Daily Wildcat — September 12, 2011

Page 1

VOLLEYBALL IMPROVES TO 8-1

UA ALUM WANTS GIRLS TO “GO!”

CHANGE OF A DIFFERENT KIND FOR DEMOCRATS

SPORTS — 7

ARTS & LIFE — 5

PERSPECTIVES — 4

DAILY WILDCAT

Monday, september , 

DAILYWILDCAT.COM

SERVING THE UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA SINCE 1899

UA opens downtown campus extension By Alexandra Bortnik DAILY WILDCAT

ROBERT ALCARAZ/ DAILY WILDCAT

The Associated Students of the University of Arizona came together with the 9/11 Planning Committee on Saturday to outline a heart commemorating the 10th anniversary of 9/11. UA students, staff and the Tucson community all met at Sancet Stadium, the former UA baseball field.

A heart, a part of healing Community gathers to commemorate Sept. 11, prior plans scrapped due to poor attendance By Eliza Molk DAILY WILDCAT

About 200 UA and Tucson community members formed the outline of a heart at Sancet Stadium on Saturday to commemorate the 10th anniversary of 9/11. Originally, attendees were supposed to form a “human flag” with students and university affiliates clad in red, service members in blue and city employees and community members in white. This was not possible because 1,000 individuals were needed to help form the flag on the former UA baseball field. Kevin Elliott, a political science junior and an Associated Students of the University of Arizona senator, said commemorating the anniversary of 9/11 helps people to remember how our nation has changed since the tragedy and to remember what was lost that day. “It’s important to publicly show our remembrance,” he said. “Never forget.” The 9/11 Planning Committee

in association with Democratic Congressman Raul Grijalva collaborated with ASUA to put on the event. The event cost a little less than $1,000, according to ASUA President James Allen. The organization funded the venue through the UA’s athletic and security departments. ASUA officers wore homemade badges that said where they were on 9/11. Kelsey Henry, a political science senior, said she attended the event because she helped the 9/11 Planning Committee organize it, and because she wanted to help remember the “important day in history.” Henry said that her father had many friends pass away on 9/11, and each anniversary she talks to him about it to help him heal and remember. “It helps me remember how important family is, and to value everything I have,” she said. Humberto Bours, a business management senior, said that because he is from Mexico he never really experienced the American

ROBERT ALZARAZ/ DAILY WILDCAT

Emiliano Reyes, 5, came with his family to outline a heart commemorating the 10th anniversary of 9/11 on Saturday. About 200 people attended the event.

“culture of patriotism.” “This event brings all of us together,” he said. “I don’t get to see this back home.” The 9/11 Planning Committee used press releases, social media and word of mouth to get people to the event, according to Jose Miranda, a member of the

committee. He said the UA and Lowe’s Home Improvement provided a lot of the resources to make the event possible. “Of great tragedy came great unity and cohesiveness,” he said. “There is no better way to show that.”

The opening of UA Downtown was celebrated with live music, hors d’oeuvres and a surprise appearance from mascots Wilbur and Wilma Wildcat on Saturday. UA Downtown is located in the Roy Place building, which existed as a Walgreens from 1956 to 2003 and has been restored to its original Spanish facade. The building will provide classrooms to students in the School of Geography and Development, the College of Architecture and Landscape Architecture and the College of Social and Behavioral Sciences. The building will give students the opportunity to work with local city agencies and private agencies, said Janice Cervelli, dean of the College of Architecture and Landscape Architecture. “It’s not just the government, it’s a lot of these partnerships, having the students here actually engaging in that process and giving ideas is an exciting learning opportunity for them,” Cervelli said. “Studying it from a distance is a whole different thing than sitting in the meeting.” The UA research space downtown as a way to expand the UA’s campus beyond its physical borders and provide students with more opportunities for hands-on learning experiences. John Paul Jones III, dean of the College of Social and Behavioral Science, said he wants students to use the building just as they would a UA space. The 10-minute commute makes it easier for faculty and students to utilize both UA campuses. “We’re starting to build sort of a group of think tanks and university facilities downtown, which I think is really the future for both the City of Tucson and the University of Arizona,” said Brint Milward, director of the National Institute for Civil Discourse

DOWNTOWN, 2

UMC, UPH renamed as Health officials medical services unite urge flu shots By Luke Money

By Michelle A. Weiss

DAILY WILDCAT

The University Medical Center and University Physicians Hospital were renamed and rebranded during a ceremony in front of McKale Center on Friday. UMC is now the University of Arizona Medical Center — University Campus, and UPC is the University of Arizona Medical Center — South Campus. The renaming is part of an ongoing effort to bring all of the UA’s medical services together under the umbrella of the University of Arizona Health Network, formerly UA Healthcare, which was formed in 2010 as a partnership of UMC, UPH and the College of Medicine. The partnership creates the first “academic medical network in the state of Arizona,” according to a release. “We are looking forward to coming together and serving Arizonans as the state’s first academic medical system. While individually we were strong, together we are even stronger and can provide the highest level of health care to more people in the region than ever before,” said Jodi Mansfield, interim president and CEO of the University of Arizona Health Network, in a release.

DAILY WILDCAT

ERNIE SOMOZA/ DAILY WILDCAT

Karen P. Mlawsky, CEO of University Medical Center, talks during a ceremony dedicated to the launch of The University of Arizona Health Network on Friday.

Michele Barnard, vice president of marketing and communications for the network, said the tagline of the network is “smart medicine.” “Because it’s really about the uniqueness that an academic medical center brings to this community and to this region,” she explained. Rebranding was an important part of integrating services in order to find “a look, a feel that really embodies what

the organization stands for,” which, Barnard said, is excellence in service across all areas under the new network. “This is an exciting night for our team to come together and really celebrate the launch of this new name and our integrated organization,” she added. — Additional reporting by Alexandra Bortnik

With flu season just around the corner, local officials are trying to give prevention a shot in the arm. While flu season in Tucson typically begins in November, “we’re realizing that there’s actually a trickle of cases all year round,” said Dr. Michelle McDonald, the chief medical officer for the Pima County Health Department. Health workers say now is the time to get the flu vaccination, which lasts for a year. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is encouraging an annual flu vaccination for anyone older than six months old. While some people may view getting the shot as an individual protection from the virus, it’s really about protecting the entire population, said Shari Overland, a nurse at Campus Health Service. “It’s a public thing and so you don’t know if you’re going to be in the store with a pregnant woman or in the movie theater with a little kid … and those are

Feeling sick? • Flu symptoms include: Fever, cough, sore throat, runny or stuffy nose, body aches, headache, chills, fatigue Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

the people who are at most risk,” she said. Overland gives flu vaccinations to UA students, which Campus Health provides for $15. For some people, the flu virus may only last a few days, but for children and pregnant women, the virus could put them in the hospital, said Shauna Okongo, a nurse at Campus Health. “If you are exposed to influenza, you can spread the virus three to five days before you even have symptoms yourself,” Okongo said. According to the CDC, there

FLU SHOTS, 6


2

News •

• Daily Wildcat

monday, september

12, 2011

Truck bomb detonated in Afghanistan Scores of American soldiers wounded on eve of 9/11 anniversary Mcclatchy tribune

Michelle A. Monroe/ Arizona Daily Wildcat

Jan Cervelli, College of Architecture and Landscape Architecture dean, talks about the uses of the new Roy Place building. The College of Social and Behavioral Sciences held an open house in the new UA downtown building, on the corner of Stone Avenue and Pennington Street, on Saturday evening.

downtown

from page 1

and director of School of Government and Public Policy. “The more we develop the better.” Rebecca Kopp, who is pursuing a master’s degree in Public Administration and volunteered at the opening, said UA Downtown is making use of space downtown that gives students access to government officials and local nonprofit organizations. The goal of UA Downtown is to further develop the UA’s campus and utilize Tucson’s resources, she said. “Food, Paper, and Alcohol: an Exhibit on Downtown Tucson,” made by students from the College of Architecture and Landscape Architecture and artist and instructor Bill Mackey of Worker, Inc., opened

along with UA Downtown. Although they are separate projects, the nature of the exhibit and its focus on the movement of people in a city, complemented the opening, Mackey said. Mackey and his students spent the semester looking at issues downtown and in an urban environment in order to collectively come up with the exhibit’s theme of “distribution,” which was then narrowed down to food, paper and alcohol. Mackey said food, paper, and alcohol seem to be the key ingredients of what makes up downtown right now. “There are a lot of restaurants, there’s a lot of office space, a lot of bars — they’re in use the most,” Mackey said. “The goal of the exhibit is for people to take a look at kind of very normal, under-the-radar processes, like how does food get to the city and how does it leave, and

have people understand it more intimately and understand that it’s a complicated system.” UA Downtown is a start to the UA’s growth and expansion both physically in Tucson and globally. The availability of resources and interactive learning will give students experiential knowledge unattainable in a university classroom, said Tim Finan, director of the Bureau of Applied Research in Anthropology. “I would like to see the UA enhance its global mission, look at itself, at its international image to promote, to see itself as a global actor, rather than just a university for the U.S.,” Finan said. “We think that having this building here will give the appropriate enabling environment where we can promote this. It’s important that students don’t be isolated in this building, this building is a part of the university.”

KABUL, Afghanistan — A suicide bomber detonated a truck loaded with explosives at a U.S. military outpost on Saturday, the eve of the 10th anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks, NATO announced Sunday. Two Afghan civilians were killed in the blast, which also wounded 77 NATO soldiers and about two dozen Afghan civilians. NATO did not disclose the nationality of the wounded troops, but officials in Washington said they were all Americans. NATO, however, sought to play down the impact of the explosion on Combat Outpost Sayed Abad, which is located in Wardak province about 30 miles west of Kabul, Afghanistan’s capital. None of the wounded soldiers suffered life-threatening injuries and most were expected to return to duty “shortly,” NATO said. But accounts from Afghan officials suggested that a catastrophe had been narrowly averted as the United States was preparing for a day of solemn ceremonies commemorating the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. Alam Gul, a local council chief who lives about six miles from the site of the explosion, said he heard the blast from his home.

“The houses that were near the base have been badly damaged,” he said. Gul said the truck’s explosive cargo had been hidden beneath a load of firewood. Shahidullah Shahid, a spokesman for the Wardak governor, said officials did not know how much of the explosives the truck was carrying. NATO said the attack took place at around 5:30 p.m. Saturday, but provided few details. Most of the explosion’s force was absorbed by blast walls, NATO said, adding that damage was limited to the base’s perimeter wall and a “maintenance facility.” The base “remains operational and the protective barriers have been repaired,” NATO said. The Taliban took responsibility in a statement posted on their website. The posting claimed that 50 U.S. soldiers had died. The exaggeration was typical of Taliban announcements. The Sayed Abad district is the same area where 30 American special forces troops and eight Afghan soldiers were killed last month when the Chinook helicopter they were riding in was shot down by Taliban insurgents. Wardak province has witnessed growing Taliban activity in the last two years, and the attack was a reminder that 10 years after invading U.S. troops helped oust the Taliban regime, security remains precarious in most of Afghanistan.

BUILD YOUR RESUME Be a Daily Wildcat Marketing Associate The Daily Wildcat is looking for dynamic students who want to be part of our elite marketing team. You will help promote readership, distribution and community engagement for the Wildcat, with opportunity for growth into more responsibilities! Perks include:

• Flexible work schedule up to 10 hours a week •Weekly stipend •Learning and using marketing skills that will enhance your resume JOIN US FOR AN INFORMATIONAL SESSION ABOUT OUR MARKETING ASSOCIATE POSITION ON WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 14 AT 4 P.M. IN THE WILDCAT OFFICE, PARK STUDENT UNION, 1ST FLOOR. Call Mackenzie Corley, Marketing Manager, at 621-9364 for more information.


