Daily WIldcat - August 29, 2011

Page 1

IN TODAY’S ISSUE SPORTS

NEWS

ARTS & LIFE

Catching up with former UA hoopster Budinger during lockout — 8

For those about to rush, we inform you — 2

Crude, lewd TV and why we love it — 8

DAILY WILDCAT

Monday, august , 

DAILYWILDCAT.COM

SERVING THE UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA SINCE 1899

More units, extra cost for some By Eliza Molk DAILY WILDCAT

Overachievers, beware: You may be in for an unpleasant surprise when the bursar’s bill arrives. The Excess Units Surcharge, enacted in 2005 by the Arizona Legislature, charges a per-unit fee to undergraduates who have not yet earned their degree and have completed 145 units or more. The surcharge is per semester and differs for residents and nonresidents. The legislative body in 2005 viewed students accumulating “unnecessary” and “excessive” course credits as “inefficient” progress toward baccalaureate degree attainment, according to Katie Paquet, associate vice president for public affairs and external relations for the Arizona Board of Regents. The sur-

charge was enacted so dollars appropriated by the state are maximized for students working toward degree attainment, Paquet explained. “The surcharge is a mechanism to offset lost state funding for these students,” she said. Alex Yang, an aerospace engineering senior slated to eventually pay the surcharge, said the policy sends “mixed signals” to students. This is because general education classes “supposedly diversify our education,” he said, which is why students like him and others chose to take extra classes. “I want to be more well-rounded with more subjects than just what I am required to study,” Yang said. “It (the policy) makes me think that it’s all about the money and not about the supposed inefficient use.”

Currently, 13 students who do not meet any of the policy’s exemptions are paying the surcharge. Elizabeth Acree, an enrollment manager at the Office of the Registrar, said that out of the handful of students who get “caught” in the policy, four or five will question it and want an explanation. In the scope of 39,000 students, she explained, that is “not a lot.” Acree said that the policy is often situational. There are times when students continue to take classes and don’t progress, she explained, but there are students who have legitimate reasons and often want to CREDIT, 2

HARDLY PARTY Survey shows steady decline in level of student alcohol use By Michelle A. Weiss DAILY WILDCAT

T

he number of alcoholic drinks consumed by the average UA student has fallen considerably since 2002, according to the results of this year’s Health and Wellness survey. In 2002, survey results indicated that the average student had 7.6 drinks per week. In the spring of 2011, the number dropped to 4.3, said David Salafsky, director of Health Promotion and Preventive Services. “I think alcohol is one of those things that people think, ‘It’s never going to change, students are always going to drink,’” Salafsky said. “I think to some extent that’s probably true.” This year does not appear to be an outlier either. According to Salafsky, the results indicate a “significant reduction year after year” over the last decade. This year’s data showed that 83 percent of UA students party one night per week or less. “I would’ve thought it would be more,”

4.3

said Ella Moore, a nutritional sciences sophomore. She said the University of Arizona Police Department is strict, so she doesn’t go to house parties anymore. “They (UAPD) are crazy,” Moore said. Rachel Low, a marketing freshman, said she could believe that drinking has dropped because of the strict drinking and driving laws. The survey also indicated that 98 percent of UA students prefer to date someone who drinks moderately or doesn’t drink at all. “I wouldn’t want to date an alcoholic but I don’t care if they drink,” Moore said. While alcohol is a popular college

27%

topic, so is sex. Salafsky said for 2011, 66 percent of UA students who have had sexual intercourse in the past year said they usually or always use a condom. The survey also takes into account relationship status. Furthermore, 79 percent of UA students had one or no sexual partners. “College students, by in large, are a pretty healthy population,” Salafsky said. However, he thinks the two most significant factors facing students in terms of their health are things related to alcohol and mental health, he said. “If we look at the leading causes of death among college students, number one is motor vehicle accidents, of course we all know alcohol plays a role in that,” he said. “And number two is suicide.” Campus Health Service was awarded SURVEY, 2

PERCENTAGE OF UA

STUDENTS SUFFERING FROM ANXIETY OR DEPRESSION

66% PERCENTAGE OF UA

NUMBER OF DRINKS THE AVERAGE UA STUDENT HAS PER WEEK

STUDENTS WHO USE CONDOMS REGULARLY

UA store matches prices on textbooks By Amer Taleb DAILY WILDCAT

Textbook suppliers catering to UA students may have met their match in the UofA Bookstore. A revision to the bookstore’s Lowest Price Guarantee pits the bookstore’s price-matching service against online retailers in addition to UA-area bookstores. After buying a textbook from the bookstore, students have one week to find a cheaper price online and collect the difference in cash. Verification of the lower price can be printed or shown to the cashier via a mobile device. Peer-to-peer selling is excluded and books must have the same cover and be of the same condition. Only required or recommended textbooks are eligible. “It’s pretty straight forward,” said Kurtis Durfey, marketing specialist for the UofA Bookstore. Durfey said the service was introduced to tie together the low prices of online merchants without forcing students to wait for a mail arrival or pay for shipping. Rachel Underwood, a junior studying Spanish, said the service would not impact her significantly because she buys most of her textbooks through online peer-to-peer selling. Shopping at the bookstore is a last resort, she said. “Their prices are ludicrously high and their buy-back rates are ludicrously low,” she said. Durfey emphasized that the bookstore is working in the interest of students, not against themBOOKSTORE, 2

SOURCE: 2011 HEALTH AND WELLNESS SURVEY

Quickies >> Stormy weather: Hurricane Irene hit the East Coast this weekend. According to news outlets, the storm left 21 dead and 4.5 million without power.

>>Coming to newstands: The Daily Wildcat’s football season preview guide publishes Thursday. Be sure to pick one up.

Weather

Online

Eco

For up-to-theminute weather data check out dailywildcat.com

For breaking news, in-depth analysis, and multimedia coverage of the biggest news stories check out dailywildcat.com

Please help keep Tucson clean by recycling your copy of the Daily Wildcat

106 / 79 Isolated T-storms

Tomorrow

104 / 80 Partly Cloudy


NEWS •

MONDAY, AUGUST

29, 2011

DAILY WILDCAT •

2

Rushing in: Frats open for new recruits About 1,000 men interested in joining a fraternity are slated to rush this week, according to Michael Colletti, Interfraternity Council president. Unlike its sorority counterpart, men’s rush is informal and those rushing can visit any of the 20 Interfraternity Council chapters they are most interested in joining. Colletti said he recommends men rushing visit a larger amount of chapters at the beginning of the week, then whittle it down toward the end. Colletti said he is expecting about 100 more men to rush this year than last year because of the council’s more innovative marketing strategy.

BOOKSTORE

FROM PAGE 1

Book prices and buy back rates are dependent on a number of factors, including publisher pricing and student enrollment. “We’re not a private enterprise that’s leasing the space on campus and sending revenue to the shareholders in Connecticut,” he said. “Everything we do is with the benefit of the student in mind.” The bookstore is a division of Student Affairs and exists to serve the student population, Durfey said. After covering costs like operating, labor and inventory, the rest of the money is circulated back into campus. The bookstore annually contributes more than $790,000 to support the Associated Students of the University of Arizona and student clubs and organizations and nearly $15,000 for UA student and bookstore employee scholarships. Underwood said she appreciates the work the bookstore does for campus, but would like to see the detailed documents for herself.

For more info

On IFC rush, please visit arizonagreek.orgsync.com/org/ifc/ rush

The council put table toppers in the Student Union Memorial Center, flyers in residence halls and classrooms and a banner on the mall. “We are trying new things this year to reach more eyes and get more men interested in registering (to rush),” he said. The council’s new academic policy, which requires that all potential members have at least a 3.0 cumulative

“They can’t just say ‘it goes back to the university’ and not tell you where,” she said. “For all I know they could be paying the $2 million to our basketball coach.” Kayleigh Orozco, a sophomore studying pre-physiology and psychology, said she shops at the bookstore because it’s convenient and she knows they will have what she wants. Orozco said she appreciates the new guarantee and would like to see the bookstore contribute more money to lowering the cost of tuition through scholarships and other services. “The campus is already nice,” she said. “We need lower tuition.” Arizona Bookstore, a privately owned business located at 845 N. Park Ave, offers price matching with local competitors, but not online retailers. Mike Lammers, the store’s manager, said he was not worried about losing business to the UofA Bookstore as a result of their revision. Arizona Bookstore has excellent customer service and students appreciate it, he added. Lammers said Arizona Bookstore tries to beat

high school grade point average or a 2.5 cumulative college GPA after 12 or more college credits, was another way to increase membership, according to Colletti. Rush registration cost $10 and all proceeds go to the Emerge Center Against Domestic Abuse. The last day of registration was Sunday, at which point the fee increased to $20. Rush events vary from chapter to chapter, because each specific chapter is responsible for creating their own events. Those who receive bids, or invitations to join fraternal organizations, have up to a year to accept it. Kyle McGillicuddy, a political science junior and member of the Sigma

the UofA Bookstore’s on prices but could not provide specific numbers. He said Arizona Bookstore will consider online price matching in the future. “People forget about that bookstore,” Orozco said. “The customer service is really good, but it’s on the outskirts of campus and people don’t go there as much.” The UofA Bookstore, however, retains the right to “change the details of this offer at any time,” according to the bookstore website. Durfey said the reservation is in place to add improvements to things like customer service. Students should not worry about the service being repealed because of a loss of money by the bookstore, he said. Durfey said it was too early to tell how the service would affect revenue, but he expects the bookstore to at least break even. He said success will be determined by the number of students that take advantage of the guarantee. “I encourage you to price shop, especially now with this new offer,” Durfey said. “There’s really no reason to go anywhere else.”

Chi fraternity, said fraternities are a great “first step” to get involved on campus. “Fraternities open doors,” he said. “Between leadership, academics and intramural sports, you can get as involved as possible.” Scott Lampert, an economics junior, said his fraternity, Phi Kappa Tau, has been his family for the past two years and that the members are the “greatest group of guys” he has met in his life. “The best things that have happened in college are because of this fraternity,” he said. Men interested in rushing attended a pre-rush event on Aug. 25 on the UA Mall. Different fraternities tabled the event and acquainted themselves with

SURVEY

a federal grant through Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration on Aug. 1, Salafsky said. The three-year grant is meant to help prevent suicide and related risk factors on campus, he said. “I think one of the things we’ve seen over time is really a growing need for mental health services,” Salafsky said. “I know our Counseling and Psychological Services staff here at Campus Health has increased over the year to help meet that need.” In regard to the survey, 27 percent of students indicated they had anxiety or depression. Of those students, 46 percent indicated they had not been diagnosed with anxiety or depression, he said. “There’s obviously some issues there and we want to try to address those better,” Salafsky said. This is one of the things Campus Health wants to target by using the grant, he said. Salafsky said he feels confident in the results of the survey. For 2011,

there was a sample size of 2,479 respondents. “A lot of people look at the fact that U of A is 39,000 students, ‘How can 2,400 students represent that?’” Salafsky said. The answer is that classes are chosen at random, rather than picking a specific day of the week or targeting a particular college to survey, he said. The selection methodology is at random. “Our sample size is quite large,” Salafsky said. The data is not only used by Campus Health, but they also prepare reports and provide the data to those interested in the health needs of the population, he said. “A great thing about the data is it brings people together to work on these issues and try to make the student experience a better one,” Salafsky said.

