10.31.13

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

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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2013

NEWS - 2

COLLEGE OF PUBLIC HEALTH AWARDED GRANT

Artificial device keeps hearts pumping BY MARK ARMAO

The Daily Wildcat

On any given day, there are approximately 3,000 people on the waiting list to get a heart transplant. However, with only about 2,000 donor hearts available annually, the wait times for these patients can stretch longer than a year.

SPORTS - 6

FRESHMAN SOCCER PLAYER BEATS LEUKEMIA

VOLUME 107 • ISSUE 48

Are you a scaredy Wildcat?

For someone with a failing heart, a year may be too long. SynCardia Systems, Inc. aims to remedy this by implanting patients with its Total Artificial Heart, providing them with a “bridge to transplant.” The device, which was recently featured in a documentary on the Smithsonian Channel, was developed with the help of several

UA surgeons and engineers. The SynCardia temporary Total Artificial Heart is the world’s first and only device of its kind to be approved for use by the Food and Drug Administration, said Michael Garippa, CEO and president of SynCardia. Originating from a University of Arizona Medical Center program,

Syncardia was formed with the help of Dr. Jack Copeland, a renowned heart surgeon who, in 1985, became the first person to successfully use the Jarvik 7 Total Artificial Heart as a bridge to transplant. The patient received a donor heart after living for nine days on the Jarvik 7, which

ARTIFICIAL HEART, 2

HAPPY HALLOWEEN

BY MICHAELA KANE The Daily Wildcat

SCIENCE - 3

PRE-WORKOUT POWDER CAN HELP OR HARM

OPINIONS - 4

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Imagine this: you’re home alone at night when you hear a strange noise coming from upstairs, a tapping that sounds almost like footsteps. Suddenly, you are overcome with paranoia and your body tenses up, each muscle prepared to spring into action. Your heart beats faster and your hair stands on end. You’re scared, and your body knows it. Fear is one of the most universal emotions humans experience. But while the cause of fear may be easy to pinpoint — be it a chainsawwielding maniac or the impending doom of midterms — the way the body and mind react to a scare is a bit more complicated. “The first thing that happens when someone is scared is an appraisal of the threat,” said Alfred Kaszniak, a professor in the UA department of psychology. This appraisal is controlled by two structures in the brain: the amygdala, which has a direct connection to the senses, and the hypothalamus, which sends signals to the adrenal gland. The adrenal gland then releases hormones throughout the body, preparing it for one of two options: fighting the threat or fleeing from it. This is called the fight-or-flight response, and it is our instinctual reaction to frightening or threatening situations. “Physiologically, it has all kinds of different effects on your body,” said Katrina Mangin, a professor in the department of ecology and evolutionary biology at the UA . “Your heart races, your blood pressure goes up, different hormones are released, all to get you to be on really high alert for whatever is happening.” During this fight-or-flight response, the brain becomes more focused and alert in order to identify the possible threat; muscles are energized, and the physiology of the gut changes as blood is moved out of the digestive system and into the surrounding muscles. This occurs as a way to divert energy away from unnecessary bodily functions and into places where it can be used effectively, Kaszniak said. “In terms of evolution, it makes sense that there would be this

FEAR FACTOR, 3

SAVANNAH DOUGLAS/THE DAILY WILDCAT

CALEB WILLIAMS LEFT, dressed as a train conductor for Halloween, plays the bean bag toss at Greek-or-Treat on Wednesday night with his father, Joshua Williams (right). The bean bag toss was hosted by the Kappa Alpha Order fraternity (See full story online at dailywildcat.com).

Children’s literature library gets facelift BY ADRIANA ESPINOSA The Daily Wildcat

The College of Education embarked on a $1.1 million project this semester to renovate a library space that houses 30,000 children’s books. The fourth floor area in the Education building, which was originally built as a library, is home to the Worlds of Words program, a collection of international adolescent and children’s literature, said Ronald W. Marx, dean of the College of Education. “This collection is the largest of its type in North America and the second-largest in the world,” Marx said. “Because of its quality

and uniqueness, we want to have and adolescent literature, Short a physical space that matches said. “The space the quality of the is very old, and books.” while we were Kathy G. Short, This has to be able to spruce a professor of a destination, it up, it was not teaching, learning something flexible enough and sociocultural people stop to for the wide studies in the range of needs, L a n g u a g e , look at. because we are Reading and —Richard Clift, doing everything Culture program coordinator of collecfrom events with and creator and tions and outreach, children and director of Worlds College of Education families and local of Words, donated organizations up the 30,000 books to highly scholarly events,” Short with the help of her husband. The purpose of the growing said. “So we needed a space that book collection is to “build global EDUCATION, 2 understanding” through children’s

WEATHER

Professor 75 54 presents on Turkish politics HI

SUNNY Scary, W.Va. Salem, Mass. Witch Lake, Mich.

LOW

64 / 48 67 / 50 41 / 32

QUOTE TO NOTE

Politicians in Phoenix should stop looking for easy solutions and manipulable numbers to prove their dedication to education, and instead start putting their money where their mouths are.” OPINIONS — 4

BY ETHAN MCSWEENEY The Daily Wildcat

The School of Middle Eastern and North African Studies is hosting a talk on Friday about the Gezi Park protests in Turkey that captured the world’s attention last summer. Can Aciksoz, an associate professor in MENAS, will be giving the talk, which is titled “Gezi Protests: An Eventful History.” The event is part of a lecture series known as the MENAS Colloquium Series, put on by the Center for Middle Eastern Studies, a division

RYAN REVOCK/THE DAILY WILDCAT

CAN ASCIKSOZ, A MIDDLE EASTERN and North African Studies assistant professor, will give a talk titled “Gezi Protests: An Eventful History” on Friday.

within MENAS. The lectures occur multiple times a month and are typically given by visiting scholars. “Generally, speakers come in from different places around the world to give these talks,” said Miriam Saleh, an administrative assistant for MENAS.

This particular talk is unique because the speaker comes from within the university, Saleh added. Aciksoz said his talk will focus on the transformation of Turkish politics after the protests. The protests began as a sit-in against an urban renewal project in

Gezi Park, but quickly swelled into a nationwide movement covering a wide swath of grievances against the government under Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Western coverage of the event failed to see how heterogeneous the protests were, according to Aciksoz, who is Turkish himself. The media instead tried to simplify the conflict into blackand-white terms — secularism vs. Islam, Turkish vs. Kurdish. Gezi, he said, is something that eludes that kind of easy categorization. “It was very novel in the way that [the protests] brought together all these social and political groups,” Aciksoz said, “ranging from anarchists and socialists to feminist and LGBT groups.” Aciksoz said he hopes to dispel these kinds of misrepresentations about the situation in his talk. He said he also plans to discuss what comes next for Turkey. While the protests felt like a popular movement that would evolve over the months, political

