riding the rails between Phoenix and Tucson was raised during an Arizona Department of Transportation open house on the UA Mall on Friday. Although the process for an intercity rail system is in the preliminary research stage, the idea of having a faster means of transportation between Tucson and Phoenix has been around for several decades. The first study was completed in 1980, according to Michael Kies, assistant director of planning and programming for the Department of Transportation. The plan wasn’t adopted until March earlier this year. And with the rail system now in the early stages, the Arizona Public Interest Research Group is encouraging Arizonans to get involved and voice their opinions. According to the organization’s website, 75 percent of Arizona’s population lives in either the Phoenix or Tucson area, and 85 percent of all jobs in Arizona are located in the area known as the Sun Corridor. The Arizona Public Research Interest Group predicts that these numbers will quickly increase in a matter of years. But the two cities are not connected by public transportation. As with most large, state-funded jobs, what the rail system will cost and how it will be paid for are major concerns, both for the prospective riders and the Department of Transportation. While cost can only be determined through the study itself, funding for projects like this one follow a standard procedure, according to C.T. Revere, senior communications officer for the Safford district of the Department of Transportation. “Right now, the only thing that’s funded is the study,” Revere said. “The way the Department of Transportation funds major projects like this is with a federal process … we get public input, we assess
By Samantha Munsey Daily Wildcat
Gordon bates/Daily Wildcat
The Arizona Department of Transportation unveiled a potential intercity transit system between Tucson and Phoenix. The project is still in early research stages.
For more info On the intercity rail system and how to voice your opinion, visit www.adot.gov.
the environmental and cultural impacts, and once we get through all of these things, the state will start lobbying for federal funding.” Regardless of the cost, there hasn’t been much talk of the project’s disadvantages. Positive environmental effects have been a major consideration throughout the process. “Putting in this rail system will result in fewer cars using I-10,” said Serena Unrein, public interest advocate for the Arizona Public Research Interest Group. “I think that would, in turn, create better air quality in both Tucson and Phoenix.” There is also a strong emphasis on the opportunities for job creation. “Building this will create a lot of construction jobs, and obviously it takes people to operate, maintain and work on those rails, as well,” Revere said. ADOT also predicts the new rail system will have to work directly with other public transportation services, such as the local bus
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systems. The Federal Transit Administration will look for “feeder systems” — methods to get riders to and from the train stations — in all cities throughout the Sun Corridor, Kies said. Many UA students have said they like the idea of a rail system between Arizona’s two largest cities. Erin McRoy, a freshman studying English, said her lack of a car kept her from going to Phoenix. “I don’t travel to Phoenix a lot, but that’s because I don’t have a car, so traveling is kind of a pain in the butt,” McRoy said. “But I do have family and friends that are in the Phoenix area, and it would be nice to visit them. So, yeah, I would definitely consider something like that … and it’s got to be better than the Greyhound.” Some students who aren’t from Arizona have decided that the rail system could benefit them as well. “I’m an out-of-state student from Utah,” said Alex Cohen, a senior studying finance and mechanical engineering. “Flights are so much cheaper from Phoenix that it would definitely pay for itself.” The idea for an intercity rail system has some people feeling hopeful that it will work out in the years to come, but the project’s process depends on the opinions of the communities.
The UA has agreed to expand its efforts in valley fever research by opening a new center in Phoenix. The UA’s Valley Fever Center for Excellence, located at the University of Arizona Medical Center-University Campus is set to open a valley fever research center in Phoenix at St. Joseph’s Hospital and Medical Center. Coccidioidomycosis, commonly known as valley fever, is a disease that occurs when fungus spores found in soil particles are breathed in and cause an infection in the lungs. The disease is typically reported in dry desert regions like the Southwestern United States and parts of central South America. Symptoms include fever, chest pain, joint stiffness and coughing. “The spores start to multiply and that causes the infection, usually pneumonia,” said Dr. John Galgiani, founder of the UA’s Valley Fever Center for Excellence and director of the new center. “In many people, the immune system controls that infection and is common with maybe 100,000 infections a year in Arizona. But out of that large denominator, a small percentage of people get fairly sick. The fungus leaves the lungs and goes to other parts of the body.”
When left untreated, valley fever can result in death. The UA wanted to establish a center in Phoenix because 80 percent of all cases of valley fever in Arizona occur in Maricopa County, Galgiani said. Galgiani said he thinks this is because of the heavy population in the western endemic region known for valley fever. “It’s a good place to have more of a clinical presence,” Galgiani said. “We are going to be practicing a combination of things at the new center.” When established, the center will be used to treat patients with valley fever as well as increase awareness and medical education about the disease through research. “We do want to make the new center an access for patients who need help,” Galgiani said. “Because of the location, patient care can be handled either at St. Joseph’s or by center members who practice around that area.” The UA’s Valley Fever Center for Excellence is the only center in the world that specializes in valley fever research and treatment. Throughout the day, the center takes calls from other hospitals treating people with lung diseases around the nation and even other countries. “Right now I will be calling a doctor in Australia who is taking care of a patient with meningitis,” said Galgiani when explaining what the current and new centers are practicing. “We think we are doing some good.”
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10, 2011
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As employment numbers creep Arizona Daily Wildcat Monday Mega up, economic fears decrease Market MCCLATCHY TRIBUNE
WASHINGTON — Betterthan-expected employment numbers Friday eased recession fears, but experts warned that the economy remains vulnerable because employers are adding new jobs at an insufficient pace to make a dent in the high unemployment rate. Employers added 103,000 jobs in September, the Department of Labor said. It also revised sharply upward the tepid hiring numbers for July and August by a combined 99,000 jobs. The unemployment rate stayed unchanged at 9.1 percent. Most analysts had expected between 25,000 and 70,000 jobs to be added in September.
Private-sector jobs grew by 137,000, but that was offset by a decline of 35,000 government jobs. “The job numbers remain disappointing in that unemployment is very high, and given the current pace of job growth, will not come down anytime soon,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist for forecaster Moody’s Analytics. “The economy needs to create at least 125,000 jobs per month on a consistent basis just to maintain the unemployment rate.” To really knock down the jobless rate, the economy needs to create as many this year. as 200,000 jobs per month, Zandi said that the risk of something it last did on aver- recession remains high. age from February to April “If anything else goes wrong
TAXI
— and there are many potential threats from Europe to the foreclosure crisis — businesses will start cutting payrolls and the economy will slide into recession,” he said. Still, the 137,000 private sector jobs went well beyond the 91,000 measured in the ADP National Employment Report that came out Wednesday and was an encouraging number given other recent good news. Brian Hamilton, CEO of Sageworks, a financial research group that keeps data on companies that don’t issue stock, said that privately held companies are seeing a 5 percent to 6 percent increase in sales this year, something that may eventually translate into hiring.
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a ride. He certifies all his shuttles with U.S. Department of Transportation regulations, making sure he has all the proper paperOn J.J.’s Shuttle Service, “where work, numbers and stickers. In all his years everything gets hotter after dark,” call of shuttling, he’s never been pulled over by (520) 272-4390. police, he said. During the summers without students and a much emptier campus, J.J. said he his phone. He has eight new voicemails. feels lost and fills his days with motorBut J.J. doesn’t just drive at night. He’s cycle riding and his three sons. also adopted daytime contracts with nearHe explained how a business guy could by apartment complexes shuttling students sit him down and lay out all of the probto campus. For those times when he gets lems with his business model, the amount too tired, he has hand-selected and hired of money he loses nightly with the favors other drivers with their own families and he does and how to change it to increase with a requirement of 10 years of driving income. But J.J. said he isn’t here for the experience. J.J. wants to make sure that if he money. He lives for the late nights. isn’t the one driving someone home late at “People don’t realize I know the inner night, he trusts the person who is. relationships,” he said. He has known On an average night, groups of girls students since their very first orientation stumbling in miniskirts and 4-inch high weekend at the UA, before they were heels are standard. He’ll get calls from even freshmen. He has driven people for familiar passengers, answering the phone four years of their life and they become a as if it’s one of his own kin: “Hey Bailey. part of his. After graduation, the relationHow are you?” He’s even turned a van full ships don’t end there, J.J. said. of customers around after he got a call from Students will even come back during a patron at a house party who witnessed a Homecoming to visit him and see how drive-by shooting and needed to rush over the business is going. to the hospital to see their friend who had And J.J. said that’s the key to his been shot. He’s aided police in finding a success — his relationships with the fradulent taxi van driver, and will get frastudents. ternity members’ names to give to chapter “Everyone I’ve had use me, keeps me,” presidents if they get too belligerent during J.J. said.
For more info
FROM PAGE 1
own kids,” J.J. said. And his kids are just as committed to him as he is to them. “J.J. is the greatest cab driver in the entire world,” said Allie Robbins, a pre-business student. “His phone just rings off the hook.” Robbins and Mara Scaliti jumped in J.J.’s shuttle outside Arizona-Sonora Residence Hall on a recent weekend. “The first person to call is J.J. He is kind of a legend around here,” said Scaliti, an undeclared undergraduate. She explained that during their first sorority new member meeting, the active members gave their newly initiated sisters J.J.’s number and told them this was the person to call if they were ever in trouble. Sorority houses have even joked about putting a J.J.’s shuttle stop outside their house due to the amount of business they have given him. Robbins and Scaliti joke with J.J. like he’s another sorority sister. They describe how he knows all about the random hookups (some of them even in the back of his shuttle) and has witnessed the many “walk of shames” through campus. Scaliti even quips to J.J. that they have pictures from the crazy night before. After dropping them off, J.J. checked
STEM
FROM PAGE 1
visibility.” STEM initiatives at the UA range from undergraduate research opportunities to activities introducing girls to science. Many of these programs are focused on improving STEM education through the preparation of teachers. The UA Center for Recruitment and Retention of Mathematics Teachers recently received a $1 million Transitions to Teaching grant from the U.S. Department of Education. The grant will be used to create the Southern Arizona Inducting New Teachers program. New math teachers have a high turnover rate, with as many as half of them quitting within three years, said Cody Patterson, director of the center. The pressure to increase standardized test scores and teach large classes creates a high-stress environment, Patterson said.