MEXICAN FOOD

HAPPY HOUR 3-6 PM

Get Even Better Makeup SPF 15 in your shade choice plus more of Clinique’s most talked-about beauty essentials. Free with your purchase of $21.50 or more. A $60.00 value.

TECATE AND TECATE LIGHT $2 DRAFTS $1.50

Visit the Clinique Counter in UA BookStores, SUMC. Through September 3 520-626-7519 | uabookstores.arizona.edu

BELLEVUE COLUMBUS

F O R

Visit health.arizona.edu/main.htm or call Campus Health Service at 520621-6490.

Molina’s Midway

Have you tried makeup that erases the need for makeup? It’s Clinique Bonus.

T I P S

potential members. Alex Paffenbarger, a visual communications freshman, said he was interested in joining a fraternity because most of the men in his family had done so. He said he was most interested in joining Phi Gamma Delta because his grandfather was one. “It’s tradition,” Paffenbarger said. Although many men planning to rush are freshmen, one does not have to be a freshman in order to rush. TJ Lundstrom, an aerospace engineering sophomore, said he did not rush last year because he did not know what it was “all about.” Now that he already has friends in fraternities, he explained, he realized Greek Life is “a good way to meet people.”

For more info

FROM PAGE 1

S T A Y I N G

SPEEDWAY

Located at� SWAN

DAILY WILDCAT

BELVEDERE

By Eliza Molk

1138 N Belvedere Tucson, AZ 85712 (520) 325-9957

S A F E

Have a pharmacy related question or concern? Call 621-6516, or stop by Campus Health. Our friendly pharmacy staff is here to help.

www.health.arizona.edu

Appointments: 621-9202 BURSAR’S ACCOUNT ALWAYS ACCEPTED!

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 TODAY’S ISSUE SPORTS

NEWS

ARTS & LIFE

Catching up with former UA hoopster Budinger during lockout — 8

For those about to rush, we inform you — 2

Crude, lewd TV and why we love it — 8

DAILY WILDCAT

Monday, august , 

DAILYWILDCAT.COM

SERVING THE UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA SINCE 1899

More units, extra cost for some By Eliza Molk DAILY WILDCAT

Overachievers, beware: You may be in for an unpleasant surprise when the bursar’s bill arrives. The Excess Units Surcharge, enacted in 2005 by the Arizona Legislature, charges a per-unit fee to undergraduates who have not yet earned their degree and have completed 145 units or more. The surcharge is per semester and differs for residents and nonresidents. The legislative body in 2005 viewed students accumulating “unnecessary” and “excessive” course credits as “inefficient” progress toward baccalaureate degree attainment, according to Katie Paquet, associate vice president for public affairs and external relations for the Arizona Board of Regents. The sur-

charge was enacted so dollars appropriated by the state are maximized for students working toward degree attainment, Paquet explained. “The surcharge is a mechanism to offset lost state funding for these students,” she said. Alex Yang, an aerospace engineering senior slated to eventually pay the surcharge, said the policy sends “mixed signals” to students. This is because general education classes “supposedly diversify our education,” he said, which is why students like him and others chose to take extra classes. “I want to be more well-rounded with more subjects than just what I am required to study,” Yang said. “It (the policy) makes me think that it’s all about the money and not about the supposed inefficient use.”

Currently, 13 students who do not meet any of the policy’s exemptions are paying the surcharge. Elizabeth Acree, an enrollment manager at the Office of the Registrar, said that out of the handful of students who get “caught” in the policy, four or five will question it and want an explanation. In the scope of 39,000 students, she explained, that is “not a lot.” Acree said that the policy is often situational. There are times when students continue to take classes and don’t progress, she explained, but there are students who have legitimate reasons and often want to CREDIT, 2

HARDLY PARTY Survey shows steady decline in level of student alcohol use By Michelle A. Weiss DAILY WILDCAT

T

he number of alcoholic drinks consumed by the average UA student has fallen considerably since 2002, according to the results of this year’s Health and Wellness survey. In 2002, survey results indicated that the average student had 7.6 drinks per week. In the spring of 2011, the number dropped to 4.3, said David Salafsky, director of Health Promotion and Preventive Services. “I think alcohol is one of those things that people think, ‘It’s never going to change, students are always going to drink,’” Salafsky said. “I think to some extent that’s probably true.” This year does not appear to be an outlier either. According to Salafsky, the results indicate a “significant reduction year after year” over the last decade. This year’s data showed that 83 percent of UA students party one night per week or less. “I would’ve thought it would be more,”

4.3

said Ella Moore, a nutritional sciences sophomore. She said the University of Arizona Police Department is strict, so she doesn’t go to house parties anymore. “They (UAPD) are crazy,” Moore said. Rachel Low, a marketing freshman, said she could believe that drinking has dropped because of the strict drinking and driving laws. The survey also indicated that 98 percent of UA students prefer to date someone who drinks moderately or doesn’t drink at all. “I wouldn’t want to date an alcoholic but I don’t care if they drink,” Moore said. While alcohol is a popular college

27%

topic, so is sex. Salafsky said for 2011, 66 percent of UA students who have had sexual intercourse in the past year said they usually or always use a condom. The survey also takes into account relationship status. Furthermore, 79 percent of UA students had one or no sexual partners. “College students, by in large, are a pretty healthy population,” Salafsky said. However, he thinks the two most significant factors facing students in terms of their health are things related to alcohol and mental health, he said. “If we look at the leading causes of death among college students, number one is motor vehicle accidents, of course we all know alcohol plays a role in that,” he said. “And number two is suicide.” Campus Health Service was awarded SURVEY, 2

PERCENTAGE OF UA

STUDENTS SUFFERING FROM ANXIETY OR DEPRESSION

66% PERCENTAGE OF UA

NUMBER OF DRINKS THE AVERAGE UA STUDENT HAS PER WEEK

STUDENTS WHO USE CONDOMS REGULARLY

UA store matches prices on textbooks By Amer Taleb DAILY WILDCAT

Textbook suppliers catering to UA students may have met their match in the UofA Bookstore. A revision to the bookstore’s Lowest Price Guarantee pits the bookstore’s price-matching service against online retailers in addition to UA-area bookstores. After buying a textbook from the bookstore, students have one week to find a cheaper price online and collect the difference in cash. Verification of the lower price can be printed or shown to the cashier via a mobile device. Peer-to-peer selling is excluded and books must have the same cover and be of the same condition. Only required or recommended textbooks are eligible. “It’s pretty straight forward,” said Kurtis Durfey, marketing specialist for the UofA Bookstore. Durfey said the service was introduced to tie together the low prices of online merchants without forcing students to wait for a mail arrival or pay for shipping. Rachel Underwood, a junior studying Spanish, said the service would not impact her significantly because she buys most of her textbooks through online peer-to-peer selling. Shopping at the bookstore is a last resort, she said. “Their prices are ludicrously high and their buy-back rates are ludicrously low,” she said. Durfey emphasized that the bookstore is working in the interest of students, not against themBOOKSTORE, 2

SOURCE: 2011 HEALTH AND WELLNESS SURVEY

Quickies >> Stormy weather: Hurricane Irene hit the East Coast this weekend. According to news outlets, the strom left 21 dead and 4.5 million without power.

>>Coming to newstands: The Daily Wildcat’s football season preview guide publishes Thursday. Be sure to pick one up.

Weather

Online

Eco

For up-to-theminute weather data check out dailywildcat.com

For breaking news, in-depth analysis, and multimedia coverage of the biggest news stories check out dailywildcat.com

Please help keep Tucson clean by recycling your copy of the Daily Wildcat

106 / 79 Isolated T-storms

Tomorrow

104 / 80 Partly Cloudy


NEWS •

MONDAY, AUGUST

29, 2011

DAILY WILDCAT •

2

Rushing in: Frats open for new recruits About 1,000 men interested in joining a fraternity are slated to rush this week, according to Michael Colletti, Interfraternity Council president. Unlike its sorority counterpart, men’s rush is informal and those rushing can visit any of the 20 Interfraternity Council chapters they are most interested in joining. Colletti said he recommends men rushing visit a larger amount of chapters at the beginning of the week, then whittle it down toward the end. Colletti said he is expecting about 100 more men to rush this year than last year because of the council’s more innovative marketing strategy.

BOOKSTORE

FROM PAGE 1

Book prices and buy back rates are dependent on a number of factors, including publisher pricing and student enrollment. “We’re not a private enterprise that’s leasing the space on campus and sending revenue to the shareholders in Connecticut,” he said. “Everything we do is with the benefit of the student in mind.” The bookstore is a division of Student Affairs and exists to serve the student population, Durfey said. After covering costs like operating, labor and inventory, the rest of the money is circulated back into campus. The bookstore annually contributes more than $790,000 to support the Associated Students of the University of Arizona and student clubs and organizations and nearly $15,000 for UA student and bookstore employee scholarships. Underwood said she appreciates the work the bookstore does for campus, but would like to see the detailed documents for herself.

For more info

On IFC rush, please visit arizonagreek.orgsync.com/org/ifc/ rush

The council put table toppers in the Student Union Memorial Center, flyers in residence halls and classrooms and a banner on the mall. “We are trying new things this year to reach more eyes and get more men interested in registering (to rush),” he said. The council’s new academic policy, which requires that all potential members have at least a 3.0 cumulative

“They can’t just say ‘it goes back to the university’ and not tell you where,” she said. “For all I know they could be paying the $2 million to our basketball coach.” Kayleigh Orozco, a sophomore studying pre-physiology and psychology, said she shops at the bookstore because it’s convenient and she knows they will have what she wants. Orozco said she appreciates the new guarantee and would like to see the bookstore contribute more money to lowering the cost of tuition through scholarships and other services. “The campus is already nice,” she said. “We need lower tuition.” Arizona Bookstore, a privately owned business located at 845 N. Park Ave, offers price matching with local competitors, but not online retailers. Mike Lammers, the store’s manager, said he was not worried about losing business to the UofA Bookstore as a result of their revision. Arizona Bookstore has excellent customer service and students appreciate it, he added. Lammers said Arizona Bookstore tries to beat

high school grade point average or a 2.5 cumulative college GPA after 12 or more college credits, was another way to increase membership, according to Colletti. Rush registration cost $10 and all proceeds go to the Emerge Center Against Domestic Abuse. The last day of registration was Sunday, at which point the fee increased to $20. Rush events vary from chapter to chapter, because each specific chapter is responsible for creating their own events. Those who receive bids, or invitations to join fraternal organizations, have up to a year to accept it. Kyle McGillicuddy, a political science junior and member of the Sigma

the UofA Bookstore’s on prices but could not provide specific numbers. He said Arizona Bookstore will consider online price matching in the future. “People forget about that bookstore,” Orozco said. “The customer service is really good, but it’s on the outskirts of campus and people don’t go there as much.” The UofA Bookstore, however, retains the right to “change the details of this offer at any time,” according to the bookstore website. Durfey said the reservation is in place to add improvements to things like customer service. Students should not worry about the service being repealed because of a loss of money by the bookstore, he said. Durfey said it was too early to tell how the service would affect revenue, but he expects the bookstore to at least break even. He said success will be determined by the number of students that take advantage of the guarantee. “I encourage you to price shop, especially now with this new offer,” Durfey said. “There’s really no reason to go anywhere else.”