GEZI, 2


2 • The Daily Wildcat

News • Thursday, October 31, 2013

UA grant targets health of Hispanic women BY Adriana espinosa The Daily Wildcat

The UA is working to help inform Latina women about health issues so they can make better-educated decisions regarding health-related treatments. The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality awarded the Center of Excellence in Women’s Health at the UA’s Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health an $878,000 grant to provide Latina women of Pima County with information regarding cervical cancer, depression and sexually transmitted infections. “We work a lot with Latina women, especially underserved women, and what we find is that a lot of them lack information that they need in order to make an educated decision about how to advocate for themselves and seek out treatment,” said Ada WilkinsonLee, an assistant professor in the department of Mexican-American studies and one of the authors who outlined the specifications of what the grant would go toward. This grant originated from a grant the college had in 2007 called the Racial and Ethnic Approaches to Community Health Grant, which focused solely on educating women about cervical cancer. The new grant, called the Healthcare Research Quality grant, focuses on three major health concerns among Latina women in Pima County, said

GracE Pierson/the Daily Wildcat

Allison Hopkins (left), Martha Moore-Monroy (center), and Ada Wilkinson-Lee (right) work in the Center of Excellence in Women’s Health. The center recently received a $878,000 grant to educate Hispanic women of Pima County about cervical cancer, depression and sexually transmitted infections.

Martha Moore-Monroy, REACH program director. The grant was written and introduced by Dr. Francisco Garcia, Moore-Monroy and Wilkinson-Lee. HRQ is essentially funding a three-year research project. The project is targeting Latina women between the ages of 30 and 65, currently residing in Pima County. The research is carried out by “promotores de salud,” meaning promoters of health. The

promoters, who are community health workers, use their personal connections to spread the word about their research and attend local churches and community centers. The promoters offer information about cervical cancer and regulations from the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force. The promoters then give a presentation about cervical cancer and teach the women ways to prevent, detect and

Artificial Heart from page 1

was later renamed the Total Artificial Heart. “[It operates] a little [differently] than your heart, but it achieves the same thing,” said Richard Smith, chief technical officer and co-founder of SynCardia and the technical director of UAMC’s Artificial Heart/Perfusion Programs. “Your blood pressure is still the same; the amount of flow is [actually increased], and so your body doesn’t know any different.” Here’s how it works: a piston contained in a “driver” that is outside the body pumps pulses of air into two tubes that enter the body and connect to the artificial heart. The air pressure created fills a diaphragm inside each of two rigid containers that mimic the ventricles of a human heart, pushing blood along its course throughout the body, Smith said. Out of the 1,260 implantations, the valves on the Total Artificial Heart have never failed, and the diaphragms have a failure rate of less than 1 percent over the lifetime of the device, said Don Isaacs, vice president of communications for SynCardia, which is based in Tucson. That kind of reliability is one of the reasons Dr. Zain Khalpey, director of Clinical and Translational Research at UAMC, said he feels confident when he performs the implantations, which require the removal of the majority of the patient’s heart. “It’s a very durable device … and very

Education from page 1

was really flexible. This [current] space did not reflect what we are doing.” The area being renovated is roughly 7,000 square feet, and the north side of the building will be made up of mostly windows so visitors can experience the “world-class view” of the Catalina Mountains and the city of Tucson, Marx said. Richard Clift, coordinator of collections and outreach for the College of Education, said the window design was the architect’s idea. “The windows were a part of the architect’s vision, because he saw the streetcar out there and realized that we just can’t have this be scenery — this has to be a destination,” Clift said, “something that people stop to look at.” The renovation began on Aug. 1, according to Short, but was halted when asbestos was found in the ceilings. The project was set back six weeks, as the finding had not been allotted for in the budget. The college has most of the $1.1 million necessary to pay for the renovations, according to Marx. Groups including the Marshall Foundation, the Margaret E. Mooney Foundation and the Ohio

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.

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Mark Armao/the Daily Wildcat

Christopher Larsen, 43, received a Total Artificial Heart in July at the University of Arizona Medical Center. He is the second Native American in the world to have the device implanted, according to UAMC surgeon Dr. Zain Khalpey.

low-maintenance,” Khalpey said, “but it’s also a very powerful device in the sense that it gives you very good [blood flow] to the kidneys and to the lungs and to the rest of the body.” The Total Artificial Heart’s pulsating action makes it preferable to continuous-flow devices in that it replicates the natural beating of the heart, Khalpey added. SynCardia is currently performing clinical

deal with the disease. The promoters follow up with the women after one month to help them gain access to a physician or doctor’s office, then follow up again after three months. The three-month follow-up consists of checking to see if the women received a screening and what they are doing from there. “We do these follow-ups to see if they are actually getting screened, and if they aren’t, then we want to know why,” Wilkinson-Lee said.

trials in the U.S. to test the efficacy of a portable driver that fits into a backpack, which would allow patients to leave the hospital, as well as a smaller artificial heart that can be implanted in people with smaller frames, such as children. Christopher Larsen, 43, was implanted with the Total Artificial Heart in July after being diagnosed with cardiomyopathy, or a weakened heart. Although he was initially hesitant to have his heart replaced with a machine, Larsen said that he lost all reservations the day before he was scheduled to receive the implant. “I was with my family and my heart stopped,” he said, adding that a screen displaying his vital signs let him “know for sure” that his heart wasn’t beating. After several seconds, during which time Larsen said he couldn’t breathe, his heart resumed its rhythm. “After that, I had no issues with getting an artificial heart,” Larsen said. As part of a clinical trial, Larsen’s artificial heart is run off of the battery-powered “Freedom” driver. The compact power source fits inside a backpack that he wears during his daily strolls around the UAMC campus. Larsen said he is grateful that he was able to get the implant. “The good thing about the artificial heart is, well, I’m alive; I’m walking around; I’m not bedridden,” Larsen said. “I’m very thankful.” — Follow Mark Armao @MarkArmao

Children’s Foundation, as well as many individual donators, have contributed to funding the project, Short said. Short said renovations are anticipated to be completed by the end of December, and the space should be 100 percent ready to host the Tucson Festival of Books in March. “This space is anticipated to be an attraction at UA,” Short said, “[with] uses ranging from young children doing illustration workshops to highly academic scholars from the U.S. and even from other countries visiting.”

