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A caveman could not, in fact, do this. tuesday, october ,
tucson, arizona
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UA soccer coach Tobias resigns By Kevin Zimmerman and Vincent Balistreri ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT Athletic Director Jim Livengood announced yesterday that Dan Tobias resigned as the Arizona head soccer coach. With his team touting a Pacific 10 Conference-worst 3-9-1 record, Tobias
issued a statement after ending his seventh year as head coach: “It is with great sadness that, for personal reasons, I am stepping down from the head coach position,” Tobias said. “I would like to thank (UA President) Robert Shelton, Jim Livengood, (Senior Associate Athletic Director) Rocky LaRose and the entire Wildcat family for affording me such a great
opportunity at one of the nation’s finest universities and one of the country’s best athletic departments.” Most recently, starting midfielder Leila Amini decided to leave the team, becoming the ninth player to leave the program over the last year. “The soccer environment has been deteriorating for the past few years since I been here,” Amini told the
Daily Wildcat. “People in the past have brought up issues to try to change the environment for the better, but unfortunately I don’t see any effort toward these changes.” Assistant coaches John Galas and Lisa Oyen will immediately replace Tobias as co-interim head coaches. Arizona has seven games remaining on its schedule. COACH, page 5
Dan Tobias
Campus Health out of flu vaccines
Amir Adib/Arizona Daily Wildcat
A worker on the future Sky Bar site, a stargazing bar next door to Brooklyn Pizza Company, begins the task of cleaning up after a day’s work. Sky Bar is the brainchild of Tony Vaccaro, the owner of Brooklyn Pizza Company.
Brooklyn Pizza Company owner to open stargazing bar Fourth Avenue to host universethemed lounge
By Michelle Cohen ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT Tony Vaccaro had an epiphany while floating down the Middle Fork of the Salmon River in Idaho on his annual vacation. Vaccaro, owner of Brooklyn Pizza Company and lifelong astronomy enthusiast, had been contemplating what to do with the empty storefront he also owns next to his pizza shop,
534 N. Fourth Ave., for a few years. His decision? Build a bar with a view of the stars. “I mulled over a few ideas,” he said. “I wanted to do something unique, inspirational and educational just because bars seem to be the opposite of all those things.” Vaccaro chose not to renew the lease on the nightclub North on Fourth, 536 N. Fourth Ave., which previously occupied the space and
closed last month, he said. Sky Bar, expected to open Oct. 31 or shortly after, will serve Brooklyn pizza and feature a full bar, outdoor patio for stargazing and a Celestron CPC 800 telescope wired to a camera to display images on a television inside the bar, he said. “Every night of the week, we’ll be taking deep-space images of nebulae, SKYBAR, page 7
Campus Health Services has run out of vaccinations for the seasonal flu and will not be receiving more, an official said. Campus Health depleted its reserve of the shots after an Oct. 3 rush where close to 500 were given out, said spokesperson Terri West. “And that was it,” she said. No new seasonal-flu shots will be delivered to the UA because pharmaceutical companies have stopped producing them in favor of the H1N1 vaccine, set to arrive on campus in early November, West said. In the meantime, she said, requests for the seasonal shots have continued to pour in, though she could not cite an exact number of denied persons because Campus Health does not keep request records. However, “it looks like we’re starting to increase again,” West said of the seasonal-flu epidemic on campus. Campus Health officials have been referring those in need of shots to clinics run by Mollen Immunization Clinics — a national immunization provider — near campus. Most of those clinics are still well stocked, West said. — Arizona Daily Wildcat
Mollen clinics near campus Mollen Clinics - Tucson 6383 E. 22nd St. Ste 131 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. Walmart 7150 E. Speedway Blvd. 10 a.m. - 6 p.m. Albertsons 6363 E. 22nd St. 10 a.m. - 6 p.m. CVS 8705 E. Speedway Blvd. 10 a.m. - 6 p.m.
Club provides for UA student wins Miss Pima County pious greeks By Yael Schusterman ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT
By Marissa Freireich ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT Religious members of the Greek Life community have an opportunity to express their faith with their peers through a new organization on campus. GreekVenture is a club that allows students to discuss both religion and their association with the greek community. The group meets every other Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the Coyote Room of Park Student Union. “I think it’s a great place where women and men from different houses can come together and connect on a spiritual basis,” said Julia Saad, a math junior who founded the club. Saad has been a member of the Chi Omega sorority since her freshman year. “It’s important to remember that you can bring into Greek Life who
you are,”she said. A different greek bible study group was on campus a few years ago but is no longer in existence, Saad said. “Greek Life is really important to me and so is my faith,”she said. Saad said she wanted to have a group where students involved with Greek Life could discuss ideas about their faith and how it applies to their lives. Greek Venture is part of Cru at UA, a Christian organization on campus that has chapters internationally as part of Campus Crusade for Christ. Cru at UA is a Christian organization, but people from all faiths are welcome to attend. Cru at UA meets weekly at 7:30 p.m. in Koffler 218 and has about 80 members. Greek Venture is a smaller GREEK VENTURE, page 5
The Miss Pima County crown was passed this weekend from one UA student to another. Kathryn Bulkley, veterinary sciences freshman, was named Miss Pima County 2010 after Tanya Valladares, physiology senior and Miss Pima County 2009, “passed the torch” to Bulkley on Saturday night. As the audience cheered in the auditorium of Flowing Wells High School , Bulkley’s sorority sisters in Chi Omega all shouted her name in excitement. “It’s my dream to be Miss America and this is the very first stepping stone to the rest of my life,” Bulkley said. Bulkley sang “Nessun Dorma,” an opera piece from the final act of Giacomo Puccini’s opera “Turandot.” Bulkley has been involved in pageants since she was a junior in high school. She entered this year’s Miss Pima Ashlee Salamon/Arizona Daily Wildcat County pageant to earn money for Veterinary science freshman Katy Bulkley displays her college, she said. Bulkley received two previous pageant crowns. $1,679 for winning according to the
News is always breaking at dailywildcat.com ... or follow us on
pageant’s Web site. The competition is a great way for women to“get out there and express how they feel on certain issues,”she said. Her outreach platform was the “ABCs of Water Safety.” Bulkley was a lifeguard for four years and said she would like to educate families on drowning prevention, because drowning has become a serious issue in Arizona . It is a requirement to raise $100 to be a contestant in the pageant, which supports the Children’s Miracle Network, she said. Bulkley’s family has shown a great deal of support as well. Her mother Pamela Bulkley, Miss Hawaii 1981 , said she was proud that to see her daughter competing, but Kathryn Bulkley made it clear that the pageant was not forced upon her. “My mother doesn’t put any pressure on me, she isn’t one of those typical pageant moms,” she said. Kathryn Bulkley said one of her goals in competing was to break down
: @DailyWildcat
PAGEANT, page 7
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• tuesday, october 13, 2009 • arizona daily wildcat
Jaclyn Lee Applegate Calendar Editor 520•621•7580 calendar@wildcat.arizona.edu
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ODDS
Weather
Datebook
Today’s High: 86 Low: 61
Get some sleep
The fall 2009 Well U Lecture will feature professor Richard Bootzin. Bootzin is director of the sleep research lab in the psychology department and will speak on “Sense and Nonsense to Improve Sleep.” This lecture will be held in the Gallagher Theater at noon.
Tomorrow: H: 88 L: 61
Bugging out
ENDS
Enjoy a casual scientific discussion with Carl “Bug Man” Olson at Science Café. This month’s subject will be, “Whats bugging you? Identifying and living with insects.” It will be held at Cushing Street Bar and Restaurant, 198 W. Cushing St. at 6 p.m.
Oct. 13
Lots o’ laughs
Enjoy free improv comedy from the Charles Darwin Experience. This will take place in the Gallagher Theater at 10 p.m. and is free for all!
On the Spot
Why did football lose to Washington?
Missed opportunities (127 votes) Refs made bad calls (117 votes)
Obama’s Nobel Prize: thoughts?
Worth noting
Feel the rhythm
Washington was the better team (45 votes)
New question: Have you gotten a flu shot this year?
News Tips Matthew Pailes
621-3193
Anthropology graduate student Did Obama deserve to win a Nobel Prize? Um, I hope he has a presidency that will allow him to deserve it.
The Daily Wildcat is always interested in story ideas and tips from readers. If you see something deserving of coverage, contact news editor Tim McDonnell at news@wildcat.arizona.edu or call the newsroom at 621-3193.
Arizona Daily Wildcat
But aren’t you supposed to do something to win an honor like that? I think it was, in a small part, that the world wanted to apply pressure to him to, basically, live up to the speeches he makes. But I think it was intended to put a little bit of exterior pressure, which I’m perfectly fine with.
Vol. 103, Issue 36
The Arizona Daily Wildcat is an independent student newspaper published daily during the fall and spring semesters at the University of Arizona. It is distrubted on campus and throughout Tucson with a circulation of 15,000. 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 Arizona 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.
You don’t think it had anything to do with being the first black president of the U.S.? Not really. I think it has to do with his personality being somebody who is quite charismatic and can really inspire people.
Lisa Beth Earle/ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT
Odaiko Sonora performs the art of Taiko, Japanese ensemble drumming, at the Tucson Meet Yourself Festival on Saturday. The festival celebrates Southern Arizona’s rich blend of ethnicities and cultures through traditional practices like art, dance and music.