Chi fraternity, said fraternities are a great “first step” to get involved on campus. “Fraternities open doors,” he said. “Between leadership, academics and intramural sports, you can get as involved as possible.” Scott Lampert, an economics junior, said his fraternity, Phi Kappa Tau, has been his family for the past two years and that the members are the “greatest group of guys” he has met in his life. “The best things that have happened in college are because of this fraternity,” he said. Men interested in rushing attended a pre-rush event on Aug. 25 on the UA Mall. Different fraternities tabled the event and acquainted themselves with

SURVEY

a federal grant through Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration on Aug. 1, Salafsky said. The three-year grant is meant to help prevent suicide and related risk factors on campus, he said. “I think one of the things we’ve seen over time is really a growing need for mental health services,” Salafsky said. “I know our Counseling and Psychological Services staff here at Campus Health has increased over the year to help meet that need.” In regard to the survey, 27 percent of students indicated they had anxiety or depression. Of those students, 46 percent indicated they had not been diagnosed with anxiety or depression, he said. “There’s obviously some issues there and we want to try to address those better,” Salafsky said. This is one of the things Campus Health wants to target by using the grant, he said. Salafsky said he feels confident in the results of the survey. For 2011,

there was a sample size of 2,479 respondents. “A lot of people look at the fact that U of A is 39,000 students, ‘How can 2,400 students represent that?’” Salafsky said. The answer is that classes are chosen at random, rather than picking a specific day of the week or targeting a particular college to survey, he said. The selection methodology is at random. “Our sample size is quite large,” Salafsky said. The data is not only used by Campus Health, but they also prepare reports and provide the data to those interested in the health needs of the population, he said. “A great thing about the data is it brings people together to work on these issues and try to make the student experience a better one,” Salafsky said.

MEXICAN FOOD

HAPPY HOUR 3-6 PM

Get Even Better Makeup SPF 15 in your shade choice plus more of Clinique’s most talked-about beauty essentials. Free with your purchase of $21.50 or more. A $60.00 value.

TECATE AND TECATE LIGHT $2 DRAFTS $1.50

Visit the Clinique Counter in UA BookStores, SUMC. Through September 3 520-626-7519 | uabookstores.arizona.edu

BELLEVUE COLUMBUS

F O R

Visit health.arizona.edu/main.htm or call Campus Health Service at 520621-6490.

Molina’s Midway

Have you tried makeup that erases the need for makeup? It’s Clinique Bonus.

T I P S

potential members. Alex Paffenbarger, a visual communications freshman, said he was interested in joining a fraternity because most of the men in his family had done so. He said he was most interested in joining Phi Gamma Delta because his grandfather was one. “It’s tradition,” Paffenbarger said. Although many men planning to rush are freshmen, one does not have to be a freshman in order to rush. TJ Lundstrom, an aerospace engineering sophomore, said he did not rush last year because he did not know what it was “all about.” Now that he already has friends in fraternities, he explained, he realized Greek Life is “a good way to meet people.”

For more info

FROM PAGE 1

S T A Y I N G

SPEEDWAY

Located at� SWAN

DAILY WILDCAT

BELVEDERE

By Eliza Molk

1138 N Belvedere Tucson, AZ 85712 (520) 325-9957

S A F E

Have a pharmacy related question or concern? Call 621-6516, or stop by Campus Health. Our friendly pharmacy staff is here to help.

www.health.arizona.edu

Appointments: 621-9202 BURSAR’S ACCOUNT ALWAYS ACCEPTED!

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


3

NEWS •

• DAILY WILDCAT

MONDAY, AUGUST

29, 2011

Arizon� Dail� Wildca�

Monda� Meg� Marke� (520) 795-3922 2513 N. Campbell Ave Mon - Sat 11am-9:30pm

10% STUDENT

DISCOUNT

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CHRIS SEWARD/ MCT

Floodwaters surround a pickup truck on Highway 55 outside New Bern, N.C., in the aftermath of Hurricane Irene on Saturday.

Irene causes flooding, outages Hurricane hits East Coast hard, but not as severely as some feared MCCLATCHY TRIBUNE

NEW YORK — Already a killer storm, Irene sloshed through the New York metropolitan area Sunday, briefly flooding parts of the city and severing power to a million people but not provoking the doomsday urban disaster that had been feared. Diminished to a tropical storm and racing to its own demise in New England and Canada, Irene killed at least 14 people in six states. More than 4.5 million customers lost power along the East Coast and well inland. Initial property damage estimates ranged up to $7 billion. And it was not over yet. Irene dumped immense amounts of rain on a region already saturated by summer downpours. Many communities in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, upstate New York, Connecticut, Vermont and elsewhere endured life-threatening flash floods and toppling trees. Authorities warned of more to come, and they begged residents not to become complacent. It takes some time for rain runoff to accumulate, they said, tree roots

were weakening in the over-moist soil, and the danger will not end for days. “Stay inside,” Gov. Chris Christie told New Jersey residents. “The real issue that we’re going to have to deal with now is flooding. We’re going to experience major flooding. Some rivers haven’t crested yet, and it’s still raining.” Christie noted at least 300 road closures and obstructions across his state, though he said the New Jersey Turnpike and bridges were clear and that tree-clearing equipment was on its way. In New York City, ocean surf invaded some beachside communities, and both the East River and the Hudson River overtopped their banks, but the resulting floods were not major and most receded quickly. At the same time, numerous waterborne rescues were necessary in Staten Island, Westchester County and other parts of the area. “It was pretty scary at four in the morning when I was woken up by the wind, but other than that, things don’t seem so bad,” said Nora Flaherty of Brooklyn. “I’m glad people took this seriously. Better safe than sorry.” By midday, with the rain coming to an end, she and many other New Yorkers ventured outside to inspect their surroundings and walk their dogs. In the Clinton Hill area near Brooklyn

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pursue their academic career by learning as much as they can. There are eight exemptions, which include things like degree programs that require credit hours above the “credit hour threshold,” credits earned in the pursuit of up to two baccalaureate degrees, credits transferred from a private institution of higher education or from an institution of higher education in another state and credits

Heights, little damage was evident, though the basement of some brownstone townhouses flooded. Residents reported two to three inches of water in their apartments, saying there would have been more if they hadn’t created sandbag dams at the entrances. Young children in raincoats and boots stomped through puddles, laughing as they were blown about in the wind, and life began returning to normal in other ways. The New York Stock Exchange planned to open for business as usual Monday and, consequently, the Men’s Wearhouse store near Wall Street re-opened for business Sunday. “The city and the state did a phenomenal job of getting everyone ready and were very forceful in terms of recommending evacuations, especially from the low-lying areas — I’m very happy about that,” said Scott Schoneman, a New York resident who works in the financial industry. “And the storm itself, it didn’t seem to be as bad as they were predicting.” Along Irene’s path, the death toll was expected to increase, but authorities said it could have been much worse. The evacuation of at least 2.3 million coastal residents — and other precautions — “dramatically reduced risk to life,” Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said after briefing President Barack Obama.

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Perspectives

Daily Wildcat

• Page 4

Perspectives Editor: Storm Byrd • 520.621.7581 • letters@wildcat.arizona.edu

Women’s Equality Day heightens everyday standards Kristina Bui Daily Wildcat

I

f, like me, you were too busy celebrating the end of the first week of the semester to notice, President Barack Obama issued an official proclamation on Thursday. We should have pulled out the party hats, you guys. Obama proclaimed it: Friday was Women’s Equality Day. Oh, gosh. How terribly sad. We missed it. What will we do on the 364 other days of the year? In the interest of fairness, you can’t accuse just the Obama administration of quiet, hollow gesturing. Every president since 1971, the year Rep. Bella Abzug pushed Congress to pass legislation designating Aug. 26 as Women’s Equality Day, has published a proclamation for it. Way to ride Abzug’s coattails, dudes. According to Obama’s proclamation, “the 19th Amendment to the United States Constitution tore down the last formal barrier to women’s enfranchisement in our nation and empowered America’s women to have their voices heard in the halls of power.” Aug. 26 marks the anniversary of the 19th Amendment, giving women the right to vote. On the 91st anniversary of this day, Obama’s proclamation stated, “We are working to ensure that womenowned businesses can compete in the marketplace, that women are not discriminated against in health care, and that we redouble our efforts to bring an end to sexual assault on college campuses.”

“Thanks for the shiny proclamation, Mr. President. It’s not as meaningless as we think it is, but it’s also not as true as we’d like it to be.”

We are working, still. That’s the part to keep in mind. Despite tearing down the last “formal barrier to women’s enfranchisement,” women still earn less than men do. Unrestricted access to safe abortion and contraceptives is still limited in many states, including Arizona. Sexual assault on college campuses is a legitimate issue, but so is sexual assault anywhere. The emptiness of the Women’s Equality Day proclamation should not distract from the Obama administration’s bigger efforts, such as the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act and the creation of the Council on Women and Girls. The proclamation should have been treated as a reminder of achievements such as these, of how far we’ve come through history. It should also serve as a reminder of how much ground there is left to cover. In fall 2008, 55 percent of students enrolled at universities nationwide were female, according to data collected by the U.S. Census Bureau. In 2009, 29.9 million women ages 25 and older had a bachelor’s degree or better. Only 28.7 million men did. Women also had more high school diplomas and associate and master’s degrees. However, more men had professional or doctoral degrees than women. Women still earn 77 cents to every dollar earned by men. Thanks for the shiny proclamation, Mr. President. It’s not as meaningless as we think it is, but it’s also not as true as we’d like it to be. Women’s Equality Day is one day of many on which we have to honor what has been accomplished by acknowledging the amount of work that’s left to be done. If Women’s Equality Day is the one day of the year for recognizing milestones like the 19th Amendment, then the other 364 days we have left should strive to be as life-changing as Aug. 26. What’s done is good. But it’s not good enough.