“Instead of inferring the barriers that Latina women may have in this research, we want to exactly know what the barriers are. To some Latino communities, depression is a taboo, so they may not seek treatment for it.” About 52 percent of the grant will go to indirect costs: electricity, building, computers and water, said Allison Hopkins, program director at the Center of Excellence of Women’s Health. The promoters’ pay is also a part of the project’s cost, along with materials for presentations and the pay for the team of researchers, she added. There are two phases of the grant; phase one focuses on cervical cancer, an uncontrolled growth of abnormal cells in the cervix. Latina women are twice as likely to die from cervical cancer than non-Hispanic white women, Hopkins said. Phase two focuses on depression and STIs. The project is currently in phase one, and phase two is anticipated to begin in June of 2014, according to Hopkins. “The ultimate goal is to provide some hard evidence in the advocacy of community health workers,” Moore-Monroy said, “and translate important health information that will help reduce health disparities amongst Latina women in Pima County.” — Follow Adriana Espinosa @adri_eee

Gezi

from page 1

and media attention has certainly died down, according to David Gramling, an assistant professor of German Studies who also wrote an article on the Gezi protests while they were going on in June. Gramling was living in Turkey at the time of Erdogan’s ascension to power and his area of research includes Turkish-German migration and literary history. “What I’m so curious about is what happens now,” Gramling said. Turkish-Americans have also started to take an interest in what happens to Turkey. The reactions of the Turkish-American population to the protests have been as diverse as reactions within the borders of Turkey, Aciksoz said. “In American society, Turkish people are scattered and generally tend to assimilate,” Aciksoz said, meaning that there is no single, unified perspective shared by the Turkish-American community. The protestors of the next major movement will learn something from the protestors at Gezi Park, Aciksoz said, just as Gezi protestors took many cues from the Occupy movement — #OccupyGezi and #OccupyTurkey were popular hashtags on social media during the protests. Gramling said UA students should be concerned about Gezi, as they are affected by these political issues overseas. “This is a multicultural and transnational campus,” Gramling said, “so by a sort of six degrees of separation, people on this campus are affected by what is happening halfway around the world.”

— Follow Ethan McSweeney @DailyWildcat

— Follow Adriana Espinosa @adri_eee Grace Pierson/the Daily Wildcat

The northwest wing of the fourth floor of the Education building, is currently undergoing construction.

If you go: Gezi Protests: An Eventful History Marshall building, room 490 Friday, 3 p.m.

rendering Courtesy of college of education

The completed project will feature wall-to-wall windows on two of the exterior walls and a new multi-purpose area. Other rooms that will be added in the renovation include a workshop room and a special collections/gallery room.

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Thursday, October 31, 2013 • Page 3

science

Editor: Dan Desrochers science@wildcat.arizona.edu twitter.com/dailywildcat

PHOTO illustration by Michaela Kane and Charlotte Drenkhahn/The Daily Wildcat

DANA KRALICEK,a junior studying optical engineering, demonstrates what it looks like when someone is frightened. When people are scared, their blood pressure increases, their pupils dilate and they experience a rush of energy.

Fear Factor from page 1

response to a threat, where it is a trade-off,” Mangin said. “You put your resources into whatever you need to do to either fight or get away.” During the fight-or-flight response, blood vessels in the skin also constrict, so that if you were to stay and fight the threat, you wouldn’t bleed as much during the brawl. This constriction of the blood vessels is also what causes your hair to stand on end when you’re scared, Kaszniak added. This primal, instinctual

reaction is what scientists call a low road response to fear, where the response is immediate and extreme, and the one experiencing fear doesn’t process the entire situation, causing them to make rash decisions. The fight-or-flight response is a common reaction in those who visit the SlaughterHouse, a haunted house in Tucson that is open during the month of October for Halloween, said Bobby Sutton, managing partner at the SlaughterHouse. “There is some very unnatural human phenomenon we experience when you scare someone and the fight-or-flight

response kicks in,” Sutton said. He described what he calls “happy feet,” which occur when someone is scared but has no place to run, causing them to rapidly stomp their feet on the ground as if they were running. “We also have a lot of people that will swing because their fight mechanism comes out because there is nowhere to go,” Sutton said. “It’s very primal.” But despite the fact that the body has such an extreme reaction to fear, people still seek out scares. Horror movies are highly popular, and haunted houses are bursting with people during the month of Halloween. The desire to be scared

seems to contradict some of our most basic instincts. The pursuit of scares may have to do with the other reaction the body has to fear, referred to as the high road response. This response to fear occurs after the initial scare, when the body is still prepared to flee or fight, but the brain is able to process more of the experience and appreciate the full context of the threat. “When you’re at the movie theater, you are able to suspend your disbelief and immerse yourself and let yourself get scared,” Kaszniak said, “but there is an aspect of the processing that is aware what the context is.”

The release of endorphins also factors into the initial fear response. In the case of a real threat, the endorphins help prepare the body for battle, but in a situation without any real danger, the endorphins create a natural high that makes the experience enjoyable and fun rather than frightening. This response is a key ingredient for the SlaughterHouse. “We are good at scaring people,” Sutton said. “If you can get a person’s mind to start scaring them, you’re set.” — Follow Michaela Kane @DailyWildcat

Pre-workout powder can IPlant innovates harm as much as help bio data analysis

BY Austin Mcevoy The Daily Wildcat

A popular pre-workout supplement called Craze is being pulled from the shelves by retailers this month because of reports that it contains an ingredient similar to methamphetamine. This is not the first time a pre-workout supplement has made headlines for containing a dangerous ingredient. In 2012, the Food and Drug Administration issued warnings to 11 companies requesting that they eliminate products containing another harmful stimulant known as dimethylamylamine, or DMAA, according to the FDA report. “There is an incentive on the company’s part to dope these products because then people feel better and look better, so they keep buying it,” said Roger Miesfeld, co-chair and department head of chemistry and biochemistry at the UA. “It’s like adding extra nicotine to a cigarette.” Stimulants like DMAA and amphetamine derivatives work by activating receptors in the brain, which then causes the athlete to feel more energetic and to lift more or run farther, Miesfeld said. These products can affect other organs too. The oxidation reactions that take place in the liver in response to unnatural chemicals can generate toxic byproducts, Miesfeld said. These substances can sometimes be hidden under a healthiersounding alias, he added. Some of the companies that were selling products containing DMAA listed it as “pelargonium graveolens extract” or “geranium extract,” according to the FDA report. “People need to remember that herbs have chemicals,” Miesfeld said. “Half of our chemicals come from plants.” This can pose a problem to college athletes in particular because the National Collegiate Athletic Association places full responsibility on the student to know what they are putting into their body, said Stephanie Jones, registered dietitian of EastSide Nutrition. “Even having too much