Nunchuck-waving ninja has beef with Sen. Joe Lieberman VERNON, Conn. — Vernon police said they arrested a man who was dressed as a ninja and waving nunchucks while yelling about wanting to beat up U.S. Sen. Joe Lieberman. The man, 30, was charged Sunday with breach of peace. Police said he was brought to Rockville General
So if he doesn’t do what he says he’s going to do in all of his speeches, should they take the award away after the fact? No, but I think people’s attention spans are short enough that either he’ll live up to it or it’ll fade into obscurity and no one will really care.
Hospital for a psychiatric evaluation and later released. Authorities said they received several emergency calls about the man, who witnesses say was standing at the corner of Route 83 and Regan Road at about 11 a.m. Officers said they pulled out bean
Elvis’ hair up for auction in Chicago
Guy: How about Tucson, eh? What a disappointment! — Student Union Memorial Center
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CHICAGO — The King may be dead, but that doesn’t mean it’s too late to run your fingers through his hair. Elvis Presley’s hair — at least a clump of hair that Presley may have lost to an Army barber when he went into the service back in 1958 — Elvis Presley is going on the auction block this Sunday at Leslie Hindman Auctioneers in Chicago. The hair is part of a collection of more than 200 items that belonged to or are associated with Presley. There are clothes he wore, scarves he threw to screaming fans — who judging by the yellow sweat stains, never washed them — and Christmas cards he sent. And there are lots of records, some he kept in his own juke box, and other sorts of memorabilia ranging from Elvis dolls to Elvis wrist watches to Elvis Pez dispensers. All the items belonged to Gary Pepper. No Hound Dog, Pepper was not only a huge Presley fan and president of a Presley fan club, but a close friend, as many of the photographs of the two together suggest. Pepper, who had cerebral palsy, died in 1980, three years after Presley, and left his collection to his nurse, and that is who is putting the items up for auction, said Mary Williams, of the auction house. —The Associated Press
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CORRECTIONS In the Oct. 12 issue, the Wildcat stated that President Barack Obama was the first black person to win the Nobel Peace Prize since Martin Luther King Jr. The column should have stated that he was the first black U.S. citizen to receive the prize since King. The Wildcat regrets this error.
Corrections
Requests for corrections or complaints concerning news and editoral content of the Arizona Daily Wildcat should be directed to the editor in chief. For further information on the Daily Wildcat’s approved grievance policy, readers may contact Mark Woodhams, director of Arizona Student Media, in the Sherman R. Miller Newsroom at the Park Student Union. Editor in Chief Alex Dalenberg Managing Editor Shain Bergan News Editor Tim McDonnell Sports Editor Kevin Zimmerman Opinions Editor Laura Donovan Calendar Editor Jaclyn Lee Applegate Design Chief Marisa D. Fisher
The word “girl” appears in the Bible once. According to the Bible, there were two windows on Noah’s Ark. Sixty percent of atheists and agnostics say they own at least one Bible.
DID YOU KNOW? UA BookStores, SUMC carries over 30,000 general reading titles. Plus, ask us about special orders. 520-621-2814 | uofabookstores.com illustration by Marino Ponder/Arizona Daily Wildcat
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Doesn’t that kind of cheapen what the Nobel Prizes are all about though if they give them out based on what they hope happens? Um, it does strike me as a bit odd. But, you know, everything is political and there’s no point in trying to pretend that it’s not. — Brian Kimball
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bag and taser guns, and the man became polite and cooperative. The man couldn’t be reached Monday. He has no public phone listing, and it’s not clear whether he has a lawyer.
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arizona daily wildcat • tuesday, october 13, 2009 •
Swine flu UA researchers gain insight into chaos deadliest to young, healthy RESEARCH NOTES
Phyics and optical science professor Poul Jessen along with a group of researchers from the College of Optical Sciences recently discovered that “classical chaos” occurs in the quantum world.
Jacob Rader/ Arizona Daily Wildcat
By Carly Kennedy Arizona Daily Wildcat UA scientists are the first to provide signs that the world is run by chaos — at least in the quantum world. Quantum mechanics: the widely accepted set of mathematic principles that can predict pretty much everything on the smallest scale. In the world of atoms and molecules, quantum mechanics is the constitution to which all things are governed. Now, switch to real life: cars honking, people walking, the wind blowing leaves around the base of a tree. In our world, there are no principles that can determine what career path we will take, what the stock market will do, or where you will eat lunch today. Nevertheless, our day-to-day lives are governed by the physics principle of chaos — defined as small disturbances that completely change the end result. This is a concept physicists believe to only work in real life, known to them as the “classical world.” UA physicists have been pondering a couple questions: what is the connection between quantum mechanics in the quantum world and chaos in the classical world? How does the chaos we see in our daily lives emerge from the behaviors of atoms and molecules? “How can it be that we see chaotic behavior in everything: the weather,
the stock market, the population of lemmings in the Arctic, and so on; but somehow it’s not built into quantum mechanics, which is our theory for how everything should behave?” asked Poul Jessen, a professor in the College of Optical Sciences. This question drove Jessen, along with a team of fellow scientists, to see if they could find signs of chaos in a model that is quantum mechanical, meaning it obeys all laws on the atomic level. And what they found could take the study of quantum chaos to a whole new level, the team said. In order to find the connection between quantum mechanics and classical physics, the team knew they had to start small — quite literally. “If you go out into the world to take a real-world model and try to find quantum chaos it’s impossible — you cannot control them at the quantum mechanical level,” said Jessen. “A scientist must have a solid model that obeys the rules of quantum mechanics.” Atoms that act like individuals illustrate the simple quantum mechanic behaviors that Jessen and his team were looking for. To prepare the atoms, the team suspended them in a vacuum-like chamber with absolutely no air to ensure there would be nothing that the atom could collide with. Because atoms move very quickly,
the team “cooled them down” to 3 millionths of a degree Kelvin by a process known as laser cooling. Even when the atoms are super cold, they are still like “spinning tops,” and scientists then measured their quantum state through a technique known as tomography, which is imaging through the use of a wave of energy, kind of like an X-ray machine. Because atoms are magnetic, the team deliberately issued “kicks” by a pulsed magnetic field, and “twists” were delivered by an optical-frequency laser beam, and then were recorded as imaged and stop-and-go movies. After observation of these images on a computer monitor, the team saw something truly amazing: the quantum “spinning top” atom actually has the same boundaries between predictability and chaos as the classical “spinning top.” On the computer monitor, the plotting of various atoms in a classical spin will move around in a shape that looks like onion layers. “This shows you that the motion is predictable and regular,” Jessen said. However, if the initial spin was moved further away, you will go everywhere, and that is called the “sea of chaos.” Atoms spun infinitesimally off to one side followed a completely different pattern, which is a clear behavior of chaos. And the quantum spin did the same thing.“The spinning of the atom
turns out to be a great model system for quantum chaos,” Jessen said “This is one of the first examples of chaos in the quantum world,” said Aaron Smith, graduate research associate in the physics department. “After almost four years here in the lab, we have something pretty cool to show for it.” “Chaos usually doesn’t exist in the quantum world like it does in the classical world. But what we have done is show that although you can’t see classical chaos in the quantum world, you can see ‘fingerprints’ of it,” Smith said. Smith said the scientists are now looking to gain more control over the atoms in the experiment, meaning they would enlarge the“spin”and gain more insight to the evidence of chaos. “The total space is actually two spins separated, and our original equipment only let us work with one spin and ignored the other. Now we’ve put in new controls so that will be the next step,”he said. The team said this experiment is a baby step toward understanding how quantum mechanics can be applied to both realms of physics — the very large and the very small. “This is basic science because it has to do with trying to understand how laws of physics are put together at a very fundamental level,” said Jessen. “This is something that will allow us to understand real life chaos — almost philosophically.”
Every week the Daily Wildcat holds the lens up to scientific research on campus. Is there an investigation you would like to learn more about? Send suggestions to news@wildcat.arizona.edu
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McClatchy Tribune MIAMI — Patients with the H1N1 virus who become severely ill and those who die tend to be relatively young adults without underlying medical conditions, according to a new Canadian study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association. The average age of 168 patients studied in 38 Canadian adult and pediatric intensive care units was 32.3 years. Thirty-three of the patients died within 90 days of being admitted to the hospital. The study, released Monday, suggests that the H1N1 flu might be more complex than experts had believed. Many had said the virus was most dangerous to people with underlying medical conditions such as asthma, diabetes, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and immune system diseases. And experts say regular seasonal flu is most dangerous to the elderly. “Our data suggest that severe disease and mortality in the current outbreak is concentrated in relatively healthy adolescents and adults between the ages of 10 and 60 years,” the authors write. But they go on to say that modern therapies, including breathing assistance from ventilators and antiviral medicines, can prevent most swine flu deaths. “With such therapy, we found that most patients can be supported through their critical illness,” the authors wrote. South Florida doctors agreed that the Canadian study suggests that the H1N1 flu is not entirely understood. “Most of the patients we’ve seen had underlying conditions or pregnancy,” said Dr. Steven Katz, director of emergency services at Memorial Hospital West in Pembroke Pines, Fla. “But this is a new strain of flu. It’s still early. Sometimes the facts change as diseases unfold.” “People die from the flu each year,” he added. “This one is no worse than other flus, at least so far.” Most people with flu-like symptoms don’t need to go to emergency rooms or even take antivirals, Katz said. Only people with severe shortness of breath or very rapid heartbeat should go to hospitals, he said. The Canadian study, conducted between April and August, was authored by Dr. Anand Kumar of the Health Sciences Centre and St. Boniface Hospital in Winnipeg. The fact that few of the severely ill patients in the Canadian study had underlying health conditions may be because the H1N1 virus primarily infects younger people, who tend to be healthier, the authors said.
