10.30.13

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

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WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2013

TECHNICALLY SPEAKING

VOLUME 107 • ISSUE 47

AZ medical students focus on homeless

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AMBASSADORS SHOWCASE UA CAMPUS (VIDEO)

BY JAZMINE FOSTER-HALL The Daily Wildcat

AMY PHELPS/THE DAILY WILDCAT

UA students have partnered with other students across the state to help create a health care system for the homeless population in Phoenix. The program, known as Student Health Outreach for Wellness, will be housed in the existing homeless clinic at the Central Arizona Shelter Services building in downtown Phoenix and is a collaboration between the UA, Northern Arizona University and Arizona State University. The main goal of the SHOW program is to provide health care to homeless people outside of the open hours of the homeless shelter, which are from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through

ISABEL KISHI (right), a UA instructor for introductory computer science courses, speaks to Dori Steinbach (left), a mathematics sophomore, at the Women in Technology Careers Event in the Irving & Rose Levine Grand Ballroom in the Student Union Memorial Center on Tuesday. The event provided networking opportunities and encouraged young women to explore careers in technology and related fields.

SPORTS - 8

ARIZONA’S NEW DEFENSIVE THREAT

HOMELESS, 6

ARTS & LIFE - 3

Árbol adjusts to non-honors residents BY SHELBY THOMAS AND BRITTNY MEJIA The Daily Wildcat

Residence Life has opened honors residence hall Árbol de la Vida to non-honors students for the first time, and some honors students said they are seeing the differences with a louder and less academic atmosphere. Árbol opened in 2011 as an exclusively honors residence hall. This semester it opened its doors to all students for the first time, a change that might have been caused by the smaller incoming honors class. There were 834 incoming honors freshmen in the fall, compared to last year’s 1,214. The Honors College decided to admit a smaller incoming class so it would still be able to serve the students, said Patricia Maccorquodale, dean of the Honors College. “We can’t have more students than we can

SHANE BEKIAN/THE DAILY WILDCAT

PRANAV BALAJI (right), a physiology freshman, and Tom Malone (left), a history freshman, walk out of Árbol de la Vida Residence Hall on Tuesday. There are now non-honors students living in the honors dorm.

reasonably serve with the resources and space that we have available,” Maccorquodale said. Although the freshman class shrank, there were 4,591 total honors students last year, while this year, there are 4,507 — signifying only a small drop in overall students in the Honors

College, Maccorquodale said. There are about 128 nonhonors students currently living in the honors dorm, according to Jennifer Hiatt, executive director of Residence Life. The Honors College was not able to fill all 719 spaces in Árbol, which is why, in the middle

of summer, the dorm was opened to non-honors students. For the most part, students have pulled their non-honors roommates into their room, which means that an honors student requested for their non-honors friend to be transferred to their room,

Hiatt said. “This has not happened before. They [the Honors College] have filled it each year with honors students,” Hiatt said. “This is the first time we’ve had this number of non-honors students in there.” Some honors students said they have seen a significant increase in the noise level, as well as the number of students going out on the weekends. Rob Gonzalez, an aerospace engineering sophomore who is living in Árbol for the second year, said “the scholastic quiet has disappeared.” “Last year was definitely positive. I had friends where, if they wanted to go to sleep at 9 p.m., they could go to sleep at 9 p.m. You can’t do that anymore,” Gonzalez said. “I don’t know if it is because people are more sociable or what, but it is definitely a louder place. If you want to get work done now, it is a lot harder.”

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HONORS, 2

Faculty explores religion, UA course politics across borders not all fun and games

DAILYWILDCAT.COM

WEATHER

BY JEN BASCH

The Daily Wildcat

UA faculty members recently launched an international project to study religion’s role in politics. The project, Religion, Secularism, and Political Belonging, will be a three-year process and was started by Leerom Medovoi, head of the Department of English and the project director. Five teams will meet annually to discuss how issues related to religion, secularism and politics look different in various parts of the world. Representatives come from Hong Kong, Tel Aviv, the Netherlands, Portland and Tucson. “What I hope to get out of this is a sense of how the historical events of the last 30 to 40 years and the rise of religion as kind of a political force might look different to other scholars in other parts of the world,” Medovoi said. Each team includes scholars who hail from varying departments, such as the humanities, religion and biopolitic departments, and

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of essays about the study as a whole, as well as to try to expand the study and get more people involved. “I think the plan is, after three years, it’s going to pass on to different schools. … It’s going to be a continuous thing,” said Pete Figler, a fifth-year PhD student in the literature program and a research assistant on the project. “At the moment, it’s discussions, research [and] how can we get

A new UA course offered to first-year honors students is puzzling. Literally. For the first time, honors freshmen can take a first-year, one-credit seminar focused on crossword puzzles. Richard Ruiz, head of the Department of Mexican American Studies, is teaching “The Examined Life Through Word Puzzles,” which is focused on language and crossword puzzles. The purpose of the class is to help students think more expansively about language. “This seminar aims to view language [as] more than just words and phrases and so on. It’s about learning … to use language in a very creative way,” Ruiz said. “I started out the semester with the question, ‘What is a word?’ because we all think we know what a word is, but words are different and used differently in many languages.” Every incoming honors student is required to enroll in a first-year, onecredit seminar. Ruiz’s course is only

SECULARISM, 6

CROSSWORD, 6

GRACE PIERSON/THE DAILY WILDCAT

each scholar will study different topics. Research will come from reading articles and books and discussing with other members of one’s own team along with other scholars in the same fields of study. Teams will then share their findings with one another and ultimately bring their discoveries to the annual meetings to discuss with representatives from all five teams. The goal of the project is to conclude with a collection

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SUNNY

BY CHANDLER WICKE

INTERNATIONALLY DISTINGUISHED scholars Mayfair Yang (left) and Janet Jakobsen (right) lead a discussion about religion on Friday at the Student Union Memorial Center for the launch of the Religion, Secularism, and Political Belonging project.

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Dixon, Calif. Grimes, Ala. Walker, Ark.

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QUOTE TO NOTE

We must modernize and preserve the positive aspects of chivalry, or both men and women will pay the price — and it will cost way more than a check at the end of dinner.” OPINIONS — 4


Wednesday, October 30, 2013 • Page 2

ODDS & ENDS

Compiled by: Greg Gonzales twitter.com/dailywildcat

ON THE SPOT

OFF BEAT

I like smoking. I just like smoking.

Esteban Obregon, industrial engineering junior How long have you been smoking? Since the beginning of sophomore year, so the beginning of last year. … Just kind of on and off. So a year and a half, maybe. How’d you get into smoking? I don’t even know! Living in the frat house last year, everybody smoked cigarettes, so I just kind of picked it up. I was always in the library, always on Adderall, late nights. And when you’re on Adderall, you smoke cigarettes like crazy. I always told myself I wouldn’t smoke, you know? RYAN REVOCK/THE DAILY WILDCAT

JESSICA COCCA, a speech, language and hearing sciences freshman, relaxes in a hammock next to the Emil W. Haury Anthropology Building on Tuesday.

HOROSCOPES Today’s Birthday (10/30/13) Your next year sparkles and crackles with creative energy. Springtime is especially fun, as someone special enters your inner circle. Capture the muse in sound, image or words. Share your expression, and positive attention grows. Your career especially heats up next summer. Work partnerships thrive, especially when you add love. To get the advantage, check the day’s rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging. Aries (March 21-April 19) — Today is a 9 — Distractions abound, especially romantically. Chop wood and carry water. Provide great service. Call in the reserves and they’ll take care of you. It’s a good time for an intimate conversation. Wait for a quiet moment. Taurus (April 20-May 20) — Today is a 9 — Read everything and soak it all up. You’re creatively on fire and quite attractive. Focus on your strengths and build up your equity. Get it in writing. Get paperwork done early so you can play. Gemini (May 21-June 20) — Today is a 9 — Create more work for yourself. The busier you are, the less time you’ll have to spend money; earn it by saving. A softer voice works better. Continue your studies of a particular passion.

Cancer (June 21-July 22) — Today is a 9 — Follow a hunch to find riches. But don’t spend what you don’t have. It’s better to do the work yourself today and save. And don’t avoid your personal responsibilities and chores. Do the math. Just show up.

choose your battles. It’s a good time to make long-range plans and renew career goals. Make lists. What would expansion look like? Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) — Today is a 9 — Bring along as many friends as possible, but remember to get some private time for rest or meditation. Expand your playfulness, especially around your career endeavors. Get the team’s feedback. Record results.

Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — Today is a 9 — Your financial net worth increases, thanks to your determination. You don’t have to make things complicated or complex. Keep it simple, and stick to basics for ease and freedom. Relax your thinking. Settle into home comforts tonight.

Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Today is a 9 — Remember epic dreams, and build a dynamic vision. A partner helps you achieve the next level. Let another represent you. Travel and adventure call. The road may get bumpy. Rest your mind in meditation. Reconnect with a friend.

Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Today is a 9 — Listen for magic in the most unusual places. You’re especially strong right now. Use your power wisely. Advise the others to stick to the schedule. Keep order. Find a way to spend more time at home.

Doesn’t everybody who smokes start off thinking they never would? And then one day you pick it up. I think that I can easily drop it. I go through phases when I can’t even finish a cigarette. I don’t like to smoke during the day on campus, I don’t like to walk into class and smell like cigarettes. It’s kind of gross. But if I’m by myself, might as well enjoy a cigarette. Have you been at the library all night? Yeah, I’ve been at the library all night. How do cigarettes help? It’s just that 10-minute break, you know? Go outside, clear your mind, smoke a cigarette, go back inside, keep studying. You could take a 10-minute break, get coffee or just sit and breathe air. But what does tobacco smoke, specifically, do for you?

If you think the Halloween masks of monsters, demons and other nasty beings that you see lining store shelves are frightening, you don’t know half of it. Germ experts warn that masks that are tried on by multiple shoppers

HONORS FROM PAGE 1

Jan Melendez, a mechanical engineering junior and National Hispanic Scholar, is living in Árbol for the third year in a row and said he feels non-honors students have changed the atmosphere of the dorm. He said there are more people going out on Thursdays and Saturdays and that he always hears loud music. However, statistics show there haven’t been as many complaints as in previous years.

NEWS TIPS: 621-3193 The Daily Wildcat is always interested in story ideas and tips from readers. If you see something deserving of coverage, contact news editor Stephanie Casanova at news@wildcat.arizona.edu or call 621-3193.

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 distributed 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 multiple copies will be considered theft and may be prosecuted. Additional copies of the Daily Wildcat are available from the Student Media office. The Daily Wildcat is a member of The Associated Press and the Associated Collegiate Press.

terms of gross, it’s definitely kind of disgusting looking at this data.” But don’t be scared off of dressing up for Halloween. Experts said that the bacteria problem can be solved by bringing a sanitized wipe with you and using it to clean the inside of the mask before you try it on.

By this time last year, according to Nicholas Sweeton, senior director of residential education for Residence life, there had been a total of eight “Noise Policy Violations Resulting in a Finding of ‘Responsible’’ in Árbol. This year, there have only been six noise violations. There had been two “Illegal Drug Violations Resulting in a Finding of ‘Responsible’” at this time in fall of 2012, while there have not been any violations so far this semester. However, this year’s residents have racked up 13 “Alcohol Violations Resulting in a Finding of ‘Responsible’” compared to last year’s seven at this time.

I’d say you’re right where most student smokers are. Most kids living with their parents aren’t going to be smoking, but they get to college, and they’re free to do whatever. When I went home — I went home for summer, I go home for breaks — I didn’t even think about smoking a cigarette. It was so easy to stop. And that’s a good place to be. No doubt. I don’t ever soberly fiend for cigarettes. When I’m drunk, I’m like, “I want a cigarette!” But when I’m sober, I never need to get that “fix.” So if there’s a lesson to draw from this conversation, what is it? If you’re going to smoke, just don’t smoke a pack a day. Sparse it out and don’t smoke for the rest of your life. I don’t plan on smoking for the rest of my life.

— In movies, zombie outbreaks have been caused by disease, radiation, experiments, voodoo and the dead magically rising. — According to author Max Brooks, author of “World War Z,” a zombie virus takes 23 hours to take effect. — The undead decompose at different rates; the hotter the climate, the less time it takes for a zombie to decompose. — In the film “Juan of the Dead,” zombies could survive underwater.

Scary masks hide even scarier germs can pick up bacteria that is passed on to the next person who puts them on. A TV station in Phoenix arranged for a biology professor to test masks for germs. “I was quite surprised at the number of bacteria and the diversity of the bacteria,” said Stan Kikkert of Mesa Community College. “In

Have you ever tried Dunhills? Hunter S. Thompson was really into those. Nah, I like lighter cigarettes. I don’t like the heavy cigarettes. It’s too much. The cigarettes that last too long — it’s too much for me to handle. I’m not the right smoker to be talking to, really. Not an avid smoker.

FAST

WORTH NOTING

MCCLATCHY TRIBUNE

What are you smoking on? Turkish Royals.

Man 1: “What, you haven’t been turned on by hot zombie girls?” Man 2: “Dude, you’d get infected! The Z-virus is like an STD.” Man 1: “One word: Condoms. They don’t stop working during the zombie apocalypse.” Woman: “Yeah, if I were a zombie, I’d still be down to fuck.” — Science-Engineering Library

Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) — Today is a 9 — Family matters and work may collide, but not for long. Make sure you understand what’s requested. Sometimes you just have to say what they want to hear, out of love. Winning may not be as much fun as you thought.

Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — Today is a 9 — The possibility of error is high, as well as the possibility of reward. Weigh your risks and

I like smoking hookah — the thick smoke, being able to blow smoke rings. Cigarettes are so disgusting … But whatever, you know.

Overheard on Campus

Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — Today is a 9 — Add a bit of passion, and it’ll be easier to handle business and financial issues. Take some time off to go for a walk, a ride or a drive and clear some ideas. Sometimes is better to let your partner do the talking.

Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) — Today is a 9 — It’s contemplation time. Put your thoughts down in writing, even if you never plan to read them. It’s the process that counts. The details work for you. You’re especially cute now, even if you don’t think so.

Is it the smoke itself you enjoy? I think it’s the act of smoking. I like smoking. I like smoking hookah. I like smoking.

FACTS

“Overall, the numbers are actually pretty much the same, there is no statistically significant difference in the violation rates,” Sweeton said in an email. “Given that our numbers are similar to last year, it does not appear that the presence of non-honors students had much of a statistical difference in terms of overall conduct numbers.” Sweeton also said Residence Life is taking this as an opportunity to measure the impact of placing non-honors students near honors students to see if a “halo effect” occurs. Residence Life officials will be able to measure variables such as retention rates, average GPA

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and graduation rates to test the theory at the end of the year. At this point, Maccorquodale said it is too early to tell what the impact of non-honors students living in the honors dorm might be. “We hope that the overall ethos of the hall and the environment has the same character that it had before,” Maccorquodale said. “It’s something we’ll obviously be looking at during the year. … I think we’ll have to wait and see what happens and how it works out.” — Follow Shelby Thomas @alayneshelby

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Wednesday, October 30, 2013 • Page 3

ARTS & LIFE

Editor: Kyle Mittan arts@wildcat.arizona.edu (520) 621-3106 twitter.com/dailywildcat

UA’s pottery collection home to rare artifacts

Tucson gallery to screen films on wars abroad Downtown microcinema aims to tell stories of struggles during ongoing Syrian revolts these underrepresented voices are coming to the foreground,” Sherman said. Sherman said that these Through a series of videos, Exploded View’s microCINEMA videos will give people a unique in downtown Tucson aims to way to view issues in Syria, as showcase stories by Syrian artists the work strays from being documentary-driven and Syrians in exile that they feel purely and objective and tends toward need to be told. This Wednesday, David narrative stories. The videos will have a range Sherman, Exploded View’s founder, is showing videos of aesthetics, from animation that have been curated by a to diary work, and each will media arts organization in the be unique in terms of their Netherlands called Impakt, structure, Sherman added. “Our interest is to combine which collects Syrian work. experimental media with other “There’s not a huge Syrian art community in the United veins of creativity which are States, but that’s the beauty of the currently happening in Tucson,” he said. Internet,” Sherman said. Susan Stryker, director of the In an intimate venue, audience members will be able Institute for LGBT Studies and a to openly discuss the issues local filmmaker, met Sherman presented on the screen, he for the first time when she was screening her own works added. “We wanted to highlight a at the Playground Bar and creative response to a serious Lounge. Stryker worked with Sherman in his war situation,” microcinema Sherman to present an Our interest said. The LGBTQ film civil unrest in is to combine to the Tucson Syria began in experimental community 2011, and has media with during LGBT since inspired History Month veins of creSyrian artists in October. ativity which and those in “ T h e r e ’s exile to tell are currently a lot of work their personal happening happening in stories in the around Tucthe film and form of short media industry son. clips and — David Sherman, that’s not videos. owner of Exploded commercial,” Sherman View Gallery Stryker said. and his wife, “There’s Reb e c ca some really Barten, coined the term “microcinema” in 1994. The first important and interesting work microcinema was established that’s out there.” Stryker said that the film in San Francisco in 1994 and was called Total Mobile Home and the works presented in microCINEMA. Sherman Sherman’s microcinema are able moved to Tucson in 2012, where to give the Tucson community a different perspective on the he introduced Exploded View. “It’s less about the big world that they live in. Although Sherman’s audience and more about how people connect with the microcinema is targeted toward a smaller audience, Stryker material,” Sherman said. Christian Sinclair, a scholar said the films presented are artistically and of Middle Eastern studies, will politically, be flying in to help create an intellectually charged. “As a filmmaker, I’m just really intimate dialogue with audience members about specific Syrian excited to see this kind of space issues expressed though the in Tucson,” she said. “They videos. Sinclair will be able to really want to be a hub for the explain the Syrian conflicts to experimental and small film those who may be unfamiliar market community.” BY CASEY KNOX

The Daily Wildcat

SHANE BEKIAN / THE DAILY WILDCAT

ANCIENT NATIVE AMERICAN BASKETS on display at the Basketry Treasured exhibit at the Arizona State Museum date back 500 years to the pre-Columbian era. All baskets are free for students to view.

