Arizona Daily Wildcat — Oct. 6, 2010

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PRO/CON: DOES ARIZONA

Rialto Theatre’s 90th anniversary

celebration recalls Tucson’s past

BELONG IN THE AP TOP 10 SPORTS, A6

WILDLIFE, B4

ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT

wednesday, october , 

tucson, arizona

dailywildcat.com

Diabetes, cancer cure research receives $1.1 million grant

UAPD tweets for safety Twitter tool for campus updates By Lucy Valencia ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT The University of Arizona Police Department is using Twitter to keep the UA community safe. Twitter is a social network that allows users to share information in “tweets,” messages limited to 140 characters.

Twitter: twitter.com/uofazpolice Name: UofAZPolice Web: uapd.arizona.edu Following: 0 Followers: 354 Tweets: 48

Hallie Bolonkin/Arizona Daily Wildcat

Dr. Christopher Hulme, professor in the College of Pharmacy and the lead researcher for the development of “small molecule” drugs, discusses science with Breland Smith, a second year biochemistry dotoral student, in a lab located in the College of Pharmacy. This research development began after a $1.1 million grant was given to the UA to help develop medicine to cure cancer and diabetes.

NIH funds small molecule study to see usefulness in medicine By Brenna Goth ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT A new grant will help UA researchers advance drug development. The three-year, $1.1 million National Institutes of Health grant will help UA researchers continue to develop small molecules, the foundation of many drugs. “What we’re trying to do is make different kinds of molecules,” said Victor Hruby, regents’ professor emeritus in the department of chemistry and biochemistry and researcher for the project. “And then see if any of them, some of them, or most of them might be useful for drug development.” Small molecules are already used in many medications, such as painkillers and drugs for high cholesterol and cancer. “Almost every drug you take orally is a small molecule,” said lead researcher Christopher Hulme, professor in the College

of Pharmacy. The research is a collaboration between UA researchers and the Translational Genomics Research Institute in Phoenix. Their work started several years ago. “Research is not usually something that starts when you get a grant,” Hruby said. “It’s something that starts when you get an idea.” Hulme said this specific grant funds the development of new molecular probes with the goal of going “from bench to bedside.” “That someone could potentially in the future use to develop drugs,” Hulme said. Hruby said the grant will help with this goal. “It allows you to get a lot more done,” Hruby said. “What we’re trying to do now is put ourselves on the map much larger than a small group of people.” The team has made about 10,000 potential small mole-

cule probes over the past three months, according to Hulme. “We just need fast and expedited ways of exploring this huge, untapped chemical space,” Hulme said. Research challenges include gauging the reaction of the human body to the small molecule probes. “We’re interested in making things compatible with life. Most of our drugs are toxic, so you can only take so much of them,” Hruby said. “What you need to think about is a molecule with useful functions and does so without toxicity.” The team is also working to develop a database of small molecules. Once researchers create small molecules, medicinal chemists must determine how they can be used to treat diseases. “Finding the right small molecule is like finding a needle in a haystack in many ways,” Hulme said. The collection will help centralize knowledge.

“It will enable them to find small molecule starting points,” Hulme said. Two researchers from the Translational Genomics Research Institute are also working on the project. Nathalie Meurice, associate investigator for the Translational Genomics Research Institute, helps develop small molecule probes. “You need a mix of different expertise,” Meurice said. “It’s like a tripod: if you’re missing one leg, it’s not going to stand.” Meurice said the research will potentially lead to new types of medicine. “We have a focus of helping the patient,” Meurice said. Hulme said the possibilities for drug innovation stemming from this research are limitless. “We’ve only made a grain of salt, if you will,” Hulme said. “As a race, we’ve only scraped the surface of small molecules with drug-like characteristics.”

From the Archive: Family Weekend 1963 Mom and Dad Watched Polo On 1929 Day By Harold Cousland ARIZONA WILDCAT The Arizona Daily Wildcat pulled this article from its archives to show the changes the UA has gone through since the original “Mom and Dad’s Day.”This article was published on Oct. 11, 1963. Mom and Dad’s Day has changed in many ways since 1929 when it was originated by Mortar Board, senior women’s honorary, and Bobcats, a senior men’s honorary. Parents coming this year look forward to the Arizona football game, but in 1929, the traditional polo game between the varsity and alumni teams vied with

football for popularity. Polo was a feature of Mom and Dad’s Day until the war years. The 400 parents who came for the first Mom and Dad’s Day received free tickets to the football game. Halftime entertainment was provided, as it is now, but then it was by the University girls’ marching squad. Parents who had sons on the 1929 football team were allowed to sit on the bench during the game. At the time, “Pop” McKale, football coach, said the arrangements would “arouse the enthusiasm of the squad and result in a winning game.” The Wildcats won 28-0 over New Mexico State. Mothers and fathers who

COMING FRIDAY — SPECIAL ISSUE

Family Weekend

registered in the lobby of the Agricultural Building in 1929 came from 31 Arizona towns and 8 states. The first award given to the parents who traveled the greatest distance to be with their children went to a woman from Detroit. Last year, when 4,000 parents came to the campus, Mrs. Emilio Yu won an “A” blanket for traveling 7,695 miles from Hong Kong. Loving cups honoring parents with the most children in school were given for the first time in 1933. One year, a mother registered 14 children. Investigation proved she had had 14 children in the University, but not all at the same time. In 1946, the practice of giving “A” blankets for the award began.

The Daily Wildcat will publish a seperate section dedicated to family at the UA on Friday.

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ASUA pushes clickers By Jazmine Woodberry ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT

Mom and Dad’s Day was cancelled two weeks before the scheduled date in 1942 because the administration decided not to sponsor any activities which encouraged travel during World War II. The University had no football team during the next two years. Mom and Dad’s Day was resumed in 1945, when more than 600 parents attended. During the 1946 Mom and Dad’s Day football game, James C. Shackleford, Sr., turned himself in at the press box after wandering though the football crowd for his wife and college son. The announcer asked the Shackleford family to identify their whereabouts, the wandering father was finally returned to his family.

Queer Film Series shows a new film about The Mormon Propsition, 7p.m. at the Gallagher Theater.

UAPD’s Twitter account, “UofAZPolice,” was created in July of 2009 in the hopes of reaching more UA students, parents and faculty. School shootings were among the events which UAPD Public Information Officer Sgt. Juan Alvarez said were factors that led university police to create the Twitter account. “It came about because of a need to put information out to the public quicker and to reach a broader audience,” said Alvarez. “At first, we had the listserv UAlerts as one of the few ways to put information out to the UA’s community. It is distributed to members of the community who are registered in the listserv and who must have a ‘.edu’ account,” Alvarez explained. “But it was only reaching a small group.” Nowadays, UAPD uses its Twitter account to disseminate Campus Watch Alerts, crime prevention tips and UAPD activities to its 353 followers. UAPD Chief of Police Anthony Daykin sends out Campus Watch Bulletins, but Alvarez,

The clicker resolution, which aims to streamline UA to a single classroom responder, is up for discussion at this week’s senate meeting. “Instructors have recently chosen various brands of classroom responders for their classes, placing an unnecessary financial cost for students with each additional brand of classroom responder,” readss Sen. Chad Travis’s drafted resolution to the ASUA Senate. “Using a single brand and model of classroom responder will decrease the unnecessary costs for students, as well as simplify technological problems among responders.” He calls for the “strongest possible support” for the Task Force on Classroom Responders, a mission he’s championing, along with ASUA President Emily Fritze, as one of his ASUA, page 3

Rebelution, Zion I, and Tribal Seeds perform live at the Rialto Theatre, 318 E. Congress St. 7 p.m.

: @DailyWildcat


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• wednesday, october 6, 2010 • arizona daily wildcat

Colin Darland Editor in Chief 520•621•7579 editor@wildcat.arizona.edu

weather Today’s High: 92 Low: 58

ODDS & ENDS worth noting

Christy Delehanty Page 2 Editor 520•621•3106 arts @wildcat.arizona.edu

catpoll

Do you donate blood regularly?

Tomorrow: H: 89 L: 61

Yes, very consistantly

on the spot

Yes, but not frequently No, I do not donate blood

Dancer with billion dollar ideas

New question: Do you follow any UA departments on Twitter?

News Tips 621-3193

Katie Weitzner

undecided sophomore What is the worst job that you have ever had? I worked at Starbucks for a day, in Target, and I hated it so I quit. Are you serious? Starbucks is one of my dream jobs, why did you hate it? I thought so too, but I worked at the one inside Target and I hated working for Target. Everyone was really mean and the girls were really scary that I worked with, so I quit. Did you still have to wear the red t-shirt? I had my Starbucks uniform, which I got to keep, which I was really excited about. On the opposite end of that, what is your ideal job? Probably it would be dancing in Los Angeles. I’m trying to figure out if I want to major or minor, but I have always wanted to dance and act in LA, so that would definitely be my dream job. Music videos? Music videos would be super fun. I have always wanted to do acting in movies or soap operas. My dream is to try out for So You Think You Can Dance, so we’ll see what happens. So awesome. If you were to be in a music video whose would it be? Definitely Ciara ‘Ride.’ Oh, totally! It’s so hot! How do you feel about making connections to get to where you want to be in life and using those connections to get where you want to be? I don’t agree with using someone; I would never do that, but I don’t think it would be wrong if you had a connection and you helped use that to get where you wanted but not in a malicious, conniving way. Have you seen “The Social Network?” Yes, I’m obsessed. I was just talking about it, and I am so obsessed. Does it make you want to take some things off your Facebook or kind of edit some of that stuff at all? I guess somewhat but more for me it was like ‘what is my billion dollar idea?’ You know, I want to be the next Mark. But I guess it sort of opens your eyes because it started out so small like in colleges and now the whole world can see whatever you want. It’s so weird. Do you have any billion dollar ideas in mind yet, or still working on those? Still working on them, you know. We’ll see what happens. — Caroline Nachazel

Erich Healy/Arizona Daily Wildcat

Solar-powered trash compactors, like this one found outside the Keating Building, are part of the UA’s efforts to make the campus more environmentally friendly. On a sunny day, these compactors require no grid electricity and as little as one quarter of the energy used by other models on cloudy days.