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• tuesday, october 13, 2009 • arizona daily wildcat
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dailywildcat.com
DWopinions
Alex Dalenberg Editor in Chief 520•621•7579 editor@wildcat.arizona.edu
Laura Donovan Opinions Editor 520•621•7581 letters@wildcat.arizona.edu
soundbites A Get Crackin’ pistachio commercial, featuring Levi Johnston, the father of Bristol Palin’s son, has gained popularity on the Web. “Now Levi Johnston does it with protection,” the narrator says as Johnston eats a pistachio accompanied by a bodyguard. Wildcat columnists comment on this “viral” video.
Baby daddy doesn’t deserve glorification
When did unplanned, teenage pregnancy beLaura come funny? Is it only Donovan laughable for Johnston, who was awarded a GQ columnist photo shoot and asked to pose for the online publication of Playgirl? Why is he deserving of such positive press? Meanwhile, Bristol Palin doesn’t get to make light of young parenthood. She’s not a Playboy centerfold, and she’s definitely not doing interviews with GQ equivalents as of late. In May, she told People that she “gets up – usually twice during the night – to feed Tripp, who sleeps in a hand-medown crib in her bedroom, and she says she has tapped out at least one school paper with her son crying in the background. And she worked two part-time jobs to help pay for the diapers and formula her parents otherwise supply.” None of this is a laughing matter. It’s unfair that Johnston can publicly reap the benefits of this situation and be considered cool and attractive. The unmarried, hockey-playing, high school drop-out is not an appropriate role model for young men, and his apparent vanity and disregard for parenting should especially be frowned upon. What is his son going to think if he ever comes across that horrible commercial or even more traumatic, naked photograph of his own father? I already feel sorry for baby Tripp Palin Johnston. — Laura Donovan is the opinions editor. She can be reached at letters@wildcat.arizona.edu
MAILBAG Wildcat ad unfairly portrays Elvis Presley
Normally I enjoy your paper. It’s one of the best campus papers I’ve seen, and most days, it is more entertaining than the city paper. But yesterday, I was dismayed by the unfair, stereotypical portrayal of America’s King of Rock and Roll, Elvis Presley, on page 13. Elvis died before probably any of the newspaper staff was even born (even I was five years too late), but that is no excuse to continue the negative images so often brushed off as “innocent fun.” Most people do not realize the great contributions Presley made to society beyond his music. He gave thousands of dollars to charities throughout his life, from the March of Dimes to St. Jude. In 1973, Elvis performed a concert in Hawaii, most famous for being broadcast via satellite, to more than one billion viewers, but what most don’t remember is that the show was a benefit for the Kui Lee Cancer Fund, and Presley raised over $75,000 in the “pay what you can” admission. Of particular interest to UA students is another concert Elvis performed in Hawaii — one that helped get the USS Arizona Memorial built. His 1961 show
Eat your heart out, Palin
in Hawaii raised over $65,000 for the fundraising effort, which had stalled until the publicity Elvis brought. As for the offending photo, it is not an accurate portrayal of the man — it was only the last year of his life that Elvis’ weight and health got out of control. For most all of his 42 years, Elvis was active, played sports and was rarely sedentary. In the era before 24/7 fitness places, he had a raquetball court built on his Graceland property so he could play and workout any time of the day. His appetite for southern fried foods is legendary, but it is greatly exaggerated. It is simply wrong to continue the myth of the “fat Elvis.” It is not only an affront to the memory of Elvis, but it is also offensive to overweight Americans and also Southerners. I expect better from a campus newspaper as high quality as the Wildcat. Candice C. Curtis Animal sciences senior UA Race Track Industry Program Graceland tour operations lead, 2004-2009
Drinking laws reminiscent of Prohibition
A day does not pass without a student receiving a minor in possession. How can this law be deemed valid when it is intentionally and frequently disregarded by almost half of the individuals it is intended to manage? In almost every part, but one, our government has determined that 18 year olds are capable of assuming the rights and responsibilities of adult citizenship. When we choose not to give adult status with respect to responsible consumption of alcohol, we sign onto our 18 to 20 year olds a superannuated childhood, without the advantage of parental guidance. If the intention of the law is to decrease driving while intoxicated, then enforce stricter driving laws. However, if we fully believe that our 18 year olds are not capable of responsible behavior, raise the age of majority. In sum, consistency is a must. Adults need to be allowed drink responsibility. Prohibition doesn’t work. Jonathan Messing Pre-business junior
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Since pistachios hopefully have nothDaniel ing to do with sex, I’m Greenberg guessing this company just used Johnston for columnist attention. It worked. Sure, it’s a touchy subject since Miss Palin gets probed by the media, but Johnston has his name tattooed on his arms, just in case he gets so plastered that he forgets it. He’s clearly a poor mating choice. Bristol’s just going to have to deal with her mistake, and she should do so by self-medicating with some wonderful Pistachios. — Daniel Greenberg is a Near Eastern studies senior. He can be reached at letters@wildcat.arizona.edu
Johnston, Palin, pistachios are all pathetic Anna Swenson columnist
This stunt has “desperate” written all over it. Johnston is struggling to stay relevant after his 15 nanoseconds of fame, while the pistachio ad people are trying to be hip and kitschy by tap-
ping this z-list celebrity. This vapid, meaningless stunt is hardly different than Sarah Palin’s swiftly-released “hockey-mom-in-lipstick” memoir. The Palins and company are over, and they know it – they just don’t want anyone else to. What a misleading sales pitch. After watching Johnston swallow the pistachio, I don’t think I can ever eat one again, not even with the awkwardly punned “protection” reference. Johnston’s other famous action, that of knocking up Bristol Palin, required even more skill and forethought than this pathetic foray into “acting.”
• Letters should be no longer than 350 words and should refrain from personal attacks.
— Anna Swenson is a sophomore majoring in English. She can be reached at letters@wildcat.arizona.edu
Barbie and Ken: a contemporary love story Got knocked off the saddle, did you? Lost because your relationship was so long you’ve become clueless to navigating the labyrinth of male-female interactions? No worries. Five years after their devastating public breakup, Ken and Barbie are here to dispense their sage advice about getting back into the dating game.
Ken’s Take: First and foremost, it’s over. Remy Albillar columnist
Your relationship has ended, and that’s the first thing you need to get through your head. Until you stop focusing on your previous relationship, you’re not going to get anywhere. If you find yourself comparing everything a new girl does to things your girlfriend used to do (or didn’t), you probably need to take a little extra time to regroup emotionally. Be confident. If you’re not completely into the idea of you being worth a new girl’s attention, why should she be into you? If you just got out of a relationship, you managed to get one girl interested in you, so you’re probably not completely repulsive. Being yourself is really cool and all, but there’s a good chance that most of the girls in this world are not as deeply interested in your hobbies and life as you are. Do your best to adapt to conversations, talk about what the new girl is into and seem relatable enough to be considered for many conversations to come. That doesn’t mean you need to be fake, it just means you need to be flexible enough to talk about anything that will keep her talking to you. Branch out! You’re single now. Enjoy it. You can
experiment with as many types of opportunities as you can talk yourself into. That means you shouldn’t limit yourself to pursuing one girl, either. One of the best perks of the single life is a lack of exclusivity. Don’t let yourself fall into the trap of just trying to date one girl because that’s what you’re used to. Don’t fear rejection. You’re going to strike out. Who cares! Your worst-case scenario is that some new girl you hit on thinks you’re weird, but then you’ve already dropped the ball, so what difference does it make? Plus, you won’t feel more comfortable doing something until you do it over and over again, so just throw out your line until something bites. Have fun, be safe, have faith in yourself and try not to mention you took some dating advice from a doll. There’s a lot of women at the UA, and it’s only a matter of time before one of them finds you attractive enough to “watch ‘Fight Club’” with. — Remy Albillar is a junior majoring in English. He can be reached at letters@wildcat.arizona.edu
Barbie’s take: It’s a two-way street Tiffany Kimmell columnist
The most difficult part of getting back into the dating game is actually having to play by the rules. According to Helen Fisher, author of “The First Sex,” games are the way to keep romance alive. “Playing hard-to-get or leaving a little to the imagination allows the woman to be wooed and appreciated and the man to be challenged and
intrigued.” But it’s hard to jump back in the driver’s seat of the dating game after a serious relationship and follow the rules of the road, basically because it’s easy to forget how to drive. Girls are told not to answer a guys’ phone calls, not to text them back right away and to avoid the urge to give too much too soon. This road is called the “the waiting game.” Ellen Kreidman, author of “Light His Fire” says this “separates the guys who just want you on a whim from the men who’ll put in the extra effort.” The waiting game is a difficult but necessary method used so women appear to be a “catch” rather than a “convenience.” Lets’s be honest. One of the hardest parts about getting back into the game is delaying doing the deed. When in a relationship, the prize is always waiting for you — in bed. But in the dating game, the rules are different. Sherry Argov, author of “Why Men Love Bitches” advises girls to resist hitting the sheets because “it shows him that you’re worth the wait and
effort.” Obviously, though, guys wouldn’t mind hitting the sheets right away. When you choose to hold out on sex, it makes you appear to care who you actually wake up to the morning after. But to those girls looking to break the rules, playing the field for a bit won’t hurt. It may not be in the “rule book,” but there’s no problem giving yourself a break from one-on-one matches and settling for a few scrimmages. Besides, no one ever said rebound relationships were just a guy thing. Just don’t get caught sneaking out his window in the middle of the night. And don’t expect to see the relationship going anywhere. A rebound is a rebound. You’re simply getting back in the game. — Tiffany Kimmell is journalism senior. She can be reached at letters@wildcat.arizona.edu
arizona daily wildcat • tuesday, october 13, 2009 •
Daily Wildcat: Can you tell me about the new research project that will involve your work? Horst Dieter Steklis: The project we just launched is with folks at the McClelland Institute. We got together and designed a project that has us looking at parenting forms and what the consequences are of parenting in gorilla societies. When I say parenting, I’m talking about the paternal side of parenting, something fairly rare in primates and mammals. When you find a primate species, especially those closely related to humans, like the gorilla, who do engage in a fair amount of parenting, that gets to be quite interesting and one can derive common principals that inform human parenting. That’s the idea — to bring comparatives. DW: How long have you been researching gorillas? HDS: My wife and I began studying gorillas in 1991 in Rwanda, so for more than 15 years. We lived in Africa for a couple of years and we go back and forth continuing our work there with the Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund International.