BY JESSICA SCHRECKER

The Daily Wildcat Amid the hustle to class, students may not realize that the Arizona State Museum is home to some of the most rare and highly coveted objects in the world. With the same artistry that is on display in nationally renowned museums like the Smithsonian Institute and The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, students have access to some of the world’s most valuable basketry and pottery. “It’s a living, breathing art form in Arizona,” said Darlene Lizarraga, the museum’s director of marketing. The museum prides itself on the wide variety of artistry it makes accessible to the community, and students in particular. The basketry exhibit, “Basketry Treasured,” displays traditions of the Southwest through the 25,000 baskets, dating back to 6,000 years ago, that the museum has curated and put on display for the public to enjoy. While the baskets come from all over, the Southwest has some of the best basketry anywhere in the world, Diane Dittemore, assistant curator of ethnological collections. “One of the reasons that basketry is so important is it’s one of the oldest technologies in our region,” Dittemore said. “It predates pottery, say, by thousands of years. It marks a continuous thread between the ancient and the contemporary people.” On display in the museum are

pieces from Navajo, Apache, Tohono O’odham and other contemporary Native American nations. The baskets feature various styles of weaving, including coiling, twining, wickerwork and plating, all of which are immensely complex and timeconsuming, Dittemore said. The basketry, in addition to being an art form, is an important learning tool for foreign students and those who aren’t local to the Southwest, Dittemore added. “We have people coming from all over the world who are students here and many of them may not have any real understanding about the native people, and they maybe don’t have any way to find out,” she said. While basketry is still utilized as an art form today, it also provides insight into the history of this region. “It’s perhaps one of the oldest craft techniques in our region, and it’s a window, even the baskets made today, into how people lived in the past,” Dittemore said. “They’re real windows into the culture, because really, that’s what we’re all about, is using the objects to tell the stories and the people who made them.” Also on display at the museum is “The Pottery Project,”the world’s largest collection of Southwest Indian pottery, according to the museum’s website. The exhibit is home to more than 20,000 ceramics from pre-Hispanic times to today, and showcases the many functions of pottery in both historical and modern times, said Andrew

Higgins, assistant to the curator of Ethnological Collections. “Pottery tells us a lot about how people lived and what they did,” Higgins said. “A lot of the pots have painted designs and from those designs, you can really analyze and get an idea of what life was like and what’s important to them.” The pottery is classified into displays based on design, form and function, curio and anomalies, with many of them having great artistic and monetary value. “It shows that Native American art has been valued for hundreds of years and still is today,” Higgins said. “The Pottery Project” is an ongoing display at the museum and “Basketry Treasured” is set to continue through January. Both exhibitions are free to students. — Follow Arts reporter Jessica Schrecker @JKSchrecker

with their history, as well as the content provided in the videos. “The issues are complex, and

— Follow Arts reporter Casey Knox @Knox_Casey

Wordy dialogue silences ‘The Counselor’ element. Many aspects of the narrative are transient. Characters come and go, playing a huge or insignificant Everything seems to be in role before being shown the door. place for a tour de force with “The The film bounces sporadically from Counselor,” with a star-studded cast location to location — from the of Michael Fassbender, Cameron States to Amsterdam to London to Diaz, Javier Bardem, Brad Pitt and Mexico and probably some other Penélope Cruz, Ridley Scott (“Alien,” places I missed in the flurry. “Gladiator”) directing and acclaimed One of the most intriguing things American novelist Cormac McCarthy about “The Counselor” was that writing the script. What we get is a McCarthy penned the screenplay. boring attempt at a thriller whose His works include the novels “All the heavy-handed script completely Pretty Horses,” “Blood Meridian,” derails the movie from reaching any “No Country for Old Men” and “The measure of its potential. Road,” most of which were adapted to The only upside is that Diaz has the screen — and one of which took sex with a Ferrari. an Academy Award for Best Picture. I The movie follows the Counselor cannot personally attest to the value — yes, that’s of the works of Mr. the character’s McCarthy, but he is name, played by What we get widely regarded as Fassbender — who is a boring one of the greatest proposes to his living American attempt at girlfriend, Laura n o v e l i s t s . a thriller (Penélope Cruz). However, his first whose heavyHe meets with foray into writing business associate handed script for film proves less Westray (Pitt) and completely than satisfying. soon becomes derails the The characters involved in a drug in “The Counselor” movie from deal, agreeing to speak in a near reaching any transport the goods inde cipherable measure of from Mexico to highfalutin Chicago. Reiner potential. language on (Bardem) and topics including Malkina (Diaz) sex, power, are, to put it lightly, predator, prey, a truly dysfunctional couple who consequences, the world, diamonds are friends of the Counselor and and power. Each character, even a also have a stake in the drug deal. diamond merchant with a whopping Things quickly spiral out of control one scene, has some metaphorical, in a storm of violence, scheming and existential speech about diamonds blood, and the Counselor, a lawyer, and life and God knows what else. finds himself completely out of his BY ALEX GUYTON

The Daily Wildcat

The heavy, loaded dialogue comes in a ceaseless barrage that’s hard to keep up with. When Pitt’s character is speaking about snuff films and how the cartel knows no limits in one scene, and then Bardem’s character is speaking on the nature of women as a group in the next scene, it becomes difficult to process. Perhaps this is McCarthy stumbling to transition from page to screen. When reading a novel, the reader has endless amounts of time to go back and reread a section that was difficult to understand. With a film, you get one shot. The characters, specifically Reiner and Malkina, are intriguing. Reiner has hair almost as loud as his style of clothing, and Malkina oozes sex and speed and cheetah print. The plot picks up pace, tension, excitement and terror and has plenty of shocking moments to make it feel like the movie can salvage itself — and then it ends. Abruptly, without much warning, and without much satisfaction. Throughout the movie, the Counselor is constantly asking questions of his crooked peers. Ironically, this lawyer, who is supposed to be the one giving advice, finds himself at a loss. I fear that the audience, like the Counselor, will constantly be asking questions throughout the movie, just trying to get a bearing on anything in this world. Grade:

C

— Follow Arts reporter Alex Guyton @TDWildcatFilm

CHOCKSTONE PICTURES


Wednesday, October 30, 2013 • Page 4

Opinions

Editor: Nathaniel Drake letters@wildcat.arizona.edu (520) 621-3192 twitter.com/dailywildcat

Basic morals of chivalry still relevant BY shelby thomas The Daily Wildcat

I

t was our first date. We spent the evening getting to know each other over a plate of sushi, and by the time we finished the last roll, I felt butterflies in my stomach. However, our perfect evening of food and flirting came screeching to a stop with the arrival of the check. The second that the waiter plopped the small leather case between us, the mood shifted dramatically. I glanced at it cautiously while my date sipped his water for an everlasting moment. Finally, he bluntly asked, “So … who pays?” I won’t lie, I was taken aback and nervously shuffled to find my wallet. He ended up paying for the meal and I covered the tip, but there was no second date. When my friends asked about how it went, I told them about the great conversation we had, yet none of that mattered when I brought up what happened at the end. They immediately rolled their eyes and told me I deserved better — still, something felt off. Young men and women are frequently left scratching their heads due to the confusing and vague interpretations of chivalry that exist in modern day society. We are losing sight of the basis of honor and respect that medieval chivalry was founded on and failing miserably at translating these morals into contemporary culture. Elite Daily even claims that “in the hookup culture we now live in, it’s pretty obvious that chivalry is completely dead.” I wouldn’t say that it’s dead, but we are definitely digging its grave through our society’s vanishing interest in helping others. Albrecht Classen, a University Distinguished Professor and undergraduate adviser for the department of German studies, teaches a class called Medieval Answers to Modern Problems. The course explores the essence of the humanities, who we are today and what the past can tell us about our future, he said. “[Chivalry] represents highly developed culture and I think [one] of the problems in modern day society is that we just aren’t courtly enough. Too many people mistreat other people. We have too many conflicts because no one really aspires to those values anymore,” Classen said. “My research and my teaching turn toward that question: how do we make those values that were hard-won ideals applicable to what we do today? Everything would change.” Change is exactly what we need. Notice, Classen didn’t exclusively state that men need to respect women or vice versa, but that all people should respect others, regardless of their gender. Society seems willing to give up on chivalry altogether, but the underlying morals of chivalry are something modern society still needs — respect, honor and pride. Mari Yamaguchi, an

