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Take a tuition hike
Border liars beware Kiosk detects deception for security
UA proposes across-the-board increases
By Jazmine Woodberry ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT The UA is leading research in helping border agents detect liars. The AVATAR kiosk, the Automated Virtual Agent for Truth Assessments in Real-time, isn’t meant to eliminate humans but rather aid them in detecting lies. “The basic problem is people lie and other people are really bad at detecting as to when they are being lied to,” said Doug Derrick, lead researcher of the AVATAR project and a UA doctoral candidate. “It’s a machine, so it doesn’t have a bias, it doesn’t have a bad day.” The system has a sensor, which reads pupil dilation, eye gaze and focus, and the vocalic center, which measures changes in pitch and voice inflection. It also has a video camera and fingerprint reader. After an interviewee pushes a button, the kiosk asks questions about what a person is carrying with them. If it detects a lie, it asks a series of follow-up questions. Derrick’s latest study revealed that while humans accurately detect lies about 54 percent of the time, the AVATAR sensor system was accurate 84 percent of the time. When matched with voice inflection, the accuracy rate shot to 93 percent in test subjects ranging from UA students to border guards in the European Union, Derrick said. “It’s been to Hawaii, St. Louis, El Paso, Washington D.C., Poland,” Derrick said. Derrick and his team have been developing the kiosk’s software for three years. But it is based on AVATAR, page 3
By Luke Money ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT
Mike Christy/Arizona Daily Wildcat
Derrick Williams, center, celebrates as time expires in the BOK Center in Tulsa, Okla., as the Wildcats defeated the Texas Longhorns 70-69 on Sunday. Williams and the Wildcats advance to the Sweet 16 and will take on Duke University in Anaheim, Calif., at 6:45 p.m. on Thursday.
Victory is Sweet (16) By Kevin Zimmerman ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT
TULSA, Okla. — Of all the blown leads resulting in painful losses and unbelievable wins, this one might have taken the cake. Arizona looked doomed, down 69-67 with 14 seconds left, and the ball given to the Longhorns on the Wildcats’ end of the court. But a five-second call was issued to Texas on the inbounds,
the Wildcats (29-7) ran their own inbounds play without a timeout, and guard Kyle Fogg found Derrick Williams on a pick-and-roll for an And 1 that Arizona’s star completed to give the Wildcats a 70-69 victory over Texas in Tulsa, Okla. The second heroic, game-winning play gave the man his teammates call Superman a ticket for the No. 5 seed Wildcats to the Sweet 16, GAME RECAP, page 14
UA med students meet their matches Disney-themed skits enliven residency reveal
By Jazmine Woodberry ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT Each spring, medical students nationwide find out where they’ll be spending their residency. At the UA, students did it dressed as Goofy, Alice from “Alice in Wonderland” and Peter Pan. Amber Steves, dressed as Russell from the movie “Up,” pushed her way through a packed auditorium, with three rows of onlookers lining the walls and more sitting in the aisles, placed a dollar in a bag and ripped open her envelope. Inside, it said “Fort Collins Family Medicine.” Steves is off to Colorado to become the first doctor in her family. “Graduation is the official seal but Match Day, it’s like getting the best
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job offer in the world,” Steves said. Her Colorado residency program was her first choice. UA medical students will officially become doctors at graduation in May. But at the DuVal Auditorium in the University Medical Center on Thursday, each student’s assignment for residency training allowed him or her to pursue a specialty. And along with UA tradition, the class performed a skit to match this year’s theme “The Wonderful World of Match 2011.” “Your life is set from that point on,” said Flora Shah, who couples matched with her fiance Sanjay Sinha to LA-area hospitals. Shah will pursue internal medicine at a residency program at University of California MATCH DAY, page 2
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Amber Steves, 26, dressed as a character from the movie “Up,” receives her match with a residency program in Fort Collins, Colo., on Thursday at the University Medical Center. UA medical students who are graduating in May receive residency matching during an event that traditionally has students perform a skit.
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COMING TOMORROW
The UA is proposing a $1,500 tuition increase for all resident students next year, according to the UA’s official proposal to the Arizona Board of Regents. For residents, this would raise tuition to $9,114, a 19.7 percent increase over current tuition levels. Non-resident tuition would increase by $600 to $24,574, a 2.5 percent rise, and students at UA South will see a raise of either a $600 for nonresidents or a $1,200 for residents. Student fees will also increase, with the health, wellness and recreation fee increasing by $150 and the student information technology fee by $125. The increase is meant to help offset another round of budget cuts from the state. Gov. Jan Brewer proposed cutting $170 million from the three state universities, including $67 million from the UA in her executive proposal, but the most recent proposition from the state Senate would cut an additional $65 million from the universities, raising the UA’s total cut to $92 million. The UA’s proposed tuition increases do not cover additional cuts under the Senate proposal and UA President Robert Shelton said if the Senate proposal were adopted the UA would need to “rethink all aspects” of its 2012 budget. In its proposal submitted to the regents during its most recent study session, the UA said that for every $10 million in lost state funding, tuition would have to be raised $500 to offset the cost. The proposed tuition increase would raise an additional $22 million in revenue for the UA. “This tuition proposal, combined with our continued commitment to financial aid, will allow us to offer an accessible, affordable, high-quality education that Arizona students will need to successfully take our state to a brighter future,” said UA President Robert Shelton in a release. Tuition at the other two state universities is also expected to increase. Northern Arizona University’s proposal would increase tuition ranging from $184 to $1,045 and Arizona State University’s from $1,198 to $1,415, depending on residency and class standing. Shelton said the UA does not compare itself to NAU or ASU because “each university offers a unique educational experience.” Elma Delic, the board chair of the Arizona Students’ Association, said the differences in tuition increases among the universities were in line with the regents’ attempts to differentiate between the institutions. Despite the tuition increases, Shelton said the UA will maintain the regents’ set-aside for need-based financial aid, TUITION, page 3
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MATCH DAY continued from page 1 at Irvine. Sinha will pursue a pediatrics residency at the University of California, Los Angeles. “In our career, training for medicine, Match Day is the most anxiety-driven day,” Sinha said. “Our whole future is affected by where we are going to go.” This year’s graduating class had the highest percentage of students matched with their top choices in the UA’s history. Dr. Larry Moher, professor of family and community medicine, remembers his Match Day in 1973. Moher’s time at Michigan State University didn’t have the fanfare of the UA’s Match Day. “It’s the culmination of their medical school career,” Moher said, “and until this moment, they really don’t know where in the country they will be going.” During the first semester of senior year, medical students apply for residency programs across the nation. Students then submit a list of choices in February, the same time programs rank-order their favorite candidates to the National Resident Matching Program in Washington, D.C.
Around half of the UA’s medical students stay in Arizona, with more than a quarter staying in the Tucson-area. Adam DaDeppo was an undergraduate student at the UA. He then spent five years as an acute nurse practitioner before pursuing a medical degree. Despite applying to five programs, DaDeppo knew a residency in Tucson was right for him. “I’ve got a wife, three kids, a house. I didn’t want to be anywhere but here,” DaDeppo said. His residencies will be spent at UAaffiliated hospitals in anesthesiology and critical care. The assignments from the 2011 Match Day correlate each student with their residency home. But for some, this won’t be their last Match Day experience. “We’ll be couples matching again in three years,” Shah said. She and her fiance both want to specialize in their residency fields — Sinha in pediatric cardiology and Shah in gastroenterology or endocrinology. “Not only is (Match Day) a relief but a sense of accomplishment,” Shah said. “A lot of us, we’ve been doing school straight since high school, so it’s finally a grown up thing that we are getting into.”
Bundgaard ousted as Senate majority leader By Luke Money ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT Republican Senate Majority Leader Scott Bundgaard was removed from his post on March 15 amid swirling allegations pertaining to a violent domestic dispute. According to reports from Phoenix police, Bundgaard, then the Senate’s secondhighest ranking member, and his now ex-girlfriend
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Aubry Ballard were returning from a charity event on Feb. 25 when they began arguing. Police said both showed marks indicating the altercation became physically violent. Senate Democrats called for Bundgaard to step down immediately after the incident though Bundgaard refused to do so. Bundgaard maintained his position after an initial caucus meeting on March 8 but Senate
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Republicans elected to remove him from the post after another meeting. He has thus far refused calls to resign from the Senate, though both the Senate Ethics Committee and the police are examining his conduct. Sen. Andy Biggs, a Republican from Gilbert, has been elected to replace him. He will also maintain his position as chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee.
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TUITION continued from page 1 which constitutes 17 percent of total tuition dollars. The UA is also working to address the shortfall through staff reductions and program consolidation or elimination and “stands by” its commitment to cut $39 million from the university budget on top of tuition and fee increases. “The UA is taking an aggressive path to reorganize itself around the critical issues confronting Arizona,” Shelton said. “The university has invested in interdisciplinary solutions to provide students with leading-edge learning opportunities that will uniquely qualify them to lead our state and country forward in the decades to come.” Emily Fritze, the president of the Associated Students of the University of Arizona, called the cuts “discouraging” and said the cuts placed an additional burden on UA students. “The immediate reaction we’re getting (from students) is frustration and concern about the increases,” Fritze said. “We hear these sorts of stories every day.” Fritze said the cuts were in line with what ASUA had expected from conversations with UA administrators, but lamented
AVATAR continued from page 1 42 years of research by Jay Nunamaker, Regents and Soldwedel professor of management information systems, computer science and communications, and Judee Burgoon, director of human communication at the Center for the Management of Information and communication professor. The kiosk tries to highlight a dozen or so of the most common psychophysiological and behavioral cues that humans utilize when deceiving others. That subgroup of behavioral cues can aid law enforcement or border agents at ground or air ports of entry.
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that tuition has almost doubled in the last six years. State appropriation to the universities has fallen approximately $230 million since 2008, and the cuts proposed by the Senate would bring that total to $465 million, a 42 percent decrease in total state funding. Regents Chair Anne Mariucci called that figure “appalling” in a release. “Irresponsibly deep cuts in higher education funding will negatively impact Arizona’s economic recovery and thus future state revenues,” Mariucci said. Delic said the group is continuing to combat tuition increases and the state Senate’s budget proposal. She also said it was important for students to get involved in the process and make their voices heard and highlighted ASA’s efforts to encourage students to write emails or call their legislators. Shelton urged students to look beyond the sticker price of tuition and fees. “With this tuition proposal, we will be able to continue our strong financial aid program,” he said. “The value of a UA degree must be maintaied and indeed appreciate with time.” The regents will host a video-conference tuition hearing on March 28 from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. The UA’s link to the hearing will be held in Room 211 of the Harvill building. Humans can mentally control only a few of those cues. “It’s inevitable that tell-tale cues will leak out no matter how hard people try to control them when being interrogated,” Nunamaker said in an Eller College of Management news release. The kiosk is the result of a sixyear grant the UA received from the Department of Homeland Security and is the flagship project of the UA, which heads the National Center for Border Security and Immigration, or Borders. Each university within the group develops its own projects to deal with a section of policy or technology that affects the border region. “The group is apolitical,” said Riley McIsaac, Borders program manager,
Arizona Daily Wildcat Vol. 104, Issue 117
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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whose background lies in border and immigration policy. “We’re here to do the research to supply the policymakers with the information they need.” UA researchers hope to get both the sensor system and the vocal registry technology working in real time. They also are working to develop a broader set of languages for AVATAR to speak in and develop more cultural considerations as to how people in various countries physiologically respond when lying. This could make this type of technology applicable in loan applications or job interviews, Derrick said. Applicable trials could start in 12 to 18 months. A fully functioning prototype could be ready in three to five years, he said.