DW: How long have you been researching paternal relationships in gorillas? HDS: That’s a recent focus for us. I’ve been involved in different research with gorillas. Because they’re a highly endangered species, a lot of our work addresses conservation issues. We did a lot of filming because when you’re interested in communication — facial expressions and postures — it’s always better to capture that on film to look at later. DW: How involved are male gorillas in parenting? HDS: We have always seen gorillas playing with youngsters but hadn’t really developed it as a research focus. It’s because we fell in here with the good folks at the McClelland Institute, like Dr. Ellis, and in psychology that we began having discussions about family and parenting. We said “Hey, this is a good opportunity to collaborate.” It was good for us because it allowed us to look at something we hadn’t thought much about it until we started talking to people here interested in human families. We said “Wouldn’t it be interesting to bring a comparative perspective on human parenting?” In this case, the comparison is with a close genetic relative, the gorilla. DW: Do most male primates show involvement with parenting? HDS: If you look among the great apes, the group of primates genetically closely related to us, gorillas stand out as the ape that shows a lot more paternal behavior than others do. Others hardly show any. If you look more broadly in the animal kingdom there are other species that also show high degrees of paternal behavior or fathering so it really depends on the animal and the mating system. Among birds for example usually both parents are
Photo by Jacob Rader/Arizona Daily Wildcat
involved in raising the young, which is why most birds are monogamous. Some mammals, many dog species, also raise offspring in pairs because you need both parents, especially if it’s a slow-maturing offspring. DW: Has a study like this been
conducted before? HDS: McClelland is on the forefront in this kind of comparative perspective study on human parenting. There are very few departments of family studies around the country who would entertain that comparative perspective. It’s unique in that regard.
Every week the Daily Wildcat sits down with a member of the UA Faculty to discuss their work and campus issues. Have a professor you’d like us to talk to? Send suggestions to news@wildcat.arizona.edu
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Horst Dieter Steklis is UA South’s associate dean for academic affairs and an adjunct psychology professor. Steklis was a professor of anthropology at Rutgers University, where he worked since 1974 before coming to the UA in 2004. In 2007 he moved to the UA South campus. He has an undergraduate degree in anthropology and a doctorate in primatology from the University of California, Berkeley. Steklis is currently conducting research on parenting by drawing comparisons between humans and gorilla parenting forms. The Daily Wildcat sat down with Steklis to discuss his work.
UA South associate dean for academic affairs, adjunct psychology professor
= how much UA students spend on housing each year
By Michelle Cohen Arizona Daily Wildcat
Horst Dieter Steklis
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Faculty Q&A
GREEK VENTURE
Faith-based group launches subsect
continued from page 1 Steve Cabrillos, a staff member for Cru leads the group in song at a weekly Cru meeting. Meetings are held every Wednesday night in Koffler room 218. Photo courtesy of Julia Saad
community group of Cru at UA that is intended for members of the greek community and has about 17 members so far. Greek Venture has been meeting since the start of fall semester. A typical meeting starts with an icebreaker question, Saad said. Then the group studies a verse from the Bible and discusses how it relates to the individual students, the UA campus and Greek Life. Andrea Cabrillos is a staff member with Cru at UA. Cabrillos said other campuses have religion-oriented greek
movements and members of Cru’s regional office suggested UA start one as well. “It’s such a large population on campus,”she said.“They have a huge influence on campus.” Saad and Cabrillos started discussing how the greek system works and brainstorming ideas for the club last semester. “Our hope is that we would be a place for people who want to know more about religion and figure out what they believe,”she said. “Whatever they need we want to be there for them.” Saad hopes to eventually have
members of every sorority and fraternity involved in Greek Venture. “I think that faith and spirituality is a really big question for people in college and out of college,” she said.“It’s a place for people to have a dialogue and bring questions if they have them.” Saad said the greek community sometimes has a bad reputation, but it is important to remember they also positively influence many areas of campus. “I think it’s just understanding that I bring my faith with me no matter what I get involved with,” she said.
Team to continue under new leaders
continued from page 1
“We’re going to do just like we do everyday — we’ll show up and we’ll roll our sleeves up and go to work,” Galas said Monday evening. “We’re focusing one game at a time, for these girls, for this program (and) for this athletic department,” he added. “We’re going to tackle each day as it comes and make sure we’re preparing this group to compete for every Friday and Sunday until
HPV Fact: It is estimated that each minute in the US, there is a new case of genital warts. There’s something you can do.
COACH
the end of the season.” Galas said he spoke with the team who reacted with“resounding shock”to Tobias’ resignation. “It was a shock to Lisa and I and the team, but we fully support his decision and we’re here for him making sure that we move forward,” Galas said. “It was tough, it was emotional, but (the team) handled it well,” he added.“Dan (Tobias) was first
class and handled everything professionally, and we owe a lot for what he’s done for this university and this program.” Tobias found success in his first few seasons with the Wildcats, leading the 2004 squad to a conference championship and garnering a Pac-10 Coach of the Year award. But after his first two seasons, Tobias posted a 26-43-3 record at Arizona.
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• tuesday, october 13, 2009
dailywildcat.com
policebeat By Michael Merriman Arizona Daily Wildcat
No work and all play, makes for a drunken RA
UAPD officers were dispatched to the Posada San Pedro Residence Hall on Oct. 3 at 12:15 a.m. to check on an intoxicated woman, said to be unconscious but breathing. Upon arrival, officers met with a resident assistant at the front door. The RA led officers to an area of the lobby where the intoxicated woman was located. According to a friend of the intoxicated woman, she was an RA at the same dorm. The two women had been drinking at the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity house at 1525 E. Drachman Street earlier that evening. The women got a cab ride back to the dorm, after which the intoxicated woman began to vomit and then went unconscious. According to police, the strong odor of intoxicants could be detected coming from the woman, who was unable to remain conscious during questioning. Tucson Fire Department medical personnel arrived on scene and transported the woman to University Medical Center where she was treated for extreme intoxication. She was cited on charges of minor in possession and released from the hospital. The incident has been referred to the Dean of Students Office.
Drunken damsel detained during stairwell slumber
UAPD officers were dispatched to the Villa del Puente Residence Hall on Oct. 3 at 12:40 a.m. to see about an intoxicated woman. Upon arrival, officers met with an RA who escorted them to a stairwell on the west side of the building. In the stairwell, police observed an unconscious woman who had her head in the lap of one of her female friends. According to police, the unconscious woman was identified as a non-student who was visiting for the weekend. The woman’s friend told police they had been drinking at the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity house. TFD arrived on scene and transported the woman to UMC for medical treatment. The woman was cited on charges of minor in possession and released from the hospital.
Fraternity flagpoles deformed
University of Arizona Police Department officers received a report of criminal damage at the Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity house at 906 N. First Avenue. According to a fraternity member, on Oct. 4 at approximately 12:43 a.m., an unknown person or persons damaged the flagpoles in front of the residence by bending them out of shape. Police have no suspects or witnesses at this time.
Hours later at the Tau Kappa Epsilon house …
UAPD officers were dispatched to the Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity house on Oct. 4 at 10:09 a.m. in reference to a report of vandalism. Upon arrival, officers met with members of the fraternity who told police that they had come outside to discover several Greek letters in their yard. The letters alpha, gamma and rho had been placed in the front lawn of the house. Fraternity members assumed the incident was a prank perpetrated by another fraternity. Officers went to the Alpha Gamma Rho fraternity house and attempted to make contact with members of the fraternity, but were forced to leave a message with the fraternity after receiving no response. Police have no suspects or witnesses at this time.
