INTERIM COACH LOOKS TO MOVE FORWARD
NORDSTROM RACK COMES TO THE CORNER
STOOPS OUT: DECISION VITAL PERSPECTIVES – 4
SPORTS – 6
ARTS & LIFE – 3
DAILY WILDCAT
Wednesday, october ,
DAILYWILDCAT.COM
SERVING THE UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA SINCE 1899
Library looks to expand e-book offerings Places greater emphasis on adding electronic formats over replacing paper-bound books By Samantha Munsey DAILY WILDCAT
The UA Main Library prefers e-books to paper when it comes to adopting more resources for students. After receiving feedback from students and conducting loophole assessments at the end of each school year, the library staff has
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seen requests for more electronic material. As a result, a policy was created to encourage the purchasing of electronic books before paper. “The library can’t afford to buy things in multiple formats generally,” said Doug Jones, the library’s circulation coordinator. “When we are acquiring materials, the preferred
format is electronic and that is based on a lot of feedback from most users.” One aspect of the policy regards the replacement of library books on the shelf that appear to be damaged or outdated. If the same content is available through e-book or other online databases, the library will not replace the paper book on the shelf. “If they are not usable anymore, like if the book is ripped out or too fragile, we take that into account and do an assessment,” Jones said. “A variety of
It may look like a slightly dated building compared to the villas that are going up next door, but it will have all the amenities that you’re going to find in the other dorms.” — Christopher Kraft, a facilities project manager
RAISING
factors come into play if we’re going to replace it, then the same general guidelines would be in place, and, if we feel if it is important to replace that title, then the first thing that we will see is if it is available electronically.” Joshua Indani, an economics freshman, said he thinks the move to have more of the library’s books online is better than replacing existing books on the shelf because it will make the resources more readily available to the student. “Getting your books online is
better because it is a lot easier to use.” Indani said. “There is really no point to replace any books on the shelf if you can get it online.” While some students might see the move to more online material as beneficial, others think it may limit resources and the way students get information. “I find more of my information online, but I think that books are better,” said Melissa Woznicki,
BOOKS, 2
WORTH
$27.8 mil
NOTING
The total cost of the Residence Life Building Renewal Phase III project
Sander holds Campus Forum
>> President Sander will hold a town hall-style meeting in the Gallagher Theater in the Student Union Memorial Center at noon today.
CORONADO
Bad day?
>> It’s International Moment of Frustration Scream Day. But take heart, it’s also Bring Your Teddy Bear to Work and School Day.
MULTI MEDIA
For breaking news and multimedia coverage of the biggest stories on campus check out dailywildcat.com
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KEVIN BROST / DAILY WILDCAT
Left: The nine-story Coronado Residence Hall, built in 1966, undergoes construction and renovation on Tuesday. The project to renovate the Coronado and Cochise residence halls is currently 5 percent complete.
45-year-old residence hall gets first set of renovations in 18 years By Alexandra Bortnik DAILY WILDCAT
As Coronado Residence Hall undergoes its third phase of construction, much of the building has been demolished and approximately 5 percent of the project is complete, according to the UA’s Project Status Report. Built in 1966, this is the first time in 18 years that the residence hall is undergoing renovations. Plans for the hall’s revamp include replacing mechanical, electrical and plumbing systems, and renovating bathrooms. Christopher Kraft, a facilities project manager, said the size of the common spaces will be increased and unnecessary amenities such as ironing board rooms will be eliminated. The superstructure of Coronado will remain
the same, according to Kraft, and updating the interior of the building is the focus of the renovation. “We’re not just improving what’s there, we’re renovating the place and making it new,” Kraft said. “Everything except the structure is being replaced with brand-new finishes, brand-new plumbing fixtures, brand-new showers, brand-new washers and dryers, brand-new everything. It’s going to be like a new building, but in the … concrete and brick tower that we all know and love.” Seth Litman, a psychology senior who lived in Coronado his freshman year, said the dryers, which cost money to use, never completely dried his clothes and led him to use
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CORONADO, 2
Townhall meetings set CAMPUS REACTS for presidential search ARIZONA FOOTBALL
By Brenna Goth DAILY WILDCAT
Students and community members can give their input on what they want in the UA’s next president at forums this week. The Arizona Board of Regents Presidential Search Committee will hold town hall-style meetings on campus Thursday and Friday. Participants are invited to share the qualities they seek in the new president as well as bring up issues they think he or she will face. The committee, made up of regents and representatives, has outlined characteristics of candidates. A search firm is also working with the committee throughout the process. Open forums will allow the community to participate, said Regent Rick Myers, co-chair of the committee. Attendees do not have to submit comments ahead of time, allowing them to participate freely, he said. “We’re going to be in listening mode,” Myers said. “We want to get as many views as possible.” President Eugene Sander said he is not directly involved in the process but encourages students
If you go Thursday, 3 to 4:30 p.m. in Tucson Catalina and Tucson rooms in the Student Union Memorial Center.
to attend and meet members of the committee and see the search process. “It’ll show the search committee you’re interested,” Sander said. The forums will also help gauge the priorities and expectations of those who are affected by the university, Myers said. “Having a strong UA helps create a multifaceted, vibrant community,” Myers said. “It improves the quality of life.” The feedback will be recorded and used to guide the committee’s conversations, Myers said. It will also be given to the new president. “We want to close the loop in the end,” Myers said. “It’s a window into the thinking of the state and community.”
TO STOOPS’ FIRING Students express opinions about the sudden firing of head football coach Mike Stoops “I was extremely excited and I think it was a very smart decision for the football athletic department at this time. I’ve been to every football game, they’ve lost every home game so far this year, I’m pissed (laughs).”
“I think it will definitely benefit the program of the Wildcats. I absolutely think it was fair, I don’t think he was very good at all.”
“I respect the man but screaming and yelling can Tim Sherman marketing only get you so far. After a senior while it becomes kind of old and tiring, so maybe it’s time for a fresh face … Wildcats all the way, just win.” “It’s about time…” — Brandon Born, political science junior — Tyler Tompkins, natural resources senior Travis Goodson regional development junior
REACT, 10
2
News •
• Daily Wildcat
wednesday, october
12, 2011
Nursing students produce video Educational segment will show operation of breathing device By Savannah Martin Daily Wildcat
UA nursing students are creating an educational video that will teach patients how to use the incentive spirometer. This will allow the students to gain new skills and demonstrate their dedication to nursing. The video, made for the University of Arizona Medical Center-University Campus, will be used to help patients understand how to correctly use the device, which is designed to help them breath. Their knowledge of how to use the device is crucial to the students’ progress once they’ve completed their treatment at the hospital. Over the past month, six senior nursing students have volunteered their time to write a script for the film under the direction of Kara Snyder, a clinical nurse specialist at the medical center. They will film the video this coming Tuesday. The students said the video will educate patients in a straightforward, engaging way. Having the video available to patients will also increase efficiency in the hospital, they said, because nurses will be able to spend
kevin brost / Daily Wildcat
Nursing students Megan Graham and Devon Cassidy discuss the procedures and demonstrate the technology used in their practices at the College of Nursing on Tuesday.
less time teaching patients how to use the device. This project has taught the students communication, collaboration and leadership skills that they will carry with them into their professional careers, they said. “We get exposure to the different steps it takes to put something
into motion and to affect change at a hospital,” said nursing senior Deidra Reiff. Additionally, the students said, the project has enabled them to extend their reach beyond the classrooms and the simulation labs. The video will allow them to directly impact the lives of patients.
“It’s our way of getting out in the community,” said nursing senior Megan Graham. According to Doug Cunningham, a clinical instructor at the College of Nursing, creating the incentive spirometry video has helped the students connect the material they have been studying to the work they
will be doing in the field. Additionally, he said, the project has allowed them to establish a network within the hospital. “In a competitive field, it’s good to know people in good positions,” he said. Snyder has been overseeing the students’ work and said the project is an effective way of involving both the College of Nursing and the medical center in improving the quality of service the hospital offers. “I think it’s a wonderful collaboration between our two organizations,” Snyder said. The incentive spirometry video is only one example of how the College of Nursing and community hospitals work together. Linda Perez, a clinical instructor at the College of Nursing, said students work with St. Joseph’s Hospital, and many of them volunteer at various health events, such as the annual stroke fair. Work with community hospitals helps students understand where they want to apply for professional positions in the future and gives them a chance prove their skills, she said. According to Snyder, students provide fresh ideas and solutions because they are new to the hospital environment. Snyder said the medical center is hoping to involve itself more fully in the school’s activities and improve the partnership. “The collaboration is only going to get more exciting,” she said.