Brewer unworthy of Rosie, diminishes empowerment problem, thought it was a good idea to cut AHCCCS coverage late last year, including coverage for people in need of certain transplants. While this action was reversed as of Miki Jennings April 1 and transplant funding is now Daily Wildcat restored, at least two people died while in AHCCCS funding limbo, and childless adults are still locked out of AHCCCS, ecently, Gov. Jan Brewer had a denying them coverage for necessary disagreement with Facebook medical services. about a post that was removed She has slashed school budgets, from her page by the social networking thereby limiting the funds schools have site. Someone felt it appropriate to to provide students with the equipment, superimpose Brewer’s face onto the body funding to the Arizona Health Care Cost of Rosie the Riveter from J. Howard Miller’s Containment System (the state’s version of teachers and other tools necessary for famous “We Can Do It!” poster from the Medicaid), slashed school budgets, limited a quality education. The UA and other state universities have since had to raise World War II era. Alongside Brewer’s state abortion services, and endorsed SB tuition significantly to make up for the lost likeness was the phrase, “doing the job 1070, I just can’t view Brewer as quite the funding. the feds won’t do!” Great. I sure am glad same symbol of empowerment that Rosie And don’t forget SB 1070, for which Brewer’s on the case. the Riveter embodies. Let’s not forget this is The post was removed by Facebook, also the same woman who complains about Brewer tried to drum up support by falsely claiming to find headless bodies in the and Brewer subsequently criticized the the state deficit, yet still wants to spend desert. Brewer has been nothing more than decision. money on a border fence to keep those a lightning rod for disgruntlement, having The original “We can do it!” poster was danged illegal immigrants out. sparked protests and demonstrations used to recruit women to work in factories Focusing more specifically on her while men were away in the military. It degrading acts towards the rights of women, around the country. Given her inconsistent politics and quickly became a popular feminism icon this is the same person who recently signed consistently awful decision-making, her and a symbol of empowerment as it showed legislation that led to a cut in the number piss-poor debate skills, and her occasional that women could do the same work as men. of abortion-providing Planned Parenthood inability to string two coherent sentences Keep in mind that, if women were employed clinics in Arizona from 10 to three. This together, I have no idea how Brewer was at all, this was a time when women were has made it more difficult for women to get even re-elected, let alone singled out as an expected to take on clerical or cleaning jobs. these services and especially screwed over inspirational woman. Why am I giving you this history lesson? women in rural areas who now will have To explain why it’s deplorable yet comical, to travel significantly longer distances to that Brewer is trying to depict herself in the receive care. — Miki Jennings is a journalism junior. same light as Rosie the Riveter. She can be reached at And this is the same person who, in Being that Brewer wanted to cut letters@wildcat.arizona.edu. an effort to take care of Arizona’s debt

R

MAILBAG

Daily Wildcat staff editorials represent the official opinion of the Daily Wildcat staff, which is determined at staff editorial meetings.

Sound off America is not the center of the universe

Let them eat local

Security breach or security bullshit?

In response to Joe Dusbabek’s well thought-out opinion (“Let’s go local: Campus lacks food diversity”) requesting more local, healthy and diverse food options on campus, I would like to suggest that the university go the extra mile and make at least some organic and locally grown foods available. As an alumna of the UA, I cringe when I see students consuming plate after plate of food without so much as an organically grown salad being offered. To my knowledge, there is only one place on campus where organic foods are offered, and that is the U-Mart, which kindly offers Amy’s (Amy’s Kitchen, Natural, and Organic Foods) organic vegetarian entrees and burritos, organic hummus, pita bread and Organic Fair Trade coffees. Fresh, healthful, pesticide and herbicide-free food choices should be available in campus cuisine, as well as some vegan choices for those that prefer them. In fact, the university should require that all food vendors offer a few of such foods. Local farmers markets offer organically grown food at very low, affordable prices. Buying local is always good, too, and reduces the greenhouse gas emissions caused by trucking food across the country.

As a UA employee, I received the infamous “Goatman” email. While I was disgusted by the content of the email, I understand that mistakes can happen and professionals cannot be prepared for every unexpected outcome. However, what I do not understand is how in the apology email, it was explained that, “by using an offshore server the perpetrator of this act was able to mask his or her identity and pretend to be one of the very few individuals with permission to transmit messages to this listserv.” On the other hand, in your article “Security” it is explained differently that, “the listserv was not moderated, meaning anyone on the listserv could forward anything to everybody.” So I am wondering if the statement in your article is factually incorrect, or if the entire campus employee community was directly lied to by the chief information officer of our university.

— Kristina Bui is the copy chief for the Daily Wildcat. She can be reached at letters@wildcat.arizona.edu.

The Daily Wildcat editorial policy

“Being that Brewer wanted to cut Medicaid (AHCCCS) coverage, slashed school budgets, limited state abortion services, and endorsed SB1070 I just can’t view Brewer as quite the same symbol of empowerment that Rosie the Riveter is.”

­— Jim Isaacs Senior Nutritional Science Major

In class the other day, we were discussing the war in Libya and a student pointed out how many misspellings she had seen of Col. Moammar Gadhafi’s name, even in prominent news sources such as CNN. I explained that he doesn’t have an English spelling of his name and most news sources use the rules of translating Arabic languages and their individual styles to attempt to give him an easily read name. She responded, “He should just make an English name.” I’m not sure my eyes could have rolled any more in their sockets. It’s such an American thing to do. “It’s complicated, so why don’t they just shift everything about themselves to fit English?” I remember a friend complaining that Yao Ming should switch his name to Ming Yao because “that’s how we do it in America.” Why do other cultures have to change their ways to fit America? In Ireland, if you introduce yourself as John they won’t call you Sean just because that’s the Irish version of the name. The Russian president’s name is Dmitry Medvedev, but it could also be written Demetri Medvedev in an American newspaper and still be right. I’ll admit that learning the rules of other countries is difficult. But it’s so elitist to demand that everyone fit the English-speaking way and to never expect to learn another. Stop expecting everyone else to do all the work and start respecting cultural differences. — Michelle A. Monroe is a journalism senior. She can be reached at letters@wildcat.arizona.edu.

— Barbara Vaughn UA Alumna, 1999

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

Email letters to: letters@wildcat.arizona.edu

• Letters should include name, connection to the university (year, major, etc.) and contact information.

Snail mail to: 615 N. Park Ave., Tucson, AZ 85719

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


ARTS & LIFE KINGS OF By Joe Dusbabek DAILY WILDCAT

DAILY WILDCAT

• PAGE 5

Arts & Life Editor: Jazmine Woodberry • 520.621.3106 • arts@wildcat.arizona.edu

OFFENSIVE

Approximately 10 years ago, Trey Parker and Matt Stone’s “South Park” was the de facto ruler of television comedy. Through the evolving story of four animated elementary school friends, it broke established rules about what was allowed on TV, pushed cable TV as being the real place to go for cutting-edge content, and taught us how good laughing at inappropriate things can feel. “South Park” often pulled both the best and worst out of us as human beings, and in the end, it’s kept us coming back for fifteen seasons (and counting). Lately, however, other sitcoms and comedies on TV have pushed “South Park” to the brink of losing its title of the most offensive and hilarious show on TV. In this special feature, the Daily Wildcat explores the newest challengers, an old favorite, and awards the championship to a deserving winner.

LONG-RUNNING CONTENDER “It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia” Offensive and uncomfortable TV doesn’t get much more offensive or uncomfortable than this. A sitcom about four guys and a gal who run a bar in Philadelphia, “It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia” features exceptionally well-crafted situational awkwardness and compellingly funny pseudo-dramatics from the cast. There are often moments that are so tough to swallow for the average viewer that it becomes difficult not to squirm in your seat, just a little. That’s the type of envelope-pushing that makes this a contender, and if you’re a fan of extremely uncomfortable moments (and if you cried the day “Arrested Development” was canceled), you’re bound to love “It’s Always Sunny.” The show is easily the elite among shows that force awkward moments down your throat, whether you want to choke on them or not.

PHOTO COURTESY OF FX.COM

NEW COMPETITION “Archer” In terms of animated 20-minute comedies about dysfunctional spy agencies and all sorts of cultural taboo, “Archer” stands alone as the premiere example of how to do it right. Outlandish situations mark “Archer” as spots mark a Dalmatian, and the snappy writing provides the type of moment-to-moment spontaneity most modern television shows severely lack. The quick and witty jokes guarantee you’ll be chortling, often suddenly and out of nowhere, despite your most sincere attempts not to. There are times when “Archer” almost gets too close to crossing the line; a certain situation involving an amazingly horny underage girl in one episode comes to mind. It’s impossible to fault “Archer” for this when it does so many things right, and this indeed is its greatest strength: The show does what it wants, when it wants, and it’s not afraid to do it. For some, that sounds like a sick kind of paradise, and if that’s you, “Archer” will please you in ways you’re ashamed to like.

TV

PHOTO COURTESY OF FX.COM

THE REIGNING CHAMPION “South Park” Fifteen seasons, a musical feature-length film, putting Comedy Central permanently on the map, viewers consistently averaging in the millions, winning a place in Time’s “100 Best TV Shows of All Time” list and being nominated for the Emmy Award for Outstanding Animated Program 11 times (and winning four). It’s all in a day’s work for Trey Parker and Matt Stone’s divisive program. Famous for its smart satire, clever structure, gross-out humor, and outright rude language, “South Park” has been at the top of the comedy charts forever, and with good reason: You don’t get that kind of following for that long without fully deserving it. Consistently one of the best shows around, “South Park” created the template for modern TV sitcoms in various different ways, and without it, it’s almost a certainty TV wouldn’t be the same today.

WINNER: “SOUTH PARK”

Without “South Park,” there’s frankly no reason for this argument to even exist at all, and no amount of controversy changes that fact. While shows like “Archer” and “It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia” do their best to contribute and create compelling TV their own way (and, it deserves mention, stand up absolutely fine on their own), “South Park” doesn’t look to run out of steam until Parker and Stone say it’s all over. PHOTO COURTESY OF COMEDYCENTRAL.COM

‘Colombiana’ makes ‘Calm Yourself’ vengeance beautiful with these tracks CAT TUNES

By Christy Delehanty DAILY WILDCAT

It’s the typical chase scene: There are big guns and cleverlystashed smaller ones. There are rooftops to fly off, awnings to jump through, and line-drying pieces of innocent laundry to disturb. The brilliant hues of Columbian capital Bogotá shine on, enveloped in silence. Everything seems in order until you remember that the object of pursuit is a freakishly coolheaded little girl complete with Peter Pan collar and pinafore. Young Cataleya is named for the genus of the delicate orchid native to her hometown; but she seems to have been born ready for the rough and tumble her life has brought her. She had to watch the coldblooded slaughter of her parents, flee the city she’s always known on foot with various motorized vehicles in hot pursuit, and gather up her bloodied hair into a balletworthy topknot before venturing forth through Miami to find her uncle in Chicago. It doesn’t take long for her to reveal her newfound career path to her tío: “I used to want to be like Xena — a warrior princess … (now) I want to be a killer.” Needless to say, it’s more than the convenient Spanglish that provokes disbelief in the viewer in “Colombiana,” which opened Aug. 26.

Remember, you’ve just tumbled with an impossibly tough child through everything from CIA custody to public transit and all the while been treated to a series of lushly textured landscapes spliced with striking sophistication. Keep watching, because into

PHOTO COURTESY OF IMBD.COM

the film here totters its most attractive inhabitant: a headturning, slutted-up Zoe Saldana as a whole new Cataleya, all grown up and ready for action. Now, if watching an incarcerated Saldana adeptly wrangle a hairpin from the depths of her mane and spring herself from her cell isn’t sexy enough for you, don’t worry.

How about a good shot of Saldana’s upper assets through a shiny, spandex unitard? In fact, some of Saldana’s best features are visible as she eats Chinese takeout with her fingers, enjoys a lollipop, and cleans her gun. They, along with the semi-sexist SWAT team dialogue, don’t let you forget that you’re watching a woman in a typically male occupation — assassin. So, the sexualization is extreme and the dialogue is shoddy at best, serving in several instances as cheap connective tissue to bind a fast-paced yet flailing plot. But the cinematography is sensual and up-to-date, and Saldana and her co-stars are — it must be admitted — simply captivating. After all, when the time is right to slide down an elevator shaft, why not be as cottonhugged and tousled as a Gap Body model? Even Saldana in snow gear wouldn’t answer the lingering questions about the morality of vigilante justice, the psychological ramifications of violent crime, or even those as basic as how exactly killing bad guys pays the bills. So she might as well wear undies while doing it.