phenotype, or the expression of the genes of an organism, will change. The system is powerful enough that it can analyze how one gene can affect one particular organism in one precise setting, making predictive biology a reality. Computer software like this is giving even the smallest labs the chance to accelerate their research to heights never before imagined. “Before, maybe one or two steps would be computational,” Matasci said. “You would turn off your computer, go to your desk, look at your data … think about it hard BY tanner Clinch enough and then write something The Daily Wildcat down.” With this new cyberinfrastructure, Just managing the files on your computer can be difficult enough scientists can analyze and compare — now imagine sifting through the genes of hundreds of thousands and analyzing the sequences of of plant species. “All sorts of other ways to observe thousands of plant genomes. The only tool biology researchers biological systems are becoming much more quantitative,” said Eric can turn to is iPlant. The iPlant Collaborative started Lyons, a scientific developer on the iPlant project. five years ago at W i t h o u t the UA, and has access to highjust received its It acts as an level computers, second five-year intermediary biologists would round of funding. between nonend up with The goal of the massive amounts of project is to allow computer savvy data and nothing to access to cuttingbiologists and do with it edge technology, the tools. “We’re trying h i g h - l e v e l to understand the supercomputing, — Eric Lyons, structure, evolution developer at iPlant software analysis and dynamics and metadata to of the genome. biologists of any … [Biologists] need to use level of expertise. “This kind of approach is computational tools to make sense essential to getting researchers of all of it, as well as having the appropriate disciplines to work together using types of cyberinfrastructure to large data sets and computational manage the life cycle of their data,” power that is going to be necessary Lyons said. “Reusing data that people to solve large-scale problems,” said have already generated, and using Naim Matasci, an analyst at the BIO5 them in a more creative way than the original author had intended, makes Institute, which houses iPlant. Before the technological science happen faster than ever.” Recently, though, there has been revolution and 21st century biology, it was hard to produce small amounts a pushback in big science: Many people think that science funding of DNA sequences. “Informatics has always should be spread around to a lot of served biology, since we started the smaller labs. IPlant may not exist five years sequencing,” Matasci said. “It’s the from now, according to many of the scale that’s new.” The data, however, have yet researchers, but its basic idea will to yield much new knowledge. live on through a network of data Rather, researchers are left with an and collaboration for the biology overabundance of data. This means community to expand its research to that today’s biologists have a lot more new horizons. “We are not one group of scientists data to work with and analyze — and doing big science,” Matasci said. this is where iPlant thrives. “It acts as an intermediary between “What we are doing is really allowing non-computer savvy biologists and the smaller labs to pool resources to create a loose consortium.” the tools,” Matasci said. IPlant gives scientists the tools necessary to compare the genetics of a plant and the aspects of its — Follow Tanner Clinch environment in order to see how the @DailyWildcat

PHOTO illustration by Amy Johnson/The Daily Wildcat

THIS MONTH a popular pre-workout supplement called Craze was pulled off the shelves. Pre-workout supplements can be helpful, if they are not laced with too many chemicals.

caffeine can cause an athlete to be disqualified,” Jones said. Jones had a client last month that came in for a consult who was using Craze as a pre-workout supplement. The client was unaware of how dangerous the product was, Jones said. “Supplements are not directly regulated by the FDA, so you don’t really know what you are taking,” she said. Pre-workout supplements also have physiological and emotional addictive properties, she said. Caffeine, a common ingredient in pre-workout supplements, can be especially addictive, Jones said. Ingesting too much of a preworkout supplement can put extra stress on the kidneys and liver, she added, and there is also the risk of dehydration. “When taking a pre-workout, it is very tempting to think more is better and add that extra scoop,” said Christina Metrejean, a public health senior. With the right dosage, pre-

workouts do have their place in nutrition, Jones said. Assuming that the product does not contain a harmful stimulant, it can improve an athlete’s performance, she said. Jones recommends two products manufactured by Abbott Laboratories to her clients: Phos Force, which is caffeinated, and Phos HP, which is not. Both products contain carbohydrates, amino acids and creatine. Metrejean uses a pre-workout called Cellucor C4 Extreme, which also contains creatine. She said that she uses the product because it gives her an “extra little kick” to get through her workouts, but she never exceeds the recommended dosage. “With college students, there is so much competition,” Metrejean said. “Unfortunately, I think a lot of people misuse pre-workouts and ignore their nutrition for the quick and awesome rush.” — Follow Austin McEvoy @AustinMcIrish


Thursday, October 31, 2013 • Page 4

OPINIONS

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

Education regulations ignore low funding BY JACQUI OESTERBLAD The Daily Wildcat

This April, like in every April before it, third-graders across the state of Arizona will sit for their benchmark AIMS test in reading, writing, math and science — but the stakes will be higher this year. Starting this spring, any third-grade student whose reading proficiency “falls far below the third grade level” will not be promoted to the fourth grade, in accordance with A.R.S. § 15-701. The Arizona Department of Education estimates that close to 2 percent of all third-graders could be held back. The impulse behind the creation of the policy is understandable; third grade often signifies the point at which the instructional focus switches from “learning to read” to “reading to learn.” Students who aren’t yet proficient in reading are unlikely to catch back up, leaving them at an increased risk of dropping out of school. Arizona has a particularly acute problem in this respect. In 2011, Arizona scored below the national average in every subject on the fourth-grade tests used nationally to compare across states. Our high school graduation rates are 43rd in the nation, and only 20 percent of those who do manage to graduate from an Arizona high school have obtained a certificate or college degree within six years. But the new law will do nothing to alleviate the problems in Arizona’s public education system. Retention is not a benign policy. “While retention seems a logical and simple solution, there is significant experience and research that indicates the many negative consequences related to retention, particularly when the student and family do not support the concept,” said Vicki Balentine, former superintendent of Amphitheater School District, former president of the Arizona School Board of Education and current professor of educational policy studies and practice. Low-income students, who are four times more likely to be held back than their more affluent peers, will be most affected by the retention policy, further aggravating educational inequalities. Patricia Anders, Jewel M. Lewis Distinguished Professor of Reading at the UA and president of the National Reading Conference, said she would “absolutely not” have voted for the law if given the opportunity. “No retention decisions should be made on the basis of one test,” she said. Anders also said she was concerned that teachers would narrow their instruction for struggling readers because of the law. The Arizona law is based on a similar measure in Florida that has achieved relative success, but, Balentine said, “Our Legislature could study and learn from the major funding infusion that occurred in Florida related to their education reform. In general, our Legislature mimics Florida’s effort while at the same time reducing funding for public education.” In fact, Arizona cut K-12 funding by 21.8 percent between fiscal 2008 and fiscal 2013, more than any other state in the nation, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. The picture of our overall per-pupil spending is similar. Arizona is 48th in the nation in what we spend to educate each student, adjusted for regional cost-ofliving differences. In 2011, the national average was $10,560; Arizona spent only $7,666. In fact, according to the Arizona Legislative Executive Council, the state is currently spending less on education per student than it was in 1986. A cornerstone of the new legislation is that students will be tested earlier and more frequently, enabling schools and families of struggling readers to partner on intervention strategies long before their students reach April of third grade. But the state is only allocating an additional $132 per K-3 student in schools that submit a plan to do this. Our state government needs to make a decision. Only one state in the bottom 20 percent in terms of educational funding per pupil found its way to the top 20 percent in terms of test performance in any subject. We cannot continue to skimp on funds while simultaneously demanding higher standards, especially if the consequences for falling short of those standards will land on the shoulders of under-supported 8-yearolds who come from poor families. Politicians in Phoenix should stop looking for easy solutions and manipulable numbers to prove their dedication to education, and instead start putting their money where their mouths are. — Jacqui Oesterblad is a junior studying global studies, political science and Middle Eastern and North African Studies. Follow her @joesterblad