NEWS •

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER

12, 2011

DAILY WILDCAT •

3

Arizon� Dail� Wildca�

Monda� Meg� Marke� India Oven Cuisine of India

$1 off Lunch for students $7.99 Lunch buffet 11-2:45 20% off Dinner Entrees with student ID Dinner 5-9:45 Find our menu online search ‘india oven’ 2727 N. Campbell Ave. 326-8635 1 mile north of campus

MICHAEL BRYANT/PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER/MCT

Sean Geyer, 4, takes in the crowd at ground zero as his mother, Lorie Geyer, holds him close as they face Freedom Tower in New York City on Sunday as the bells sound to mark the first plane crashing into the towers 10 years ago.

US marks 10 years since 9/11 MCCLATCHY TRIBUNE

NEW YORK — With simple and solemn ceremony, the United States marked the 10th anniversary of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks Sunday with prayer and remembrances at the sites where thousands of Americans died on this day a decade ago. Americans of every stripe, from presidents to firefighters to average citizens, paused to honor the dead in churches, at the sites of the attacks, and in living rooms across the country. Church bells rang. Prayers were read aloud. Choirs sang. “God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble,” President Barack Obama said at the World Trade Center site in New York, reading from Psalm 46. “Therefore, we will not fear, even though the earth be removed and though the mountains be carried into the midst of the sea, though its waters roar and be troubled, though the mountains shake with its swelling.” Obama was joined by former President George W. Bush in a moment of bipartisan unity reminiscent of the way the country came together in the wake of the attacks. Bush read of sacrifice from

a letter written by Abraham Lincoln to a mother who lost five sons in the Civil War. Hand in hand with their wives, the two presidents walked to the site as the ceremony opened at 8:46 a.m., the precise moment the first hijacked plane smashed into the first tower. A church bell rang twice. Obama’s hand grazed the new bronze panels bearing the names of the dead, part of the moving memorial formally dedicated Sunday. They went on to the North Memorial Pool, built on the footprint of the World Trade Center’s North tower. The ceremony took place under the threat of terror attack, the audience there by invitation only, the leaders behind bulletproof glass. Chundera Epps, whose brother was on the 98th floor of the North tower, said it still hurts 10 years later. “When it comes to family gatherings, that’s when the hurt comes in,” Epps said. “The first Thanksgiving all we did was cry, we couldn’t even eat.” Some wore shirts bearing images of those who perished in the attacks, or carried signs with pictures of loved ones and the words “never forget.”

Surrounding the site, U.S. flags flew under a sunny sky at half mast. Obama left the site precisely at 9:11 a.m., bound for Shanskville, Pa., to honor the passengers of United Flight 93 who died stopping their hijacked plane from reaching its intended target, the U.S. Capitol or the White House. There, he and First Lady Michelle Obama laid a wreath at the undulating wall of white marble that is engraved with the names of those aboard Flight 93. The Obamas also visited the boulder that marks the actual crash site, standing quietly in a field of wildflowers, gazing into the distance. They spent nearly an hour greeting guests, most of them families of passengers on the ill-fated flight. “God bless you and our country,” Linda White of Hamburg, N.Y., said to Obama. White told the president that her cousin, Louis J. Nacke, was among the passengers and that her husband has been at the site every year but one. That exception came the year he joined a motorcycle ride cross-country that symbolically finished the flight’s intended journey from Newark to San Francisco. Kevin Marisay brought an

American flag he carried in memory of his sister, Georgine Rose Corrigan, who had boarded Flight 93 instead of the later flight she had booked in hopes of getting home early from a business trip. “It’s still not setting with me that she’s gone,” Marisay said. At the Pentagon, the remembrance began at 6:48 a.m. when Pentagon workers unfurled a flag to the right of very spot where the building was struck, just as they had done on Sept. 12, 2001. Guests observed a moment of silence at 9:37 a.m., the same minute that a hijacked plane had hit there on Sept. 11, 2001. Vice President Joe Biden attended the Pentagon ceremony, where he praised the courage of the family members of the 184 people who died there. “I know these memorials — and you’ve been through many — are bittersweet moments for you, because as you sit here right now, unlike a month ago, everything’s come back in stark relief. It’s not a thought, it’s precise. You remember that God-awful empty feeling, you remember being sucked into your own chest and that feeling of hollowness,” he said.

WILDCAT SPECIALS

Falafel $1.99 Falafel w/Hummus $2.50 Falafel w/Baba Ganoush $2.50 Chicken Shawarma Beef Shawarma Gyro

$3.99 $3.99 $3.99

520-319-5554 1/2 Dozen Falafel $3.95 1800 E. Fort Lowell 1 Dozen Falafel 2 Dozen Falafel Suite. 168

$6.95 $10.95

After two-day weather delay, NASA launches GRAIL mission to moon MCCLATCHY TRIBUNE

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Shaking off a two-day delay that began with swirling winds on the coast of Florida, NASA launched its GRAIL mission to the moon on Saturday, seeking a greater understanding of Earth’s nearest neighbor through a promising dual-spacecraft technology. The Delta II rocket carrying the paired washingmachine-sized craft that make up the Gravity Recovery and Interior Laboratory lifted off into a blue sky from Cape Canaveral, Fla., at 9:08

a.m. Roughly 90 minutes later, NASA confirmed that GRAIL-A and GRAIL-B had separated from the rocket, unfurled their solar panels and begun a three-and-ahalf-month trip to the moon. “Our GRAIL twins have Earth in their rear-view mirrors,” said David Lehman, GRAIL project manager at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in La Canada Flintridge, which is managing the $496 million mission. Maria Zuber, professor of geophysics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and GRAIL’s princi-

pal investigator, said in an email that the launch, long in the making, was an emotional experience. It was akin, she said, to watching a child practice for years at music or sports, “then watching them perform in extraordinary fashion.” NASA had scrubbed planned launches Thursday and Friday, first as a result of foul weather and then because of a data glitch. The spacecraft will spend three months making 12 polar orbits of the moon each day. Scientists predict that the mission will provide a

map of the lunar gravitational field, data that will allow for the first comprehensive assessment of the moon’s crust, mantle and core. Considering that 12 humans have walked on its surface, there are still surprisingly significant questions about the moon. For instance, scientists do not know why lava flooded the plains on one face of the moon but does not appear to have reached the surface elsewhere. Understanding the moon’s thermal history would add to the understanding of the evolution of the rocky planets, including Earth.

Memories Thrift Store Hand washed, as good as new. You’ll always remember your first time at memories. Clothing, furniture, ect.

4529 E Broadway Tues - Sat

10am - 6pm

THOROUGHBRED PAINT & BODY, INC. -SINCE 1979-

-FREE ESTIMATES-FREE SHUTTLE-

THE BRIGHT PINK BUILDING 5133 EAST 22ND ST. (520) 790-4946

1st Hot Pot Restaurant In

Tucson OPEN Lunch 11:30-2:30 Dinner 5:00-10:00

$

2

off with this coupon

Sunday - Thursday, 5 - Midnight Friday & Saturday, 5 - 2am

YA GOT THE FUNK?

5319 E. Speedway Blvd l 520.881.7735

520.882.3059 | 2610 N 1st Ave, Tucson

somethingsweet-dl.com

ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT

YO UL EX TR AVA OOK BA GANZ BY A, !

Lash Dip

Lasts up to 6 weeks Completely water & smudge proof $ 25 OFF of the The perfect Semi Permanent Lash Dip Service Mascara Coat! 520-881-1050

2567 N. Campbell Ave

spiritsalontucson.com


Perspectives

Daily Wildcat

• Page 4

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

Passing blame will only work for so long Storm Byrd Daily Wildcat

M

any Democrats are reconsidering their faith in President Barack Obama. In an interview with The New York Times, Rep. Peter A. DeFazio, a Democrat from Oregon, was even so blunt as to say “there is tremendous discontent with (Obama’s) direction.” A rather restrained attitude, numerous failures to convince the Republican-controlled House of Representatives to pass anything that looks agreeable to anyone but themselves, and an unemployment rate of just more than 9.1 percent have all contributed to the president’s high disapproval rating. Even some of the most devout Obama supporters are reconsidering their support. DeFazio said they all feel as though they voted for him once and that they’re not sure they could do it again. While disapproval of Obama is nothing new, it was often regarded as nothing to really worry about in regards to re-election. With the Republican primary field flashing a different front-runner each week, Democrats could write off the GOP as a party unable to unite behind one entity. All the contenders set to challenge Obama seemed too conservative, too inexperienced and too unknown by the party base or even by the general public. Now though, Democrats seem fearful enough that Obama’s support has dipped beyond the threshhold and are sounding the alarm. All hope doesn’t seem to be lost though. Obama’s most recent job speech is regarded as one that displays his long dormant passion and fire. There are those who feel that as long as Obama gets back to his roots that won him the presidency in the first place, he can fend off a Republican threat. There is no doubting Obama’s presidency hasn’t been what his supporters would have hoped for. Yes, he passed health-care reform, but it wasn’t exactly what everyone wanted. Not only that, it’s been tied up in litigation from the get-go. Guantanamo Bay “closed,” but not by the definition that people wanted. The recession ended, but the country didn’t recover. “Don’t ask, don’t tell” was discarded, but gay individuals haven’t realized their full equality from the federal government’s end. And ultimately, the change in the bickering and boorish behavior in Washington still hasn’t come. Democrats had sweeping victories in November 2008, yet they’ve managed to completely fumble away their momentum, in no time at all. Democrats hoped to regain the lost ground from the Tea Party’s “mad as hell” campaign in 2010 but, at this rate, the look of Washington will return to its pre-2008 appearance. It could even be worse, depending on who’s behind the wheel and what other stubborn politicians enter the playing field and steal a spot in the 2012 elections. The harsh reality is that the trendy movement that allowed Democrats to blame their way to large scale election success is now being turned against them. Ultimately, the ground made up by the Republican Party begs the question: When is it no longer enough to just blame your predecessor? In 2008, it was all George W. Bush’s fault. In 2012, it will no doubt be Obama’s. When is it no longer enough to just point the finger? Regardless of who you believe is to blame, what are you going to do to rectify the issue? We’re all aware that these are trying times. We can point our fingers at whomever, but with what credibility and what purpose? Even the most uninformed American needs only to look at their paycheck and their job security to understand something is wrong and someone is to blame. But a true visionary and a true leader looks at worsening situations and figures out how to fix them. Perhaps Obama isn’t the visionary that many thought he was. He has made minor, or indirect, strides at accomplishing his campaign promises and ultimately his failures to rectify economic woes are the only thing that matters to the everyday American. Regardless of whether he is or not is the leader many thought he was is honestly irrelevant. As voting trends will likely show, it’s who makes the best case for being the least to blame that will win in 2012. — Storm Byrd is the Perspectives editor. He can be reached at letters@wildcat.arizona.edu

The Daily Wildcat editorial policy

Daily Wildcat staff editorials represent the official opinion of the Daily Wildcat staff, which is determined at staff editorial meetings. Columns, cartoons, online comments and letters to the editors represent the opinion of their author and do not represent the opinion of the Daily Wildcat.