Greeks examine drug problems Online data
spreads faster than users think
Chapter leaders gather with health reps to learn warning signs of abuse By Eliza Molk
Mcclatchy tribune
Daily Wildcat
Chapter leaders of Greek Life were taught how to spot and approach members with potential drug problems at an executive board training session for Drug Awareness Week on Tuesday. Representatives from Campus Health Service, the University of Arizona Police Department and the Oasis Program, a relationship violence prevention program at Campus Health, taught at the event, which was hosted by the governing bodies of UA Greek Life. Greek Life’s Drug Awareness Week is meant to educate the greek community about the dangers of drug use, an issue especially close to home after the death of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity member Wilson Forrester from an accidental overdose. Lynn Reyes, an alcohol and other drug prevention specialist at Campus Health, explained to attendees about the different categories of drugs — stimulants, depressants and others. Stimulants, she said, can raise a person’s heart rate, blood pressure and energy level, while depressants lower the functioning of the central nervous system and as more doses are added to the body, the brain is required to “depress” some function. Stimulants include drugs like caffeine, methamphetamine, cocaine and ecstasy. Depressants include alcohol, Xanax, narcotics and the “date rape drug” Rohypnol. “If you’re looking for signs (of drug use), look for changes people are exhibiting. A
coronado
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other services. In response to these complications, incoming students can look forward to new laundry facilities and water lines. Cooper Feldman, a sociology senior and former Coronado resident, said he was forced to move rooms his freshman year because of a major pipe leakage. Feldman also said the dorm room refrigerators often leaked. Jillian Lipstone, a creative writing senior, said she had fond memories of living in Coronado, though rats running through pipes, frequent elevator complications and stained
Kevin brost / Daily Wildcat
Lynn Reyes and Debra Cox-Howard talk about drug abuse during the Drug Awareness Week Executive Board Training Session in the Center for Student Involvement and Leadership on Tuesday.
change in mood, behavior, eating or sleeping habits can all be signs of drug use,” Reyes said. Debra Cox-Howard, a mental health clinician at Campus Health, told attendees what to do if they see someone “not in good shape.” She said to get the person help by calling 911 and to not leave the person unattended. “Do not, do not, do not leave them alone,” she said. “You never know what’s going to happen after you leave.” The most common drugs reported to UAPD are alcohol, marijuana and cocaine, according to Joe Bermudez, a crime prevention specialist with UAPD. Bermudez said intervention is vital when spotting drug use. “Don’t be selfish,” he said. “Bite the bullet, take some responsibility for your actions and get the person the help they need.” Bermudez explained that UAPD’s “main concern” is the unresponsive person, not the
alcohol use of the responsive person who called for help. He also said courts give “so many chances” to drug users, especially firsttime offenders. “You’re doing that person a disservice by not stepping in and getting someone else involved,” he added. Campus Health representatives also spoke about their Friend 2 Friend program, which provides information and advice to those who wish to help a friend possibly experiencing drug, alcohol or self-injury problems. Kelsey Hoyt, mechanical engineering junior and vice president of development for Kappa Alpha Theta, said the event provided resources in case sorority members “need help.” “I also think it’s really nice they (Greek Life) are recognizing Will (Forrester), and that they are remembering him in a positive way,” she added.
carpets were all accessories to her freshman year dorm-living experience. Despite Coronado’s vintage exterior, its new interior will match up to the new facilities of Arbol de La Vida Residence Hall and Likins Hall, and the interior will finally be as nice as the views, Kraft said. “It may look like a slightly dated building compared to the villas that are going up next door, but it will have all the amenities that you’re going to find in the other dormitories,” Kraft said. “(Coronado) was built for the ages, but times change, and tastes change, and codes change, and we’re simply trying to take a perfectly good residence hall and structure and modernize it, renovate it and update it.”
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WASHINGTON — Information that could identify you often leaks from major websites to online advertisers because of the practice of embedding such data in the Web addresses shared between sites when a user logs on. Such data leakage may involve a person’s name, user name or email address and is pervasive, though not necessarily intentional, among the most popular websites, said Jonathan Mayer, a Stanford University graduate student who has studied the phenomenon and released findings Tuesday. The information is transferred because the unique Web address, or URL, created when a person logs on to a site is sent to third parties to assist them in delivering pertinent ads and other content on the page. Mayer and other privacy advocates said the leakage is a risk because one identifiable piece of information associated with a Web browser’s unique sequence of numbers could allow all that browser’s activity to be connected to a particular person. For example, when a user logs on to the Home Depot website and then looks at a local ad, the person’s first name and email address is sent to 13 companies, Mayer said. “And that email and first name get associated not just with what you’re doing right now, but get associated with what you’ve done in the past and what Web-browsing activity you might have in the future,” Mayer said. Mayer also found that trying to log on to the Wall Street Journal website and using the wrong password sent the user’s email address to seven companies. Changing user settings on the video sharing site Metacafe sent the person’s first name, last name, birthday, email address, physical address and phone numbers to two companies.
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a freshman studying family studies and human development. “Obviously, having information online is more convenient and easy. Books tend to be more accurate because anyone can post anything online. Not everyone who uses the library is educated with computers and some people still like to use books. If the library limits their books on the shelf, people might not be able to use them as a resource.” Zack Yaqoobi, a pre-computer science junior, said he thinks paper books help students focus and stay on task, as opposed to online content.
“I think that we need both books and online resources,” Yaqoobi said. “Because I learn better if I have a book in my hand, and I am less distracted by things like Facebook or emails.” According to Robyn Huff-Eibl, the team leader of materials access for the library, there is not a great need to replace damaged or wornout paper books because the library buys or accepts materials that are made to withstand heavy use. “We have very few books that end up in that condition because of normal use. If you notice, most of collection that come in are usually hardback cover,” Huff-Eibl said. “We generally don’t have books that are too worn out to use.”
Arts & Life
Daily Wildcat
Nordstrom offshoot opens in Old Pueblo By Ashley Pearlstein Daily Wildcat
With the exception of La Encantada and a few boutiques here and there, Tucson lacks the key components of a major shopping destination. Fashionistas across campus struggle to find their favorite brands and quality clothing with such limited choices. But on Thursday, the grand opening of Nordstrom Rack at The Corner on the southeast corner of Oracle and Wetmore roads will change that. Nordstrom Rack, an off-price division of Nordstrom, offers on-trend clearance items from Nordstrom as well as items specifically
purchased for Nordstrom Rack. The store boasts name brands like Coach, Marc by Marc Jacobs, Juicy Couture, 7 for All Mankind and True Religion, all at discounts of 30 to 70 percent off original prices. This new shopper’s paradise offers more than 2,000 pairs of denim jeans for men and women and more than 1,000 designer men’s ties. Perhaps the most enticing feature of the store is the entire wall dedicated to discounted Coach shoes alone. The 33,200 square foot shopaholic haven is sure to be a new hotspot for designer apparel,
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Commentary
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Arts & Life Editor: Jazmine Woodberry • 520.621.3106• arts@wildcat.arizona.edu
Weekend Guide
accessories and cosmetics. Tucson’s Nordstrom Rack will be the fourth in Arizona, joining racks in Chandler, Peoria and Scottsdale. To celebrate its new store, Nordstrom Rack will incorporate many festivities for customers into its grand opening event. Customers are welcome at 7 a.m. Thursday for free food, music and mingling at the Nordstrom Rack tailgate party. Then at 9 a.m. customers can begin shopping — and Nordstrom Rack expects a crowd. “Our opening morning is just like a tailgate party except this one’s all about fashion! Customers might want to get there early … We can accommodate hundreds of customers at any given time on opening morning,” Nordstrom public relations specialist Kendall Ault wrote in an email. The first 1,000 customers to make a purchase will be awarded a complimentary reusable tote bag, and all shoppers will be greeted by hundreds of dollars of savings waiting inside the doors. The most exciting festivity, however, is the golden hanger challenge. Twenty golden hangers, hidden throughout the store, can be redeemed for $100 per hanger to spend inside the store. “It’s the ultimate treasure hunt,” Ault wrote. The exciting opening of a designer-studded store helps put Tucson on the map of the fashion world. With the first Tucson Fashion’s Night Out event and a Nordstrom Rack opening in the same semester, it is clear that Tucson fashionistas are stepping up and working hard to make Tucson more fashion-friendly.
janice biancavilla / Daily Wildcat
The Shanty, on Fourth Avenue and Ninth Street, is one of Tucson’s oldest bars.