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• monday, march 21, 2011 • arizona daily wildcat
perspectives
Michelle A. Monroe Editor in Chief 520•621•7579 editor@wildcat.arizona.edu
Kristina Bui Opinions Editor 520•621•7581 letters@wildcat.arizona.edu
ASUA president will not be my president Storm Byrd Arizona Daily Wildcat
J
ust a day before election results were announced, this publication commended the Associated Students of the University of Arizona. The candidates were something seemingly new and, dare I say, “diverse.” It seemed as though ASUA may have been turning the corner and was expanding its representative abilities. Of course, we have since seen the outcomes of the elections and the Daily Wildcat retracted its statement of brighter futures in another editorial. Both presidential candidates were disqualified, ASUA won’t say why, the candidates wouldn’t say why and there was just something expected about the outcomes. This election, which had the potential to be so very different, turned out just as we feared. The general rule of “he who has the most friends gets the most votes” held true yet again. James Allen destroyed Daniel Hernandez in the presidential vote, and candidates with unique backgrounds were stomped by platforms that insist upon creating systems and programs that we already have. Elections Commissioner Michael Colletti has announced that, due to the disqualification of both presidential candidates, a special election could be held unless Allen successfully appeals violations. A special election would open the playing field up to any interested UA students. Unfortunately, that includes the two candidates who just got disqualified. In other words, Allen will run against Hernandez, and maybe some student will be crazy enough to think that in one week’s time of a special election, he/she can muster up the support to beat a candidate with national recognition and another who is a member of Greek Life (which, as has been mentioned several times, dominates student government). What this all means is that we get another election, another week full of being pestered by people we don’t know and more listening to cries of foul play. I’ll bite and play devil’s advocate. Perhaps now that James Allen is not carrying the ticket of the Ponton brothers, he won’t get as many votes. Perhaps the 2,000 plus who voted for him won’t show up to vote again. It’s hard enough to get students between the ages of 18 and 24 to vote in a state government election once; I can’t imagine the fight of getting them to vote in an ASUA election twice. Maybe this new election will breed even more voters and we’ll have the chance of getting a truly representative student government and a president that can say that they truly hold a majority of the student body’s approval. Or maybe, a new candidate will rise and defeat both the violators. Now that I’ve got that out of my system, we can go back to the likely reality. The election will be pointless. Instead of a front-page photo with utter disbelief, we’ll get a celebratory one of our new student body president. Fewer students will come out to vote, and most likely all the hype that we all build, myself included, will inevitably let us down. If any outside candidate tries to run, they’ll most likely only serve to make the margin of victory larger for the inevitable winner. When the smoke clears and the votes are tallied, we’ll most certainly get what we deserve: A student body president who cheated the rules, but won anyway. That is in no way a knock or endorsement for one candidate or the other, it is simply fact. Hernandez and Allen both broke the rules, and one of them will win nonetheless. I conclude with a quick quote from Allen, who was a few violations away from being the student body President of “YOUR student government.” “It is not good for the post (of president) for these sorts of violations to occur,” he told the Wildcat. “That was just the nature of the election this year.” That is about the lamest excuse for a violation I’ve heard since Cam Newton whipped out the, “I didn’t know my dad was shopping me around” excuse. — Storm Byrd is a political science sophomore. Hecan 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.
Outcry over A ‘ sians in the Library’ misguided Kristina Bui Arizona Daily Wildcat
“O
oh ching chong ling long ting tong ooh” is Asian for “What the hell, Internet?” All right, not really. The question still stands though, and it’s a two-parter: First, what the hell, Alexandra Wallace? Wallace, a political science student at the University of California, Los Angeles, achieved Internet fame last week when she posted a video on YouTube. The video, a “rant” that she titled “Asians in the Library,” went viral during spring break. Wallace begins by pointing out to the audience that she’s not the most politically correct person, so don’t take what she’s about to say offensively. Then Wallace goes on to describe how many Asians have been admitted to UCLA, and how they’re invading her apartment complex and the library. This wouldn’t be so terrible, if they weren’t always chatting on their cell phones. She sing-songs a little rhyme that goes, “Ching chong ling long ting tong.” According to Wallace, it’s what all those Asians are chanting while “checking on everybody from the tsunami thing.” Don’t forget, guys, don’t take it offensively.
The sequel to “What the hell, Internet?” picks up shortly after the saga of Wallace leaves off. Wallace’s rant sets the Internet on fire, UCLA gets embarrassed and releases a statement calling the video “repugnant,” a Facebook group encourages that users report her to the dean and people call for her expulsion from UCLA. According to the Daily Bruin, Wallace reported receiving death threats by phone and email. It goes without saying that Wallace is beyond ridiculous, and the mother who she claims to have raised her to be a “nice, polite American girl,” is probably deeply ashamed. Unfortunately, the response to Wallace hardly proves anyone else is any classier. Wallace’s rant was ignorant and childish. But on a scale of 1 to racist, it was pretty mild. She could have said a lot worse. More than that, it wasn’t anything new. The only way it could have been more of a stale cliche was if Wallace had pulled the corners of her eyes into little slits while chanting. The difference between Wallace and playground bullies is that she chose to
broadcast her mistake on the Internet, and people won’t let her take it back. Sending her death threats and calling for her expulsion sends one message to Wallace: Way to go, Alex, you really pissed a bunch of people off. But it fails to teach her why people are so angry. The backlash led Wallace to releasing two statements to the Daily Bruin. Both apologized for the video, but the second ends with an announcement: “I made a mistake. My mistake, however, has lead (sic) to the harassment of my family, the publishing of my personal information, death threats, and being ostracized from an entire community. Accordingly, for personal safety reasons, I have chosen to no longer attend classes at UCLA.” People make mistakes, and need to be offered the opportunity to learn from them, not forced to run away. In elementary school, when a little kid picks on another kid for having funny-shaped eyes or weird hair, you don’t tell the little kid they deserve to die. You sit them down and you explain to them that everyone’s a little different. You can’t fight stupid with stupid. You don’t stop stupid by driving her to withdrawing from school. Stupid doesn’t respond to name-calling or death threats, and there’s nothing to feel morally superior about when you try to scare stupid out of people. — Kristina Bui is the opinions editor of the Daily Wildcat. She can be reached at letters@wildcat.arizona.edu.
GUEST COLUMN
ASUA should be open, accountable David Cuillier Guest Columnist
S
tudents of the UA: You are losing your clout, and unless you stand up for yourselves you will be treated simply like customers, or worse, kids. A story in the March 11 Arizona Daily Wildcat stated that your two ASUA presidential candidates were disqualified and the university won’t tell you why. For all you know they got caught drinking. Or maybe their grades are too low, or they violated election rules. Or maybe they did nothing wrong and the administration just doesn’t like them. Who knows? You don’t. The government won’t tell you. According to ASUA Elections Commissioner Michael Colletti, they are keeping it secret because of the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act. I’m not sure if that’s true, or who would give such advice, but it’s misguided. The university could certainly explain the reasons for why it disqualified its student presidential candidates, if it wants to. This federal privacy law, FERPA, is once again being abused and twisted beyond recognition. Universities have cited FERPA for keeping parking tickets secret, saying they are educational records. They’ve tried to use FERPA to hide corruption, favoritism and nepotism. One school cited FERPA to keep school lunch menus secret. The creator of the law, former U.S. Sen. James L. Buckley, told the Columbus Dispatch a few years ago that, “Things have gone wild. These are ridiculous extensions. One likes to think common sense would come into play. Clearly, these days, it isn’t true.” He’s right. Last week was national “Sunshine Week,” which is intended to raise public awareness about government transparency. But from what I’ve seen
around the country, secrecy is creeping ever more insidiously throughout government, including universities. This year some states crafted new public record laws that are more secretive than those of Mexico and former Soviet republics, such as Kyrgyzstan and Azerbaijan. While we send soldiers overseas to fight for democracy, we are losing it little by little in our own homeland. The intent of FERPA was to protect students from unwarranted invasions of privacy, such as being embarrassed by poor grades or other “educational records.” As in most privacy laws, the idea is if the information would be highly offensive to the average person and of no legitimate public concern, then it should be kept secret. I agree with that. But we’ve gone astray. Government agencies are forgetting about that “legitimate public concern” part, which is why Buckley has called upon Congress to revamp FERPA. Clearly there is a legitimate public concern to know why two presidential candidates are banned from seeking office. That speaks to what our government is up to, and outweighs the candidates’ privacy interests. If anything, the secrecy is going to hurt the candidates more than help them, given the flurry of rumors that will probably be far worse than reality. Transparency is cleansing — secrecy breeds mistrust and paranoia. Even if the ASUA candidate documents are “educational records,” such as grades, they are now campaign records, relevant to an issue of public importance, and they should be made public. The U.S. Department of Education is not going to punish the UA for being open about election violations. It all comes down to common sense. Imagine if, right before the 2008 U.S. presidential election, the federal government
disqualified Barack Obama and John McCain for unspecified reasons, saying that the U.S. Privacy Act prohibits release of that information to protect their privacy. The nation would be in an uproar. Common sense would prevail, I would hope. Some people might say, “Well, that’s real government. This is just ASUA.” That’s where I start to fear for your student rights. If you go along with that rationale, you might as well just ignore ASUA and the elections. If ASUA is not real government then it’s simply a puppet organization where the administration pats you on the head and lets you play house. If ASUA isn’t real government, then the Wildcat should spend its time and resources covering something else that is real. Or, you can view ASUA as legitimate. After all, ASUA decides how to spend your student fees. It makes policy decisions that affect you. It speaks on your behalf to the administration and the Arizona Board of Regents. It’s really your choice, students. In some states, such as Washington, public university student governments are officially recognized by statute as legitimate agencies, subject to state open meeting laws. It wasn’t the administration that fought to put that into law — it was student leaders. They wanted clout, and they knew that if they wanted to be real government, then they would have to play by real government rules. So I encourage ASUA to exert its legitimate power. Be open and accountable, without hiding behind FERPA. Explain, just as a city, state or federal government would, why two seemingly qualified presidential candidates were booted. Engender trust among your 30,000 undergraduate citizens, and be proud to practice real government, in a real democracy. — David Cuillier is an associate professor in the UA School of Journalism, Freedom of Information chairman for the Society of Professional Journalists and co-author of “The Art of Access: Strategies for Acquiring Public Records.” He can be reached at cuillier@email.arizona.edu.
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NATION & WORLD
• monday, march 21, 2011 • arizona daily wildcat
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Western powers attack Gadhafi forces in Libya
Lionel Bonaventure/Abaca Press/MCT
World leaders take part in a meeting on Saturday, at the Elysee Palace in Paris, France, during a summit on implementing action on the U.N. Security Council resolution against Libya.
MCCLATCHY TRIBUNE WASHINGTON — French fighter jets struck targets in Libya on Saturday and the U.S. launched missile strikes on air defenses as Western powers intervened in the country’s civil war to prevent Moammar Gadhafi from crushing the rebellion in the eastern city of Benghazi. French warplanes rushed into Libyan airspace on Saturday morning (U.S. Eastern time) while emergency talks were under way in Paris among the U.S., France, Spain, United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and the Arab League. Al-Jazeera, the pan-Arab television network, reported that French jets destroyed a number of Libyan tanks. The U.S. missiles were launched a few hours later. President Barack Obama made a statement announcing the action, saying the U.S. would act on the “front end” and then enforcement of the no-fly zone will be enforced by U.S. allies. The leaders in Paris acted after fresh intelligence from Libya indicated that Gadhafi had thrown all his forces forward to capture Benghazi before the West could act. In a dramatic statement, French President Nicolas Sarkozy announced the planes would prevent Gadhafi ’s aircraft from bombarding the city and also attack tanks on the ground if necessary to end any assault. The West will oppose any aggression
against the civilian population in Benghazi, Sarkozy said. At a press conference in Paris where she took part in the talks, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said “there will be other actions to follow” the deployment of the French planes. Clinton waved away questions about what those other steps might be. Rebels in Benghazi pleaded for action Saturday reporting they were under attack from troops and tanks in the city. Sarkozy said it appeared that the reports were true. He said Gadhafi has stepped up his military campaign after the West demanded that he stop the fighting and withdraw his forces. Reports from cable news channel reporters on the ground in Benghazi reported that there had been a general lull in the fighting prior to the attack by the French airplanes. British Prime Minister David Cameron announced that British planes were operating in the skies over Libya. “Colonel Gadhafi has made this happen. He has lied to the international community, he has promised a cease-fire, he has broken that cease-fire. He continues to brutalize his own people,” Cameron said after the talks in Paris. France, the U.K., the U.S. and others began the action to enforce the U.N. Security Council resolution, which is aimed at averting further bloodshed in the struggle for control of the North African nation.