Fifty new middle school and high school math teachers placed at highneed schools will be inducted over five years. The program provides funding to these teachers and requires them to attend monthly workshops on how to handle students and parents and how to create effective lesson plans. “It will help with those first few stressful years,” said Patterson, who added the new STEM center could help teachers connect to resources. The program relies on collaboration with the College of Education, Patterson said. The STEM center aims to promote these types of relationships throughout campus. “There’s certainly coordination, but not to the degree it could be,” said Bruce Johnson, head of the teaching, learning and sociocultural studies department in the College of Education and co-director of the STEM center. Collaboration with the community is also important, Johnson said. Oftentimes,
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people within the UA create a STEM program and then search for participants. A center may allow people to approach the university with their needs, he said. “If someone wants to access it, it would be nice to come to a place where someone can help them find that,” Johnson said. “That will help us be better able to support the community.” The center does not have a cost associated with it at this point and could attract more grants, McCallum said. The National Science Foundation, the U.S. Department of Education and private foundations are all interested in funding STEM initiatives, he said. “Having a highly visible STEM center could help with that,” McCallum said. “This is partly about making it all visible to the outside world.” The center could open as early as July 2012, according to Cheu. “If we can get this right, I think it will really put the UA on the map for STEM education in Southern Arizona,” he said.
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STOOPS
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Yes, transition years happen. Key injuries have to be taken into account. Playing three top-10 teams and four perennial contenders in a row to open the season can’t be understated. But losing the way the Wildcats have for almost a calendar year is hard to swallow, especially when athletic director Greg Byrne has emptied the pockets of boosters in an attempt to make Arizona football a legitimate program. More than $7 million was spent on the Arizona Stadium video board. While that’s a huge win from a recruiting
standpoint, it sure looks like a waste of money right now. A 1-5 team having one of the biggest video boards on the West Coast? It just doesn’t add up. The estimated $85.7 million North End Zone project is next to follow, but does that make sense for a Pac-12 bottom feeder? While it appeared Stoops was poised to lead Arizona to yet another bowl game and take the program to an even higher level, the Wildcats are stuck in reverse and the clock is ticking. If Stoops can rally the troops and help the Wildcats run the table on their way to a fourth straight bowl game, his job should be safe.
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But that’s wishful thinking to say the least, especially watching the Wildcats swing and miss at the opportunity to bounce back against a Beavers team that couldn’t beat FCS opponent Sacramento State. The sand in the hourglass is running out. Arizona football is at a crossroads, and if Stoops can’t turn things around, Boise State’s Chris Petersen or former Texas Tech coach Mike Leach could be receiving a phone call very soon.
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Perspectives
Daily Wildcat
• Page 4
Perspectives Editor: Storm Byrd • 520.621.7581 • letters@wildcat.arizona.edu
Oregon provides ammo to gun lobby Kristina Bui Daily Wildcat
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un enthusiasts, rejoice: Oregon has overturned a firearms ban and undermined the safety of its universities. At the end of last month, the Oregon Court of Appeals lifted a longstanding firearms ban on university campuses when the three-judge panel decided only the state Legislature has the authority to regulate guns. The Oregon Firearms Educational Foundation filed the lawsuit in response to the 2009 arrest of a Western Oregon University student for carrying a gun on campus. He had a concealed carry license, and the charge against him was later dropped. The court’s ruling decided that the on-campus ban was invalid because the Oregon University System does not have the authority to control firearms. It wasn’t a complete victory for the OFEF. The court declined to rule on the contention that the campus ban violates Second Amendment rights because its decision invalidated the ban anyway. Judges also denied the OFEF’s claim that the Oregon University System could not impose rules governing campus visitors’ conduct. Still, the judges’ ruling is progress for gun supporters, and the Second Amendment issue is bound to come up again if the university system decides to appeal. For now, Oregon campuses are examining ways to get around the ruling. While the university system can’t issue a blanket ban on concealed firearms, there may be loopholes like including clauses in contracts for residence halls that would not permit weapons in dorm rooms, or requiring football ticket-buyers to agree not to bring a weapon inside the football stadium. Di Saunders, Oregon University System spokeswoman, told Inside Higher Ed that colleges are consulting legal counsel. Saunders also said the university system’s seven campuses are unanimous in opposition, with good reason: College kids are stupid. A study, performed in 2007 by the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University, found that nearly half of full-time college students abuse drugs or binge drink at least once a month. A study performed five years earlier by the Harvard School of Public Health found student gun owners are more likely to binge drink, drive drunk and use illegal drugs than students who do not own guns. It doesn’t take a third study to establish that firearms and drugs or alcohol is a terrifying combination. In a survey published in December 2009 in the Journal of American College Health, just 5 percent of college campus police chiefs said allowing students to carry concealed weapons would prevent campus killings. Another 86 percent disagreed, while 9 percent were uncertain. Of course, there are people who imagine they know better than real law enforcement. Gun rights supporters will insist the 86 percent of police chiefs are wrong. The gun lobby argues that shooters will choose gun-free campuses because they make easy targets. But this argument fails to consider how rare campus violence is. Yet another study, this one performed by the Department of Justice and published in 2005, found that 93 percent of violent crimes against college students occur off campus. On-campus shootings make huge headlines because they don’t actually happen all that often. The rarity of on-campus violence is probably, at least in part, due to campus policies that regulate firearms. Besides that, the relatively few campus shootings that occur are usually intended as murder-suicides, in which the goal is to take other people down before dying by gunfire. Campus shooters aren’t likely to be deterred by knowing the other people around them may also be armed if their goal is to get shot anyway. The safety of the college campus is in question; it’s the students, faculties and administrations of those campuses that should decide what’s best for them. The Oregon ruling lets gun enthusiasts play vigilante by putting college students at risk, and it sets a dangerous precedent for universities elsewhere. — Kristina Bui is the copy chief. She can be reached at letters@wildcat.arizona.edu.
The Daily Wildcat editorial policy Daily Wildcat staff editorials represent the official opinion of the Daily Wildcat staff, which is determined at staff editorial meetings. Columns, cartoons, online comments and letters to the editors represent the opinion of their author and do not represent the opinion of the Daily Wildcat.
Terrorist acts negate constitutional rights Joshua Segall Daily Wildcat
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imply put, terrorists have no place anywhere in this world, let alone in the United States of America. It does not matter where you are from or who you are. If you seek to destroy any group of people, you simply do not belong. U.S. citizen Anwar Al-Awlaki is no exception to this rule. Al-Awlaki is a native of Las Cruces, New Mexico. He attended school in the U.S. until age 7, when his parents moved back to their native country of Yemen. He returned to the U.S. on a student visa to study at Colorado State University where he earned a Bachelor of Science in civil engineering. During his undergraduate career, he was president of the Muslim Student Association on campus, actively engaging in a number of Islamic affairs. While Al-Awlaki’s story may seem like nothing out of the ordinary, there are a number of underlying details that take away from this nicely painted story. During his return to the U.S., Al-Awlaki began recruiting for terrorist organizations back in the Middle East. The CIA has numerous reports citing his involvement in recruiting American-born citizens to join the terrorist organization al-Qaeda overseas.
Al-Awlaki has been linked to nearly a dozen different cases of attempted terror plots in the U.S. He is responsible for engaging and recruiting Nigerianborn Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab prior to his attempted underwear bombing of a Northwest Airlines flight on Dec. 25, 2009. He was connected with Faisal Shahzad, a naturalized U.S. citizen, who attempted to set a car bomb off in New York City’s Times Square. He has been connected with Zachary Adam Chesser, a 20-year-old who was recently arrested for trying to join the Islamic terrorist group Al-Shabaab. Al-Awlaki has also been linked to Maj. Nidal Hassan prior to the Fort Hood Army Base killings in Texas in 2009. Last year he attempted to set cargo plane bombs off in the United Kingdom during another failed terrorist attack. Al-Awlaki was a main component to the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks on New York City. While in the U.S., he gave the terrorists lectures and even helped them rent apartments and fund their project. This man was a known terrorist who subsequently forewent all rights as a citizen of any country. It should come as no surprise that when the U.S. had the chance to kill him, they did via drone air attacks in Yemen.