Tucson’s ‘Cheers’: Sip at The Shanty By Joe Dusbabek Daily Wildcat
Tucson has no shortage of fashionable and interesting bars. Crawl down Fourth Avenue and at any corner you can find an alcoholic wonderland to suit any fetish. The most interesting thing about our lovely bar scene, though, is the lack of “traditional” bars. If you want to find a bar with a giant tiki head or a burlesque show, it couldn’t be easier. But billiards? You’re kidding, right? That is, until you discover The Shanty. The Shanty comes from an old breed of bars. Those retro hangouts with quarter billiard tables, friendly bartenders, no cover charges, heavy wooden stools and brass countertops have been an American icon as long as any of us can remember. Unfortunately, they’ve slowly been dying out in favor of trendier spots — until now. If you’re looking to spend three to five hours just downing beers, playing pool and chatting with friends (or strangers), The Shanty is the shit. Beyond the well-blended and highly potent cocktails, beers are cheap and free-flowing and
If you go The Shanty 401 E. Ninth St. (520) 623-2664 the location couldn’t be better; Congress Street and the rest of downtown Tucson is only a short walk away, and if you’re looking to go the other way, Fourth Avenue awaits. As any truly drunk person knows, a short walk sounds a lot better after you’ve had a few. Several TVs and a projector, usually showing sports of some kind, adorn several walls. The patio seating might be the best outdoor seating in Tucson and the free popcorn makes for a great, old-school bar snack to soak up all those drinks when you’re ready to attempt going out again. If it isn’t clear already, The Shanty nails the atmosphere head-on, and then some. Going out doesn’t always have to be expensive, crowded or loud. The Shanty, at its traditional finest with its $2.50 beer specials and accessible clientele, invites patrons to just sit down and stay awhile.
Netflix ‘qwik’ to axe company split
or the past several years, Netflix has redefined the way we watch TV and movies — and monopolized the market in the process. Not only has Netflix’s popularity contributed to the downfall of movie rental franchises like Blockbuster, but the multimillion dollar corporation has also changed the way we own TV shows and movies. It’s easy to embrace the idea that, for just $10 per month, we can own a whole library of DVDs, through both online streaming and mail-in orders. But during the past few months, Netflix has made several
announcements that customers aren’t too excited about. In July, Netflix hiked its prices from $10 to $16 per month, which pushed away an estimated 1 million subscribers. And then, on Sept. 18, Netflix announced via email that its services would split in half entirely: mail-order DVDs and newly established video game rentals would move to a new spinoff company called Qwikster, while customers’ account information and instant streaming capabilities remained under the Netflix name. CEO Reed Hastings wrote the split was necessary because: “Streaming and DVD by
mail are becoming two quite different businesses … that need to be marketed differently.” Or do they? Since its establishment in 1997, Netflix’s reasonable pricing, vast selection of titles and sheer convenience have helped the company acquire more than 20 million customers. And all the while, the company has offered instant streaming and DVD rentals together in one place. So a change that would require customers who want both services to create two separate accounts on two separate websites, as well as pay bills to two separate companies, seems to
go against everything that has made Netflix successful. And since the company has already started changing its prices, too, a lot of people have a lot to complain about. On the blog post that announced Qwikster, customers left more than 24,000 comments, the majority of which were negative. As a result, just weeks after announcing the upcoming launch of Qwikster, Netflix realized its mistake. In an email and blog post on Monday, Hastings axed the Qwikster project completely: “It is clear that for many of our members two websites would make things more difficult, so we are
going to keep Netflix as one place to go for streaming and DVDs. This means … no Qwikster,” he wrote. Of course, many customers can breathe a sigh of relief that the company won’t branch into two separate and confusing entities. However, this series of missteps doesn’t bode well for the company. Maybe Netflix should ask customers’ opinions first next time, before changing its prices or introducing new policies without warning. — Miranda Butler is the assistant arts editor. She can be reached at arts@wildcat.arizona.edu.
Dueling ‘The Ides of March’ Reviews I
s ambition’s debt ever truly paid? Such is the question at the heart of George Clooney’s “The Ides of March,” a film whose very excellence is in itself ironic. The movie is as much a reflection of the political order as it is a condemnation of the false promises on which nominees so often seem to run. In the movie, Mike Morris (Clooney) is as ideal a public figure as can be imagined, boldly offering promises of religious freedom, peaceful foreign policy and a departure from the nation’s prevailing dependence on foreign oil. He’s progressive, he’s smart and most importantly, he’s a good man, which is why senior campaign staffer Stephen Myers (Ryan Gosling) believes in him as fiercely as he does. In Stephen’s view, the United States needs Morris if it is to survive, meaning when rival campaign manager Tom Duffy (Paul Giamatti) invites him to work for the opposition, it takes no thought to turn down the job. This meeting with Duffy, however, is the catalyst for a series of events that could cost Morris — and the entire Democratic Party — the presidency. While the film’s message — that politics can corrupt otherwise moral men — isn’t new, the way the filmmakers deliver this theme sets the movie apart. Many of the story’s revelations hit hard, even though a basic knowledge of the subject is enough to see them coming (especially given the less-thanpristine reputation of politicians today). This is unmistakably the result of great filmmakers — and yes, Clooney is a great filmmaker — being given the freedom to do their jobs, leaving us with a film that’s as methodical as it is pulsepoundingly intense, bursting at the
seams with questions of morality. And while the story is undoubtedly Gosling’s, it’s Clooney’s Pennsylvania Gov. Morris who proves the most worthy of discussion. It’s stated early in the film that Morris is “a great guy. They’re all great guys. But sooner or later, he will disappoint you. They always do.” Whether or not the film disappoints, of course, will rest on the viewer, making “Ides” more likely to clean up at awards season than at the box office. — Josh Weisman
Grade: A
Starring Ryan Gosling, George Clooney, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Paul Giamatti, Evan Rachel Wood, Marisa Tomei, Jeffrey Wright Directed by George Clooney Rating: R 101 minutes Open everywhere
I
have an idea. Let’s take every single recognizable piece of pop culture’s spin on the political sphere, ball it up and throw it against a big screen with George Clooney and someone even hotter. Hmm, how about Ryan Gosling? It’s not that “The Ides of March” fails at what it sets out to accomplish; it’s that it never seems to have set out to accomplish much. The plot roots itself firmly around the Ohio Democratic presidential primary of some near-present fictional reality, where Clooney’s Gov. Mike Morris
Grade: C
Photo Courtesy of imdb.com
hopes to gain the nomination over downplayed opponent Sen. Pullman. In a jumble of political allusions ranging — in the realm of signage alone — from Obama-style portraits to “I Like Mike,” a series of betrayals, self-serving maneuvers and quick-spoken discoveries of both unfold. Were it not for the prominent padded suit shoulders, hotel-surfing interns and Gosling’s cool-charm smile, the story could be about any given group of welldressed friends. In fact, far from feeling like a crash course in the ethics of politics — or even a “24”-esque glimpse into the lives of the powerful — “The Ides of March” settles into a “Gossip Girl”-like groove, complete with semi-meaningful shots of the vibrating screens on brandless phones. But it is in this sense that the movie succeeds; the human drama is compelling enough to carry the plot, whose respective twists do nothing if not engage the audience. And, yes, you feel for the characters. Gosling’s bright-eyed Stephen Myers is particularly sympathetic because of his killer combo of idealism and purported campaign-saving talents. Truly, the entire story could (were you willing to limit it) serve as a sort of coming-of-age narrative for this noble-seeming staffer. Mostly, though, this is the type of movie that made me want to play office as a kindergartener — full of people who dress well, talk quickly and seem to have so much to do. But what if the political mood piece of a movie, full of such effective characters, has far less conviction than they do? — Christy Delehanty