From toilet to shower, one drunken man’s journey
UAPD officers responded to the Graham-Greenlee Residence Hall on Oct. 4 at 2:52 a.m. in reference to an extremely intoxicated man. Upon arrival, officers met with a RA who led them to the second floor. On the upper floor, officers found a large puddle of vomit on the floor. Officers followed the vomit into the men’s bathroom. There, they found another large puddle of vomit on a toilet and the intoxicated man, sitting on a ledge in a shower. According to police, the man had bloodshot eyes, slowed speech, vomit on his shorts, and the strong odor of intoxicants coming from his mouth as he spoke. The man admitted to drinking alcohol but was unable to tell police, what he had been drinking or where. TFD personnel arrived to evaluate the man’s medical condition. They cleaned the man up and police cited him on charges of minor in possession. The incident has been referred to the Dean of Students Office.
Delta Tau Delta fraternity house vandalized
UAPD officers met with the president of the Delta Tau Delta fraternity at the UAPD station on Oct. 4 in reference to a report of criminal damage. According to the president, at approximately 5:35 a.m. on Oct. 4, he had been sleeping in his room at the fraternity house. He was awakened by two fraternity members who told him that as they had been walking outside, they heard a loud crash and then the sound of a vehicle quickly leaving the scene. When the members went to check and see what was happening, they found two light pillars had been shattered, apparently by a rock that was left near the scene. Police have no suspects or witnesses at this time.
Let your mind take off with
Fast Facts Every Day in the Wildcat
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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arizona daily wildcat • tuesday, october 13, 2009 •
Americans win Nobel Prize for work in field of economic governance MarketWatch LONDON — Americans Elinor Ostrom and Oliver E. Williamson won the 2009 Nobel prize for economics for their work in the field of economic governance, studying the role of firms, markets and other institutions in setting and enforcing rules, the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences announced Monday. Ostrom, a political scientist at Indiana University in Bloomington, is the first woman to win the prize in economics,
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which was established in 1968. Her work “has challenged the conventional wisdom that common property is poorly managed and should be completely privatized or regulated by central authorities,”the academy said. Williamson, professor emeritus at the University of California, Berkeley, has developed a theory where business firms serve as structures for conflict resolution. Their work over the last three decades has “advanced economic governance research from the fringe to the forefront of scientific
attention,”the academy said. Ostrom and Williamson will split the 10 million Swedish kronor ($1.4 million) prize. “Based on numerous studies of user-managed fish stocks, pastures, woods, lakes and groundwater basins, Ostrom concluded that the outcomes are often better than predicted by standard theories,”the academy said. Williamson’s work has studied the role of markets and firms in resolving conflicts. A drawback of markets is that negotiations invite haggling and disagreement.
Within firms, the use of authority can mitigate contention, but the drawback is that authority can be abused. “Competitive markets work relatively well because buyers and sellers can turn to other trading partners in case of dissent. But when market competition is limited, firms are better suited for conflict resolution than markets,” the academy said. One of the predictions of Williamson’s theory is that the higher the degree of mutual dependence, the more people are likely to
conduct transactions within a firm. “For example, a coal mine and a nearby electric generating plant are more likely to be jointly incorporated the greater the distance to other mines and plants,” the academy said. The economists’ contributions complement each other, the academy said. “Williamson focuses on the problem of regulating transactions that are not covered by detailed contracts or legal rules; Ostrom focuses on the separate problem of rule enforcement,”
Local crown on road to vie for Miss Arizona
stereotypes about“pageant girls.” “I wanna show people that we are sophisticated women who go on to do amazing things,” she said. Audrey Sibley, the pageant’s co-executive director, said she has also been working to change public perception of the pageant since she took the reins in 2005. It’s not just a beauty pageant, she said. It is a “self development program.” Out of the 11 contestants, seven of the women were UA students. This was the first year the pageant was “open,” meaning that girls who live outside Pima County were able to participate. Not every city offers a pageant and winning a local pageant is a requirement to go on to Miss Arizona. Which was ideal for
the academy said. The Nobel economics prize wasn’t among the categories originally laid out by Alfred Nobel in his 1895 will. The prize, officially known as the Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel, was established in 1968 by the Swedish central bank. Paul Krugman, the Princeton University professor and New York Times columnist, won the prize last year for his analysis of trade patterns and location of economic activity.
UA freshman Katy Bulkley receives her crown at the Miss Pima County Pageant 2010 on Saturday. For winning, Bulkley received a $1,679 scholarship toward her education at UA.
Kathryn Bulkey, a Mesa resident. The competition included five categories: talent, interview, evening wear, swimwear and on-stage questioning. Lisa Schmidt, a psychology and criminal justice freshman, is Kathryn Bulkley’s “little sister” in Chi Omega. “I’m so proud of her, it was amazing to watch her,” Schmidt said. “Katy (Kathryn) is a champ at balancing everything, so she will be able to handle everything with no problem,” she added. Kathryn Bulkley will continue to balance work on her outreach platform with her studies and prepare for upcoming pageants, Pamela Bulkley said. “She has plenty of time to prepare for Miss Arizona,”she said.
Photo courtesy of Ed Flores Photography
SKYBAR
Space wonders focus of new hangout continued from page 1 star clusters and galaxies,” Vaccaro said. The name Sky Bar also refers to the bar’s use of solar panels and many windows to create an “open feeling,” he said. In addition, the bar’s tabletops will be made of bamboo and other renewable resources, he said. The bar will also be equipped with solar panels, like the ones already in use at Brooklyn Pizza. “It will add something unique to Tucson,” Vaccaro said. “I honestly don’t know of another bar in the world with its own telescope.” The telescope will be operated with the help of UA and Pima Community College students, he said. Creative writing senior Wells Brambl, who has worked at Brooklyn Pizza for four years, will help operate the telescope. “It’s right up my alley,” Brambl said. “I’m excited to work there to be part of something that’s new and different that will also give me the opportunity to pursue something that fascinates me, which is looking at the cosmos.” Undeclared Pima sophomore
Dillon McCallum, created the logo and flyers for Brooklyn Pizza Company and is creating a Web and graphic design for Sky Bar. He will also be help run the telescope software. “I definitely think (Sky Bar) is pretty cool,” McCallum said. “Everything Tony has done so far with Brooklyn Pizza has helped cater to downtown and the Tucson community and I’m glad to see he’s expanding that with Sky Bar.” Recent UA graduate Connor Mansager, who has worked at Brooklyn Pizza for about three years, said the bar is going to have something to offer non-drinkers and will be a good place to study during the day. “We’re going to have an espresso machine for people to come in and get nonalcoholic drinks like coffee and soda during the day,” he said. “It’s not going to be your typical bar.” Vaccaro said he hopes to find more UA student volunteers. “I’m trying to find students in any department, but specifically in the astronomy department, to help run the telescope
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and the astronomy software we’re going to have on another projector with simulations of space,” he said. Volunteers from the UA School of Music or other musicans for hire are also needed to perform at the bar, he said. “I’d prefer maybe integrating some classical, bluegrass or jazz music, and have music there a little different than what you typically hear on Fourth Avenue,”Vaccaro added. Ed Beshore, principal investigator at the UA-based Catalina Sky Survey — a NASA-funded project to search for hazardous asteroids — said that while he doesn’t know exactly how the bar and telescope will be organized, it’s a “cool idea if it truly is a stargazing bar.” “Any chance people have to look through a telescope, I think they should take it,” he said. However, Beshore did have one concern. “One thing I thought about is that your night vision and how well you see things in a telescope is impaired by alcohol, so if people want to look in the telescope they should do it before drinking,” he said.
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Stoops disappointed, but optimistic By Tim Kosch ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT Forget about moving forward to next week, Saturday’s loss to Washington was heartbreaking enough to leave a player or coach in bed for a few days. But there was head coach Mike Stoops in his weekly, Monday-morning press conference, taking blame for some play calls, commending both the Wildcats and Huskies for their efforts, pointing out the good things that Arizona did, and even cracking jokes to lighten the mood. “(I’m) still disappointed about what happened on Saturday, but I’m encouraged by a lot of things we did,” he said. “The way our kids prepared and the way we played, we’re fighting through some personnel issues, but to play that well for that long and not win was probably the most disappointing part of it all.” Despite the loss, Arizona did a lot of good things throughout the contest. The Wildcats nearly doubled the Huskies in total yardage, total plays and total time of possession. Nick Foles continued to impress, completing 39for-53 for 384 yards and scoring once through the air and once on the ground. “We just didn’t finish the game,” Stoops added. “We had some opportunities to really gain control throughout the game. We got down inside the red zone eight times and kicked four field goals and that hurt. We just didn’t play as well as we needed to. There’s a lot of things we still need to improve on.”