undeclared sophomore, spoke about the rarity of chivalrous behavior in college, and her overall loss of respect for men as a result. “I honestly think that the UA is probably the most unromantic place in the universe,” Yamaguchi said. “There couldn’t be a place that people would probably be more repulsed. It’s sad that we freak out when we meet a guy who has morals and feelings, and doesn’t dehumanize girls.” Yamaguchi represents a population of women who are fed up with some men’s lack of class when it comes to their treatment of women. While women have every right to expect a heightened level of respect from men, there are two sides to every story. Davis Hollingsworth, a criminal justice junior, said he thinks that chivalry is something that should be a reality for both men and women, but he has found that kind actions are often misinterpreted by women. “If you [act chivalrously toward] a girl, they take it as ‘Oh, he wants to date me or something,’” Hollingsworth said. “They take it more serious than it actually is. Sometimes I’m just buying you food; it’s not a big deal.” This miscommunication results in men who refrain from performing chivalrous acts altogether. So who is to say that Yamaguchi didn’t encounter men with sound morals like Hollingsworth who simply didn’t want to give her the wrong impression about their intentions? Kindness isn’t a strictly give and take relationship; it’s a crucial cultural value that should be practiced at all times by all people. Since these morals are no longer commonplace, neither men nor women can tell if they are meeting someone who lacks respect for others or someone who is simply confused about how they should behave due to conflicting perspectives of chivalry. It’s unfortunate that we are evolving into a society where random acts of kindness are reason for apprehension. “We are human beings. We all have, hopefully, erotic desires,” Classen said. “So if an individual [performs chivalrous acts] because he or she is interested in the other … why not? … As long as this does not translate into abuse then why not, as long as it is respectful?” The abundance of varying opinions regarding chivalry is evident and overwhelming. At the end of the day, respect for others, regardless of gender or personal desire, should be an ideal rooted in all members of society. Unless everyone is willing to give a little without expecting anything in return, chivalry will become a system of the past. We must modernize and preserve the positive aspects of chivalry, or both men and women will pay the price — and it will cost way more than a check at the end of dinner. — Shelby Thomas is a sophomore studying journalism and sociology. Follow her @alayneshelby

Society seems willing to give up on chivalry altogether, but the underlying morals of chivalry are something modern society still needs — respect, honor and pride.

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.

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Chivalry degrades women, promotes sexism in society please and protect the lady, which is also a loaded classbased term. “When a knight or noble male figure would act chivalrously, he would be assuming that the person is BY David W. Mariotte The Daily Wildcat in need, is weaker than he, and that the act would make him look better to his peers going on crusades have he word “medieval” and higher-ups,” said Emily gone out of style, so chivalry has a connotation Carlisle, a studio art junior today consists of more basic of antiquity and and a FORCE intern. practices, like holding open unenlightenment because Relegation of women into doors, lending a jacket of misconceptions about a subordinate position by to a friend who is cold or the era like the supposedly constructing them as weaker giving up a seat on the bus widespread aversion to than men, physically or for someone who needs it science and bathing. Though emotionally, is one of the more. It still implies that some of this reputation is few “standard practices” of the practitioner is a noble undeserved, one aspect of chivalry. This makes for an “gentleman,” and because the Middle Ages should be interesting dynamic, because men are practicing chivalry treated as antiquated and it seems to contradict one of toward women, the concept out of touch with the times: the other theoretical pillars places them in a superior chivalry. of chivalry, which is the position. Chivalry also still The idea of chivalry positioning suggests is surrounded by of women as bravery and misconceptions that make When a almost idols. honor and it appear to be this shining knight Consistent the sort. example of good, instead of or noble throughout As such, its terrible sexist and classist male figure the history there has reality. would act of chivalry is been a push Most people probably chivalrously, what Abels to revive first encountered the idea of he would be calls “the idea chivalry. chivalry with some variation assuming that that the male Paloma of the Arthurian Cycle. King the person is could win/ Arthur, Sir Lancelot the Brave, Phelps, an in need. be worthy of intern for Sir Robin the Not-Quite-So— Emily Carlisle, his ‘lady love’ Feminists Brave-as-Sir Lancelot, and FORCE Intern by winning Organized other aristocratic white men approbation to Resist, from “Monty Python and through noble/ Create, and the Holy Grail” are the ones honorable acts.” Empower and a psychology we tend to associate with This creates a sense of false senior, said she does not chivalry. autonomy. It suggests that think chivalry should return, To be a little more ladies — not peasant women, however. historically accurate, and to though, of course — are free “It’s problematic because summarize Richard Abels’ to make their own choices the revival of chivalry seems paper on chivalry for the about romantic partners to only consist of baseless U.S. Naval Academy, chivalry and that they are the ones started with French horsemen acts of kindness that are who have the power in a meant to affirm a woman’s and became a loose and relationship, but that they place as less capable and evolving set of ethos for are also prizes to be won and [more] fragile,” Phelps said. medieval knights that fused therefore objects. She has a point; how is ideals from war, Christianity Chivalry is full of holding a door brave? and nobility. It was adopted contradictions, but instead of This is not to say holding into stories and writings trying to navigate them now, doors, pushing in chairs, and was romanticized to be they should be left to history, helping move heavy boxes all about honor, bravery, where chivalry belongs — or any one of the everyday strength and courtliness. it’s nothing more than a things we do to help people The only Merriam-Webster flawed substitute for general are bad, but we shouldn’t online definition of chivalry kindness in action. associate them with being that does not have to do with a gentleman or being being medieval defines it chivalrous. Chivalry makes as “an honorable and polite them about power. The way of behaving, especially — David W. Mariotte is a gentleman is showing his toward women.” journalism sophomore. Follow strength or resourcefulness to Jousting, dueling and @DW_DavidWallace

T

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Police Beat BY micah montiel

The Daily Wildcat

Party animal

A UA student was diverted to the Dean of Students Office for charges of minor in possession of alcohol in the body on Saturday at 11:40 p.m. University of Arizona Police Department officers received a call that evening about a woman on the ground by Tyndall Avenue Parking Garage. When the officers arrived, they found a woman dressed in a black bunny costume lying on the ground, not moving. The woman seemed to be drifting in and out of consciousness. Officers were able to find her wallet and identify her as a UA student. University of Arizona Student Emergency Medical Services arrived on scene to evaluate the student. The Tucson Fire Department was also called because the student was unresponsive. When the woman was able to speak, she told SEMS that she had taken four shots of vodka, Adderall and several weight loss pills. UAPD officers noticed the woman’s watery and bloodshot eyes. She slurred her words when attempting to speak to officials, and a strong smell of alcohol was on her breath. At that point, the student was taken to University of Arizona Medical Center to be treated for extreme intoxication. An ambulance arrived to take the student to the UAMC. Someone had to help her stand up because she could not do so on her own. The student was diverted to the Dean of Students Office and no further legal action was taken.

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A UA student was arrested on alcohol-related charges outside of the University Information Technology Services building on Saturday at 1:10 a.m. UAPD officers were on patrol for a sorority event earlier that evening. While patrolling, they noticed two men and a woman walking in front of them. One of the men walking turned and saw the patrol vehicle. Then, he threw something against a wall east of the Kappa Alpha Theta sorority and started running westbound, leaving the woman and other man behind. Officers turned on their emergency lights and followed the running man. As officers got out of the vehicle, the man turned around and looked at them, then kept running. Officers continued to follow the man into an alley. As they got close to a dumpster, the man came out from behind it with his hands raised above his head. The student was handcuffed and taken back to the patrol vehicle. When they got back to the car, they saw the other man and woman had left and were unable to track them down. The handcuffed student admitted to throwing an unopened 12-ounce bottle of Bud Light Platinum when he saw the patrol car. His breath smelled heavily of alcohol and he had bloodshot, watery eyes. The student would not give the names of the people who were with him or tell the officers how they had gotten the alcohol. He was cited and released on charges of minor in possession of alcohol in the body. A code of conduct referral was sent to the Dean of Students Office for the student.

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TUCSON EVENTS

Flu Shot Clinic on the UA Mall 10 a.m. - 2 p.m. The cost is $17 for UA students and employees. The cost is covered by the Aetna Student Health Insurance Plan and most other billable insurances.

Greek or Treat from 5:30 PM to 7 PM at the UA Mall near the SUMC, 1303 E. University Blvd. The UA Greek community would like to welcome UA and Tucson families to attend this annual event hosted by Order of Omega. This event brings together UA fraternities and sororities to host a fun and candy filled evening for Tucson youth.

is conducting a non-partisan study about why Tucsonans vote the way they do. Please contact lvilahen@email.arizona.edu for more info.