Unfortunately, there are many critics who argue that because Al-Awlaki was born in the U.S., he should have been brought back for trial as part of his constitutional right to trial. This idea might be one of the most irrational ideas proposed in recent times. Al-Awlaki rose in the ranks of al-Qaeda, becoming a regional commander. Why would the U.S. want to bring one of the world’s most dangerous criminals onto their own soil when he repeatedly attempted to kill citizens? GOP presidential nominee Ron Paul is among those who think that Al-Awlaki deserved a fair trial. Paul told MSNBC that “Al-Awlaki was born here, he is an American citizen. He was never tried or charged for any crimes. No one knows if he killed anybody. We know he might have been associated with the underwear bomber. But if the American people accept this blindly and casually that we now have an accepted practice of the president assassinating people who he thinks are bad guys, I think it’s sad.” Those who believe Al-Awlaki deserved a fair trial are sorely mistaken. Terrorists forego their right to a fair trial when they choose to wage war, especially on their own countrymen. Taking Al-Awlaki out was one of the smartest moves the U.S. could have made, and as a result, our world is a bit safer today than it was a couple weeks ago. — Joshua Segall is a management information systems senior. He can be reached at letters@wildcat.arizona.edu.
MAILBAG Investigative class pays respects, not insensitivity
have four hours. Would that, then, be the height of insensitivity? Crime reporting has long been a crucial part of journalism. Though you might cringe at the thought I’m writing in response to Caroline of approaching a grieving mother whose Nachazel’s recent op-ed piece “Rowan son or daughter was unjustly killed hours University investigative journalism class ago in a brutal murder, the societal imporinvestigation show insensitivity.” tance of doing just that ripples far beyond Before I go further, I want to say that I a brief, and emotionally challenging, conthink the piece was well-written and the ele- versation. ments Ms. Nachazel used to frame her arguIt offers an outlet for grief. It informs the ment were cohesive and well-structured. community. It can aid law enforcement in That said, if she hopes to pursue a career in apprehending suspects. It tells the story of journalism, I would hope she rethinks her a life lost. position. Any murder, regardless of circumstance I think this may be the most intriguing, or location, is a tragedy. But silencing disand potentially academically beneficial, class course, muffling the power of amplification Rowan’s journalism department has ever that the media (or in this case academia) offered. It provides students a unique oppor- has would be tremendously damaging. tunity to understand the emotions and chalWill the students of Amy Quinn’s class lenges that come with crime reporting, some- solve Farrell’s murder case? Probably not. thing most of us have to learn in the field. But it keeps the conversation alive, and who Crime reporters who cover murders knows what that might inspire. I suspect don’t have four months or four years to that plays into why Farrell’s parents giving wait before they write a story, they often Quinn their blessing for the class and why
they may speak to the students later in the semester. Even if nothing positive comes from it in regards to Farrell’s murder case, these 10 students will get firsthand experience in covering a murder, in understanding the emotional toll it takes on the web of people who knew the victim (and in turn, themselves), and that is invaluable. Murders leave emotional scars on victim’s friends and families that can last a lifetime, but no one personally touched by Farrell’s murder has to speak to any of these students. I doubt any of them will be overly aggressive in their pursuit of information. Ms. Nachazel wrote that campus deaths should be treated with the utmost respect. I think writing about Farrell’s life and unfair death is the height of respect. No one will know or care that someone died unless you tell them that they lived. — Stephen Stirling, Rowan University alumnus Star-Ledger staff writer
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Monday, october 10, 2011 •
5
Police Beat By Rebecca Rillos DAILY WILDCAT
Office break-in, laptops snatched A University of Arizona Police Department officer went to the Marley building on Tuesday in response to a report of a theft from one of the offices. The officer met with an employee, who said the office she shares with four other people had been broken into over the weekend. She said she left her office and locked the door around 4 p.m. on Sept. 28. When she and her coworkers returned to the office Tuesday morning, they noticed some items missing. Among the missing items were two laptops that contained “expensive graphic software” and a cordless Panasonic telephone. The value of the laptops and phone is unknown, but the employee estimated the software was worth $1,000 on each computer. The employee was confident that other staff had not borrowed the items. A student who worked for the employee told her he had seen a telephone like the one missing on a bench near the building on Sept. 30. The officer contacted the video surveillance company Amer-X, who said they would review the footage and contact UAPD with the results later. A victim’s rights form was mailed to the UA.
Lock, shock and one empty parking spot A UAPD officer went to a UA parking lot on Fremont Avenue on Tuesday around 7:40 p.m. in response to a theft. The office met with a student who said she had parked and locked her car in the lot at 7 p.m. on Oct. 2. When she returned Tuesday evening, her car was gone. She walked all around the lots in the area to be sure, but could not find her car. The woman said she had a permit from Parking and Transportation Services and always parked her car in that lot. No one else had keys to the car except herself and her parents, who live in Gilbert, Ariz., she said. The woman filled out a victim’s rights form and a stolen vehicle agreement.
The robbery pain falls mainly in Old Main A UAPD officer spoke on Tuesday to a UA employee who said items had been taken from his office in Old Main. The man said a black laptop bag containing a computer mouse and jump drive had been stolen. He said he believed the theft took place between Sept. 21 and Sept. 30. The man estimated the total cost of the items to be around $80 to $100. He said a coworker of his also had items stolen from him the same day, but the man had already filed a separate case report. Victim’s rights forms were mailed to the man’s office. Police Beat is compiled from official University of Arizona Police Department reports. A complete list of UAPD activity can be found at www.uapd.arizona.edu.
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USING YOUR HANDS
GOING COMMANDO
Arts & Life
Daily Wildcat
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Arts & Life Editor: Jazmine Woodberry • 520.621.3106 • arts@wildcat.arizona.edu
Viva la Diva Wingspan and La Paz unite for a night of fun and diversity Photos by Ernie Somoza DAILY WILDCAT
Tucson’s premier female illusionists take over the Sol Courtyard in the Colonia de La Paz Residence Hall on Friday to help raise awareness and celebrate National Coming Out Day.
COMMENTARY
‘Burn Notice’ still most consistent show on television
Diva La Paz, hosted by Colonia de la Paz Residence Hall, is an annual drag show which brings in hundreds of students each year to raise awareness on campus about the LGBTQ community. The main beneficiary of the event is the Tucson LGBTQ center, Wingspan. Students at the event
could browse a room with educational materials about transgender issues before sitting down for the show. The event is part of Residence Life’s diversity and social justice programming, aimed at teaching students about different social justice topics at the UA.
Q&A
By Joe Dusbabek
lackluster show “The Game.” These two complete the diverse foursome “Burn Notice,” the USA Network and create some truly touching and original series about a framed-andhilarious moments throughout the fired spy and his explosive path to course of the show. redemption, is nearing the end of its The series follows Westen on his fifth season. On the list of decent TV path to figure out who “burned” him: shows canceled before making it to a A former spy, Westen gets dumped fifth season: “Arrested Development,” by the U.S. government and dropped “Dollhouse,” “Firefly,” “Boomtown” in Miami. Along the way, the cast and “Deadwood.” “Burn Notice” has helps the average Miami citizen in a survived longer than cultspot of trouble to stay afloat by using favorite comedies, sci-fi their unique skill sets. Some truly epics and HBO critically interesting situations come about acclaimed as a result, usually involving series. explosions, car chases, gunfights or any other TV trope. Full disclosure: I’m a huge fan of the series and I fully believe everyone should give it a shot. That said, the character development and storytelling are half the reason “Burn Notice” leaves viewers satisfied. But how many other shows can you name that can cram a healthy PHOTO COURTESY OF USANETWORK.COM amount of Allow that to sink in for a moment. action, complex subplots, government USA Network can attribute a large conspiracies and satisfying moments part of the success of “Burn Notice” of humorous respite consistently into to its expert handling of character every single episode of five whole development and chemistry between seasons? them. Jeffrey Donovan, as lead Television, at its core, should be character and ex-spy extraordinaire a chance to indulge in what makes Michael Westen, lends a particular us human. Truly excellent television professional precision to his role and shows offer visual appeasement of our combines it with a well-mannered humanity, both in its flaws and merits. sense of humor. Bruce Campbell, of Whether that involves heavy-handed “Evil Dead” fame, plays an affable, drama, laugh-until-you-can’t-breath womanizing and cocktail-loving jokes or something in between, great retired Navy SEAL originally brought TV gives us a window into what it in to spy on Westen but now his means to enjoy life. partner-in-crime, as he heartily enjoys “Burn Notice,” somehow flying his Miami lifestyle. Yes, it’s as good as it mostly under-the-radar for five sounds; Sam Axe might end up being seasons on the underappreciated USA the iconic Campbell role when all is Network, might be one of the most said and done. consistently great shows on television. Rounding out the cast are You owe it to yourself to watch it, Gabrielle Anwar, who plays Westen’s and if you’re not, just know you’re kick-ass female counterpart and missing out on arguably the most former (and somewhat still) satisfying show around. love interest Fiona Glenanne, and Coby Bell, as Jesse Porter, a — Joe Dusbabek is a senior studying distinct departure from his role as a French and linguistics. He can be cheapskate semi-football star in the reached at arts@wildcat.arizona.edu. DAILY WILDCAT
FIONA FOSTER/DAILY WILDCAT
Science education senior Devon Moule “danceblades,” a mix of dance and inline skating, on the UA Mall.