GRADE: C+

By Joe Dusbabek DAILY WILDCAT

Get into the easygoing flow of things in your second week back to campus by adding three appropriately relaxing songs to your newest iTunes playlist.

PHOTO COURTESY OF BILLBOARD.COM

1. “Calm, Calm, Calm Yourself,” by Anchor & Braille, brings childhood nostalgia into the forefront by mixing light piano melodies with lead singer Stephen Christian (whom you might also know as Anberlin’s frontman) singing gently over the top in a perfectly calming falsetto. The song emphasizes a distinctly lullaby-like sound, and it’s easy to rank it as a perfect song for listening to while taking a leisurely afternoon nap. The strangely adult-oriented lyrical musings of the song only adds to its solid melange of contrasting elements. If you’re feeling stressed

as homework increases this week, give this track a listen. 2. As one of the defining tracks on Bon Iver’s debut album, “Skinny Love” remains one of the most incredible and rich listening experiences currently available. Justin Vernon, the voice behind the song, wrote all of “For Emma, Forever Ago” while struggling alone with mononucleosis in a northwestern Wisconsin cabin for three months. Well-deserved critical acclaim hit Bon Iver with its release. With acoustic guitars, delicate voicing and some powerful lyrics thrown in for good measure, you can’t go wrong with this track. 3. In 2007, a man by the name of Dan Wilson released an album named “Free Life” to little media fanfare. Hidden on the album was a song of pure gold, “Breathless.” Wilson’s strengths as a musician come out during a song runtime that includes poetic ranting such as this gem: “I’m lifting wishes to the stars / the gleaming satellites of time / orbiting circles overhead / to futures when your love is mine.” Powerful stuff, eh? Wilson emphasizes a solid foundation in basic musical theory as all of the different parts of the song blend easily to create a song that’s stronger than the sum of its musical parts.

Wayne’s latest falls short of expectations By Jason Krell

To point out specifics, its two main problems revolve around, The “F” in “Weezy F. Baby” unfortunately, the two most must be for “falter,” among other important facets of a song: the things, because that’s exactly what lyrics and the music itself. he’s done in delivering us “Tha Sadly, and this was especially Carter IV.” apparent after spending the past The easiest thing to say is that few weeks with Kanye West and it just wasn’t good, no matter Jay-Z’s “Watch the Throne,” the how you look at it. Lil Wayne, for production of the music on “Tha whatever reason, didn’t show Carter IV” was just awful. up on his latest CD, which was Every track had the same released today. tired beats you’ve heard a He’s never been the kind of rap million times before, and some revolutionist Kanye West proves seemed to be exact copies of himself to be, but he had that other beats he’s blown to in quintessential uniqueness to his the past. It sounds like the CD sound that made him undeniably was made on GarageBand, and great. It’s not that he’s lost that while it’s a wonderful program, a either, because in every track he professional record label should appears in, his flow is smooth, he want to spend a bit more and boosts himself up and he does make sure it sounds fresh. that little laugh we all love. The fact is, Lil Tunechi has DAILY WILDCAT

never written the most creative raps. Sure, he has killer lines, but he hardly ever tells a story with it like the greats did. Tupac, Notorious B.I.G. and Nas come to mind. Of course, no one is like them these days, but at least some other rappers attempt to be. All Lil Wayne ever does is talk about how much money he has, how much sex he gets, how great Young Money — his record label— is or how he’s such a thug. That’s fine for one or two tracks on a CD. Everyone does that and it’s what we’ve come to expect out of the rap game. But 15 tracks out of 18? Three of those were bonus tracks too, so that means almost every song he released was about the same damn thing. By themselves, they’re good fun, but listening

to them one after the other was mind-numbing, and with no new sound to set them apart, it was all but impossible to tell the difference. There was one song — a bonus track no less — called “Mirror,” where Weezy actually seemed to bare his soul and talk about something that might have mattered, and Bruno Mars gave it that soulful sound to help. But otherwise, everything else was terrible. In fact, my favorite song on the album was one in which Lil Wayne didn’t say one word. “Interlude,” the aptly named middle track, was performed by Tech N9ne, and they killed it. Absolutely slaughtered it, especially since they haven’t been nearly as prominent lately.

They were a wonderful breather between the rest of Wayne’s monotonous music. “Tha Carter IV” does have a saving grace: The featured artists are great. There’s everyone from T-Pain, Rick Ross, John Legend, Nas and Drake sharing songs with Lil Wayne and for the most part, they provide all the variety. Without them, it’s hard to imagine what the record would have sounded like. Weezy needs to come back from this effort on the next one, because this effort was poor. Maybe it’s time to retire “Tha Carter” as an album name, because I’m pretty sure Lil Wayne just killed it … and not in a good way.

GRADE: F


6

• MONDAY, AUGUST 29, 2011

POLICE BEAT By Rebecca Rillos DAILY WILDCAT

Not so well in the stairwell

A University of Arizona Police Department officer went to Arizona-Sonora Residence Hall around midnight on Wednesday in response to an intoxicated student. The man was sitting on the steps of the fourth floor staircase and vomitting repeatedly. The officer noticed the smell of alcohol coming from the man’s mouth and that he also had watery eyes and a lack of balance. His speech was slurred. Paramedics from the Tucson Fire Department treated the man on scene and determined he did not need to be taken to the hospital. The officer helped the man to his room and read him his rights. The man agreed to answer any questions. He told the officer that he had two drinks of hard liquor earlier at an unknown fraternity house on campus. The man was cited with minor in possession of alcohol and was released into the care of his roommate.

If you can’t stand the heat, get out of Arizona

A UAPD officer arrived at Cochise Residence Hall around midnight on Wednesday in response to a report of a woman vomiting in the lobby. The officer met with the woman and her roommate. The woman was vomiting continuously into a bucket and was on the verge of passing out. Tucson Fire Department medics assessed the woman and transported her to University Medical Center for treatment for extreme intoxication. The officer asked the woman’s roommate where they had been and if they had consumed any alcohol. The roommate said they had been at a fraternity party off-campus and she had not been with her friend the whole time. The officer asked her if she had been drinking and she replied, crying, that she had only had one shot of liquor. The officer informed the roommate she was under arrest for drinking underage and she continued to cry. “I just want to go home, I don’t want to be in Arizona anymore,� the roommate said. The officer went to UMC to follow up on the other woman. She was stable and admitted to having five shots of vodka. The woman was cited for minor in possession of alcohol. Both women were referred to the Dean of Students Office.

Bulletin board bullying

A UAPD officer responded to Arizona-Sonora Residence Hall on Wednesday morning after racially inappropriate comments were left on a bulletin board in the hall. The officer met with the resident assistant and community director, who showed him the message. The RA said he had been in class the day before between 11 a.m. and 5 p.m. and had noticed the message when he returned. He removed it and placed it in his room to show to police later. The paper had been placed on the board with the question, “What did you do over the summer?� The question had been intended for people to write about their summer experience, the RA said. Someone had written, “Killed numerous black people� under the question. The RA, a black man, said he did not find the phrase particularly offensive, nor did he think the message was directed at him. He said he was concerned, however, for the other black residents in the dorm. The community director reviewed camera footage from the hallway and found three possible people involved, but could not tell what they had written. The officer unsuccessfully attempted to contact the individuals at their rooms. The bulletin was placed into property and evidence at UAPD.

Frauds on PCard

A UAPD officer contacted a College of Medicine employee on Wednesday who reported fraudulent purchases had been made earlier in the week to her UA-issued purchasing card. The woman found nine purchases made to the card, totaling $1,043.97. The purchases had been made on Aug. 22 between midnight and 4 p.m. to the charity organization The Oregon Family Seven, Q-Furniture LLC, Member VII Inc., Peoplefinders.com, BergdorfGoodman.com and Verizon Wireless. No representatives from the businesses had any suspect information. The PCard was canceled.

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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Daily Wildcat •

7


Sports weekend scoreboard:

Daily Wildcat

• Page 8

Sports Editor: Kevin Zimmerman • 520.621.2956 • sports@wildcat.arizona.edu

Soccer South Carolina 1, Arizona 0

Volleyball Arizona 3 games, Wichita State 0 games

Arizona 3 games, San Francisco 2 games

Offensive woes strike Arizona Soccer lets game slip away two minutes into second overtime Kevin Nadakal Daily Wildcat

Three games into the season, the Arizona soccer team has more questions than answers in breaking out of an offensive slump. “It’s probably the toughest loss that I have had in my time here,” said senior goalkeeper Ashley Jett. The Wildcats (0-3) lost in a second overtime to South Carolina on Friday “It’s probably night by a score of 1-0 in their first the toughest home game of the loss that I have season. had in my time “I think any- here.” one who saw the — Ashley Jett game and saw how senior much energy and goalkeeper passion we put into the game and, to have a result like this, it’s heartbreaking,” head coach Lisa Oyen said. The Wildcats had a few chances to score but could not capitalize on their opportunities. In the seventh minute, redshirt junior Renae Cuellar had a oneon-one attack against the goalie but her shot went wide left. “I had an opportunity that I obviously should have put away,” Cuellar said. “That’s a big heartbreaker for me.” Arizona had more than the Gamecocks to contend with, as weather was also an issue. The game was suspended at halftime for about 50 minutes due to a thunderstorm warning. Oyen and the rest of the coaching staff used to the extra time to tell the team what they wanted fix and the team listened to music in their field house to keep themselves pumped up.

Gordon bates/ Daily Wildcat

Junior Ariel Boulicault dribbles the ball upfield in Arizona’s 1-0 loss to South Carolina. The Wildcats’ loss on Friday came by way of missed opportunities on shots on goals.

The Wildcats had several chances toward the end of the regulation to put the ball in the back of the net but couldn’t make the most of it. With under two minutes left in the game, sophomore Jazmin Ponce lined up a free kick, just outside of the penalty box, and her shot clanked off the cross bar. “It’s extremely frustrating,” Jett said. “We’ve had, I don’t know how many games now, it’s like an eight-game streak

where we haven’t scored. “We’ve gotten so close, we’ve gotten to the cross bar, we’ve gotten great headers, we’ve had great looks that go straight to the keeper or way out wide. I still think one day they are going to fall one day and once they do there’s no stopping us.” The Wildcats have this week off as they prepare for their Sept. 5 game against BYU in Provo, Utah.

Injury update Junior Kirstyn Magyar left the game in the first half after injuring her leg on a 50/50 ball. Oyen said Magyar was held out of the rest of the game because she did not want to take any unnecessary risks, and added that Magyar should be fine for the next game. Magyar had her leg wrapped and was on crutches.