Remember to be thoughtful, kind even on ordinary days In Tucson, tens of thousands of people turned out to create a human flag. No amount of talking about how you feel about one day when nearly 3,000 Americans died will change the point: People die every day. Those deaths belong to other people, Kristina Bui and we don’t always think of those deaths Daily Wildcat as tragedies. But compassion happens every day, not just on the anniversary of one morning when you turned on the news. itnessing other people’s grief is a It is not enough to say you are sorry that The legacy of 9/11 is one of heartbreak self-indulgence. This weekend, thousands of strangers died. Tens of thouand hope. In the decade that’s followed, the the nation reflected on the 10th sands of strangers die all the time. Their overwrought monologues, all the falsified anniversary of 9/11. We remembered. We deaths and the lamentations of the people words masquerading as caring, have dismourned. We honored. Thousands of peowho loved them aren’t captured on TV. ple died on Sept. 11, 2001, and 10 years later, Tragedy, the televised kind on the scale tracted us from the simplest fact. Yesterday, we’re still bursting with feelings about it. and scope of 9/11, is romanticized. Seeing 10 years ago, thousands of people died, innocently on an ordinary day. Thousands For weeks leading up to the anniversary, the towers fall on TV made the tragedy media outlets like NPR and the Los Angeles ours, it belonged to us. But it didn’t really. more came together and acted. It is not that the 10th anniversary of 9/11 Times collected memories of that day. Many During it, we became inflated with a sense shouldn’t have been commemorated. Every of them began with, “I was watching TV.” If of self-importance that we mistook for life lost or changed that day mattered. But your story begins with, “I was watching TV,” kindness. now that the anniversary is over, what are maybe you should re-evaluate your story. Now, 10 years later, we remember this day you doing today? Even our memories of other people’s horror when most of us were watching TV. It’s as Today is Sept. 12. It is another ordinary begin with our own navel-gazing. narcissistic now as it was then. Maybe now On Sept. 11, 2001, at around 11:45 p.m., it’s even worse, because we should know bet- day, when thousands of other innocent people will die, and their deaths won’t be a Polish immigrant named Henry Siwiak in ter. We tell ourselves what we feel is empathy televised or mourned en masse. But their New York City was killed while walking to because it came out of this incredible time of work. A decade later, the case remains the mass grief, despair, bravery and resilience. But deaths still matter, and the lesson still applies: Compassion is worth having on the city’s lone unsolved homicide of that day. really, we’re just grossly fascinated by grief. most ordinary days. On the same day, hundreds of thousands of Some beauty came out of 9/11. After the other people died all over the globe. Not in attacks, an estimated 36,000 units of blood — Kristina Bui is the copy chief for the Daily an airplane or a skyscraper but of violence were donated to the New York Blood Center. Wildcat. She can be reached at or hunger or exposure, not on TV but quiFunds dedicated to families of members of letters@wildcat.arizona.edu. etly and mourned by only a few people in the New York City police and fire departthe world. ments collected an estimated $500 million.

W

MAILBAG Republicans can’t please everybody at every turn

Telling people that Republicans are being insensitive to Democrats is insensitive in itself. By your logic, should we have discontinued the use of aircraft because terrorist organizations decided Americans deserved to die? Should vehicle manufacturers discontinue production because people have used automobiles in suicides and homicides? By no means am I dismissing the horrible incident in which a man injured and killed my fellow Tucsonans. However, the auction of these firearms have not originated because of that incident. As far as textbook stereotypical conservative agenda, what ideals are you speaking of? Free speech, which you have so easily exercised? What do you propose the Pima Republican Party auction off? Do you have a better idea that has the ability to raise that much money? I didn’t think so. I do not know what you expected from any of what you wrote. No one person, or party for that matter, can please everybody.

ing back from a teaching job in Kuwait, I learned there were few opportunities because baby boomers had grabbed all the jobs. What to do? In response to “Show some respect, please, My dad and my government teacher had and put down your piece”: mentioned they thought law would be a First, I would like to say the editorial piece possibility for me. No pushing. Just a comabout the insensitive, intolerant, ignorant ment here and there. Everyone was so proud and inexplicably unintelligent red-blooded when I graduated. Then on to the actual Republicans was not only biased but unjust. practice, which was not so much fun. Much You were correct when you said just because of the time, you’re in your office pushing you can do something, doesn’t mean you pleadings and organizing notes. should. That being said, just because you Much later I went back to teaching at a have a pen and a platform does not give community college and my happiness level you the right to name call and belittle an went up exponentially. People are surprised entire group of people. Did you know that when they find out I’m a lawyer, and respect Gabrielle Giffords was a pro-gun Democrat for me noticeably goes up in the eyes of who opposed the D.C. gun ban? Does she a few. Others think I’m nuts because why have a problem with this auction? You stated would I teach when I could be making all all guns are guns, so why is it that you are so that money? Pretty sad either way. opposed to the Glock 23 being auctioned off? As for journalism, loving newspapers Is it because it bears the same name as the was passed on to me by both my parents. weapon used to shoot innocent people? Dad and I got down on the floor to read For your information, Glock is an Austrian — Chelita Dalton the funnies on Sunday morning. I read defense manufacturer who not only pro“Dear Abby” in fifth grade. Gradually, the duces guns of varied caliber, but knives and Des Moines Register and the Sioux City Happiness is important too, entrenching tools. Glock reports that their Journal led to a love of informing myself pistols are “in use in 65 percent of law enforce- regardless of your major about world happenings (and) politics. ment agencies.” For instance, the Federal Many of us are worried about the future of Bureau of Investigations issues Glock 22 or 23, In response to “Majors are not to be judged; our beloved newspapers and news magaappreciate student decisions”: depending on personal preference. Should zines. It’s a comfort to know that there are Dear Kelly, agents stop carrying their sidearms based on dedicated young people like you who will Surviving being an English major in the an isolated incident? Or should they continue carry on. to carry them because they are extremely reli- ’60s wasn’t so hard. Oh, there were a few snickers (but) easy to ignore. But comable and can fire in extreme conditions? — Mary Jo Hultgren

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 UA alum guides travel for women By Ashley Pearlstein DAILY WILDCAT

One cool December evening, a self-empowered, travel-obsessed UA graduate was lying in bed dreaming about her travels. Little did she know, this particular dream would lead her down the path of a lifetime to her very own travel guidebook business, “Go! Girl Guides.” This dreamer, Kelly Lewis, remembers looking at a travel guidebook specifically geared toward women in her dream. “In my “In my dream I dream, I was kicking was kicking myself for myself for not thinking not thinking of the idea and then of the idea I woke up and then and realized I woke up I did,” Lewis said. “It hit and realized me and I I did. was like ‘Oh It hit me my God, I and I was have to do this,’ and so like ‘Oh my I did.” God, I have After to do this.’” months of working - Kelly Lewis, three jobs founder, Go! to save for Girl Guides the business, Lewis created a website for the idea. With help from fellow travel bloggers and friends, she began working on the first guidebook centering on Thailand. The book, which will be released on Sept. 17, includes valuable information for female travelers. “I think that women face some pretty unique challenges by traveling. It is totally safe to travel; it’s just that we have some extra things to worry about. For instance, we talked to a Thai gynecologist for this book and asked him questions about women’s health in Thailand,” Lewis said, in case a female traveler needed immediate attention, information about where to purchase women’s health needs or where to go for help. The book also contains a recipe section with different Thai recipes, how to order common dishes and what ingredients are in that exotic fare (in case all of the menus are in Thai). A lodging section is also included in the book, teaching female travelers where they can stay and feel safe, which places are most affordable, how to stay safe in hostels and which places have the nicest owners, night guards or sturdy lofts. The safety portions of the book teach travelers how to keep their belongings from being stolen, common scams to watch out for, how to use taxis, cultural etiquette, how to travel safely on a budget and where the best and safest places are to volunteer in Thailand. The “Go! Girl Guides” idea is one of the first of its kind as a guidebook exclusively for women. Lewis said she hopes the books will inspire other women to travel, volunteer and experience life in other cultures. “Traveling has changed my life in so many ways and I think it’s just such an important experience,” Lewis said. “I hope our books are a useful tool for other girls.”

DAILY WILDCAT

• PAGE 5

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

From a Wildcat to a Jet By Jazmine Woodberry

and sing in “West Side Story.” “It’s kind of my thank you card to Tucson,” Harris said. Harris said he hopes to go back to New York with this credit on his resume and work on musical theater. He said he wants to eventually end up back in his home state of California, channeling his work on the stage into a film and TV career. And for people trying to make it like him, Harris has one piece of advice: Be willing to starve for what you love. “It’s the highest highs and the lowest low, and if you can get through the lowest lows and still have an appreciation for what you are doing, then you are meant to do it,” Harris said. See Harris and company at the Tucson Music Hall for eight shows beginning on Sept. 20.

DAILY WILDCAT

Kyle Harris was an athlete in high school, until he followed a girl to the Arizona Repertory Theatre at the UA. Now he is ending a one-year stint as Tony in a national touring Broadway production of “West Side Story”. As a soccer player, he came to the UA to see his girlfriend in a production of “Guys and Dolls” in 2004. “I was blown away. I grew up as an athlete and a soccer player,” Harris said. “I had no idea young people were so capable of doing professional work.” Harris said his reaction to the show was this: “It was like, ‘This is a college? This is a theater program in the desert? What?’ I didn’t expect any of this.” Later that year, he went to audition for the UA’s theater program. It only took 15 minutes for the panel to decide he was in. Four years and plenty of shows later, Harris graduated with Bachelor of Fine Arts in musical theater from the UA in 2008, and a week before graduation was casted in a show in Florida. “It was exciting. I was already on my way to becoming a professional actor before I had graduated,” Harris said. Harris couldn’t stay away from Arizona for long. After living in New York City for a month after the run of the Florida show, he saw Arizona Theater Company doing a rendition of “Hair” and jumped on board. Soon, though, he was back in New York City, back to a pastime of many a struggling actor — a waiter. And then there was Tony. Premiering last September in Detroit, Harris is now on the last few stops of the national tour of “West Side Story” when the show stops in Tucson later this month, showcasing a cast that won a Grammy for Best Musical Show Album last year. He’s Tony.

Fast facts:

COURTESY OF KYLEAHARRIS.COM

Kyle Harris is starring in Broadway’s latest national tour of West Side Story as Tony. He is a 2008 graduate of the UA in musical theater. “I just owe it all to the teachers and the experience to shape my career,” Harris said. “I think I had a lot of raw talent, it just needed to be honed, to be guided and polished.”

Harris said he’s most excited for things to come full circle — to share with his teachers and other students who came to see him in UA theater now get to see him professionally act

- The new Broadway cast album of “West Side Story” won the Best Musical Show Album for the 2010 Grammys. - The “West Side Story” revival tour, on which this show is based, began in February 2009 and raked in more than the $14 million invested in the show by 30 weeks of its run. - “West Side Story”’s latest run held 27 previews and 748 regular performances, making it the longest-running production of the musical in Broadway history. The original held the previous record, with 732 performances. - The original musical took six years before Jerome Robbins’s modernization of Romeo and Juliet became a Broadway show in 1957. The first concept for the musical was meant to highlight the tensions between Jewish Americans and Catholics in New York’s Lower East Side between Passover and Easter.

Not your mother’s fashion myths How to make a pair of white jeans after Labor Day or that maxi dress work all year long

Don’t wear white after Labor Day.

This is definitely the biggest fashion myth of all time. How this myth even began, I will never know, but it couldn’t be further from the truth. In fact, a white maxi dress, white skinny jeans, By Ashley Pearlstein a light white cardigan or summer scarf can DAILY WILDCAT The world of fashion can be complicated and dif- be key transition pieces from summer to fall. ficult to keep up with. It’s hard to know if black really Don’t let this myth fool you, and don’t be afraid is slimming or what accessories will properly comple- to sport white pieces all year long. ment an outfit. The difficult decisions are not made any easier with all of the fashion myths that circulate Never mix and match patterns. around the industry. The other day I came across an adorable black and brown dress while feeding my This is ridiculous. I personally do not know shopping addiction on topshop.com. I’ve always been how anyone can get through life without pattaught black and brown together is a criminal offense, terns and prints. A confident fashionista can and the fashion police will immediately snatch up an wear a striped shirt with a patterned skirt, or a offender. This got me thinking about all of the fashion printed shirt and a polka-dot cardigan. These myths that have been pounded into our brains. It’s bold fashions, in moderation, can make a bortime to break down these myths and learn that break- ing outfit pop. ing the rules is all part of the fun of fashion. Maxi dresses are only for tall girls. I’m sure all short girls (like me) have heard that long dresses and skirts only make us look shorter. I beg to differ. My collection of maxi dresses contains some of my favorite spring pieces from the season. If a maxi dress makes you feel short or uncomfortable, try an updo or a pair of comfy, chic wedges to elongate your body. The beauty of a maxi dress is that every girl, of every shape and size, can rock it. Don’t wear more than one bold color. Hello old fashion, meet color blocking, one of the most popular spring fashions. Color blocking, for those that don’t know, is pairing bold colors together. This daring approach to spring style has proven over and over to be the perfect, flirty addition to any plain ensemble and there is no reason to believe this style will fade out anytime soon.