COMMENTARY By Bryan Roy sports columnist
— It’ll be interesting to see how the Pacific 10 Conference grades its football-officiating crew in Seattle. The only worse grade could be the broadcasting crew. — Dear Florida State coach Bobby Bowden, Not exactly the best of times? Hang in there buddy; trust me, I feel your pain. Sincerely, Lute Olson. — With every new softball season comes a new Hillenbrand Stadium music playlist. Headlining the new lineup of pump-up jams is Miley Cyrus’“Party in the U.S.A.” Those are our girls. — Ex-UA hoops interim coach and your Public Enemy No. 1 Kevin O’Neill decided to bring back all of Tim Floyd’s assistants as head coach at USC. Guess Jim Rosborough and Miles Simon weren’t available. — Cal gets the daunting task at earning the Pac-10 some basketball reputation in the loaded Coaches vs. Cancer preseason tournament. They travel to New York to face cupcakes like North Carolina, Ohio State and Syracuse. Will the Bears establish any top-10 swagger or fall on their faces? — Speaking of respect: CBSSports.com has just one Pac-10 basketball player — Isaiah Thomas — listed on all of its All-American teams. That includes a free-for-all “Thirty other players under consideration” section. Uno. — A few months after Chase Budinger canceled his NBA Draft Day teleconference because he slipped so far in the draft, he is tearing up the No. 44 pick expectations. — Congratulations to the Phoenix Mercury for saving the Valley of the Sun from its winning drought. Wait, but who’s watching? — Questions on my mind for hoops media day: Can Brendon Lavender finally get some playing time? Nic Wise, how did your brother get a spot as a walk-on (Dondre Wise transferred after playing at Pima Community College)? — Quote you’ll be sick of hearing said every UA men’s basketball player: “I just want to contribute any way I can and win the Pac-10.”
Catch or not, it was something unique
While there were several factors that led to the outcome, the easiest target to point a finger at is Mason Foster’s interception return for a touchdown off of Delashaun Dean’s foot. It wasn’t an incredible play by Foster by any means, but more of a “right place, right time” type of play. “(The interception) was just an unfortunate thing that happened and we were on the wrong end of it,”Stoops said.“There were just some bad breaks. That’s part of football, but our kids have been very resilient.” There’s been much debate over whether or not that ball hit the ground, or only Dean’s cleat, before it bounced into Foster’s hands and also whether Devin Ross forced a fumble in the first quarter. Both plays were reviewed by the officiating crew, both worked against the Wildcats and both cited a lack of conclusive evidence. Stoops was visibly upset on the sideline, but was much more composed on NOTES, page 9
Alan Walsh/Arizona Daily Wildcat
Arizona quarterback Nick Foles takes the snap against the Huskies on Saturday in Seattle, Wash. The redshirt sophomore threw for 384 yards and went 39-for-53 passing in the 36-33 loss to Washington.
Pac-10 Power Rankings By Tim Kosch ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT Another week and another round of mayhem for the Pacific 10 Conference. Some teams showed up, some didn’t. Blowouts, close games and upsets — it was all there. Where your team is ranked here? Save the page, because it’s likely to change by next week.
1.
USC 4-1 (2-1 Pac-10) Last week: No. 1
The bye week must’ve been nice. The Trojans got to rest that physical defense of theirs and who knows, maybe they figured out how to score again. Huge test this week going to Notre Dame, and USC is not a lock to win the game by any stretch. Notre Dame can score with the best of ‘em.
2.
Oregon 5-1 (3-0 Pac-10) Last Week: No. 3
If that Boise State debacle never happened, Oregon would be in the top 5 in the country right now. They are just a good team. Quarterback Jeremiah Masoli didn’t even suit up against UCLA, yet the Ducks won with ease. They have a bye this week, giving them some time to prepare for a trip to Washington that will surely be one of the most exciting games of the season.
3.
Stanford 4-2 (3-1 Pac-10) Last Week: No. 2
They’re probably the slowest team in the conference not named Washington State, and that was exposed big time in the loss to Oregon State. That being said, they’re a smart football team that plays hard, and as long as they don’t fall behind early in the game they can win every time.
4.
Arizona 3-2 (1-1 Pac-10) Last Week: No. 4
The Wildcats should not have lost to Washington. They were the better team in that game for about 59 of the 60 minutes. The talent is there for Arizona to be an elite team and win the Pac-10, they just need to do the little things right — like, say, scoring touchdowns in the red zone. The issues can be fixed, but they have to be done this week in a must-win game against Stanford.
5.
Washington 3-3 (2-2 Pac-10) Last Week: No. 5
Cac us Soup
There are a lot of holes in this team. Their defense is suspect and the wide receivers leave a lot
of plays in the field. If Jake Locker was playing at USC he would be out of this world. All that being said, they play hard and are a great story this year. The win over Arizona was more of a reflection of luck and momentum from their ridiculously loud home crowd, though.
6.
Oregon State 4-2 (2-1 Pac-10) Last Week: No. 6
Figuring out whether the Beavers will be good or bad in a given week is like how fans of “The Office” felt about whether or not Jim and Pam would get together in the first four seasons. Will they? Won’t they? This week they did. Bye next week, then a date with the Trojans. Guess here is that “they won’t” week.
7.
California 3-2 (0-2 Pac-10) Last Week: No. 8
No team in the entire country needed a bye more than Cal did. They’ve always had high preseason hype only to let it slip away with bad losses, but this year has already been worse than ever. They have a chance to make a statement this week against UCLA on national TV.
8.
Arizona State 3-2 (1-1 Pac-10) Last Week: No. 9
The Sun Devils can apparently play some pretty tough defense, but the offense is still a little shaky. You would’ve liked to see a more dominating victory over Washington State than 27-14, but a win is a win. They’ll need to score more this week against Washington.
9.
UCLA 3-2 (0-2 Pac-10) Last Week: No. 7
The Bruins are making me look stupid. Head coach Rick Neuheisel and offensive coordinator Norm Chow have so much talent and brain power going into planning that offense but why can’t they score ? They’ll be fantastic in a year or two, but this year will be rough. They’re going to fall victim to some hungry Bears this weekend and continue the season 0-3 in the Pac-10.
10.
WSU 1-5 (0-3 Pac-10) Last Week: No. 10
They aren’t very good, but they play hard. In their five losses, the Cougars have really only been blown out twice. I would not be surprised if they upset a Pac-10 team somewhere along the way this season.
— Bryan Roy can be reached at media@wildcat.arizona.edu
BRIEFS
Nymeyer makes last NCAA Woman of the Year cut Former Arizona swimmer Lacey Nymeyer golfer Amanda Blumenherst. made the cut of candidates to win the 2009 NCAA Woman of the Year award, given to fe- W-golf sits seventh in New Mexico male collegiate athletes that perform not only After one round of play at the New Mexico in competition, but also in the classState University Golf Course, Ariroom and community. zona women’s golf currently sits at “I feel like it’s an award that doesn’t seventh place in the Price’s Give ‘Em just take into account your athletic Five Intercollegiate tournament. ability,” Nymeyer said in a phone inFreshman Kyndall Ardoin registerview, “but it really does showcase tered a 1-over-par round to help the you as a person, your academics and Arizona blue team, fundamentally a what you do in the community and junior varsity squad, to land 10 shots your leadership capabilities.” back of the leader, UC Irvine. “For me to be one of the top three The Wildcats are just six shots bein Division I, I just feel so honored and Lacey Nymeyer hind third-place Fresno State. Arizolucky to make it this far,” she added. na continues play at 6:30 a.m. MST. The former Wildcat, and Olympic silver medalist ran out of athletic eligibility in 2008 Volleyball returns to top 20 but graduated in May of 2009 with a physical Arizona women’s volleyball returned to the education major. It was that point when she top 20 in the national rankings after sweeping applied for the prestigious award, she said. the Oregon schools at home this weekend, inNow working towards another Olympic cluding a then-No. 11-ranked Oregon squad. berth in the 2012 games, Nymeyer spends her The No. 18 ranking ties the season high for time training during the weekdays and travel- the Wildcats, who had previously received the ing to swimming clinics during the weekends. spot after defeating then-No. 13 USC. “The swim clinics are really my job and also The Pacific 10 Conference currently has swimming is my job,” Nymeyer said. “It’s great seven nationally ranked teams according to because I can use my passion, which is swim- the American Volleyball Coaches Associaming, and then also another interest, which is tion weekly poll. Arizona next heads into the working with kids.” first installment of the Duel in the Desert this Nymeyer will head to Indianapolis, Ind., weekend when they travel to Tempe to take on Sunday for a banquet where a winner will be Arizona State. chosen between herself, LSU gymnast Ashleigh Clare-Kearney and former Duke women’s —Arizona Daily Wildcat
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arizona daily wildcat • tuesday, october 13, 2009 •
Will the football team’s loss take the life out of the Wildcats? YES:
Helplessness could mentally scar players
NO:
To nearly double the time of possession, post twelve more first downs and tally 461 total yards to the 256 for the Huskies, the Arizona Wildcats had Saturday’s game won. Well, they should have. It was demoralizing. Play poorly against Iowa and lose. Play exceptionally against Washington and lose again. That’s how a team’s balloon will burst. The Wildcats played one of their better games of the season, as they rolled through the Husky defense possession after possession but couldn’t bury their opponents. Quarterback Nick Foles would have posted an outstanding performance, save for his freak interception and then Kevin another semi-excusable interception on a last-gasp, Zimmerman fourth down. sports editor In the end, though, such a well-executed performance ending in such a painful loss can’t sit well in the Wildcats’ stomachs. Greg Nwoko’s first-half touchdown run where he Mack-trucked a Washington defender could have made him feel unstoppable. But come the end of the game, the endless domination of the Washington defense didn’t matter a bit. It’s like the improbable interception for the Huskies was symbolic of the entire game. Arizona literally was throwing three consecutive bubble-screens to its wide outs to easily march down the field. When they reached the red zone though, they seemed lost, not knowing what play to run or whose hands the ball should be in. Similarly, they didn’t know why or how they’d lost the game. It was no mystery that they’d played one of the better games of the year, only for the scoreboard in Husky Stadium to show otherwise. Where has one game deflated a team so much? Look no further than ASU’s football team in 2008. After a hyped preseason, the Sun Devils met UNLV in a game most thought was a gimme. But the underdog Rebels led a comeback in the fourth quarter and kicked a field goal in overtime to beat the Sun Devils. It was embarrassing to say the least. ASU would go on to lose their next five games. The Wildcats didn’t face as poor of a team as did the Sun Devils a year ago, but there lies more reason for coaches to be concerned about their team’s psyche. The Sun Devils struggled and lost to a terrible team. The Wildcats played exceptionally well for the most part. Both teams lost, but which scenario would make a team of young men feel more lost, more helpless and without a solution? In the end, college football isn’t for mentally weak athletes and the Wildcats probably won’t fall into a bottomless pit. Then again, it’s happened to our rivals up north.
