DW
Heading into the ‘Green Zone’ How different is the movie starring Matt Damon from the book that inspired it?
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WILDLIFE
Arizona Daily Wildcat
The independent student voice of the University of Arizona since 1899 friday, april , dailywildcat.com
tucson, arizona
Flandrau Center to reopen Helping
divided families
By Luke Money ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT
On Saturday, after a nine-month hiatus, the Flandrau Science Center and Planetarium will once again open its doors to the public full time. “Time-wise, I think it just worked,” said Hassan Hijazi, the director of external affairs for Biosphere 2. “We can use the remainder of the semester and the summer in order to develop programs and make sure the public know we’re open again.” The center was forced to close last June after 33 years of serving the Tucson and university community due to ongoing state budget cuts but will reopen in all capacities, including hosting regular planetarium shows, housing hands-on exhibits and demonstrations, as well as allowing visitors to use their 16inch public viewing telescope, the largest telescope open to the public in southern Arizona. “I think this is a very important place and our community understands how important it is,”said Joaquin Ruiz, dean of the UA College of Science.“At this university we’re lucky enough to have enormous assets to spread scientific knowledge and this place is one of those assets.” Earlier this year, the UA College of Science was charged with running the Flandrau Science Center and all of its subsidiaries on campus, including the planetarium. The College of Science was able to reopen Flandrau by leveraging funds from the Biosphere 2, which the College of Science also took control of this year. “Philanthropy is making this happen,”Ruiz said.“This is an example of what philanthropy can do.” The reorganization is partly for financial reasons, but, as Dean Ruiz says, there were equally numerous academic reasons for the reorganization. Flandrau’s new role will be to serve as an on-campus nerve center for the university’s off-campus scientific outreach programs, including both the Mt. Lemmon SkyCenter and the Biosphere 2. “Flandrau will now be able to serve as a portal we can use to send people out to our off-campus assets,” Ruiz said.“But it can also serve as a magnet to draw people in and attract them to what we have to offer.” Ruiz stressed that, even though Flandrau is reopening, there are ongoing discussions for reorganizing and renovating the center. “Flandrau is certainly not as exquisite as it will be in the fall,”
DNA tests to bring those separated in Holocaust together By Luke Money ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT
Valentina Martinelli/Arizona Daily Wildcat
UA College of Science Dean Joaquin Ruiz stands inside the Flandrau Science Center, which will reopen on Saturday for the first time since it closed in June.
Ruiz said, “but we’re working on getting it ready.” Beginning Saturday, the planetarium will be open every day of the week, offering a variety of planetarium shows as well as access to its current mineral show, entitled “Treasures of
Threats limit creativity By Jennifer Koehmstedt ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT Early this semester, the UA Creative Writing program sent an e-mail to creative writing instructors stating that students who submit inappropriate work should be disciplined. The e-mail, sent out on Feb. 5 to all 200-level creative writing instructors, discussed information regarding the beginning of the semester, such as administrative drops. The second item in the e-mail pertained solely to student work. “If you receive any student work that seems inappropriate to you — graphic sex or violence, material that could be construed as representing others in the classroom — you should discuss this with me,” said Aurelie Sheehan, Director of the Creative Writing program, in the e-mail. “Inappropriate work should not be brought to workshop and the student should be disciplined appropriately, based on the severity of the problem.” Prior to this e-mail, a student was disciplined by the dean of the College of Humanities for submitting an English paper in a workshop class, which inappropriately referenced the WRITING, page 3
the Queen,” which features rare gems found in and around the Arizona town of Bisbee. “I hope there’s a mob there, I hope there’s excitement” Ruiz said. “Excitement from the community is what makes us do things like this.”
EVERYONE HAS A STORY
For more details on program offerings, please visit the Flandrau Web site at www.flandrau.org
Families separated by the Holocaust may soon be able to reunite, thanks to the unique services of the UA’s DNA Shoah Project. The project, whose name comes from a Hebrew word for “holocaust,” has been creating a database of genetic material collected from Holocaust survivors and their descendants with the hope of reuniting families divided by the Holocaust. “It’s something where time is of the essence,” said Matt Kaplan, project lead and a UA associate staff scientist in ecology and evolutionary biology at the Arizona Research Laboratories. “The closest we can get to the original generation of survivors, the more accuracy we can assure and the more useful it is.” The DNA Shoah Project has been mailing self-administered DNA tests to interested participants around the world since 2006. The test is in the form of a cheek swab, and can be safely and quickly administered at home. The project now boasts a database of more than 1,500 samples. Those involved with the project expect the database to grow significantly as the first wave of test results come in and word of the service spreads. “Primarily this is a personto-person contact process,” Kaplan said. “We don’t ask people for credentials or anything like that. If people have a family connection to the Holocaust, we will explain the process to them and determine if they are good candidates.” Sample testing began this year, with results to follow soon after for those who applied. “As far as we know, this is a unique service,” said Lynn Davis, an information specialist at the Arizona Research Laboratories. “For people who have exhausted the paper trail we offer something truly special.”
Jessica Hahn
Plans poker tournament for sister’s new kidney
By Laura E. Donovan ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT “Everyone has a story” is a weekly segment in the Arizona Daily Wildcat that aims to tell the story of an interesting person on the UA campus. This week, the Daily Wildcat interviewed Jessica Hahn, a journalism senior whose 23-year-old sister Kristin was diagnosed with kidney failure in August 2008. The family will be holding a fundraiser to raise money for Kristin ’s kidney transplant. Doctors have no idea how or why Kristin Hahn’s kidneys failed. “What was odd about my sister Kristin’s situation was that this sickness doesn’t run in our family at all,” Jessica Hahn said. While doctors were operating on her ankle, they noticed gout, a buildup of uric acid in the blood that crystallizes in the joints of the feet. Gout is also a sign of underlying kidney issues, so Kristin Hahn was tested for and subsequently diagnosed with kidney failure. Kristin Hahn has been waiting for a kidney transplant since August 2008 to no avail. “I’ve asked her what her kidney failure is like, and she says it hasn’t changed her very much,” said Jessica Hahn. “She’s fighting, working a fullAlan Walsh/Arizona Daily Wildcat time job at Walgreens.” Jessica Hahn, a journalism senior, relates the hardships her sister Kristin Hahn faced with kidney failure and Though Kristin Hahn’s kidneys are only about Stevens-Johnson Syndrome, and how she supports her sister through her illness. 13-percent functional, she tries to live as if she Kristin Hahn must maintain a diet low in high in iron, and one of the side effects it gave Kristin doesn’t have any health problems. “She should be bedbound, but she’s up, going potassium and dairy. She’s also on several was Stevens-Johnson Syndrome,”said Jessica Hahn. Stevens-Johnson Syndrome is a life-threatening to work every day, going to parties, playing with medications and takes shots every month. Life isn’t always easy for the Hahn family. my one-year-old son. She’s your average 23-yearKIDNEY, page 3 “One day, she was taking a medication that was old with a minor side effect,” said Jessica Hahn.
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• friday, april 2, 2010 • arizona daily wildcat
Lance Madden Editor in Chief 520•621•7579 editor@wildcat.arizona.edu
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on the spot
ODDS & ENDS
Anna Swenson Page 2 Editor 520•621•7581 letters@wildcat.arizona.edu
april
datebook Friday afternoon learning
Tonight at 5 in the Student Union Memorial Center South Ballroom, Rashid Khalidi, Edward Said Professor of Modern Arab Studies at Columbia University, will give the keynote lecture at the 10th Annual Graduate Student Conference of the Middle East and North Africa Graduate Student Association.
Y’all gon’ make her act a fool
Gutentag
Today at 2 p.m. in the Harvill building Room 204, Sabine Hake, professor of German literature and culture at the University of Texas at Austin, will give a talk titled “Heroic Sacrifice: The Third Reich in Cold War Cinema.”The first German films about the Third Reich were made in the 1950s, with filmmakers in the East and West seeking to explain the rise of the Nazis and the continued attraction of fascism.
2
Good Friday
Brilliant with my millions (12 votes) Rockin’ like this (16 votes) A brother, but my name ain’t Lehman (3 votes)
New question: Do you think the UA Creative Writing program should be allowed to censor writers’ content?
Hallie Edmonds
Anthropology and art history senior
News Tips
Since it is noon on April Fools’ Day, I just have to ask, have you been pranked yet? No, I haven’t been pranked as of yet, but I wouldn’t be surprised if it happens sooner or later.
621-3193 The Daily Wildcat is always interested in story ideas and tips from readers. If you see something deserving of coverage, contact news editor Michelle Monroe at news@wildcat.arizona.edu or call the newsroom at 621-3193.
Arizona Daily Wildcat Vol. 103, Issue 125
Alan Walsh/Arizona Daily Wildcat
Construction workers lower a portable toilet onto the top floor of the dorm development on the west side of Arizona Stadium.
New evidence on WWII mystery of Raoul Wallenberg STOCKHOLM — New evidence from Russian archives suggests Swedish diplomat Raoul Wallenberg, credited with rescuing tens of thousands of Hungarian Jews during the Holocaust, was alive after Soviets reported that he had died in a Moscow prison, a Swedish magazine and U.S. researchers reported Thursday.
No food fights or test fibs or anything like that? Well, I do have me Ancient Greek Class later, and that only has about five people in it. There is a good opportunity to stir up some trouble there. Are any of your friends likely to surprise you with something? I don’t know, I’m not really sure. Typically people will go up and point to your shirt like something is on it, and then when you go to look down, they will flick you in the face. I hate that! Me too! Well, it’s only noon! Who knows what the day will bring? I know! We’ll see. Hopefully nothing too psychologically damaging!
—Dallas Williamson
The fate of Wallenberg, who was arrested in Budapest in January 1945 by the Soviet army, has remained one of the great mysteries of World War II. The Soviets claimed he was executed July 17, 1947, but never produced a reliable death certificate or his remains. Witnesses claim he was seen in Soviet prisons or labor
camps many years later, although those accounts were never verified. Now, the archives of the Russian Security Services say a man identified only as Prisoner No. 7, who was interrogated six days after the diplomat’s reported death, was “with great likelihood” Wallenberg. — The Associated Press
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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Corrections
peeps
Ivanka Trump’s accused stalker freed
“That’s crazy. If I have to do a six-page paper, I literally have a nervous breakdown.”
Wow! I don’t know whether to find that funny or just plain mean. I know, right? So do you plan to pull a little prank on anyone? Not as of yet. I might, if something occurs to me I might try it. No plans to yet, though.
Imma be?