Pulse of the Pac What else is happening in the Pac-12? High school sex ed, the objectification of women and the importance of recognizing prejudice were up for debate “Turn the lights on our high school sex education” by Dominique Wald The quality of sex education students are receiving is inexcusable. According to the National Conference of State Legislature, only 19 states require their curriculum to be medically, factually or technically accurate. It’s a scary thought to wonder what the other 31 states are actually teaching students. There should be a national standard to which sex education is taught. Every state should be required to teach the most current and medically accurate material available. The education system cannot leave it in the hands of parents to discuss these matters with their children. Not every child gets “the talk,” and no one should be under the assumption that every person is well informed on the topic of sex. The Daily Evergreen Washington State University

“UC should make exceptions to admissions rules for veterans” by Katie Shepherd There are a lot of things I never got used to growing up in a military family. One of the only aspects of military life that I did learn to expect was its uncertainty: uncertainty in where I would be living in a year, uncertainty in when my father would be returning from overseas, uncertainty in whether I would graduate from the same high school where I started as a freshman. It is exactly because of the instability that surrounds these individuals’ lives that UCLA must better accommodate veterans seeking entry to a UC campus. The UCLA Office of Undergraduate Admissions, although bound to the UC admissions policy, can make exceptions to these rules and should do so to accommodate difficulties specific to student veterans, such as last-minute changes in military orders. The Daily Bruin University of California, Los Angeles

“Recognizing the objectification of women” by Ryan Mills

“Recognizing prejudice key to preventing violent acts” by Rose Jones

Despite the best efforts of feminists, objectification of women continues to persist throughout our community. I am a straight, 21-yearold college male with a raging sex drive and yet it is blatantly obvious to me that University of Oregon has a problem with sexism. If I had a nickel for every time I saw a drunk male student forcibly and desperately grabbing a female at a house party — not to mention every time I hear about a date rape that occurs — I would have enough money to buy said females tasers to electrocute said males until they couldn’t stand, let alone remain erect. It is endlessly disappointing that in our modern era, some men still believe that they can screw women just for the sake of screwing without respecting and acknowledging the true value of a female. The Daily Emerald University of Oregon

Salt Lake City’s Liberty Park is a wonderful place to spend a sunny afternoon. People of all ages and walks of life are drawn together. There are plenty of smiles for kids, people with dogs, family picnics and loving couples strolling together hand in hand. But if the couples are samesex, the casual observer’s reaction — both psychologically and physiologically — contrasts highly to viewing an opposite-sex couple making the same public display of affection. Gravely, and more often than not, the psycho-physiological response to an innocent, loving, same-sex couple holding hands in public is prejudiced and even violent. Civil rights for LGBT people have come a long way — however, there are still societal fractures regarding this issue that need to be addressed. The Daily Utah Chronicle University of Utah

Your Views Online Comments

Letter to the Editor In response to “Basic morals of chivalry still relevant today” (by Shelby Thomas, Oct. 30) It is confusing to talk about chivalry and yet open it up with the scenario of who picks up the check, posing the guy as clueless and ungentlemanly. In measuring all with the same ruler, is that to say that the woman is also clueless and ungentlemanly for expecting the guy to pay rather than treating her date? I agree in not dealing with social interactions as social exchanges, though it can be hard to in a culture and society that promotes “getting yours.” People may not be as “courtly” as they were before, but it might actually just be a product of their surroundings. If one is trying to get to class, with a never-ending to do list expanding with each step one takes, it is unlikely that they will lend themselves to their surroundings. Respect, honor, and pride are important values to uphold and easier to do so if mindful of the moment at hand. You suggest a modernization and preservation of the positive aspects of chivalry while neglecting underlying tones that can undermine the intent. I am all for forgiving dark pasts, etc., but not to forget. As it was once said, “those who do not know of their past are condemned to repeat it.” Want to modernize and preserve positive aspects of chivalry meanwhile preventing social exchanges? Pay for your date next time. — Azucena Gonzalez, senior studying psychology and sociology

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.

but get real. This isn’t medieval times. We’re ready for a new kind of code, one that involves treating everyone with equal respect. From the sound of it, no one gives a rat’s ass about being respectful to men, just hell bent on making sure their little lady friends are pandered to and worshiped. — Wildcat I also disagree. Regardless of what society would have us believe, men and women are inherently different. Because of this, the relationship and interactions that occur between men and women should be different as well. In some respects I do not treat women the same as I do a fellow man. I choose to show them respect through my actions because of their status as a woman. I am not better than them, nor am I subservient to them. We are equal but I choose to honor them because of the unique positions which we each hold. I do this because my honor demands it. I am a gentleman and as such, will act like one. A woman is a lady from the moment she is born. Her status, wealth, or position in life do not change that. In my opinion, your views are a big reason why this generation is so morally flawed and corrupt, why the plague of pornography has so fully overtaken our communities that it now leeches into public broadcast programing that out families are subjected to. Our society lacks decency, kindness, and respect for others. Shame on us. We need to start believing in the goodness of the world. We need to start holding ourselves and others to higher standards of moral conduct. A big portion of that begins with how we view the opposite gender. — William

In response to “Chivalry degrades women, promotes sexism in society” (by David W. Mariotte, Oct. 30) I’m sorry, but no. Chivalry is not sexism, chivalry does not affirm man’s superiority. Chivalry is a man’s way of showing a woman that she is worth that extra time to help her out. I don’t hold open doors because women are weak, I hold open doors because sometimes, it helps to take an extra moment to make her feel important. For example, I was on a date with a girl, and I spent the whole night doing things like going around to the other side of the car to open her door. She was perfectly capable, but such an act is similar to a chauffeur opening the door for his wealthy patron, or a servant opening the carriage for the king. I realize that in being chivalrous, I treat women differently than I would treat men. But even in today’s overly sensitive society, I don’t see anything wrong with taking a moment to show a woman she is special, even in a medieval way. Just as long as I stick to doors and flowers and stay away from chastity belts, I think I’m okay. — Jake Rochester I’m a little shocked by these comments, I really thought yours was the better article. I mean honestly, people, chivalry? Men are not soldiers and women are not weak. There’s nothing wrong with being polite or protecting your loved ones

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Thursday, October 31, 2013

•5

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A UA student was taken from the Herbert K. Abrams Building to the University of Arizona Medical Center for extreme intoxication on Sunday at 2:49 a.m. University of Arizona Police Department officers received a call from the Tucson Fire Department about a man on the ground outside of the Abrams building and went to see if he was OK. When officers arrived, they found a UA student lying on the sidewalk, speaking to TFD officials. The student was overheard excitedly telling medical personnel, “I’m drunk!” and slurring his words as he was evaluated. Officers noted that it was very hard to understand the student due to his slurring and could not verbally identify him. The officers then tried to identify him by asking for the student’s ID. The student agreed to give the officer his wallet with identification inside. The officer waited but the student made no effort to hand over his wallet. When the officer asked again, the student looked at the officer and said, “I did.” An officer asked the student if he could get the ID out of the student’s wallet and the student said yes. While getting the ID, officers found two California licenses, one real, the other fake, stating the student was six years older than he actually was. At that point, TFD’s evaluation determined that the student should be taken to the UAMC for treatment for extreme drunkenness. A referral to the Dean of Students Office for minor in possession of alcohol and possession of a fictitious out-of-state drivers license was completed on behalf of the student. The fake drivers license was placed into evidence.

