December 4, 2012

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HILL’S FEAR GUIDING HIM FOR UA

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STUDENT EMERGENCY WHAT IF YOU DID JUST MEDICAL SERVICES DROP OUT? IN SEARCH OF NEW FUNDING NEWS - 2 PERSPECTIVES - 4

ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT Printing the news, sounding the alarm, and raising hell since 1899

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 4, 2012

VOLUME 106 • ISSUE 73

DAILYWILDCAT.COM

Spring remodel will move union services RACHEL MCCLUSKEY Arizona Daily Wildcat

The Student Union Memorial Center will undergo renovations next semester to make room for additional seating and new restaurants. The meal plan office, CatCard office, post office, and Wells Fargo bank will all move to the

basement of the SUMC to form an integrated service center with a lobby space. This will enable these offices to have the same hours, said Joel Hauff, the interim director for the Administration and Business Office. The bank will fill the location of the computer lounge, currently next to the Cellar Bistro. The lounge will then move across the hall,

To fill the space being vacated by the offices, in between the games room and where the CatCard, meal plan and post office will be, Hauff additional seating will be installed. “That borders off the food court and we all added. The change will be implemented while know we need more seats there during lunch students are away for spring break and has been time,” Hauff said. Enrique Noriega, a graduate student studying a part of a master plan for the SUMC, which UA officials have been working on for 18 months, UNION, 2 Hauff said.

WATCH OUT FOR STARES

Survey aims to strengthen development in Marana MAXWELL J. MANGOLD Arizona Daily Wildcat

The Eller College of Management and Town of Marana are collaborating to improve the management of an already “well-run” town. In an effort to strengthen the morale and culture of employees who work for the town, employees will complete a survey created by Sam Birk, a graduate student in the Eller College. The survey will ask workers questions regarding their work atmosphere, in terms of what they consider adequate and what could be improved. The survey’s results will then be presented to Paul Melendez, associate dean of executive education, and Stephen Gilliland, department head of Eller College management and organizations. The two will review these findings with 75 Marana town managers. The opportunity to have access to “some of the best and brightest” minds in the college is exciting, said Gilbert Davidson, a town TYLER BESH/ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT

PRINTED FACES COVER THE STAIRS at the Student Union Memorial Center on Monday. The faces are part of a secret campaign scheduled for Dec. 12, according to the UofA Bookstore.

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Faculty Senate questions ASA fee KYLE MITTAN

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The Faculty Senate tackled the suspension of ASA’s fee and the president’s strategic plan for the university in its monthly meeting Monday evening. The senate addressed issues as it was presented in various reports by Associate Students of the University of Arizona President Katy Murray. The student fee that provides the majority of funding for the Arizona Students’ Association was suspended following a meeting with the Arizona Board of Regents last week. Murray’s mention of the suspension sparked a discussion by the senate regarding the initial cause for suspending the fee, as well as talk about the future of the organization. Wanda Howell, chair of faculty, directed her question to Murray, asking what caused the regents to suspend the fee in the first place. Both Murray and Graduate and Professional Student Council President Zachary Brooks agreed that the association’s initial funding of

WORTH

NOTING This day in history >> 1967: Doctors perform first heart transplant >> 1818: Illinois becomes 21st state >> 1944: Civil war breaks out in Athens

FACULTY SENATE, 2

TYLER BESH/ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT

ANDREW COMRIE, interim provost and senior vice president of academic affairs, presented President Ann Weaver Hart’s strategic plan for the university to the UA Faculty Senate at its monthly meeting on Monday afternoon.

Senators propose DREAM alternative STEPHANIE CASANOVA Arizona Daily Wildcat

Although a proposed bill is being called an alternative to the DREAM Act, which grants young undocumented immigrants a path to citizenship, some members of the UA community are decrying the bill as a failed attempt to address immigration issues faced by the country. Three U.S. Republican senators proposed an immigration reform bill, called the ACHIEVE Act,

on Nov. 27 that would allow immigrant youth to go to school, join the military and eventually obtain a renewable work visa through a three-step process. The three-step process includes a visa that would allow undocumented immigrants to obtain a bachelors, associates, vocational, technical or advanced degree within six years or serve four years in the U.S. military. Retiring Sens. Jon Kyl (Ariz.) and Kay Bailey Hutchison (Texas) and Sen. John McCain (Ariz.) filed the bill in attempt to grant legal status to young

December 3rd-18th LOOK FOR US ALL OVER CAMPUS!

Student Union Memorial Center • Campus Rec Center • Arizona Health Sciences Center McClelland Hall • UA Mall • Bookend Café • The A-Store at Maingate • UA South BookStore

undocumented immigrants with legal status. The act isn’t inclusive of people who flee their country because of its impoverished state, said UA professor Anna Ochoa O’ Leary, of the Mexican American Studies Department. Instead, the bill intends to support only a young population that can be assimilated into the U.S. easily and without effort, she added. “It’s almost as if we are saying, ‘We don’t want

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