Today is Hospital Admitting Clerks Day, International Children’s Book Day, World Autism Day and Reconciliation Day.
worth noting
All right, well let’s retrograde a bit. What is your most memorable April Fools’ Day experience? I actually have never had a very memorable one, to be honest. But I do have a friend who told me about one he had in elementary school. I guess in the third grade he had a teacher who was always very sweet and had a very nice disposition — never really raised her voice. Well, she came in to class one day and started screaming at the kids. She told them to sit down and begin writing out “I will not talk in class, and I will not misbehave” 50 times. The class was in shock, but they proceeded to write it down anyways. About 20 lines in, she suddenly turned back to the class and said, “Why you all doing this?” And they all said, “Because you told us to. Because we were being bad apparently.” At which point she said, “Oh, well April Fools!”
catpoll
— Chavez building submit at dailywildcat.com or twitter @overheardatua
fast facts
• To be a RIAA-certified gold record, an album needs to sell 100,000 copies in Britain and 500,000 in the United States. • Music was sent across a telephone line for the first time in 1876, the year the phone was invented.
• The first pop music video was “Bohemian Rhapsody” by Queen, released in 1975. • The British are the highest per capita spenders on music, buy 7.2 percent of the world’s music.
• The CD was developed by Philips and Sony in 1980.
• The harmonica is the world’s best-selling music instrument.
• About 1/3 of recorded CDs are pirated.
• The last note on a keyboard is C.
• Ireland has won the most Eurovision song contests with seven wins.
• DVD discs are the same diameter (120 mm) and thickness (1.2 mm) as a CD, but a DVD can store 13 times more data.
• At eight Brit Awards, Annie Lennox holds the record.
NEW YORK — A self-described celebrity stalker obsessed with Ivanka Trump threatened to kill himself in her jewelry store and “commandeer” her husband’s newspaper in e-mail and Twitter messages to the couple, prosecutors said Thursday. “I won’t just be ignored,” Justin Massler wrote in an August e-mail to the newspaper, The New York Observer, according to a court complaint filed at his arraignment Thursday. He added in another message that unless he got an autographed photo, he would commit suicide Ivanka Trump at The Ivanka Trump Collection boutique to damage its reputation, “or my only other option will be to simply stalk Ivanka Trump in a maniacal manner for this picture by becoming nothing other than a deranged celebrity stalker,” according to the court documents. Massler, 27, didn’t enter a plea. His lawyer, George Vomvolakis, said the messages didn’t amount to crimes, and Massler “at no point intended to follow through with any of these comments.” Massler was released on $10,000 bond, with orders to get psychiatric care as he awaits trial at his mother’s home in Reno, Nev. Trump, the daughter of Donald and Ivana Trump, declined to comment. She co-hosts NBC’s “Celebrity Apprentice” and is a vice president at her father’s real estate company. Her husband, Jared Kushner, is the publisher of The New York Observer and an executive at his family’s real estate business, the Kushner Cos. The couple got married in October. Manhattan Assistant District Attorney Lucrece Francois told a judge that Massler had stalked Trump for about two years. In Twitter messages directed at Trump, Massler said his “dream in life” was to marry her but also called her “a diseased elitist,” according to the court complaint. In e-mails to Kushner and the Observer, he demanded that Kushner “surrender” a Fifth Avenue office tower, asked where Kushner lived so he could “talk some sense into him” and discussed “commandeering” the newspaper, the documents said. Vomvolakis said Massler never came closer to Trump than trying unsuccessfully to send her an $800 pair of earrings he’d bought online from her store. Massler, who had his name legally changed to Cloud Starchaser, has grappled with psychiatric problems for years and spent time in a mental hospital, his attorney said. “He’s got a very eccentric sense of humor, and he thinks it’s funny, declaring himself a celebrity stalker,” Vomvolakis said.
— The Associated Press
Requests for corrections or complaints concerning news and editoral content of the Arizona Daily Wildcat should be directed to the editor in chief. For further information on the Daily Wildcat’s approved grievance policy, readers may contact Mark Woodhams, director of Arizona Student Media, in the Sherman R. Miller Newsroom at the Park Student Union. Editor in Chief Lance Madden News Editor Michelle Monroe Sports Editor Nicole Dimtsios Opinions Editor Anna Swenson Design Chief Jessica Leftault Arts Editor Steven Kwan Photo Editor Sam Shumaker Copy Chief Kathryn Banks Web Director Colin Darland Asst. News Editors Matthew Lewis Asst. Sports Editors Mike Schmitz Kevin Zimmerman Asst. Photo Editor Ashlee Salamon Asst. Arts Editor Brandon Specktor Asst. Copy Chief Christy Delehanty News Reporters Bethany Barnes Laura Donovan Bridgette Doran Brenna Goth Jennifer Koehmstedt Gabriel Matthew Schivone Jacob Moeller Luke Money Alexandra Newman Jonathan Prince Maura Shea Jazmine Woodberry Sports Reporters Vincent Balistreri Michael Fitzsimmons Dan Kohler Tim Kosch Derek Lawrence Galo Mejia Kevin Nadakal Bryan Roy Jaime Valenzuela Alex Williams Arts & Feature Writers Christy Delehanty Ada Dieke Joe Dusbabek Marisa D. Fisher Ali Freedman Katie Gault Kim Kotel Kellie Mejdrich Emily Moore Bryan Ponton Heather Price-Wright Kathleen Roosa Zachary Smith Dallas Williamson Columnists Miranda Butler Laura Donovan Jan Flisek-Boyle Ben Harper Tom Knauer
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arizona daily wildcat • friday, april 2, 2010 •
Smashing protons to deliver answers
By Luke Money ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT
While most people in Tucson were sound asleep Tuesday morning, scientists were busy creating the largest collision ever achieved in a particle accelerator, hoping to answer questions about how the universe was formed. The accelerator, known as the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), is based in Geneva, Switzerland, at the headquarters of the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN). Featuring components manufactured at the UA, the collider is the most powerful particle accelerator ever built. “There was no new physics discovered on Tuesday,� said Elliott Cheu, a UA physics professor who is part of the UA-LHC team. “However, we did discover that all of the hard work put in by many thousands of people has paid off. The experiments worked extremely well and we’re looking forward to the results.� The LHC works by smashing proton beams together as they race around a 16.5-mile underground tunnel on the Swiss-France border. When protons collide with such
KIDNEY
continued from page 1
energy, they break apart into elementary particles, the smallest components of matter in the universe. “As far as the science, the new energy frontier opened up by the LHC will hopefully allow us to solve, or at least make progress on, some of the most important problems in physics,� said Ken Johns, a UA physics professor. Scientists hope that such high-energy collisions will effectively recreate conditions of the universe in the immediate aftermath of the Big Bang. “While we have theories that may explain these mysteries, the bottom line is that we won’t know the answers until we do the experiment,� Johns said. The first collisions in the LHC produced energy of 7 trillion electron volts, more than three times the energy that had ever been achieved in a particle accelerator before. “It is tremendously exciting,� Johns said. “The potential for new discovery is enormous. Even though UA is one of nearly 200 universities from 40 countries throughout the world (that contributed to the experiment), we in fact have had a disproportionately
large influence on the design of the experiment.� One of those design influences is the ATLAS detector component of the collider. ATLAS, which stands for A Toroidal LHC Apparatus and was manufactured at the UA, is a highly advanced detector designed to process massive data input and display the results of high-energy proton collisions that occur in the collider. “I’m guessing that our ATLAS detector will be taking data for 20 to 30 years, with a few upgrades to improve its capability along the way,� said John Rutherfoord, UA physics professor. “Discoveries should be spread out over this time. We won’t have to wait decades for the earlier discoveries, if all goes well.� The LHC will run for two years at its current energy capacity for two years before being shut down for a year to prepare for 14 trillion electron-volt collisions. “Of course,we don’t really know what we’ll find,�Rutherfoord said. “That’s part of the fun. But we do have ideas what might be there to find. We are also prepared to be surprised to find things we never imagined.�
‘I realize how silly it is to stress about failing a class’
condition in which the skin dries out and flakes off the body. “What was sadder was that she walked into the hospital and said she had StevensJohnson Syndrome, and she was told to have a seat. She said to them,‘You realize I can die from this, right?’ and was still instructed to stay in the waiting room. If they’d taken an hour longer to get her in the see a doctor, she could
have died,�said Jessica Hahn. Jessica Hahn praises and admires her sister for enduring kidney failure. “The fact that she’s still going is amazing to a lot of people. There are times when I want to give up on a major or a class, and then I realize how silly it is to stress about failing a class while my sister is seriously ill and still going strong,� said Jessica Hahn.