Perspectives
Daily Wildcat
• Page 4
Perspectives Editor: Storm Byrd • 520.621.7581 • letters@wildcat.arizona.edu
Tucson: a lawless land Andrew Conlogue Daily Wildcat
S
everal days ago, a man robbed a bank on the north side of Tucson. Thankfully, no one was hurt in the robbery, and he was apprehended with the money a short time later. The robber was armed with an AK-47 assault rifle. Whether that seems surprising or not, the fact that a daylight assault with heavy weapons barely made the news means that the people of the borderland have become somewhat accustomed to violently lawless behavior. Some observers have declared our southern neighbor a narco-state, and the “A little musviolence there is as ing seem sto commonplace as it is horrendous. suggest ast Here in Southern least cicrumArizona, the carstantial evinage is not nearly so severe, but if dence fro etermen robbing banks nal lawlessness with the chosen gun on the border, of the Taliban or no matter what African rebel groups is any indication, the issues of there is a brazenthe day are.” ness to local criminality that doesn’t exist elsewhere in the country. It is easy to point the finger of blame at the cause of local lawlessness. There are drugs in Mexico and drug users in America. There are guns in America and criminals who need guns to defend their operations in Mexico. That analysis is so simple it borders on basic arithmetic. What might not be so easy is to appeal to the days before drug cartels and gun running rings as a peaceable, law-abiding time. When one really thinks about it, there are no “good old days” to appeal to here on the border if your criterion is lawful behavior. Entire peoples have been exterminated. Wars have been fought on this side of the border, the other side, and once between bordering countries — remember the Alamo? In fact, the Old West genre of film is essentially a thousand different reiterations of the fact that the people who lived here in the 19th century didn’t behave very well. And that Old Western staple, a daring daylight bank robbery, is happening now. Only the technology has changed. A little musing seems to suggest at least circumstantial evidence for eternal lawlessness on the border, no matter what the issues of the day are. The next question, of course, is why this might be. Is it a clash of cultures that we can’t seem to overcome? It very easily might be. The Spanish were notoriously bad at getting along with the American Indians. The Mexicans and the Americans, in many ways, have yet to really be friendly to one another, not to mention the fact that they too have been notoriously bad at getting along with American Indians. Perhaps the proximity of a whole other identity, in many ways alien to one’s own, just breeds an angst that manifests in violence against whoever is in the area. On the other hand, the borderlands might just attract a lawless crowd. In the past, prospectors who wanted to live on their own terms and Civil War veterans who had become desensitized to violence flocked here. Today, it’s minutemen and volunteer border guards who, whether their goal is noble or not, by their very existence think that the legal force in this country is not what it should be. Or maybe it’s just the fact that this particular border is a desert. Laws — and philosophical analysis, for that matter — might just be wasted on the thirsty. Whatever the deep, underlying cause might be, there is legitimate reason to think that the land where our university sits may not be within human power to tame. That being said, there are certainly steps to take to make the area safer, and those efforts should not be discouraged. But whoever thinks the “Wild West” is dead and gone seems to be laboring under some misapprehension. Cartel-related violence can be curbed, just as the days of horse riding criminals or Indian Wars are long gone. But if there’s a daring daylight bank robbery a hundred years from now, with whatever we’re using to kill each other at that point in time, it’s a gambling man’s odds that said robbery takes place not far from where this paper was printed. — Andrew Conlogue is a junior studying politics, philosophy, economics and law. He 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.
editorial
Stoops’ firing: Necessary roughness
I
f there was ever a time that the writing was on the wall, it was at the end of former head football coach Mike Stoops’ career at the UA. Whether after the team’s 10th consecutive loss to an FBS school or at the conclusion of a season that has started with a 1-5 record, Stoops was out and rightfully so. While Stoops certainly struggled to produce lately, his casualty was more than numbersbased. There is no denying the results of his tenure which included both the highs of three consecutive bowl appearances and the lows of a 27-38 conference record and a 9-24 record against top-25 teams. But the breaking point was that Stoops’ lack of success came amid large administrative changes at the UA. The face of college athletics at the UA is transforming from being historically regarded as solely a basketball school at the same time that the administration is restructuring. In a search for a permanent university president, and after the hiring of athletic director Greg Byrne back in March 2010, Stoops ultimately had no remaining ties to the UA’s athletic administration. Despite the objections of the players, it was not as though Stoops was a highly regarded or documented as a well-liked community figure.
Aside from a quick, and rather dull, commercial for Vantage West Credit Union, there’s little in the way of appearances in the community that can be tied to Stoops. His sideline antics, while lauded as comical at times, didn’t do much help to his reputation with the local or national community. Ultimately, what kept Stoops around this long was his success with the program. Say what you want about where Stoops’ 8-5 teams rank in the history of UA football, they were undoubtedly significant. A program in the gutter was on the upswing. Unfortunately for Stoops, that raised expectations. Once that occurred, there was no going back. No room for patience anymore. Had the familiar faces of former UA President Robert Shelton and former UA athletic director Jim Livengood still been around, perhaps their appreciation and connection to Stoops would have been strong enough to sustain his fiery attitude and struggles over the recent stretch. These were the men who hired him, and ultimately knew what they were getting. However, those faces are gone and it’s time for a new athletic director to forge his own path and establish himself now rather than
MAILBAG
Let courts decide the facts In response to “Terrorist acts negate constitutional rights” (Oct. 10 issue): I won’t attempt to argue with Mr. Segall’s title premise about which actions can negate one’s inalienable rights. I would, however, like to take issue with the writer’s statements about what Anwar AlAwlaki has or hasn’t done to merit government action on his life. Segall states, “Al-Awlaki has been linked to nearly a dozen different cases of attempted terror plots,” and goes on to describe many of these. Unfortunately, I can’t believe a single thing said about Al-Awlaki’s connection to the “underwear bomber” or Fort Hood Army Base killings for one simple reason: none of it was ever proven in a court of law. And as an American citizen, I respect my duty to believe nothing about another American citizen until it has been proven beyond a shadow of a doubt. The government can attempt to retroactively draw connections between Al-Awlaki and
later. This explains the timing of the firing. Byrne is defining his legacy at the UA. Don’t pretend that the massive scoreboard and Arizona Stadium expansions aren’t the first steps in that legacy. With that in mind, how can Byrne keep forging ahead with a bottomfeeding football program that just lost to one of the worst teams in the conference and doesn’t show any signs of improving in the near future? The administration, and for that matter the university, is undergoing massive changes that will dictate its future. The football program is most assuredly an integral part of that future. Football is one of the few collegiate sports that can turn a profit, alongside basketball, and ultimately the university has boosters to please and a stadium to fill. While it’s difficult to part ways with a man who at least moderately resurrected the program, it is no doubt necessary for the future of not only the program, but also the university. — Editorials are determined by the Daily Wildcat opinions board and written by one of its members. They are Kristina Bui, Storm Byrd, Nicole Dimtsios and Steven Kwan. They can be reached at letters@wildcat.arizona.edu.