Would you like to see Donald Trump run for president?

Could real estate magnate Donald Trump have his eye on the White House? Time magazine has quite a scoop: New Hampshire voters were polled on their feelings about Trump and 2012. The mysterious poll’s callers asked people about several potential Republican candidates and matchups. It included about 30 questions on Trump. Voters were reportedly asked if they had heard that Trump had donated to Democrats in the past and if they thought his appearances

on TV would help or hurt in a political race. Time doesn’t know who paid for the poll. Trump tells CNN he’s never heard of this poll but is “anxious to find out what it says.” He says he didn’t commission it, nor does he know who did. Trump goes on to say that he really likes the people of New Hampshire because they’re “strong and intelligent people” and they know what’s happening in the U.S. is wrong. Sounds kinda like a politician, doesn’t he?

Trump insists he’s not considering to run, but he adds that “somebody has to do something or this country is not going to be a very great country for long.” Experts point out that the Republican field in 2012 is wide open, with no clear frontrunner. They say if Trump simply made a couple of trips to New Hampshire and ran some ads, he could become a player pretty quickly.

fast facts Woman: “Who is spitting on my iPod?” Other Woman: “It’s raining.” — Second Street, UA

submit at dailywildcat.com or twitter @overheardatua

• Phoenicians invented the world’s first phonetic alphabet in 2000 B.C. • The five most frequently used letters of the alphabet, in order: e, t, o, a, and n. • Quotation marks are the youngest punctuation marks in the English language. • “Q” is the only

The Daily Wildcat is always interested in story ideas and tips from readers. If you see something deserving of coverage, contact news editor Michelle Monroe at news@wildcat.arizona.edu or call the newsroom at 621-3193.

Arizona Daily Wildcat Vol. 104, Issue 32

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.

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Contact Us

Editor in Chief News Editor Opinions Editor Photo Editor Sports Editor WildLife Editor

letter of the alphabet that doesn’t occur in the name of any state. • There are more than 40,000 characters in Chinese script. • More words start with the letter “s” than any other letter. • The oldest letter of the alphabet is “o.” It’s more than 3,000 years old.

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Corrections

Requests for corrections or complaints concerning news and editorial 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 Colin Darland News Editor Michelle A. Monroe Sports Editor Tim Kosch Opinions Editor Heather Price-Wright Design Chief Jessica Leftault Arts Editor Christy Delehanty

horoscopes

Photo Editor Lisa Beth Earle

Today’s birthday Dust off your numerous talents and put them to use now. Independent ideas applied to household projects produce brilliant results. Your personal desire for greater financial comfort pushes you to excel in fulfilling career responsibilities down to the last detail. Aries (March 21 - April 19) — Today is a 5 — Is it dangerous to strive for more power? Only if you let desire diminish your capacity to think logically. Resolve problems for a winwin. Taurus (April 20 - May 20) — Today is a 5 — People around you seem to respond to energy you can’t even perceive. To understand their motivation, ask questions that deliver logical answers. Gemini (May 21 - June 21) — Today is a 5 — As your thinking matures, you see practical changes that transform the results into a magical success. Set it free to really grow it. Cancer (June 22 - July 22) — Today is a 6 — A favorite person makes demands today that seem unreasonable at first. Once you get rolling, you see exactly how to accommodate their wishes. Leo (July 23 - Aug. 22) — Today is a 5 — Someone at work decides they want their own way. If you don’t care, let them have it, at least for today. Otherwise, careful, logical explanations are needed. Virgo (Aug. 23 - Sept. 22) — Today is a 7 — A younger person applies considerable pressure about practical matters. You may need a trip to the store for the right uniform or gear.

Libra (Sept. 23 - Oct. 22) — Today is a 6 — Take care of your own nutritional needs. Assume the role of chef at home, perhaps, and go out for lunch with friends somewhere fabulous. Healthy food can be delicious. Scorpio (Oct. 23 - Nov. 21) — Today is a 5 — A neighbor or sibling challenges you to a dual of practical words. Your best tactic is logic as you respond to their emotions. Keep yours out of it. Sagittarius (Nov. 22 - Dec. 21) — Today is a 6 — Exert your will and apply physical effort to a housekeeping project. You’ve thought this through. Now get others to cooperate for fabulous results. Capricorn (Dec. 22 - Jan. 19) — Today is a 5 — Take control of your own responsibilities. Others want to tell you what to do. Be respectful. You don’t have to do it their way. Aquarius (Jan. 20 - Feb. 18) — Today is a 5 — A dramatic dream had you tossing and turning. Now see how it applies to today’s agenda. Maybe your subconscious is trying to tell you something. Pisces (Feb. 19 - March 20) — Today is a 5 — Group activities pose problems for one person with petty objections. Resolve the difficulties by acknowledging their position. It helps to be heard.

Copy Chief Kenny Contrata Web Director Eric Vogt Asst. News Editors Luke Money Bethany Barnes Asst. Sports Editors Michael Schmitz Daniel Kohler Asst. Photo Editor Farren Halcovich Asst. Arts Editor Brandon Specktor Asst. Copy Chief Kristen Sheeran News Reporters Brenna Goth Abragail Kappel Lucy Valencia Jazmine Woodberry Nicole Seigel Bethany Barnes Livia Fialho Brenna Goth Luke Money Abigail Richardson Yael Schusterman Sports Reporters Nicole Dimtsios Kevin Zimmerman Bryan Roy Vince Balistreri Michael Fitzsimmons Kevin Nadakal Alex Williams Arts & Feature Writers Steven Kwan Emily Moore Dallas Williamson Ali Freedman Kellie Mejdrich Jason Krell Graham Thompson Maitri Mehta Charles Zoll Miranda Butler Caroline Nachazel Columnists Brett Haupt Nyles Kendall Gabe Schivone Mallory Hawkins Alexandra Bortnik Andrew Shepherd Storm Byrd Remy Albillar

Photographers Gordon Bates Hallie Bolonkin Mike Christy Tim Glass Rodney Haas Erich Healy Mike Ignatov Valentina Martinelli Virginia Polin Sam Shumaker Ernie Somoza Designers Kelsey Dieterich Olen Lenets Alyssa Ramer Rebecca Rillos Copy Editors Kristina Bui Chelsea Cohen Greg Gonzales Johnathon Hanson Jason Krell Kayla Peck Natalie Schwab Jennie Vatoseow Advertising Account Executives Ryan Adkins Jason Clairmont Liliana Esquer Ivan Flores Jim McClure Brian McGill Greg Moore Siobhan Nobel John Reed Daniela Saylor Courtney Wood Sales Manager Noel Palmer Advertising Designers Christine Bryant Lindsey Cook Fiona Foster Levi Sherman Classified Advertising Jasmin Bell Katie Jenkins Christal Montoya Jenn Rosso Sales Coordinator Sarah Dalton Accounting Nicole Browning Brandon Holmes Luke Pergande Joe Thomson Delivery Colin Buchanan Brian Gingras Kameron Norwood


NEWS

arızona daıly wıldcat • wednesday, october 6, 2010 •

TWITTER continued from page 1

ASUA

Text listserv found inefficient for expanding UA audience

Officer Bethany Wilson and Officer Joe Bermudez monitor the Twitter account. Before UAPD created a Twitter account, students relied on information regarding things like major power outages, thefts, blocked roads and other campus activities or emergencies via UAlert, a free service provided by UA’s Campus Emergency Response Team. Students who signed up for UAlert received text messages from the listserv to notify them when there was an emergency on campus of which they needed to be aware. Those students could then add one more person to the listserv, usually a parent, who would also receive the same text notifications. Like Twitter, the service is free and requires that you register online. Unlike Twitter, it is limited to those affiliated with the UA community. “Twitter allows us to put information out there that many more people can have access to. If a parent who lives in California wants to get information on their son or daughter, they can follow UAPD’s Twitter account,” Alvarez said. “UAlerts just had a narrower scope than Twitter.”