Former figure skater now a ‘danceblader’ By Joe Dusbabek DAILY WILDCAT
Devon Moule, a science education senior, has carved himself a unique niche on the UA campus: “danceblading,” an amalgamation of dance, balance and athleticism, where he inline skates while dancing to pop and hip-hop music. Daily Wildcat: Tell me about danceblading. Did you come up with it? Moule: In other sects, it’s called “choreographed skating,” but when I came here, I thought that was kind of boring-sounding, so I started calling it “danceblading.” I didn’t come up with the idea, but I put a twist on it. I was originally a figure skater — I come from Kentucky and we actually have ice there — but when I got here, I took up rollerblading because there wasn’t much in the way of skating in Tucson. I had to change my medium, and when I heard about choreographed skating, I thought it would be pretty cool to take and do something with it. What do you do on the UA campus? I strap on my skates and I usually
go around the Mall — I end up going up and down all the places where bikes generally aren’t allowed, too, because I don’t like being run over. I tend to go in front of Bear Down Gymnasium and Old Main, and I dance to pop and hip-hop songs while I’m on blades. I’ve also had people ask me to perform at various venues; I was a part of a competition last year where I had to perform Beyoncé’s “Single Ladies” on rollerblades. It seems like danceblading would be kind of hard. It’s pretty much what you’d expect when you see figure skating, except it’s more hip-hop and not “Oh, I’m doing ballet on skates.” Is there a community behind this here, or is it just you? So far, it’s just me. We do have a Rollerblading Club but they’re kind of more into speed skating and jumping up off of things. I’m the only danceblader we have on campus, to my knowledge. There are always these campus characters you hear about, such as Fake Business Man, Brother Jed and the guy
who used to do the robot in the SUMC. Recently, you’ve started being mentioned along with them in conversations I’ve overheard. Thoughts? Any time you can be lumped in with Fake Business Man, that is awesome. I prefer to stay away from clumping with the general homeless community, because I’m a student and I actually do have a place to live, but being coupled with awesome figures like that — that’s just epic. Do you see yourself continuing this at a future job or does it stop when you graduate? I feel like it’s one of those cool things that kids can say about it, “Oh, that teacher is weird because he dances on rollerblades and I like that.” I want to be that weird teacher. It’s just one of those fun things that I hope to keep doing.
Online Visit www.dailywildcat.com to watch a video of Moule’s performance: “Devon Danceblader.”
Sports SCOREBOARD:
Daily Wildcat
• Page 7
Sports Editor: Kevin Zimmerman • 520.621.2956 • sports@wildcat.arizona.edu
NFL Buffalo 31, Philadelphia 24
San Diego 29, Denver 24
New England 30, New York Jets 21
Adam Hall makes noise in debut By Mike Schmitz DAILY WILDCAT
Although it wasn’t enough to snap Arizona’s losing streak, junior safety Adam Hall made his 2011 debut on Saturday and didn’t disappoint. The 6-foot-4, 220-pound free safety registered a team-high 10 tackles to go along with two tackles for a loss and forced a fumble in Arizona’s 37-27 loss to Oregon State in Corvallis, Ore. “He gives it everything he has,” head coach Mike Stoops said on 1290-AM postgame radio show. “I’m very proud of him. He pushed
himself through it. That first time on the field coming off a major knee injury is always traumatic, and I’m really proud Adam Hall of the way he junior safety handled it and moved around.” Hall tore his ACL during the spring season and underwent surgery soon thereafter. Stoops was unsure how much Hall would be able to contribute against the Beavers, but Hall quickly answered
that question on Saturday. He showed no signs of rust as the Palo Verde High School product looked like the same physical specimen who started seven games at safety in 2010, racking up 54 tackles, 3.5 tackles for a loss, three pass break ups and two interceptions. “Adam filled his role really nicely and was aggressive. It was good to have Adam back,” said sophomore cornerback Shaquille Richardson, who finished the game with two interceptions and a touchdown. “We like him and Marquis (Flowers), so if they can
figure out a rotation then it would be great.” Hall’s return didn’t come without controversy, however. After tackling running back Jovan Stevenson late in the third quarter, Hall exchanged words with receiver James Rodgers, the same player who Hall tackled in the end zone last season, bending the wide receiver backward and tearing Rodgers’ ACL. Oregon State tight end Joe Halahuni didn’t appreciate what Hall had to say to Rodgers on Saturday, and pushed Hall’s helmet. Hall lost it and made con-
tact with a referee while pleading his case, leading to a 15-yard penalty. The bad blood between Hall and Rodgers was evident, and Halahuni wasn’t having any of it. “I just didn’t appreciate how he was talking to my teammates,” Halahuni told the Oregon State media. “A couple times he was in somebody’s face, I was kind of sick of it.” Hall and Rodgers won’t face off ever again at the collegiate level, but the junior safety will continue to get back to 100 percent for a Wildcats defense that’s giving up a confer-
HALL, 12
ANALYSIS
A look at the Wildcats’ woes By Alex Williams DAILY WILDCAT
We’re six games into the 2011 season, and Arizona still doesn’t have a win against a Football Bowl Subdivision opponent. The Wildcats found themselves in a huge hole for the fifth straight week in a 37-27 loss to Oregon State on Saturday in Corvallis, Ore., and for the second time in as many weeks, their comeback effort fell just short. But Saturday’s loss was different from the rest. After the NAU game, Arizona’s next four games were as brutal a stretch as anybody in America plays this season. Against the Beavers, Arizona had a very realistic shot at its first win against an FBS team since late October 2010. Here’s a look at what has led to the Wildcats’ dismal 1-5 start:
By Kyle Johnson DAILY WILDCAT
Special teams
Except for kickoffs and most punts, Arizona’s special teams are one of the least reliable units in the country. They convert extra points 76 percent of the time while their opponents make 96 percent. They make 40 percent of field goals while their opponents are connecting on 87 percent. When a team doesn’t have any sort of reliability from the kicker position, it puts a ton of pressure on the offense. Nick Foles and Co. know that unless they score a touchdown, there’s a very good chance they’re not putting points on the board. Arizona also isn’t getting any big plays from its special teams — at least not any that go the Wildcats’ way. Jack Baucus’ muffed kickoff against Oregon State led to a Beaver field goal, one that could have ultimately decided the game. Oregon State also blocked a punt and returned it for a score. Erase those two mistakes, and you erase 10 OSU points, and maybe we’re talking about Arizona’s first Pac-12 Conference win.
TAYLOR HAND/ THE DAILY BAROMETER
Arizona’s David Douglas, left, attempts to catch a pass from quarterback Nick Foles. The ball was intercepted by Oregon State safety Lance Mitchell in the Wildcats’ 37-27 loss to the Beavers in Corallis, Ore., on Saturday.
No discipline
It seems like every time Arizona gets something going, some kind of penalty or mental mistake comes up to bite them. Safety Adam Hall picked up a 15-yard personal foul for bumping into an official, but fortunately for Arizona, that drive ended with a missed OSU field goal. The Wildcat O-line is good for a few false starts a game, usually coming on first down. Even with an offense as good as Arizona’s, 1st-and-15 isn’t easy to overcome, especially on the road. Dropped passes are also starting to become a problem. Receiver
Dan Buckner dropped a sure touchdown on fourth down late in Saturday’s game that would have given the Wildcats a shot at winning. Missed opportunities burned the Wildcats against Oregon two weeks prior as well. Arizona’s defense also loves to go for the big hit. But while it might work once or twice a game, it’s been leading to a huge number of missed tackles, which ultimately leads to big plays.
sive line. Other than Hall missing the first five games, the rest of the defense was the same set of characters. To summarize how this year’s D-line has played, it can’t stuff the run and it can’t rush the quarterback. The line has accounted for only two sacks on the season and the D-line has only 8.5 tackles for loss. Any average defense has at least some ability to do those two things. Any average defense can at least do one. But Arizona’s defense? It can’t do either. No D-line It doesn’t matter how good a Look at last year’s defense, one that was at least respectable, and look at defense’s linebackers are if the offense this year’s. What changed? The defen- is getting blockers on them without being slowed down by the D-line.
Volleyball upsets No. 2 UCLA Bruins By Kelly Hultgren DAILY WILDCAT
ANNIE MARUM/ DAILY WILDCAT
Arizona midfielder Shannon Heinzler, left, tries to edge Oregon’s Riley Smith for position in the Wildcats’ first win of the season on Friday in Tucson.
UA earns first win By Zack Rosenblatt DAILY WILDCAT
It had been 350 days, spread over 16 games, since the last win. On Friday night, the Arizona women’s soccer team temporarily put an end to its losing ways with a 1-0 victory over Oregon. On Sunday, it wasn’t able to replicate its success with a 1-0 loss to Oregon State. Despite the loss, getting the first win of the season made this weekend a successful one. “We definitely took steps forward this weekend. Obviously getting the win was a must,” said senior goalkeeper Ashley Jett. In Sunday’s game versus Oregon State, the team was unable to score any goals despite many opportunities. It was clear throughout the day that the Wildcats were capable of pulling out a victory, but they weren’t able to capitalize on their chances.
Hockey takes lumps, collects first victory
“Inconsistent was a theme for today,” Jett said. “We came out hard, had chances early in the game. Second half we didn’t come out like we should have.” Despite its struggles on Sunday, the team’s focus was on the positive progress it made this weekend, and much of that can be attributed to the relentless performance of Jett, especially on Friday night. “Amazing. She’s always amazing. When we need her the most she’s always there,” said sophomore Jazmin Ponce. Junior defender Alex Smith, who scored the team’s only goal on Friday on a penalty kick, also believes some accolades should be going the goalkeeper’s way. “(Her performance) was unreal. She deserves Pac-12 player of the
SOCCER, 12
As Arizona fans rose to their feet for match point in the final set against No. 2 UCLA, Arizona served the ball, the Bruins sent it back over and, with a perfect pass to Chloe Mathis, Rachel Rhoades sprung into the air to meet Mathis’ set and murdered the ball down the center. The Wildcats (11-6, 3-5) stunned the Bruins in a 3-2 game (25-21, 25-10, 25-19, 25-18 and 15-12) match Saturday night. McKale Center erupted in screams. Head coach Dave Rubio triumphantly punched the air and the girls joyously tackled each other. The odds weren’t in Arizona’s favor for Saturday’s match, especially after falling to No. 5 USC 3-0 (27-25, 25-21, 25-19) on Friday. Arizona hadn’t defeated a top-2 team since 1993. Coincidentally, that match was also against UCLA. The team has continuously been written off as young with a lot of potential. That potential came to fruition on Saturday and Rubio saw his team grow up. “It’s certainly a gutsy win for us,” Rubio said. “We could have rolled over a lot of times and we really toughed it out. That’s what I was telling the team in the games we were losing: ‘We’ve got to grow up here guys.’ “If we’re going to beat a great team and be a great team, then you have to be able to weather the storms and execute as a result of that.”