WRITING
Department policy enforces state law on personal threats, violence
continued from page 1
teacher of the class. Though the department routinely sends out an e-mail at the beginning of the semester to all instructors, this information on student content was added after the recent incident, Sheehan said. “I sent the e-mail out for a variety of reasons. I usually send 201/209/210 instructors a ‘checking in’ e-mail early in the semester. But yes, that bulleted item in the e-mail was included as a reminder in part because of the incident,â€? Sheehan said. Tenaya Snider, a freshman majoring in English with a minor in creative writing, said the instructor of her Introduction to Poetry class told her about the e-mail sent out by the department. “That’s a hard line to define in writing. I feel for the most part it should be up to the discretion of the student, not the instructors,â€? she said.“All of us shouldn’t be limited because one person’s an idiot.â€? The e-mail was not a change in the creative writing program’s policy on student content, Sheehan said. “We don’t have a policy, except that we have to try and enforce the law around the issue of making personal threats to individuals,â€? said Jason Brown, Director of Undergraduate English. “When it comes to policy, we only mobilize the forces ‌ when there’s a credible threat.â€? Persona, UA’s undergraduate magazine for art and literature,
WANT TO HELP? Hahn’s family will be holding a Texas hold’em poker tournament at Fox and Hound on April 25 from 5:30 to10 p.m. to raise money for Kristin Hahn and her illness. Tickets are $30 each and only 50 tickets will be sold. There will be prizes, including a Budweiser tabletop and a 300-piece poker gift set. Call Jerry Hahn at 245-1581 to purchase tickets to this event. Donations can also be made to the Kristin Hahn Medical Donation Account Wells Fargo account number: 8506246118
has also received student submissions that could be interpreted as threatening, said Elisa Meza, publicity director of the magazine. “In my reading group we read this piece of short fiction ‌ it was told in first person, so he woke up one morning and decided to pick up his gun, put it in his bag, go to campus and just shoot up some people,â€? Meza said. “I have to personally say that I liked it, because no one’s brave enough to write this kind of thing, so my condition was that he was brave, and that’s why he wrote it — to be bold.â€? Not everyone at the magazine felt the same way about the piece, however, and University of Arizona Police Department was called and contacted the student who submitted the piece, Meza said. Meza said that with Persona submissions or in the creative writing classroom, there should not be any restrictions on what a student can write about, even if other students or teachers are mentioned in the text. “That is called creative writing. That’s called amazing characterization, that you would feel that powerful about someone to want to do that to them in the story. We all write about people we know, whether or not we want to admit it. The best characters are those you know of. I don’t think there should be any line drawn,â€?she said. Creative writing senior, Alan Tanz, said there should be a line
should be drawn concerning violence in the classroom. “If you’re being violent for the sake of being violent, you should be disciplined,� he said. “If your violence is seen as a threat, then you should be kicked out of the class.� Sheehan said that keeping the creative writing classroom safe is dependent on knowing where to draw the line with content. “We all, as you can imagine, here in the Creative Writing department, are big proponents of freedom of expression and we want to help students develop as writers essentially without boundaries, except for the boundaries of creating a safe space in the classroom,� she said.“That safe space would include not writing about other students in the classroom or teachers and knowing where the line is drawn in terms of graphic or gratuitous violence.� Brown said that though a line must be drawn, the department should never censor sex and violence completely. “Where is the line between something that is pornography and something that is art? Where is the line between something that is gratuitous violence and something that is violence as part of art?� Brown asked. “Every institution and instructor deals with it a little bit differently, and some institutions, some departments will really not let their students have that stuff in there, which is a big mistake because violence and sex is so much a part of our lives.�
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• friday, april 2, 2010 • arizona daily wildcat
dailywildcat.com
DWOPINIONS
Lance Madden Editor in Chief 520•621•7579 editor@wildcat.arizona.edu
Anna Swenson Opinions Editor 520•621•7581 letters@wildcat.arizona.edu
Live for today, graduate tomorrow A
long with thousands of other UA students, I will finish college next month. When I was a lonely, admittedly naïve, freshman from the small town of Scotts Valley, Calif., I struggled to adjust to so many changes at once and couldn’t wait to finish my undergraduate studies. At the time, I didn’t realize that I was wishing away the most phenomenal, thrilling years of my young life. The UA and the Arizona Daily Wildcat changed my life in the best way imaginable. I found exactly what I wanted to do with Laura E. Donovan my life, that is, be a nonfiction Columnist writer, and I met exceptional friends and colleagues along the way. So it’s heartbreaking to part with such fantastic institutions as well as the highlights of my collegiate experience. Graduation is looming and it’s almost time to say farewell to literally hundreds of excellent, inspiring, fascinating individuals. As if it’s not already haunting our thoughts, friends, relatives, classmates, the UA Web site and even the Daily Wildcat, continues to remind all graduating seniors that college is almost over. Just two days ago, a Daily Wildcat article mentioned that seniors only have 45 days left until graduation. GradFest was last week, but you knew that already. If you didn’t receive a million e-mails from the UofA Bookstore beforehand, you might have seen the white tent on the UA Mall. If you read a physical copy of the Daily Wildcat, you would have also noticed Fast Copy advertisements for graduation announcements. Who can avoid the inescapable small talk that surrounds graduation conversation, either? Acquaintances, neighbors, family friends and relatives are asking about graduation all the time: “What are you doing after college ends? Are you going home? Will you go to graduate school? Are you going to look for a job? But wait a minute, why are you even trying to enter the work force during a recession?” All the same questions, all of which are incredibly dull. Props to anyone who has managed to dodge this type of discouraging discussion. Instead of focusing on the fact that graduation is right around the corner, why not just enjoy today, especially in Tucson where the weather is unbeatably gorgeous this time of year? The phrase “live for the moment” is often viewed as irresponsible advice and sounds a little too spontaneous for anyone’s good. If given careful consideration, however, this aphorism could benefit everyone. It’s crucial to prepare for graduation by completing degree check requirements, ordering a cap and gown, and passing all of your classes. But it would also be wise to take things day by day and concentrate on the present. Instead of stressing out over graduation plans, why not go out for a few drinks with your friends this evening? There’s a good chance you’ll have to move away from your close college buddies after graduation, so have fun with them while you still can. Because, really, all we have is now. I don’t want to sound too morbid, but for all anyone knows, death could come for us before the graduation ceremony, and we would have spent unnecessary amounts of time planning for a future that would never come. That’s obviously the worst-case scenario, but being aware of it can serve to encourage us to live each day to the fullest. Appreciate life in college while you still have the opportunity rather than constantly remind yourself that you won’t be a UA student in a month’s time. Cross the graduation bridge once you actually get there. Spring 2010 graduates have a lot to be proud of. Though the job market remains competitive, it’s a huge accomplishment to have a college degree, especially from a spectacular research institution such as the UA. Take pride in your achievements, but don’t forget to slow down and enjoy everything that’s going on in your lives right now. And don’t waste time on boring conversations about graduation. — Laura E. Donovan is a creative writing senior. She can be reached at letters@wildcat.arizona.edu.
CHATTER
C O M M E N T S F R O M daily wildcat.c o m On ‘Evolution, intelligent design face off at Humanities panel,’ April 1 Science dismisses not only creationism (including intelligent design creationism), but other religious icons such as virgin birth and resurrection and the soul, as false — or at least not provably true. Religionists therefore attack science, because it is incompatible with their beliefs. Only the scientifically illiterate can possibly equate the well-established and long-established theory of evolution with the unproved and unprovable “theory” of intelligent design creationism. — Anonymous Why do these people focus on the theory of evolution? Why don’t you ever see them attack the fundamentals of geology, which disprove the Biblical age of the Earth? Why don’t you see them attack astronomy, which provides non-magical explanations for the origin of the Earth, Sun and planets? Why don’t they attack the archaeologists who prove the Exodus did not happen as written, or the textual scholars who prove the Pentateuch wasn’t written by Moses? Or, will these other fields of study be under attack next if give unearned legitimacy to “intelligent design?” — Rick Wow, referring to evolution as a belief! They are giving creationists way too much credibility by having this kind of discussion. — David Does it really matter whether it was evolution or intelligent design? Seems to me that it’s a topic drummed up to create a pissing match. — Anonymous The bible is a fairy story. Evolution is about learning and scientific method. Exactly where do they meet
for discussion? Idiots only think that creationism has anything to say about science and only to those who do not understand science at all. — Anonymous
On ‘How to Train Your Dragon doesn’t soar,’ March 31 Hey, im 16 years old, i watched the film with my boyfriend, and we had fun. So does that mean that were not normal? I think we are … it’s a nice movie for me and I actually watched it twice. — Normal gurl XP I love this movie. And just about everyone else does too. Love this movie way more than “Kung Fu Panda” or “Up.” — Anonymous My daughter (5) loved this move and so did we. My 3-year-old son was a bit scared towards the end. This movie is fantastic — one of the better ones I’ve seen this year. The animation is superb and the jokes work on several levels so neither the parents or the kids are bored. Highly recommended from your average schmo. — Average Schmo
On ‘Students dig into organic garden,’ April 1 Wow, that is a really great article!! It inspired me to build a composting area in an existing planter box for our citrus trees in our back yard in Scottsdale. I just started a garden on our new front patio this spring, and it has been a lot of fun watching the new plants grow. — Anonymous
A view from other college editorials
The Vatican’t
The sex abuse scandals that have enveloped the Catholic Church as of late leave very little for the public to defend the clergymen and rightfully so. With the travesties occurring in Ireland and Germany especially, the Vatican has done little to address the serious, legal accusations facing its subsidiaries and therefore has been attacked even more so than usual. One of the Catholic Church’s failures surfaced back in the 1990s with the Vatican’s failure to defrock an American priest who was accused of molesting 200 deaf boys in Wisconsin. The scandals go as far as 1980 and keep in close proximity with Pope Benedict XVI when he, as a German archdiocese of Munich and Freising, allowed proven child molesters to return to old priesthood positions. Rather than taking legal actions then, the Church decided to pursue its own agenda and escape almost unscathed. Today’s scandals touch on this idea of Church-guided legal system. While more than 100 people have come out in Germany, saying that Catholic officials had put them through sexual abuse, the repercussions go as far as the Church itself, rather than any deeper, legal solutions. That is what we believe is the main problem. The Catholic Church, as one of the world’s major religions, must choose to reform itself — something that is hardly plausible. Its resistence to reform puts the Catholic Church at fault as it resists any legal repercussions. And as a main figure in many lives, the Church has a duty to remain an upstanding part of society rather than an uncontrollable giant. It is in the public eye, therefore it should exhibit its projected ideals — one thing that has been a problem in the Catholic Church. It could be compared to a political figure, and just as President Barack Obama has come under critique for his health care reform, justly or not, he must possess the ability to prove his opponents wrong or reform his ways. The Catholic Church has always had enemies, but up until today, cases were widely unreported and even unaddressed by the Church itself. Now with the massive numbers of people speaking up, justice may actually be served, as long as the Catholic Church reforms itself or heavier legal actions are taken. Up until then, however, the singling out of the Catholic Church amongst others is deserved, because as long as the Vatican fails to control its powerful machine, blame should be thrown its direction.
Fool’s errand
March Madness will be over Monday, but it seems the chaos of classes has all but started again after spring break has ended. We thought we were busy before break, but all those assignments we forgot about last week have found a way to sneak up and are due right around the corner. As our stomachs keep turning into tighter knots and we begin to be consumed by the stress, let’s try to hold onto the more easygoing side of life. (Yesterday was) April Fools’ Day, which gives people all over the U.S. an excuse to act a little careless, be a little silly and hopefully get a good laugh in the end. As Americans, we often don’t get enough time to relax and just do things that make us happy. Compared to other countries, the U.S. is low on the scale of average number of paid vacation days per year given to employees. While the U.S., on average, has only 13 days, Italy has 42, France 37 and Germany 35. For Americans ages 25 to 54 with children, most of the time is spent on the job or sleeping to regain energy for more work. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, eight hours is reserved for work, 7.6 hours is used for rest and only 2.6 hours is reserved for leisure and sports. No wonder more than one in 20 Americans 12 years and older were found to have current depression, according to data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey for 2005-2006 from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Web site. We are literally worked to death so we can spend money on homes that we don’t live in and buy items we can’t play with. Our consumer-driven country that bombards us with advertisements makes us think life is all about work so we can have all the stuff that we end up not being able to use anyway. It ends up being a very frustrating and depressing situation. We need to rethink how the world has told us we need to be. The way it is going right now, people aren’t getting anything out of life. We need to make it a priority to find and do the things that we most enjoy. Maybe that can be finding a job you really like, but most likely it will be found somewhere else. An example is getting a hobby and spending time doing it until you’re great at whatever it is. Maybe it’s drawing cartoon characters or going hiking or taking pictures. Find that something that makes you tick and give yourself the time to go after it.You might even find something you love doing so much and that you’re so good at, is what you want to pursue for a career and it could change your life around for the better. So, ride with the flow of April Fools’ Day’s lighthearted nature and be a little careless, be a little silly. You’ll be a lot happier.
“Catholic Church abuse not just petty gossip,” The Rutgers University Daily Targum Editorial Board, March 30
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.