Twitter: twitter.com/UAPTS Name: UA Parking Location: Tucson, AZ Web: parking.arizona.edu/ UA Parking and Transportation Services provides parking options and promotes transportation alternatives for employees and students of the UA. Following: 621 Followers: 517 Tweets: 131 Most of their followers are members of the UA community, and Alvarez said they have received positive feedback. “Last summer, we were having a lot of thefts from the library, so we linked a Campus Watch Bulletin to our Twitter to reach the community and also gave them tips on how to protect themselves,” Alvarez said. “Even though Twitter is a social networking website, we don’t follow anybody because we use it most to push information out, not to get information,” Alvarez said. “And if

continued from page 1

NEW YORK — During his sentencing Tuesday to life in prison, Faisal Shahzad — a Pakistani immigrant who gave up a secure suburban life in America to become a terrorist for Islam — was unapologetic about his botched attempt to kill dozens of people in Times Square last spring. After a federal judge declared that he would never leave prison, Shahzad smiled, held up an finger and declared, “Allah Akbar.” U.S. District Judge Miriam Goldman Cedarbaum didn’t bother to review parole possibilities because she said there were none. “You appear to be someone who was capable of education,” she said later, “and I do hope that you will spend some of the time in prison thinking carefully about whether the Quran wants you to kill lots of people.” As he did throughout the halfhour sentencing, Shahzad, 31, interrupted her to press his religious viewpoint: “The Quran gives us the right to defend, and that’s what all I’m doing.” Last May, on a bustling corner of Broadway in the theater district, Shahzad parked an SUV loaded with three homemade bombs and tried to set them off. When his attempt fizzled, he returned by train to suburban Connecticut, where he’d been living off and on since he moved to America to attend college. Authorities tracked Shahzad through the vehicle and the keys

he left dangling from the ignition, and two days later he was arrested at JFK International Airport aboard a plane that was about to take off for the Middle East. Cedarbaum asked whether Shahzad hadn’t taken an oath of allegiance to the United States when he became an American citizen a year before the May 1 bombing attempt. “I did swear, but I did not mean it,” Shahzad said. “Humanmade” laws, he elaborated, were corrupt and meant nothing to him because he abided by “sharia,” or Islamic law. “I see,” the judge said. “You took a false oath?” “Yes,” Shahzad said. Shahzad’s beard and hair, spilling out from under a white prayer cap, had grown long and bushy since he last appeared in court in late June and announced his desire “to plead guilty 100 times over.” Again, Shahzad lectured the judge and a packed courtroom about his guilt: “If I am given 1,000 lives, I will sacrifice them all for the sake of Allah fighting this cause, defending our lands, making the word of Allah supreme over any religion or system.” He went on to explain how Muslims would never accept having Western forces in their countries fighting on a “pretext for your democracy and freedom.” The past nine years of war, he said, had achieved nothing except to awaken Muslims to defend their “religion, people, honor and land.”

The ASUA Senate meeting will be held in the Ventana Room of the SUMC, at 5 p.m. Global Health Alliance Amount Approved: $902 Amount Requested: $1,327 Vote: 6-0-0

Collegiate Cattle Growers Association Amount Approved: $2,837.45 Amount Requested: $11,871 Vote: 5-0-1

Filipino American Student Association Amount Approved: $189.66 Amount Requested: $379.32 Vote: 6-0-0

Business Law Society Amount Approved: $81.11 Amount Requested: $81.11 Vote: 6-0-0

Dhamaka Indian Club Amount Approved: Stricken Amount Requested: $1,547 Vote: 6-0-0

Wildcats for Christ Amount Approved: $360.50 Amount Requested: $360.50 Vote: 6-0-0

Jewish Voice for Peace Amount Approved: Tabled Amount Requested: $350 Vote: 6-0-0

Astronomy Club Amount Approved: $201.18 Amount Requested: $201.18 Vote: 6-0-0

FREE

Soda or Side

ny entree e of aID with purchas

with Student 5350 E Broadway Blvd, Suite 128 (Williams Center, Next to The Good Egg)

(520) 514-9797 www.monkeyburgerrestaurant.com

Total Requested: $16,117.11 Total Allocated: $4,571.90 Total Funding for the Year: $24,068.29

The son of a retired Pakistani air force marshal, Shahzad grew up in a secular, upper-middle class neighborhood in Karachi, Pakistan’s largest city. He came to the U.S. in 1998 as an undergraduate student, and over the years attained many of the trappings of what many here consider a successful life — two university degrees, a wife and two small children, a house in the suburbs, credit cards and a job as a junior financial analyst. But the U.S. military presence in Muslim countries and perceived insults by Westerners toward Islam apparently had begun plaguing Shahzad, according to reports of what he told investigators, and he became increasingly religious. He returned last winter to his native Pakistan, first to spend time with family in Peshawar and later to attend terror camp in the volatile Waziristan region, where he learned to make bombs. After he returned to America, he left his job, let a house he owned in Shelton, Conn., go into foreclosure and sent his young family to live in Pakistan with his parents. Living in a rundown neighborhood in Bridgeport, Conn., he began monitoring via the Internet a crowded corner in Times Square where he planned to blow up his vehicle. He told police he’d hoped to kill at least 40 people on the first try, and that if he hadn’t been caught he would have kept trying to blast through crowded areas in New York City until he was arrested or killed.

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Costs for binders are also up for approval in the meeting, a $49.16 cost in the senate budget. The senate aides, placed last week, are there to assist ASUA senators. The cohort program presentation, an information item, and consent agenda approvals from the Monday meeting represent the last two items on the agenda.

IF YOU GO

Pakistani immigrant gets life for attempted Times Square bombing MCCLATCHY NEWSPAPERS

Faculty first on clicker task force

senate projects. Gail Burd, vice provost in the office of academic affairs and a committee-based faculty began work in the spring of last school year on the Task Force on Classroom Responders. Only recently has ASUA been made aware of the effort and come out in support of it, according to Fritze.

people make use of the information, they’ll be able to protect themselves.” Another UA department broadening UAPD’s Twitter publicity by “re-tweeting” or re-publishing messages is Parking and Transportation Services. Known as “UAPTS,” Parking and Transportation Services joined Twitter more than a year ago. Bill Davidson, marketing specialist for Parking and Transportation Services, said he “often re-tweets information from our car share program, bike share program, and of course UAPD.” As for other social networking websites, Alvarez said there is a chance they might go onto Facebook in the near future. “As soon as we know about a threat, we need to alert the community. Our goal is to get more people to sign up for Twitter accounts,” Alvarez said. Recently, it’s allowed UA to reach an audience outside of the community. “We just did an interview with Univision, which is a Spanish news channel, about our bike safety program. One of the ways they had heard about it was because of our Twitter.”

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Obama hails community colleges, skirts lack of funds MCCLATCHY NEWSPAPERS WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama used a special White House conference Tuesday to tout the nation’s community colleges as offering a path to the American dream for underprivileged citizens and as essential centers for training the 21st-century work force. He glossed over, however, the serious funding challenges that these institutions face. Calling community colleges the “unsung heroes” of the U.S. educational system, Obama said that they “provide a gateway to millions of Americans to good jobs and a better life.” Jill Biden, the wife of Vice President Joe Biden, introduced Obama during the first White House meeting on community colleges. She has been a community college professor for the past 17 years and a tireless advocate for the two-year schools. “Community colleges are uniquely American, places where anyone who walks through the door is one step closer to the American dream,” Jill Biden said during

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an opening ceremony that featured the unveiling of a $35 million grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. That donation will set up a grant program for five years whose goal will be to reverse a trend in which roughly half of community college students fail to achieve certificates or associate’s degrees. The White House also announced a new public-private partnership to foster closer links between community colleges and corporate America, labor unions and government agencies. This effort will try to standardize what has worked best at various schools, particularly in creating certified skills that can be recognized across the nation. The National Association of Manufacturers has pioneered the concept of national recognition and so-called stackable skills for a modern work force. To meet the president’s goal, community colleges will need to have 5 million students graduate either with associate’s degrees or certification required by employers.

Do you have a question for The Weekly Advisor?

Email: advising@email.arizona.edu

Questions and Answers On Academic Advising

Sponsored by the Advising Resource Cener

Q: Dear Advisor: Why isn’t there one place on campus where I can get ALL my questions answered? I just want someone to tell me what I need to do to graduate in four years! And even after I have met with everyone on the planet, I STILL don’t know exactly which classes to take each semester! --Tired of Walking Around. A: Dear Tired of Walking Around: We at The Weekly Advisor understand your desire to minimize campus treks (especially in 100 degree heat!). And we appreciate your interest in having a clear plan for graduation. However, it’s essential for you to get complete and correct information. This means that you will see specialists in several areas, depending on your interests, abilities, and goals. You might meet regularly with your major advisor(s) AND a pre-health advisor AND your Honors College advisor. If you plan to study abroad, or want more information about scholarships, you will meet with people in those areas as well. The University is large and multi-faceted, with myriad opportunities. You have a lot of decisions to make, and it is true that you won’t be told exactly which class to take each semester. Even in very structured degree programs, such as engineering, you decide how to fine-tune your schedule, and you decide which general education courses to take. There is a lot of freedom in the university setting, and advisors can help you understand the possible outcomes of the choices you make. But in the end, you make the decisions. We take a break in our regular format to bring you this important public service announcement: Attention Students: Take a few minutes to… Learn how to use the registration tools in UAccess to get ready for spring 2011 priority registration. Open Lab TODAY, Wednesday, October 6th ILC Computer Lab – Room 112 Walk-In Hours: 9:00 – 12:00 Whether you just need a quick refresher or have no idea where to begin, stop by to get help so you can be ready for priority registration. We hope to see you there!