MCCLATCHY TRIBUNE

Maxi dresses are a fashion as of late, but not one limited to tall women. Wearing an updo or a pair of wedges with a maxi dress can make it work for anyone.

MCCLATCHY TRIBUNE

White has always been rumored to not work after Labor Day, but in the desert, this couldn’t be further from true. A pair of white jeans is a fashion do.

can see floral patterns are the new black (or just as popular). I’m not saying your dress should match your grandmother’s plastic-covered couch, but floral patterns are not something to be afraid of. Sparkles are only for the holidays.

This myth just breaks my heart. As a lover of all things sparkly, I can’t imagine not having some glitziness in my outfit. Whether it is a sequined crop top with a pencil skirt, some Floral patterns are for Grandma. dazzling accessories or glittery high heels, I All I have to say to those who believe in this am always in favor of a little sparkle. myth: Where have you been? Anyone who has — Ashley Pearlstein is a journalism junior. stepped inside a mall, boutique or even Target She can be reached at arts@wildcat.arizona.edu.

One week to make a five-minute film By Jazmine Woodberry DAILY WILDCAT

Ever wanted to make a movie in a week? Maybe the pot would be sweeter if $10,000 were up for grabs. Campus Movie Fest, the world’s largest student film festival, is currently touring the country and is coming back to one of the organizers’ favorite schools, the UA, according to Diane Payes, promotions manager for the festival. Payes said this year the organizers are looking for more submissions of anything under the movie sun, from dramas, comedies, even music videos. She encourages all students, not just those particularly interested in

film, to participate in the contest. “You really get a chance to flex your creative muscle,” she said. The festival furnishes moviemakers with an Apple laptop with iLife and Final Cut Pro, a Panasonic HD camera, and 24-hour tech support to make a five-minute movie in seven days. The movies can only be produced by UA students, faculty and staff members. The only non-UA affiliates allowed are any actors a team wants to hire for their film. The official launch of the festival is Sept. 20 in the Student Union Games Room from noon to 5 p.m., but this Thursday there will be a mixer on campus from 5 to 7 p.m. where old

participants and new prospective filmmakers can dish about the festival and what it takes to win. “It’s a challenge,” Payes said. “But anywhere in life you are going to meet some tough deadlines.” From Sept. 20 to 26, teams will create movies, and then the top 16 films will screen at a red carpet premiere in Gallagher Theater on Sept. 30 where Best Picture, Best Comedy and Best Drama winners will be announced and awarded. Those three films will then receive an invitation to screen at the Campus Movie Fest International Grand Finale next June in Hollywood. There’s also a chance for interested students to make movies for a cause

and win $10,000 in cash grants. The Elfenworks Social Justice category is open for those in the contest to gear their creations toward issues of homelessness, poverty or other social inequalities and injustices in their communities. These issues, like a film last year that won, analyzed why people turn a blind eye to those issues in their community, should look at how fear or hope might add and multiply those problems. “If you are a film student, it’s a way to take what you are doing in class and apply it,” she said. “And if you aren’t, it’s a way to try something COURTESY OF CAMPUS MOVIE FEST new — and that’s what college is The movie “Mike and Megan” won best all about.” film at UA’s Campus Movie Fest last year.


6

• Monday, september 12, 2011

flu shots

from page 1

have been an estimated 3,000 to 49,000 deaths over a period of 30 years, and more than 200,000 people are hospitalized each year in the U.S. for flu-related complications. Pre-business freshman Reid Lunceford said he gets the flu shot annually, though he hasn’t yet had one this year. “It’s a quick 15 seconds of pain and it helps protect us from not just the flu, but also the common cold,” Lunceford said. Some people fear getting the flu shot for a variety of reasons. One of the common fears is that they previously got vaccinated and still ended up with the flu, said Rose Mary Jacob, a nurse at Campus Where to go Health who gives vaccinaCampus Health Service tions to Campus Health When: 8 a.m. and 4:30 employees. But it’s possible p.m., Monday through they had been exposed to the virus prior to getting the Friday. flu shot, she said. Cost: Flu shots are $15. “The flu vaccine takes No appointment necessary. approximately two weeks to develop antibodies against the flu,” Jacob said. People could also infect others without knowing they have the virus, said Frances Drake, the program coordinator for occupational health at Campus Health, who also gives employee vaccinations. The influenza virus has what is called “shedding,” which takes place a few days before a person actually gets sick and is aware of it. “The best way to prevent the flu is through flu vaccination,” McDonald said. “If they end up not taking it, I would encourage them to be really vigorous about hand washing.” Healthy people for the most part are able to get the vaccination without difficulty, but that’s not always the case, McDonald said. People can still get the flu and there’s potential to develop a severe infection. People can develop secondary infections from the virus, get more severe pneumonia or be hospitalized in some cases. These secondary infections can occur if people have the flu and don’t take care of it, Overland said. But flu complications can also arise for people who are at a greater risk. This could include those who are overweight, pregnant or have a chronic disease, McDonald said. “Healthy children, teenagers and young adults die from flu every year,” she said. Drake, Jacob and Overland recommend the medication Tamiflu in the first 48 hours of having the flu virus. It helps alleviate some of the symptoms and makes people feel better sooner, Drake said. How long the virus lasts depends on the person’s immunity system, she said. If students don’t want to miss class or work, they need to get the flu vaccine, Drake and Overland said. “I’d be upset just starting out in college and having to miss class and stuff,” Lunceford said. Jimmy Song, a biomedical engineering freshman, said he is content as long as people aren’t coughing next to him. He said he probably won’t get the flu vaccination. “I haven’t been sick for five years, so no need,” Song said. McDonald suggests people encourage their co-workers, family members and schoolmates to stay home if they are infected. Health workers agree getting the flu vaccination is the best protection from the influenza virus, even for the healthiest people. “Getting your flu shot not only protects you, but everybody around you,” Okongo said.

Madera Medical Affordable

Medical

520.889.8879

Weight Loss

100 E Ajo Way

Tucson, AZ

Call Dr. Roth to schedule

Appointment

Today an

Arizona Daily Wildcat

It’s like a prarty, Except you’re invited

INTERESTED in PHARMACY? T I P S

F O R

S T A Y I N G

P re

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.

T

he

Pre-Pharmacy club is a student organization created for underthe mission of

graduates who Plan on Pursuing careers in Pharmacy.

the club is to Provide valuable resources and oPPortunities which

will introduce students to the quickly changing world of Pharmacy. in addition, the club seeks to helP its members become the most

qualified aPPlicants to the

www.health.arizona.edu

club

Pharmacy Program.

you are invited to attend our first meeting of the semester which will be held on sePtember 12th at 5 P.m. in room b111 of drachman hall at the ua college of Pharmacy. httP://www.Pharmacy.arizona.edu/students/stdorgs/PrePharmfor more information.

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

refreshments will be served.


Sports scoreboard:

Daily Wildcat

• Page 7

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

Volleyball Arizona 3 Games, University of Evansville 1 Game

Arizona 3 Games, Southeast Missouri State 0 Games

Soccer Oklahoma 4, Arizona 2

wide receiver rising

gordon Bates / Daily Wildcat

Redshirt freshman Austin Hill, seen here against NAU on Sept. 3, came into his own against Oklahoma State on Thursday.

Rangy receiver makes a name on the national stage in Stillwater By Mike Schmitz Daily Wildcat

Gordon Bates / Daily Wildcat

Arizona receiver Dan Buckner led the Wildcats with 142 receiving yards against Oklahoma State, helping make up for the absence of Juron Criner.

Texas transfer plays up to preseason billing in Wildcats’ 37-14 loss to Cowboys By Alex Williams Daily Wildcat

STILLWATER, Okla. — Receiver Dan Buckner was one of the few Arizona players to take advantage of the national stage the Wildcats were on against No. 9 Oklahoma State. With Juron Criner sitting out after undergoing an appendectomy, Buckner had a chance to show why there was so much hype following him to Arizona after a transfer from Texas. Buckner made the most of that chance, grabbing 10 balls for 142 yards — both team-highs — in the nationally televised Thursday-night game. “Somebody needed to step up,” said Buckner, citing Criner’s absence from the team. Buckner’s performance was one of the few bright spots for Arizona in the 37-14

loss. Another was Arizona’s group of receivers as a whole. When all was said and done, Wildcat receivers may have had the best performance of any non-quarterback in the game. Redshirt freshman Austin Hill also received for over 100 yards, and six other players caught a pass. Plus, with Oklahoma State expecting 24 NFL talent scouts to be at the game — without a doubt there to watch electric OSU receiver Justin Blackmon — the stage for personal performances doesn’t get much bigger. But while Buckner was pleased with how he played, personal numbers aren’t as important to him when the team isn’t winning. “I thought I played well, but numbers don’t mean anything without wins,” Buckner said.

Although a team win wasn’t there to back up Buckner’s personal numbers, quarterback Nick Foles said Buckner is doing what he needs to do each week. “(Buckner) did well. He did what he’s supposed to do; he’s got to play better every week,” Foles said. “He’s got to play aggressive, he’s got to play confident. If he does that, he’s gonna be a really good player.” But at the end of the day, Buckner was lamenting what happened to the team, not celebrating his debut. “They held us to 14 points,” Buckner said. “We’re an offense that wants to put up a lot of points, and we feel like we’re gonna do that throughout the season. So their defense must have played pretty well to hold us to 14.”

Foles improves, D struggles By Mike Schmitz Daily Wildcat

STILLWATER, Okla. — The similarities between the Alamo Bowl and Arizona’s Thursday night loss to Oklahoma State are endless. Everything from the eerily similar score to UA’s painfully slow start felt like déjà vu. For quarterback Nick Foles, however, the two games couldn’t have been more different. Foles flopped in the Alamodome last season, accounting for three interceptions of Arizona’s four turnovers in his worst performance of 2010. In front of his home state of Texas at the stadium where he’d played multiple times in high school, Foles failed to deliver. “That game made me grow up, the Alamo Bowl,” Foles said. “That was a tough game playing in your home town.” But the learning experience prepared Foles for the Cowboys this time around, and it showed in his play. Foles threw for 398 yards and a touchdown on Thursday, giving the quarterback a nation-leading 810 yards on the season. OSU quarterback Brandon Weeden, who completed a school record 42 pass-

es for 397 yards and two touchdowns, stole the show, but Foles did his part with no help from the running game and with No. 1 target Juron Criner in Tucson. Although it came in another embarrassing loss, Foles’ performance allows him to put his Alamo Bowl struggles in the rearview mirror. “After this game, I’m ready to move on,” Foles said. “This is tough too, but it’s football. I still get to live tomorrow and hopefully keep moving forward.”

STILLWATER, Okla. — Redshirt freshman Austin Hill arrived at training camp talented enough to contribute right away, but with the Wildcats’ depth at receiver, his coming-out party seemed uncertain. Hill entered the season behind outside receivers Juron Criner, Gino Crump and Dan Buckner on the UA depth chart, meaning his breakout year would most likely have to wait until 2012. But with Criner’s appendectomy sidelining him against Oklahoma State on Thursday, the Wildcats took off the training wheels and gave Hill his first career start and the opportunity to prove himself. Against a top-10 team in a raucous Boone Pickens Stadium, he delivered. The 6-foot-3, 205-pound long and athletic wideout took the reins as another deadly receiving threat, catching eight passes for 128 yards, all through the first three quarters. “It felt really good,” Hill said, adding he wished it had been under different circumstances. “I didn’t think I was going to get a chance like this. So I was just happy. Thank God for letting me perform so well.”

Notes, 12

UA players’ thoughts on the 37-14 loss to Oklahoma State

Paul Vassallo Linebacker

“We practiced what they were going to do. They didn’t come out and run 23 personnel and goal line the whole time, we knew what they were going to do. We saw them, however, many months ago. Two of our last three games were Oklahoma State. I’m not about to say we weren’t ready.”

“The only thing missing was the run game. That’s why you have games like this early in the season, so you figure out your team before the season goes on.”