“Americans need more time to laugh and have fun,” The Marshall University Parthenon Editorial Board, April 1
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friday, april 2, 2010 •
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POLICEBEAT By Bridgette Doran ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT
Inappropriate man busted for creeping
A University of Arizona Police Department officer arrived at the Sky View Apartments on Friday at 3:47 p.m. after a community director called to report a suspicious person. The community director was with the resident who initially reported the incident when the officer got there. The resident told the officer that she rolled over at 4:45 a.m. while she was sleeping and saw a man about 5-feet-11 inches tall and 30 years old standing in the hallway of her apartment wearing a gray T-shirt and dark baseball hat. She said that he was slowly walking down the hallway and when he was out of the hallway she got out of bed, slammed her door, shut and locked it. The woman said she could hear the man leave the apartment, shut the door behind him and put the deadbolt on. She and her roommate live in the apartment alone. She also reported that over the spring break she noticed two boxes of macaroni and cheese had been taken from the kitchen and a jar of peanut butter that was full when she left was empty when she returned. Both she and her roommate were gone over break. The woman told the officer that the man she saw in her apartment looked very much like a maintenance worker in the building who usually wears a grey shirt and baseball hat. The officer spoke with another student that said the worker has made several inappropriate comments to students in the past and has shown up at her apartment in the night drunk. He has also made students feel uncomfortable by coming on to them. He has bragged to students about having keys to every room in the Sky View Apartments. The community director told the officer that when she first called the worker to tell him the lock needed to be changed for the resident, he was acting strange and said,“It wasn’t me.” The officer spoke with the worker outside of his house and the man admitted to acting too personal with students and has made them feel uncomfortable. He told the officer that he had left the apartments at 7 p.m. and did not return. After searching the maintenance room of the building, the officer found an 8-inch long knife stabbed into the wall. The man stated it was not his. The man had his keys to the building taken away and was told not to return to Sky View. The residents of the apartment that was broken into were also transferred to a new room.
Man smokes marijuana to avoid Xanax
A UAPD officer arrived at the Tyndall parking garage on Monday at 5:04 p.m. after getting a report that there were people smoking marijuana in a beige Ford Explorer. The officer found the car there, and when he walked up the passenger side door of the car, he could smell a strong odor of marijuana coming from the open window. Both the passenger and the driver were taken from the car and read their rights. The passenger told the officer, “I smoked a ‘J’ with my friend just briefly. I smoke because of my anxiety and I don’t want to take Xanax.” The man said there was also a metal grinder in the center console of the car; the grinder and the marijuana were not his. While the officer was speaking with the man who had been in the driver’s seat, the man said,“My friend and I were just having a smoke.” The man told the officer that he did not know of a baggie of marijuana that was found in the car and thought that it was in his dorm room. He admitted that the marijuana was his. The metal grinder and pipe found in the car, were also his. A digital scale, an 8-inch hunting knife and a 4-inch knife were also found in the car. The passenger admitted to providing rolling papers for the marijuana and he was cited and released for unlawful use of marijuana and possession of drug paraphernalia. The officer asked the driver if he had any other marijuana in his dorm room and the man gave consent to the officer the search the room. In the room, the officer found a marijuana bud in a plastic baggie and a pair of brass knuckles. The man was arrested for possession of marijuana and possession of drug paraphernalia. The knives and brass knuckles were placed into property for safekeeping. The marijuana and all paraphernalia were placed into property as evidence. The officer sent Code of Conduct referrals to the Dean of Students for both men.
Man fails to use phones after assault
A UAPD officer met with a University Medical Center nurse on Monday at 9:20 p.m. after she reported to the officer of a possible assault victim. The nurse told the officer that a man came into the emergency room with a 3-inch laceration on his upper left arm. The nurse said that the man did not want to talk with police about the incident but had told the nurse that three men assaulted him outside of the UA Main Library. The man did tell the officer that he had walked to UMC from the library but did not call police on the way to report the men because, according to the officer’s report,“There were no pay phones along the way and a pedestrian probably would not have helped him because he was Hispanic.” The officer tried to give the man information about the Blue Light emergency phones on campus but the man was not interested in learning about them. The man was advised to call UAPD if he changed his mind about officially reporting the incident. 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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• friday, april 2, 2010 • arizona daily wildcat
weekend Wildlife THE TV NUT
By Katie Gault ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT Don’t get me wrong, I love “Lost.” But every once in a while, I wish I could watch a good show with flashbacks, alternate realities, and scientific experimentation without adding to the wrinkles on my forehead. Luckily for me, J.J. Abrams created another show in 2008 called “Fringe,” which shares many qualities with “Lost,” besides the polar bears, islands and an overabundance of characters. “Fringe” returned last night to continue the second half of its second season. When we last saw FBI Agent Olivia Dunham, she had just learned to use mental powers that allowed her to recognize objects in her reality that had been brought from an alternate reality. In the final moments of the fall finale, she realized that her “partner,” Peter, was actually from the alternate reality, a fact unknown to him. Cue the dramatic cut to black. In this episode, viewers finally
‘Fringe’ benefits
got the answers that they had been waiting for during the long hiatus. Flashing back to Peter’s youth, we see his father, mad scientist Walter, attempting to save Peter from an incurable disease. Walter has the ability to see into the other dimension to his own counterpart, a Walter who possesses far more advanced technology. After this reality’s Peter dies of illness, the other Walter unknowingly finds the cure for Peter’s disease while this reality’s Walter watches through his dimensional window. This is getting confusing. Basically, this reality’s Walter ends up jumping into the other reality to save the other Peter, who has not yet died. He can’t bear to give up his son for a second time. And that, my friends, is the story of Peter’s origins. Whew. Overall, the episode managed to be heartwarming and eerie all at the same time. If you’re a fan of the show and you missed it , catch up at Hulu.com.
B+
Photo courtesy of Fox Broadcasting Co.
Damon back in the ‘Zone’ By Bryan Ponton ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT
The latest Matt Damon movie is called “Green Zone.” In the same style as his other recent movies, “Green Zone” is centered on the war in the Middle East and the fight against weapons of mass destruction. Damon’s character is an officer who is tired of coming up empty at sites that a Middle Eastern source named “Magellan” says hold the WMDs. The movie is based around trying to find out whether the weapons truly exist or not. The movie is interesting. The conspiracy theory aspect of the movie around the weapons of mass destruction is a cool idea that the movie focuses on. It is packed with explosions, gunfire and blood. Not exactly the type of movie to bring your grandmother to, but it’s filled with action. The story itself seems to run long, but stays interesting throughout the movie. Damon is his usual action-star self. His character in the movie reminded me a lot of his work in the Bourne movies, with a lot of yelling and action. Overall, though, it is interesting to see Damon in a movie that is not about secret agents, like usual. The movie feels like someone is actually filming it. With the camera shaking and turning around corners quickly, you feel like you are actually there. If you get motion sickness, this might not be the best movie for you. Some parts of the movie are filmed in the dark. Most of the time it is hard to see what is actually happening because the location is so dark. It becomes confusing
B
Paul Greengrass Green Zone 1 hr 55min MPAA Rating: R
Photo courtesy of allmoviephoto.com
when you see Damon walking down a street, then the screen goes black and you find Damon in a hallway. Overall, if you like seeing Matt Damon in action roles, conspiracy theories and films about the war in the Middle East, “Green Zone” is the perfect fit for you.
Photo courtesy of Random House
Book chronicles US’s first year in Iraq By Marisa D. Fisher ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT
In order to survive, you need to be able to recognize the real aliens from the weirdos. For your own survival, read The Arizona Daily Wildcat
In the spring of 2003, I was a freshman in high school. Old Xbox buddies of mine had joined the army to go shoot non-virtual bad guys, but I was completely unconcerned with the fact that Saddam Hussein’s reign in Iraq had collapsed. The whole idea was so foreign and surreal to me that I didn’t give it a second thought. It wasn’t until college that I realized I had absolutely no idea what role the U.S. had really played in Iraq. “Imperial Life in the Emerald City: Inside Iraq’s Green Zone” by Rajiv Chandrasekaran provides startling insight into that world. Chandrasekaran was formerly the Washington Post Baghdad bureau chief. His novel chronicles the U.S.’s first year in Iraq, beginning just after the overthrow of Saddam Hussein. The U.S. was newly in charge of Iraq’s administration and the country’s legal power. The author recounts firsthand the events that took place within the Green Zone, where soldiers and officials were untouched by the unrest and the poverty that ruled the everyday life of the average Iraqi citizen. Chandrasekaran describes a world very much marked by preand post- Green Zone divisions. He details the actions of the Coalition Provisional Authority which held its headquarters in the reassigned Baghdad palace formerly occupied by Hussein. While the conditions in Iraq were not rapidly improving for the general public, the Green Zone that Chandrasekaran
describes functioned like a college campus. Ballroomsturned-dining-halls, the PX for shopping and American-run bars created an oasis on the west bank of the Tigris. It was an island. Chandrasekaran’s restraint in editorializing is laudable considering the controversial subject matter. He writes like any conscientious journalist would, attempting neutrality and leaving his own opinions out of nearly the entire book. Only toward the closing pages does the reader get any sense of his personal perspective on the United States’ involvement in Iraq, or on the Green Zone. Even then, he remains professional and less judgmental than most would muster. This leaves the reader to their own interpretation of his account. The description is vivid and the intricacies of bureaucratic blundering in Iraq are laid open in this novel. The Green Zone compound walls are lifted for the average reader. It’s no surprise that director Paul Greengrass credits this novel as the final inspiration for his recent film“Green Zone.” While a more personal report might have been more sensational, the time period relayed in this work of nonfiction holds enough shock value to keep even the most dramaaddicted audience enthralled. That said,“Imperial Life in the Emerald City: Inside Iraq’s Green Zone”also provides an incredible resource for those of us who weren’t inside the walls when it all went wrong in Iraq, without the distraction of Hollywood flair or virtual bad guys.