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• wednesday, october 6, 2010 • arizona daily wildcat

perspectives

Colin Darland Editor in Chief 520•621•7579 editor@wildcat.arizona.edu

Heather Price-Wright Opinions Editor 520•621•7581 letters@wildcat.arizona.edu

Sanchez’s credibility tarnished with outburst Nyles Kendall

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Arizona Daily Wildcat

ick Sanchez, the host of CNN’s “Rick’s List,” was terminated last Thursday following a bizarre outburst on “Stand Up! with Pete Dominick.” Sanchez’s on-air antics have made him an easy target for satirists. His quirky adlibbed commentary is frequently used in Jon Stewart’s comedic routines on “The Daily Show.” Sanchez, on the other hand, believes his Hispanic heritage has more to do with why he is always the butt of Stewart’s jokes: “Deep down, when they look at a guy like me, they see a guy automatically who belongs in the second tier and not the top tier.” In his rant, Sanchez harshly berates Stewart, calling him a “bigot” with a “white liberal establishment point of view.” Sanchez drew sharp criticism not only for his mischaracterization of Stewart, but for comments which were seemingly antiSemitic in nature. At one point in his heated discussion with radio host Pete Dominick, Sanchez, a Cuban immigrant of modest upbringing, refers to Stewart as an “elite Northeast establishment liberal,” insensitive to the plight of minorities and prejudiced toward “everyone who’s not like him.” “He can’t relate to a guy like me. He can’t relate to a guy whose dad worked all his life. He can’t relate to somebody who grew up poor,” Sanchez said. Dominick refuted Sanchez, suggesting that Stewart could understand the situation of an oppressed minority because he is Jewish. Sanchez scoffed at the claim: “Yeah, very powerless people. … He’s such a minority … everybody who runs CNN is a lot like Stewart, and a lot of people who run all the other networks are a lot like Stewart, and to imply somehow they — the people in this country who are Jewish — are an oppressed minority?” CNN released a statement shortly thereafter, ending Sanchez’s six-year stint on the network. Sanchez retracted his statements Monday, claiming to have “mangled his thought process,” but the damage was already done. Not only has he lost his job, but he has irreparably destroyed his reputation as a journalist. Sanchez wrongly jumped to the conclusion that Stewart’s taunting was racially motivated. He opened himself up to such ridicule by insisting on ad-libbing his entire show. He was known for his outlandish on-air behavior. Rather than hurling accusations of bigotry, Sanchez should have taken the time to evaluate his performance as a news anchor, which was mediocre at best. His haphazard reporting, though entertaining, lacked substance. Sanchez’s race baiting is also very telling. It indicates that underneath this façade of tolerance he puts on, a racist anti-Semitic sentiment lingers just below the surface. Jon Stewart recently weighed in on the controversy and of course did what he does best: “If you went on the radio and said Jews controlled the media, you may want to hold on to your money. … All he has to do is apologize to us and we’ll hire him back,” Stewart said. It has also been suggested that Sanchez’s intemperate comments were a culmination of two things. “Rick’s List” was only a temporary fill-in for the new “Parker Spitzer” show, which premiered Monday. This, combined with an endless barrage of insults from Stewart is likely to have pushed Sanchez over the edge. But regardless of what may have been the catalyst for Sanchez’s outburst, his behavior was still a clear breach of journalistic boundaries. Sanchez’s credibility as a news anchor is predicated on his neutrality. By lashing out at the “northeastern liberal establishment” and the Jews who allegedly control the media, Sanchez makes it impossible to believe he is truly an objective newsman. — Nyles Kendall is a political science junior. 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 opinions of their author and do not represent the opinion of the Daily Wildcat.

MAILBAG Brewer, Republicans didn’t create Arizona’s problems

With the clear lean towards liberal Democrat politics in your paper, I doubt you will publish this letter. However, I feel it my duty to point out to you and your readers that you are missing the point. It is not Jan Brewer that created the problems in our state, problems such as illegal aliens and a very dangerous border, and a crippled economy. She is simply attempting to solve a problem our corrupt federal government will not address. Your parents understand this, and someday you will to. The differences between a Democrat and Republican are age and success. When you grow up and make a living to protect, you will be far less likely to endorse policies that will destroy this country, that Democrats are bent on passing. The real enemy here is Obama and his policies. The piece “House Republican pledge more fantasy than reality” (Sept. 30) made the ridiculous assertion that extending the Bush tax cuts will raise the deficit. Look at history — lower taxes always raise revenue over time for the Untied States government. Obama was asked if it were clearly shown to him that raising capital gains taxes would cause revenues to go down would he still raise rates, his answer was “Yes,” because it was “fair.” What has fair to do with anything? Obama’s main concern at this juncture should be growing the economy. He is doing the opposite. His insistence of pushing Obamacare on a population that did not support this issue combined with desire to raise taxes and pass legislation such as “cap and trade” has scared the business community of the United States into their shells. He and his policies are crippling America. Obama’s wasteful spending is so out of control there is not even another president we can compare his spending to. The national debt when Bush left office was $9.849 trillion, the National debt today is $13.5 trillion; he has managed to increase the national debt by almost $4 trillion, in less than two years! We would all like to help the poor and provide health care for those that don’t have it. However, a bankrupt nation that cannot

provide jobs for 21 percent of its people (the true unemployment rate) cannot do much for anyone. This greatest country on earth has been built on capitalism, and only capitalism will solve our problems. We must unleash the power of the individual; allow their desire to fulfill the American dream for their family to spur our economic growth. That will never happen until Obama stops penalizing the very businesses that provide jobs for everyday people. What right does Obama have to decide who makes too much money? None at all, is the answer, and that is why the Republicans will thump the Democrats in the upcoming election. Pat Takash UA alumnus, class of 1985

Editorial frustrating, uninspiring

While it is fun to snark, you might be well advised to remember what the alternative is for your readers. The Republican Party did not want your readers to enjoy the benefits of the Affordable Care Act. This imperative allows your readers to stay on their parent’s medical insurance until age 26. Given the bleak prospects for employment for the graduating class of 2011, that should be of some comfort. Also, it is important for you and your student readers to remember what Governor Brewer and the Republican-led legislature did to post-secondary education in Arizona. Governor Brewer effectively has no education, so it is not surprising that she places little value on yours. Glassman’s opponent, McCain, has never sent any of his children to a public school. He opposes the end of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell, gay marriage, the DREAM Act and just about every other social justice cause brought to Congress in the last 25 years. McCain has never held a job outside of government, but continues to paint himself as an outsider. In closing, your editorial inspired apathy, not passion. No wonder my generation is so worried about yours. Jameson C. Johnson Southwest Litigation Support LLC

If I die before I wake, don’t let it be ironic Johnny McKay

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Arizona Daily Wildcat

s you may have heard (although probably not, you self-centered college kid) (ed. he doesn’t mean it) the owner of Segway recently died … by driving a Segway off a cliff. All puzzling logistics of this aside, this raises a very serious hazard: dying ironically. This has been a personal fear of mine for a while now, ranking just above winged spiders, and right below a Michael Bay Oscar. It’s actually one of the most terrifying thoughts ever, for a myriad of reasons. However, before we delve into my determinate diatribe of the subject, I would like to add that this should in no way discourage people from buying Segways, as they are a great source of humor for a lot of people, including me. I fear I would lose any chase to a Segway-mounted security guard, not because the determined guardian is inherently faster, but because I would collapse into slaphappy laughter at about mile two. But back to ironic deaths. When someone expires in a way that is funny or ironic, that moment of passing instantly supersedes almost every other aspect of his or her life. You could spend your entire life racking up five Nobel prizes, have three philanthropies, a building named in your honor and marry Madonna, but the second you’re killed by a malfunctioning nose-hair clipper, none of that matters.

The man who died this past weekend was actually a very respectable and interesting man. Jimi Heselden was a British millionaire who bought the U.S.-based Segway empire about a year ago. He was already known for extremely large donations to charity. His first company, Hesco Bastion, invented a high-tech replacement for sandbags as bullet cover in Iraq, which is what catapulted him to millionaire status. After purchasing the Segway company, Heselden donated 1,000 Segways to wounded Iraq war veterans. On top of all this, he occupied that most coveted of success stories — the son of a miner who dropped out of school and rose to power through his own volition. And yet now, whenever he is brought up, the first thing that will be heard is some smart-ass remark about Segways. It’s a scary legacy replacer — death by irony. Heselden is not the only famous person to depart to the next universe in such a fashion. Some other prime examples: Steve Irwin and Grizzly Man. Steve Irwin was one of the most badass men ever. He was essentially the love child of Crocodile Dundee and Barney, and performed feats of insane craziness that would make John McClane cry. After braving and defeating an infinite number of dangerous creatures, he finally succumbed to a stingray, in what is the mortality equivalent of your keys always being in the last place

you look. So now, after dodging the South African poison wombat by mere inches, and inserting his entire body into the mouth of India’s über-death serpent, he is remembered almost solely for that one unfortunate encounter with a plain ol’ stingray. Another great example is Timothy Treadwell, a.k.a. Grizzly Man. This is the man who for many years lived among grizzly bears in the state of Alaska, thus proving that man and bear could co-exist in peace, and paving the way for future Man-Bear negotiations. That was, however, until the one summer in Alaska when he and his girlfriend were mauled to death by grizzly bears. You could argue that this, and Steve Irwin’s death, were less ironic and more inevitable, given the circumstances. However, if you did this, I would be out two paragraphs. The worst part of it all is that by writing this article, I have exposed myself to this very terrible situation. You see, if I die soon after writing an article about ironic deaths, my death would be, in fact, ironic. As a hobbledehoy, the chances are high, but this simply can’t be allowed to happen. So I implore everyone out there — if I see you today or tomorrow, and you have been meticulously planning to kill me for a while, please hold off for another week or two. I realize that you have potentially put a lot of time and planning into the plot, but if you waited just a little longer, I would be freed of the sphere of ironic death. Also, by that time I could buy a Segway to escape. As long as there are no cliffs nearby and I don’t own the company. See what I mean? Sorry Jimi Heselden. — Johnny McKay is a media arts senior. He can be reached at letters@wildcat.arizona.edu.