AMY WEBB/ DAILY WILDCAT
Arizona’s Cursty Jackson spikes a ball in UA’s loss to USC on Friday in Tucson.
Arizona set the pace for the match and took the Bruins by surprise in the first game, winning 25-21. In the next set, the Bruins rebounded with a short and sweet 25-10 win. “The Bruins were a little flat,” Rubio said. “I told them upsets happen because the team that’s supposed to win doesn’t come ready to play. In Game 1 they did that, and we took advantage of that. In game two, they said, ‘Not so fast. We’re No. 2 in the country, we’re the best team in the conference, we’re going to stomp on you and show you who’s in charge,’ and they did.” For the rest of the story, go online: www.dailywildcat.com
The No. 22 Arizona hockey team earned its first win this season, beating No. 21 Michigan-Dearborn 6-1 Friday in the opening game at the ACHA Division I Showcase in Springfield, Ill. Yet, the winning streak didn’t last long, as the Wildcats dropped their next two games, losing 5-1 to No. 11 Oakland University Saturday and 5-3 to No. 17 Stony Brook Sunday. “It was very liberating,” captain Brian Slugocki said about the team getting its first win Friday. “It was good to see that the team did come together and pull a win against a top-ranked team, and we did it in big fashion, winning six to one. “We got a lot more work that we need to do.” Forward Andrew Murmes carried the scoring load for the Wildcats (1-3-1) in the victory, netting five points through four assists and a goal. The rest of Murmes’ line also performed well, as forward Blake Richards scored two and assistant captain Brady Lefferts had one goal and two assists on the night. Slugocki and forward Michael Ferreira also put the puck in the net, rounding out the scoring for the UA. The team led the entire way, scoring just 53 seconds into the game with a goal by Murmes. Goalkeeper David Herman’s shutout bid was ended after the Wolves scored a late goal with a little over two minutes left and the game well out of hand. “We came out playing,” head coach Sean Hogan said. “I think honestly we’re just a better team than they (Michigan-Dearborn) are right now. ” The game on Saturday was not quite as easy for the Wildcats as they faced Hogan’s old school, No. 11 Oakland University. However, the UA hung with Grizzlies and tied the game at the 10:27 mark in the second period with a short-handed goal by Murmes. After that, things went downhill for the Wildcats. “We had a few mistakes that those good teams capitalize on, and it blew the game open,” Hogan said. Oakland took the lead with 6:45 left in the second period and then put the game out of reach early in the third, scoring three goals before the 10-minute mark, making it 5-1. In the final game of the showcase, the UA played Stony Brook in what was a back-and-forth affair. The teams traded off goals until Edwin Montgomery put the Sea Wolves up 4-2 in the middle of the third period. Lefferts got the Wildcats within one on power play goal with 4:12 left on the clock, but they were never able to score an equalizer. The Sea Wolves then ended the game with a late empty net goal. “We were right on top of their goalie,” Hogan said, “we just couldn’t find the back of the net.” That loss gives the Wildcats a 1-3-1 record on the season, yet all five games have been against topranked opponents. Slugocki, the teams’ leading scorer last season, came into the showcase with a rib injury that forced him to miss most of the first two games against No. 7 ASU, but he said that the injury didn’t affect him much. Overall, the weekend was successful for the team even if the scores don’t indicate it, Hogan said. “We knew it would be tough having immediate success,” Hogan said. “But I think playing this level of competition, playing the ranked opponents, and competing like we did, I think it’s going to bring more national recognition to our program and I think it’s going to bode well for our upcoming weeks.”
Odds & Ends
Daily Wildcat
• Page 8
Arts & Life Contributor: Greg Gonzales • 520.621.3106 • arts@wildcat.arizona.edu
OFFBEAT
OVERHEARD ON CAMPUS
OPTICAL SCIENCES ILLUSION
Man 1: Wake the hell up. Man 2: Wake the hell down. — UA Main Library Submit your overheard on Twitter @OverheardAtUA
ON THE SPOT
The London Bridge is ... in Arizona? In 1971, the London Bridge was purchased and relocated to Lake Havasu, Arizona. Do you think that’s bad juju? You know, because of the song? “The London Bridge Is Falling Down”? I don’t think it’s a bad thing.
KEVIN BROST/DAILY WILDCAT
A large optical glass sphere resting on a steel tripod inside the west wing lobby of the Meinel Optical Science building. Optician Geoff Brett Hart spent hundreds of hours shaping the sphere before it was ready for presentation.
HOROSCOPES Today’s birthday: A strong organizational infrastructure and attention to detail save time and frustration, today and all year. Use mistakes to sharpen your edge, and stay persistent to tap into abundance. Make your home a place that sustains and nurtures you for success.
Aries
— Today is an 8 — You’ve got the advantage, and you’re looking good. Things are lining up in your favor, so go ahead with a delicious scheme. Finish the old job while planning the new.
Taurus — Today is a 9 — Go ahead,
get completely lost in your thoughts. Don’t put off what’s important, though. Your deadlines may seem like they come faster than usual, so be prepared.
Leo — Today is a 7 — Focus on love more Sagittarius — Today is an 8 —
Would the middle of downtown Tucson have worked? You know what? I probably would’ve traded it to, like, California for something more recognizable like the Golden Gate Bridge. And replacing that awful snake bridge? I could see that working.
than money now. It’s not a good time for gambling. Open windows appear, as long as you’re willing to see them. When you pursue a passion, hidden profit appears.
Abandoning a preconception could clear the way for new intrigue. There’s no reason to be nervous. You really are in control. You could just have fun with it.
Virgo — Today is a 5 — The hardest
Capricorn — Today is a 7 — Get into
Yeah, it would be awesome to have something classy like that in Tucson. Do we even have anything that compares? Anything that compares to the London Bridge? We have dirt. And saguaros. Didn’t we have something famous here? … We got John Dillinger. How much more awesomeness do we need?
Aquarius — Today is an 8 — Your
FAST FACTS
Pisces — Today is an 8 — A stroke
• One story about how the “Apple computer” got its name is that Steve Jobs worked on a farm with friends, and named it after the fruit they picked. • Another possibility is that it was a tribute to the Beatles’ record company, Apple Records, who sued them in 1989 for copyright violations.
part is to stay in the game. Don’t give up, and remember: It’s just a game. Play to win, but coming in second place is no shame. Do your best, and keep playing.
functional changes at home. Fix a leaky faucet or organize something that’s been slowing you down. A quiet family night revives everyone.
Gemini — Today is a 9 — You’d much Libra — Today is an 8 — Focus on how rather have fun, but a little focus gets a lot accomplished. Avoid an argument by cleaning up something. An unexpected change requires nimble thinking.
you want to contribute for the greater good. You’re not alone. Many others share your ideals. Get organized, and stay positive. Complaining makes no difference.
Cancer — Today is a 9 — Consider
Scorpio — Today is a 9 — The
new chances in your career and social pursuits. There’s room for error. Practice makes perfect. Keep going for it, even if you don’t see the money. It will come.
Neither do I. But would you have moved it somewhere else, given the opportunity? There are probably more interesting places to have put it, but I think it’s pretty funny that we took someSam Guber thing else from England and then UA alumnus put it in some out of the way city where nobody would ever find it. I didn’t even know there was a bridge in Lake Havasu City, much less a bridge that’s mentioned in a nursery rhyme. I’m not sure where else I would have put it.
capacity to study and concentrate are especially sharp, as is your connection to peers. Use this to forward a professional aim. Stay flexible and conserve resources.
impulse is to work and achieve now. Don’t sacrifice your health to increase your income. Avoid being a borrower or a lender, too. Relax to keep a balance.
October 10
TODAY IS
Wildcat Calendar Campus Events
Professional Development Seminar - “Resume Writing” Monday, October 10, 2011 11 a.m. - 11:50 a.m. This seminar provides information about how to write your professional resume and job search letters - focusing on content and format. No prior sign-up required. Student Union Memorial Center Career Services Room: 411 Biosciences Toastmasters Club Meeting Monday, October 10, 2011 12 p.m. - 1 p.m. The Biosciences Toastmasters Club offers a great environment for scientists and other professionals to practice speaking and leaderships skills, an area of development often overlooked in specialized higher education. Bring your lunch and join us! Medical Research Building Room: 102 “Being an Inclusive Leader” Workshop Monday, October 10, 2011 12 p.m. - 1 p.m. How diverse is your world? Come explore the nature of diversity and learn about how diversity matters. Learn how effective leaders create an inclusive environment where everyone matters. Student Union Memorial Center Room: 404
of genius opens up the previously unimaginable. You’re in the eye of the storm, and there could be a test. Stay energized by taking frequent thinking breaks.