other known terrorists to justify its actions, but such suspicions are hardly axiomatic enough for the government to act upon them without respecting the due process of law. The irony is that Segall claims Al-Awlaki was killed to keep the American people “safe” from the threat of terror. We are allowing a government agency to arbitrarily sentence a citizen to death, and this is supposed to preserve America? What greater threat is there to life and liberty? Perhaps I’m paranoid, but via the new government standards, we all have reason to fear for our lives. None of us knows which of our activities or acquaintances might raise a red flag within the CIA and now we are being told that there will be no peer review on these “facts” before drastic government action is taken on our persons and our lives. There is a long history of wartime being used as justification for the suspension of basic human rights. We must not stand complacently by as we witness history repeating itself. — Jacquelyn Oesterblad, anthropology and Near Eastern studies freshman
Online Comments In response to “Terrorist acts negate constitutional rights” (Oct. 10 issue):
ment becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely We all own things we do not deserve. Who to effect their Safety and Happiness. Prudence, among us has earned their inalienable rights? indeed, will dictate that Governments long “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that established should not be changed for light and all men are created equal, that they are endowed transient causes; and accordingly all experience by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, hath shewn, that mankind are more disposed that among these are Life, Liberty and the purto suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right suit of Happiness. — That to secure these rights, themselves by abolishing the forms to which Governments are instituted among Men, derivthey are accustomed. But when a long train of ing their just powers from the consent of the gov- abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the erned, — That whenever any Form of Governsame Object evinces a design to reduce them
under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security.” Our Constitution build upon these ideals by enumerating some of our rights and charging our Federal government to refrain from trespassing against our rights (sic). It is foolish to rejoice when our Federal government tramples the rights of someone we dislike. Inevitably arbitrary governments that eschew the rule of law turn on their entire populations. Are you truly eager for the yoke of oppression? — Elizabeth Conley
CONTACT US | The Daily Wildcat accepts original, unpublished letters from all of its readers. •
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5
• Wednesday, october 12, 2011
Police Beat By Rebecca Rillos Daily Wildcat
Villa del vomit A University of Arizona Police Department officer went to Villa del Puente Residence Hall at 12:10 a.m. on Saturday in response to a report of an intoxicated woman. The officer met with a resident assistant who was assisting the woman in the lobby. The woman was lying on her side on the floor next to a puddle of vomit. She smelled strongly of alcohol. She was unconscious, but was still breathing, the officer noted. Paramedics from Tucson Fire Department transported the woman to University of Arizona Medical Center-University Campus. The officer went to the hospital later when the woman regained consciousness. She did not want to talk about what or where she had been drinking. The woman was cited and released for minor in possession of alcohol in body.
Never again UAPD officers went to Babcock Residence Hall around 2 a.m. on Saturday in response to two intoxicated women. The officers approached the two women, who were vomiting into trash bags. Both had watery eyes and smelled of alcohol. Their speech was slurred. They told the officers they drank an unknown amount of hard liquor at a party. The women said they would never drink again. TFD paramedics arrived and transported the women to UMC for extreme intoxication. The women both were cited for minor in possession of alcohol in body.
That’s not mine, officer A UAPD officer stopped a car on Broadway Boulevard at 8 a.m. on Saturday for speeding in a 35 mph zone. As the officer approached the car, he could smell a strong odor of marijuana coming from the inside of the vehicle. The driver and passenger identified themselves and consented to a voluntary search. Neither of the men had any contraband on them. During a search of the vehicle, however, the officer found a small glass jar containing marijuana under the front passenger seat. Both men denied ownership of the marijuana and said they did not even know it was there. The driver said he had allowed someone he barely knew to drive his car the previous night and that he may have left it there. The driver was issued a warning for speeding. A record’s check of the passenger revealed an outstanding warrant for reckless driving from the Maricopa County Sheriff ’s Office. He was arrested and transported to Pima County Jail.
Greek graffiti fest A UAPD officer went to Delta Chi fraternity at 1:30 p.m. on Saturday in response to a report of vandalism. The officer met with a representative of the fraternity who said someone had spray-painted the house and broken a window between 6:30 p.m. on Friday and 11:30 a.m. on Saturday. One of the kitchen windows had been broken. The officer found a rock inside the kitchen near the broken glass that may have been used to break the window. Along the west outside wall of the house were several graffiti words and drawings. The Greek letters for Sigma Chi, Delta Delta Delta, Sigma Kappa, Alpha Epsilon Phi and the letters “FIJI” and “DJ” were painted on the wall in red and blue spray paint. The words “cock suckers,” “pussies” and a drawing of what appeared to be a penis urinating were also on the wall. The representative had no suspects of who might have vandalized the fraternity, but said he was willing to prosecute if one was identified. A victim’s rights form was mailed to the fraternity.
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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Sports
Daily Wildcat
• Page 6
Sports Editor: Kevin Zimmerman • 520.621.2956 • sports@wildcat.arizona.edu
SCOREBOARD:
MLB Detroit 5, Texas 2
NHL Pittsburgh 4, Florida 2
Ottawa 4, Minnesota 3
A NEW SEASON “ Kish looks to get Wildcats rejuvenated for second half of the year
Getting your face rubbed in the dirt wakes you up. It’s been a long summer.“ — Mike Candrea Softball head coach
Softball back to drawing board Drubs Pima 18-0 in fall ball’s first game, takes one game at a time KEVIN BROST / DAILY WILDCAT
Arizona interim head coach Tim Kish addresses the media following his team’s practice at the Jimenez Practice Facility on Tuesday. Kish said he will focus on keeping his players disciplined for the remainder of the year.
By Alex Williams DAILY WILDCAT
For the first time in his life, Tim Kish is the head coach of a football team. So what’s priority No. 1? “Discipline,” Kish said. “There will be no compromise on the discipline.” Tuesday was Kish’s first day on the job since taking over for former head coach Mike Stoops, who was fired on Monday following Saturday’s loss at Oregon State — Arizona’s 10th straight loss against Football Bowl Subdivision teams. Kish said Stoops has not addressed the team, but will have the opportunity if he chooses to do so. Players and assistant coaches are off-limits to the media until after Wednesday’s practice. “It’s all 120 of us working together that’s going to fix the problem,” Kish said. Kish said Tuesday’s practice was about giving the team a looser mentality and starting the process of moving on from the Stoops era. “I knew today was going to be a struggle,” Kish said. “I had the sense that maybe the guys didn’t want to come out today, and I didn’t think that was the right approach. We’re just trying to come out here and have a little fun
Tim’s tips • Discipline: The Wildcats have struggled with being out of position, especially on defense, all year. • Working together: Following the firing of the Wildcats’ head coach, the 120 players must remain united.= • Moving on: Arizona wants closure on a 1-5 start.
during the day and remember why we’re playing the game.” Moving on from Arizona’s 1-5 start is also a priority for Kish, who said he doesn’t have any personal goals for the rest of the season. As far as team goals, Kish said the Wildcats are taking things day by day instead of putting added pressure on putting together the 5-1 finish that’s necessary for Arizona to reach a bowl game. “We want to make sure we’re headed in a good direction and put closure on the first half of the season,” Kish said. “We’re looking at this as a new season for us and a new opportunity.” Kish said Arizona’s offensive staff will be
the same as it has been for the first six games of 2011, but the ex-defensive coordinator said that things may change on the defensive side of the ball. “I’m looking into that right now,” Kish said. “We’re going to see what can happen there. I’m not sure exactly where that goes, but there’s one individual that I’d like to see if we can get involved with us a little bit.” Kish will also return to coaching from the sidelines after coaching from the press box since the Sept. 24 game against Oregon. But while he’ll be in the same location as his predecessor, Kish said his demeanor won’t be quite as excitable. “I’m gonna be who I am,” Kish said. “I have a different approach than Mike (Stoops). There isn’t one right approach. I just want these kids to enjoy playing the game of football again, and hopefully we can instill that in them.” Kish said his time as Arizona’s head coach is off to a good start. “We needed to come out here and get things moving in the right direction,” Kish said. “It turned out great. We even made a couple field goals, so that was good.”
Freshmen starting to make an impact for women’s basketball Newcomers coming along at different rates, starting lineups not set
Butler will still contribute. “She’s making good basketball decisions, so we really look for her to be solid and steady throughout the year.”