CONTACT US | The Arizona Daily Wildcat accepts original, unpublished letters from all of its readers. •

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• Letters should be no longer than 350 words and should refrain from personal attacks.


• wednesday, october 6, 2010

dailywildcat.com

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policebeat By Lucy Valencia Arizona Daily Wildcat

Drinking in residence halls leads to students being booked into Pima County Jail

Two students were arrested for minor in possession of alcohol on Sunday, at 1:15 a.m. The two students — a man and a woman — were booked into Pima County Jail after the incident. About a half hour after midnight, a University of Arizona Police Department officer received a reference of two intoxicated individuals who were refusing to comply with the resident assistants of their dorms. Upon arriving, the officer met with one of the resident assistants, who took him to the fourth floor of the residence hall where the officer was brought to a room occupied by at least six people. Every one in the room exited quickly, but the resident assistant told the officer that there was one person missing. The resident assistant granted the officer permission to enter the room, inside of which he found a woman in the back corner. The officer had her exit the room and after looking around, found no other individuals. All of the people who were present denied having consumed alcohol. The officer performed an alcohol test on all of the students and believed two of them were intoxicated. The resident assistant confirmed the two who had given him a hard time. While the officer was talking to one of the individuals, he could smell alcohol on her breath. She also had watery and bloodshot eyes. The woman’s eyes twitched during an eye test. The woman refused to take a breath test and said she knew her rights. She also told the officer that she had not consumed any alcohol. While talking to the other man, who was giving the resident assistants trouble, the officer also smelled an odor of intoxicants on his breath. He also had difficulty with the eye test and refused a breath test, but continued to say he had not consumed alcohol. The two individuals were placed under arrest and booked into Pima County Jail. A code of conduct violation was forwarded to the dean of students’ office.

Broken windows, splattered paint at Delta Tau Delta

Criminal damages occurred at Delta Tau Delta fraternity on Sunday. A window was broken with a chair, and later that morning, blue paint was thrown at the fraternity’s door and a hole was punched through a wall. At 2:40 a.m., a UAPD officer was dispatched to Delta Tau Delta after receiving reference of a chair being thrown into a window and causing it to shatter. Upon arriving, the officer spoke with Wild West security and the reporting party. The reporting party, a man, showed the officer the broken window. The UAPD officer asked the president of the fraternity if he wanted to report the damage, to which he stated “No.� The officer informed the reporting party that he could not be a victim in this incident because he is not affiliated with the fraternity house. The reporting party’s boss had advised him that he should report the damage and get a case number from UAPD for documentation. While the criminal damage had occurred at Delta Tau Delta, the reporting party had gone to the restroom, and it was then that he heard that there was a group of 15 people in the courtyard who could have done the damage. However he did not witness anything. The president of the fraternity gave the officer the phone number of the owner of the house. The officer left a message on his phone to inform him of what had happened and to find out whether or not he wanted to be involved in the judicial process if anybody was apprehended for the damage. The officer was called back to the same fraternity at 5:27 a.m. on reference of more damage to the same room that had the broken window. This time, it was completely separate damage from the first incident. Blue paint was thrown on the door and floor and a foot-long hole was punched into the wall. A Corona beer bottle was shoved inside the hole. Also, the plastic cover of a fire pull station was damaged and knocked off the wall. The previous reporting party who worked for Wild West Security said that he was standing outside doing rounds every 30 minutes when he heard a noise and went up to the hallway. It was then that he saw the damage but no one was around. This is when he called UAPD, who documented the damage.

More criminal damage at UA

On an unknown date at an unknown time, someone vandalized a blue sign at the UA Student Recreation Center. UA risk management received a victim’s rights form. At 7:39 a.m. on Sunday, a UAPD officer noticed a blue sign at the UA student recreation center had been vandalized. The sign read “Outdoor Adventures,� and was on the south side of the building near the temporary entrance. Whoever did this used a stencil to spray paint three red figures resembling people at the bottom of the sign.

Found phone

A phone was found at the Arizona-Sonora Residence Hall on Sunday at 8:09 p.m. and was turned into UAPD. The black Blackberry phone was turned into UAPD possession and was placed into property and evidence as found property. It had at first been turned into the front desk. The phone had a green casing and it is unknown how long the phone was missing or who it belongs to.

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.

WHAT’S GOING ON?

WHAT’S GOING ON?

WHAT’S WGOING O N? ’ G O ? HAT S

OING

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WHAT’S GOINGWO N’? HAT S GOING ON? WHAT’S GOING ON?


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dailywildcat.com

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Tim Kosch Sports Editor 520•626•2956 sports@wildcat.arizona.edu

The Brown Files: An insider’s look into Oregon State Co-defensive coordinator Greg Brown’s ties to OSU coaches could benefit ’Cats By Mike Schmitz ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT No single Arizona player has the power to stifle Oregon State’s lethal offense Saturday night. There is, however, a certain Wildcats defensive coordinator with a small window into the Beavers’ offensive schemes. Enter Greg Brown. The 15-year NFL coaching veteran worked with both OSU head coach Mike Riley and offensive coordinator Danny Langsdorf on the New Orleans Saints’ staff in the early 2000s. “They’re outstanding people as well as outstanding coaches,” said Brown, who served as the Saints’ defensive assistant for quality control in 2002 , and defensive assistant and cornerbacks coach from 2003 to 2005. “Whoever gets them, you’re going to get all you want for 60 minutes because they will be well-prepared, well-trained and ready to go.” Riley spent only the 2002 season with the Saints as an assistant, but Brown coached with Langsdorf for three seasons in New Orleans. The Beavers’ offensive mastermind worked as the Saints’ offensive assistant for quality control in 2002 and the assistant-wide receivers and special teams coach for the next two seasons. Needless to say, Brown knows the brains behind Oregon State’s offensive operation, and has a good grasp of what the Beavers like to do. ”They design the intricacies of their offense to try to get you to take one false step and really get you back where they want you to be as far as both the pass and the run,” Brown said.“It’s a wellthought out, well-conceived plan of attack, both in the running and the throwing game. It’s going to be an absolute dogfight down to the last minute.”

Arizona’s codefensive coordinator Greg Brown, right, could give the Wildcats an advantage against Oregon State thanks to his ties with OSU coaches. Brown and the rest of the defense will be faced with the difficult task of stopping James and Jacquizz Rodgers on Saturday at Arizona Stadium. Mike Christy/ Arizona Daily Wildcat

Rodgers brothers

Oregon State’s offense goes as far as the brother duo James and Jacquizz Rodgers will take it. Junior running back Jacquizz Rodgers and senior wide receiver James Rodgers are the engines to the Beavers’ offense, and have combined for over 40 percent of the team’s total yards and over 50 percent of its touchdowns. “They play off of each other,” said sophomore linebacker Jake Fischer. “If you bite on one, the other one’s going BROWN, page A7

Does Arizona belong in Top 10? PRO: Defense, circumstances are right The fact that people have and Boise State — two top been openly questioning 10 teams that are expected and even complaining that to contend for the national Arizona jumped from No. title for the entire season. 14 to No. 9 in the AP Poll Offense sells tickets, deastounds me. fense wins games … and garThe Wildcats have done ners national respect. all that can be asked of But more than what Tim Kosch them so far, winning every the Wildcats have game on their way to the done off the field, it’s sports editor first 4-0 start of this millenwhat the teams ahead nium, and they’ve done it in a way of them did over the weekend that makes national voters notice. that helped the ’Cats move into People assume Arizona is an offen- the top 10. sive team since quarterback Nick Foles Stanford lost. Wisconsin lost. is the most recognizable face in the pro- Florida got embarrassed. LSU gram. Yet while the offense has been squeaked out one of the ugliest victogood — for the most part — it’s the de- ries you’ll ever see. Arkansas didn’t fense that has carried the Wildcats. play, but Arizona jumped ahead beOffense sells tickets, defense wins cause the Razorbacks have a loss. games. Utah was idle as well, but Arizona The defense has been nothing short has played a better schedule. of amazing. The unit ranks first in Speaking of Arizona’s schedule, the Pacific 10 Conference in all major did anyone catch any of the Iowa/ defensive categories — rushing de- Penn State game? Iowa completefense, pass defense, total defense and ly shut down the Nittany Lions and scoring defense — and is in the top played like the national contender five nationally in all of those catego- it’s been all season. ries except rush defense. Don’t underestimate the Wildcats’ The only defense that ranks better thrashing of the Hawkeyes. That win than them nationally in total defense is the main reason Arizona is No. 9 is Boise State, and the only team that rather than No. 10 or No. 11. has given up fewer touchdowns than Arizona is Alabama. Yes, Alabama