Robert Golden

Nick Foles Quarterback

Soccer team ends scoreless drought, continues losing streak By Zack Rosenblatt Daily Wildcat

The Arizona soccer team dropped both of its games this weekend of the Sun Devil Desert Classic in Tempe. On the bright side, the Wildcats finally managed to score their first two goals of the season. Both goals came against the Oklahoma Sooners in a 4-2 loss on Sunday, following a scoreless 1-0 outing on Friday versus Missouri. The Wildcats may have scored their first two goals, and that is definitely a step in the

Hill, 12

they said it

Defensive takes a step backward

While Foles did his part, the Arizona defense — namely the secondary — couldn’t hold up its end of the bargain. Weeden shredded the Wildcats’ defensive backfield, an area where senior Robert Golden said the UA needs to grow up. “I felt like they were more mature than us out there,” Golden said. Aside from Golden and senior Trevin Wade, the Wildcats are young in the sec-

On Arizona’s first play from scrimmage, quarterback Nick Foles found Hill for a six-yard completion and from that point on, the Corona, Calif., native didn’t look back. Hill caught two balls for a combined 35 yards on the Wildcats’ first scoring drive and blew past the Cowboys’ secondary to haul in a 47-yard bomb late in the third quarter. Along with Buckner (10 catches, 142 yards and a score), Hill more than filled in the cracks for Criner, while earning himself a bigger role moving forward. “Austin’s a guy that I feel really confident in and I’ve told him that. Tonight he grew up a lot. I know he fumbled the ball, but he came back and made a play,” Foles said, referencing Hill’s costly fumble at the Cowboys’ 32-yard-line just before halftime. After catching a 24-yard touchdown against NAU in week one, Hill now has nine grabs for 152 yards and a score in a season where he was supposed to see limited action. “I thought Austin played well,” added head coach Mike Stoops. “He fumbled the ball around a couple times that could have kept

right direction, but following the weekend, the team now finds itself in the midst of a season-opening, six game losing streak that may be tough to bounce back from. “We are focused on getting our first win. We have all the individual pieces,” said head coach Lisa Oyen. “Throughout the course of the season we have had great games. We have done enough to put ourselves in situations to finish off games, it’s just a matter of staying committed and playing an entire 90 minutes.” The truth lies in the numbers. Obviously,

a six-game losing streak is a six-game losing streak, there’s no avoiding that fact. But a look at the numbers shows that the team has had flashes of potential. The Wildcats may have only scored two goals this season on 63 shots, but of those 63 shots, a total of 30, or 48 percent, were shots on goal. Their opponents on the other hand, have shot a total of 98 shots, 42 of which were on goal, for a percentage of 43. That statistic tells a few things. For

Soccer, 8

“I felt like (Oklahoma State) was a better team than last year. I felt like they was more mature than us out there. That’s one thing we’ve got to work on, and it’s one thing I’ve been saying we have to work on, our maturity and being grown-up.”

Robert Golden Safety “When the run game doesn’t work out, it’s really tough to get open because they can play the pass … it makes it a little more difficult because they’re playing so deep and so off (of receivers). They were running a lot of cloud (coverage) on us.” — Alex Williams

Austin Hill Wide receiver


8

SPORTS •

• DAILY WILDCAT

NFL ROUNDUP

NFL, fans pause to remember 9/11

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER

12, 2011

M-tennis opens fall season Urquidi takes third place in Aggie Invitational

MCCLATCHY TRIBUNE

CLEVELAND — On Sunday, a sacred day of mourning and remembrance, Ben Watson was almost as popular as Peyton Hillis; red, white and blue complemented brown and orange quite nicely; and some Bengals fans were even welcomed in Cleveland Browns Stadium. Jim Weidus was one of them. He grew up a Browns fan but converted in 1968 when the Bengals were an expansion team. Now he’s a firefighter in Cincinnati and attended the game Sunday wearing a Bengals shirt and fireman’s hat painted in America’s colors. One Browns fan spotted the helmet and came over to shake his hand, then he saw the Bengals’ T-shirt. “Love ya,” the fan said. “Even though you’re from Cincinnati.” Weidus smiled. “It’s all good fun,” he said. “The helmet saves me.” The Browns joined the NFL on Sunday in commemorating the 10year anniversary of Sept. 11 before the season opener against the Bengals. Watson ran onto the field during pregame introductions through a tunnel of military personnel with an American flag draped over his shoulders, eliciting an eruption from the crowd surpassed only by Hillis’ introduction. All NFL games across the country featured a video of a taps performance in Shanksville, Pa., where United Airlines flight 93 crashed to the ground. A moment of silence was

SOCCER

FROM PAGE 7

one, the Arizona defense has been allowing an alarming number of shots, a little more than 16 per game. On the positive side, however, the team has had nearly half of its shots be on goal, meaning it was only a matter of time before it finally scored some points.

By Kyle Johnson DAILY WILDCAT

PHIL MASTURZO/ AKRON BEACON JOURNAL/ MCT

The Cleveland Browns’ Benjamin Watson runs onto the field with an American flag before his team’s 27-17 loss to the Cincinnatti Bengals Sunday in Cleveland.

planned for all the stadiums following taps, but Browns fans couldn’t stay quiet long enough, as chants of “USA! USA!” rolled through the seats. Those same chants filled the gates as fans entered the stadium and were handed miniature American flags. The chants alternated with the more traditional woofing from Browns fans, creating a strangely patriotic scene with a Browns twist in the concourse. Sal Paratore walked to his seat with a flag draped over his shoulders like Watson. Four women sat in their seats before kickoff displaying a special

Oyen echoed that sentiment, and said she hopes the team can build on its progress and secure its first victory against Pacific on Friday at home. Freshmen LeeAndra Smith and Brie DeFelice scoring their first collegiate goals on Sunday is a start in the right direction. “We’ve had opportunities. We’ve had enough shots. It’s just really good to see that we can put the ball at the

Sept. 11 flag listing all of the names of those killed. One of the women, Diane Wickham, has a son in the Air Force in Kuwait on a mission to Iraq. American flags dotted Browns Stadium on Sunday. Full-size flags hung from walls, waved in the air and were even worn as jackets. Tom Richey is a burly 42-year-old bakery owner with a shaved head. He lives in Dayton and made the drive up with his wife Sunday to root for his Bengals. He wore a jacket with an American flag print on it and described himself as extremely patriotic, even before Sept. 11.

The Arizona men’s tennis team traveled this weekend to Las Cruces, N.M., for its first tournament of the season, the Aggie Invitational. While the final results were not overly impressive, the Wildcats still left with confidence and optimism. “(For being the) first tournament out of the gate with official practice not starting yet, the guys did pretty well,” said assistant coach Tom Lloyd, who traveled with the team in place of head coach Tad Berkowitz. “We took two freshmen (Carlos Bermudez and Robin Chou), so they’ve never really seen the light of a college match or college competition … It was a good test for both freshmen.” Of the four Wildcats who traveled, sophomore Mario Urquidi finished third, losing in the semifinals in the singles division. According to Lloyd, junior Frank Chen and Bermudez won their opening matches before being eliminated, and Chou lost his first round match but won once in the back draw before being eliminated. Official statistics were not available by publication time. Since it was the first tournament of the season and official practice did not start until Thursday, the coaches elected to bring a younger and less experienced team to let them gain some experience at the collegiate level. “The first tournament is always a tough read,” Lloyd said. “It is always a great opportunity to see where the guys are, what they did over the sum-

mer, and what we need to work on for the upcoming year.” Of course, considering the current composition of the roster, this group was not much younger than any other combination that coaches could have constructed. Chen, a junior, is the only upperclassmen on the roster. This weekend’s strong performance by Urquidi was reminiscent of his trip to Las Cruces last year, where he won his first college title in the lower division of the Aggie Invitational. “I thought I played pretty well (this weekend), just considering the fact that we haven’t really started practice yet,” Urquidi said. “It was a good tournament to go to just to get all the other guys — the young freshman guys — some experience and just see how the college level is. “For how much I’ve practiced, I was pretty happy (with my performance). I had a couple of pretty good matches where I played well, so overall I think it was a pretty good tournament.” The Wildcats also participated in the doubles competition, teaming up Bermudez/Chou and Chen/Urquidi. Both pairs struggled mightily. “The doubles was a different story, back to the drawing board for sure,” Lloyd said. But Lloyd remained optimistic about the season and is ready for it to get underway. “We are looking forward to a young team this year,” he said. “It’s going to be a fun year for the coaches, but a lot of learning and a lot of teaching for the guys.”

back of the net and we found a way to do so,” Oyen said. “We really are trying to take it one game at a time,” she added. “Our expectation is that we focus on this next game and get a good result and then we’ll look ahead to the game after that. Just take it one game at a time and one play at a time. Now we’ll focus on the game against Pacific.”

friend 2 friend notice. care. help.

A website for University of Arizona students that serves as a resource to help you help your friends stay safe and healthy.

Watch out for each other... Keep each other safe... Be a real friend.

F2F.health.arizona.edu

• Design ads for the Daily Wildcat • Work in Adobe InDesign, Photoshop and Illustrator • Gain experience in meeting deadlines • Work closely with advertising sales reps • Flexible hours • Relaxed and creative atmosphere

Hours

Tuesday/Thursday between Noon-5 p.m.

applications available

at Park Student Union 615 N. Park. Ask for Cindy Callahan 621-3377 Looking for UA students with at least 2 years of college remaining

Daily Wildcat, Your extended family...

Positions available for registered UA students only


monday, september

12, 2011

Daily Wildcat •

9

CLASSIFIEDS classifieds.arizona.edu

In Print and Online—The UA’s #1 Marketplace! PLACE YOUR AD

RATES

621-3425 http://classifieds.arizona.edu

CLASSIFIED READER RATES: $5.00 minimum for 20 words (or less) per insertion. 25¢ each additional word. 20% discount for five or more consecutive insertions of the same ad during same academic year. An additional $2.75 per order will put your ad online. Online only rate: (without purchase of print ad) is $2.75 per day. Any Friday posting must include Saturday and Sunday.

615 N. Park Ave., Rm. 101

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

Hours: Monday-Friday 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY RATES: $11.75 per column inch. DISPLAY AD DEADLINE: Two business days prior to publication.

FAX: 621-3094 classifieds@wildcat.arizona.edu

Join tucson in the 90 day challenge!!! ‑Lose weight ‑Get fit ‑ gain muscle -get healthy -Feel good -Make $$$$ -earn a Free bMw -Free personal trainer* visit adams88.myvi.net or call 520.730.8992

egg donorS needed! Healthy females ages 18-30. Donate to infertile couples some of the many eggs your body disposes monthly. COMPENSATION $5,000. Call Reproductive Solutions. (818)8321494. http://donor.eggreproductive.com Reproductive Solutions abides by all federal and state guidelines regarding egg donation, as well as all ASRM guidelines pregnant? conSidering adoption? Loving, prescreened couples are waiting! Adoption Law Group (626)7651285

guyS FantaSy get away www.tripouttovegas.com 855-trip- out

own a coMputer, put it to work earn up to $1,500/pt $7,500/ft will train, apply online: wealthywithrak.com

inveSt in your Future Success. Own a Business Now. Cleaning Franchise. Only $1,500 Cash Down. 520-790-1056 www.vanguardcleaning.com

looking For aFternoon/ evening nanny type help. Approximately 20hours a week $10/hr. We have 3very cool kids and need help with pick ups, dinner and babysitting. Schedule is somewhat flexible. 520‑301‑7425 looking For energetic nanny/ tutor to look after 3children. P/T. Experience required. Must have own vehicle & DL. Please call for details, contact Elle 520971-4029 nanny/ tutor needed for twin 7year old boys. River/ Campbell area. Must enjoy sports and children’s activities. Prior childcare experience and references required. Must have clean, dependable transportation. After school, evenings, and weekends required. $15/hr email resumes to: twinanny@gmail.com

PLEASE NOTE: Ads may be cancelled before expiration but there are no refunds on canceled ads. COPY ERROR: The Arizona Daily Wildcat will not be responsible for more than the first incorrect insertion of an advertisement.

now hiring bartenders (nightclub) & cocktail Servers (no exp req) apply in person thursday 12pm-2:30pm at Sapphire lounge 61 e. congress dreSS to iMpreSS and bring a pen we are hiring now!

aviva children’S ServiceS provides internships with CPS. Tasks include but are not limited to: home visits, assessment of client, researching social services, researching case records, attending court hearings, supervising visitations. Questions or interested, Contact Michelle Rios @327-6779 ext. 11 or michelle.rios@avivatucson.org Student internShip opportunity: Assistant Manager of Business Development working in Tucson close to the UofA. Summer, Fall, and Spring available. Earn academic units, while gaining work experience. Call 866-5455303 for more details.