By Zack Rosenblatt
Pat Summitt’s return to coaching not a surprise to Butts
DAILY WILDCAT
Freshmen Aley Rohde, Erin Butler and Layana White represent the future of the Arizona women’s basketball program. The trio, along with three transfers, is taking longer than expected to get acclimated to its new environment. But head coach Niya Butts is excited about the potential the three recruits have. “I expect them all to contribute. I think they all will play a role with the team moving forward,” Butts said. With six new players, a learning curve was to be expected for the Wildcats. So far, it is taking a bit longer for the team to adjust than Butts would like, but, luckily for the Wildcats, the season does not start for about another month. “Obviously, with six new players we’re putting a lot of things together and (there is) a lot of learning and a lot of teaching going on,” Butts said. “It’s not going as fast as I want it to be right now, but we certainly are making strides in the right direction.” Butts is unsure of who will be the starting lineup will be on Nov. 11, when the Wildcats face Georgia Southern. Senior point guard Shanita Arnold and junior guard Davellyn Whyte are pretty safe bets, and based off her performance in practice thus far, it wouldn’t be surprising if Rohde joined them. Layana White, who hails from Lancaster, Calif., has been one of the bright spots in practice thus far, and Butts expects her to play an important role on the team this season. “She goes extremely hard,” Butts said. “One thing she really does probably more than anyone on our team is that she never takes
COLIN PRENGER / DAILY WILDCAT
Arizona center Aley Rohde will likely lead the Wildcats’ freshman class this season and has already shown signs she could make an impact in the paint.
any possessions off. Whether she understands or gets what we’re trying to tell her, she’s going hard so a lot of times, even when she’s out of position, she’s able to make some plays.” The third freshman, guard Erin Butler, has done a good job with her decision-making in practice thus far, Butts said, but her athleticism isn’t really on the same level
as that of many of her peers. “She’s a really good basketball player, she can really shoot the ball. She’s not as athletic as some of the other ones, but (in terms of ) trying to make sure she’s in the right places at the right time, she’s done a really good job,” said Butts, adding that the transition from high school to college basketball can be tough and that she believes
In August, longtime Tennessee women’s basketball coach Pat Summitt announced that she had been diagnosed with dementia. That, however, would not prevent her from continuing to coach the Lady Volunteers, a fact that did not surprise Arizona head coach and former Summitt player Niya Butts at all. “She is a fighter, she doesn’t let anyone tell her what she can and can’t do, certainly not something like that,” said Butts, who played for Summitt at Tennessee from 1997 until 2000. “She’s going to continue to move forward with passion and commitment and tenacity. That’s just who she is as a person. It didn’t surprise me at all.” As would be expected for the all-time winningest coach in the history of college basketball among men and women, Summitt only wants to focus on basketball and not her medical problems. Summitt told USA Today last week, “That’s what I want to talk about, basketball, not dementia.” Butts said the media blitz and publicity regarding the diagnosis have prevented her from coming into direct contact with Summitt, but she has spoken with several members on Tennessee’s coaching staff. “I stay in contact with those guys because we have a professional and a personal relationship,” Butts said. “Things have been moving along with her and she’s continuing to work and continuing to be there with the team, and I look for those guys to do good things this year.”
By Cameron Moon DAILY WILDCAT
The official start of Arizona’s softball season is still almost four months away, but the team got its first taste of action on Sunday against the Pima Community College Aztecs. The Wildcats had an impressive showing in winning 18-0 and only allowing only one hit. After making the Women’s College World Series 22 out of the last 24 years, a win like this has become what’s expected by Arizona fans, but the team insists that it still has work to do before the season starts. “We need to focus on taking it day-to-day,” head coach Mike Candrea said. “We can improve our energy in addition to working well in practice.” If Sunday’s game is any indication, practices have been going well. The offensive explosion was aided by a nine-run, nine-hit inning, that also included three home runs — one from freshman center fielder Hallie Wilson — and back-to-back fifth inning shots from senior first baseman Alicia Banks and fellow first baseman Baillie Kirker. The Wildcats have the power to out-score opponents, but they know it takes more than that to come out victorious. “We’re pretty powerful, but we also have lots of speed,” Wilson said. “We have to keep them both going to be successful.” The Wildcats are lucky to have an experienced team on the field, with 11 of the 21 players being members of the team since its last appearance in the World Series in 2010. Despite that, there is also a lot of youth on the team — six freshmen and four sophomores to be exact. However, the Wildcats can still hang their hats on the chemistry they built in the offseason as they inch closer to the start of the regular season. “We’re proud of the way the new team has come together so far,” Kirker said. “Everyone contributed and turned out well today.” Keeping that in mind, Candrea insists his team is not focused on the long-term success of a season not yet started, but instead on getting back to basics. “Every weekend is a test, and this weekend we passed,” he said. “It’s back to the drawing board though.” Like any coach, Candrea stressed the importance of taking the season one game at a time, and is “not looking down the road.” “We’re focused on the now, and we’re just going to continue to work hard,” he said. While he maintained that hard work and high energy are going to be the constants that propel the Wildcats to success this season, Candrea also acknowledged that some changes needed to be made after last season’s drubbing at the hands of Oklahoma in the NCAA Super Regional. The loss prevented Arizona from making the WCWS. “Getting your face rubbed in the dirt wakes you up,” he said. “We had to change our practice approach, and get kids back to having fun. “It’s been a long summer.” Now that summer is over and fall ball has officially begun, the tests for the Wildcats will keep coming. The test this weekend is the annual Arizona Fall Softball Classic, a tournament that the Wildcats are eagerly awaiting. “I’m really excited to see the other teams and get a lot of at bats in,” Kirker said. Added Banks: “There’s so many people coming out to support us, so the turnout is going to be fun.”
Odds & Ends Offbeat
Daily Wildcat
• Page 7
Arts & Life Contributor: Greg Gonzales • 520.621.3106 • arts@wildcat.arizona.edu
Overheard on campus
Buggin’ Out
Man 1: It tastes good. Man 2: Yeah, AIDS always tastes good. — Park Student Union Submit your overheard on Twitter @OverheardAtUA
On the spot
‘No one wants old beavers’
What does the term “Old whores don’t do much giggling” mean to you? It means since no one wants old beavers, they can’t get any sex.
Kevin Brost/Daily Wildcat
A praying mantis crawls on a box in the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity house on Thursday. Jacob Snyder, a fraternity member brought the mantis inside to shelter it from a rainstorm.
Horoscopes Today’s birthday: Your deepest satisfaction comes from providing useful service to others, now and for the whole year. Your patient compassion guides your community through transitions, and its gratitude feeds your spirit. What comes around goes around. Share the love.
Aries — Today is an 8 — Life’s good, but a spiral of self-doubt could shake things up. Draw or write down your worries and fears, and burn them to release their hold on you. Cast a new intention into the fire.
Leo
Taurus — Today is a 7 — Rethink your
Virgo — Today is a 6 — Find
Capricorn — Today is a 7 — Devote time for artistic creation today. Express something abstract, symbolic and dreamy. Go for clear communications tomorrow. Read the instructions carefully.
Gemini — Today is an 8 — A dream
Libra — Today is a 7 — If you want to
understand their point of view, put yourself in your partner’s shoes. If things don’t work the way you want, try again tomorrow. Look at it philosophically.
Aquarius — Today is an 8 — There’s a fork in the road ahead. A message from your dreams can point you in the right direction. The line between fact and fantasy may blur, so double-check the data.
Scorpio
Pisces — Today is an 8 — Don’t forget
roles at home and at work, and try something new. Use your experience to avoid a costly mistake. Don’t spend your check before you get it. Patience pays. may inspire a romance. Your friends are there to help. Most great innovation is sparked by an accident. Consider this when confronted by one.
Cancer — Today is an 8 — It may take something to sort fact from fiction. Stick to what you know to be so. Your standards and perceptions are challenged (which could be a good thing).
— Today is a 6 — Now you’re on a roller coaster. Will you laugh and scream and enjoy the ride, or cry the whole way, waiting to get off? You may go through both sensations before the day’s out. It’s temporary.
satisfaction in little things. It’s okay to want to hide now and be private. There’s time for social life later. Read the small print. Go over picky details.
— Today is an 8 — Not everything that glitters is gold. You can make barriers disappear (especially the ones that exist only in your head). Gain selfrespect through a job well done.
Campus Events
UA History Tour Wednesday, October 12, 2011 10 a.m. - 11:30 a.m. Experience the UA Campus and learn about the local history and traditions associated with the foundation of the University 127 years ago. UA Visitor Center, 811 N. Euclid Ave. National Coming Out Day LGBTQ Resource Fair Wednesday, October 12, 2011 11 a.m. - 2 p.m. Come check out organizations from all over campus and the community at our lesbian, gay, bisexual, transexual and queer Resource Fair! Resources include campus clubs and resources, community organizations, and HIV/AIDS support. A passive education piece will detail why such resources are needed. University of Arizona Mall Caregiving During the Holidays: From Stress to Success Wednesday, October 12, 2011 12 p.m. 1 p.m. The holidays are about staying connected to the values, people and experiences that enrich us. For caregivers, the holidays can be particularly challenging because they must juggle the competing pressures of work, family obligations and caring for a loved one in declining health. So bring your lunch, relax, and enjoy this free presentation! Thomas W. Keating Building Room: 103 Chest-Compression-Only CPR Wednesday, October 12, 2011 5:15 p.m. - 6:30 p.m. Do you know what to do in case of cardiac arrest? Be a lifesaver, not a bystander. Learn CPR that uses only chest compressions. This training is free and open to the public. No pre-registration is necessary, but an RSVP to 520-626-2419 is appreciated. DuVal Auditorium
8 — Your imagination plays to your advantage now. Aim higher than usual to gain some ground, even if you miss the mark. Stash away winnings. Note the options that worked.
to call if you’ll be late for dinner. Don’t get lost in nebulous daydreams without keeping an eye on the clock. You could make great progress in private.