SBS Downtown Lecture Series - ‘How Our Surroundings Influence Happiness and Health’ 6:30 p.m. - 7:30 p.m. Fox Tucson Theatre, 17 W. Congress St. Do the places and spaces around us affect our happiness and health? Esther Sternberg, UA professor of medicine and research director at the Arizona Center for Integrative Medicine, will show us how our physical environment, experienced through each of the senses, can affect emotions and trigger the brain’s stress or relaxation responses. Bioscience Toastmasters from noon to 1 PM at the Medical Research Building Room 102. Provides a comfortable environment for scientists and other professionals to practice speaking and leadership skills. Biomedical Engineering Design Day from 1 PM to 5 PM at the SUMC, Main Ballroom. Gives a glimpse about the newest and fastest growing department in the UA College of Engineering.

Widescreen Wednesdays - “The Fantasticks” from 7 PM to 9:15 PM at the Center for Creative Photography, 1030 N. Olive Road. Please join us for a free one-time screening of the film adaptation of the play, followed by a lively discussion led by members of the film and television faculty. Lunar and Planetary Laboratory Evening Lecture from 7 PM to 8 PM at the Kuiper Space Sciences, Room 308. Timothy D. Swindle will give this lecture with the main topic being the status of searches for Martians on the 75th anniversary of “The War of the Worlds.” UA Non-Partisan Sociological Voting Research from 10 AM to 7 PM at the Social Science Building 416a, 1145 E. South Campus Drive. A researcher at the University of Arizona

UA Science: Mirror Lab Tours from 1 PM to 2:30 PM at Steward Observatory Mirror Lab, 933 N. Cherry Ave. This tour provides a behind the scenes look at unparalleled optical technology, revolutionary spin- casting, mold construction, grinding and polishing involved in making giant telescope mirrors.

Tucson Researching Your Family History at 3 PM at the Himmel Park Public Library, 1035 N. Treat Ave. Experienced genealogists from Pima County Genealogy Society will be leading sessions to help you start your own family tree. Scrabble Group from 10 AM to 12 PM at the Tucson Jewish Community Center, 3800 E. River Rd. Calling all Scrabble enthusiasts! Join this casual and congenial group of Scrabble players. Drop in, no advance registration necessary. Games and score pads supplied, but please bring a Scrabble dictionary if you have one.

Information Compiled by Anna Yeltchev

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


6 • The Daily Wildcat

News • Wednesday, October 30, 2013

homeless from page 1

grace pierson/The Daily Wildcat

homeless people in Tucson wait in front of Joel D. Valdez Main Library to receive dinner from Matthew 25: Ministries on Tuesday. Medical students from the three Arizona universities have teamed up to open a clinic in Phoenix that will offer health services to Arizona’s homeless.

presence in downtown Phoenix: the College of Medicine of the UA, the College of Nursing and Health Innovation of ASU, and the Physician Assistant and Physical Therapy programs of NAU. The SHOW program will be a great learning experience for students in

addition to the education they receive at each college, Nguyen said. “If we hadn’t started working on this program, getting interdisciplinary, interprofessional experience would probably have to wait until we actually started working,”

— Follow Jazmine Foster-Hall @Jazz_Foster

Crossword

secularism

one of the options available and allows students to focus on solving crossword puzzles and learning about linguistics and the different meanings of language. Each student is given a crossword puzzle book to work on throughout the semester and completes at least one major crossword puzzle per week. Students are also required to complete an end-ofsemester project where they take the answers from a completed crossword puzzle and use them to come up with their own clues. Honors student Grace Ritchey, an aerospace engineering freshman, said she chose the course because she thought it would be interesting. “It’s a really fun class,” Ritchey said. “We’ve talked about the basics of crossword instruction and also linguistics and some of the stuff that goes into language.” Although the main focus of the course is solving crossword puzzles, it also looks at sociolinguistics, comparing figurative language and looking at the structure of words and their origins. Ariana Manson, a biochemistry

people together and get people going.” On Oct. 25, the team launched the project with a panel to inform the community about the study. About 100 people gathered to listen as representatives of each team discussed ideas about how the project could make a difference. “Everybody can maybe start getting along if we understand that [religion and secularism are] not just one idea that guides everything,” Figler said. Ernst van den Hemel, a research fellow at University of Utrecht in the Netherlands, said the study is looking into an important and necessary topic, since societies live in a mix of religions. “We are all supposed to live in a sort of society where we increasingly tolerate each other’s religions, and yet conflicts and misunderstandings keep on returning — in an ever more violent manner, it seems,” van den Hemel said, “and interdisciplinary international study into religion and the way interactive political consolations is necessary more than ever.” Though many people may

from page 1

from page 1

amy phelps/The Daily Wildcat

Professor Richard Ruiz teaches his HNRS 195H freshman colloquium class, “Examining Life Through Word Puzzles,” in the Cesar E. Chavez building on Monday. He uses crossword puzzles as a teaching tool for students to better understand language.

freshman taking the course, said students have been working on linguistics, including root words and Greek and Latin roots. She said her favorite part is learning where words come from and how they can be used in language. Some students said the class has proven to be more interesting than they initially thought it would be. “I thought this class would be a very easy blow-off class, but I’m

interested, so I’ve tried a lot harder to solve the crossword puzzles,” said Jeffry Granados, a math and biomedical engineering freshman. “It’s not always about what you know; it’s about how you can put certain words together … and from the puzzles, you can learn a lot.” — Follow Chandler Wicke @ChandlerWicke

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believe that problems surrounding religion, secularism and politics have subsided over the years, the world is still not free of vicious acts motivated by these factors, Figler said. “If people think we are increasingly becoming more and more secular as a globe, then why do we still have issues with violence in religion, and violence in secularism, and certainly violence with politics?” he asked. In response to the violence ongoing around the world, Figler said the goal of the study is to find some of the answers as to why issues relating to religion are still prominent. Although there might not be a solution, Figler said there are benefits just in having the discussion. “I think that getting the dialogue going is a step in the direction in maybe finding some answers in, why are we still violent with each other even though we’re modern, even though we’ve made all these advances with technology?” Figler said. “You know, you’ve got really well-developed nations who are still really horrifically violent, including America.”

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Friday, said Maireen Nguyen, a second-year medical student at the UA. “For a lot of the patient population, if they are trying to work, it’s difficult for them to be able to get access to the health care they need if the office is closed,” Nguyen said. “That’s the part of the need we’re trying to fill.” While the main goal is providing health care, SHOW has two other goals it’s working toward, said Tim Ellis, co-director of the student executive committee for SHOW and a UA graduate research associate. The other goals are providing clinical education to the students of all three universities and providing education and inter-professional know-how to pre-clinical students, Ellis said. Jacquelin Esque, a second-year UA medical student, said the partnership between schools is beneficial because it encourages students to work together for a common goal. “It’s really a great partnership between the three universities,” Esque said. “Even though we all go to separate schools, we all have a common interest of wanting to serve the community, and a lot of us get to work together to do that.” Each university’s medical program has a

Nguyen said. “This is a good learning space because you’re actually doing work handson.” Doctors and nurses from the community will be volunteering their time to help at the clinic and teach students as well. The program is also still looking to gain funding through grants and personal donations. However, Nguyen said the biggest problem the program faces is losing student volunteers as classes became too hectic. “We’re trying to modify the program now so that way we’re actually splitting the work more among students,” Nguyen said. “If people are having difficulties, they have the support they need and they can ask for help.” Ultimately, the goal is to expand the program once it is up and running to provide opportunities for students in a variety of majors in the future. Nguyen said program members are trying to get students with a variety of majors involved. “Not only do you get to work with students that are from different fields, but also from different schools, and I don’t know where else you can find that,” Nguyen said. “It’s a very exciting time for all of us, and I hope other people get to see that.”

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Wednesday, October 30, 2013

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Wednesday, October 30, 2013 • Page 8

SPORTS

Editors: Megan Coghlan & James Kelley

sports@wildcat.arizona.edu (520) 621-2956 twitter.com/wildcatsports

FOOTBALL

Changes push UA, Cal over goal line BY LUKE DELLA

The Daily Wildcat Arizona’s upcoming opponent, California, has seen a vast change in recent years. In under two decades, the Golden Bears have gone from the floor of college football to being ranked No. 2 in the country, to where they are now, completely restarting under first-year head coach Sonny Dykes. But despite starting his tenure at Cal with a 1-7 record, Dykes shouldn’t feel as if he’s in the hot seat, because he has a $321 million present that will help. “From what I know of [Dykes], he’s got a great chance to succeed there,” said Arizona head coach Rich Rodriguez. “They’ve got great new facilities.” Dykes was Arizona’s offensive coordinator/quarterbacks coach from 2007 to 2009. When Rodriguez came to Tucson in 2012, the Wildcats became his third head-coaching job in 11 years. But it was the first time that he was given a brand new facility. When Rodriguez took the coaching job at West Virginia in 2001, he somewhat had it easy. The Mountaineers were already an established program, and their facilities were up to par. Rodriguez faced challenges similar to what Dykes is going through now. Rodriguez’s spread option offense was completely new to West Virginia and took time before it saw success. In his first season at Western Virginia, Rodriguez posted a 3-8 record. “It was painful,” Rodriguez said about the 2001 season. “It’s been a lot

RYAN REVOCK/THE DAILY WILDCAT

ARIZONA STADIUM’S $72 million renovation added the Lowell-Stevens Football Facility, which opened in July. The football program moved into the stadium from McKale Center.