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6
• monday, march 21, 2011
dailywildcat.com
policebeat By Alexander Vega Arizona Daily Wildcat
Driver urinates in his car before DUI arrest
A non-UA-affiliated man was arrested for driving under the influence after improperly parking on the sidewalk by the Student Union Memorial Center on March 4. Around 11:20 a.m., the UAPD chief of police was driving in the area of the union and reported an improperly parked vehicle on the sidewalk by the roundabout on the north side of the union. At the time, there were many pedestrians walking in the area. The chief made contact with the driver and needed additional assistance because he noticed that the driver showed symptoms of intoxication. The chief said that it looked like the driver had urinated on himself. Another officer arrived and made contact with the driver. The driver admitted to drinking the previous night but said he had stopped awhile ago. The driver, a paraplegic, also said that he was embarrassed because he had just urinated in his pants after trying to urinate into a bottle. The officer also learned that the driver was waiting for his girlfriend to get out of class and meet him at the car. However, the girlfriend did not appear in the 20 to 30 minutes the officer was talking with the driver. The officer arrested the driver for driving under the influence and transported him to UAPD with a UA golf cart. The driver’s blood-alcohol content was .124 and .121 after the deprivation period and was cited and released to a third party.
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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7
• monday, march 21, 2011 • arizona daily wildcat
ODDS & ENDS
Michelle A. Monroe Editor in Chief 520•621•7579 editor@wildcat.arizona.edu
ON THE SPOT Not quite a Wildcat
Caroline Nachazel Odds & Ends Reporter 520•621•3106 editor@wildcat.arizona.edu
RECYCLE
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Please recycle your copy of the Arizona Daily Wildcat.
Olivia Seils UA visitor
Spring break is over, what are your thoughts? That sucks for you guys, but I actually don’t go here and am on my break now. I am visiting my boyfriend for the week. Derrick Williams? I wish! No, my boyfriend lives in Coronado (Residence Hall). How do you feel about UA? I go to school in Florida and it gets pretty wild there. I don’t know what Arizona has to offer since this weekend was pretty dead in the dorms. So you are saying your school may be better than UA? I mean, it’s possible. Wow, you are going to get nowhere on this campus with that attitude … (Laughs) But I love Arizona, go ‘Cats. Basketball is killing it. Anyways, aside from wishing you went here, what did you wish for on your last birthday? It was in October, so I probably wished that I would get a lot of Halloween candy. Trick-or-treating? Well, like rave candy. Oh right, best rave song? “Dancing in the Dark” by Dev. I can move my body to this song all night long.
HOROSCOPES Aries (March 21 - April 19) — Today is an 8 — There’s a double rainbow after the storm. From this perspective, you can appreciate the beauty of those seemingly insurmountable obstacles earlier. Taurus (April 20 - May 20) — Today is a 7 — Your natural talents and imagination could persuade you to arrogance. Let your light-hearted affection triumph over nerves and give a stirring performance. Gemini (May 21 - June 21) — Today is a 9 — You’ve put together something of great
If on campus, you may use any recycling bin regardless of the label.
STAFF BOX Editor in Chief Michelle A. Monroe Managing Editor Ken Contrata News Editor Luke Money Sports Editor Tim Kosch
Kristopher Skinner/Contra Costa Times/MCT
Metro Dog co-owner Diane Livoti watches as Kiva gets some exercise outdoors at the boarding, day care and training facility in Richmond, Calif., on March 7.
Opinions Editor Kristina Bui Design Chief Olen Lenets
Snooki makes SATs: students fret over reality TV question
Students who blew off studying for the SAT may have Snooki to thank when their acceptance letters arrive this spring. On the March 12 college admissions exam, students were asked to write an essay about reality TV and the concept of authenticity, leaving nervous teens to wonder whether Lauren Conrad is as good of a source as Joseph Conrad. “Most people believe that the reality these shows portray is authentic, but they are being misled,” the prompt begins, according to the New York Times. The question alludes to shows like “American Idol” and “The Biggest Loser” before asking, “How authentic
can these shows be when producers design challenges for the participants and then editors alter filmed scenes?” After the exam, concerned students took to the Internet to discuss the nuances of the question in a lengthy thread on the website CollegeConfidential.com “I’ve never gotten such a ridiculous essay question. Hope they are lenient about it?” wrote one commenter. “Nothing would go through my head since I don’t watch reality shows. … I only vaguely know ‘Jersey Shore’ and its controversy with ItalianAmericans so I chose that.” Many students were surprised to find themselves citing TV stars
FAST FACTS •Product packaging accounts for one-third of trash. •Solid waste disposal is the third largest municipal government expense after police protection and education. •70 percent less energy is required to recycle paper compared with making it from raw materials. •Once an aluminum can is recycled it can be part of new can within six weeks.
originality and talent, and imagination feeds your creative need. Things happen fast, so speed up the dance. Cancer (June 22 - July 22) — Today is a 7 — You want to play and have a burning need to create. Don’t stress on the details. Let your talent and appreciation for beauty imagine a fresh new direction. Write it down. Leo (July 23 - Aug. 22) — Today is a 7 — You’re strongly grounded in a creative pursuit that calls to you. Details may hold anxiety, which can be
•Incinerating 10,000 tons of waste creates one job, land-filling the same amount of waste creates six jobs but recycling this much waste creates 36 jobs.
OVERHEARD Woman: “After I ask him on a date, I told him I was really into ugly guys — they’re my thing.”
— Today is an 8 — Your easygoing and vibrant enthusiasm creates charisma that attracts. Don’t give in to stage fright. Let your imagination feed your original talent. Sagittarius (Nov. 22 - Dec. 21) — Today is a 7 — Do unto others as you’d have them do to you. Push your own artistic boundaries by seeking hidden beauty in the mundane. Create for no good reason. Capricorn (Dec. 22 - Jan. 19) — Today is a 7 — There’s plenty of action at home, and maybe even some chaos. Try
Photo Editor Tim Glass Multimedia Editor Johnny McKay Web Director Colin Darland Asst. News Editors Bethany Barnes Jazmine Woodberry Asst. Sports Editors Michael Schmitz Asst. Photo Editor Mike Christy Asst. Arts Editor Heather Price-Wright Asst. Copy Chief Kristen Sheeran News Reporters Brenna Goth Steven Kwan Eliza Molk Lucy Valencia Alexander Vega Michelle Weiss Sports Reporters Kyle Arps Vince Balistreri Nicole Dimtsios Ryan Dolan Kelly Hultgren Tyler Johnson Daniel Kohler Kevin Nadakal Zack Rosenblatt Bryan Roy Alex Williams Kevin Zimmerman Arts & Feature Writers Remy Albillar Miranda Butler Christy Delehanty Kim Kotel Jason Krell Steven Kwan Kellie Mejdrich Kathleen Roosa Johanna Willet Dallas Williamson Jazmine Woodberry Columnists Storm Byrd
Photographers Robert Alcaraz Gordon Bates Janice Biancavilla Will Ferguson Farren Halcovich Valentina Martinelli Virginia Polin Ernesto Somoza Annie Marum Koby Upchurch Rebecca Rillos David Venezia Designers Kelsey Dieterich Freddy Eschrich Jessica Leftault Chris Legere Adrienne Lobl Rebecca Rillos Zack Rosenblatt Copy Editors Chelsea Cohen Nicole Dimtsios Emily Estrada Greg Gonzales Jason Krell James Neeley Melissa Porter Sarah Precup Lynley Price Stephanie Ramirez Advertising Account Executives Ryan Adkins Kirstie Birmingham Sarah Dalton Liliana Esquer Zach McClain Grego Moore Siobhan Nobel Luke Pergande John Reed Daniela Saylor Sales Manager Courtney Wood 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 Kameron Norwood
something new today, out of the familiar routine. You may discover a new career skill. Aquarius (Jan. 20 - Feb. 18) — Today is a 7 — Take time to lie down and look at clouds. Don’t let other people’s stress get to you. A cloud weighs as much as a whale, yet it floats above effortlessly. Pisces (Feb. 19 - March 20) — Today is a 7 — It’s time to go, even if it’s just a trip outside to breathe in the fresh air and appreciate beauty. Or you may want to travel far, by plane or through the pages of a novel.
March 21
Wildcat Campus Events Calendar Campus Events
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Arizona Men’s Baseball vs. San Francisco (Home) March 21, 12 p.m.. Arizona takes on San Francisco. Frank Sancet Field How We Love March 21, 6pm – 8pm Kiva Room. As women we engage in many different types of relationships. Join AASA to explore characteristics of both healthy and unhealthy relationships within African American culture. We’ll address how past experiences shape our behavior with present interactions, and collectively dialogue about the benefits of loving yourself. Real Women, Real Beauty Exhibition Mar 2 – 31. Student Union Gallery DescriptionChallenging the media’s unrealistic portrayal of women, these photographs of real UA women focus on the reclamation of the female form and celebrate realistic health. Exhibit open March 2-31st with an opening reception on March 9. Part of Women’s Herstory Month
like Nicole “Snooki” Polizzi or Kim Kardashian instead of writers and historical figures. “I never thought the Kardashians would play a role in my SAT essay, but I wrote how the Kardashians create the impression that one can be rewarded financially for doing nothing, whereas some of the most successful Americans came to this country with nothing and only saw results after years of hard work,” another student wrote. Others seemed relieved to be answering a question that was seemingly tailored for their TV diet.
— Park Student Union
dispelled with imagination and independent action. Think outside the box. Virgo (Aug. 23 - Sept. 22) — Today is a 7 — Go somewhere fun with the kids after work: the park, a movie … have an adventure of some kind. Let your silly side out. Create something together. Libra (Sept. 23 - Oct. 22) — Today is a 9 — Brilliant ideas abound, and the pace is quick. You delight in beauty, and it’s springing forth like new clover. Play with it, and capture those ideas with a brush stroke. Scorpio (Oct. 23 - Nov. 21)
Arts Editor Brandon Specktor
Nyles Kendall Mallory Hawkins Eliza Meza Caroline Nachazel Heather Price-Wright Andrew Shepherd Tanner Weigel
Exhibit Commemorates Stewart Lee Udall Legacy “I’m for Stew: The Life and Times of Stewart Lee Udall” will be on display through June 15 in the gallery at Special Collections at the University Libraries, located at 1510 E. University Blvd. “Treasures of the Queen” Exhibit at UA Mineral Museum Feb. 06 — May 31 1601 E. University Blvd. 520-621-4516 The Flandrau Science Center and the UA Mineral Museum presents a special exhibition celebrating historic Bisbee and collections of rare Bisbee minerals, including specimens from the 1893 Chicago World’s Fair. “Face to Face: 150 Years of Photographic Portraiture” exhibit is being shown in the Center for Creative Photography main auditorium until May 15, 2011. The Aesthetic Code: Unraveling the Secrets of Art, through April 12, 2011. University of Arizona Musem of Art. “Ansel Adams: Arizona and the West” exhibit is being shown in the Center for Creative Photography until May 15, 2011.