!!!!bartendering!!!! up TO $250/ DAY. NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY. TRAINING COURSES AVAILABLE. AGE 19+ OK. CALL 800-965-6520 EXT.139 dining rooM Server and Banquet Server. Must have experience as a Server in a Full Service Restaurant. Must be at least 19 years old. Marriott University Park Hotel, 880 E. Second Street, Tucson, AZ 85719. Please complete the application process by going to our website at: http://jqhhotels.com/careers/ -Then select “Property Level Associates” to begin the application process. editor aSSiStant wanted. Help local author edit, format and finalize his latest book for publish‑ ing. Contact Tony az990tony@ gmail.com get paid to throw partieS! Local bar looking for a promoter. Must be social and willing to work and play hard. 520-275-8483

parent- child viSit Supervisor at Aviva Children’s Services, must be available to work 1-6pm at least 4days per week and occasional Saturdays. Must have reliable personal vehicle, valid driver’s license, personal computer with internet services, cell phone and appropriate car insurance. Must be at least 21 years old. Visit http://avivatucson.org for more information. Send resume by email to hr@avivatucson.org or by fax to 903-0430. public prograM SpecialiSt Kitt Peak National Observatory has a seasonal part-time position available to help conduct its Advance Observing Programs. The position requires knowledge of astronomy, excellent imaging processing skills and strong CCD data acquisition skills (astrophotography, web cam and digital camera preferred). Proficiency with op‑ erating amateur telescopes is also required. Schedule must be flexi‑ ble to work evenings and some weekends. Relocation is not available. The position is based on Kitt Peak Mountain, 56miles southwest of Tucson, AZ. Transportation, lodging and meals are available while on duty. Information about NOAO/KPNO may be found at: http://www.noao.edu/kpno/. Qualified applicants may apply to hrnoao@noao.edu: reference Job 1083, AOP Public Program Specialist, or mail to: NOAO Human Resources Office, Public Program Specialist-Job #1083, P.O. Box 26732, Tucson, Arizona 857266732 or FAX: 520-318-8494. Preference granted to Native Americans qualified for the position liv‑ ing on or near the Tohono O’odham Reservation. NOAO actively support efforts to broaden participation in all Observatory activities. Women and candidates from underrepresented minorities are particularly encouraged to apply. EOE/AA StudentpayoutS.coM paid survey takers needed in Tucson. 100% FREE to join! Click on surveys. wanted FeMale Student to drive for injured male. Light personal care and companionship in exchange for a private room & board and sharing home. Call 4088714

gyMnaSticS inStructor wanted: Experience is necessary, girls team experience is an added plus! Earn up to $20 an hour based on experience! Contact: 520-870-7556, or 520-6284355

wanted: creative, Skilled graphic designer interested in working on fashion design for an apparel brand. If interested, contact Taylor at tdr1@email.arizona.edu

lancer valet now accepting applications for qualified part time Valet drivers. Flexible hours, hourly plus tips. Apply at www.lancervalet.com 520-5797805.

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

ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT CLASSIFIED MAIL-IN FORM Deadline: Noon one business day before publication WRITE AD BELOW—ONE WORD PER BLANK

__________

___________

__________

____________

__________

___________

__________

____________

__________ __________ __________

___________ ___________ ___________

__________

____________

__________

____________

__________

Classification: _______________________________

____________

# of Days: ___________________

Name: _________________________________________________________________________ Address: ______________________________________________________________________ City/State:_____________________ Zip: _____________ Phone_____________________ Place my ad online: ___ Send ad with check/money order. We also accept: MasterCard/Visa/American Express: ______________________________ Expiration Date: ___________

Signature: ____________________________________

RATES: $5.00 minimum for 20 words (or less) per insertion. 25¢ each additional word. 20 percent discount for five

or more consecutive insertions of the same ad. 20 percent discount for 20 or more insertions of the same ad running the same day(s) of the week during same academic year. For an additional $2.75 per order your ad can appear on the Wildcat Website (wildcat.arizona.edu). Online only rate: (without purchase of print ad) is $2.75 per day. Any posting on Friday must include Saturday and Sunday. The Wildcat will not be responsible for more than the first incorrect insertion of an ad. NO REFUNDS ON CANCELED ADS. Deadline: Noon, one business day before publication.

615 N. Park, Rm. 101

621-3425 ➤

University of Arizona

Tucson AZ 85721

CLASSIFICATION INDEX ANNOUNCEMENTS

Greek Health and Body General Notices Personal Schools & Instruction ➤ Sports ➤ ➤ ➤ ➤ ➤

EMPLOYMENT

Business Opportunities ➤ Childcare ➤ Employment Information ➤ Internships ➤ Jobs Available ➤

➤ ➤ ➤

Jobs Wanted Personal Aide Volunteer Opportunities

FOR RENT ➤ ➤

Miscellaneous Parking

FOR SALE ➤ ➤ ➤ ➤ ➤ ➤ ➤

Cameras Clothing Computers Furniture Income Property Misc. for Sale Yard Sales

Musical Instruments ➤ Pets ➤ Audio Equipment ➤ TVs, DVD Players, DVDs ➤

HOUSING

Apartment for Rent Condominium for Rent ➤ Condominium for Sale ➤ Duplex-Fourplex: Rent ➤ Guesthse/Studio: Rent ➤ House for Rent ➤ House for Sale ➤ Housing Wanted ➤ ➤

➤ ➤ ➤ ➤

Roommate Wanted Room for Rent Townhouse for Rent Townhouse for Sale

➤ ➤ ➤ ➤

Resumes Services Clerical Services General Tutoring Services

LOST & FOUND

TRANSPORTATION

➤ ➤

➤ ➤ ➤ ➤

Misc. Lost & Found Pets Lost & Found

RECREATION ➤ ➤ ➤ ➤

Accommodations Spring Break Tickets Travel

SERVICES ➤ ➤

Housesitting Music Lessons

Autos for Sale Auto Parts Bicycles for Sale Motorbikes for Sale

WANTED ➤ ➤ ➤ ➤ ➤ ➤

Adoption Musicians Wanted Riders Wanted Rides Wanted Tutor Wanted Wanted General

honor StudentS: phi Sigma theta national Honor Society is seeking motivated students to establish a campus chapter. Contact: Director@PhiSigmaTheta.org MentorS needed For middle school gang prevention program. Committment is only 1hr per week! Internship and service hours available. For more info contact David Jimenez at 388-7370 or djimenez@luzsocialservices.org

1100SF oFFice building near UofA. 639 E. Speedway. 623-1313

brand new MattreSS sets Full $130, Queen Pillow Top $175, King Pillow Top $199, Twin $99 In original plastic w/Warranty Can deliver 520-745-5874

!!!!!!! -1+blks to ua- just blocks away! niceStneweStbiggeSt- beSt houSing valueS- going FaSt! whether you need a 2bdrm/ 2bath, or 3/3, or 4/4, or 5/5, or 6br/ 6ba, you’ll want to live in luXury in one of ourS. iMagine what you’re MiSSingSpaciouS bedrooMS with walk-in cloSetS, private cuStoMtiled full bathrooM in every bedrooM. Most baths have a private over-sized 6jet whirlpool tub. all have big living- dining areas, high ceilingS, big kitchenS with granite counters, quality applianceS including diShwaSherS, & walk-in pantrieS! private walled yardS, beautiFul landScaping, Free alarM Service and Still More: Full laundry, upstairs outSide patioS with gorgeouS Mountain and green treetop viewS, Fancy custommade balcony railingS, big garageS, and new Furniture available. coMe See theM now to avoid regret. call bob 388-0781. Speak your phone nuMber clearly. callS returned aSap! 3880781 to experience the niceSt living eXperience poSSible. !!!**** we also have a brand new 6br- 7ba, with huge living room + giant 20’x30’ DEN + BIG office LI‑ brary- owner says cannot rent to more than 4 total rooMMateS- one of a kind- only $2,800/mo obo******** 388-0781 bob !!!!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 $620 1bed. MuSt GO! Immediate move in. Internet, and parking included. 2blocks from campus. Call 520-884-9376. $87.50 MoveS you IN! A GREAT PLACE FOR STUDENTS! FREE Shuttle to the UofA! 1&2 BDs. 24hr fitness & laundry. Pool & spa, Ramada w/gas grills, gated access. Student discount, business center. Call Deerfield Vil‑ lage @520-323-9516 www.deerfieldvillageapts.com *Short terM 2br+2ba condo rental 2blocks from campus on university ave parents, alumni, visitors, vendors. Fully equipped & Furnished. garage/Street parking. call 818-708-1770 See: vrbo.com/284572 art deco 1br w/HW floors. Walk or park. No pets. Short term leases OK. $550. Call Lynne 571277-8222. FurniShed 1bdrM. eFFiciency kitchen, quiet, walled yard, cable, cat OK. Direct #4 bus to UofA. Speedway/ Wilmot area. ESL student grad/ faculty preferred. No smoking. $525/mo utils incl. Security deposit. 520-7225555 large StudioS 6blockS UofA, 1125 N. 7th Ave. Walled yard, security gate, doors, windows, full bath, kitchen. Free wi/fi. $380. 977-4106 sunstoneapts@aol.com newly renovated apartMentS. Spacious 1,2, & 3 bed, short walk to campus and nightlife. Brand new A/C & appliances. Starting @600/mo. View details and floorplans at UofAdigs.com Contact Shawn 520-440-0947 overSiZed 1br w/ac. Walk or park. No pets. Short term leases OK. $565. Call Lynne 571-2778222.

Attention Classified Readers: The Arizona Daily Wildcat screens classified advertising for misleading or false messages, but does not guarantee any ad or any claim. Please be cautious in answering ads, especially when you are asked to send cash, money orders, or a check. Publisher’s Notice: All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or intention to make any such preferences, limitations or discrimination. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis.

quiet 1bedrooM apartMent, $555/mo. 1mi East of campus, 5th St and Country Club, 3122 E. Terra Alta #B. Nice friendly community, great landscaping, and large pool, ideal for grad student. Call Dell 6230474. www.ashton-goodman.com SMall 1bdrM apartMent close to UofA. Water incl. Laundry facilities. Available immediately. Call 990-1243 StudioS FroM $400 spacious apartment homes with great downtown location. 884-8279. blue agave apartments 1240 n. 7th ave. Speedway/Stone. www.blueagaveapartments.com

1St Month Free RENT SPEC. $450/mo. EIGHT LARGE 1BR. CONDOS IN 100% GATED COMMUNITY. CENTRAL TO ALL. CALL 520-777-3895 TO SEE www.sierramadrecondos.com beautiFul 2bed 2bath furnished condo in the foothills. A gated community, good for graduate and residency students. $1200/mo. Call 520-405-9902 to see. For rent: 2bedrooM/ 2bath unfurnished condo at Skyline Villas (Skyline and Campbell Ave. next to La Encantada Mall). New carpet, washer & dryer. $1100/mo. 520-730-0550 or sadiagostine@comcast.net $695 2bdrM, 775SqFt, wtr & trsh pd, evap, w/d hu, fncd. Brdwy & Cherrry. Call ADOBE PMI at 520-325-6971 1bd 680SqFt. $550/Mo lease. $550 deposit. A/C, unfurnished, cats ok, water paid only. 1433 E. Adams. Walk to med school and UofA. Call 520-909-4766 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 520909-4766 2br 1ba, ac, fenced yard $700. 1702 N. Highland. Call 743-0667 college dorM rooM too small? 2/1, 920sqft, 2.5mi to UofA, w/d, ac, covered parking, dw, disposal. Move-in ready. Cherry/ Ft. Lowell. $700/mo, $500 security deposit. (520)559-1379 $475 Studio caSita! 400sf, separate kitchen & dining, wtr pd. 3rd Ave & 4th St. Call ADOBE PMI at 520-325-6971 600SqFt unattached gueSt house water paid $425 ALSO 1bd guest house a/c water paid pets welcome $535 call REDI 520-6235710 or log on to www.azredirentals.com 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 Studio apartMent 1121 e. 12th St. Complete kitchen, covered parking, no pets, fresh paint, lease/ deposit/ references/ $295. Owner agent 907-2044 ! beautiFul 2br 1ba, walking distance from UA/ UMC @Highland/ Elm. Recently renovated, porcelain tile, carpeted BRs, partially furnished, AC, washer, dryer, dishwasher. Quiet, security doors/ windows, carport, landscaped yard. $985 Call 520-904-7845 !!! 5bedrooM 3bath, only 4blocks to the UofA $2000 Kitchen with tons of cabinet space! Big Bedrooms & closets, fenced yard, tons of parking, washer & dryer, fireplace, very cute front porch for relaxing after a long day! Call Chantel 520.398.5738 !!!!!!!!*** 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. !!!!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 $1500, 4bd, 1305 e. Waverly #1 (Grant/Mountain) fenced yard, covered patio, fp, approx 1679sqft, AC, 881- 0930 view pictures at prestigepropertymgmt.com $535 1bdrM houSe & Evap, 511sqft, wtr & fncd front & back. Euclid Call ADOBE PMI at 6971.