KORE CHAN/THE DAILY CALIFORNIAN

CALIFORNIA’S MEMORIAL STADIUM underwent a $321 million renovation that finished last year. It earthquake-proofed the stadium and added new training facilities.

easier here because at least some of the guys have run some spread, so it hasn’t been completely new to them.” Dykes’ transition to Cal bears some similarities to Rodriguez’s. Dykes comes to California as an airraid offensive system coach, bringing

a scheme that is very pass-centric and features many receivers. Former Cal head coach Jeff Tedford ran a more traditional pro-style offense that had a balance of run and pass. The change in offense is one of the reasons the Golden Bears now

host the No. 8 passing offense in the country, but it’s also why they’ve struggled. “I think they’ve had some big plays this year, but … turnovers have hurt them,” Rodriguez said. Rodriguez also understands the importance of modern facilities in recruiting the types of players a coach needs to fit his system. Dykes inherited Memorial Stadium, which just last year finished its $321 million renovation. Similarly, Rodriguez, in his second year at UA, received the $72 million LowellStevens Football Facility. The Memorial Stadium upgrades — which include, but are not limited to, earthquake-proof new training facilities and a modern press box and seating — should help convince recruits to commit to Cal. The Wildcats’ offensive line coach, Jim Michalczik, joined the UA coaching staff this year after spending time as an assistant coach at Cal under Tedford. Michalczik said he believes Dykes has a great recruiting tool in the new Memorial Stadium facilities. “Facilities are like the doctor’s office waiting room,” Michalczik said. “If you go in there and it’s all nice and well-kept up, you feel good about the doctor. But if you go into a waiting room and it’s old and not well-taken care of, you worry.” So while California may be struggling in 2013, Rodriguez and other coaches can tell you it’s just part of the process, and soon enough the Golden Bears will be competing as they did in the past. — Follow Luke Della @LukeDella

BASKETBALL

Hollis-Jefferson provides defensive support, athleticism

SCORE CENTER

MIAMI BACK IN FLAMES Miami Heat 107 Chicago Bulls 95

PACERS DEFY MAGIC Indiana Pacers 97 Orlando Magic 87

ONE LA BEATS ANOTHER Los Angeles Lakers 116 Los Angeles Clippers 103

NAME TO NOTE

DERRICK ROSE returned

to the NBA last night, scoring 12 points in the Bulls’ loss to the Heat. In 2007, Rose and Memphis beat Arizona 7663 at McKale.

WILBUR UPDATE This week Wilbur T. Wildcat is facing Rocky The Bull of South Florida in the Capital One Mascot challenge. As of Tuesday afternoon, Wilbur trailed 13 percent to 87 percent.

BY EVAN ROSENFELD The Daily Wildcat

TYLER BAKER/THE DAILY WILDCAT

FORWARD JEFFREY WADHAMS handles the puck against Delaware.

HOCKEY

QA

Senior Wadhams & talks new rank, Icecat transition BY JOEY PUTRELO

The Daily Wildcat Wildcat hockey senior forward Jeffrey Wadhams is one of four players on the roster to have played on the former ACHA hockey program at the UA called “Icecats.” In 10 games this season, Wadhams earned three total points from one goal with a pair of assists. Thus far in his career at Arizona, the veteran winger has accumulated 19 points on four goals and 15 assists. The Daily Wildcat sat down with Wadhams to get a taste of what being a senior hockey player at the UA is like. The Daily Wildcat: How does it feel to be a part of the first Arizona hockey team ranked in the top 10 of the ACHA polls since 2006? Wadhams: It’s nice. I’ve been here since the 2010-11 season and it’s definitely been a long road since then to get to where we are today. It’s definitely a sense of accomplishment. What makes your senior class so special? I think because we’ve seen it all here. We were here before the transition, during the transition and now after the transition of the coaching staff. Because of that I think we’ve been really close; we had to come together after our freshman year wanting change. Just going through that battle together, getting a new [head] coach [Sean Hogan], adjusting to him and just working hard together with the new things he’s implemented into the program. So I think that’s why we’re unique. What emotions did you have coming back to the Tucson Convention Center for the home opener last weekend? It was a long grind the first four weeks of the season, so it’s always nice to come home and play in front of your fans, especially with the fans we have. As for the emotions, I can’t really describe it — you’re nervous, excited, anxious, maybe even a little scared [laughs]. For the older guys it’s a reunion and just a sense of relief to be playing back at the TCC again. What’s the best part about attending the UA, apart from playing hockey here? The quality of character of people you meet when you’re networking. There’s just good people here. I have a lot of really good close friends here that don’t put on a uniform with me every Friday and Saturday night. Who is your celebrity crush? Kate Mara, ever since I saw the movie “Shooter.” In the scene where she’s holding a shotgun, ever since she’s been my celebrity crush. She’s got just a bra on and she’s holding a shotgun and it’s just awesome [laughs]. — Follow Joey Putrelo @JoeyPutrelo

O

ne of the most exciting things about Arizona men’s basketball this season might be watching Wildcat freshman forward Rondae Hollis-Jefferson. If all goes as planned this year, as the sixth man, Hollis-Jefferson will be known for his tenacious defense and relentless hustle. At 6-foot-7 and 215 pounds, Arizona hasn’t had a defender with his athleticism and size since Andre Iguodala. Hollis-Jefferson is expected to contribute in scoring, rebounds, steals, assists and blocks, and provides an enthusiastic and positive attitude that the team will be able to rally around. In his first game as a Wildcat against Augustana, Hollis-Jefferson was one of the leading scorers with 10 points and was one of five Wildcats to have put up double digits during the exhibition match. He shot just 2-for-7 RYAN REVOCK/THE DAILY WILDCAT from the field, contributed with three FRESHMAN FORWARD Rondae Hollis-Jefferson rebounds and steals and was sent to drives the ball against Augustana on Monday at the free throw line a team-leading McKale Center. nine times, where he scored six of his points. defensive abilities shone, allowing Despite the uncharacteristic him to successfully force a 10-second performance in his first live college violation against the other team. action, he is expected to shake off the He additionally impressed at the nerves and make a larger impact as 2013 Nike Hoops Summit, where he the season progresses. was added to Team Before becoming a USA specifically to Wildcat, the Chester, help defend the No. He possesses Pa., native finished 1-ranked player in his his high school career quick feet and class, Andrew Wiggins. with more than 1,000 will be able He is an excellent points and a schoolrebounder and will to guard any record 780 rebounds. be looked at to extend He was rated as the spot on the possessions with his No. 5 small forward perimeter. rebounding ability. in his class, and No. In addition to 21 overall by ESPN. his elite defensive com. Over his final capabilities, Hollisthree seasons at Jefferson also excels in his passing Chester High School, Hollis-Jefferson game, setting up his teammates by led the team to a 91-5 overall record, feeding them the ball when they are in earning state titles in 2011 and 2012. position to score. He should perform In his senior year, he averaged 15.5 well alongside scoring-minded guards points, 11.0 rebounds and 2.8 steals like Gabe York and Jordin Mayes. per game. While he currently doesn’t possess He possesses quick feet and will much of a consistent jump shot, he be able to guard any spot on the should develop one over this season. perimeter, making him one of the Regardless of how under-publicized most versatile defenders in the lineup. Hollis-Jefferson is, he can step up His abilities stem from his 7-foot and become the team’s X-factor this wingspan, which allows him to be year, similar to Kevin Parrom last year. a lock-down defender, capable of He will be the Wildcats’ go-to guy in guarding an opponent’s best player at breaking the zone. any given notice. Earlier this year, Hollis-Jefferson — Follow Evan Rosenfeld participated in the 2013 McDonald’s @EvanRosenfeld17 All-American Game, where his elite

NUMBER OF THE DAY

10

Wildcat hockey is ranked No. 10 in the latest poll, its first appearance in the top 10 since 2006.

[EX]WILDCAT WATCH Deadspin.com reported that the Gronkowski brothers are shopping around an animated series based on the famous football family called “The Gronks.” Rob Gronkowski played at Arizona in 2007 and 2008 and Chris Gronkowski was a Wildcat from 2008 to 2009.