• The last theory about the origin of the name Apple is that Jobs wanted his company to appear before Atari in the phonebook. • The first logo for Apple was Sir Isaac Newton sitting under an apple tree, but Jobs considered it too intellectual and it was hard to see in small print.
Campus Events
Made for Flight Workshop Monday, October 10, 2011 4 p.m. - 6 p.m. Made for Flight is a transgender youth and ally empowerment workshop series designed to celebrate youth voice and resiliency. We build kites to commemorate the transgender individuals who have been murdered in the last year. Student Union Memorial Center Room: Union Gallery “Interviewing for Jobs and Internships” Professional Development Seminar Monday, October 10, 2011 3 p.m. - 3:50 p.m. Learn what to expect and how to prepare for an interview so that you can answer interview questions with ease. No prior sign-up required. Student Union Memorial Center Room: 411 Fall Plant Sale - Plus Smooth Jazz Guitar & Wine Tasting Bring your CatCard or another valid form of UA i.d. for free admission to Boyce Thompson Arboretum during the big Fall Plant Sale fundraiser Oct. 7-23. Daily admission is normally $9 for adults and $4.50 for ages 5-12 at BTA, an affiliate of the College of Life Sciences and Agriculture. http:// ag.arizona.edu/bta/
Campus Events
Biosphere 2 Tours Friday, September 17, 2010 - Saturday, December 31, 2011 Open daily for tours from 9 a.m. - 4 p.m.; Closed Thanksgiving and Christmas Biosphere 2 is located just north of Tucson in the middle of a magnificent natural desert preserve at a cool elevation of nearly 4,000 feet. “Time Life Books” recently named Biosphere 2 one of the 50 must-see “Wonders of the World.” Where: 32540 S. Biosphere Road, Oracle, Arizona 85623 Room: Biosphere 2 Visitor Center. To make reservations: 520-838-6200 email: info@B2science.org
Of Note
San Xavier Mission Guided Tours 1950 W. San Xavier Road Docents lead 45-minute tours of the National Historic Landmark, Monday Saturday, and explain the mission’s rich history and ornate interior that includes painted murals and original statuary. 520-294-2624
Gallery
Rockin the Desert: Photographs by Baron Wolman and Lynn Goldsmith Presented by Etherton Gallery at Etherton Gallery September 10-November 12. Etherton Gallery is pleased to announce our first show of the 2011-2012 season, Rockin the Desert: Photographs by Baron Wolman and Lynn Goldsmith. Rockin’ the Desert is Etherton Gallery’s contribution to the larger downtown celebration, Tucson Rocks! Baron Wolman, the first photographer for Rolling Stone magazine and celebrated portrait photographer Lynn Goldsmith, give us backstage passes to some of rock n’ roll’s most important moments and the legends who lived them. (520) 624-7370 135 South 6th Avenue Mí Musica exhibition Sep 3, through Oct 15, 2011. Art can give music a visual dimension in the same way music can illustrate art, both are connected by a common global image and culture. “Mí Musica” brings together artists with an exhibition of their visual interpretations of music in paintings, sculpture, and multimedia works. Raices Taller 222 Art Gallery & Workshop 218 E. 6th Street (1/2 block east of 6th St. & 6th Ave.) (520) 881-5335 visit us at: http: //www.raicestaller222.webs.com Día de los Muertos Exhibit at Tohono Chul Park September 01, 2011 - November 06, 2011,7366 North Paseo del Norte, 520742-6455 Tohono Chul Park showcases fanciful and moving contemporary paintings, photographs, quilts, and artful works that link us as human beings in dealing with death, loss and remembrance.
To sponsor this calendar, or list an event, email dailywildcatcalendar@gmail.com or call 621.3425 Deadline 3pm 2 business days prior to publication
News Tips: 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 Luke Money at news@wildcat. arizona.edu or call the newsroom at 621-3193.
Daily Wildcat SERVING THE UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA SINCE 1899 Vol. 105, Issue 35
The Daily Wildcat is an independent student newspaper published Monday through Friday during the fall and spring semesters at the University of Arizona. It is distrubted on campus and throughout Tucson with a circulation of 10,000. 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 in the Daily Wildcat are the sole property of the 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 mutiple copies will be considered theft and may be prosecuted. Additional copies of the Daily Wildcat are available from the Student Media office. The Arizona Daily Wildcat is a member of The Associated Press and the Associated Collegiate Press.
News Reporters Alexandra Bortnik Savannah Martin Stewart McClintic Kyle Mittan Samantha Munsey Rebecca Rillos Amer Taleb Michelle A. Weiss Sports Reporters Kelly Hultgren Kyle Johnson Dan Kohler Zack Rosenblatt Mike Schmitz
Arts & Life Writers Christy Delehanty Joe Dusbabek Jason Krell K.C. Libman Cecelia Marshall Ashley Pearlstein Josh Weisman Columnists Jacquelyn Abad Kristina Bui Michelle A. Monroe Caroline Nachazel Joshua Segall
Photographers Robert Alcaraz Gordon Bates Kevin Brost Annie Marum Valentina Martinelli Juni Nelson Colin Prenger Rebecca Rillos Ernie Somoza Amy Webb Designers Taylor Bacic Daniella Castillo Kelsey Dieterich
Steven Kwan Ina Lee Brendan Rice Eric Vogt Copy Editors Greg Gonzales Jason Krell Charles Misra Sarah Precup Lynley Price Zack Rosenblatt Advertising Account Executives Amalia Beckmann
Editor in Chief Nicole Dimtsios
Design Chief Colin Darland
Web Director Andrew Starkman
Asst. Design Chief Rebecca Rillos
News Editor Luke Money
Arts & Life Editor Jazmine Woodberry
Asst. Photo Editor Janice Biancavilla
Sports Editor Kevin Zimmerman
Photo Editor Will Ferguson
Asst. News Editors Brenna Goth Eliza Molk
Opinions Editor Storm Byrd
Copy Chief Kristina Bui
Bozsho Margaretich Megan Mitchell Alex Nielsen Aly Pearl Luke Pergande John Reed Jenna Whitney Training Manager Zach McClain Sales Manager Courtney Wood
Asst. Sports Editor Alex Williams
Advertising Designers Lindsey Cook Fiona Foster Elizabeth Moeur Andrew Nguyen Sergei Tuterov
Asst. Arts & Life Editor Miranda Butler Asst. Copy Chief Bethany Barnes
Accounting Nicole Browning Su Hyun Kim Jake Storer Chi Zhang
Classified Advertising Katie Jenkins Christal Montoya Samantha Motowski Jenn Rosso
Marketing Manager Mackenzie Corley
for corrections or complaints concerning news and editorial content of the Daily Wildcat should be directed to the editor in chief. For further information on the Daily Wildcat’s CORRECTIONS Requests approved grievance policy, readers may contact Mark Woodhams, director of Arizona Student Media, in the Sherman R. Miller III Newsroom at the Park Student Union.
Contact Us Editor in Chief editor@wildcat.arizona.edu News Editor news@wildcat.arizona.edu Opinions Editor letters@wildcat.arizona.edu Photo Editor photo@wildcat.arizona.edu Sports Editor sports@wildcat.arizona.edu Arts & Life Editor arts@wildcat.arizona.edu
Newsroom 615 N. Park Ave. Tucson, Arizona 85721 520-621-3551 Advertising Department 520-621-3425
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ExTrAS nEEdEd To stand in the backgrounds for a major film production. Earn up to $300/day. No experience required. Call 877460-0657
Egg donorS nEEdEd! Healthy females ages 18-30. Donate to infertile couples some of the many eggs your body disposes monthly. COMPENSATION $5,000. Call Reproductive Solutions. (818)8321494. http://donor.eggreproductive.com Reproductive Solutions abides by all federal and state guidelines regarding egg donation, as well as all ASRM guidelines
hELp wAnTEd. MoTivATE servers and promoters for Adobo island. Will work with your schedule. Call Belle for an interview 520465-2772 Looking for An artist to create (4) original hip hop style designs in JPG format. Contact Bernadette 520-980-2802 pArEnT‑ chiLd viSiT Supervi‑ sor at Aviva Children’s Services, must be available to work 1-6pm at least 4days per week and occasional Saturdays. Must have reliable personal vehicle, valid driver’s license, personal computer with internet services, cell phone and appropriate car insurance. Must be at least 21 years old. Visit http://avivatucson.org for more information. Send resume by email to hr@avivatucson.org or by fax to 903-0430.
own A coMpuTEr, put it to work earn up to $1,500/pt $7,500/ft will train, apply online: wealthywithrak.com
Looking for uofA students to run and write for goazwildcats.com, a site dedicated to UofA basketball and football. Call 702-7388488.
!!!!BArTEndEring!!!! up TO $250/ DAy. NO ExPERIENCE NECESSARy. TRAINING COURSES AVAILABLE. AGE 19+ OK. CALL 800-965-6520 ExT.139
pArT‑ TiME nAnny nEEdEd for nice NW family. 5yr & 3yr old. 2days/ week 8-5; days flexible. Car required. Contact Monica at mderrick@mmgm-law.com. $1012/hr
ATTEnTion high‑ EnErgy hArdworking, fun part-time job seeking students. Join our restaurant family. Busser to start. Travel experience in Spain, love of good food, wine, and bilingual (Spanish- English) a plus. Call 884-5253 for interview.