Yes, very much so. Do you think that tends to happen in everyone’s career? I think after a while, it most certainly does. Even the person who strives for their dream job and gets it will face this. The biggest problem is that once people get to the point where their job is no longer challenging them, that loses them. It’s probably why the best teachers can teach until they are fossils. They get new kids every year, or even throughout the year they learn more and more about their kids and get to help them cope with whatever challenge the students face within their lives.
Correction The Oct. 7 article “Student mothers grapple with additional challenges” should read that UA Work & Life Connections make in-home caregivers accessible to eligible students and employees. The program offers emergency services for children younger than 12.
October 12
TODAY IS
Wildcat Calendar
Sagittarius — Today is an
Are you sure? When Hunter Thompson said it, I think he meant something else. (Laughs) No, I’m not sure. That’s just the first thing I thought of. Upon reflection, it’s probably more about doing the same thing over Heather Devers and over and how awful that Natural resources is. This applies especially in terms of careers. Whores sophomore wouldn’t be whores if there wasn’t a reason behind it, like quick money, and that’s kind of like how most of the planet works. They are in jobs for the money, not for the enjoyment. What most people lose sight of is how money is not the means to an end, it’s a tool. In the case that the “whore” isn’t good at anything and that’s why she’s in “the business,” she obviously didn’t search hard enough and explore enough to find her niche. (Laughs) Is that better?
Campus Events
Disney College Alumni - Apply Now Event Wednesday, October 12, 2011 5 p.m. - 6 p.m. As a Disney College Program participant, you’ll become part of the magic that is known worldwide. You’ll get valuable, on-the-job experience in the parks and resorts and expand your knowledge. Discover new worlds and create long-lasting memories. Because here, a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity will change your life forever. The Disney College Program Alumni Association is holding an information session to answer questions about the Disney College Program and assist in student applications for the program. For more information: www.disneycollegeprogram. com. Student Union Memorial Center Career Services Room: 409A “The Ripple Effect: Step Up!” Violence Prevention Training Wednesday, October 12, 2011 5:30 p.m. - 7 p.m. “Step Up!” is a prosocial behavior and bystander intervention program that educates students to be proactive in helping others. Teaching people about the determinants of prosocial behavior makes them more aware of why they sometimes don’t help. As a result they are more likely to help in the future. Student Union Memorial Center Kiva Room Queer Film Series: “Bullied” Wednesday, October 12, 2011 7 p.m. - 9 p.m. Each day, thousands of LGBTQ youth face bullying. Some lose hope, some ignore it and some fight back – in the courtroom. Bullied is a documentary that tells the story of Jamie Nabozmy, a gay student who endured relentless bullying in both middle and high school despite seeking help from school administrators. The film shows how Jamie’s legal battle helped him secure justice and underscores how important it is to confront anti-gay bullying. Dr. Stephen Russell, director of the UA’s Frances McClelland Institute and expert on LGBT youth, will speak after the film. Student Union Memorial Center Room: Gallagher Theater
Campus Events
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/ 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/ 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
Gallery Día de los Muertos Exhibit at Tohono Chul Park September 01, 2011 - November 06, 2011,7366 North Paseo del Norte, 520-742-6455 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.
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 multi-media 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
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
Tucson Meet Yourself 2011 Presented by Tucson Meet Yourself at El Presidio Park October 14 October 16. Celebrating the living traditions of Arizona-Sonora’s folk and ethnic communities, Tucson Meet Yourself is the region’s biggest and oldest multicultural folklife festival featuring five stages with music and dance, 50 ethnic food vendors, folk arts demos, arts marketplace and cultural heritage displays.
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 6
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 Iman Hamdan Kelly Hultgren Kyle Johnson Dan Kohler Emi Komiya
Cameron Moon 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
Andrew Conlogue Megan Hurley Michelle A. Monroe Caroline Nachazel Ashley Reid Photographers Robert Alcaraz Gordon Bates Kevin Brost Keith Hickman-Perfetti Annie Marum Valentina Martinelli Juni Nelson Colin Prenger Ernie Somoza
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
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Zachary Vito Amy Webb
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Advertising Account Executives Amalia Beckmann Bozsho Margaretich Megan Mitchell Alex Nielsen Aly Pearl Luke Pergande John Reed Jenna Whitney
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Asst. Arts & Life Editor Miranda Butler Asst. Copy Chief Bethany Barnes
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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
8
COMICS •
• DAILY WILDCAT
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER
12, 2011
The Bear Down Times
3 4 9 8 3 5 1 7 5 6 4 1 5 1 8 8 6 3 9 2 4 9 8 7
Difficulty Level
2011 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
By Dave Green
10/12
WHAT’S GOING ON?
WHAT’S GOING ON?
WHAT’S WGOING OO N? ? ’ G HAT S
OING
N
WHAT’S GOINGWOHATN’?S GOING ON? WHAT’S GOING ON? Do you or someone that you know have
Psoriatic Arthritis? We are currently seeking individuals for
participation in an investigational clinical research study. Specific investigational study requirements apply for participation. Please call for more information
520-408-8030
COLLEGE NIGHT: THURSDAY the 13 Live$5.00 off Terror in the Corn (w/student ID) (Friday & Saturday regular price) Music 00
$2.
Any Beer
(Friday & Saturday regular price)
HENRY GONZALEZ IS ANNOUNCING HIS NEW LOCATION Professional Full Service
$2 Off
(520) 795-1981 3015 East Speedway & Country Club
ANY Haircut
Honored by ALL Barbers
See: Elcontinentalbarbers.com
Visit our website: www.buckelewfarm.com
Where in Wildcat Country is GINGY? Log onto dailywildcat.com/contests and tell us the location of Gingy in the above photo.
wednesday, october
12, 2011
Daily Wildcat •
9
CLASSIFIEDS classiďŹ eds.arizona.edu
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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
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$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
PARENT- CHILD VISIT Supervisor 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.
LOOKING FOR UOFA students to run and write for goazwildcats.com, a site dedicated to UofA basketball and football. Call 702-7388488.
PART TIME CLERK. $7.50 +commission to start. Morning/ afternoon shifts. 25/ 30hrs a week. Near campus. Apply in Person 2509 N. Campbell Ave.
!!!!BARTENDERING!!!! UP TO $250/ DAy. NO ExPERIENCE NECESSARy. TRAINING COURSES AVAILABLE. AGE 19+ OK. CALL 800-965-6520 ExT.139
PART TIME RECEPTIONIST East Side Location - Weekend hours. Previous business experience preferred, business casual dress code for front desk/ customer reception. E-mail resume to PamelaT@longrealty.com
*TURBULENCE GENTLEMENS CLUB HAS A LIQUOR LICENSE* NOW HIRING COCKTAIL SERVERS FOR OUR LIQUOR LICENSE PARTY November 11-19TH!! ALL SHIFTS, NO EXPERIENCE REQUIRED. PLEASE APPLY IN PERSON. 6608 S TUCSON BLVD. BETWEEN 2-11PM CLUBTURBULENCE.COM
*SHORT TERM 2BR+2BA CONDO RENTAL 2Blocks from Campus on University Ave Parents, Alumni, Visitors, Vendors. Fully equipped & Furnished. Garage/Street parking. Call 818-708-1770 See: VRBO.com/284572 7TH STREET AND Park- studio, 1br, 3br. 444-6213/ 429-3829 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 LARGE 2BD 1 1/2BA, $575. Large 1BR $475 Deposit $200. A/C, pool, cold & hot water paid. Bicycle distance UofA. 327-8811 or 990-0130. Available now!