TWEET TO NOTE We gotta bunch of thugs on the team... until a baby comes around the locker room, then they do the baby talk and everything haha —@VanillaV1ck7, senior quarterback B.j. Denker ‘Like‘ us on Facebook facebook.com/dailywildcat

Follow us on Twitter twitter.com/wildcatsports

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DAILYWILDCAT.COM


Sports • Wednesday, October 30, 2013

THE DAILY WILDCAT • 9

HOT ‘N’ NOT

TYLER BAKER/THE DAILY WILDCAT

SENIOR ASHLEY EVANS swims against UNLV on Friday at home. Arizona swept UNLV in seven categories in the Wildcats’ first home meet.

ALEXANDER PLAUMANN/THE DAILY WILDCAT

SOPHOMORE HANNAH WONG tries to keep the ball in bounds against Washington State on Friday. The Wildcats fell to the Cougars 4-0.

No. 25 Arizona indoor volleyball dropped its two away matches last weekend. The Wildcats were defeated by Colorado and Utah and won just one set in two matches.

BY ROSE ALY VALENZUELA

The Daily Wildcat Senior quarterback B.J. Denker was named Pac12 Offensive Player of the Week after gathering a career-high 192 rushing yards and passing for 265 yards. He also had a touchdown and an interception during the victory against Colorado.

The Arizona soccer team was defeated 4-0 by Washington State on Friday. It played Washington on Sunday and couldn’t pull a win then either. The Wildcats tied the match with the Huskies.

Arizona swimming and diving swept UNLV in the first home meet. The men’s team outscored UNLV 208-91 and the women won 183-109.

Sophomore Arizona hockey defenseman Bryan Drazner suffered a bruised sternum during Saturday’s game against the Delaware Blue Hens. Drazner was escorted off the ice by two of his teammates. The time it will take for him to recover is currently unknown.

Arizona softball swept all three games of the Fall Round Robin exhibition tournament during the weekend. The Wildcats beat Eastern Arizona 15-0, Fort Lewis 10-0 and Scottsdale Community College 12-0.

The Dallas Cowboys lost to the Lions, 31-30. With 1:33 minutes left of the game, the Advanced NFL Stats’ Win Probability calculator said the Cowboys had a 99 percent chance of winning the game. Clearly, it was wrong.

Senior pitcher Kenzie Fowler is back in action after being out of the pitcher’s circle for a year. Fowler only allowed one hit from SCC on Sunday in the four innings she pitched.

The controversial obstruction call made by MLB umpire Jim Joyce during game 3 of the World Series was trending

on Twitter on Saturday night. Joyce’s call gave the St. Louis Cardinals the win against the Boston Red Sox. Some fans agreed with Joyce and some disagreed, but if the Red Sox don’t win the World Series this year, their fans just might go after Joyce for that call.

Arizona head coach Andy Lopez was inducted into the Pima County Sports Hall of Fame on Sunday.

— Follow Rose Aly Valenzuela @RoseAlyVal

You are not alone. SUVA students are different, creative and challenge the status quo. Call today to learn more about a university that’s as unique as you are. 520.325.0123 suva.edu BA Interior Design, Illustration, Graphic Design, Landscape Architecture, Animation, Advertising & Marketing BFA Fine Arts, Photography MFA Painting and Drawing, Photography, Motion Arts

Accredited by The Higher Learning Commission (a commission of the North Central Association) • Transfer Credits Welcome


Classifieds • Wednesday, October 30, 2013

CLASSIFIED READER RATES: $5 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.

READER AD DEADLINE: Noon, one business day prior to publication. CLASSIFIED DISPLAY RATES: $11.75 per column inch. Display Ad

Deadline: Two business days prior to publication. Please note: Ads may be cancelled before expiration but there are no refunds on canceled ads.

CLASSIFIEDS ONLINE: An additional $2.75 per order will put

your print ad online. Online only: (without purchase of print ad) $2.75 per day. Friday posting must include Saturday and Sunday.

storaGe sPaCe 25% off. Freeup your room! Located just east of I-10. 657 W. St. Mary’s Rd. Tucson, AZ 85701 520-903-1960 www.wildcatstorage.net ua CIvIL dIsCourse Institute conducting student survey. You may be contacted to participate. If you participate you will be compensated.

aIrtroNICs INC. a local Aerospace/Aviation company is looking for a part administrative support staff member. Job duties will include supporting the team that is expanding our current military and commercial sales. Flexible hours make this position ideal for a student. If interested please submit a resume to kmayer@airtronicsinc.com.

COPY ERROR: The Daily Wildcat will not be responsible for more than the first incorrect insertion of an advertisement.

assIstaNt for marKetING, bookkeeping, errands. Late afternoon, weekend times available. Part-time flexible schedule. Campus area. Excel experience. Email resume: terrydahlstrom@volkco.com

red roBIN tuCsoN Mall. Immediate openings for experienced cooks and servers. Apply Today!

the arIZoNa INN, Tucson’s historic, Four-Diamond rated resort hotel is accepting applications for the following position: Dining Host/ Hostess (F/T or P/T) Assistant Server. All positions require evening, weekend and holiday availability. Those interested may apply at: http://www.arizonainn.com/careers/employment-application/

soLar PoWered offICe, 3blocks from UA campus. 639 E Speedway, Complete building= 690 Sf/$950/mo (520)623-1313

609 e. mabel street, historical home built in 1923 with a separate guest house. all remodeled in guest home and both homes with electric and plumbing. Buy this home live in one rent out the other. Call Peggy mackey-Craig at Coldwell Banker residential Brokerage 520-907-0631 mLs #21321472

eXtremeLy rare afrICaN spurred tortoise (Geochelone Sulcata) From: Sahara Desert/Africa. 8 year old male. Excellent breeding stud. Easy to care for/great pet. $550/O.B.O. Call 520-404-6800 for pictures.

!!! West uNIversIty art Deco Building 1bdrm. $695, all utilities included. 5blocks to campus. Unique space with hardwood floors, 12ft. ceilings, laundry, off street parking. Available January. No pets. 520-743-2060 www.tarolaproperties.com !!!!!!! 1BLoCK from UA. Avail Jan. 1, Summer or fall. Remodeled, furnished or unfurnished. 1BD from $610, 2BD from $810. Pool/ laundry. 746 E 5th St. Shown by appointment 751-4363/ 409-3010 1004 e CoPPer st. - 2Bed 1bath near Park/Grant for $575/mo! Off street and covered parking available. Please call Peach Properties @(520)7983331 for additional info. 1Bd/ .75Ba off street parking, pool, washer/dryer. All utilities paid. 520-419-3159. 1Bdrm furNIshed at University Arms. 1515 E 10th St. Clean, quiet, green, clearwave wifi. Lease to May 15, 2014 @$570/mo and to August 1st @$530/mo. 3blocks to campus. 623-0474. www.ashton-goodman.com 1Bdrm uNfurNIshed aPartmeNt. 5th Street and Country Club. 1mile to campus. Small, quiet complex. Mature landscaping. Large pool. Covered parking. Storage. Terra Alta Apartments 3122 E. Terra Alta Apartment C. 623-0474. www.ashton-goodman.com studios from $400 spacious apartment homes with great downtown location. 884-8279. Blue agave apartments 1240 N. 7th ave. speedway/ stone. www.blueagaveapartments.com

7 9 2 6 4 3 8

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By Dave Green

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1237 e draChmaN st -Spacious 2bed 2bath condo located near UofA campus $950.00/mo! Please call Peach Properties @(520)798-3331 for additional info.

NOTICE

RATES

10 • The Daily Wildcat

Attention Classified Readers: The 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.

!!! homes for reNt. Available August 2014. www.uofarentalhomes.com. Ask about how you can live for FREE! !!!!! $2250 Per month for our last 6BDRM 6.5BATH each has own WHIRLPOOL tub-shower. Just a few blocks from campus. 5car GARAGE, walk-in closets, all Granite counters, large outside balconies off bedrooms, very large master suites, high ceilings. TEP Electric Discount. Monitored security system. 884-1505 www.MyUofARental.com *SPECIAL is for immediate rental through July 2014 only !!!!! 4Br/4.5Ba +3 car garage. Only a few left at The Village from only $1495 per month. 5-7 Blocks NW UA HUGE luxury Homes. Large master suites with walk-in closets +balconies +10ft ceilings up and down +DW, W&D, Pantry, TEP Electric Discount, Monitored Security System. Pool privileges. 884-1505 www.MyUofARental.com *SPECIAL is for immediate rental through July 2014 only

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.

!!!!! tIred of seeing your friends having all the fun with their private pools and luxurious homes within walking distance to campus? Then lease one of these amazing homes before they are all gone! View properties at www.PrestigiousUofArentals.com AND then call 520.331.8050 (owner/agent) to tour and lease one of these luxury homes for August 2014!