friday, april 2, 2010
dailywildcat.com
DWsports Softball Heyer survives defeats scare; ’Cats fall ASU
By Kevin Zimmerman Arizona Daily Wildcat Before the weekend series against ASU, Arizona softball shortstop K’Lee Arredondo said the Wildcat offense would have to feel out Sun Devil ace Hillary Bach (15-2) and “adjust the second time around.” Turns out, they decided to jump on the ace right from the start. Arizona’s first five hitters tapped home base during the first inning as the Wildcats (29-3, 1-0 Pacific 10 Conference) rolled to a 12-6 win against the Sun Devils (31-5, 0-1) in Tempe Thursday night. “I felt like we had a decent practice (Wednesday), and I felt like today (we) came to the ballpark,” head coach Mike Candrea said. “They weren’t hyperactive, but I think they were ready to go.” After two singles by outfielders Brittany Lastrapes and Lauren Schutzler in the top of the first, Arredondo nabbed a three-run shot off Bach before a two-run bomb by freshman Brigette Del Ponte brought herself and catcher Stacie Chambers home for Arizona, earning a 5-0 lead. But the Sun Devils’ offense quickly returned the favor after Wildcat pitcher Kenzie Fowler (19-2) allowed four runs in the bottom of the first. She walked the first three ASU batters, loading the bases and getting herself in a jam, but Candrea said that from first glance, it wasn’t a matter of her nerves. “I would say that the (strike) zone tonight was pretty small to say the least,”Candrea said.“Kenzie did a good job of just hanging in there. She had to throw it perfect to get a strike, at least that’s how I saw it.” Whether she was battling nerves or a small strike zone, Fowler remained calm with a 5-4 lead after the first inning, shutting out the Sun Devils for the next four innings. Meanwhile, the Arizona offense tallied three more runs in the third inning and another three in the fifth, bringing their lead to 11-4. In the third, eight-slot hitter Kristen Arriola hit a bases-loaded, two-out Softball, page 8
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Nicole Dimtsios Sports Editor 520•626•2956 sports@wildcat.arizona.edu
UA loses focus after pitcher gets hit By Mike Schmitz Arizona Daily Wildcat
Through the first three innings of its first road trip of the season, against the California Golden Bears, the Arizona baseball team played like a squad that recently won 15 consecutive games should. UA pitching ace Kurt Heyer, who posted a 4-0 record and a 2.01 ERA coming into the contest, coasted through the first three innings of work Thursday and a home run by right fielder Steve Selsky — his third in the last three games — gave the Wildcats an early 1-0 lead. But a 110 mph line drive off the side of Heyer’s head took the Wildcats (20-6, 2-2 Pacific 10 Conference) out of the game mentally, resulting in a 7-2 Golden Bears (13-11, 1-3 Pac-10) victory. “It was a 2-0 fastball and (Cal’s Mark Canha) hit a line drive and it hit (Heyer) right above the eye on the right side of his head,” said head coach Andy Lopez. “It’s one of those things where I don’t care if you’re an old team or a young team, it’s a scary moment when one of your teammates gets hit in the head. “To be real honest, I think it took us out of our game for that one inning,”he added. “We just kind of unraveled — made an
error or two.” When Heyer wanted to continue pitching, Lopez insisted he be replaced. Heyer left the game for the emergency room with no out in the fourth inning The Golden Bears exploded for five runs in the fourth inning off of freshman relief pitcher Stephen Manthei, and the Arizona offense, which averaged 10.9 runs per contest in the 15 games prior, failed to mount a comeback. Cal and starting pitcher Erik Johnson, who allowed one run in six innings, held the Wildcats to under 10 hits for only the third time in 25 games. Although the Wildcats dropped their second consecutive game, the real concern was the health of Heyer, who had “no major issues” after his stint in the hospital, according to Lopez. “Nobody likes losing, but in the grand scheme of things, I’m pretty happy that Kurt’s OK,”Lopez said.“I’ve only had a couple of situations like that in the past and those are pretty dire situations, so I’m pretty happy he’s OK and we’ll bounce back.” The Wildcats will get their chance today at 2:30 p.m. in the second of three games against Cal.
Steve Selsky
Rodney Haas/Arizona Daily Wildcat
Ortega out again
After missing the series finale loss against the Oregon Ducks on March 28, Arizona second baseman Bryce Ortega missed Thursday’s game against Cal due to soreness in his lower back. Ortega, who has a .281 batting average and no errors in 24 games at second base, only missed one game in his first two years at Arizona. “His back was not as loose as we thought it would be,” Lopez said. “Obviously we’ve got to get Bryce back. He’s an important factor.” Sophomore Ethan Chavez filled in for Ortega and committed a big error in the Golden Bears’ five-run fourth inning. With Ortega out again today, Lopez expects to go with freshman and regular left fielder Robert Refsnyder at second base.
Jim Click meet provides home advantage for track and field By Galo Mejia Arizona Daily Wildcat
With its biggest home meet of the season this weekend, the Arizona track and field team will finally compete in Tucson after having to travel for every meet during the indoor season. Because of the climate in Tucson, the UA lacks an indoor track, so the Wildcats’ entire indoor season was a road trip. Now, the Wildcats will finally be at home, hosting the Jim Click
Invitational. Throwing, running and jumping events begin Saturday. Freshman high jumper Brigetta Barrett will get to do something extra. Not only will she be high jumping, she will also be singing the national anthem. “I know how to sing, but it’s more unnerving to sing than to jump,”Barrett said. “Jumping never really makes me nervous. This meet is like a prep meet for me. I always jump for height, but this meet I’m working on technique.”
For the coaching staff, competing in a home meet is easier than going on the road. There’s no time-zone change, no flights and no difficulty with transportation. Sprinter coach Francesca Green is excited about the Jim Click meet and eager to see how her sprinters will perform. “I love home meets, especially when the weather’s great, and the kids are used to training every day on this track so they know what it’s like,” Green said. “It’s nice to give them a
few weeks at home without having to worry about traveling.” Head coach Fred Harvey didn’t change anything about the team’s training going into this weekend. He feels that the biggest advantage of having a home meet is the emotional boost it gives the athletes. “You have your friends and family that can come out and support you,” Harvey said. “For about 98 percent of the athletes, it’s an emotional plus for them. It’s a definite advantage to be on your home track.”
Confidence key for tennis this weekend By Dan Kohler Arizona Daily Wildcat After a rough weekend in northern California, the No. 34 Arizona men’s tennis team returns home to Tucson to face the No. 21 Washington Huskies and the Oregon Ducks this weekend at the LaNelle Robson Tennis Center. After convincing losses against Stanford and California last weekend, the Wildcats (11-7, 0-2 Pacific 10 Conference) seek to regain their confidence and some momentum from both the Huskies (15-6, 0-2) and Ducks (11-6, 0-2) whom, like Arizona, have yet to win a conference match. “We played two quality top-15 teams this past weekend, and we still have a tremendous amount of confidence in ourselves,” said head coach Tad Berkowitz. “After you lose to a couple of tough teams you don’t need to panic. We just need to have confidence in ourselves and confidence in what we do, and we’ll move on to next week.” The results of last weekend dropped the Wildcats two spots in the Intercollegiate Tennis Association (ITA) rankings, but the solid individual performances of Andres Arango and Andres Carrasco put them into the singles rankings for the first time this year, at No. 90 and No. 115, respectively. “Those two guys have been very, very solid for us all year,” Berkowitz said. “They both are the guys that you know (you want) when its clutch time. They just step up when we need them to, and it shows with the results that they’ve had and the wins that they’ve had. I’m really proud of both of those guys” Today, Arizona takes on the Washington Huskies who, like Arizona, met defeat under the California sun last weekend. They were swept by the UCLA Bruins and lost 6-1 against the USC Trojans. The Huskies’ No. 65 singles player junior Jeevan Nedunchezhiyan and the No. 65 doubles duo of junior Alex Rosinski and junior Tobi
Valentina Martinelli/Arizona Daily Wildcat
Arizona tennis players Andres Arango, left, and Andres Carrasco compete in a doubles match against Santa Clara on March 5 at LaNelle Robson Tennis Center. The Wildcats will host Washington and Oregon this weekend.
Obenaus will be gunning to defeat the Wildcats at home . The Ducks, who the Wildcats face Sunday, also pack a punch thanks to No. 103 singles player Alexander Cornelissen. Arizona is 6-1 at home this year, and the team is hoping that their return to Tucson for the first time in three weeks will play to their advantage over the weekend. “It’ll be nice to get back to our home court, to play in our conditions and our element,” Berkowitz said. “Our guys are happy to be back at home and we’ll look to use that hopefully for an advantage.”
Women are California-bound for nonconference play Heading to Los Angeles this weekend to face two unranked teams, Loyola Marymount University and California State University, Northridge, might be just what the doctor ordered for the No. 53 Arizona women’s tennis team, whose confidence was shaken after tough home losses to Pacific 10 Conference frontrunners Stanford and California last week. “We know we will have to play well, but I feel we will have a really good chance if we do,” said head coach Vicky
Maes. “Both Northridge and LMU have had good wins this year and, at this stage in the season, anything can happen.” Last weekend the Wildcats (10-6, 1-4 Pac-10 Conference) were plagued by anemic doubles play, losing all six matches. Against the Northridge Matadors (7-5, 1-3 Big West Conference) and the Loyola Lions (3-10, 0-2 West Coast Conference) Arizona needs to step up and perform. Despite a substantial loss column last weekend, sophomore Sarah Landsman’s win over the weekend brought her into the ITA rankings for the first time this season, entering at No. 84.
Sophomore Natasha Marks fell a little in the rankings but is still represented at the No. 105 spot in the country. With uncertainty in the No. 3 and 4 spots on the Wildcat roster, Maes is hoping for junior Jane Huh and sophomore Debora Castany to show what they are capable of in their next few contests. “It is crucial for Jane and Debora to hold their own, especially since they have less experience this year.” Maes said. “Either way, this weekend is a great opportunity for us to bounce back, so we just need to embrace that and play to win.”
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• friday, april 2, 2010 • arizona daily wildcat
Staff Picks
Alex Williams
Kevin Zimmerman
Sports writer
Bryan Roy
Assistant sports editor
Sports writer
NCAA softball: Arizona vs. ASU This season, Arizona football beat ASU 20-17. Arizona basketball beat ASU 77-58. What else did those two games have in common? They were both played in Tempe, two hours up the Interstate 10, where the Arizona softball team is in the midst of a three-game series with ASU. If the Devils can’t handle an above-average football team and an overachieving basketball team in their home city, what are they going to do when the nation’s No. 2 softball team comes to town? Arizona 2-0
In the 2009 season, the Wildcats cleaned up against the Sun Devils better than Tiger Woods cleaned up his cell phone inbox. But a new year brings new challenges. Each team has an improved pitching staff and the two squads have the top-scoring offenses in the land. ASU ace Hillary Bach has improved drastically, but is it fair to say Arizona’s Kenzie Fowler will perform up to her normal, 0.71 ERA standards? After all, she’s still a freshman. Tie 1-1
Not sure why they’re playing softball games during the Ander Monson book release party at Club Congress. This weekend’s Duel in the Desert can’t even hold the jock strap of the Duel in Miami and the debut filming of Jersey Shore II. Tension between The Situation and Snookie looks wire tight, like a Kenzie Fowler 98 mph softball.