STudEnTpAyouTS.coM pAid survey takers needed in Tucson. 100% FREE to join! Click on surveys.
EArn MonEy in a Sociology Experiment! For more information and to sign up visit www.u.arizona.edu/~mwhitham/1.html
wAnTEd: MEnTorS MentorKids USA, a faith-based youth mentoring program (mentorkidstucson.com) and 1-on-1 Mentoring, a community-based program (1on1mentoring.com) is seeking top-quality role-models for kids aged 5-17. For more information call 624-4765 or email mentorkidsusatucson@gmail.com.
BrAnd nEw MATTrESS sets Full $130, Queen Pillow Top $175, King Pillow Top $199, Twin $99 In original plastic w/Warranty Can deliver 520-745-5874
MATTrESS SALE! 2 piEcE Mattress & Box Spring set. Twin sets $99. Full sets $115. Queen sets $135. Warranty available. Will match any price. Delivery available. Visa/MC/Disc. Tucson Furniture, 4241 E. Speedway, 3236163 Se Habla EspaĂąol.
cLoSE To uofA‑ 1BR, 1BA apts. A/C, carpet/ tile, stove, refrig, din. Area, comm. Pool, laundry onsite, beautiful grounds, No pets, 1 upstairs/ 1 downstairs available, 3800 E. 4th St., #18, #15, $525/mo. incl. water, also available Studio, end unit, evap. cooling, tile, walk-in closet, $400/mo. incl. utilities, The Property Mgmt. Group, 721-7121. ELEgAnT dupLEx. 2Br 1BA new carpet. Beehive fireplace, hot tub, Speedway/ Country Club. 1st, last month security. 323-7287 firST MonTh frEE with your lease. 2BR 1BA 973sqft, fenced yard, pets okay. 1114 E Ft. Lowell. Bike route to campus. $695. 6827877
$87.50 MovES you IN! A GREAT PLACE FOR STUDENTS! FREE Shuttle to the UofA! 1&2 BDs. 24hr fitness & laundry. Pool & spa, Ramada w/gas grills, gated access. Student discount, business center. Call Deerfield Village @520-323-9516 www.deerfieldvillageapts.com
2Br+2BA *ShorT TErM condo rEnTAL 2Blocks from campus on university Ave parents, Alumni, visitors, vendors. fully equipped & fur‑ nished. garage/Street parking. call 818‑708‑1770 See: vrBo.‑ com/284572
2BEdrooM, 1BATh, wALking distance to campus, evaporative cooling. $670/mo, water paid, internet included. 1321 N. 1st Avenue. Call 520-370-8588
7Th STrEET And Park- studio, 1br, 3br. 444-6213/ 429-3829
LArgE STudioS 6BLockS UofA, 1125 N. 7th Ave. Walled yard, security gate, doors, windows, full bath, kitchen. Free wi/fi. $380. 977-4106 sunstoneapts@aol.com SAndpipEr ApArTMEnTS, frEE utilities, rate specials. 1Bedroom. 795-2356 SAvE MonEy & TiME 1block UofA. Private patio, parking newly tiled, 3bdrm. Price below market value. 356 N. Euclid. Check it out! 405-7278 STudioS froM $400 spacious apartment homes with great downtown location. 884‑8279. Blue Agave Apartments 1240 n. 7th Ave. Speedway/Stone. www.blueagaveapartments.‑ com
1Br, A/c, covErEd porch, shared fenced yard and W/D. $600 all utilities included. 4th Ave and 6th Street. 730-5625.
Attention Classified Readers: The Arizona Daily Wildcat screens classified advertising for misleading or false messages, but does not guarantee any ad or any claim. Please be cautious in answering ads, especially when you are asked to send cash, money orders, or a check. Publisher’s Notice: All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or intention to make any such preferences, limitations or discrimination. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis.
2Bd 1BA: furniShEd AMEni‑ TiES incLudE cABLE, Tv, cEn‑ TrAL hEAT And Ac, TABLE TEnniS, MounTAin viEwS. 15 MinuTES froM ThE uni‑ vErSiTy. $600/Mo BASEd on douBLE occupAncy. phonE JAnicE AT 520‑325‑3610
!!!!!!!!*** Brand new 6bdrm/ 7ba‑ single family res‑ hugE Living room + giAnT 20’x30’ dEn + BIG office LIBRARY‑ ONE of a kind‑ new furniture avail. $2,800/mo oBo. 388‑0781 roB.
1Bd unATTAchEd guEST house with water and internet paid a/c security doors fenced yard $400 REDI 520-623-5710 or log on to www.azredirentals.com
!‑ uncoMpArABLE Luxury‑ 6BdrM 6BATHS each has own WHIRLPOOL tub- shower. 5car GARAGE, walk-in closets, all Granite counters, large outside patios off bedrooms, full private laundry, very large master suites, high ceilings. TEP Electric discount. Monitored security system. Very close to UA 884-1505 www.myUofARental.com.
guEST houSE. $600 includes utilities/ internet. On UA bike path at Prince/ Mountain. Quiet, intown. Tiled throughout, A/C, patio, D/W. Deposit/ lease/ references. 237-2951
3Bd 2BA $1300 beautiful home 5blocks from UofA. Fireplace, D/W, W/D, porch, carport, AC, volleyball court, tile floors, alarm system. DMT Properties. Call Ilene 520-240-6487.
LofT STyLE guEST house. 1100sf, Private yard, 11ft ceiling, floor to ceiling windows, concrete floors, rammed earth. No pets. Avail Dec1. $900/ month +utilities. freesamh@gmail.com
3Bd 2BA houSE 1300sqft, Large backyard, nice front yard, carport, near UofA. Glenn/ Campbell. 2749 N Warren Ave. $975/mo. 240-9033
2Br 1BA, Ac, fenced yard $700. 1702 N. Highland. Call 743-0667
! 5BLockS nw uA HUGE Luxury Homes 4br/ 4.5ba +3car garage +large master suites with walk-in closets +balconies +10ft ceilings up and down +DW, W&D, Pantry, TEP electric discount, monitored security system. Pool privileges. 884-1505 www.myUofArental.com !!! 5BEdrooM 3BATh, onLy 4blocks to the UofA $2000 Kitchen with tons of cabinet space! Big Bedrooms & closets, fenced yard, tons of parking, washer & dryer, fireplace, very cute front porch for relaxing after a long day! Call Chantel 520.398.5738
3Bd houSE cArporT fenced yard $900 ALSO 2400sqft 4bd/ 3ba a/c washer dryer pets ok $1400 REDI 520-623-5710 or log on to www.azredirentals.com 3Bd, 2BTh hoME in Nice family neighborhood in North West Tucson, minutes from a freeway entrance. $1000mth, flxble lease. Call 520-834-7520 to see. 3Br/ 2BA houSE 1578sqft 2317 N Los Altos (1mi from UofA) Appliances, fenced yard. $990/mo Available November 15. May swap for property near Barry University in Miami. Call for application 602568-9806.
ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT CLASSIFIED MAIL-IN FORM Deadline: Noon one business day before publication WRITE AD BELOW—ONE WORD PER BLANK
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rning 75
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monday, october
• Daily Wildcat
10, 2011
4BEdrooM 3BATh $1200 Home with spacious living room, full size washer and dryer, dishwasher, storage room, private balcony, tile throughout the house with carpet in the bedrooms! Plenty of parking, right off the Mountain bike path, 5blocks to UA. Call Amy 520.440.7776
6BEdrooM 5BATh– A must see! Great two story floor plan with garage at Mabel and Cherry. Open living room, separate dining area, large bedrooms & closets, fenced yard and lots of storage. Call Chantel 520.245.5604
Awesome Brand new 5bdrm, 2Bath houses $2775/ month‑ available January 2012. Washer/ Dryer, A/C, balconies, walk-in closets, alarm system, pets welcome plus more. http://www.UniversityRentalinfo.com No Security Deposit (o.a.c.) Call 747-9331
SMALL houSE wATEr paid pets ok fenced yard $425 ALSO 2bd house water paid off street parking $575 REDI 520-623-5710 or log on to www.azredirentals.com
Lgr. 2Bdr coTTAgE SAM HUGHES NEIGH/ 2BLKS TO CAMPUS PRIV BATH PARKING/ WASHER/ DRyER THEATER GRAD, EASy GOING 485 MONTH/ 485 DEP. INCL WATER +GAS/ ELEC/ CHARMING/ TxT/ CALL KATHRyN 730-7857
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1furniShEd rooM wiTh private bath and entrance. UofA/ UMC no kitchen but refrigerator and microwave. Cable TV, internet, utilities included. No smoking. $440/mo. Tim 795-1499 timaz2000@cox.net
Arizona
The economy is still hiring, you just need to stand out a bit more! professional resume/ cover‑letter writing services. for a free consultation email: poletopoleconsulting@gmail.‑ com. $150
rELEASE pSychoLogicAL SkiLLS/ anxiety blocks using certified non-invasive therapeutic method, brian spotting. Turning points therapy. Helen Svob LAMFT 520-247-4961
WE’vE gOT YOU COvERED
DAILY WILDCAT CAMPUS DISTRIBUTION SITES •Administration •Alumni Building •AME •Enrollment Mgmt. •Babcock •Baskin Robbins •Chavez
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•Main Library •Manzi/Mo •Maricopa •McClelland •McKale Center •MLK Center •Modern Languages
•Mountain & Second St. •Park & University •Park Student Union •Police Station •Rec Center •Saguaro Hall
•Social Sciences •Speech, Language & Hearing •Student Union —Canyon Cafe —Near Info Desk —Near Games Rm
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monday, october
10, 2011
Daily Wildcat •
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WHAT’S GOING ON?