Alan Walsh/Arizona Daily Wildcat
NOTES continued from page 8
Stoops says Grigsby, Antolin will return
Monday morning. “They are what they call,” Stoops said to questions about whether or not the results of the reviews were correct. “There’s nothing you can do about it now, it is what it is.” “To me, their interpretation (of conclusive evidence) can be whatever they want it to be,”Stoops added about the officials. “What is indisputable evidence? To me, that’s still subjective. It is whatever you want to make it.”
Injury Update
This week was more of the same in a season mired with injuries. Defensive tackle Earl Mitchell was left off the traveling roster on Friday after he was hit in the head by a swinging door in the hallway of McKale Center. Stoops is unsure if Mitchell will play this week.
Running backs Nic Grigsby and Keola Antolin and defensive end Brooks Reed are expected to play this week, although they all suited up against Washington and saw minimal playing time. Guard Conan Amituanai left the game against the Huskies with a knee injury. Stoops said the hope is that it is just an MCL sprain that will keep him out for just 2-3 weeks, but they are awaiting results of an MRI that was administered on Monday afternoon. On the bright side, wide receiver William “Bug” Wright is expected to suit up this week for the first time since arthroscopic knee surgery. Wright is expected to contribute to the passing game, as well as return to his role as punt returner. In his absence, the Wildcats are currently ranked dead last in the NCAA with -0.33 yards per punt return.
Dolphins rally past Jets MCCLATCHY NEWSPAPERS MIAMI — Now, that’s how to throw a party. On a night when the Dolphins’ organization did everything possible to set up a celebration of Hispanic heritage, it was the heroic efforts of two running backs and its quarterback that kept this fiesta rocking into early Tuesday morning. For 3-{ quarters of this epic 31-27 win against the Jets on Monday night, the Dolphins grinded and pounded and clawed for every inch of every yard behind the huge efforts of running backs Ronnie Brown and Ricky Williams. But then, with one swift, smooth throw, it happened: Quarterback Chad Henne took over his team in the graceful, epic manner that will forever be sealed away in the vaults of long-standing history between these two teams. With the momentum waning and the energy flattened, Henne dropped back, made a beautiful play-action fake and looked downfield to the speedy but previously unproductive Ted Ginn Jr. The spiral was perfect. The timing was flawless. And the catch — for a 53-yard touchdown — provided enough reason with one single throw to place confidence that, yes, Henne might just be the right man for this job. “For a young quarterback, in that situation, there’s going to be confidence that comes with that,” coach Tony Sparano said. If you weren’t sold then, perhaps you were sold instead by the 13-play, 70-yard drive Henne orchestrated during the game’s final five minutes that led to the final, game-sealing touchdown to give Miami a 31-27 win. Henne was 20-of-26 passing for 241 yards and a passer rating of 130.4.
But this certainly wasn’t just Henne’s game, even if it was Henne’s quarter. Perhaps symbolic of the rest of the game, Brown scored the final touchdown out of the Wildcat — the same package that gave the Jets trouble the entire game. “We’ve got 10 seconds left on the clock,” Brown said.“We were in the huddle, we’re all like, ‘All right, here we go we’ve got to score a touchdown. No settling for field goals. We’ve got to finish the game.’ “That’s something we’ve been struggling with the first couple of games. We said, ‘We’re going to finish tonight. Whatever we’ve got to do, get the ball in the end zone.’“ Just as Miami did in its previous Monday Night Football game this season, the team benefited from long, grinding drives this time featuring the Wildcat nearly as often as the base offense.
9
Wildcats will learn, move on
Following Saturday’s heartbreaking loss, every player brought out for interviews had the look of a child whose dog was just run over by a car. They appeared saddened, in shock and were short on words. However, behind the somber attitude, each player spoke with a tone that showed underlying confidence. Because even though Arizona lost — whether it was due to angry football gods or the many missed opportunities — the Wildcats knew at one point they had that game won. One of the things that struck me as I stood beside the Arizona bench as Huskies’ quarterback Jake Locker threw his final touchdown pass of the evening — Bobby bringing Washington to within five Stover with just over two minutes to sports writer go — the Wildcats appeared unnerved. Quarterback Nick Foles led the offense back onto the field with his casual jaunt and his teammates followed suit, ready to do what they had done all night — steadily move the ball down the field, this time in an attempt to seal the game. Obviously, things didn’t pan out the way Foles or anyone in that stadium projected, however, even after the Arizona offense failed to drive the field in the final two minutes for the dramatic comeback there was no aura of a beaten team surrounding locker room in Seattle, Wash. Instead the players appeared to know exactly how they lost the game. “Too many missed opportunities,” said receiver Dave Roberts. Nearly every player could pinpoint the mistakes: the inability to score on fourth down from the one yard line, the four field goals from within the red zone and the allowing of Locker to find a rhythm late in the game. The significance of these immediate observations is that Arizona knows what it needs to fix. After their 10-point loss to Iowa three weeks ago, players found difficulty describing what went wrong other than suggesting they were outmatched. “They were really physical,”quarterback Matt Scott said of Iowa after the game.“(The coaches) told us they would be but I didn’t expect them to be that big and strong.” But even after a loss that demoralizing, the Wildcats found a way to right themselves and beat a talented Oregon State squad two weeks later. With this Washington loss, little confidence has been lost. The only casualty was Arizona’s moCenter: David Roberts mentary happiness. Losses like Saturday’s tend to burn more than demoralize, and with a three-game homestretch on deck, the team’s attitude Monday was full of more excitement than nerves. “We just need to learn from this loss and take that into next week,” Foles said after Saturday’s game. With an attitude like that, Arizona will be fine.