ASU 2-0, The Situation 2-0
NCAA hoops: West Virginia vs. Duke Jon Scheyer has been at Duke for what seems like a decade, but this will be his first Final Four, even though he plays for coach Mike “Nobody can pronounce my name” Krzyzewski. Although 30 percent of Coach K’s seasons at Duke have resulted in a Final Four appearance, last weekend was the first time since 2004 that Duke won a tournament game against a team seeded higher than fourth in its region. West Virginia 86, Duke 73
Mountaineer head coach Bob Huggins isn’t the most likeable man; he’s about as friendly-looking as a 1930s gangster with his greased-back hairdo, and his shady dealings (not with weapons or drugs but with recruiting) fit the part. Duke isn’t a very likeable team either; how much more verbal fellatio must ESPN commentator Dick Vitale give the Blue Devils? Luckily, Dickie V. won’t be commentating for the CBS-owned telecast. Please, please let it be Mr. Gus Johnson. He gets buckets. Gus Johnson 75, Duke/West Virginia 0
If your eyes haven’t witnessed the mashup of Gus Johnson’s basketball commentary and a video of a dog humping a stuffed animal, do that before reading the rest of the newspaper. Or any other newspaper. It’s a life-changing two minutes of brilliant YouTube film — the only remaining tribute to the broadcasting legend after an evil CBS Corp brass took down Johnson’s soundboard. Unlike my fellow columnist, I’ll actually choose a team to win and take West Virginia. West Virginia 60, Duke 53
NCAA hoops: Butler vs. Michigan State What do Michigan State and West Virginia have in common? Both teams have lost their starting point guards to foot injuries for the rest of the tournament. What don’t they have in common? West Virginia is going to have another basketball game after Saturday’s Final Four game, while the Fighting Izzos are going to be on a plane back to East Lansing. Butler’s Brad Stevens will have a chance to be the youngest national champion coach since Branch McCracken won the 1940 championship at age 31 for Indiana. Butler 71, Michigan State 64
Michigan State 74, Butler 62
Think about a universe that makes college basketball players attend class on Fridays. You’re living in one right now. Since the Butler Bulldogs face Michigan State just 6 miles from their home campus, unfortunate students without three-day weekends are officially encouraged to attend classes. A suggestion: Eat enough White Castle burgers to call out sick. That’s about 11, the number of views it takes to fully appreciate the Gus Johnson video mash-up to a dog humping a stuffed animal. Butler 60, Michigan State 53
NCAA Tourney close to expansion
SOFTBALL
Arredondo, Lastrapes lead RBI count
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS INDIANAPOLIS — The NCAA appears to be on the verge of expanding the men’s basketball tournament to 96 teams. Insisting that nothing has been decided, NCAA vice president Greg Shaheen nonetheless outlined a detailed plan Thursday that included the logistics and timing of a 96-team tournament, how much time off the players would have and even revenue distribution. Shaheen said the NCAA looked at keeping the current 65-team field and expanding to 68 or 80 teams, but decided the bigger bracket was best fit logistically and financially. It would be played during the same time frame as the current three-week tournament and include first-round byes for 32 teams. Although the plan still needs to be approved by the Division I Men’s Basketball Committee and passed on to the board of directors, most of the details already seem to be in place. “We needed to make sure that we did everything possible to use the due diligence window to understand
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double for two RBIs. They were the only RBIs scored by a hitter outside the top-5 in the rotation. “When we get some production from the bottom half,” Candrea said, “we score a bunch of runs.” Chambers began the sixth inning with a homer, giving Arizona an eightrun lead. The Sun Devils dropped in two more scores in the bottom of the sixth as Katelyn Boyd hit a two-run shot to right field. But the Wildcats would hold on despite Fowler’s struggle to find the strike zone. She recorded only one strikeout on the evening. Arredondo and Lastrapes led the team with three RBIs each. “We still had some bad at-bats where it felt like we were guessing,” Candrea said. “Overall, I can’t complain. This is an endurance test; it’s not a sprint.”
2
Everyone can ooh and ah about Butler’s Cinderella story. There’s no denying that it’s a wonderful American Dream in the making, but how about Michigan State? Head coach Tom Izzo is maybe the most impeccable postseason coach, not to mention a good human being — he even did a phone interview with ESPN to deny the Oregon coaching vacancy in the middle of his team’s Final Four run! The Spartans will be too well-coached and too athletic for the Bulldogs. Sorry, America.
ourselves and understand what the future would hold,” Shaheen said. “So that’s what we’re doing, that’s the process we’re undertaking. We’ve been handling it every day for the last several months and years, as we studied for the benefit of the organization.” The men’s tournament last expanded in 2001, adding one team to the 64-team field that was set in 1985. The 96-team tournament would likely envelop the 32-team NIT, though Shaheen said no decision has been made on what to do with the NCAA’s other, independently operated season-ending tournament. The new format would start two days later than the current 65-team field because it would eliminate the Tuesday play-in game and would conclude on the same day, a Monday. It would be played at one fewer venue — again, the play-in game — and the NCAA says it would include no additional travel time for teams. The first-round games for the 64 non-bye teams would take place on Thursday and Friday, with the winners playing the top eight seeds in each region on Saturday and Sunday.
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Winners on Saturday would likely play again on Tuesday, and the Sunday winners on Wednesday. Those winners would then move on to the regionals, playing alternate days starting on Thursday. Shaheen said the NCAA hasn’t decided on whether to keep the same sites for second and first-round games or to make the midweek sites the same as the regionals. He also said the amount of time student-athletes would be out of school would be roughly the same as the current model, but teams that play in the opening round and keep winning would actually be out an entire week of school instead of just a few days. “On a 96-team basis — vs. the current 97 teams that the NCAA conducts through the championship and the NIT, for example — you have, on a side-by-side basis, a reduction in the travel time,” Shaheen said. Adding teams to the NCAA tournament could create some monumentally lopsided games, or seeds in the 30s and 90s playing each other. There might be less importance on the regular season and conference tournaments; the resume wouldn’t need to be padded so much if more teams get in. “I don’t see any watering down at all,” said Minnesota coach Tubby
Smith. “I think there are a number of teams playing in the NIT that could have gotten in, and I think there will be more people and more excitement with more teams in.” Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski said he would like to see regularseason and conference tournament champions get automatic bids to the NCAA tournament. “The regular season would mean something,” he said. “There would still be bubble teams and all that, but we would reward those teams accordingly. And I would still like the conference tournament champions. They make a lot of money and celebrate each conference. I think it’s a way of each conference celebrating their conference, which is a good thing.” Any plans to expand the tournament hinge on the NCAA’s $6 billion television deal with CBS. The 11-year deal, signed in 1999, has a mutual opt-out until July 31. The NCAA has already spoken with numerous networks about expansion, so the opt-out is at least on the table, and adding 32 more teams is certainly going to bring in more revenue. The proposal is strictly for the men’s tournament. Another NCAA committee is looking at whether to expand the women’s tournament or keep it in the current format.
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STUDENT RUN RADIO AND TV!
BROADCASTING 24/7 ON CHANNEL 3 AND CHANNEL 20 IN THE RESIDENCE HALLS.
2BD/ 1BA oN Adams/ Tyndall. Private yard with off street parking $900/mo. $895 deposit. w/d, newer kitchen. Available June1 843 E. Adams #2 call 240-2615 2BDRM. 3Blks To UofA. $950. Beautiful 1200Sq.ft. duplex. Granite counters, dishwasher, W/D, A/C, covered parking, private landscaped yard. Great location. No pets. Available July 1st. www.tarolaproperties.com 743-2060. 2BEDRooM DuPlEX. JusT north of campus behind UMC. $900/mo. 1421 E. Adams. Available June 10th. Call 798-3331 Peach Properties HM, Inc. www.peachprops.com 2BR DuPlEX W/cERAMic tile floors, dishwasher, washer, dryer, fenced yard &some off-street parking. $900/mo. 915 E. Elm St. Available August 6th. Call 798-3331 Peach Properties HM, Inc. www.peachprops.com 2BR iN WEsT University available July 6th $925/mo. Wood floors, fireplace &laundry on premises. 638 E. 4th St. #1 Call 798-3331 Peach Properties HM, Inc. www.peachprops.com 3BR/ 2BA, $1275/Mo, near UA campus, only 3yrs old, AC, washer/dryer, gated, www.UAoffcampus.com or 520-891-9043 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. 4Blocks To uofA 3BD 2BA. 1100sqft duplex, w/stylish, modern interior. Recent total remodel. All new appliances: D/W, W/D, stove, fridge, A/C. Maple laminate flooring. Large private lot, fenced yard. Cats ok. Owner managed. $1150-$1200/mo. Available June. 623-9565. For more info & 50photos, go to: http://www.pippelproperties.com/815
ABsoluTElY GREAT sPoTlEss furnished guesthouse. 2blks to UofA. A/C, W/D, Italian tile, full kitchen, large bath. 36x16 pool, extremely quiet & secure. Water paid. No pets. Available mid April. 885-1343 or 904-1587.
KAMP STUDENT RADIO STREAMING LIVE AT KAMP.ARIZONA.EDU
10
• friday, april 2, 2010 • arizona daily wildcat
AMAziNG WEsT uNiVERsiTY Guest House. $750. Highest quality architectural design. 750Sq.Ft., vaulted ceilings, fireplace, A/C, W/D, private professionally landscaped grounds. No pets. Available June 1st. 743-2060. www.tarolaproperties.com
!!!4BD 2BA on quiet street near Mountain prince, POOL (svc incl.) WD DW AC fenced yard tiled living area $1,400/mo by owner Alex 520-370-5448 avail Aug 1, pets ok
cHARMiNG 1BD, Pool, patio, utilities paid, free laundry. $475/mo. 3260046
!!!5Blks NoRTH of UofA Mountain/Lee 1BD $490. Available now. Month to month. No pets, quiet, familyowned, security patrolled. www.uofahousing.com 299-5020, 624-3080.
coMPlETElY REMoDElED 380sqfT back house. Evap., off street parking. $450/mo. Utilities paid. Available now. 2830 N Park Ave 520903-4353
!!NoW PRElEAsiNG 1,2,3,4&5bdrm units within walking distance to campus. www.PrestigiousUofArentals.com Call 331.8050 (owner/agent) to schedule showing appt.