Galleries
Bill Schenck: The Serigraphs at Tucson Museum of Art through June 05, 2011. 140 N. Main Avenue, 520-624-2333 Contemporary painter Bill Schenck’s serigraphs at Tucson Museum of Art encompass fictionalized Western histories, Native American subjects, and depictions of the modern cowboy/cowgirl.
Galleries
“Legados” is being exhibited during the month of March in conjunction with the celebration of César E. Chávez Day (March 31). In honor of César E. Chávez and his legacy, “Legados” presents work by over 20 artists that honors and exemplifies the working individual, education, literacy, human rights, social rights, and the environment. March 5 through April 16. Raices Taller 222 Art Gallery & Workshop 218 E. 6th St. (1/2 block east of 6th St. & 6th Ave.) (520)881-5335
Of Note The Aesthetic Code: Unraveling the Secrets of Art, through April 12, This exhibition explores the basic math and design principles that artists have utilized for centuries. It is designed to help the layperson develop a vocabulary to approach unfamiliar works of art. By learning about the basic elements of art and seeing how the application of these elements enhances a work of art, the visitor will be able to recognize these principles and perhaps have some insight into art that otherwise seems incomprehensible. University of Arizona Museum of Art TuesdaysFridays, 9am-5pm and Saturdays and Sundays, Noon-4pm $5 adults; free for children, students and military with ID and members
Of Note
AttentionAll Classified Staff or Appointed Personnel / Artists and Family Members too!: The University of Arizona Staff Advisory Council Presents “On Our Own Time” The 1st Annual National Arts Program® Staff Art Exhibit Wednesday, March 30th - Thursday, April 21nd. Student Union Gallery This Exhibit is Open to the Public – Opening Reception 12 Noon, Wed. March 30th To register online: http:// www.nationalartsprogram.org/venues/ university-of-arizona-az Entries Accepted Thursday, March 24th at the Student Union Gallery, between 12:00 a.m. and 6:00 p.m. Craft Fair Support local artisans. Magnetic jewelry, purses, wind spinners, beautiful handcrafted jewelry, wickless candles, clothing and kettle corn at the Tucson Spectrum Shopping Center I-19 & Irvington from 9:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. on selected Mondays &Tuesdays Arizona Archaeological and Historical Society Lecture March 21, 7:30pm- 9pm. Patricia Crown will give a talk titled “Cacao Exchange and Use in the Prehispanic American Southwest.” Meet Me at Maynards March 21, 400 N. Toole Ave. 520-991-0733 OR 520-5450577 Southern Arizona Roadrunners’ Monday evening, non-competitive 3-mile run/walk begins and ends at Maynards Market/Kitchen and features trash pick-up en route every third Monday.
To sponsor this calendar, or list an event, email calendar@dailywildcat.com or call 621.3425 Deadline 3pm 2 business days prior to publication
UA&E
arizona daily wildcat • monday, march 21, 2011 •
8
Tokyo garage rockers sweat through disaster
By Brandon Specktor Arizona Daily Wildcat Don Matsuo and his fellow members of the Zoobombs were preparing for a concert in Peterborough, Ontario when an 8.9-magnitude earthquake rattled Japan two weeks ago. The Tokyo-bred Zoobombs have been playing prolific garage rock around the world for 17 years, making a big noise at Canada’s North by Northeast festival and beyond, but no amount of familiarity with the road can prepare for a natural disaster at home — so distant in miles, yet so near in spirit. Emotions came in clusters.
“Sadness, surprise, worry, and a feeling of powerlessness,” Matsuo described in an email. “But, I’m surprised. Every American person has shown us deep sympathy and friendship. So we decided to keep going and find something we can do in America as Japanese. Our families are safe. So we can keep going.” And so the Zoobombs go, like Energizer bunnies pumped with amphetamines, rampaging through North America on a relentless rock tour. If you’re lucky, you can catch them tonight at Vaudeville Cabaret before they recharge their batteries and plow on through California. This current tour is partially a promotion for
the Zoobombs’ upcoming 14th album, La Vie En Jupon, due out next week. But this tour is mostly just a tour — a familiar, semi-annual experience that has become just as vital to the band as sleep. “Playing music is losing energy and charging energy at the same time,” Matsuo said. “I never get tired.” Few Zoobombs audience members can make the same claim. Famed for their live performances, the Zoobombs are a kinetic combination of Jimi Hendrix and The Cramps, Sly Stone and the Rolling Stones — equal measures funk and punk. Audience participation is necessary. Only certain venues will do.
“The sound must be natural,” Matsuo said. “Enough space to move around, doesn’t need ‘super’ sound system. And people must … sweat!” Sweat tonight with the Zoobombs. Wallshaking rock music might be the adrenaline shot you need to survive the semester’s end.
if you go The Zoobombs at Vaudeville Cabaret 110 E. Congress St.
friend 2 friend notice. care. help.
A website for University of Arizona students that serves as a resource to help you help your friends stay safe and healthy.
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Watch out for each other... Keep each other safe... Be a real friend.
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APPROVED-KD MONDAY WK:4 Opinions
In the middle of the paper but not middle of the road. Agree. Disagree. Throw us down and stomp.
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Spring 2011’s Fair Circuit Finale featuring YOU
The biggest career fair of the semester…
UA Spring Career Days
By Susan L. Miller, M.A. This is it…your last chance to connect with employers before full-scale summer hits and you are back home, wherever “back home” may be. The final installment of the Spring Semester Career Fair Circuit is upon us and it’s more important than ever for students to take advantage of the available opportunities. Already attended all the other campus fairs this semester? Great! Just don’t miss this one. Especially if you haven’t yet landed that coveted job or internship; this one is the biggest career fair held on campus all semester and worth your time & effort. There are many opportunities to be explored over this 2-day event. Even in a slowly (oh so slowly!) recovering economy, it’s important to remember that these tables are filled with eager representatives here to meet YOU! Yes, YOU. There will be representatives from across the work spectrum and the possibilities are too numerous to list in this short (but powerful) missive. Just a few of the organizations that will be attending include corporate giants like The Hershey Company, Verizon Wireless and Frito-Lay; retail heavy weights like Old Navy,
Tuesday & Wednesday Wednesday, March 22 & 23 23, 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Student Union Memorial Center 3rd Floor Ballroom SPONSORED BY UA CAREER SERVICES AND SUPPORTED BY OUR MULTI-CULTURAL STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS Our thanks to these Clubs and Multi-Cultural Centers for their support of UA Spring Career Days 2011 Accounting Student Association Aerial Robotics Club African American Student Affairs American Institute of Chemical Engineers Arizona Assurance Mentors Arizona Blue Chip Asian Pacific American Student Affairs
Associated Students of the University of Arizona Black Graduate Student Association Chemical Engineering Honors Society Peer Mentors Chicano/Hispano Student Affairs Community Justice Board Credit-Wise Cats Eller Scholars & Eller Unity Board
9
monday, march 21, 2011 •
career days 2011, supplement to arizona daily wildcat
Honors College Ambassadors Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health Mentor Program National Society of Black Engineers Native American Student Affairs Public Health Student Alliance Society of Hispanic Professional Engineers
Macy’s and Target; outstanding nonprofits like Lions Camp, COPE Community Services and Boy Scouts of America and government positions with agencies like C.I.A., Department of Economic Security and Sunnyside School District. Did we mention the Tech area? Look for opportunities with Apple, IBM and eBay. Into Communications? Talk to KVOA Communications. There is no denying that finding an internship or permanent position is very competitive, but there is something at UA Spring Career Day for just about everyone. In the interest of your future, make this event a priority. Visit the Career Services’ website at www. career.arizona.edu for an up-to-date list of organizations attending UA Spring Career Days. And head on over to the Student Union Memorial Center 3rd floor ballroon on Tuesday and Wednesday, March 22nd and 23rd! One final note: this fair is not just for Seniors...Freshmen and Sophomores are welcome and encouraged to attend. Get more info on possible internships and Co-op positions. In fact, it’s in your best interest to get started on your future TODAY. You can’t start too soon!
CAREER SERVICES PARTNERS & SPONSORS CAREER SERVICES PARTNERS UA Career Services would like to thank our generous
Career Services Partners. These partners play a vital role in building services essential to the success of our students. Employers can become members of the Career Services’ Partners Program at one of four contribution levels - Platinum, Gold, Silver or Copper (brand new!). More information regarding this program is available at www.career.arizona.edu/Employers/?Corporate.
PLATINUM PARTNERS Altria Sales and Distribution Excelencia in Education UA Student Services Fee
GOLD PARTNERS GEICO Nestle University Libraries
SILVER PARTNERS American Express Enterprise Peace Corps BAE Systems Rent-A-Car Schlumberger Dick’s Sporting Goods JCPenney UA BookStores Dillard’s Macy’s, Inc. Vector Marketing E&J Gallo
CAREER SERVICES SPONSORS
Our thanks to these generous sponsors for their support of UA Spring Career Days 2011 Enterprise Rent-a-Car Insight Global, Inc. Liberty Mutual Tucson Hispanic GEICO Key Technology, Inc. Tanimura & Antle Chamber of Commerce
COMPANIES ATTENDING UA SPRING CAREER DAYS 2011 Employer
3/22
ADP 206 ADTRAN* 705 Aero Automatic Sprinkler Company* Aerotek* 1206 American Family Insurance 604 American Red Cross 303 Apple, Inc.* 1100 ARBONNE International Arizona Army National Guard 402 Arizona Dept. of Economic Security 208 Arizona Electric Power Cooperative, Inc.* 1000 Arizona MENTOR 1201 Arizona’s Children Assoc. 600 ASARCO LLC*
3/23
802 604 303 404 402
1000
701
Employer
3/22
3/23
Auto-Owners Insurance* 800 AXA Advisors, LLC 1204 B/E Aerospace* 1209 Barrick Gold North America* 804/805 Beckman Coulter 1200 Boy Scouts of America 501 501 Buckeye 505 505 C.H. Robinson Worldwide, Inc. 306 306 CDW 105 Central Intelligence Agency (West Coast Recruitment Office) 1109 Child & Family Support Services 1205 Collective Brands TBD 207 Copart, Inc. 1102 COPE Community Svcs, Inc.601 601
Employer
3/22
3/23
Coventry Workers’ Comp Services* 905 905 Cymer, Inc.* 703 CyraCom International* 1001/10021001/1002 Dream Careers cancelled DrFirst* 804 E&J Gallo Winery 204 204 eBay, Inc.* 702 702 Edward Jones 404 EMC* 802 Enterprise Rent-a-Car 200 200 Ephibian* 1003 1003 Everest University Online 308 Farmers Insurance 406 Farmers Insurance & Financial Services 205 205 Fastenal 706
Employer
3/22
3/23
Federal Bureau of Prisons 502 Federal Correctional Institution* 906 906 Federated Insurance 503 Ferguson, a Wolseley Company 403 First Investors Corporation 500 500 Freeport McMoRan Copper & Gold* 705 Frito Lay TBD 606/706 Fund for the Public Interest 603 Gannett Local 305 305 GEICO 100 100 Gowan Company* 1113 Hillstone Restaurant Group1106 Honeywell* 903 IBM (Univ. Recruiting & Relations)* 1211
Employer
3/22
3/23
Indian Health Service* TBD 805 Insight Global, Inc 202 202 Intermountain Centers for Human Development 1101 JDA Software 400 Jim Click Automotive Team (Tuttle-Click Automotive Group) 105 Key Technology* 103 103 Kiewit Infrastructure West Co.* 1207 Knight Piesold* 901 Kraft Foods 1203 KVOA Communications Inc.307 La Frontera Arizona 502 Legacy Traditional School 304 304 Liberty Mutual 201 201 Lions Camp Tatiyee, Inc. 1105 Lovitt & Touche, Inc. 504 504
Employer
3/22
Macy’s Inc. 101 Maxim Integrated Products* 701 Medix 308 Monterey Institute of International Studies 1104 North Star Resource Group 401 Northwestern Mutual 104 Old Navy 704 Opera Solutions* 900 Our Family Services 602 Primerica Financial Svcs. 106 Procter & Gamble* 803 Prudential 1107 Republic Services 606 Schlumberger Technology Corp.* 102 Schlumberger Water Svcs.* Scottrade* 903
3/23
401 104
602 106 803
704
Employer
3/22
Shaw Industries Southwest College of Naturopathic Medicine Student Experts Sunnyside Unified School District No. 12* Sunquest* Tanimura & Antle Target TEKsystems The Hershey Company The Offshore Group Toys”R”Us, Inc.* TTi (Techtronic Industries) Tucson Federal Credit Union Tucson Police Department
1103 605
902 203 301 206 1202 1110 1112 302
3/23
605 307 800 902 301
302
506 406
Employer U of A National Center for Interpretation* U.S. Army Medical Recruiting* U.S. Navy* USDA, APHIS, PPQ* U-Haul International Unum USA Electronic Proving Ground* Vanguard Ventana Medical Systems, Inc.* Verizon Wireless* Walt Disney World* Yelp, Inc Zoosk Inc.*
3/22
3/23
801
801
1208 1005 901 1108 207 1111 405 700 904 1210 300 1004
405
904 300 1004
10
• monday, march 21, 2011 • arizona daily wildcat
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new energy drink all natural nutritional drink, whole food concentrate. Excellent source of nutrients and antioxidants and vitamins. Check web site BARBARASMILES.ZEALFORLIFE.BIZ Own business opportunity.