CON: Bye produces unexpected ranking Arizona fans expected a break trying make the Rose Bowl. after two weeks of last-minute But I can’t comprehend how a wins over Iowa and California. team — any team for that matter The players expected a rest af— can jump five spots and into ter two weeks of grinding it out the Top-10 during its bye week, on the field. Head coach especially when other teams Mike Stoops expected stayed perfect on the season. some time off to preDid Arizona’s rest really imNicole Dimtsios press the voters? Did the fact pare for Oregon State this weekend. that they had time off to recover sports writer But for and get players back on the field every Wildcat fan for practice warrant the five-place jump? that woke up Nebraska also had a bye week, but it Sunday morning moved down a spot. Apparently, its rest and saw the AP wasn’t as impressive as Arizona’s. rankings, they probAnd LSU stayed at No. 12 after winning ably weren’t expect- — although it was a last second win. ing a Top-10 ranking, Arizona jumped 10 spots after beating Arizona’s best since Iowa, none after beating Cal, and five after pre-season 1999. a bye week. You certainly won’t hear Ridiculous, and not because of what has the football team or Arizona Arizona has done during the season when athletics complain. it’s actually played, but because the bye Now, Arizona football is week gave the Wildcats so much help in good. Very good. But should the polls. the rankings have placed the True, there was some shake up in the Wildcats in the Top-10 af- Top-10, but Stanford and Florida losing ter they had a bye this week? to the No. 3 and No. 1 teams in the naProbably not. tion, respectively, doesn’t get Arizona Personally, I think the ac- into the Top-10 by itself. complishment of cracking If things continue to go this way for the into the elite of the elite na- Wildcats in the polls, maybe head coach tionally is great for the program — recruit- Mike Stoops won’t put his team on the field ing-wise and for the fact that the team is again this season.


SPORTS

arizona daily wildcat • wednesday, october 6, 2010 •

Mid-season report card

BROWN

Junior goalie Ashley Jett has been a bright spot for Arizona soccer, leading the Pacific 10 Conference in total saves and saves per game. She and the Wildcats will open up Pac-10 play against Washington this Friday. Gordon Bates/ Arizona Daily Wildcat

At the half-way mark in the season, goaltending carries the load for soccer while offense and defense continue to improve By Michael Fitzsimmons ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT The Arizona soccer team has passed the halfway point of the 2010 season, and will enter Pacific 10 Conference play with four wins — the same number the Wildcats finished with all of last year. Head coach Lisa Oyen has guided the Wildcats (4-5-2) into making concrete improvements on the field. Before Pac-10 play begins, here are midseason grades for different aspects of Arizona’s team.

Goalkeeping: A-

In her first year as the primary keeper, junior Ashley Jett is relishing every minute, and showing Arizona’s coaches and players the results of her hard work. Jett has been as reliable as can be after taking over between the posts in the third game of the year. She missed the first two games due to injury, but has been the voice of the defense ever since, and currently leads the Pac-10 in total saves (53) and saves per game (5.89). Oyen has referred to Jett more than once as being the vocal leader of the defense, and it’s an assignment that Jett takes pride in. “I think it’s my role since I can see the

whole field and know the flow of the game. Keeping it organized back there kind of falls on my shoulders as being one of the older players on the field,” Jett said. Senior Macke Mutz also acknowledged Jett’s leadership, adding: “She’s been awesome, it’s good to get someone back there with a voice that knows the team.”

Defense: B-

Entering conference play, the Wildcats have allowed the most goals (24) of any other team in the Pac-10, and have the highest average of goals allowed per game (2.18) However, playing in the super conference that is the Pac-10, those statistics are not telling of the improvements the Arizona back four has made since the first game. The Wildcats allowed eight goals in their first two games and let up five in a head-scratching loss to Ohio State three weeks ago. That leaves a total of 11 goals allowed in Arizona’s other eight games (1.375 per game average), which is a more truthful portrayal of the Wildcats’ play from their defense.

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Consistency remains the defense’s biggest Achilles’ heel, and if Oyen can continue to get solid play from the back four more routinely, the Wildcats will position themselves to upset some teams in conference play.

Offense: C+

Arizona has been without junior leading scorer Renae Cuellar since September 12 due to injury, and will seemingly be without her for an extended period of time. To the Wildcats’ credit, they have not made excuses in her absence, but the goals have been fewer and farther between — UA is tied for last in total goals in the Pac-10 (16). The talent is there for Arizona in the form of freshmen Jazmin Ponce, Ana Montoya and Jensen Skinner, who all boast the skill sets needed to provide offensive sparks. Arizona has recently shown its ability to create scoring opportunites, but has lacked the finishing touch that results in goals scored. If the Wildcats can continue to develop their attack and finish on passes up top, they will become a more complete team.

Rodgers brothers pose problem

continued from page A6

to get the ball and is going to make a big play.” Although 5-foot-7, 191-pound Jacquizz Rodgers is the team’s premier back, and 5-foot-7, 188-pound James Rodgers is OSU’s No. 1 receiver, they’re both extremely versatile. James Rodgers, who missed last week’s 31-28 win over ASU with a concussion and is probable this week, has seven carries for 36 yards to go along with his team-leading nine receptions for 113 yards and a score. He finished 2009 with 1,337 yards on the ground and in the air, and is the Beavers’ alltime leader with 5,360 all-purpose yards. Jacquizz Rodgers has racked up six rushing touchdowns and 398 yards through four games, but also has eight grabs for 38 yards and a score. He’s been consistently one of the conference’s best backs, totaling 1,500-plus yards receiving and rushing during the last two seasons, including 1,962 in 2009 to go along with 22 touchdowns. “They got great change of direction, great body control,” Brown said. “They’re big-time athletes and they’ve been that way for a number of years. Our guys have a tremendous challenge this week trying to match up with them.” The versatility of the Rodgers brothers gives Riley and Langsdorf a world of options offensively. “They just like getting the ball to their playmakers and they do a really good job of it, whether they disguise a formation, whether they shift, whether they do it in motion with the fly sweep, whatever it may be they do a really good job of getting the ball in the playmakers hands,” Fischer said. “They’ll fake it to one of them and give the ball to the other one and vice versa,” Brown said. “Then they’re both outstanding in the passing game, they both have soft hands.” The Wildcats’ defense has yet to allow a rushing touchdown this season, and comes in at the No. 2 defense in the nation. Arizona is also tops in the conference in total defense, scoring defense, rushing defense and passing defense. But Arizona has faced more powertype backs in its last two games against Iowa and Cal, so it still remains to be seen how it will handle the speedster Jacquizz Rodgers. “Sometimes if you’re smaller you have better body control, you’re lower to the ground,” Brown said. “You have better control of your movement skills and both of those guys play those to the utmost.”

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The Daily Wildcat and UA Career Services are teaming up to provide Career assistance to our dynamic UA readership Sally Wyer, a Tucson native who

went to Salpointe High School, took a position with Gallo Wine in San Diego after graduating from UA with a double degree in Retailing and Media Arts and a Business minor in May 2006. Sally entered the university with every intention of pursuing a business degree. Before she even applied for advanced standing though, she started looking for something broader. Sally did no less than four internships over her college career. Yes, this is in addition to those 18 units she carried every semester to get through with her double major. Her favorite internship was with KVOA as a Sports Intern where she helped edit and produce programs and interviewed players. For Sally’s complete success story, go to www.career.arizona. edu, click on “More News” listed beneath the current articles in the middle section for the articles archives and then filter (at the bottom) for Success Stories.

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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

MISS PIMA COUNTY looking for contestants. Got talent? Need $ for school? You could be the next Miss America! Visit www.misspimacounty.org. Pageant is Oct. 31st.

Your resume puts you on a recruiter’s radar Generally it’s the first thing an employer will see when you are searching for a job or career position. If recruiters don’t like this initial view, your opportunities with that organization may stall out right there. Sounds grim, we know. But there’s hope. The challenge? For optimum resume results, you need to spend time ensuring the best presentation possible. Your future, literally, depends on it. The good news is you don’t have to go it alone. Thanks to the UA Library and Career Services, you can create a professional, high-quality resume online in about the time it takes to watch one episode of Jersey Shore. “UA Resume Builder,” powered by Optimal Resume and made possible through the UA Library’s generous support can save students time and frustration. You can create and maintain a first-rate document that

competitive edge

student success

READER AD DEADLINE: Noon, one business day prior to publication.

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.

CHILDCARE! MI KASA in home Childcare is an amazing, educational, nuturing environment for your child. Call Karen 349-3815 or 297-3178. Accepting 2 to 12 year old children. Over 30 years experience, CPR certified, medical experience, educational experience. Breakfast, lunch and snacks included. Open Monday through Friday from 7am to 6pm, but will work with your schedule.

!!!!BARTENDING! UP TO $250/ DAY. NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY. TRAINING PROVIDED. CALL 800-965-6520 EXT.139 $8.50/HR FREE training, flexible schedule. Responsible, caring, outgoing individuals to join our team working with individuals with disabilities or elderly. Call office 520512-0200. ALGEBRA TUTOR NEEDED for high school student. M-F, one hour between 3:00 and 5:00. Must have transportation. Contact at 885-9301 or st@tedlock.com. ATTENTION STUDENTS $16 Base/Appt. Customer sales/service Flexible Schedules Scholarships Possible Call 520-624-3822 www.workforstudents.com

BOOKKEEPER/OFFICE COORDINATOR POSITION available for Downtown consulting firm. Parttime position. Experience with QuickBooks, Excel and Word preferred. Knowledge of basic accounting required. Email resumes to info@tangointernational.com or fax to 520-617-0980. EARN $1000 -$3200 a month to drive our cars with ads. www.AdCarDriver.com EXTRAS NEEDED TO stand in the backgrounds for a major film production. Earn up to $200/day. No experience required. Call 877571-1176 HELP WANTED PT/FT. Apply at 7280 E Broadway. Play it Again Sports. 296-6888 LOOKING FOR RELIABLE energetic workers to demo products at Albertsons on Saturday, October 16 from 10am-4pm. Pay is $15/hr. Call 520-404-1266.

highlights the very information recruiters are most interested in. It’s no easy task to distill all the experience and skills you’ve honed up to this point. You’ve done your share of part-time jobs (Hey, flipping burgers at the fraternity counts!) and diligently participate in academic pursuits. How best to translate all that experience into a succinct, compelling marketing tool that will convince employers you are the best candidate? One of the features of UA Resume Builder is an interactive process that guides, prompts

For optimum resume results, you need to spend time ensuring the best presentation possible. Your future, literally, depends on it.