By the Numbers UA:

SC:

11 shots on goal

8 shots on goal

1 shot on target

2 shots on target

5 corner kicks

6 corner kicks

combined 27 fouls

Volleyball opens In midst of lockout, season with 2-1 Budinger eyes Europe record in Hawaii By Mike Schmitz

UA falls to No. 10 Warriors after winning two games

Daily Wildcat

The NBA lockout opened doors for players to stay active while pursuing a passion outside of basketball, and for former UA standout Chase Budinger, that passion is volleyball. Budinger was the 2006 Mizuno National Player of the Year and dusted off those skills on Aug. 20 and 21 when he teamed up with pro Dane Jensen at the Corona Light Wide Open tournament in Hermosa Beach, Calif. “It was good exposure and fun playing out there,” Budinger said in an exclusive phone interview with the Daily Wildcat. “I was a little rusty but I was still able to compete against the guys. “I’m going to try and play as much as I can and get into as many tournaments as I can because it’s great crosstraining and I love playing volleyball.” Budinger’s said he’s enjoying beach volleyball for the time being, but he could trade that in for a basketball gig in Europe any day now. He said he’d love to play in Spain or Italy and his agent is doing his best to make it happen. “I told my agent that I’m very interested in going overseas if it’s a good league, so he’s definitely searching for jobs for me over there,” Budinger said. Budinger went on to talk more about the lockout, playing with former UA teammate Jordan Hill, and Luke Walton joining Josh Pastner’s staff in Memphis. On how life’s been during the lockout: “It’s been good. Just working out as if we had a regular season. It’s just tough because we have no idea when the season’s going to start. I wish there wasn’t a lockout and it doesn’t look like anything’s moving along so it’s kind of like just wait and see.” On the pros and cons of going

By Kelly Hultgren Daily Wildcat

alan Walsh/ Daily Wildcat

Former Wildcat forward Chase Budinger dunks in a Jan. 6, 2010, game that pitted Budinger’s Houston Rockets against the Phoenix Suns.

overseas: “If I do go, it’s a chance to just play basketball, to practice every day with the team and I think it would be pretty cool to experience a new culture and live the lifestyle over there. The cons are it’s not the NBA,

it’s European ball, it wouldn’t be a typical NBA schedule and wouldn’t be played the same way an NBA game would be.” budinger, 9

Both the Arizona volleyball team and their Sunday night opponents, the No. 10 University of Hawaii Warriors, were undefeated going into the finals last night at the Chevron Wahine Invitational in Honolulu. But in the end, the Wildcats couldn’t overcome the Warriors in their house, losing the match in three games, 12-25, 16-25 and 20-25. The loss was the first of the year, as the 2-1 Wildcats won its first two games to start the 2011 season. Despite preseason stereotypes of being a young and relatively short team, the Arizona volleyball team dominated both the Wichita State Shockers and the University of San Francisco Dons at the Chevron Rainbow Wahine Invitational in Honolulu over the weekend. In the team’s season opener Friday, the Wildcats beat the Shockers in three sets, 25-14, 2521 and 25-20, led by seniors Cursty Jackson, Courtney Karst and Marketa Hanzlova. Jackson, a middle blocker, and Karst, an outside hitter, combined for 18 kills against Wichita State. Hanzlova, an outside hitter from the Czech Republic, contributed 12 digs and eight kills. “It was nice to get a win in the opening match,” head coach Dave Rubio said in a press release. “I thought we played like we have been playing in practice. The upperclassmen really did well for us

today. Hopefully we can play as steadily tomorrow.” A player who defied the team’s preseason stereotypes was 6-foot1 freshman outside hitter Madison Kingdon. In addition to Kingdon’s 12 kills in her debut as a Wildcat, the freshman made six digs and one block for the team. “She’s very competitive and has a tremendous skill set as an incoming freshman,” Rubio said before the team left for Hawaii. Kingdon was just warming up. Against USF, she hammered 18 kills and got up 13 digs for the Wildcats in their five-game victory (25-20, 20-25, 25-16, 24-26, 15-10) against the Dons. It was Kingdon’s first double-double of the season. “For her to be able to serve receive and score, those two things are rare to find in someone that young, and at such a high level,” Rubio said. “You can sometimes find someone who scores, but it’s hard to find someone who passes too.” But the win didn’t come as easily as the day before. The Dons flew under the radar before the tournament, surprising the team with a more challenging match. “We gutted the match out tonight,” Rubio said. “We weren’t as smooth as we were the night before, but we happened to play well enough at the end to win the match.” Karst’s experience took center stage during the match’s final moments. “Courtney Karst really played well for us at the end,” Rubio said. “We were really lucky to have her leadership tonight.” Jackson’s experience also played a crucial role in the team’s win, supplying eight of the team’s 12 total blocks to go along with eight kills.

With battered Vick, Eagles seek line changes Mcclatchy tribune

PHILADELPHIA — He finally made the move. After seeing Michael Vick battered again Thursday, Andy Reid pushed Todd Herremans, one of his most talented and consistent linemen, to the most critical position on the offensive line, right tackle. Problem solved? Not quite.

With rookie Danny Watkins struggling at right guard, rookie Jason Kelce apparently having the inside track to the center job despite evident growing pains, Herremans in a new position, and a new left guard, there are four offensive line slots with question marks hanging over them with two weeks to go until the season opener. Until now, the Eagles knew they

could count on Herremans and left tackle Jason Peters to provide solid protection on one side of Vick. But as Herremans moves to a position that is more important — but less familiar — even that certainty has been lost. Moving Herremans might be better than the alternatives at right tackle, but it’s not ideal. Amid the turbulence, journeyman Evan Mathis has an opportunity and

added responsibility. Mathis will step in for Herremans at left guard, hoping to solidify the position so that the Eagles don’t improve at one spot and slide at another. Herremans played at a Pro Bowl level last year. Mathis is with his fourth team in seven NFL seasons after playing for Carolina, Miami, and Cincinnati. “I wanted to make the most of this

opportunity,” Mathis said. He’s well aware of his career path. He has just 22 career starts — a number he knows off the top of his head — 15 of them in 2006, his only year as a full-time starter. He has appeared in one playoff game and now is part of a lineup with Super Bowl aspirations. Reading his team bio, you can almost nfl, 11


Sports •

monday, august

29, 2011

budinger

from page 8

On the bigger names going overseas: “I think they’re doing it for the same reasons. They just want to play basketball. If you can’t have an NBA season here, why not go over there?” On his first two years in the NBA: “I think I’ve done well for my first two years. (Former Houston Rockets) coach (Rick) Adelman gave me an opportunity to play and I think I’ve done a good job so far. My only goal is to improve each year.” On playing with Jordan Hill: “It’s been great just because we know each other so well and we’re so used to each other. When he got traded to Houston it was an easy fit.” On how Hill has done: “He’s going to be just fine. He’s a confident player and he’s a great ball player. There’s been games when he’s done great and games where he knows he

Daily Wildcat •

could have done a little better.” On the UA basketball program) “It was fun to watch them in the tournament. I keep up with Arizona basketball. I try to catch as many games as I can. Sean Miller’s doing a great job with the guys over there bringing back Arizona basketball to where it should be as one of the top basketball schools.” On whether he keeps in touch with former coaches and teammates: “I still talk with coach (Lute) Olson and Josh Pastner and still keep up with Kyle Fogg and Nic Wise. It’s a big family that Arizona has and you definitely keep in touch with everybody.” On Luke Walton coaching at Memphis: “That’s pretty neat. The running joke right now is it’s like Arizona East at Memphis. All the Arizona coaches and players are coaching over there now. It’s a good chance for Luke to get into coaching. Josh is a great coach and he’s got some really good recruits coming in and (I’m) hoping to see them do big things in the next couple of years.”

mlb roundup

Greinke, Brewers shut down Cubs

Mcclatchy tribune

MILWAUKEE — As if the Cubs didn’t have enough trouble hitting the ball, they run into two straight Cy Young Award winners. The first, the Brewers’ Zack Greinke, shut them down Sunday in a 3-2 victory, the Cubs’ eighth loss in the last nine games. The second, Tim Lincecum, comes Monday night in San Francisco. Manager Mike Quade wasn’t around to see much of Sunday’s game. He was ejected in the first inning while trying to keep Aramis Ramirez in the game fol-

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“Casey threw the ball well,” Quade said, “but he just couldn’t match Greinke (13-5) pitch-forpitch.”

O’s blank Yanks in twinbill opener

BALTIMORE — Although not a loss that felt like a victory, Sunday afternoon’s 2-0 defeat to the Orioles still produced more of a positive vibe than a negative one for the Yankees. That was because Bartolo Colon, whose season expiration date seemed very much upon MLB, 11

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lowing a called third strike. “(Umpire Bill Miller) didn’t like what I said, so I sat and watched,” Quade said. It was Quade’s sixth ejection of the season. The loser was Casey Coleman, who is 0-3 since replacing Carlos Zambrano (disqualified list) in the rotation. Coleman didn’t pitch poorly, allowing the NL Centralleading Brewers six hits over seven innings. Trouble is, one of the hits was a two-run homer by Corey Hart, who in the last two days had a pair of homers, a triple, double, single and two walks.

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aviva children’s services seeking tutors for 1-3 hrs/wk with a child under CPS care for 1semester. Provide academic/ homework, friendship, attention. Michelle Rios 327-6779 Ext. 11

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monday, august

1Bd, $600/mo lease. $600 deposit. Central A/C, carport, w/d, unfurnished, cats ok, water paid only, walk to UofA and med school. 1503 N. Vine. Call 520-909-4766 2Br 1Ba BroadWay/ Campbell $650 incl water/trash/stove/ fridge. A/C and off street parking 9754170 home for rent. 3BR/ 2BA, 1600sf, near UA and 4th Ave, lots of amenities, pets ok. $1050/mo. Call 869-9930

29, 2011

Daily Wildcat •

!!!!!!!!*** Brand new 6bdrm/ 7basingle family res- huGe livinG room + Giant 20’x30’ den + BIG office LIBRARY- ONE of a kindnew furniture avail. $2,800/mo oBo. 388-0781 roB. $1500, 4Bd, 1305 e. Waverly #1 (Grant/Mountain) fenced yard, covered patio, fp, approx 1679sqft, AC, 881- 0930 view pictures at prestigepropertymgmt.com

$475 studio casita! 400sf, separate kitchen & dining, wtr pd. 3rd Ave & 4th St. Call ADOBE PMI at 520-325-6971

$1950 - 4/Bedroom- 2Bath completely remodeled, all new appliances, Gourmet kitchen, Granite, Partially furnished, Jacuzzi tub, new a/c, ss-BBq, Garage, adams/tucson 520-9908650

1Bdrm Guesthouse, $450. 3miles to campus. A/C, fireplace, carport, free laundry and cable, all utils incl., $450 available now. 6170696

$535 1Bdrm house & Evap, 511sqft, wtr & fncd front & back. Euclid Call ADOBE PMI at 6971.