!!! what’s up? ........ check this out......new ongoing updates (prophecy, dreams...) http://whatsupnow7.blogspot.com Free FuLL Body Massage by body builder, trainer, therapist. Student and faculty discount. Ask about free massage! Call! 954-6838546. participate in a sociology experiment! Freshmen and sophomores interested should email Lahunter@email.arizona.edu for information. compensation provided.
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sonoran science acadeMy charter school location in metro Tucson: positions for Science and Math Instructional Coordinators. Min req master’s degree or equivalent in relevant subject area. Resume and letter of interest to: Attn: HR, #01-001/01-002. Sonoran Science Academy, 14647 S. 50th St. Ste 175, Phoenix AZ 85044, or fax to 480-940-5458 or email: hr@sonoranacademy.org. no ph calls
Large studios onLy 6blocks from campus, 1125 N. 7th Ave. Walled yard, security gate, doors, windows, full bath, kitchen. Free wi/fi. Unfurnished, $380, lease. No pets. 977-4106 sunstoneapts@aol.com
4Bd/ 2Ba FaBuLous property w/green grass & tall trees behind UMC. 3carports, fireplace, gas, bbq, A/C, and evap. cooling, D/W and laundry. Only $2,000/mo, available Aug. 1st. 1418 E. Adams 240-2615.
! Historic west university 1bdrm. cottage. $675. 1920’s Santa Fe adobe with oak floors, fireplace, W/D, wonderful natural light and beautiful grounds. No pets. Available June. 520-7432060. www.tarolaproperties.com.
Mountain pLaZa apartMents Furnished 2BR/1BA apartments starts at $570. Only 4blocks from UofA with sparkling pool, gas grills, and on-site laundry. 520-6235600
HeaLtH education service: Looking for professional to answer telephones & schedule classes. Energetic with outstanding communication skills. Tues& Thurs 10am5pm M,W,& F 2pm-5pm $8.25hr to start. send brief email to eclipsecpr.com
studentpayouts.coM paid survey takers needed in Tucson. 100% FREE to join! Click on surveys.
pre-Lease now For fall! 1BR $495/mo. Pool, laundry & offstreet parking. 824 E 10th St. Call 798-3331 Peach Properties HM, Inc. www.peachprops.com
on ua cattran route, preleasing for 2011 school year, newer duplex, 3BD/ 2BD, small fenced yard, upgraded appliances, W/D, close to Campbell corridor and UofA. $1395/mo, $1395 deposit. 520-909-4089
!!! 5BLocks to UofA Lee St near Mountain. One bedroom house $720 plus gas and electric, completely remodeled with $35,000 in new stuff, wood floors, AC, No pets, security patrol, quiet, <uofahousing.com> 624-3080 or 299-5020.
suMMer day caMp COUNSELORS wanted for fun arts camp for children with and without disabilities. M-F. FT. Contact Frank 622-4100 x205. assistdirector@artsforallinc.org www.artsforallinc.org
2 MontHs Free storage Rent! Call for details, Get an extra 10% off when you show your student ID. Near 77 an I10. (520)624-3494
! 1-5 BedrooM Houses and Apartment Units located close to UofA. PRELEASING FOR SUMMER AND FALL 2011! www.PrestigiousUofArentals.com Call 331.8050 for showing appts
Offer valid for eligable new donors. Donor fees vary by donor weight. New donors bring photo ID, proof of address, and Social Security Card.
seMi-retired rn looking for care giving position. Will also consider childcare. CPR certified, references on request. 748-8359.
!!!!Bartending! up TO $250/ DAY. NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY. TRAINING AVAILABLE. BECOME A BARTENDER. CALL 800-965-6520 EXT.139 artist needed! great at Illustrations? Please call 520-7430844 or 520-870-2574 Will pay per illustration earn top $$$ for highly motivated, energetic & outgoing individuals. Must have professional appearance with friendly attitude to speak openly with public. Reliable transportation and cell phone a must. No hard sales!!! If interested, please contact Kevin immediately @520-272-6420 or apply in person @3146 E Grant. eXperienced tennis instructor wanted at local club. Contact Chuck at 299-3000 extension 151.
Publisherâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Notice: All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or intention to make any such preferences, limitations or discrimination. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis.
Fun and FLeXiBLe!!! DON PEDROâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S PERUVIAN BISTRO IS LOOKING FOR BILINGUAL (SPANISH/ ENGLISH), RELIABLE, ENERGETIC AND RESPONSIBLE STUDENTS TO WORK IN VARIOUS POSITIONS. FLEXIBLE SCHEDULES AND GREAT PAY. PT/ FT SHIFTS AVAILABLE. CONTACT JOCELYN @(520)247-1270 OR SEND RESUMES TO JGONZVAR@HOTMAIL.COM
psychic Fair at the spring Festival by tawn including a sunset witchâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s ritual, saturday March 26 9am-6pm at uu church, 4831 e. 22nd street
suMMer nannies avaiLaBLe. We have nannies available to handle your summer needs. Save 50% of placement fee by enrolling before 4/1. Call 262-0177.
Attention Classified Readers: The Arizona Daily Wildcat screens classified advertising for misleading or false messages, but does not guarantee any ad or any claim. Please be cautious in answering ads, especially when you are asked to send cash, money orders, or a check.
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Learn to swiM Instructors & Swim Team coaches needed! We are looking for positive, experienced, energetic applicants. Morning & afternoon/ evening shifts available. Applicant must be available during the summer. *Experience teaching or coaching swimming *Lifeguard certification or willing to get certified *CPR certification or willing to get certified e-mail resume to josh@saguaroaquatics.com
Make a diFFerence! BecoMe a caMp counseLor! Friendly Pines Camp in the cool mountains of Prescott, AZ, is hiring for our â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;11 season, May 21stJuly 27th. We offer horseback riding, water ski, climbing, canoeing, target sports, jewelry and more. Competitive salary with room and board covered. Go to www.friendlypines.com or contact Sylvia at 1888-281-CAMP for information. Come be a part of something amazing and have the summer of a lifetime!
saLesperson needed For tuxedo store. P/T temp. through May 15. 15-20 hrs/week. Start pay $10/hr. Apply at 2435 E. Broadway. No phone calls, please.
sappHire and Zenrock are hiring for Waitstaff and Bartenders. Please apply in person at 61 E Congress from 12:30pm-3pm Thursdays.
Editor in Chief Summer Wildcat / Daily Wildcat
Applications are now available for editor in chief of the Arizona Summer Wildcat (a weekly) and the fall semester Arizona Daily Wildcat. You may apply for EITHER position or BOTH. Candidates must be UA students (grad or undergrad) and should possess the requisite journalism experience and organizational skills to lead one of the largest college newsrooms in the country. To apply, pick up a complete job description and application from the Student Media business office, 101 Park Student Union. Completed applications are due by 4 p.m. April 4. The editor in chief is selected by the Student Media Board. Candidates are strongly encouraged to discuss their interest with Mark Woodhams, Wildcat adviser, phone 621-3408, woodhams@email.arizona.edu, before applying.
speciaL! 1Bed/ 1BatH $320 and 3Bed/1Bath for $575. 2Bed/ 2Bath and 4Bed/ 2bath also available. Call (520)888-2111 or visit www.oasisapartments.net studios FroM $400 spacious apartment homes with great downtown location. 884-8279. Blue agave apartments 1240 n. 7th ave. speedway/ stone. www.blueagaveapartments.com utiLities incLuded $505*/Mo. Pool & laundry. Wood floors. *Special pricing. 770 N Dodge Blvd. Call 798-3331 Peach Properties HM, Inc. www.peachprops.com 2Bd w/pooL, a/c, laundry, dishwasher, fountain, ramada, oak floors, covered porch. $700/mo. 2806 N. Tucson Blvd. (Tucson & Glenn intersection) Cell: 520-2402615 or 520-299-3987
! 4BLks to uoFa. Studio$435, 2Bdrm.- $750. Hardwood floors, private patios, laundry. All in quiet gated courtyard. Serious students only. No Pets. Available June. 520-743-2060. www.tarolaproperties.com.
3Br/ 2Ba condo for rent. 2mi to campus. Walk to restaurants, grocery, CatTran, banks. SS appliances, 2pools, covered parking, fitness center, tennis & racquetball, gated. Pete 401-9105.
! aLL utiLities paid. 1Rm studio $400. Giant studio w/kitchen $660. A/C, quiet, no pets, security patrolled. Available 6/1. 299-5020/ 624-3080
cHarMing condo For rent. 2miles UOFA. 2BR W/balconies, 2bth, office room, new appliances, washer and dryer, patio, 2covered parking + visitors parking. Quiet/ safe.(Campbell/ Glenn) $825. Contact 520-906-2325
!!!FaMiLy owned &operated. Studio 1,2,3 or 4BD houses & apartments. 4blks north of UofA. $360 to $1800. Available now or pre-lease. No pets, security patrolled. www.uofahousing.com 299-5020, 624-3080. ** Large 2Bd/1Bd- apartments 150 S Eastbourne $475- $625 2BD Downstairs Unit Pool/ Laundry Facility Broadway/ Country Club Werth Realty 319-0753 **1Bd- apartMent** 2533 e Elm #1 $440- 1BD/1BA- apartment Cute single story compex Close to UofA/ Shopping Elm/ Tucson Blvd. Werth Realty 319-0753 1BLk FroM uoFa reserve your apartment for summer or fall. Furnished or unfurnished. 1bedroom from $610. Pool/ Laundry. 5th/ Euclid. Call 751-4363 or 309-8207 for appointment. 2Br 4BLocks to campus. Tastefully remodeled, light, modern, spotlessly clean. Quiet, wellmaintained, 6unit building w/patios. Cats ok. Laundry. Available June 1st or August 1st. $750/mo. 623-9565 billpippel@gmail.com. For more info and 80 photos: http://www.pippelproperties.com/860 7tH street and Park - studio, 1br, 2br, 3br. 444-6213 aaa service aLL utilities included. Rentâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s as low as $514. Call Sally 326-6700 castLe apartMents. Lease in March, get $100 off first months rent. Leasing for April, 1studio left at $600. utilities included, Near UofA. www.thecastleproperties.com 406-5515/ 903-2402. cute Large 1BedrooM, kitchen, tile throughout, extra large walk in closet, private backyard, A/C and evap cooling, gas heat/ stove, landscaped, off street parking, laundry facilities, available now $615 month, $615 Sec Deposit, Pets OK w/deposit 520-2066281 for more info -3blocks from campus (mountain/ drachman) Free utiLities no roommates needed. Call 520-326-6700
saM HugHes pLace 2BDR, 2BA, UPSTAIRS, AC, STLS STEEL APLNCE, W/D, FIREPLACE, AUDIO SYSTM, BAR, CVRD BALCNY, $2K MO. 520.370.4640 (JOHN, CBRE) sHort terM 2Br+2Ba condo rentaL 2Blocks from campus on university av parents, alumni, visitors,vendors. Fully equipped & Furnished. garage/street parking included see website: vrBo.com/284572
! 2BdrM. 3BLks to UofA. $925. Beautiful 1200Sq.ft. duplex. Granite counters, dishwasher, W/D, A/C, covered parking, private landscaped yard. Great location. No pets. Available June. 520-7432060. www.tarolaproperties.com.