STONE CANYON CLUB- A private golf course in the Northwest is seeking clubhouse servers and line cooks for our upcoming season. Please email resume to: stonecanyonclub@ymail.com STUDENTPAYOUTS.COM PAID survey takers needed in Tucson. 100% FREE to join! Click on surveys. TURN 8 HOURS INTO $3,000 & more monthly. No selling, free report, ZLC department 00002610. Conejo Spectrum Ft. Thousand Oaks, CA 91320 (55663) 1-800943-7203.

and encourages you with examples and templates. Really, if they could write the document for you, they would. UA Resume Builder is a great way to get started with your first resume, but it’s also a great way to improve the resume you already have. The system automatically creates personalized resume websites in addition to traditional Microsoft Word® documents. This alone could help your resume garner extra attention and elevate you above the crowd. And gaining an edge on the competition is what it’s all about. Get started now. Access UA Resume Builder on the Career Services website at www.career. arizona.edu, visit the Career Services office in Suite 411 of the Student Union Memorial Center, or call 621-2588 for more information.

MENTORS NEEDED FOR middle school gang prevention program. Committment is only 1hr per week! Internship and service hours available. For more info contact David Jimenez at 388-7370 or djimenez@luzsocialservices.org

NEW WEDDING DRESS. Size 12, satin and chiffon with chapel train and strapless. $250. Call 520-6252084.

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

!!! ALL UTILITIES PAID 4blocks N of UofA. $330/mo.1Rm studio, no kitchen, refrigerator only. Family owned and operated. Great alternative to the dorm. Quiet and private w/bathroom & lots of closets. Security patrolled, no pets. 624-3080 or 299-5020 www.uofahousing.com

TUTOR FOR BUSINESS Math 115B Ex-jock, pre-business major, very strong in writing and graphics, needs tutor for Business Math 115B. Hourly rate plus potential incentives. Send qualifications to: jcanderson27@comcast.net

LOVING FAMILY NEEDS an organizer/ neat nic, a Mary Poppins type that enjoys organizing a household. Must enjoy children, two/ three mornings per week, $10/hr. 721-7501.

WANTED 15 SERIOUS PEOPLE to work from home using a computer. Up to $1500 PT to $5000 FT. www.djincome.com. 303-4761292.

RED ROBIN AT THE TUCSON MALL has immediate openings for experienced cooks & servers. Apply today.

WANTED: 29 SERIOUS PEOPLE to Work From Home using a computer. Up to $1,500-$5,000 PT/FT www.thecareer4you.com

STUDENT RUN RADIO AND TV!

BROADCASTING 24/7 ON CHANNEL 3 AND CHANNEL 20 IN THE RESIDENCE HALLS.

KAMP STUDENT RADIO STREAMING LIVE AT KAMP.ARIZONA.EDU

edu

A Guide to Religious Services CHURCH OF CHRIST CAMPUS MINISTRY College bible 9:30am Worship 10:45am 2848 N. MOUNTAIN AVE. TUCSON, AZ 85719 795-7578

FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST CHURCH PRIORITY College Worship, 6:00pm, Worship 11:00am. WWW.PRIORITYMINISTRY.COM 445 E. SPEEDWAY.

LUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRY-ELCA Wednesday Dinner /Vespers 6pm Sunday 10:30am WWW.LCM-UA.ORG. 715 N. PARK AVE.

GRACE EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH (WELS) Sunday Worship 7:45am & 10:00am. Bible Class 9:00am www.GraceTucsonWELS.com | 623-6633 830 N First Ave. Tucson, AZ 85719

CONGREGATION ANSHEI ISRAEL *CONSERVATIVE* Daily Minyan 7:30am; Friday Service 5:45pm; Shabbat Morning 9:00am 5550 E. 5TH ST. AT CRAYCROFT 745-5550 WWW.CAIAZ.ORG

L.D.S. CHURCH- INSTITUTE OF RELIGION. Sunday meetings 9:00 A.M. Institute Classes M-F WWW.LDSCES.ORG/TUCSON. 1333 E. 2ND ST, TUCSON, AZ, 85755 COMMUNITY OF HOPE Services @ 8am- Traditional, 10:30am- Contemporary, 6pm- Spirit-Filled. 3141 W. Ironwood Hill Drive, Tucson, 85745 cohtucson.org EPISCOPAL CAMPUS MINISTRY. Eucharist Sundays 6:00 pm. Gatherings Thursdays 5:30pm UA-CANTERBURY.ORG 715 N PARK AVE. 623-7575

WELS TUCSON CAMPUS MINISTRY Student Bible study and discussion. Sundays 7:00pm. www.welstcm.com 830 N. First Ave. Tucson, AZ 85719 | 520-623-5088 ST. PHILIP’S IN THE HILLS EPISCOPAL CHURCH Sunday Worship 7:45am, 5:30pm, Choirs at 9 &11:15am, 4pm “Come & See”. WWW.STPHILIPSTUCSON.ORG. 4440 N. CAMPBELL AVE AT RIVER ROAD. 520-299-6421.

To be a part of our Guide to Religious Services, contact Jasmin Bell (520) 621-3425 or email classifieds@wildcat.arizona.edu


CLASSIFIEDS

arizona daily wildcat • wednesday, october 6, 2010 •

1BR TRIPLEX. 1 COVERED parking space. Pool & Laundry. 1293 E Glenn St. $495/mo. Call 798-3331 Peach Properties HM, Inc. www.peachprops.com 2Br also available $600/mo

!!!!!!!!!AAA+ Amazing Luxury Apartment Homes 3bedroom/ 3bath (1017sqft) $900/ month, 4bedroom/ 3Bath (1236sqft), $1200/ month. No security deposit (o.a.c). Central AC & heat, washer/dryer, security alarm system, free high speed Internet, full kitchen, ceiling fans, free storage room, fenced yard/ balcony, onsite parking, on site management & maintenance, 2miles from campus, Pets Welcome! 2010/11 semester free shuttle to campus.Taking reservations for summer/ fall 2010. Call Cathy @884-5044

2BEDROOM DUPLEX, WATER included, carport, dishwasher, fenced yard, ceramic tile $575 ALSO 2House 1513sqft, a/c, carport, w/d, fenced yard, covered patio, pets ok $675 CALL REDI 520623-5710 OR LOG ON WWW.AZREDIRENTALS.COM

$695 VERY CUTE 2bed/ 1bath 850ft, red concrete oors, front porch, laundry room and great community courtyard. Locate at 2249 E. Water. Call Russ at 520349-8442 (owner is a licensed RE agent in AZ) 1BR $495/MO STUDIO $425/mo. pool, laundry, & off-street parking. 824 E. 10th St. call 798-3331 Peach Properties HM, Inc www.peachprops.com 2BD/ 1BA, AC, covered parking, tile, 6th/ Euclid, $740 if paid early APL 747-4747 A GREAT PLACE FOR STUDENTS. DeerďŹ eld Village has 1&2 BDs. 24hr ďŹ tness & laundry. Pool/ spa W/Cabana & gas grills. FREE SHUTTLE TO UOFA. GPA discount, gated community, business center w/WIFI. $87.50 moves you in! 520-323-9516 www.deerďŹ eldvillageapts.com APARTMENTS FOR RENT! Fort Lowell/Campbell. Located near university, Studios and 1bd available $375+. 3blocks from Mountain Ave bike bath, close walking distance to public transportation. Utilities included! For showing please call 520-780-7888. Bluefoxproperties.com MOUNTAIN PLAZA APARTMENTS 1250 E. 10th St. 6235600, QUIET! 2BD/ 1BA furnished. $570/mo. Water paid. Evap. coolers, pool, & laundry. 4blocks south UofA. NEAR UA, STUDIO- $375, 1BR -$525, 2BR -$625, 3BR -$1125, furnished. 1135 E. 7th. 429-3829 or 444-6213 ONE MONTH FREE!! Downtown Historic House converted to Apartments. One bed, One bath, wood oors, and balcony! $575/mo, 12mo lease, A/C, onsite laundry, Water Paid. 385 S. Stone Ave. Casa Vista Properties 520-7421455 STUDIOS FROM $400 spacious apartment homes with great downtown location. 884-8279. Blue Agave Apartments 1240 N. 7th Ave. Speedway/ Stone. www.blueagaveapartment.com UTILITIES INCLUDED $550/MO. Pool & Laundry. Wood oors 770 N Dodge Blvd. Call 798-3331 Peach Props HM, Inc www.peachprops.com

1BD 1BA SECURE gated courtyard. A common entry. Private, fenced rear yard. Water paid. Tile ooring. Evap cool. Pet? $430/mo. $400 deposit. Apllication fee $30/ renter. 520-240-8844 Owner/ Agent 1BD DUPLEX 1437 E Adams. 4blocks UA & Med School. $550/mo $550 deposit w/lease. Water included only. Partially furnished. No Pets. 520-909-4766 1BD/ 1BA DUPLEX, Euclid/ Elm $505 if paid early, water/ gas included, APL 747-4747 1BD W/DEN DUPLEX 1508 N Santa Rita. $500/mo, $500 deposit. Lease. W/D on-site, A/C, Evap. No Dogs. Water paid. 5block to UA & Med school. 520909-4766

BIKE TO UOFA. 2BD 1BA Lovely air-conditioned house. Hardwood oors. Laundry, Mountain Views, Private & Quiet. $795/mo. Call Madeleine 520-349-3419 GREAT DEAL! LOOK! 3or4 Bedroom. $1200. LOW MOVE IN COSTS. Close to UofA. Clean and open oor plan. CALL FOR DETAILS! 520.398.5738.