Smokin’ librarian On Sunday at 1:17 p.m., UAPD officers were called to the UA Music Building because of smoke in the building. Three UAPD officers went into the building to find the source of the smoke. After several minutes, they found that the smoke had been coming from a microwave oven in an employee break room. When officers entered the break room, they saw the back wall by the microwave blackened by fire and food left inside the open microwave. The face of the oven had melted and had been taken off the microwave and was left to cool off on a table inside the break room. Officers spoke to the on-duty Music Library employee, who said she had used the microwave to warm up her lunch but had forgotten about it as she went back to work. She left the food only for two minutes, but two minutes was enough to do damage. A coworker smelled smoke and went into the library to warn her. At that point, she remembered the food in the microwave and went to check on it. She saw the food and took off the scorched microwave door. TFD arrived later to help clear the room of any further fire threats and helped gather fans to disperse the smoke in the library and faculty break room. Though no injuries or other damages were apparent, UAPD was asked to make a report on the incident.

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EVENTS

ArizonA Daily

Wildcat EVENT CALENDAR

THURS.

31 OCT 2013

all over! ENJOY EVERY DAY

CAMPUS EVENTS

TUCSON EVENTS

TUCSON EVENTS

Arizona Wildcats Hockey vs. Colorado at 7:30 PM at the Tucson Convention Center, 260 S. Church Ave. Come support the Hockey men as they strive to defeat Colorado. For ticketing, please call the Tucson Convention Center Ticket Office at 520-791-4101.

Frankenstein, presented by National Theatre Live 7:00pm The Loft Cinema, 3233 E. Speedway. The National Theatre Live’s smash-hit broadcast of Danny Boyle’s Frankenstein, starring Benedict Cumberbatch and Jonny Lee Miller in alternating roles as The Doctor and The Creature, returns to cinemas as part of the National Theatre’s 50th anniversary celebration! General Admission: $15 • Loft Members: $10

characters - It’s not just a Haunted House; It’s a Whole Town Gone Mad!

Chemistry and Biochemistry Colloquium from 4 PM to 5 PM at the Henry Koffler Bldg, Rm 218, 1340 E. University Blvd. Elizabeth Nolan, Pfizer-Laubach Career Development Assistant Professor of Chemistry at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, will present a talk titled “Metal-Chelating Host-Defense Proteins in the Human Innate Immune Response.” International Writer’s Workshop from 4 PM to 5 PM at the John W. Harshbarger Bldg, Rm 206. This free workshop is titled “Organization: the Essay, the Paragraph and the Sentence” and covers topics helpful to international and second language speakers, including both undergraduate and graduate students. ‘The Fantasticks’ Presented by Arizona Repertory Theatre Oct. 20 – Nov.10 7:30 p.m. - 9:45 p.m. Tornabene Theatre, 1025 N. Olive Road. $20-$31.

Madaras Halloween “Art Walk” 5:00 PM to 7:00 PM Madaras Gallery, 3001 E. Skyline Dr. (at Campbell). Ofrenda and All Souls Memorial Service from 8:30 AM to 4:30 PM at the St. Philip’s In The Hills Episcopal Church, 4440 N. Campbell Ave. St. Philip’s invites you to remember your departed loved ones by contributing to an ofrenda (a shrine or altar). Photographs, meaningful objects, and memorabilia are all suitable offerings. Nightfall at Old Tucson at 6 PM at Old Tucson, 201 S. Kinney Road. $25 Adult, $20 kids 4-11, with discounts available. With terrifying attractions, entertaining live shows, and gruesome

Sara Grey - Music from the Old World to the New at 3 PM at the Arizona Folklore Preserve, 56 E. Folklore Trail. Featured will be Sara Grey, a folk musician. The program will explore the journey of music from the British Isles as settlers migrated to the new colonies and how this music was adapted and spread, becoming today’s folk, western, and country music. Mainstream Square Dancing at 7:30 PM at the Tanque Verde Lutheran Church, 8625 E. Tanque Verde Road. Solos, couples and families. No partner needed. Experience for yourself all the fun, fellowship and exercise that modern American square dancing offers today. Please wear comfortable shoes and casual attire. $5 first night, $4 there after. Yoga Beginner Classes from 10:30 AM to 11:30 AM at the St. Philip’s In The Hills Episcopal Church, 4440 N. Campbell Ave. Tap into the body- mind connection through practices designed to bring strength, flexibility, balance, and profound wellbeing to body, mind, and spirit.

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.


Thursday, October 31, 2013 • Page 6

SPORTS dailywildcat.com/sports

MEN’S TENNIS DUO TAKES VEGAS

Editors: Megan Coghlan & James Kelley

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

SOCCER

Selman’s story not over Soccer freshman Lexe Selman overcomes battle with leukemia to return to the field and make unexpected impact

BY BRIAN PEEL

The Daily Wildcat

[EX]WILDCAT WATCH Phoenix Sun Channing Frye returned to the court last night after missing 2012-13 due to an enlarged heart. Frye started and scored seven points in the Suns’ 104-91 win over Portland. Frye played at Arizona from 2002 to 2005.

SCORE CENTER HEAT FLAME BURNS OUT Philadelphia 76ers 114 Miami Heat 110

There is a video on YouTube that is the epitome of inspiration. In just a little over six minutes of run time, it shares the story of a talented high school soccer player from Utah who, with graduation and an athletic scholarship to play for the Wildcats ahead of her, suddenly learned some devastating and life-altering news. She had leukemia. Titled “The Lexe Selman Story,” the video chronicles the journey of Selman’s battle with her sickness and the difficult chemotherapy treatments she was forced to endure. It concludes on a high note with Selman, despite being weakened from her treatment, miraculously scoring a goal for her club team in a game where she was only supposed to make the first kick as a gesture honoring her courage. In reality, though, Selman’s story is just beginning. “It was always part of my plan to be able to play again,” Selman said. “I’m not sure if anyone else really expected it to happen so quickly.” With only three games remaining in the 2013 season for Wildcat soccer, Selman has been able to play quite a bit, making appearances in all 17 games so far and as of late finding herself in the starting lineup at midfield — even though she missed all of last year recovering from her illness. “I’ve learned a lot this season and think I’ve been progressing,” Selman said. “I just came here hoping to get any kind of playing time, and I’ve actually been lucky enough to play more than I thought.” While she has yet to record a goal for Arizona this year, Selman’s 23 shots are good for

WEDNESDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL Cincinnati Bearcats 34 Memphis Tigers 21

QUOTE TO NOTE

There are some days where, because of what I went through, my energy is not where everyone else is, but overall I’m very pleased with my fitness, and I know I can only go up from here. —Lexe Selman, UA soccer

NUMBER OF THE DAY

81

Arizona soccer junior goalkeeper Gabby Kaufman leads the Pac-12 in saves with 81, averaging 4.76 per game.