waLk to caMpus Large 1Bedroom 1bath Duplex, oak flooring, high ceilings with archways, lots of natural light and windows, covered porch, a/c, Pre-Leasing $750 ALSO GREAT LOCATION! walk to campus, 1Bedroom Apartment over Garage, huge covered balcony, covered parking, a/c, water paid, Available June $680 CALL REAL ESTATE DIRECT 520-6232566
! Historic west university Studios and 1Bdrm. Properties. $425 to $675. Beautiful 1920â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s architecture with wood floors, private patios, W/D. No pets. Available June. 520-743-2060. www.tarolaproperties.com. **great studio** 2533 E Elm #6 $395- Studio Tile Floors/ Evap. Cooling Elm/ Tucson Blvd. Werth Realty 319-0753 BeautiFuL guestHouse 1Bd 1Ba. A/C, Eat-in kitchen, all custom remodeled, laundry included. Available Feb 1. $650/mo. 2040 E Spring St (Spring/ Olsen). 520-8855292/ 520-841-2871 cLose uMc caMpus. 1bd, 1ba, beautiful guesthouse, safe, clean, skylights, ceiling fans, built-in furniture. Bay window. Completely furnished. $595 248-1688
! 1-5 BedrooM Houses and Apartment Units located close to UofA. PRELEASING FOR SUMMER AND FALL 2011! www.PrestigiousUofArentals.com Call 331.8050 for showing appts ! 1/2/3/4 BedrooM HoMes. Renovated, updated and new homes available. Walk/Bike to UA. Great Amenities. wildcatrentals@gmail.com or 310.497.4193 ! 1918 caLiF. BungaLow in Historic West University. $950. Beautiful 1000sq.ft. 1bedroom Craftsman home in pristine condition. Oak floors, fireplace, A/C, W/D, security system and professionally maintained walled grounds. No pets. Available June. 520-743-2060. www.tarolaproperties.com.
!!!!!! 2/3/4Bd HoMes. Old World Charm, New World Conveniences. Walk or Bike to UA. Spacious Inside. Please call 310.497.4193 or email wildcatrentals@gmail.com !!!!!sign up now for FY11â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 2, 3, 4 & 5bdm, Newer homes! 1mi to UofA, A/C, Garages & all appl. included. www.GoldenWestManagement.com 520-790-0776 !5BLocks nw ua Huge Luxury Homes 4br/ 4.5ba +3car garage +large master suites with walk-in closets +balconies +10ft ceilings up and down +DW, W&D, Pantry, TEP electric discount, monitored security system. Pool privileges. Reserve now for August 884-1505 www.myUofArental.com !reserve your 2 or 4 or 6 bedroom home now for August. Great homes 2 to 5 blocks to UA. Call for details. 884-1505 or visit us at www.MyUofARental.com. $800-$2400 Fy11 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 3, 4 & 5bdm, BRAND NEW homes! 2mi to UofA, A/C, Garages & all appl. included. www.GoldenWestManagement.com 520-790-0776 2BedrooM 2BatH Walk to Campus Beautiful Historic building all updated with stainless steel appliances, custom cabinets, granite countertops, oak floors, two private decks, walk in closets, water paid, street assigned parking, intercom security with remote front door control PRE-LEASING $1495 Call Real Estate Direct 520623-2566 2BedrooM House, a/c, wood floors, garage, fireplace, washer/dryer, fenced yard, covered patio $825 ALSO WALK TO CAMPUS, Available June Newly remodeled, 2Bedroom 2bath House a/c, washer/dryer, fenced yard, pets ok $930 CALL REDI 520-623-5710 WWW.AZREDIRENTALS.COM 2Min to caMpus IN FY11â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 1, 2, 3, 4 & 5bdm, homes & apartments! 1mi to UofA, A/C, Garages & all appl. included. www.GoldenWestManagement.com 520-7900776 3Bed, 2BatH, a/c, Tile floors, ceiling fans, dishwasher, washer & dryer, pantry, large enclosed yard, covered parking. Immaculate. Available now. Pima & Columbus. 3miles to campus. $1050. Call 631-7563. 3BedrooM 2BatH House, den, fireplace, washer/dryer, walled yard, GREAT LOCATION $1200 ALSO WALK TO CAMPUS 3Bedroom 2bath House 2500sqft, a/c, fireplace, washer/dryer, fenced yard, covered patio $1600 CALL REDI 520-623-5710 WWW.AZREDIRENTALS.COM
! 3Br/ 2Ba, $1275/ month, close to campus, only a few years old, AC, W/D, very nice, 520-891-9043 or www.UAoffcampus.com
! 2BdrM. cottage 4BLks. To UofA. $825. Hardwood floors, dishwasher, W/D, A/C, covered parking, walled landscaped grounds. No pets. Available June. 520-7432060. www.tarolaproperties.com.
!!!!!1Bd w/pooL, laundry, fountain, ramada, oak floors, covered porch. $550/mo. 2806 N. Tucson Blvd. Cell: (520)240-2615, (520)299-3987.
! 4 or 5 BedrooM 3BatH. $2200 all new inside. Mountain Lee area. Quiet, no pets, security patrolled, security bars. Available 6/1 299-5020/ 624-3080
3Br 2Ba House available August 10th. Dishwasher. Washer/ dryer. 1901 & 1909 N Park Ave. $1325/mo. Call 798-3331 Peach Properties HM, Inc. www.peachprops.com
! 5Br/ 3Ba, $3030/ month, BRAND NEW, walk or bike to campus, AC, W/D, great house, 520891-9043 or www.UAoffcampus.com
4Bd 2Ba august 2011. GREAT LOCATION! $1700 Spacious rooms, fireplace, W/D, A/C, addiitonal storage. CALL AMY 520440-7776
! 7 BedrooM 7 BatH Brand new Huge 3900sqft luxury home. 4car garage. Huge common areas, 7 Large Master Suits. Balconies. Monitored Security System. Available August, Be first to live in this amazing home. 8841505 www.MyUofARental.com.
5Bd 4Ba august 2011. Huge rooms, W/D, A/C, Walk-in closets, Vaulted ceilings. NICE! CALL AMY 520-440-7776
1Bd/ 1Ba near UMC. Carport, newer appliances, carpet, covered porch, &private yard. Only $595/mo. Available June 1st. 1410 E. Adams. 520-240-2615 1Br avaiLaBLe June 4th in West University. 638 E. 4th St. #2 $515/mo. Call 798-3331 Peach Properties HM, Inc. www.peachprops.com 2BedrooM dupLeX BeHind UMC. Available June 10th. 1419 E. Adams $925/mo. Call 7983331 Peach Properties HM, Inc www.peachprops.com 2BLocks FroM caMpus, $780. Large 2BR 1BA, ceiling fans, tile floors, carport, yard, W/D, linen closet security bars. www.thecastleproperties.com. 882-8153. 2Br dupLeX witH fenced yard. Available June 10th. 1419 E. Adams $850/mo. Call 798-3331 Peach Properties HM, Inc www.peachprops.com
! august avaiLaBiLity uncoMparaBLe LUXURY- 6bdrm 6BATHS each has own WHIRLPOOL tub- shower. 5car GARAGE, Walk-in closets, all Granite counters, large outside patios off bedrooms, full private laundry, very large master suites, high ceilings. TEP Electric discount. Monitored security system. Very close to UA. 884-1505 www.MyUofARental.com
STUDENT RUN RADIO AND TV!
BROADCASTING 24/7 ON CHANNEL 3 AND CHANNEL 20 IN THE RESIDENCE HALLS.
5Bd For august 2011. Large bedroom, laundry, A/C, additional storage. BEST DEAL! CALL AMY 520-440-7776 5Br House witH pool available July 15th. Ceramic tile floors. Newly remodeled kitchen. $2,100/mo. 819 E. Alturas Call 798-3331 Peach Properties HM, Inc. www.peachprops.com 6 or 7 BedrooM. awesoMe floorplan, big rooms, blocks to campus! Front door parking! Rent $650/ person and $695/ person. 520-398-5738 www.casabonitarentals.com.
KAMP STUDENT RADIO STREAMING LIVE AT KAMP.ARIZONA.EDU
CLASSIFIEDS
a cLose to campus, close to play, and close to perfect new home. We have 2, 3 and 4 bedroom homes with private entrances, separate leases, roommate matching if needed, fully furnished, most utilities paid and much more. Call or come by for this weeksâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; special 520-622-8503 or 1725 N. Park Avenue. aLL are waLking distance to uofa/ uMc. 1631 e Lester 2BR 1BA, 1600sqft. Fireplace, W/D, A/C, $1100. Available in August. 1535 e seneca 3BR 2BA 1800sqft A/C, W/D $1650 Available in June. 2319 e Helen 3BR 2BA 2250sqft, A/C, W/D, fireplace $1700. Available in August. 7773995. awesoMe 6BedrooM, 3BatH House. $3400/month. Available August 2011. Large floor plan with huge covered porch, washer/dryer, A/C, two balconies, walk in closets, alarm system, pets welcome, plus more. http://www.UniversityRentalinfo.com No security deposit (o.a.c.) Call 747-9331.