2BR 2BA. MOUNTAIN and Ft. Lowell. All appliances, W/D. Lease deposit $700, Rent $600, water paid. 1255 Halcyon. 9062275 or 297-1666.

HUGE! 3BEDROOM 2BATH house 2500sqft, a/c, ceramic tile, w/d hookups, fenced yard $900 ALSO 4Bedroom 2bath house with basement, ďŹ replace, w/d, covered patio, family and dining rooms $1200 CALL REDI 520-623-5710 OR LOG ON WWW.AZREDIRENTALS.COM

LARGE 2BD 1BTH. 2blocks from campus, parking, W/D, A/C, quiet, clean. $650/mo. See website for locations: www.thecastleproperties.com 520-406-5515 or 520-9032402

HUGE! MUST SEE! 6bed/ 3bath $400 per person! LOW MOVE IN COSTS! Beautiful home close to campus, oak cabinets, open livingroom CALL FOR DETAILS! 520.398.5738

ONE BED, ONE Bath, walking distance to university, A/C, wood oors, Water Paid, off street parking, $525/mo, 12Mo Lease, No Dogs. 141 N. Santa Rita Ave. Casa Vista Properties 520-7421455 ONE MONTH FREE!! Built in 2008, Two bedrooms, One bath, 850sqft. Private backyard, Community laundry room, $525/mo, 12mo. lease. 2921 N. Geronimo Ave #8 Casa Vista Properties 520742-1455. ONE MONTH FREE!! one bed, one bath, with private back patio, Saltillo Tile Floors, 600sqft, Water paid, Evap. Cooling, $475/mo, 12mo lease, 3units available. 840 E 10th St. Units A, C and D. Casa Vista Properties 520-7421455 PEACEFUL AND QUIET 2BR 1BA. Spacious living room and bedrooms. 1,000sqft. Lease $530/mo. 1024 E. Weymouth Broadstone 623-8111 WALK TO CAMPUS, 2bd 2ba 4plex. Beautiful historic building all updated with stainless steel appliances, custom cabinets, granite countertops, oak oors, tile oors in bathrooms, two private decks/ patio, walk in closets, off-street assigned parking, intercom security with remote front door control, extra on-site lighting, non-smoking unit. 745 E 1st St $1150 Call REDI 520-623-2566 http://www.azredirentals.com/REDI-management-Listings.asp

LARGE STUDIOS ONLY 6blocks from campus, 1125 N. 7th Ave. Walled yard, security gate, doors, windows, full bath, kitchen. Free wi/ďŹ . Unfurnished, $370, lease. No pets. 977-4106 sunstoneapts@aol.com

!!!!!! #1 4BR, 2BA spacious house. Large fenced backyard, renovated and nicely maintained. All amenities included. 310.497.4193. wildcatrentals@gmail.com

PERFECT FOR ROOMMATES! 2bed/ 2bath $475 per person! Private bathrooms, split oorplan, private patios, huge closets! CALL FOR DETAILS! 520.398.5738 RENOVATED HOME ON MOUNTAIN AVE (1/4 MILE TO UofA). 2BD 1BA huge arizona room. Garage, large fenced backyard, 1150sqft. AC, new appliances. W/D. Free CatTran. $950/mo 303330-3776 SPEEDWAY/ CRAYCROFT 15 MINUTES from campus. Quiet neighborhood 3Bedroom, 2bathsRed Brick Home with beautiful mountain views, carport parking, pets allowed upon approval. $995.00 per month plus utilities. $995.00 Security Deposit Call John 520-275-4848 Location: 5608 E. Hawthorne SPEEDWAY/ CRAYCROFT 15 MINUTES from campus. Quiet neighborhood 2 or 3Bedroom, 2baths- Red Brick Home with beautiful mountain views, carport parking, pets allowed upon approval. $950.00 per month plus utilities. $950.00 Security Deposit Call John 520-275-4848 Location: 5555 E. Hawthorne

PRIVATE MATH TUTORING: All Levels (well, almost). Call Phil at (520)313-6517, email phil@phgtutoring.com, or check out www.phgtutoring.com. UA student discount!

2003 Honda VTX 1300 Retro, $6500 OBO, Metallic Orange Color, 8000Miles, In Great Condition! Includes: After Market Cobra Pipes, Memphis Shade Windshield, Leather Saddle Bags, Cover. 520-282-0989 or 520-822-8168.

2007 Honda Metropolitan Scooter CHF 50S. $1700 OBO, Pristine Condition! Only 380 Miles, 100mpg, 50cc engine, Cream/Purple Color. Includes: New Cover, Rear Rack, Trunk. Contact 520-282-0989 or 8228168.

SUZUKI BURGAMM SCOOTER 650cc 2003 $2900. Silver, good condition, clean, well maintained, automatic, 2cylinder, fast. Call Jim 648-2032

2 7 5

WALK TO CAMPUS Studio Plex, all utilities included, small lease, ceramic tile, small deposit $385 ALSO 1Bedroom house 1000sqft, all utilities included +cable, fenced yard, covered patio, dog run, step down living, negotiable lease $650 CALL REDI 520-623-5710 OR LOG ON WWW.AZREDIRENTALS.COM

4BD, 2BTH GRANITE WITH GARAGE. Located 1mile from UofA. Home features kitchen, with fridge, dishwasher, range, etc. Full size washer/ dryer, lots of closet space, a large fenced yard and deck. A great deal at $1495/mo and is a must see. Call today 760809-7575.

2BR 2BA POLISHED concrete oors. Fireplace, Dishwasher, & stack washer/ dryer. FencedYard. A/C. $850/mo. 1630 E. Adelaide Dr. Call 798-3331 Peach Properties HM, Inc. www.peachprops.com

5BR/ 3BA HUGE House plus basement. Parking, non smoking, no pets, walking dist. to university, wired for internet $1,600/mo 624-8695 or 360-7818

ARE YOU LOOKING for a mover? Same day service? Student rates available. 977-4600

TWO ONE BEDROOM units available in Gated Complex near university! A/C, Saltillo and Concrete Floors, Water Paid, 12Mo lease, $500-600/mo, No Dogs, 1145 &1139 E 10th St. Casa Vista Properties 520-742-1455

2BDRM/ 1BA HOUSE at Helen & Tyndall. $500/ month +utilities. Wshr/ dryr, parking space, gated yrd, super cute! call, text 520-4886949.

5BLOCKS NORTH OF UofA. 2BR house $680/mo. no pets, quiet, month to month. Family owned and operated. 624-3080 or 2995020.

!!-AA TYPING $1.50/PG. Laser printing, term papers, theses, dissertations, editing, grammar, punctuation, professional service, near campus. Fax: 326-7095. Dorothy 327-5170.

SWEET! GREAT DEAL! 5bed/ 3bath $400 per person! LOW MOVE IN COSTS! Vaulted ceilings, large closets, private patio/ balcony! CALL FOR DETAILS!!! 520.398.5738

3bedroom 2bath + AZ room extra bedroom? $1125= 375 ea bedroom or $1200 for 4. 1515 E. Mabel practically on campus!! Call: 429- 2689

5BD 4BA GRANITE kitchen 2ďŹ replaces, entire place tiled, swimming pool. Sabino Canyon Rd. $1600/mo. Available Now! Call 271-0913.

UA BASKETBALL SEASON tickets. $750. Section 118, row 38 seats 7 and 8. Call Tony at 661587-4707.

By Dave Green

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2STORY 4BEDROOM TOWNHOME. Dishwasher, washer & dryer. 1017 N. 6th Ave. $1300/mo. Call 798-3331 Peach Properties HM, Inc www.peachprops.com

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3BEDROOM 2BATH 5BLOCKS NW of UA. AC/ DW Washer & Dryer/ Storage/ Room/ Yard/ Free monitored security- $995/mo Use of Pool and Jacuzzi 8841505. Available for immediate move in. www.myUofArental.com

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2BR 2BA IN Sam Hughes. Remodeled 2010.1735sqft. GPS Reality-Stephen Tass 850-2275.

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!!!! 1BD/ 1BA, $495, Furnished, 3BLOCKS TO UA, Euclid/ 9th, Water/ Gas/ Internet Included, 520-798-3453, upa@cox.net, http://www.UPapts.com, 726 East 9th Street

A9


A10 • wednesday, october 6, 2010 • arizona daily wildcat


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