TWEET TO NOTE Who celebrates more tonight: Boston Red Sox or their wives and girlfriends because they will be clean shaven tomorrow? —@CaitlinLowe, Caitlin Lowe, UA volunteer assistant softball coach

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REBECCA MARIE SASNETT/THE DAILY WILDCAT

MIDFIELDER LEXE SELMAN (left) controls the ball after receiving a throw-in during soccer practice Tuesday.

fourth on the team and anyone who has seen her play knows she may very well have the most dangerous right foot of the team. Wildcat head coach Tony Amato said Selman’s talents on the field are sometimes unfairly overlooked. “I think the most important thing — that gets lost sometimes because of the story of how she was sick and now she is back playing — is how good of a player she is,” Amato said. “She was a top-150 recruit in the nation, according to the rankings, and she is just a real quality player. The key to it all is she is a player deserving to play in the Pac12 and she is going to just keep getting better.” Selman, who is a freshman this season, was planning on joining the Wildcats in 2012. However, her diagnosis left her no choice

but to stay home in Utah and recover. Selman said the time away from the game was difficult for several reasons, one being losing some of the energy she used to have when playing. “I think it’s still an ongoing process,” Selman said. “There are some days where, because of what I went through, my energy is not where everyone else is, but overall I’m very pleased with my fitness, and I know I can only go up from here.” Selman’s teammate and roommate Jaden DeGracie said that beyond being an inspiration, Selman also brings plenty of tenacity to the pitch. “She’s awesome,” DeGracie said. “You can just tell the desire she has on the field. Every time she steps on, you just know that she is going to make it happen and give her full effort.”

WORLD SERIES

Fans might see Selman’s effort cranked up to another level this Friday, when the Utah Utes make the trip to Tucson to take on the Wildcats. Utah, who is currently third in the Pac-12 standings, is not just another game for Selman, considering how close Salt Lake City is to her hometown of Draper. “It’s definitely extra motivation,” Selman said. “I know some of the players, and one of their assistant coaches coached me during club, and she even helped me practice when I was trying to come back. I’ve had this one on my calendar for a while.” However well Selman performs this weekend, or even the rest of her Wildcat career, one thing seems certain: The Lexe Selman story is far from over. — Follow Brian Peel @BrianPeel91

FOOTBALL

Red Sox win third world Heisman championship since 2004 chances MCCLATCHY TRIBUNE

At the end of the fourth inning Wednesday night, the Boston Police Department issued a statement reporting that the bars in the Kenmore Square area were filled and telling people not holding game tickets to leave the area. The sense of anticipation wasn’t lost on a community ready to celebrate the Red Sox’s first World Series clincher at Fenway Park since 1918. After finishing in last place in the American League East in 2012, the stunning transformation of the Red Sox to World Series champion was on the verge of becoming completed in a convincing manner. They knocked out rookie postseason sensation Michael Wacha by the fourth inning, and John Lackey harnessed a Cardinals lineup en route to a 6-1 victory in Game 6 as the Red Sox took the series 4-2. The Red Sox won their third World Series title in 10 seasons and their first under John Farrell, their first-year manager. This Red Sox team carved its own niche with a massive makeover starting midway through 2012 and carrying over to spring training with major contributions from newcomers Shane Victorino, Mike Napoli and Jonny Gomes, all of whom played significant roles in knocking out Wacha, who had allowed three runs in 29 previous playoff innings. Victorino, who missed Games 4 and 5 because of lower-back stiffness, ripped a three-run double ROBERT COHEN/ST. LOUIS POSTDISPATCH/MCT off the Green Monster to snap a scoreless tie in ST. LOUIS CARDINAL Matt Carpenter, right, walks off after strikthe third and singled to cap a three-run fourth. Napoli, who drove in 92 runs during the regular ing out to end the game as the Boston Red Sox begin to celebrate at season, had an RBI single in the fourth. Gomes Fenway Park in Boston, on Wednesday. The Red Sox won, 6-1, to reached base safely in his first three appearances, clinch the championship. including getting hit by a pitch before Victorino’s Meanwhile, the collective contributions of double. It marked the first time Wacha hit a batter in the Red Sox mirrored the unselfishness that Farrell detected after the Boston his professional career (200.1 Marathon bombing in April, innings). And Victorino’s double when five groups of players was the first hit off Wacha in his We feel good went to local hospitals to visit major league career. about the victims. Stephen Drew, in a 4-for-51 state of the They also didn’t have to rely postseason slump, hit a leadoff organization, on David Ortiz, who had four home run in the fourth. walks, three intentional, after Lackey, who pitched a but you can an 11-for-15 performance in the scoreless inning in Game 4 in never be first five games. his first relief appearance since complacent or “We feel good about the state 2004, blanked the Cardinals comfortable. of the organization, but you through the first six innings. can never be complacent or The Cardinals, who batted — Ben Cherington, comfortable,” Red Sox general .330 with runners in scoring Red Sox general manager manager Ben Cherington said position during the regular before the game. “We have to season, didn’t get a clutch hit keep the pedal down and look until Carlos Beltran had an RBI single with two outs in the seventh. The Cardinals for talent to bring in.” also botched a rundown.

slim for Carey BY SCARLETT MCCOURT

The Daily Wildcat

L

ast week, the Arizona Athletics department reignited the #TeamKaDeem campaign, after the hashtag had been left mostly unused for months. After All-American running back Ka’Deem Carey carried the ball a school-record 39 times and ran for 236 yards against Utah, Arizona Athletics brought back the Twitter hype and dedicated a page on its website to his accomplishments. The sports-communications staff is reaching out to media across the nation and injecting Carey into the conversation, apparently in hopes of boosting Carey’s chances of winning a postseason award. In fact, there has been talk of Carey being in the running for the Heisman Trophy. Not much talk, but talk nonetheless. He was seventh on the ESPN Heisman Watch Experts’ Poll. The harsh reality, though, is that Carey’s just not going to win a Heisman. The odds aren’t ever in his favor. Since 2000, only one running back has won the Heisman. That was Mark Ingram from the Alabama Crimson Tide in 2009. The rest of the winners? Quarterbacks. Not to mention that the last time a Heisman winner came from the West Coast was in 2004, with Matt Leinart from USC. Technically, Reggie Bush won one in 2005. He vacated it, though, after the NCAA sanctioned USC for Bush’s receiving of improper benefits. The majority of schools that put out Heisman winners reside in the

KA’DEEM, 7


Sports • Thursday, October 31, 2013

The Daily Wildcat • 7

hockey

rugby

Wildcats at home to USA Rugby names trophy after former trick, not treat CU UA coach Sitton by Roberto Payne

The Daily Wildcat

Keenan Turner/The Daily Wildcat

defenseman will pointon powers his way past a Delaware defender on Saturday. The Wildcats lost to Delaware, 7-4.