dMt properties. personaLiZed property ManageMent services since 1999. 1,2,3, and 4 bedroom homes available. Close to UofA with many amenties. Call Ilene 520.240.6487. pavon@cox.net. great deaL! Look! 3 or 4 Bedroom. $1200. LOW MOVE-IN COSTS. Close to UofA. Clean open floor plan. CALL FOR DETAILS! 520.398.5738. House For rent! 4bedroom 2 1/2 bathroom, fully furnished, also included flat screen and pool table, seconds away from starpass resort, $400 -$500 rent and will negotiate. ContactHunter- 602-616-9516 newer HoMe 3Bd/ 2ba, 2story w/garage in desirable River Haven. Ft. Lowell/Columbus. All appliances including W/D. $1225/ mo. Available May. 360-9098. perFect HoMe 3Bd 3BA August 2011. $1650. Big rooms, W/D, A/C, yard, 2car garage. CALL AMY 520-440-7776
very cooL House! 5th St, 4BR, 3BA, 8 car park, HOT TUB, fenced yard 1/2acre lot, pets OK, 42â&#x20AC;? flat TV!, $2,350/MN, Debbie 520-419-3787 very cooL House! Campbell & Spdwy, walk to UofA, 6BR, 4BA, 5 car park, POOL, fenced yard, pets OK, 42â&#x20AC;? flat TV!, $3,200/MN, Debbie 520-419-3787 very cooL House! Helen St, 5BR, 2BA, walk to UofA, 5 car park, HOT TUB, fenced yard, sport court, pets OK, 42â&#x20AC;? flat TV!, $2,400/MN, Debbie 520-419-3787 very cooL House! Helen St, 5BR, 3BA, walk to UofA, 2car gar, 8 car park, POOL, fenced yard, pets OK, 42â&#x20AC;? flat TV!, $2,750/MN, Debbie 520-419-3787 waLk to caMpus 1Bedroom House, fireplace, water paid, den, washer/ dryer, walled yard, no lease $650 ALSO 1Bedroom House 900sqft, wood floors, fireplace, washer/ dryer, fenced yard, covered patio $750 CALL REDI 520-623-5710 WWW.AZREDIRENTALS.COM
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Casa Bonita
No Deposit on Remaining 5 Bedrooms*
www.casabonitarentals.com
â&#x20AC;˘ AFFORDABLE PRICES Why Rent an Apartment? â&#x20AC;˘3-6 bedrooms available Experience the Difference with US! â&#x20AC;˘ Private parking â&#x20AC;˘ Open floor plans â&#x20AC;˘ Walk in closets* â&#x20AC;˘ 0 to 12 blks from campus â&#x20AC;˘ Dishwasher, washer & dryer â&#x20AC;˘ Big bedrooms & bath
BeautiFuL 5Bd 3Ba house sky lights. Ceiling fans, marble floor, walled yard, close to bus lines, shopping. Lease $2000 248-1688 BeautiFuL FurnisHed 3BedrooM home in gated community 2miles from campus. Large master suite and family room with 42â&#x20AC;?Plasma TV $1595 per month. No Pets. Call Bruce 619-917-9757 Brand new 5BedrooM 2BatH House $3300/month. Walking distance to UA. A/C, washer/dryer, three covered balconies, walk in closets, extra storage, alarm system, pets welcome. Watch your new home being built! No Security Deposit (o.a.c.) http://www.UniversityRentalinfo.com Call 747-9331. cLose ua and Pima. Great location to school and 4th Avenue area. 3BD/ 2BD, recently painted and newer carpet, huge fenced backyard, W/D, preleasing for fall 2011 school year. Rent $1050, deposit $1050. 520-909-4089 decorators dreaM HoMe! 3BD, 2BA, 3blocks from UA. 1927 California bungalow rebuild w/all mod cons. Maple floors, claw-foot tub, gorgeous tile work. Available 8/1/11. 1yr lease. $1350/mo w/1month security deposit. Contact Jack at Windsor Property Investments 520-620-6206
cLose, caMpus, sHopping, buslines, CatTran, skylights, ceiling fan. Internet, cable, water, laundry, fenced property. Completely furnished. Broadway Campbell $300 248-1688
& UI 4U t t XXX LJXJLOJUUJOH DPN Near Rincon Market. At the corner of Tucson Blvd. and 6th Street, close to the U of A.
**one MontH Free-oac** 1514 & 1530 E Blacklidge $6252BD/1BA- Townhome w/yard Dishwasher/ AC. Extra storage Grant/ Campbell Werth Realty 319-0753 **one MontH Free-oac** 1741 E Hedrick #2101 & 1102 $950.00- 2BD/ 2.5BA- townhome Washer/ Dryer/ AC. Yard Grant Campbell Werth Realty 319-0753 4Br townHoMe avaiLaBLe June 10th. Dishwasher, Washer/ dryer. 1013 N. 6th Ave. $1,300/mo. Call 798-3331 Peach Properties HM, Inc. www.peachprops.com Bike to caMpus IN FY11â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 1, 2 & 3bdm Townhomes & Condos! A/C, Garages, FREE WIFI & all appl. www.GoldenWestManagement.com 520-790-0776
popuLar uoFa Location 4Bedroom 3bath House a/c, fireplace, washer/dryer, fenced yard, 6car parking lot $1350 ALSO 4Blocks to Campus 5Bedroom 2bath House, washer/dryer, walled yard, pets ok $1850 CALL REDI 520-623-5710 WWW.AZREDIRENTALS.COM prices starting at $390 per room, per month. Individual leases, private entrances fully furnished 2, 3 and 4 bedroom homes available for immediate move in. Call or come by today! 520.622.8503, 1725 N. Park Ave. Visit us at www.casaespanaapts.com. saM HugHes, cLassic Homes, Near UofA, 4BR 4BA; 3BD 2BA; 2BR 1BA AC, wood/ tile floors, disposals. 520-400-8795 save your quarters for playing pool down on 4th Ave. We have washers and dryers in select homes! Imagine the time and money youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll save doing laundry in your own home! 5blocks from campus- 10minutes walking 5minutes on a bike. Close to University Boulevard and 4th Ave. Call for specials 520-622-8503 or 1725 N. Park Avenue. very cooL House! 2BR, 1BA, walk to UofA, fenced yard, pets OK, $1,000/MN, Debbie 520-4193787 very cooL House! 2BR, 1BA + den/dining room, walk to UofA, fenced yard, pets OK, $1,000/MN, Debbie 520-419-3787 very cooL House! 5th St, 4BR, 3BA, 2car gar, HOT TUB, fenced yard, pets OK, 42â&#x20AC;? flat TV!, $2,350/MN, Debbie 520-419-3787
House For saLe. 4bdrm, 3bath. Sam Hughes neighborhood. Upgraded. Minutes from UofA or UMC. Call Jackie Bianculli, Fort Lowell Realty, (520)248-1011. 921 N. Plumer Ave. (do not disturb tenant) $325,000.00
ariZona eLite cLeaners We are a maid, housekeeping and cleaning service. Having a party, weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll clean the mess. www.AzEliteCleaners.com Call 520-207-9699 aZ eLite Landscapers We provide landscape service to residential, vacant lots and commercial properties www.azelitelandscapers.com Call 520-207-9699
$100 - $5,000 casH PAID for unwanted cars, pick-ups, 4X4â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s, jeeps, motorcycles & scooters. Running or not. Free towing. 7 days. 409-5013.
we Buy aLL laptops with CASH. Need a little spending money? Have an old laptop thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s collecting dust? Shoot us an email, weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll schedule a meeting, and give you CASH for your old laptop. Contact us at johngaltllc@msn.com.
$550/Mo centraL 900sqFt gated condo. Private B/B, stainless kitchen, cable, internet, office, parking, laundry, pools, sauna, gym, volleyball, tennis, racquetball. Available 7/1/11 Email: cookcondotucson@gmail.com
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arizona daily wildcat • monday, march 21, 2011 •
HOOPS continued from page 14 Hill came out aggressively, scoring 16 points and grabbing eight rebounds while crashing the glass to help Arizona get out-rebounded by the athletic Longhorns only by 33-32. He shot 7-for-12 from the field, making Hamilton — his one knock throughout his career has been his lack of a defensive prowess — work just as hard on the other end. Hamilton, a highly-touted recruit out of Dominguez High School in Los Angeles, was above fellow sophomores Hill and Williams on Texas’ recruiting board. Though Hamilton had his usual high volume of shots on Sunday, he only connected on 7-for-18 of those, scoring 18 points but never being able to take over the game. “He’s the big guy, he’s the guy at Texas, he’s the leading scorer,” Hill said, “(I) just wanted to get that one (win). “It felt good,” he added. “I’ll take this one over all of them losses.” Meanwhile, Mayes helped Hill in atoning for a quiet first half from Williams. The back-up point guard hit all four 3-point attempts and gave Arizona a threat against the Longhorn’s defense focused on shutting down Williams. Admittedly having a poor game in going 0-for-6 with only two assists, starting point guard Momo Jones was complimentary of his understudy. “It’s going to come to a point in the season where I don’t have a great night, and he’s going to have to step up,” Jones said. “D-Will hit some big shots, but Jordin Mayes stepped up.” Not one to show emotion, Mayes has gradually improved his play in recent games, showing the same talent that Jones has seen in practice. It’s a growth aided by his daily
battles with Jones, who’s admittedly hard on his younger position-mate for a reason — tough love will help the team get wins, the only thing that matters to Jones. And Sunday, that popped up in a game where Mayes went 6-for-7, his only miss coming on an open, short-armed layup. “All season I thought I shot the ball with confidence. Coming into today, I wanted to add on to that and be aggressive,” Mayes said. And while Jones didn’t look exceptionally strong on the court, his presence of feeding into Mayes’ growth appeared in the form of Mayes himself. “It helped me a lot,” Mayes said of the competitive practices with Jones. “We go at each other on the offensive end, each defensive segment. There were a couple practices where he killed me. I just keep working hard, that’s going to benefit both of us.”
Texas on final seconds
Arizona took the lead by scoring the final three points with 9.6 seconds remaining in the game. So the Longhorns inbounded to J’Covan Brown, who led Texas with 23 points and repeatedly beat Arizona off the dribble to get either open shots or one of his 13 of his free throws. He took the ball the length of the floor, but couldn’t put the ball in the hole. Forward Gary Johnson got the offensive rebound and nearly got off a shot attempt, and maybe even was fouled. “I just tried to get to the rim and just, you know, put it on the rim for my teammates,” Brown said. “I don’t know about the foul.” Referee Richard Cartmell said: “We all had a look and didn’t have a foul on the play. And the buzzer went off before there was contact up high. So we checked with each other, none of us had a foul, there’s no review involved, game over.”
SOFTBALL continued from page 14 Arizona this season, the 5-3 loss was much closer than the previous meeting between the two teams which saw the Wildcats fall 11-1 in five innings at the Kajikawa Classic.
zimmerman continued from page 14 seen a replay of the final 15 seconds, but his wishful thinking comes at a pivotal time for NCAA basketball. With so many tight contests and the development of the review monitor, what are officials to do in the closing seconds? I say, call away. Enough with the complaining about officials being essentially a third-team. If your team is good enough, don’t bank on officials — human beings — to get everything right. If you team is good enough, don’t let it come down to judgement calls. Earlier Sunday, the Washington Huskies, down 86-83, had an opportunity for a 3-pointer to tie North Carolina, but the officials seemingly left too little time on the clock (0.5 seconds) for a good shot attempt. Replays showed there should have been more than one second
13
UA played one game on Friday, which resulted in an 8-0 loss to Michigan. Despite the lopsided score, the Wildcats notched as many hits as the Wolverines. Arizona had runners in scoring position in four of the seven innings in the game, but was unable to capitalize. The game stood score-
less until the third inning when Michigan took a 1-0 lead. The score stayed the same until the Wolverines broke the game open with a six-run sixth inning. The Wildcats have one more weekend of non-conference play before traveling to Stanford to start conference play.
remaining. Yes, Washington let let the lead slip away. Yes, the Huskies probably deserved a monitor review and time to get a shot off. But such are the symptoms of taking it out of a their own hands. At that point, all the power goes to two other entities: the opponent and the official. Then there’s the issue of whether to call the foul or not call the foul. Last Friday’s block by Arizona’s Williams of Memphis’ Wesley Witherspoon to ensure a UA victory could’ve been a foul on Williams, Memphis fans probably thought — actually it might’ve been a foul prior to the shot on Wildcat Jamelle Horne, but the basketball gods weren’t about to throw that hitch in Wildcat fans’ wagon once again. Anyway, if it’s in the officials’ control, there’s a definite risk. But Arizona has played it correctly so far. Attack, play well enough for an entire
game, and you’ll be on the winning end of things. Be a Memphis, who didn’t have a constant focus to put the Wildcats away, and it probably won’t turn out well. Be a Texas, who played catchup all game before floundering their last timeout with the lead and the ball — Jordan Hamilton grabbed a Williams miss with 14 seconds left and called time, which led to the five-second inbounds call — and you’ll lose. The foul on the ensuing play was in question as well. Hamilton, trying to draw a charge, said he didn’t feel contact on the final score by Williams. “But the ref made up his mind and called a foul,” Hamilton said. “There’s nothing we can do about it now.” But here’s something the remaining NCAA teams can do: Beat the hell out of somebody and call it a win. — Kevin Zimmerman is a journalism senior. He can be reached at sports@wildcat.arizona.edu
Arizona gymnastics takes on Pac, finishes fifth By Kevin Nadakal Arizona Daily Wildcat The Arizona gymnastics team faced off against its conference foes in the Pacific 10 championships this weekend in Los Angeles. The Pac-10 is widely considered the best conference for gymnastics with three schools ranked nationally in the top 10 and four in the top 20.