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

$800 2bd, 1ba, 896sqft, wtr & trsh pd, washer & dryer, wood flrs. Speedway & Park. 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 520-325-6971

1bd houSe water pd washer/ dryer hookups pets welcome $485 ALSO 1bd Sam Hughes house washer/ dryer 900sqft $550 call REDI 520-623-5710 or log on to www.azredirentals.com

2225 e Juanita 4bd/ 2ba a/c washer/dryer hookups $1500 call Real Estate Direct, Inc 520-6232566

2bd/ 2ba houSe a/c water paid $650 ALSO 1600sqft 2bd house with garage and bonus room $825 call REDI 520-623-5710 or log on to www.azredirentals.com

3bd/ 2ba houSe 1980 N Tyndall #2 all appliances a/c washer dryer walled yard $1200 ALSO 3bd/2ba house carport all appliances pets ok $800 call Real Estate Direct, Inc 520-623-5710

4bd/ 2ba houSe washer & dryer off street parking water pd $975 ALSO 4bd/ 2ba a/c private pool $1400 call REDI 520-623-5710 or log on to www.azredirentals.com

4bedrooM 3bath $1500 Home with spacious living room, full size washer and dryer, dishwasher, storage room, private balcony, tile throughout the house with carpet in the bedrooms! Plenty of parking, right off the Mountain bike path, 5blocks to UA. Call Amy 520.440.7776

5bd/ 3ba houSe 1980 N Tyndall #1 a/c all appliances washer dryer $2000 ALSO 2558 E Hampton 6bd/ 3ba house a/c all appliances fenced yd $3000 call Real Estate Direct, Inc 520-623-2566

6bedrooM 5bath– a must see! Great two story floor plan with garage at Mabel and Cherry. Open living room, separate dining area, large bedrooms & closets, fenced yard and lots of storage. Call Chantel 520.245.5604

bike down Mountain to the UofA. 2Br,1ba home with A/C, W/D, fenced yard, cov’d parking for 3 cars. 1611 E. Blacklidge. $895 call 520-869-6845. No credit check.

location location location! 3BR, 1block UofA, parking, walk to classes, live with your friends. 405-7278.

looking For reSponSible GRADUATE STUDENTS FOR 3BDRM/1BATH HOME, FENCEDIN YARD, QUIET NEIGHBORHOOD, 2702 E BLANTON CALL 324-2465 7-4, AFTER 5P 7950254

$300/Mo, 4br 2ba HOUSE, Mountain and Grant. Dishwasher, fridge, w/d, a/c, water, trash, wi‑fi included. 5Minutes north of UofA, plus Bikepath and CatTran. Contact 520-334-7881 or ijb@email.arizona.edu.

2bdrM/ 1ba reSponSible roomate wanted. $400/mo +electric. Internet & TV incl. No parties, drug free. Oracle/ Orange Grove. 520870-0220. vickersethan@gmail.com.

cloSe, caMpuS, Shopping, buslines, CatTran, skylights, ceiling fan. Internet, cable, water, fenced property. Completely furnished. Broadway Campbell. Start $250. 248-1688

haMpton & vine. M/F necessary for premier property (only 8blocks away!) hardwood/ tile floors, AC, wifi, cable, washer/ dryer. $550/ month. tedsleep@gmail.com

beautiFul 2bd/ 1ba. 3231 E. Presidio. Country Club/ Fort Lowell. A/C, just remodeled, W/D, walled patio. Pets ok. Covered parking. $725/mo +$750 deposit. Water Included. Mike 272-1928 presidiotownhomes.com


Odds & Ends

Daily Wildcat

• Page 10

Arts & Life Contributor: Greg Gonzales • 520.621.3106 • arts@wildcat.arizona.edu

worth noting

Overheard on campus

Changing of the guard Mcclatchy tribune

COLUMBIA, S.C. — Next week, openly gay men and women will be able to serve in the U.S. military. At Fort Jackson, it’s Capt. Guy Allsup’s job to ensure that recruits in Charlie Company now realize a soldier is a soldier: gay or straight. The 29-year-old recently walked 231 nervous basic training recruits through scenarios. Soldiers won’t be asked their sexual orientation. After Sept. 20, they won’t be kicked out of the armed services simply for acknowledging they are gay. Hand-holding and other forms of public affection on base won’t be tolerated. That goes for a guy and girl, or a guy and a guy. “Does anybody think that this is going to be a drastic change for deployed soldiers?” Allsup called out to the group. “No, sir,” they yelled. “Someone give me a reason why not,” Allsup said. Pvt. Umberto Werner, 18, of Fayetteville, Ga., stood at attention. He looked straight ahead, clutching his M-16. “Sexual orientation has nothing to do with our mission, sir,” he said.

“I’ll buy that,” replied Allsup. Sessions like these are happening at military bases across the U.S., and in Iraq and Afghanistan. The Pentagon says it has trained more than 2 million men and women in uniform. The 18-year-old policy expires after years of emotionally charged debate about whether gays and lesbians should be allowed to serve in the military. Some troops feel the repeal could be a distraction on the battlefield; others contend it violates their personal and religious beliefs. Interviews with troops at Fort Jackson in South Carolina, and Fort Bragg and Camp Lejeune in North Carolina, reflect the mix of emotions about ending “don’t ask, don’t tell.” About 14,000 gay service members have been discharged since “don’t ask, don’t tell” was enacted in 1993. But soon, gays and lesbians will no longer have to hide their sexual orientation or pretend they’re straight. They will still lack some benefits. Gay couples will not be eligible to live in family housing or receive health benefits for their partners because of the federal Defense of Marriage

Man 1: (in a suit, sweating profusely): (Mumbles something unintelligible.) Man 2: What? Man 1: Well, I needed to get over there, and you were right here and talking to someone, and I had to say excuse me to incorporate myself into this system… so excuse me.

Act passed in 1996. Pvt. Brandon Eleby, 19, of Durham, N.C., was raised by his godmother, who is gay. He echoed other recruits, who said the change is less dramatic for their generation, which has grown up with a more high-profile gay community. “I never saw it as a big deal,” Eleby said. Allsup served 14 months in Iraq. While stationed in Sadr City, one of the most dangerous parts of Baghdad, Allsup said a member of his unit came out to him. “At one point, he said, ‘Hey, Guy, I’m homosexual,’” Allsup recalled. “I said, ‘Got it.’ And we moved on.” Knowing the soldier was gay, Allsup said, made no difference in their relationship. Many gay soldiers will finally be able to serve without fear of losing their jobs, current and former service members say. “I’ve looked forward to this day since the day that I raised my hand and joined the service,” said a 42-year-old captain at Fort Bragg. “I lost a seven-year relationship when I joined the Army. ‘Don’t ask, don’t tell’ played a huge role in the end of the relationship.”

— Espresso Art Submit your overheard on Twitter @OverheardAtUA

On the spot

Rider takes bike way to danger zone I noticed you ride a nice bike. Have you run into anyone with it yet? Close. But I skidded out; I saw them. They weren’t looking both ways.

Offbeat

with arms wide open

People need to watch out more. So what’s the most dangerous vehicle on campus? Chris Gailey

Undeclared freshman

People on foot. Always everywhere. If everyone on campus had bikes, it would be a lot easier.

Why do you think that? Because there would just be two directions, not people everywhere. So if you could improve foot traffic on campus, how would you do it? Make one side of the Mall for bikes, one side for walking, I guess. I dig it.

fast facts • Motorola came up with the first cellphone. • Sixty percent of the radiation produced by your cellphone can be absorbed into your head. • The most commonly texted word is, in fact, not a word; it is the letter “R.” • Over time, cellphones

Michelle A. Monroe/ Daily Wildcat

Molly McKnight-Guymon, 4, runs away from Wilma at the College of Social and Behavioral Sciences’ open house at the Roy Place building, the new location of UA Downtown on the corner of Stone Avenue and Pennington Street, on Saturday evening.

News Tips: 621-3193

Daily Wildcat

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.

serving the university of arizona since 1899 Vol. 105, Issue 15

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.

News Reporters Alexandra Bortnik Ryan Kelly Samantha Munsey Conrad Pursley Rebecca Rillos Amer Taleb Michelle A. Weiss Sports Reporters Kelly Hultgren Kyle Johnson Dan Kohler Zack Rosenblatt Mike Schmitz

Arts & Life Writers Christy Delehanty Joe Dusbabek Jason Krell Maitri Mehta Ashley Pearlstein Columnists Jacquelyn Abad Kristina Bui Kelly Hultgren Miki Jennings Michelle A. Monroe Caroline Nachazel Joshua Segall

Photographers Robert Alcaraz Gordon Bates Kevin Brost Annie Marum Valentina Martinelli Juni Nelson Keturah Oberst Rebecca Rillos Ernie Somoza

Ina Lee Eric Vogt

Designers Taylor Bacic Daniella Castillo Kelsey Dieterich Steven Kwan

Advertising Account Executives Aly Pearl Amalia Beckmann Arthur Vinuelas

Editor in Chief Nicole Dimtsios

Design Chief Colin Darland

Web Director Andrew Starkman

Asst. Design Chief Rebecca Rillos

News Editor Luke Money

Arts & Life Editor Jazmine Woodberry

Asst. Photo Editor Janice Biancavilla

Sports Editor Kevin Zimmerman

Photo Editor Will Ferguson

Asst. News Editors Brenna Goth Eliza Molk

Opinions Editor Storm Byrd

Copy Chief Kristina Bui

Carson McGrath Chelsy McHone John Reed Jenna Whitney Luke Pergande

Copy Editors Greg Gonzales Jason Krell Charles Misra Sarah Precup Lynley Price Zack Rosenblatt

seem quieter due to earwax and dust buildups on the speaker. • If you lock your keys in the car, call home and have someone press the “unlock” button on the emergency remote. The signal will travel over the phone and unlock your door.

Training Manager Zach McClain Sales Manager Courtney Wood Marketing Manager Mackenzie Corley

Asst. Sports Editor Alex Williams

Advertising Designers Lindsey Cook Fiona Foster Elizabeth Moeur Andrew Nguyen Sergei Tuterov

Asst. Arts & Life Editor Miranda Butler Asst. Copy Chief Bethany Barnes

Accounting Nicole Browning Su Hyun Kim Jake Storer Chi Zhang

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 most-loved 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 Creative Continuum: The History of the Center for Creative Photography Presented by Center for Creative Photography at Center for Creative Photography August 20-November 17, 2011 The Center for Creative Photography at the University of Arizona celebrates its 35th anniversary in 2010, presenting a prime opportunity to look back at this world-class institution’s evolution. Creative Continuum presents just a fraction of the materials housed at the Center: about 90,000 fine prints, nearly four million archival objects and hundreds of interviews in the Voices of Photography oralhistory collection.