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
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
STUDENTPAYOUTS.COM PAID survey takers needed in Tucson. 100% FREE to join! Click on surveys.
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.
MOVE-IN READY. NEWLY remodeled. 1block UofA. 3bdrm parking and enclosed patio. Check it out! 356 N. Euclid. Available for viewing. 520-405-7278
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.
EARN MONEY IN a Sociology Experiment! For more information and to sign up visit www.u.arizona.edu/~mwhitham/1.html EXTRAS NEEDED TO stand in the backgrounds for a major film production. Earn up to $300/day. No experience required. Call 877460-0657
SANDPIPER APARTMENTS, FREE utilities, rate specials. 1Bedroom. 795-2356 SIERRA POINTE APARTMENTS. $99 Move-in 1month Free! 1mile from UofA. 1and2 Bedrooms starting at $665. Awesome roommate floorplans. Rent includes *high speed internet, expanded cable, heating, A/C, water, sewer &trash* Pet friendly. Our quiet property also has a pool, spa, 2laundry facilities and 24/hr fitness center. Call us today @520-323-1170. Located at Tucson Blvd/ Grant.
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
HELP WANTED. MOTIVATE servers and promoters for Adobo Island. Will work with your schedule. Call Belle for an interview 520465-2772
2BDRM 1BA $650/MO $350 deposit 303 & 305 E. Lester. 520419-6267 438 E 1ST ST, 2BD 1bath lower unit all tile floors, fenced yard, range, refrigerator, evap cooling. All electric unit. $595/mo 1yr lease no pets. Call owner/agent Rosemary 520.272.8483
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 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 LARGE STUDIO, WALK to UofA, separate kitchen & bath. AC. Lots of closet area. Very nice, clean, and quiet. Includes water & trash. $450/mo with 1yr lease. 298-3017
(520) 626-8546
TS
UAPRESEN
M
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ones Indiana J
prepayment discount
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of Arizo University
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c o m a m u T c Terrirtflaib near campus offersistogreryalet svsieowns,
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
SCOOTER 2008 DIAMO Torino 150cc $1800 firm- Excellent condition- 90mpg- Call Mike: 9901813.
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Name: _________________________________________________________________________ Address: ______________________________________________________________________ City/State:_____________________ Zip: _____________ Phone_____________________ Place my ad online: ___ Send ad with check/money order. We also accept: MasterCard/Visa/American Express: ______________________________ Expiration Date: ___________
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RATES: $5.00 minimum for 20 words (or less) per insertion. 25¢ each additional word. 20 percent discount for five
or more consecutive insertions of the same ad. 20 percent discount for 20 or more insertions of the same ad running the same day(s) of the week during same academic year. For an additional $2.75 per order your ad can appear on the Wildcat Website (wildcat.arizona.edu). Online only rate: (without purchase of print ad) is $2.75 per day. Any posting on Friday must include Saturday and Sunday. The Wildcat will not be responsible for more than the first incorrect insertion of an ad. NO REFUNDS ON CANCELED ADS. Deadline: Noon, one business day before publication.
621-3425 ➤
University of Arizona
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Tucson AZ 85721
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Greek Health and Body General Notices Personal Schools & Instruction ➤ Sports ➤ ➤ ➤ ➤ ➤
EMPLOYMENT
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DJSDVMBUJPO t 1VCMJTIFT JO +BOVBSZ t IUUQ XD BSJ[POB FEV BET WJTJUPSHVJEF 0-year h UA’s dese ut and 2,30 o rk o w io card
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
WRITE AD BELOW—ONE WORD PER BLANK
ing 75
2011
Awesome Brand New 5bdrm, 2Bath Houses $2775/ monthavailable 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
Deadline: Noon one business day before publication
615 N. Park, Rm. 101 r Fall/Winte
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.
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
ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT CLASSIFIED MAIL-IN FORM
l Hall turn
rt st the sta
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
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
U!
Centennia
ION
PANS ADIUM EX OTBALL ST
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.
!!! 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
Welcome the NEW to the
!- UNCOMPARABLE LUXURY6BDRM 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.
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.
1BR, A/C, COVERED porch, shared fenced yard and W/D. $600 all utilities included. 4th Ave and 6th Street. 730-5625.
Reserve your full color ad today for the Spring 2012 UA Visitor Guide
!!!!!!!!*** Brand new 6bdrm/ 7basingle family res- HUGE LIVING room + GIANT 20’x30’ DEN + BIG office LIBRARY‑ ONE of a KINDNew furniture avail. $2,800/mo OBO. 388-0781 ROB.
! 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
STUDIOS FROM $400 spacious apartment homes with great downtown location. 884-8279. Blue Agave Apartments 1240 N. 7th Ave. Speedway/Stone. www.blueagaveapartments.com
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.
NEED TUTORING IN Adobe Premier Pro CS5.5, short-term basis (10-20 hours). Pay is $1520/hr depending on qualifica‑ tions. 882-8080
CAMERAREADY ART: Nov. 17
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.
READER AD DEADLINE: Noon, one business day prior to publication.
Hours: Monday-Friday 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
DEADLINE: Nov. 3
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.
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FOR RENT ➤ ➤
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FOR SALE ➤ ➤ ➤ ➤ ➤ ➤ ➤
Cameras Clothing Computers Furniture Income Property Misc. for Sale Yard Sales
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HOUSING
Apartment for Rent Condominium for Rent ➤ Condominium for Sale ➤ Duplex-Fourplex: Rent ➤ Guesthse/Studio: Rent ➤ House for Rent ➤ House for Sale ➤ Housing Wanted ➤ ➤
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A Guide to Religious Services
Grace Evangelical Lutheran Church (WELS). Sunday Worship 7:45am & 10:00am. Bible Class 9:00am. www.GraceTucsonWELS.com 830 N First Ave. Tucson, AZ 85719 520-623-6633
Community of Hope Sunday worship service - 8am (traditional), 10:30am (contemporary), & 6pm (charismatic). 3141 W. Ironwood Hill Dr. Tucson, AZ 85745
Priority College Ministry at First Southern Baptist Church Sundays, 11am Contemporary/ 8:30am Classic Worship. Come worship with us! 445 E. Speedway Blvd. Tucson, AZ 85705
First Christian Church Open & Affirming. Just Peace Progressive. Worship: 10:30am Sundays. 740 E. Speedway Blvd. Tucson, AZ 85719
Anglican Fellowship Sunday Mass - 12:00 1212 N. Sahuara, Tucson. Evening Prayer - Monday 7:00pm Ada Pierce McCormick Bldg/Chapel 1401 E. 1st, UA (520)991-9842.
WELS Tucson Campus Ministry Student Bible Study and discussion. Sundays 7:00pm. www.WELSTCM.com 830 N. First Avenue, Tucson, AZ 85719
L.D.S. Church- Institute of Religion. Sunday meetings 9am, 11am, 1 pm;. Institute Classes M-F www.ldsces.org/tucson. 1333 E. 2nd St, Tucson, AZ, 85755
Episcopal Campus Ministry 6pm Sunday Mass, 6pm Thursday Dinner ua-canterbury.org 715 N. Park Ave. 520-878-8774
Lutheran Campus Ministry - ELCA Lutheran Campus Ministry @ Campus Christia Center. Sunday 10:30am, Wednesday 6pm. www.lcm-ua.org 715 N. Park Avenue, Tucson, AZ 85719
Church of Christ Campus Ministry Campus Minister - Jesse Warren. 520-390-8115 2848 N. Mountain Ave. 85719 To be a part of our Guide to Religious Services, contact Christal Montoya (520) 621-3425 or email classifieds@wildcat.arizona.edu
10
• Daily Wildcat
sports
•
wednesday, october
12, 2011
react
from page 10
Alex Monetta agriculture business economics junior
“Coach Stoops did about all that he could here. He took over a program when it was nothing. And he took the team to three straight bowl games but it’s just time to move on. There’s still six games in the season, it shows that (athletic director) Greg Byrne is not afraid to take chances.” “It’s a good thing because we were losing so many games. We’ve lost like everything so they had to do something.”
Jen Gummere retail and consumer sciences senior “I was happy because maybe we’ll get a new kicker. I think he was just really negative but I mean, I don’t know that, just what I see on TV.” Alyssa nikolas elementary education senior
&
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