4Blocks from ua! nice studio, a/c, carport. $450/mo, water paid. furnished if needed. 1336 e 10th st (back). 520-9034353

$800 2Bd, 1Ba, 896sqft, wtr & trsh pd, washer & dryer, wood flrs. Speedway & Park. Call ADOBE PMI at 520-325-6971.

free 1st month w/year lease. $345 studio w/335sqft, A/C, wtr, trash, & gas pd! Coinop lndry onsite! Park & Grant. Call ADOBE PMI at 520-325-6971

$825 lG 2Bdrm, 1071sqft, A/C, frplc, sngl gar, w/d/, fncd. 1st Ave & Elm. Call ADOBE PMI at 520325-6971

quiet studio aPartment 3miles from UofA, Tucson and Glenn area. $300 per month includes utilities Call 520-858-5505 or 520-326-0517 studio aPartment 1121 e. 12th St. Complete kitchen, covered parking, no pets, fresh paint, lease/ deposit/ references/ $350. Owner agent 907-2044 studio aPartment behind private residence available Sept., near Campbell and Elm St, 465.00/ month includes utilities, cable. 808-6301 tucson country cluB Estates area, attached “guesthouse� to large spacious 5000sqft house. Available immediately. This large studio has private kitchen & full bath w/tub and shower, large walk-in closet storage, large yard and private parking, A/C, high speed wi‑fi and Netflix, gated guarded community. Furnished or unfurnished. Call Bob 624-0172 ! $1700 5Bdrm/ 3Bath available now! Water/ trash/ power included. Fireplaces, A/C, W/D, ceiling fans, lg bdrms, gated courtyards. Park & Elm. Call Erika 602-703-5557 or email at desertdwell@me.com for more info. ! 5Blocks nW ua HUGE Luxury Homes 4br/ 4.5ba +3car garage +large master suites with walk-in closets +balconies +10ft ceilings up and down +DW, W&D, Pantry, TEP electric discount, monitored security system. Pool privileges. Reserve now for August 884-1505 www.myUofArental.com ! reserve your 4 or 6bedroom home now for August. Great homes 2to5 blocks to UA. Call for details. 884-1505 or visit us at www.MyUofARental.com.

w/ A/C trsh pd, & Glenn. 520-325-

1601 e. seneca & cherry 3br $1200 Deposit $1300 with Pet Year Lease Large Bathroom 8x12 Whole House is upgraded. Very Clean. Washer/ Dryer Fenced Patio Cover Parking No yardwork. Pat 949-887-5507 1Block uofa. 3Bd walled in patio, off street parking. $950 4057278 2Bd 1.5 Ba toWnhouse with w/d and community pool. $800/mo. Greasewood & Anklam. Tucson’s Choice Poperty Management. 520-229-2050 2Bdrm/ 1Ba near campus with A/C, WD, $900/mo, call Jason 602402-5451 3Bd/ 2Ba+ den (or 4th bedroom). Remodeled, large living room, a/c, w/d hu, under two miles north of UA. $1050/mo, water pd. 2926 N Tyndall Ave (back) 520903-4353 3Bedroom 2.5Bath TOWNHOUSE W/AC on 3rd St bike path. Newly remodeled with w/d in unit. 2covered parking spaces, access to community pool and outside storage. 2.3miles to UofA, near 3rd St and Dodge. $875 a month, $800 security. No Pets. Please contact karen85716@gmail.com a close to campus, close to play, and close to perfect new home. We have 2, 3 and 4 bedroom homes with private entrances, separate leases, roommate matching if needed, fully furnished, most utilities paid and much more. Call or come by for this weeks’ special 520-622-8503 or 1725 N. Park Avenue.

Prices startinG at $375 per room, per month. Individual leases, private entrances fully furnished 2, 3 and 4 bedroom homes available for immediate move in. Call or come by today! 520.622.8503, 1725 N. Park Ave. Visit us at www.casaespanaapts.com.

save your quarters for playing pool down on 4th Ave. We have washers and dryers in select homes! Imagine the time and money you’ll save doing laundry in your own home! 5blocks from campus- 10minutes walking 5minutes on a bike. Close to University Boulevard and 4th Ave. Call for specials 520-622-8503 or 1725 N. Park Avenue.

Beautifully remodeled home 2bdrm/ 2ba 1148sf townhouse in the area of Ft. Lowell and Columbus. Go to longrealty.com, MLS# 21102136.

$400/mo. 4Br 2Ba house, Mountain & Grant. Dishwasher, fridge, w/d, a/c, water, trash, wi‑fi included. 5Minutes north of UofA, plus Bikepath & CatTran. Contact 520-334-7881 or ijb@email.arizona.edu.

$450/mo. female roommate Wanted 2bed/3bath. 12min from UA. Water incl. Internet/Electric split. No smoking/alcohol/drugs/pets. Fully Furnished, washer/dryer incl. Call Ebby (480)3539773

$475/mo. females only. 2bedrooms available. Furnished 3bedroom house close to UA, shopping, bus, restaurants. Includes wireless hi-speed internet, cable, d/w, washer-dryer, BBQ, and more. This one has everything! 520.419.4199.

a Great location, at an incredible price! M/F needed for a fully furnished HUGE apartment close to campus. Most utilities paid, private entrances, separate leases. Call for our move in specials 520.622.8503

m/f needed for great apartment close to campus (5blocks away), fully furnished, most utilities are paid, private entrances, separate leases! MUST SEE! Call Astrid 520.622.8503.

roommates Wanted/ roommates needed! 2, 3 and 4 bedrooms open for immediate move in. M/F ok, Smoking/Non-smoking available, starting from $375. Individual leases, private entrances. Call for appointment 520.622.8503.

11

Wanted female roommate, large 4bdrm/ 2ba house, 2miles from UofA campus. $425/mo includes utilities. Ready now. 520227-2473

1furnished room With private bath and entrance. UofA/ UMC no kitchen but refrigerator and microwave. Cable TV, internet, utilities included. No smoking. $440/mo. Tim 795-1499 timaz2000@cox.net

2rooms for $450 each available. House is near UofA with easy access to Cat Tran and City bus lanes. House has full kitchen, washer/ dryer and a backyard. If interested call (520)909-8633 or email phildurham1@gmail.com.

room for rent Campbell & Prince. Near bike path & catran stop. female grad student preferred. $350 includes laundry, wifi, carport, utiltiies. 891‑4661

Beautiful 2Bd/ 1Ba. 3231 E. Presidio. Country Club/ Fort Lowell. A/C, just remodeled, W/D, walled patio. Pets ok. Covered parking. $750/mo +deposit. Water Included. Mike 272-1928 presidiotownhomes.com

ProofreadinG/ editinG By experienced writer: Resumes, court filings, essays, APA Style, manuscripts, screenplays, etc. Proofing only on certain college documents. $3.50/ page, 3page minimum. Call Karen at 979-6201.

homeWork helP needed for 2 6th grade students. Ideally 3 early evenings a week, T/W/TH, 6:00- 8:00. Must have transportation. Email kathy@mesquitehomesaz.com to set up an phone interview.

9 1 2 6

4door Pt crusier. A/C, 14,000 actual miles. 2004 almond color. Illness forces sale. clean. 1small scratch. Blue Book $7900. Make offer. 323-2715.

men’s 21-sPeed mountain bike $75, women’s 10-speed bike $65. 744-1183

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!!!! 2Br/ 2Ba or 3br/ 3ba luxury home, 3car garage by UofA. $1400 to $1800/mo OBO. Beautiful furniture available. Large rooms, laundry, outside balconies. 388-0781 Dave !!!!! r u lookinG for a 2or3 bedroom home? Find 1or2 roommates and rent an incredible Luxury 4bedroom 4.5 bath home close to campus. Great specials going on now. SAVE! SAVE! SAVE! 8841505. www.MyUofARental.com

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NFL

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from page 8

from page 9

feel the Eagles staff struggling to find highlights. “Saw significant action in five games at LG,� reads one line from 2010, when Mathis was with the Bengals. “Played a key role on an offensive line that allowed no sacks over the final three games of the season.� But Mathis has looked like a good fit in Howard Mudd’s offensive line scheme. Perhaps he has found a match of opportunity and style. At 6-foot-5 and 302 pounds, Mathis is leaner than most guards — he’s listed 19 pounds lighter than the 6-6 Herremans — but has quickness and can block in the open field. Just as Mudd likes it. “I love Mudd’s style, and any technique that he tells me to do on a given play, I’m out there trying it,� Mathis said. “Nothing’s really awkward. Some of the things I’ve even been trying for the first time, it feels good doing it. He does it because it works.� With shoulder-length hair and permanent stubble, he resembles a rocker, or, according to some Eagles staffers, professional wrestling’s Undertaker. He played well against Cleveland Thursday. While the Eagles, by design, go light at some positions such as linebacker, Reid believes line play is fundamental to winning. But his group hasn’t been right since Jamaal Jackson tore up his knee on Jan. 3, 2010. With Vick’s blind side at risk, and rookie Watkins struggling at right guard, Reid had to make a change at right tackle. Herremans — athletic, smart, and hardworking — has been more reliable than Reid’s other options there. The changes should boost the over-

him in recent weeks, produced the kind of start that had the Yankees earlier in the season thinking he could be a realistic option for Game 2 of a playoff series. Colon shut out the Orioles for six innings before allowing a run in the seventh and one in the eighth. He took the loss mostly because the Yankees, who were to meet the Orioles in the second game of the doubleheader Sunday night, failed to score against rookie lefthander Zach Britton and two Orioles relievers. Kevin Gregg allowed a one-out single to Mark Teixeira, who had three of the Yankees’ five hits, but Alex Rodriguez grounded into a 6-4-3 double play to end it, earning Gregg his 19th save. Colon came in winless in his previous four starts, having allowed five runs in each of his previous two. Sunday he allowed two runs and seven hits in 7 2/3 innings, his longest outing since a complete-game shutout May 30 in Oakland. Colon struck out four and did not walk a batter.

Ron Cortes/ Philadelphia Inquirer/ MCT

Eagles quarterback Michael Vick runs for a touchdown in Thursday’s his team’s 2414 victory against the Cleveland Browns in Philadelphia.

all talent on the line, and it’s easy to envision Herremans improving the tackle play, but by how much? With only five career starts at tackle — four of them in 2005 — will the man who dubbed himself “the illest LG in the game� on Twitter be a Pro Bowl-level tackle? Above average? Adequate? How long will it take him to get used to the new spot? If Kelce opens the season at center, and it seems the Eagles want him to, fans will hope his growing pains don’t hurt Vick, too. Watkins has been anointed a starter since the Eagles drafted him, and he remains in place despite early woes. Maybe having the veteran Herremans alongside will help the

first-round pick. If Watkins isn’t ready, though, the Eagles have one less fallback option now that Mathis has joined the starting lineup. “You hear it so many times in football, that the offensive line needs time to jell, but I think all of us out there, we’re all professionals, and you can do a lot of jelling in the meeting room, watching film, and going through the playbook together,� Mathis said. “I think we’re going to pick it up very fast.� At stake is Vick’s health and any hope for a championship. There are now four question marks on the line, up from three. And with just one preseason game left, the answers might not start coming until the games count.

White Sox, Danks blank Mariners, 3-0

SEATTLE — The sight of fictitious Larry Bernandez throwing out the ceremonial first pitch gave a pretty good indication this night would belong to pitchers. And it pretty much did once Seattle Mariners ace Felix Hernandez — dressed as his alter ego from team television commercials — had concluded the pregame festivities Saturday night by tossing a ball to a look-alike fan. Michael Pineda looked as good as he has in quite some time, but Chicago White Sox counterpart John Danks was even better in handing the Mariners a 3-0 loss.