Advertising Department 520-621-3425

September 12

TODAY IS

Campus Events

Editor in Chief editor@wildcat.arizona.edu News Editor news@wildcat.arizona.edu Opinions Editor letters@wildcat.arizona.edu Photo Editor photo@wildcat.arizona.edu Sports Editor sports@wildcat.arizona.edu Arts & Life Editor arts@wildcat.arizona.edu

Newsroom 615 N. Park Ave. Tucson, Arizona 85721 520-621-3551

Classified Advertising Katie Jenkins Christal Montoya Samantha Motowski Jenn Rosso

for corrections or complaints concerning news and editorial content of the Daily Wildcat should be directed to the editor in chief. For further information on the Daily Wildcat’s Corrections Requests approved grievance policy, readers may contact Mark Woodhams, director of Arizona Student Media, in the Sherman R. Miller III Newsroom at the Park Student Union.

Wildcat Calendar

Contact Us

Campus Events

Blood Drive at the UA Foundation on Sept. 13, 8:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. According to the American Red Cross, “Every two seconds someone in the U.S. needs blood.” When you give, others live. Lend about one hour of time and one pint of blood, and you can save three lives. Marvin D. “Swede” Johnson Building, 1111 N. Cherry Ave. Career Services’ 2011 Kick-Off Wednesday, September 14, 2011 11am– 2pm Career Services, Suite 411, Student Union Memorial Center 520-621-2588 Visit our website at www.career.arizona.edu/ students for information about the Kick-Off, Campus Interviewing, UA Fall Career Days, job search assistance and more.

Galleries

Musical Compositions of Ted DeGrazia January 21, 2011 - January 16, 2012 Arizona artist Ted DeGrazia’s dual passions for art and music are explored in a special collection of musically inspired paintings, including the complete collection of abstract originals from his 1945 Master of Arts thesis at the University of Arizona titled “Art and Its Relation to Music in Music Education.” 6300 N. Swan Road

Galleries

Rockin the Desert: Photographs by Baron Wolman and Lynn Goldsmith Presented by Etherton Gallery at Etherton Gallery September 10-November 12. Etherton Gallery is pleased to announce our first show of the 2011-2012 season, Rockin the Desert: Photographs by Baron Wolman and Lynn Goldsmith. Rockin’ the Desert is Etherton Gallery’s contribution to the larger downtown celebration, Tucson Rocks! Baron Wolman, the first photographer for Rolling Stone magazine and celebrated portrait photographer Lynn Goldsmith, give us backstage passes to some of rock n’ roll’s most important moments and the legends who lived them. (520) 624-7370 135 South 6th Avenue

Mí Musica exhibition Sep 3, through Oct 15, 2011. Art can give music a visual dimension in the same way music can illustrate art, both are connected by a common global image and culture. “Mí Musica” brings together artists with an exhibition of their visual interpretations of music in paintings, sculpture, and multi-media works. Raices Taller 222 Art Gallery & Workshop 218 E. 6th Street (1/2 block east of 6th St. & 6th Ave.) (520) 881-5335 visit us at: http: //www. raicestaller222.webs.com

Galleries

Día de los Muertos Exhibit at Tohono Chul Park September 01, 2011 - November 06, 2011,7366 North Paseo del Norte, 520742-6455 Tohono Chul Park show cases fanciful and moving contemporary paintings, photographs, quilts, and artful works that link us as human beings in dealing with death, loss and remembrance.

Of Note

Meet Me at Maynards Recurring weekly on Monday 400 N. Toole Ave. Southern Arizona Roadrunners’ Monday evening, noncompetitive 3-mile run/walk begins and ends at Maynards Market/Kitchen and features trash pick-up en route every third Monday. www.meetmeatmaynards.com/ San Xavier Mission Guided Tours 1950 W. San Xavier Road Docents lead 45-minute tours of the National Historic Landmark, Monday - Saturday, and explain the mission’s rich history and ornate interior that includes painted murals and original statuary. 520294-2624 Tango basic: A Community Dance Class. No partner needed at this regualr class on Argentine close-embrace tango fundamentals. Casual dress and leather sole shoes that pivot easily recommended. The Hotel Arizona bar lobby 181 W. Broadway 7:15PM - 8:30PM.

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


Comics •

monday, september

12, 2011

Daily Wildcat •

11

The Bear Down Times

9 2 1 4 5 6 4 7 3 9 3 2 9 1 3 9 4 4 5 8 6 9 6 5 2 3 7 1 6 1 8 9 7

Difficulty Level

answers to your ques�ons about sex and rela�onships Sweat glands are found everywhere on the body except for the lips, the clitoris, and the tip of the penis.

Q Why do vaginas and penises smell funny? A. Although your question sounds a little like the setup for a punch line, here’s the short answer: people sweat, the sweat glands in the genital region are different from those in other areas of the body, and, yes, bacteria and their byproducts can make things funky down there. Sweating helps regulate body temperature, but it’s also responsible for other functions, including hydrating the skin, secreting metabolic wastes like urea and lactic acid, and keeping electrolytes in balance. Nearly every square inch of our skin has eccrine sweat glands for these reasons. Groin odor, on the other hand, comes primarily from special sweat glands associated with hair follicles on the body, called apocrine glands. These sweat glands get “turned on” during adolescence and are located in the armpits, genital/anal region and the areola around the nipples. Think of these as being our ancestral scent glands that do little in the way of cooling body temperature, but are big on aroma. Scientists believe apocrine glands may have had an olfactory role in helping humans identify possible mates earlier in our evolutionary history. It’s ironic that these days, body odor may have quite the opposite effect, depending on your partner.

Compared with eccrine sweat glands, apocrine glands secrete a fattier form of sweat that, if left unchecked, can create the conditions for B.O. Here’s how it happens: perspiration gives bacteria an environment in which to thrive, these bacteria then use enzymes to break down the lipids/fats in sweat, and the resulting chemical waste that’s left over can smell less than sweet. Chief among these is butyric acid, a chemical found in butter, parmesan cheese, and vomit. This is also the nausea-inducing chemical found in stink bombs that Greenpeace launches on whaling ships to disrupt their operations that you may have heard about on “Whale Wars.” You get the idea – but what to do about it? Stick to regular showers with plain old soap and water or body wash to help keep things smelling clean. Use a deodorant or antiperspirant for underarm odor and avoid heavily perfumed products that only mask things. Also, check out the Campus Health Pharmacy, which has great prices on common personal care products.

SCAN THIS FOR MORE SEXTALK!

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.

ENCOURAGE HEALTHY DECISIONS

DON’T SMOKE

2011 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

By Dave Green

9/12

SHARE A HEALTHY MEAL

WASH YOUR HANDS SLEEP AWAY STRESS

STEP UP TO HELP A FRIEND

BUDDY UP TO EXERCISE BE A COVER YOUR DESIGNATED COUGH DRIVER LAUGH TOGETHER USE A CONDOM www.health.arizona.edu

at your service. The Campus Health Service, located in the Highland Commons building, provides high quality health care, and a whole lot more!

General Medicine • Counseling and • Psychological Services Urgent Care • Pharmacy • Women’s Health • Health Promotion • Sports Medicine • Lab Testing • Physical Therapy • Radiology • Nutrition • Acupuncture • Massage Therapy •

BURSAR’S ACCOUNT ALWAYS ACCEPTED • Appointments: 621-9202 • www.health.arizona.edu


12

SPORTS •

• DAILY WILDCAT

Volleyball sweeps in Ind. invitational Wildcats debut new offense, rebound after poor play last week By Kelly Hultgren DAILY WILDCAT

Undefeated at two invitationals in two weeks in a row, the Arizona volleyball team is gaining momentum for their upcoming conference play. The Wildcats (8-1) went 3-0 this weekend at the Evansville Dunn Hospitality Invitational in Evansville, Ind. Last week at their Wildcat Classic, the team also went undefeated, but struggled against less competitive teams. The Wildcats were their own worst enemy, giving up multiple points in errors, especially in serving and defense. Head coach Dave Rubio said he wasn’t pleased with his team’s play last week, even comparing his experience to getting a cavity filled in without Novocain, he said. No cavities were filled this weekend. “We had a really good week of practice last week, and it really showed in the tournament,” Rubio said after their last match on Saturday. “I thought we were the best we played since we started. We were very efficient in our serving and our passing, so the team in

general played really solid.” On Friday, UA defeated the University of Illinois Chicago Flames, 25-16, 25-22 and 25-20. The team also debuted their new 6-2 offense, having setters junior Tori Moore and freshman Chloe Mathis, simultaneously take the court. Mathis took on more responsibility and rose to the occasion with 24 assists in the first match. “She was solid,” Rubio said of Mathis. “Taylor (Arizobal) would go in when Tori (Moore) was in back row and Courtney (Karst) would go in when Chloe (Mathis) would be back row.” Rubio waited to test out this new offense with Arizobal, a freshman outside hitter, who wasn’t cleared to play due to a shoulder injury. “Taylor’s shoulder is holding up. I don’t think it’s at 100 percent, but we’ve been given the green light by her trainers,” Rubio said. On Saturday the team had a double-header, first beating the Southeast Missouri State Redhawks, 25-16, 25-15, 25-18. They concluded their sweep with a win against the University of Evansville Purple Aces, the only team to get a game on the ‘Cats (2517, 25-16, 23-25, 25-19). “I liked what’s been going on,” Rubio said. “I like where we’re at, I think we can still improve quite a bit, but I like what we’re doing.”

08-00251

Div:09 Date:09-12-11

TIRED OF THE DESERT HEAT? THE DAILY WILDCAT WILL COOL YOU OFF.

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER

12, 2011

HILL

FROM PAGE 7 some drives alive, but for a redshirt freshman, he’s playing well.” If Criner is unable to go against Stanford on Saturday, expect Hill to start once again and continue to produce while learning on the job. He may not be Criner, but if he remains a contributor in his first season on the field, that comparison may not be a reach. “He’s just a guy that shows what he’s going to be capable of doing in the future, fumbling a ball and then doing big things,” Foles said. “He’s going to be a talented receiver. He’s a guy that I really look to and a guy that I’m going to look to the rest of the season.”

NOTES

FROM PAGE 7

Run 9/12

Due 9/9 Approved-MB WK3 Monday

KEITH HICKMAN-PERFETTI/ DAILY WILDCAT

SetterSize: Tori Moore, seen here playing in last weekend’s Wildcat Classic, was a key 65 FC player in a two-setter offense that the UA debuted in three wins this weekend.

MKTS: U/A

ondary, and it showed on the field. Safety Marquis Flowers and nickelback Jourdan Grandon are both in their first season as full-time starters, while starting sophomore cornerback Shaquille Richardson began the year as a starter for the first time as a Wildcat. For the second straight week, Richardson was picked on and burned time and time again. Though OSU wideout Justin Blackmon does it to most opposing cornerbacks, he made Richardson look silly, twisting and turning him around for 12 catches, 128 yards and two touchdowns. When Richardson finally made a play, sticking Blackmon on a hitch, he got in the receiver’s face and celebrated when the Wildcats were down 14-0.

Find all your Fall needs at Dillard’s from Hurley including the Timbers long sleeve tee, Skeeter short sleeve tee and your favorite jean.

“Skeeter”short sleeve tee $22. “Timbers” long sleeve tee $29.

Check out more great brands:

ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT

Brand selection varies by store.

Opinions In the middle of the paper but not middle of the road. Agree. Disagree. Throw us down and stomp.

THE

READ ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT

Call 1-800-345-5273 to find a Dillard’s store near you.

...BECAUSE A DAY WITHOUT THE WILDCAT IS LIKE A DAY AT ASU

MB

FIRST DRA FT DG

BW

DI V I S I ON A P P ROVA L DATE / TI ME

MB

FINAL DG

BW


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.