HisToRic WEsT uNiVERsiTY Studio. $610 utilities included. Beautiful 1920’s architecture with wood floors, private patio, W/D. No pets. Available June 1st. www.tarolaproperties.com 743-2060. lARGE 2RooM sTuDio. 450sqft in small 5-plex, coined W/D, patio area, firepit, wall of built-ins, full kitchen. $375/mo. 2145 N Country Club #2. Owner/Agent 730-5625 lARGE sTuDios oNlY 6blocks from campus, 1125 N. 7th Ave. Walled yard, security gate, doors, windows, full bath, kitchen. Free wi/fi. Unfurnished, $370, lease. No pets. 9774106 sunstoneapts@aol.com luXuRY GuEsTHousE WiTH W/D, A/C, fenced yard, covered patio, available August 1st. Contact Mike at morgan@tucsonselect.com or 520954-7686. sAM HuGHEs 2Blocks UofA. Small studio, A/C, enclosed patio. $475/mo including utilities. 522 N. Olson 577-7773 PETS OK! sTuDio GuEsTHousE, fullY furnished, full kitchen, Pool, w/d, water included, concrete floors, ONLY $535 CALL REDI 520-623-5710 www.azredirentals.com ! 3BD 2BA EXTRA nice homes with A/C, skylights, walled yard, patios, all appliances. Available June 1. Walk or take Cattran to campus. 577-1310 or 834-6915 http://home.comcast.net/~ua4rent !!! BikE To cAMPus IN Aug 20101, 2, 3bdm, remodeled condos $650$1200! Within 1mi to UofA, A/C, Covered Parking, Pool, Fitness & Rec Ctr, Free Wifi and water/ trash. Most appl. Included. www.GoldenWestManagement.com toll free 866-545-5303 !!! uofA luXuRY RENTAls. 1,3,4bedroom homes for rent. Available August 2010. Contact 520-954-7686 or Morgan@tucsonselect.com for more info. !!!!! #1 4BR, 2BA red brick house. Large fenced yard, renovated and nicely maintained. W/D, Ref, DW. 310.497.4193 wildcatrentals@gmail.com !!!!! #1 ARizoNA Inn neighborhood. 2BR, 1.75BA and 1.5BA. Renovated and nicely maintained. Reserve now! 310.497.4193 wildcatrentals@gmail.com !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! MAGNificENT HoME... WALK TO THE UOFA! NEWLY REMODELED 4/5 BEDROOMS 3 BATH. TILE FLOORS, WIRELESS INTERNET. LOCATED IN THE SAM HUGHES NEIGHBORHOOD JUST BLOCKS FROM CAMPUS. AVAILABLE FOR NExT SEMESTER! THIS WON’T LAST! PHNE/TExT 520-404-6477. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!MoVE iN AuGusT 2010, BRAND NEW 4Bedroom, 2Bath house located in Sam Hughes Neighborhood on 3rd Street – the bike route direct to UA. $3000/month ($750/ bedroom). Washer/dryer, alarm system, zoned A/C, fenced back yard, off street parking, pets welcome. Reserve now for August 2010. No security deposit (o.a.c.). Call 747-9331. http://www.UniversityRentalinfo.com !!!!!!!!!!!!!AWEsoME BRAND NEW 5bedroom, 2bath house $3300/month ($660/ bedroom). Walking distance to UA. Zoned A/C, full size washer/dryer, alarm system, walk-in closets, fenced back yard, off-street parking, pets welcome. Quality living rents quick. Reserve now for August 2010. No security deposit (o.a.c.). Call 747-9331 http://www.UniversityRentalinfo.com !!!!!siGN uP now for Aug 2010– 2,3,4 &5bdm, NEWER homes! 2mi to UofA, A/C, Garages and all appl. included. www.GoldenWestManagement.com toll free 866-545-5303 !!!!4BR, 4BA MusT ABSOLUTELY SEE HOMES, Sam Hughes. Near UofA. Exclusive, Large LR. New Appliances. 2728 E. 5th St. Available May/June. Please call (520)400-8796.
!!REsERVE YouR 2,3, or 4 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 $900- $1700 AuG 2010– 1,2,3,4 & 5bdm, NEWER homes! all within 2mi to UofA, A/C, Garages and all appl. included. www.GoldenWestManagement.com toll free 866-545-5303 **3BR/ 2BA $1245 6/1; 2BR/ 2BA $945; $50/early DISCOUNT;1601 E. Glenn #2,#1; AC; DW; WD; Pets; Fence; morningdove@tutoringsolutions.net; 520-250-9014 1020 E. silVER sT $650 2BD/1BA Home $20 move in Yard/ washer&dryer hu’s 2wks free oac w/1yr lse Grant/Park Werth Realty 520-319-0753 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 1st. 743-2060. www.tarolaproperties.com 1BD HousE WiTH a/c, water paid, w/d, $600 ALSO 1bd house with carport, family rm, water included, w/d, fenced yard, covered patio $650 CALL REDI 520-623-5710 www.azredirentals.com 2440 N fAiR oAks #1 $695 2BD/1BA Newer home 2wks free oac w/1yr lse AC/ ceramic tile/ Yard Grant/Columbus Werth Realty 520-319-0753 2730 N EAsTGATE Dr $900 3BD/2BA Home 2wks free oac w/1yr lse 1200sqft/ AC/ Yard Glenn/Alvernon Werth Realty 520-319-0753 2764 N HAskEll #1 $850 3BD/2Ba Home AC/ Yard/ Washer& dryer 2wks free oac w/1yr lease Alvernon/Glenn Werth Realty 520-319-0753 2BEDRooM 2BATH HousE wood floors, 1000sqft, move in specials $695 ALSO 2Bedroom 2bath house, dual cooling, garage, den, 1100sqft, Italian tile $850 CALL REDI 520-623-5710 www.azredirentals.com 2BEDRooM iN sAM Hughes, fireplace, w/d, water included, a/c $950 ALSO 2Bedroom 2bath house 5blocks from UofA, Newly remodeled, jacuzzi tubs, wood floors, fireplace, 1500sqft, w/d, gated $1200 CALL REDI 520-6235710 www.azredirentals.com 2BR HousE WiTH den/ 3rd Bedroom. Dishwasher, microwave, washer& dryer. Fenced yard. A/C. Available June 10th. $1000/mo. 1701 E. Copper Call 798-3331 Peach Properties HM, Inc. www.peachprops.com 3/B 2 1/2BA HousE for rent. Pool in the back yard. 2 car garage. $1100/mo. Available May 1st. 520-6616162. 3635-3655 E Bellevue $475 1BD/ $650 2BD Ceramic tile/ Yard/ garbage disposal/ dishwasher in select units/ laundry onsite Speedway/Alvernon Werth Realty 520-319-0753 3BD 3BA TAkE a look at our exceptional floor plans all homes are uniquely designed and incld a garage call Casa Bonita 398-5738 www.casabonitarentals.com 3BD/ 2BA, NEWER 1518sqft house. Built in 2005 with 2-car garage, upgrades throughout with mountain views. Central location only 2.5miles from UofA. Beautiful tile throughout. Tiled, multihead shower in the Master. Contemporary open floorplan with spacious rooms. All appliances including washer and dryer are included. Available June 1. $1395 per month. Contact Amanda 559-360-4753. 3BDR/ 2BA HoME for rent- 10minutes from campus. All appliances including washer and dryer. Two car garage with fenced backyard. 1581sqft. constructed in 2002 $995 (1719 E. St. Bernadine) EMS Realty 544-2727 3BDRM 2BATH NEAR UMC/Arizona Inn. $1395. Beautiful walled in home with professionally maintained grounds, hardwood floors, W/D, dishwasher, covered parking and more. No pets. Available June 1st. $1495 for school year lease. 743-2060. www.tarolaproperties.com
3BEDRooM 1BATH 2Blocks north of campus, washer& dryer and swimming pool. $1075. d-n-b-properties.com or Bryan 907-3763. 3BEDRooM HousE iN Sam Hughes, Arizona rm, fireplace, w/d, wood floors $1150 ALSO 3Bedroom House 2car garage, fireplace, vaulted ceilings, walk in closets, w/d, $1500 CALL REDI 520-623-5710 www.azredirentals.com 3BEDRooM HousE WiTH fireplace, fenced yard, w/d, pets ok $875 ALSO 3Bedroom house with garage, fireplace, walled yard, w/d, dishwasher $965 CALL REDI 520-623-5710 www.azredirentals.com 3BR/ 2BA 1518sqfT House; Safe, Quiet Neighborhood; 3miles from UofA; Large Master bedroom and bath; Walled Backyard; W/D, Dishwasher; Community pool; 2-car garage, No pets/ smoking; Close to UofA shuttle and Mountain bike path. Available August 1. $1350/mo plus utilities. Contact Joni 970-728-4942. 3BR/ 2BA iNcluDEs dishwasher & Washer/ Dryer, some off-street parking, available August 6th for only $1195/mo. 1901 & 1909 N. Park Ave. 1915 N. Park Ave. also available July 10th. Call 798-3331 Peach Properties HM, Inc. www.peachprops.com 4-5BD 3BA NEWlY remodeled home. Upstairs studio w/hardwood floors, private bath &mountain views. Brand new A/C, large game room w/beamed ceilings, huge private back yard w/detached garage. $2,200/mo. Call John 520-429-0396
AVAilABlE NoW, WAlkiNG distance, 2bedroom, 1bath, built-in vanities, refrigerator, window covering, carport, water paid, $600/mo, flexible terms, 370-8588, leave message. BEAuTiful 4BD. MusT see! Remodeled. Hardwood floors, recently repainted, fireplace, high ceiling, all appliances. Available July 1. 885-5292, 841-2871. Great for serious students. 2040 E Spring. Corner of Spring& Olsen near Campbell &Grant. $2100/mo. BEAuTiful VAcATioN RENTAl available for short or long term rentals. Located near Pima and Alvernon. Visit www.lacasitatucson.com or call (520)326-2750. BikE To cAMPus iN Aug 2010– 2,3,4 &5bdm, NEWER homes! within 2mi to UofA, A/C, Garages and all appl. included. www.GoldenWestManagement.com toll free 866-545-5303 BikE To uofA- Adorable Red-Brick Bungalow just off Mountain & Water. 2Bed/ 1Ba w/bright & open floorplan, updated kitchen & bathroom, Ac, covered Parking, Washer/ Dryer, large Yard, $900/mo. Available 4/1/10 - call 520.647.4082 for showing
4BD 2,3BA Taking Reservations 1011 Superior locations as well as exceptional floor plans 0-8 blks from campus call Casa Bonita 398-5738 www.casabonitarentals.com 4BD/ 3BA HousE. Individual leases. $425/mo. Refundable security deposit. 8blocks away from Main Gate. All utilities included. 749-2012. Please leave message. Available as of May 17. 4BDR. 3BATH HousE Behind Gate. Glenn Campbell Area. Modern House Built In 2002. New Appliances and Carpet. Huge Master Bedroom. $550/ room $650/ Master Bedroom. Call Josh 818-451-6946 or via Email JoshWohl@gmail.com 4BEDRooM 2.5BATH House garage, w/d, stainless steel appliances, vaulted ceilings, open floor plan $1400 ALSO 4Bedroom House with designer kitchen with granite countertops, wood floors, Private pool, dual cooling ONLY $1400 CALL REDI 520-6235710 www.azredirentals.com 4BEDRooM 2BATH 6Blocks north of campus, washer& dryer and swimming pool. $1900. d-n-b-properties.com or Bryan 907-3763. 5801 E 33RD $1125 5BD/2BA home 2000sqft/ Yard/ New master cool/ 2car carport/ fireplace Golflinks/Craycroft Werth Realty 520-319-0753 5BD 3,4BA Take a look at our exceptional floor plans all homes are uniquely designed and lots of private parking call Casa Bonita 398-5738 www.casabonitarentals.com 5BD 4BA GRANiTE kitchen 2 fireplaces, entire place tiled, swimming pool. Sabino Canyon Rd. $1800/mo. Call 298-7426 5BD 5BA REsERVE for 10-11, great location, private parking, awesome floor plan call Casa Bonita 398-5738 www.casabonitarentals.com 5BEDRooM HousE 4Blocks to the UofA, w/d, walled yard, pets ok, $2000 ALSO 6Bedroom 3bath house 2400sqft, dual cooling, fireplace, wood floors, storage shed, also can be 4bedroom with a 2bedroom guesthouse $2400 CALL REDI 520-623-5710 www.azredirentals.com 5BEDRooM/ 3BATH AVAilABlE June 15th, pool, dishwasher, stack washer/dryer, ceramic tile floors &fenced yard. $1895/mo. 819 E. Alturas. Call 798-3331 Peach Properties HM, Inc. www.peachprops.com 6BD 4BA HousE $3000 7BD 4BA $3200 3BD 3BA $1800 Skylights ceiling fans. Close UMC campus. Cattran shopping safe. 248-1688 6BD 5BA WiTH larger homes available, 0-8 blks from campus, private parking, fireplace, private patios and plenty of parking. Reserve 10-11 call Casa Bonita 398-5738 www.casabonitarentals.com
cHARMiNG 2BD/ 1BTH Home 3miles to UofA/ UMC. Large enclosed yard and carport. Appliances include stove, refrig, dishwasher, washer and dryer. Avail 4/15/10. Call 240-6166 to view. DMT PRoPERTiEs PREMiER UofA rentals. 1,2,3,4,6 Bedroom homes. Available June & August. Close to campus, many amenities. Call Ilene 520-240-6487 HisToRic WEsT uNiVERsiTY 1bdrm. cottage. $650. 1920’s Santa Fe adobe with oak floors, fireplace, W/D, wonderful natural light and beautiful grounds. No pets. Available June 1st. www.tarolaproperties.com 7432060. HousE WiTH Pool. 3BDRM/2BA, 1.5 miles to campus. Pool service, garage. washer/dryer, covered patio. Available Aug. $1500/ month Call Lynn 831-320-3127. JEffERsoN PARk, TWo bedroom one bathroom with new flooring and paint. Large backyard and Arizona room. Washer/ Dryer/ Refrigerator/ Stove included, Off street parking. $750/mo and $750 deposit. Available immediately with deposit will hold until July/ August. Call Casa Vista Properties 520-742-1455 (1728 E. Seneca St.) NO PETS! one or Two Bedroom near campus in the Village at Tucson & 6th street starting at $750/mo with one month free 322-2940 or gmadrid@sebra.com RENTAls oNliNE fREE lisT WERTH REAlTY llc (520)319-0753 www.werthrealty.com sPEcTAculAR WEsT uNiVERsiTY home with designer architecture. $1150. Loft master bedroom, great room with 22Ft. vaulted ceilings, office/den, gourmet kitchen, A/C, maple floors, fireplace, W/D and much more. No pets. Available June 1st. 7432060. www.tarolaproperties.com
6Blocks fRoM uofA. Available August 1st. 3BD/ 2BA, 1800sqft, living room, dining room, den, fireplace, W/D, large fenced yard. $1400/mo. 751-4363 or 309-8207.