!!!avaILaBLe NoW !!!!!! 6bedroom house for lease (will entertain offers for a group less than 6) 2story, A/C, fireplace, 2sets W/D, private parking. HUGE outdoor enclosed entertaining area w/FP! All within blocks of Campus. Call for more info 520-398-5738

!!!!styLIsh houses RESERVING NOW FOR SUMMER/FALL 2014. Studios, 1,2,3,4,5 & 6 Bedrooms. $425 to $3775 depending on Plan & location. http://www.UniversityRentalinfo.com most have Washer/Dryer, A/C, Alarm. Call 520-747-9331 to see one today! 2Bd toWNhouse Near Pima West and Starpass Resort for $790/mo. A/C, W/D, community pool, covered patio. www.thecastleproperties.com 520-9032402 or 520-250-6659

!!!!! avaILaBLe NoW. FANTASTIC NEW houses 4BEDROOM, 2Bath $2100/mo & 5Bedroom, 2Bath $2500/mo Convenient to campus - A/C, alarm, washer/ dryer, private backyard, plus more. Website: http://www.universityrentalinfo.com/water-floorplans.php Pets welcome. Call 520-7479331 to see one today.

1927 e 10th st. - 2bed 1bath house with yard in Sam Hughes Neighborhood, near Broadway/ Campbell for $1200/mo! Please call Peach Properties @(520)7983331 for additional info.

2Bedroom house Wood floors, washer/dryer hookups, water/gas paid $600. ALSO walk or bike to campus 2Bedroom House washer/dryer, fenced yard, pet ok $700 CALL REDI 520-623-5710 www.azredirentals.com

Moving?

Elegant Movers

! l y l a re

boost your job search in as little as 9 months UA Graduate School Day Wednesday, November 6 1:00 – 4:00 p.m. Student Union Memorial Center 3rd Floor Ballroom

446 N CamPBeLL rd. - Beautiful 2bed 2bath condos with A/C, W&D located at Sam Hughes Place near 6th/Campbell for $1600/mo! Please call Peach Properties @(520)798-3331 for additional info. sam huGhes PLaCe luxury 3BR/2BA Condo. Renting at $500/BR 3-6mo lease negotiable. Secured access building, w/d, shaded patio. Exercise rm same floor. 2parking spaces incl. Joyce 520-299-5920, or 520-401-0438, jptucson@aol.com

2Bdrm 1.75 Bath at 5th & Euclid. $725 water incl, lease till end of May. Call Burns Development & Realty 327-8971 CeNtraL 2Br/ 1Ba, 800sq. Newly tiled. BR’s carpeted, Remodeled bathroom. Spacious LR, large yard, ample parking. Pets ok 520-440-6869 $675/mo. Wood fLoors. BIG rooms, skylights. Extra space adjacent to living rm 4 office. Well kept, mature landscape. Close to Coffee Times/Loft & mass transit/bike. Evap cool/gas heat. Lease, references, background. $500/mo. Call (520)288-1758 to see.

wpcarey.asu.edu/graduate

Th

A Guide to Religious Services Fall 2013

St. Michael Ukrainian Catholic Church

Grace Evangelical Lutheran Church (WELS)

1st and 3rd Sundays Liturgy in English, otherwise. Ukrainian/English 10 a.m. 715 W Vanover Rd. | www.stmichaeltucson.org

Sunday Worship 7:45 a.m. & 10 a.m. Bible Class 9 a.m. 830 N. First Ave. | (520)623-6633 | (www.GraceTucsonWELS.com

Sundays 8 a.m. & 10:30 a.m., Wednesdays 6 p.m.-8 p.m. www.trinitytucson.org 400 E. University Blvd.

Trinity Presbyterian Church

Sunday Worship 10:30am. All Welcome! Open & affirming, socially active congregation. 740 E. Speedway Blvd. | www.firstchristianchurchtucson.org

First Church of Christ, Scientist, Tucson

First United Methodist Church of Tucson

Sunday Service 10 a.m. Wednesday Testimony Meeting 7:30 p.m. All are welcome. 1010 N. Alvernon Way

Lutheran Campus Ministry - ECLA

6pm Wednesday dinner/vespers 10:30 a.m. Sunday Worship @ Campus Christian Center www.LCM-ua.org

First Christian Church (Disciples of Christ)

A community of welcome to ALL people. Services Sunday 10 a.m./6 p.m. 915 E. 4th Street | (520)622-6481 www.firstchurchtuch.org

WELS Tucson Campus Ministry

Student Bible Study and discussion Sundays 7 p.m. 830 N. First Avenue | (520)623-5088 www.WELSTCM.com

Mountain Avenue Church of Christ

Sunday Class 9:30am, Worship 10:45 a.m. Campus Minister Jesse Warren 2848 N. Mountain Ave. | 390-8115

Ina Road Church of Christ

Worship Jesus with us, Sunday 10 a.m. Inspiring a Jesus motivated life! 2425 W. Ina Rd.

To be a part of our Guide to Religious Services, call (520) 621-3425 or email classifieds@wildcat.arizona.edu

L.D.S. Church-Institute of Religion

Sundays 9 a.m., 11 a.m., 1 p.m.; Class M–F (520)623-4204 | www.institute.lds.org/tucson

Zen Desert Sangha Zen Buddhist Meditation ZDS@zendesertsangha.org. 520-319-6260. 3226 N. Martin Ave. www.zendesertsangha.org

Tucson Shambhala Meditation Center

Cultivate a clear mind, open heart and humor through meditation. 3250 N. Tucson Blvd.


Comics • Wednesday, October 30, 2013

3Bedroom 2Bath house a/c, wood floors, carport, washer/dryer $900 ALSO 2Blocks from UofA! 4Bedroom 2Bath House a/c, fenced yard, washer/dryer, fireplace $1200 CALL REDI 520-6235710 www.azredirentals.com

3Br 2.5Ba a/C, pool, new carpet, new showers, etc. Tennis court, covered parking. Water & trash paid, lease, no pets, near Starpass. $850. 682-7728.

amaZING, huGe 4Bedroom home available NOW close to campus, $525 per person. Ice cold A/C, w/d, incredible area for entertaining. Please call Tammy at 520398-5738 to view

LooK!!!! free WI-Fi and cable! Female looking for female roommates in a 5bed/3Bath home, located at Tyndall and Speedway. $450. Large bdrms. Private parking. Please call or text 520-4407711 to inquire

The Daily Wildcat • 11

BIKe to CamPus IN FY13! 1,2 & 3bdm Townhomes & Condos! A/C, Gar, FREE WIFI & all appl. www.GoldenWestManagement.com 520-790-0776

No WorrIes!!! We still have rooms AVAIL. NOW in our 5bedroom homes on individual leases from $375-$450 per person. Male/Female houses. SO close to campus!!! Please call Tammy at 520-398-5738 to view any of these homes!

maLe LooKING for male roommates for a 5bd/3bath 2story home, within walking/biking distance to Campus. $450 per person, with access to all common areas. Fenced side yard, sec. bars on all windows, doors, private parking. Call or text 520-245-5604

very CooL house- helen (tucson & speedway), Available September, 5BDR/ 2BA. $2450/mo. Landlord pays water, landscaping, hot tub maintenance, trash. HOT TUB, private, fenced backyard with sport court, basketball hoop. Close to UofA. Call 419- 3787.

WaLK to CamPus from this Cute 1Bedroom House 600sqft, fenced yard $495 ALSO Studio Fully Furnished Guesthouse ALL utilities included, a/c, garage mintues from UofA $800 CALL REDI 520-623-5710 www.azredirentals.com WaLK to CamPus, Sam Hughes- 2, 3, 4, 5BD. Newer homes! Within 1mi to UofA, A/C, garages and all appl included. www.GoldenWestManagement.com 520-790-0776

WaLK to uofa, 3bd, 2ba, all new, SS Appliances, W/D, fenced yd, pets ok, Utilities included $1,200/mo. 503-320-1148

Professors, PareNts, INvestors – 2 homes less than a mile to UofA in Sam Hughes - both below comps.2803 E. 6th St $225,000; 2904 E. 8th St (pool/studio guest house) - $474,900. Jean McCall, Tierra Antigua Realty, 520.488.7832…

Bear Down Times

“The King of the Falafel”

STUDENT SPECIALS Falafel Sandwich Chicken Shawarma .......... $399 Beef Shawarma ................ $399 Gyro................................. $399

Sandwiches

1800 E. Ft. Lowell, #168

Falafel .............................. $199 Falafel w/Hummus .......... $250 Falafel w/Baba Ganoush .. $250

Mon.–Sat. 11 a.m.–8 p.m. www.falafelkingtucson.com

Greek Salad w/Chicken.... $699

520-319-5554

We’re on our way! See you at the grad fair on your campus.

University of Pennsylvania Graduate School of Education • Philadelphia, PA www.gse.upenn.edu

dailywildcat.com 2013 National Online Pacemaker award Associated Collegiate Press


12 • The Daily Wildcat 1339_AZTNI

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

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