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WHAT’S GOINGWO N’? HAT S GOING ON? WHAT’S GOING ON?
do you want... answers to your ques�ons about sex and rela�onships
less stress? better grades? less sickness? better mood? Getting enough sleep each night improves ability to manage stress, boosts the immune system, sharpens concentration and memory for studying, and enhances overall physical and emotional health.
Cooking on Campus: It’s All About Breakfast! Tomorrow, 5:15pm at the Rec Center. Food samples, recipes, and more for only $5! Call 621-8702 for more info.
Q
Why don’t you talk about abstinence?
A. But we do! Check out our SexTalk archives online at health.arizona.edu and see for yourself. This column strives to provide accurate, balanced advice on sexual health and relationships. Our hope is to make SexTalk a reliable place that offers answers, options and resources to help students make informed decisions. The questions we answer have everything to do with SexTalk’s Q&A format, however. In other words, if a student asks “what’s the best condom type to get,� as appeared in our 8/22/11 edition, mentioning abstinence isn’t always relevant, given the question. We all know that abstinence is the only 100% effective option that prevents against sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) and unintended pregnancy. But here’s something you might not have considered – it’s also probably the one prevention method all of us use or have used. And while it’s often perceived in absolute terms, abstinence is always a good option to avoid STDs and unplanned pregnancy, no matter what your sexual history is. Waiting on sex can have other benefits as well. Consider that abstinence is free, has no medical or hormonal side effects, and can be practiced at any time. Some may
abstain because they don’t feel ready for sex yet, or haven’t found the right partner. Others may wait to focus on academics, work or extracurricular activities, while others may skip sex to get over a recent breakup. In addition to these reasons, many people abstain as an extension of their personal, moral, or religious beliefs. According to the 2011 Health & Wellness Survey (N=2,479) more students are abstaining than you might think. In addition to students who have had sex in the past but are not currently sexually active, the survey revealed that 30% had never had vaginal intercourse, 81% had never had anal intercourse and 27% had never had oral sex. The take away message from these numbers is clear: students who choose to abstain are certainly not alone at the UA. Whatever your thoughts on sex and relationships, we’re here to help you make healthy choices in line with your values. And the great thing about SexTalk is, you don’t need to be having sex to be in the know!
SCAN THIS FOR MORE SEXTALK!
Have a question? Send it to sextalk@email.arizona.edu www.health.arizona.edu
SexTalk is written by Lee Ann Hamilton, M.A., CHES, David Salafsky, MPH, and Carrie Hardesty, BS, CHES, health educators at The UA Campus Health Service.
tips for better sleep
www.health.arizona.edu
• Keep regular bedtime/ waking hours • Exercise regularly • Avoid caffeine and nicotine in the evening • Keep up with schoolwork • Minimize sleep disruptions with a dark, quiet bedroom (try ear plugs and a sleep mask)
injured? Sports Medicine doctors are available to you! Injuries can occur anywhere from participating in intramurals to everyday mishaps. The Campus Health Service has qualified doctors who are able to assist with your sports medicine needs.
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12
SPORTS •
• DAILY WILDCAT
HALL
FROM PAGE 7
ence-worst 487.7 yards per game. Although he looked healthy on Saturday, Hall’s recovery won’t come without bumps and bruises. “I haven’t really hit anyone in six months,” Hall told the media after the game. “My body’s got to turn itself to get used to contact all the time.”
Juron Criner leaves game with sprained knee
The setbacks continue for Arizona’s star receiver Juron Criner. The senior wideout, who has undergone appendicitis surgery this season, sprained his knee after fighting for extra yards in the first quarter. Criner did not return and finished
the game with two catches for 16 yards. Stoops told the media that Criner should be back by the UCLA game on Oct. 20 and that the injury is nothing too serious. But even when Criner’s Juron Criner been healthy, he’s been senior receiver a shell of his former self. The 6-foot-4, 215-pound All-American has only one game over 100 yards this season and has only gone over 50 yards receiving in two of the five games he’s played. Junior Texas transfer Dan Buckner, who finished with eight catches for 144 yards and a touchdown, has replaced Criner as Arizona’s most deadly threat this season.
Now, Arizona must use any momentum from the weekend to its advantage. “(The team needs to) do a lot of what we did in the first half (on Friday) and just keep this week for that. It was awesome,” Smith said. Smith had a solid performance herself on the momentum,” Jett said. “Especially now that we weekend, and her first career goal happened to have the confidence that we know we can win.” be the one that gave the Wildcats their first win of the season. Arizona loses key player “I’m so excited and it feels good to do it at home,” said Smith, who attributed her score on a Junior forward Renee Cuellar will no longer be penalty kick to her routine and discipline. suiting up for the Wildcats. “Honestly, it’s about staying disciplined and “She’s not going to continue with the team this it’s about not using power and getting so amped season,” head coach Lisa Oyen said. up that you’re about to score … you have to know One of Arizona’s few bright spots in the past exactly where you’re going to go and just stay few seasons, Cuellar had 13 shots on goal and where you’re comfortable,” she added. was held scoreless on the year.
SOCCER
Swimming dominates Kansas, cruises to victory in opener Arizona women’s swimming started the 2011-12 season off with a bang Saturday at Hillenbrand Stadium against the Kansas Jayhawks, winning 13 out of 14 events. The meet could not have gone much better, said head coach Eric Hansen. “The whole group really swam well. We executed well, and showed up strong,” he said. Sophomore Margo Geer and senior Alyssa Anderson won seven events combined. Geer won individually in the 50-meter freestyle, 100m freestyle and 200m freestyle along with the 200m freestyle relay. Anderson won the 1000m freestyle, 200m butterfly and 500m freestyle. Of the four races Geer won, the most impressive was the 100m freestyle in which she recorded a time of 24.08 seconds, the top time nationally. Despite that, she and the rest of the team are focused on a larger goal. “I need to keep it up,” Geer said. “I’m not going to let that go to my head. It’s still very early.” In practices this week, the coaching staff stressed the importance of the relay teams and how they were going to impact the season. They were not disappointed Saturday, as the relay teams won both the 200m medley relay and the 200m freestyle relay, something Hansen was especially proud of. “It shows what we’re capable of, and that we have the personnel,” he said. “It’s exciting to see.” The swim team started the season strong, but Hansen is worried about the long term. “Nothing matters until the last meet of March,” he said. “The goal is to decrease our mistakes as we get further into the season. I’m impressed with the team and how everybody’s settled into their role.”
Women’s cross-country places first in Goodyear, men’s team takes second place
Log onto dailywildcat.com/contests and tell us the location of Gingy in the above photo.
10, 2011
SPORTS RECAP
—Cameron Moon
Where in Wildcat Country is GINGY?
MONDAY, OCTOBER
The Arizona women’s cross-country team won the Grand Canyon Invitational on Saturday with six of its seven runners finishing in the top 10, while the men came in second place behind ASU. Senior Hanna Henson came in first place for the women, followed by freshmen Nicci Corbin and Clea Formaz in second and third place, respectively.
Junior Rory McLeod was the men’s top runner this weekend, finishing in seventh place. He was followed by freshman Dylan Souza, who earned ninth place overall. A total of six runners competed for the Arizona men’s team while the rest of the team trained. The men’s team overall has shown progress and came in second place in the 8,000-meter race after ASU. “The race was great and the girls that did not compete had an awesome workout in preparation for next week,” junior Megan Meyer said. “We are all ready to score some major points at Wisconsin on Friday.” Top runners from both teams spent the weekend training with drills such as 1,200m repeats on Friday and 90-minute runs on Saturday. The Wildcats will be competing in one of the biggest meets of the year, the Wisconsin adidas Invitational in Madison, Wisc., this Friday. —Emi Komiya
M-tennis impresses at N.M. invitational A developing Arizona men’s tennis team traveled to Albuquerque, N.M., this past weekend to earn valuable experience in the 2011 Balloon Fiesta Invitational, hosted by the University of New Mexico. “We brought a young group of guys,” said head coach Tad Berkowitz. “It was a productive tournament and the guys are definitely progressing in the right direction.” On Sunday, freshman Robin Chou fell short in the three-set match of the Flight B singles finals to Alex Grubbs from US Air Force Academy 6-2, 4-6, 7-6. Chou defeated NAU’s Rob Martin in the quarterfinals 6-1, 6-1, and he was the only Wildcat to advance to the finals on Sunday after beating NAU’s Josh Brown with final scores of 6-4, 6-1. Fellow freshman Carlos Bermudez advanced to the Flight A quarterfinals after defeating Steven Young from the US Air Force Academy in the round of 16 play 6-2, 6-2. He then defeated Landon Kinsley from the U.S. Air Force Academy in the quarterfinals of the Flight A singles play 6-2, 6-3. However in the semifinals, Bermudez fell short to Ben Dunbar from New Mexico with scores of 7-5, 6-1. In the semifinals of Flight B singles play, junior Frank Chen lost to Alex Grubbs from the U.S. Air Force Academy 6-1, 6-1. In doubles play, Bermudez and Chen lost in the semifinals to Rob Pezzuto and Shaun Waters of NAU with a final score of 8-4. — Iman Hamdan