sTuNNiNG coMPlETElY REMoDElED 3BD +den, pool, spa, bbq, new appliances including washer/dryer. $1900/mo First/ River. 751-4363
7983 E EscAlANTE 2 $595 2BD/1BA Tri-Plex AC/ Washer&Dryer hu’s/ ceramic tile/ carpet $20 move in oac w/1yr lse Pantano/Escalante Werth Realty 520-319-0753
WAlk To cAMPus sam Hughes, 2,3,4 &5bdm, NEWER homes! within 1mi to UofA, A/C, Garages and all appl. included. www.GoldenWestManagement.com toll free 866-545-5303
Walk to uA campus! 2BD/1BA house with 2BD/1BA Guest house. Rent as 4BD or 2separate units... large walled private courtyard w/covered front & back patio. W/D, Ac & Swamp, ceiling fans, fireplace, & parking. $1600. No pets, smoking & Water PD. Avail. June 1st. 970708-3753. WAlk To uA campus! 2BD/1BA house with Large walled private courtyard and covered front & back patio. W/D, central AC/Evap cooling, ceiling fans, Fireplace $825, Water PD. Also 2BD/1BA attached guest house, w/ W/D, Evap. Cooling, appliances $750 all utilities paid. No pets/smoking. Avail June 1st. Bill 970-708-3753
Yes! 5BED/ 3full BATH Home1521 N. Park Ave- Built 2005. Perfect location - some util incl. Great Home! $2950/mon. 1yr lease. 8-1 to 7-31. call Jason@ 602.793.7685
GATEWAYATTUCSON.COM Text “Tucson” to 47464 for Fall Move-in Specials
lookiNG foR TWo roommates, 4BD 4BA. Non-smoking, house located 1mi from UofA, 2years old, details including rent given when called. 858-735-6475
Need one roommate in master planned community home $500 flat no surcharge for utilities- call for info (909)287-6667
4BRs Plus DEN, dishwasher, washer, dryer, exp. basic cable & HS Internet (from Cox). $1400/mo. 1017 N. 6th Ave. Available June 15th. Call 798-3331. Peach Properties HM, Inc. www.peachprops.com
cERTifiED PRofEssioNAl coMPuTER sERVicE A+, NETWoRk+ AND MicRosofT cERTifiED PRofEssioNAl. NETWoRk sEcuRiTY sPEciAlisT, cisco EXPERT. oVER 30YEARs EXPERiENcE. fREE ANTiViRus WiTH sERVicE. 520-795-3465
*Standard Rates Apply*
$8000 TAX cREDiT Now is the time to take advantage of the $8000 tax credit for new home buyers. Please call 1-888-712-4636 ext. 102 for information. 2BEDRooM/ 1BATH DARliNG bungalow across from UA at 1016 N Campbell. Upgraded kitchen, darling backyard, arizona room, tile, large front multipurpose room. $234,995. Call Pattie Martin 520-906-6445. Madera Realty & Mortgage.
!!-AA TYPiNG $1.50/PG. Laser printing, term papers, theses, dissertations, editing, grammar, punctuation, professional service, near campus. Fax: 326-7095. Dorothy 3275170.
ARizoNA EliTE clEANERs- We specialize in cleaning. We’ll clean your rental, home, investment property or Special Event. www.AzEliteCleaners.com Call 520-207-9699
NicE 2700sqfT HousE 345K Easy Univ Access 3Mi 5th and Columbus 12% Dn Owner will carry 940-0516, 321-4682, 850-6799 TWo Blocks NoRTH of UMC. Easy walking distance to UA. Large lot with plenty of parking & storage. 1640 E. Linden St. $219,000 csee@LPL.arizona.edu
ADoPTioN: loViNG PARENTs and their 9-year-old adopted daughter would love a baby brother or sister. Stay at home mom, professional dad. Expenses Paid. Please call Becky/ Mike 800-472-1835
arizona daily wildcat • friday, april 2, 2010 •
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The Flandrau is looking up!
2010 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
By Dave Green
4/02
Come to the
Flandrau Planetarium
reopening on Saturday April 3rd.
Join us at UA Science: Flandrau as we celebrate our reopening. See our new exhibits, spectacular mineral collection, and Treasures of the Queen: Minerals of Bisbee exhibition sponsored by the Freeport-McMoRan Foundation. Saturday planetarium shows are at 11am, 1, 3 and 7:30pm. Call for complete show schedule.
Admission is $7.50 for adults and $5 children. Children under 4 are free. For information call 520-621-7827 or visit http://uasciencecenter.org.
UA Science: Flandrau Starting April 3rd, open 7 days a week! Open Mon-Thu 10am-3pm, Fri-Sat 10am-9pm, Sun 12-5pm.
$2 off admission with UA CatCard.
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12
• friday, april 2, 2010 • arizona daily wildcat
M-golf tees off in Tempe
By Alex Williams ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT
The Arizona men’s golf team is set for its last regular-season tournament of the season, today’s ASU Thunderbird Invitational at Karsten Golf Course in Tempe. The Wildcats are still trying to exhibit consistent play from all five golfers on their scorecard. After winning the Braveheart Classic by 20 strokes, they finished dead last at the Southern Highlands Collegiate Masters. They went on to finish fourth at the National Invitational Tournament, but 10th at the Callaway Collegiate Match Play. “Consistency is something we’ve struggled with in the fifth spot,” said senior Rich Saferian, who will be playing in the last regular-season event of his career. For the second consecutive tournament, freshman Trent Redfern, who went 3-1 at last week’s match play tournament, will try his hand at the end of the lineup. “Hopefully Trent will be able to help us out with (the No. 5 spot),” Saferian said. This is the team’s final tune-up before the Pacific 10 Conference Championship, which is also held at Karsten Golf Course. All 10 teams in the conference are using this tournament as an opportunity to get familiar with the course, as well as the competition they will be facing. “We’re obviously always trying to win and put ourselves in a position to compete,” said junior Tarquin MacManus, the team’s No. 1 golfer. “If we can get anything else out of a tournament, that’s great — but competing is the main thing.” Arizona could be fighting for a postseason bid, as the NCAA Golf Championships are set up like the NCAA basketball tournaments — conference tournament winners get automatic bids, while the rest
Rodney Haas/Arizona Daily Wildcat
Arizona senior golfer Rich Saferian lines up a put during the Callaway Match Play Championship at Ritz-Carlton Golf Course on March 17. Saferian and the men’s golf team will compete in the ASU Thunderbird Invitational in Tempe this weekend.
of the field receives at-large bids. There are about 60 at-large spots up for grabs, and the Wildcats, ranked No. 42 in the latest Golfweek/Sagarin rankings, would appear to have
a firm grasp on one of them. Arizona State is the twotime defending champion in this event and is one of the favorites in the conference tournament, ranked at No. 11
in the Golfweek/Sagarin poll. No. 2 Stanford and No. 7 UCLA are the only Pac-10 teams in the top-10, but ASU and No. 15 Oregon are both in the top 20.
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NEW YORK — Dayton players danced at midcourt and then lingered on ladders as they cut down the nets at Madison Square Garden. Forgive these Flyers for taking extra time to soak it all in. They’re not as accustomed to trophy ceremonies as the North Carolina team they had just beaten. Marcus Johnson scored 20 points and Dayton denied last year’s national champs another title, topping the Tar Heels 79-68
Thursday night to win the NIT. “This game kind of is a capsule of our season,” coach Brian Gregory said. “Started off great, had some tough times and then just kind of fight through, and ended up very successful at the end.” Relying on depth, defense and some clutch 3-point shooting, the Flyers took home their first title in 42 years and handed North Carolina one more disheartening loss at the end of a lousy season. “It’s a tough feeling right
now, there’s no question about that. It’s been an unusual year for North Carolina basketball,” coach Roy Williams said, his eyes red and puffy as he spoke about his seniors. “I’ve lived a charmed life in the past, and this has been a little tougher. I’m so proud of our guys for coming to play in this National Invitation Tournament and playing so well up until today and getting us to this point. We just didn’t finish the job.” Reserve guard Paul Williams
added 16 points for No. 3 seed Dayton (25-12), which bounced back from a disappointing regular season of its own to win its third NIT title and first since 1968 under coach Don Donoher. Picked to win the Atlantic 10 Conference, the athletic and experienced Flyers faded late and missed the NCAA tournament before turning things around and finishing on a high note. “We struggled through the season. But being in the NIT, we stayed positive,”said tournament MVP Chris Johnson.
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