Phillies erupt in 9th, finish off Rockies MCCLATCHY NEWSPAPERS
DENVER — All the elements of a championship team were on view in the ninth inning of Monday night’s 5-4, division series-clinching win against Colorado: Jimmy Rollins fired up the offense, Ryan Howard crushed a ball to right field for two series-defining runs batted in and Brad Lidge earned the save. The Phillies, who promised all season they would bring their most dynamic selves to the postseason, followed through. Now they will play the Los Angeles Dodgers, starting Thursday, for a berth in the World Series. After Ryan Madson faltered in the eighth, the Phils appeared headed home for a deciding Game 5. But this team prides itself on the ability to come back, and the Phils regard Rollins as the man who can best instigate them. With one out in the ninth and his team trailing 4-2, Rollins singled off Rockies closer Huston Street. Shane Victorino then reached base on a fielder’s choice that erased Rollins, and Chase Utley walked. That brought up Howard, whom manager Charlie Manuel calls “The Big Piece.” The Big Piece doubled in a huge moment, tying the game, and Jayson Werth drove in the winning run with a single. Two Rockies batters reached in the ninth off Scott Eyre, and Manuel summoned Lidge to face Troy Tulowitzki with two out. The once-troubled closer earned his second save in 24 hours when Tulowitzki could not check his swing on a slider. Lidge pumped his fists,
screamed, and embraced catcher Carlos Ruiz. The series offered an uncommonly generous dose of drama. Lefthander Cliff Lee began his postseason career with a Game 1 dazzler. Cole Hamels’ wife went into labor during his Game 2 loss. Snow and freezing temperatures postponed Game 3, and when they finally played Sunday night, Lidge saved a tense 6-5 win in record-setting cold. The Phillies’ offense has been more consistent in this series than it was during much of the regular season. In the top of the first inning, Victorino blasted a hard line drive over the wall in right field. Five Phillies batters forced Ubaldo Jimenez to throw 30 pitches in the first, a victory in itself against the Rockies’ best starter. Lee allowed two hits in the first but settled into a more typical pace in the second. With his cutter and change-up sharp, Lee breezed through the bottom of the Colorado lineup, striking out two. In the third, the Phils further increased Jimenez’s pitch count but wasted a chance to bury their desperate opponent, just six innings away from the end of their season. Victorino and Utley hit oneout singles, with the former moving to third due to another questionable call by an umpire. The day after Utley charged to first base in a key moment on an obvious foul ball, and then was incorrectly ruled safe at first, Victorino benefited from a close call at third on Utley’s single. Rightfielder Carlos Gonzalez’s throw PHILLIES, page 11
from basics to beautiful. ALL SIZES EXPERT FITTINGS OV E R 25 D ES I G N E R S
Few big chunks
And just as Sparano prescribed, the Dolphins opened with a flawlessly executed drive that included eight runs and four passes (all completions) for a touchdown that wiped 7:29 from the clock. It wasn’t always so efficient, nor was it always so pretty. Despite what went down in the final quarter, the Dolphins never managed to muster many big chunks of yardage through the passing game. Even Williams’ 59-yard reception began near the line of scrimmage and occurred because of some crafty cuts. At one point in the third quarter, the Dolphins snapped directly to Brown five consecutive times, providing the team with 25 combined yards during that span to set up a touchdown for a 17-13 lead. Through three quarters, Henne was extremely DOLPHINS, page 11
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10
• tuesday, october 13, 2009 • arizona daily wildcat
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1BD HOUSE TILE oors carport water paid fenced yard covered patio mountain views pets ok $500 ALSO 1bd house 800sf a/c water paid stove refrigerator w/d hookups fenced yard security door $575 REDI 623-5710 or log on www.azredirentals.com
CLOSE TO UOFA 4bd 2ba house a/c refrigerator stove dishwasher washer dryer pets ok $875 ALSO Newly Remodeled 4bd 3ba house a/c ďŹ replace dishwasher washer dryer fenced yard pets welcome $1100 REDI 623-5710 or log on www.azredirentals.com
1BLOCK TO UOFA 2bd house with garage a/c family room dishwasher washer dryer fenced yard pets ok covered patio $700 ALSO 2bd house ALL utilities paid wood oors refrigerator stove w/d hookups fenced yard $850 REDI 623-5710 or log on www.azredirentals.com
GREAT PRICE!!!! 4BD up to 3ba start at $1000.00 per mo 0-4 blks from UofA w/private parking, yard and newly remodeled. More details 520-245-5604
MALE ROOMMATE WANTED to share 3br house near Craycroft/ Golf Links, nonsmoking, no pets, furnished, W/D, cable, internet, $475 includes all. Call 520-977-8966 MOVING TO HOUSE on corner of Speedway and Euclid. Roommate needed $400 plus util. Male or Female roommate doesn’t matter. Must enjoy cleanliness, room has own entrance, wiďŹ , cable. House comes with alarm system. Prefer over 21. call 520-2411188 STUDY HERE! 300 inc. utl, clean, bright room in 3bd newer home, CC and Glenn. 928-550-9684 WIFI, laundry.
CLOSE TO CAMPUS, shopping, Cattran, furnished, $280 up including water, laundry, Internet, cable, phone. Economic, safe place with skylights. 248-1688 PRIVATE ROOM FOR $295/mo. Near UofA campus, on bus line, pool and laundry on site. Call 520-888-2111 http://www.oasisapartments.net
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!!!!!!!!!!!!!!AWESOME 2BEDROOM, 2bath just $940/ month. Close to UofA campus. Spacious oor plan with A/C, alarm system, full size washer/dryer, ďŹ replace, ceiling fans, built-in desks, private fenced yard, high speed internet available, pets welcome. No security deposit (o.a.c.) Now taking reservations for summer and fall 2010. Quality living rents quick! Call 747-9331 www.UniversityRentalinfo.com
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!!!!!1BD W/POOL, laundry, fountain, ramada, oak oors, covered porch. $550/mo. 2806 N. Tucson Blvd. Cell: (520)240-2615, (520)299-3987
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1121 E. 12 ST. STUDIO $350/mo. 2BD 1 1/2BA $550/mo. Both covered parking &fresh paint, Owner/Agent 907-2044
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1BDRM, clean and quiet. Grassy courtyard w/lots of trees, water included, only $485 per month. Also 1BD w/private yard area, water and gas included. $525/mo. Available now! 5211 E Bellevue 520-240-2615
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ABSOLUTELY THE LARGEST 3bedroom 2bath around for only $1450/ month. Great location across the street from MansďŹ eld Park within a mile of the UofA. Full size washer/dryer, A/C, alarm system, ďŹ replace, ceiling fans, built-in desks, private fenced yard, high speed internet available, pets welcome. No security deposit (o.a.c.). Now taking reservations for summer/fall 2010. Call 747-9331 www.UniversityRentalinfo.com
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615 N. Park, Rm. 101
621-3425
University of Arizona
Tucson AZ 85721
CLASSIFICATION INDEX LARGE STUDIOS ONLY 6blocks from campus, 1125 N. 7th Ave. Walled yard, security gate, doors, windows, full bath, kitchen. Free wi/ďŹ . Unfurnished, $380, lease. No pets. 9774106 sunstoneapts@aol.com UNATTACHED GUESTHOUSE NO lease low deposit a/c water paid stove refrigerator $425 ALSO 1bd ALL utilities paid ceramic tile oors refrigerator stove pets ok fenced yard $450 REDI 623-5710 or log on www.azredirentals.com
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arizona daily wildcat • tuesday, october 13, 2009 •
Casa Bonita Rental Homes
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BEAUTIFUL 2BD/ 1BA. 3231 E. Presidio. Country Club/ Fort Lowell. A/C, just remodeled, W/D, walled patio. Pets ok. Covered parking. $750/mo +deposit. Water Included. Mike 2721928 presidiotownhomes.com. Foothills townhouse. 2BR 2BA. 4827 N. Via Entrada. Pets, smoking okay. Pool. Major appliances. Unfurnished. $950/mo. Contact shendron@aol.com.
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DOLPHINS continued from page 9
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Henne’s 53-yard touchdown pass leads to Miami’s victory efficient, even if he wasn’t all that flashy. He completed 11 of his first 14 passes — but those passes were only good for 120 yards (59 of which came from Williams on the short pass he turned into a big gain). It wasn’t until the final quarter when Henne’s leash began to loosen, likely in part because the Dolphins’ grinding ground attack caused the Jets to become so focused on trying to stop Brown and Williams. But when it finally happened — when Henne finally let go of that 53-yard touchdown pass to Ginn — it changed the entire dynamic of the game, helping the Dolphins capture a critical 24-20 lead. Henne’s completion was critical for multiple reasons. Not only did it put Miami back on top, but it also provided a major boost of morale for a defense and a crowd that seemed to be flattening in the wake of a huge play by new Jets wide receiver Braylon Edwards. On the previous series before Henne’s touchdown pass, Edwards came down with a brilliant 34-yard, acrobatic catch that led to a touchdown from the 2-yard line.
Henne comes through
Miami Dolphins Ronnie Brown celebrates after scoring in the first quarter against the New York Jets, Monday, at Land Shark Stadium in Miami, Fla.
PHILLIES continued from page 9
Lee works past rocky seventh
beat Victorino to first, but Gerry Davis ruled that Victorino beat the tag. Unlike on Sunday, though, the Phils could not capitalize. Jimenez loaded the bases with an intentional walk to Howard, but Werth and Raul Ibanez struck out, keeping the score at 1-0. Though the talented Jimenez was inefficient to that point, throwing 35 strikes and 30 balls through three, he trailed only by a solo home run. And the Phils made his day easier by falling quickly in a seven-pitch fourth. Granted the reprieve, Jimenez began to resemble the electric pitcher who helped lead his team to the National League wild card. Mixing a high-90s fastball with a diving, high 80s change-up, Jimenez swapped scoreless innings with Lee, and kept things tense. Jimenez faltered before Lee. With one out in the sixth, he left a 2-2 offspeed pitch to Werth in the middle of the strike zone, and Werth bashed it
over the wall in right-center for a 2-0 Phillies lead. But the Rockies’ underrated lineup quickly snatched back the run in the bottom of the inning, though bad luck again spoiled a rally. Todd Helton drew a one-out walk, and scored on Tulowitzki’s double. Garrett Atkins followed with a hot liner to third, but Pedro Feliz stood in its path. He caught it and threw to second for an inning-ending double play. Lee overcame a potentially significant error in the seventh to preserve the one-run lead. With one out, Seth Smith sent a ball to left field. Ibanez lurched forward to grab it, and the ball deflected off the top of his glove. Smith landed at second, but Lee got a fly out and pop-up, sending the game into the eighth with the Phils still leading by 2-1. But the offense wasted yet another opportunity in the eighth when a bases-loaded, no-out situation failed to yield a run.
Charles Trainor Jr./Miami Herald
However, just as Edwards’ big catch was not the final swing of momentum in this game, Henne’s touchdown pass to Ginn was not the last word, either. On the next series, Edwards was back to running the deep route. This time, it hurt the Dolphins once more. Cornerback Will Allen was flagged for a questionable pass-interference call that provided the Jets with a huge 49-yard gain, setting up a touchdown that gave them a 27-24 lead. But it was Henne’s heroics — a drive that will surely provide the Dolphins with the confidence in their secondyear quarterback to take this team over — that locked up this game for good.
Philadelphia Phillies catcher Carlos Ruiz celebrates in champagne after the Phillies beat the Colorado Rockies in the NLDS, Monday, in Denver, Colo. Yong Kim/ Philadelphia Daily News
• tuesday, october 13, 2009 • arizona daily wildcat
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