The Wildcats are currently ranked at No. 24 behind Stanford, Oregon State, UCLA and Washington. Arizona was able to secure fifth place during the meet with a team score of 195.475. No. 5 Oregon State took the title with a team score of 197.200. “Overall, it was pretty good. Unfortunately, we had a week floor that dropped us from finishing third
to fifth,” said head coach Bill Ryden. “We had some really good individual performances. I think it helps us with the postseason once we figure out where we are going.” Senior Miranda Russell led the way during the bars routine with a 9.850, which was good enough for third place individually. The fast start carried over to the second event where the Wildcats posted
answers to your ques�ons about sex and rela�onships
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Is it true that hormonal contraceptives “kill” sexual desire, sensual arousal, and reduce lubrication?
A. The short answer is... there is no short answer. Many women experience increased sexual desire when they take oral contraceptives because they no longer fear getting pregnant. Still, some women do report decreased desire when using “the pill.” Sexual desire, or libido, is a physiological and psychological phenomenon. Libido is, in part, determined by circulating levels of testosterone (an androgen that occurs in both men and women). Oral contraceptives, containing ethinyl estradiol (an estrogen) decrease testosterone levels. Low testosterone has been correlated with decreased libido in some, but not all, studies. What this fact really means is undetermined because there is no specific level of testosterone associated with low sexual desire in women who use oral contraceptives or women in general. For women who do feel diminished sexual desire, use of a progestin-only pill (sometimes called the mini-pill) can be an alternative to consider. Because the mini-pill does not contain ethinyl estradiol, it does not decrease testosterone levels. However, this contraceptive pill offers less room for error (in regard to pregnancy protection) and requires the user to take the pill at a set time each day. Typically, women occasionally miss
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meet. Usually unable to execute one event, this time the Wildcats struggled during floor. “We are satisfied that we have the routines and the athletes, we just have to work on the details,” Ryden said. Arizona’s final rankings will come out later today to determine the location of their NCAA Regional Championships.
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doses... which could lead to a greater fear of pregnancy... which could lead to decreased sexual desire. As for vaginal dryness or lubrication, the use of oral contraceptives increases cervical mucus, which is just one component of the secretions that make up vaginal lubrication. Interestingly, the Nuva-Ring, a vaginal hormonal contraceptive containing an estrogen and a progestin, is known to increase vaginal wetness, most likely due to an increase in the “good” flora of the vaginal tract. Reduced libido may also be caused by other factors and other medications. Stress, fatigue, anxiety, depression, and interpersonal conflicts may contribute to a lack of interest in sex. In addition, many antidepressant medications are known to squelch sexual desire. If your libido continues to lag, you may want to consult your medical provider. Guest author: Julia E. Pheifer, Pharm.D. Candidate References: Journal of Sexual Medicine,Journal of Women’s Health and Gender Based Medicine.
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the second highest beam total for the season. Junior Katie Matusik led the way with a 9.900 score on beam, which earned her second place individually for the meet. “I’m pretty confident, but at the same time I starting to become a perfectionist,” Matusik said. The Wildcats have struggled all year in putting together a complete
SexTalk is written by Lee Ann Hamilton, M.A., CHES, David Salafsky, MPH, and Carrie Hardesty, BS, health educators at The UA Campus Health Service.
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Scoreboard
Game of the night
SPORTS UA wrangles Horns, Sweet 16 berth Duke
Men’s Hoops
Michigan
73-71
NCAA
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UNC 86,Washington 83 Ohio State 98, G. Mason 66
VCU 94, Purdue 76 Marquette 66, Syracuse 62 Kansas 73, Illinois 59 FSU 71, Notre Dame 57
Tim Kosch Sports Editor 520•626•2956 sports@wildcat.arizona.edu
Don’t blame officials for NCAA losses
COMMENTARY BY Kevin Zimmerman sports writer
TULSA, Okla. — Have you noticed a trend in these NCAA Tournament games that end in a flurry? There’s big players making big plays, others making idiotic decisions, and ultimately, referees having to make the calls that will make a fan’s blood boil. Only two games deep into the tournament, Arizona’s been on the winning end of two of those. On Sunday, it was Arizona’s 70-69 victory when the refs called a questionable five-second count on UT guard Cory Joseph’s inbounds play with 14 seconds left leading to UA forward Derrick Williams’ 3-point play that won it for the Wildcats. “If we have to go back to the monitor ... in this situation, I wish we could go back and review the fivesecond call,” Texas head coach Rick Barnes said afterward. Now, Barnes admitted he hadn’t ZIMMERMAN, page 13
Two California superstars overshadowed by Hill, Mayes By Kevin Zimmerman ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT Going into Sunday, Texas and Arizona’s two leading scorers were Southern California boys that had all the NBA scouts’ attention. It was long-time friends in UA’s Derrick Williams facing UT’s Jordan Hamilton with all the attention. Though Williams’ last three points snatched Arizona’s 70-69 win on Sunday, teammates Jordin Mayes and Solomon Hill kept the Wildcats afloat through a tough offensive night for Williams. Both hail from the Los Angeles area, and for Hill, a Fairfax High School product, asking UA head coach Sean Miller for the defensive assignment on Hamilton had more clinging to it than simply being a challenge. “I haven’t beaten Jordan (Hamilton) in basketball since probably fourth grade,” Hill said, guessing he’s played against the second-team All-American 15-20 times in his life. “AAU, high school, I’ve never beaten him, not once. It’s always something my dad and I talk about.” Sunday was different. HOOPS, page 13
’Cats drop two in SoCal By Nicole Dimtsios ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT
The tournament struggles continued for the Arizona Wildcats softball team in Fullerton, Calif., during the weekend. No. 7 Arizona completed the Judi Garman Classic with a slight edge, finishing with a record of 3-2 in five games. The Wildcats finished on a high note, winning two games to finish the tournament against DePaul and San Jose State. Arizona put a combined 21 runs on the scoreboard during the two games. Of the three wins, Arizona also recorded two run-rule victories over Louisiana-Lafayette 10-2 on Thursday and San Jose State 14-6 on Saturday. The Wildcats opened the weekend with a loss against No. 8 Oklahoma on Thursday. Although the it was the second time the Sooners have knocked off SOFTBALL, page 13
Mike Christy/Arizona Daily Wildcat
Texas’ J’Covan Brown puts up a shot attempt with one second left in Arizona’s 70-69 win over the Longhorns after Derrick Williams completed a three-point play with nine seconds left in the game to give Arizona a one-point lead. Brown missed his shot and and the Wildcats to advance to the Sweet 16 in Anaheim, Calif.
GAME RECAP continued from page 1 where they’ll face No. 1 seed Duke on Thursday at 6:45 p.m. in Anaheim, Calif . “We actually ran a play called 21 Around,” Fogg said. “I came off the screen looking for a shot. Cory Joseph did a great job on me. The great things about our plays, they’ll all have endings. The ending to that play is me and Derrick’s pick-and-roll. “He just made a big-time play.” Williams struggled throughout the game, scoring 17 and grabbing nine rebounds on 4-for-14 field goal shooting and a 9-for-15 free throw mark. Before Williams hit his game winning shot, with Arizona down 69-67 , his shot in the lane was blocked by Texas forward Tristan Thompson , giving the ball back to the Longhorns with seemingly no hope. Forward Jordan Hamilton ,
who scored 18 points on 7-for18 shooting , mostly against UA forward Solomon Hill , rebounded the Williams’ miss and called the Longhorns’ last timeout with 14 seconds left. During the huddle, UA head coach Sean Miller instructed his team to switch every screen on the inbounds. Texas (28-8 ) couldn’t find an open player and the official threw up a five-second call. Replays showed that inbounder Cory Joseph called the timeout before the infraction. “I had five seconds before the kid turned and signaled a timeout,” referee Richard Cartmell said. “I had to make a decision whether it was five seconds or a timeout, and I made the decision it was five seconds because I had counted five seconds before he called timeout.” That gave Arizona the ball back. Fogg took the inbounds and Williams set a screen for him. “I came off (the screen) hard
and I heard (the defense) say ‘switch,” Fogg said. “I just waited a second, and there was a little bit of space so I threaded the needle on the bounce pass.” Williams hit a left bank shot while being fouled, then hit the free throw with nine seconds left. Texas’ J’Covan Brown , who led UT in scoring with 23 points behind shooting 13-for13 from the foul stripe, missed a final shot attempt. Once again, the Wildcats allowed a large lead to slip away. After a rough start, Arizona settled in behind strong play from Los Angeles-area players Hill and freshman guard Jordin Mayes , who each scored 16 points . Unlike the game prior, at which the Wildcats shot a woeful 5-for-19 from 3-point range against Memphis, Arizona took advantage of an aggressive, collapsing defense on Texas’ side, shooting 8-for-14 for the game.
Though Williams shot 0-for6 in the first half, Arizona went into the halftime break ahead 36-25 behind 23 points between Hill and Mayes. “Our gameplan was just to rebound and be tough,” point guard Momo Jones said. “Me and D-Will talked before the game, and he told me, ‘Look I’m not going to go out and get 20. I’m going to go out, and I’m gonna block (UT forward) Tristan Thompson out. If he doesn’t get offensive rebounds and he doesn’t score, it’s almost impossible for them to win.’” Thompson, a highly-touted big man, struggled against Williams and center Kyryl Natyazhko, finishing with three points and six rebounds . “These guys … played all the way to the last horn , and that’s what’s required in this tournament,” Miller said. “I can’t tell you how excited we are to be moving to the Sweet 16.”
Baseball readying for conference play Offense, starting pitching shines; bullpen needs work By Dan Kohler ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT Getting his team early road experience was crucial for Arizona baseball head coach Andy Lopez ’s plan at the start of the season, and with conference play looming, road maturity will be essential to the team’s success. The No. 11 Wildcats head to Tempe to take on the No. 9 Sun Devils on Friday to start Pacific 10 Conference play. On March 11 , the Wildcats (14-5) routed the Northern Colorado Bears in a three-game sweep, before heading out Kansas to face the Wichita State Shockers in a mid-week series. The welcome wasn’t warm, as the Shockers capitalized on a weak Arizona bullpen on Tuesday, scratching away a 5-1 Wildcat lead and coming out on top with a 6-5 win in 11 innings. On Wednesday, neither the Wildcat pitching staff nor the offense could get anything going, and they were saddled with their first series loss of the season falling 8-3.
What’s been working
The offense: Other then Wednesday’s performance where they Wildcats only managed to play three runs, their offensive game has been evident throughout the entire season. With pre-season AllAmerican Steve Selsky returning to action after recovering from a hand injury, it was the Arizona offense that annihilated the University of San Francisco Dons, 14-0 on Saturday. Selsky went 3-for-5 with four RBI and also managed his first home run of the season against USF. The starting pitching: Kurt Heyer secured his third win on Saturday hurling 11 strikeouts , which matched his season high, over 7.0 innings on the mound. The other weekend starters, Kyle Simon and Tyler Hale, have both been solid throughout the beginning of the season as well.
Mike Christy/Arizona Daily Wildcat
Senior Bryce Ortega collects a ball against the Rice Owls on March 2. Ortega and the rest of the Wildcats’ offense has been consistent this season, something that will have to continue through Pacific 10 Conference season, which begins on Friday at ASU.
What hasn’t
The bullpen: The young Arizona pitching staff has had a tough time over the first 19 games. A poor relief effort was the reason the Wildcats lost their 5-1 lead on Tuesday, but there is cause to be optimistic.
Both Nick Cunningham and Bryce Bandilla came in to secure the shutout in Saturday’s contest and Lopez is still trying to figure out what’s working for his team. It is certain, however, that come Friday the coaching staff will have its team in prime position to run through its conference schedule.