Danks tied his career high with 10 strikeouts while holding the Mariners to just three hits in notching his second career shutout. “You see why he’s had so much success,� said Kyle Seager, who had one of the three Seattle hits. “He’s a tough guy to pick up. He had good stuff and he locates it very well.�

Giants find a way in 10th against Astros

SAN FRANCISCO — This isn’t torture, this is agony. But somehow, the San Francisco Giants are managing to find a way to stay alive despite a seriously vapor-locked offensive attack. Jeff Keppinger’s two-out single in the bottom of 10th inning after pinch hitter Mark DeRosa had singled and stolen second base with one out allowed the Giants to squeeze out their second straight 2-1 victory over Houston on Saturday night at AT&T Park. It ended on a positive note what had been mostly a night of offensive frustration for the Giants, who managed just five hits, including a mere two over the first seven innings against Astros starter Brett Myers. But San Francisco matched Myers’ masterwork with an impressive major league debut from left-handed callup Erik Surkamp, and three relievers — Guillermo Mota, Santiago Casilla and Jeremy Affeldt — held the Astros scoreless for the final four innings until Keppinger’s two-out, two-strike hit over the head of second baseman Jose Altuve brought home DeRosa with the game-winner. Affeldt (3-2) pitched two-thirds of an inning for the win, and Fernando Rodriguez (2-3), who entered in the ninth, took the loss. Surkamp gave the Giants as much as they could have asked. Even though he had to dodge trouble throughout his major league debut, he allowed just one run, and that probably shouldn’t have been.


12

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answers to your ques�ons about sex and rela�onships

FOR KEEPS

Campus Health offers confidential testing for STDs. You can bill all medical testing to your Bursar’s account. Your Bursar’s statement protects your privacy and will read: “Student Health Charge”.

Q How do you know if you have an STD? A. Sometimes you do and sometimes you don’t. Signs or symptoms that may indicate a problem include: pain, itching, painful sores, redness, unusual discharge, rash, painless lesions, unusual/ foul odor, bumps, painful urination, swelling, unusual bleeding, blisters, sore throat If you notice any changes in your body, get checked out by a medical professional who

can give you a thorough exam and order appropriate lab tests. On the other hand, many STDs have no symptoms at all. Most women with chlamydia (and about half of men) do not experience any noticeable symptoms. Gonorrhea, herpes, HIV, and human papilloma virus (HPV) may show a wide range of symptoms (from mild to moderate to severe). The only way to find out for sure if you have an STD is to get tested.

Q What’s the difference between STDs and STIs? A. As times change, so do names. Since around the 1980’s, diseases spread through sexual contact have commonly been referred to as “sexually transmitted diseases”– STDs for short. Going back further, college students of your grandparents’ age called sexual infections “venereal diseases” or VD. In recent years, however, many public health experts have suggested replacing STD with a newer term – sexually transmitted infection, or STI. Why? The concept of “disease,” as in STD, implies a clear medical problem, usually some obvious signs or symptoms. But in truth

several of the most common STDs have no signs or symptoms in the majority of persons infected. Or they have mild signs and symptoms that can be easily overlooked. The sexually transmitted virus or bacteria can be described as creating “infection,” which may or may not result in “disease.” This is true of chlamydia, gonorrhea, herpes, and human papillomavirus (HPV), to name a few. For this reason, in some of the published literature, the term “disease” is being replaced by “infection” (The American Social Health Association, 2011).

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Have a question? Send it to sextalk@email.arizona.edu www.health.arizona.edu

SexTalk is written by Lee Ann Hamilton, M.A., CHES, David Salafsky, MPH, and Carrie Hardesty, BS, CHES, health educators at The UA Campus Health Service.

www.health.arizona.edu


Odds & Ends

Daily Wildcat

• Page 13

Arts & Life Editor: Jazmine Woodberry • 520.621.3106 • arts@wildcat.arizona.edu

worth noting

Volunteer clown clubs look for younger generation Mcclatchy tribune

MINNEAPOLIS – The transformation from Frank Mitchell of Cottage Grove to Knufie of the St. Paul Clown Club takes about an hour, starting with precise application of face paint, followed by a colorful and comically oversized outfit, topped with a yellow bowler hat that’s much too small. The wacky ensemble, on top of a sunny disposition, belies a challenge that’s anything but funny for Mitchell, 77, and other volunteer clowns around the metro area: They are getting old. Young members are scarce and shrinking membership has meant the St. Paul, Minn., troupe is doing fewer outings, including cutting back on their once-regular visits to nursing homes and hospitals. “We only go when one of us is in there,”

joked Denise Chapeau, aka Sassie. Blame scary clown movies, busy family schedules or lack of civic spirit. But clown clubs, like other classic community clubs such as the Lions or American Legion, wonder what the future holds as their enthusiastic members grow gray. “As age creeps in, it gets a little more difficult to do the parades and stuff,” Mitchell said. “The clubs are dwindling, which is kind of sad, I think. We’re trying to attract younger people.” As the St. Paul Clown Club traversed the New Brighton Stockyard Days Parade route, taking turns hopping off a pickup truck decorated with balloon animals to entertain the crowds, there were waves and smiles aplenty. “It’s been a part of history,” spectator Karen Carlson said. “Without them, it

wouldn’t be coming to a parade.” The clubs’ origins are intertwined with the metro area’s largest festivals. Both the St. Paul Clown Club and the Minneapolis Aqua Jesters were formed by community leaders to bring laughter and boost interest in the cities’ marquee festivals, the Winter Carnival and the Aquatennial, after World War II. The Powder Puffs, a women’s troupe, was formed later as a sister group to the then-all-male St. Paul club. The clubs once counted 50 to 100 active members, a number that’s now more like a couple dozen per troupe. They teach each other the tricks of the trade, face painting, balloon animals and magic tricks, and seek opportunities to cavort at hospitals, nursing homes and charity events and in shows at libraries or community centers.

Overheard on campus Man: Have you ever longboarded on a cloud? Submit your overheard on Twitter @OverheardAtUA

On the spot

Gender issues and cheesy gummy bears Have any wacky sociology classes this semester? I do have the Sociology of Terrorism. We’re reading this book — well, it’s my professor’s book — and it’s a collection of journals by a person who was someone involved in the attack (9/11).

Offbeat

The cups runneth over

Jennifer Sevillano Sociology junior

Interesting. Is that the only weird class you’ve got? It’s more like interesting. I’m in sociology of gender. It’s all about how we determine our gender and our gender ideas.

So that gender is different than sex and all that — Exactly. I’m taking those classes, and I was going to do a criminal justice minor but the UA isn’t offering that anymore so I’m thinking of leaning toward doing a psychology minor to go along with Spanish. Just in case you had any extra free time you needed to kill? Yeah, plus I work at Core, so … And people order the craziest things. Gummy bears and ranch on a salad. I’ve seen it happen. What’s the weirdest thing you’ve made there? Someone once had me put gummy bears and cheese and steam it over brown rice. It looked like a rainbow when it was all done. But I just don’t ask sometimes, I just make the salads with a smile — most of the time.

fast facts

Will Ferguson / Daily Wildcat

After the first weekend back at school, students scattered trash across the sand volleyball courts next to the Park Student Union.

News Tips: 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 Luke Money at news@wildcat. arizona.edu or call the newsroom at 621-3193.

Daily Wildcat serving the university of arizona since 1899 Vol. 105, Issue 6

The Daily Wildcat is an independent student newspaper published Monday through Friday during the fall and spring semesters at the University of Arizona. It is distrubted on campus and throughout Tucson with a circulation of 10,000. 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 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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• In Rome, a piece of toast- • “The quick brown fox jumps ed bread was dropped over the lazy dog” is widely into wine, creating the considered to be the shorttradition of using the est sentence, which includes word “toast” during all the letters of the alphacheers. The word “toast,” bet. But alcohol lovers came meaning “wishing good up with one of their own: health” originated in an“Pack my box with five dozcient Rome. en liquor jugs.”

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Wildcat Calendar Campus Events

Biosciences Toastmasters Club Meeting August 29 12 p.m. - 1 p.m. The Biosciences Toastmasters Club offers a great environment for scientists and other professionals to practice speaking and leaderships skills, an area of development often overlooked in specialized higher education. Medical Research Building Room: 102

Brain Teasers 2 at UA Science: Flandrau. 1601 E. University Blvd. Mon-Thurs 10am-3pm, Thurs 6-9pm, Sat 10-9pm, Sun 1-4pm. Flandrau presents a traveling exhibit that challenges visitors with 20 puzzles designed to sharpen problem-solving skills and provide plenty of fun.

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August 29 Campus Events Campus Events Campus Events

Arizona Intramurals Registration Period August 22, - September 2, 2011 10 a.m. - 6 p.m. Grab some friends and sign up your team for one of these Season A sports: Flag Football, Indoor Soccer, 6 v. 6 Indoor Volleyball, Tennis Singles You can play at a beginner (desert), intermediate (sunset), or advanced (cactus) level. We offer men’s, women’s, co-rec, Greek, and graduate/professional leagues. The fee for officiated sports is $160 per team; for nonofficiated sports, the fee ranges from $65 to $85 per team. Student Recreation Center Free ASM Admission for Military Personnel Monday, May 30, 2011 -Monday, September 5, 2011 For the second year, the Arizona State Museum is offering free admission to all active duty military personnel and their families from Memorial Day through Labor Day 2011. More than 1,000 museums nationwide are participating in this initiative of Blue Star Museums. Where: Arizona State Museum

UAMA Exhibition: “20th Century Works from the Permanent Collection” Friday, June 10, 2011 -Sunday, October 9, 2011 The “20th Century Works from the Permanent Collection” exhibit heralds the return of some of the best-known and mostloved works in the University of Arizona Museum of Art collection. In addition to Rothko, O’Keeffe and Pollock, see works by Chuck Close, Robert Colescott, Andrew Wyeth and Richard Diebenkorn. Admission: $5 for adults; Free for students with ID, children, active military with ID and museum members. UA Museum of Art “Yana Payusova and Joseph Farbrook: Tale of Two Heads” Wednesday, June 1, 2011 -Wednesday, August 31, 2011 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.

UAMAExhibit - “Andreas Nottebohm: Raw Metal” May 26, 2011 - September 11, The University of Arizona Museum of Art presents the metallic creations of Andreas Nottebohm. Two exhibitions of Nottebohm’s work will scintillate in UAMA’s galleries. The Main Gallery will feature Nottebohm’s current work in an exhibition titled “Andreas Nottebohm: Raw Metal;” the Hanson Gallery will display his work from the 1980s that was commissioned by NASA as well as the NASA work of Robert McCall. Admission: $5 Adult; Free for Students with ID, Children, Active Military with ID, Museum Members. Where: UA Museum of Art

Of Note

HoCoFest Music Festival September 01, — September 04, 311 E. Congress St., 520-247-4141 Hotel Congress presents local and national bands; solarpowered entertainment venues; record, family, and eco fairs; a barbecue, a fashion show, and more at Downtown Tucson venues.

To sponsor this calendar, or list an event, email calendar@dailywildcat.com or call 621.3425 Deadline 3pm 2 business days prior to publication


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• Daily Wildcat

monday, august

29, 2011

UA BOOKSTORES WILL MATCH and other online retailers.

ls or visit See store for detai u/textbooks ona.ed uabookstores.ariz


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