by joey putrelo

The Daily Wildcat Tonight, newly-minted No. 10 Arizona hockey returns to Western Collegiate Hockey League to play a single game against Colorado at the Tucson Convention Center. The last time the UA (6-5-0, 2-1-0 WCHL) was ranked in the top 10 of the ACHA poll was in February 2006. After a string of successful seasons as an ACHA Division II program, CU (1-5-0, 0-1-0) is in its inaugural season at the Division I level. “We’re happy to be No. 10, but we know as a team that we let an opportunity get away to be ranked six or seven if we had won on Saturday,” said Arizona head coach Sean Hogan. The Wildcats are coming off a Friday night victory over NAU and a Saturday loss to No. 4 Delaware. The Buffaloes last played Oct. 19, falling to WCHL opponent No. 18 Colorado State 3-2. “They’re [the Buffaloes] coming off their bye week last

week; they’ll be well-rested,” Hogan said. “We’re going to have to play well all weekend to maintain our No. 10 ranking.” Senior forward and alternate captain Andrew Murmes still leads Arizona in points with 12 via six goals and six assists. Both senior forward Ansel Ivens-Anderson and junior defenseman Shane Gleason trail behind him by a point. Freshman forward Maty Pierce’s five points on three goals with two assists put him atop the Colorado point- and goal-scoring list. The Buffaloes have five players tied for second in points, with two. “I just have to keep doing the same thing: working hard, getting open by the net, finding my teammates, letting my teammates find me, and I just have to bury more,” Murmes said. “I’ve gotten a lot of chances and haven’t put the puck in the net [last weekend], so I have to just keep battling and they’ll come.” Despite giving up seven goals in his last start, senior Steven

ka’deem from page 6

dominant football conferences: the SEC, Big 12 and Big 10. That’s not to say a Pac-12 player can’t win the Heisman this year; Oregon’s quarterback, Marcus Mariota, is currently leading ESPN’s watch list. But Arizona football just doesn’t get enough attention around the country. People who watch Wildcats games are people who want to watch Wildcats games. Five out of seven of Arizona’s games started at 7 p.m. or later. Football fans on the East Coast

Sisler (5-2-0) is likely to get the nod in net for the Wildcats. However, because the UA will face Colorado State on Friday and Saturday, freshman Garrett Patrick (0-0-0) may be the one between the pipes tonight. CU freshman goalie Alex Palumbo (1-3-0) has seen the most playing time so far this season. However, Arizona could see freshman Matt Lechner (01-0) or sophomore Mike Stafford (0-1-0) in net as well. “I’m excited to hopefully get out there and finally try to help the team win and play in front of our home fans,” said Patrick. “I feel very prepared. I’ve been ready the whole season, waiting for my chance to get out there and begin.” The puck will drop at 7:30 p.m. The game will feature the Buy Two Tickets, Get One Free and Thirsty Thursday promotions. Fans are encouraged to dress up for Halloween tonight, and there will be a best costume contest.

aren’t going to sit through a game with a 10 p.m. start time. Four of those same seven games were shown on the Pac-12 Networks. Not even all Arizona fans in Tucson could watch them, thanks to the DirecTV debacle. Arizona finally gets off the Pac12 Networks for its Homecoming game and onto ESPN, but the kickoff will be at 8 p.m. So what happens? Carey doesn’t get enough nationwide recognition. Why? Because people just haven’t seen him. He might be the FBS rushing leader with an average of 153.3 yards per game. He might be the FBS leader in consecutive 100-yard rushing games. But

— Follow Joey Putrelo @JoeyPutrelo

USA Rugby honored the memory of former UA rugby head coach Dave Sitton by naming the Men’s Division I Most Valuable Player Award for the 2013 USA Rugby College 7s National Championship in his honor. Club Vice President and fundraising chair Jacob Haebe said he is excited about the new Dave Sitton Memorial Trophy. “This [trophy] speaks to how much of an impact he had on the game, as well as to all the players who played with and under Dave Sitton,” Haebe said. “It will be great for his memory.” Sitton died of a heart attack on Aug. 12 at the age of 58. He coached UA Rugby from 1978-2013 and compiled a record photo courtesy of arizona wildcat rugby of 400-212-12 in his 35 years as the team’s head coach. In addition, Sitton played four Former UA rugby head coach Dave Sitton is carried off the field after his 400th win, on April 13. years of rugby at the UA. “Dave was a personal friend of mine Swetnam assumed the role of interim during those years and was a special head coach after Sitton’s death. proponent of all things rugby — from “He was a father figure to a lot of us,” the novice player to the gifted athlete,” Swetnam said. “I played for him for four said USA Rugby Collegiate Director Rich years and he was the guy we all looked up Cortez in a press release. “With this award, to. We wanted to play well for him.” perhaps we can remember that excellence Swetnam said he is trying hard to fill is an objective worthy of a the void left by Sitton’s lifelong quest.” death. Coach Sitton The trophy will be “It’s tough — is undoubtedly presented at the 2013 Dave did a lot of the College 7s National going to be in managerial things for Championships, which our club,” Swetnam the Rugby Hall will be held from Nov. 23said. “He didn’t really of Fame. 24 in Greensboro, N.C., leave us a handbook with 48 teams competing. — Jack Arnold, of all the things that “Coach Sitton is UA rugby player he did, so it’s been a undoubtedly going to little bit of research to be in the Rugby Hall of figure out how he got Fame, and his achievements and success everything done the way he did.” as a rugby coach are legendary,” said Sitton was also a broadcaster of Arizona senior UA rugby player Jack Arnold, who football and basketball games from 1990was the recruiting director last season. 2012 and an activist in the community. “But what he did as a coach is what set The Tucson Metropolitan Chamber of him apart. He devoted countless hours to Commerce named Sitton its Man of the the team; no single man could accomplish Year in 2006. what coach Sitton did for us.” Tyson Swetnam played club rugby at Arizona for Sitton and was a member — Follow Roberto Payne of Sitton’s coaching staff for a decade. @RPsportreporter

because Arizona football games aren’t televised nationally or at opportune times, and because Arizona has yet to pull off a thrilling upset/win, people can’t see, or haven’t seen, Carey in action. Not all hope is lost, though. On Tuesday, Carey was named a semifinalist for the Maxwell Award for the Collegiate Player of the Year, the winner of which will be announced in December. But until then, Arizona athletics will continue to promote #TeamKadeem. — Follow Scarlett McCourt @scarlettnoelani

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UA running back Ka’Deem Carey runs the ball against Utah on Oct. 19.

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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. 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 his- toric, 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/

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!!! 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 1BD/ .75BA off street parking, pool, washer/dryer. All utilities paid. 520-419-3159.

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!!!!!!! 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)798-3331 for additional info. 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

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. 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.

!!! 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 !!!!! 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. !!!!! 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! !!!!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! !!!LOOK!!! AAA**9** Bedroom, 5Bath, 2Story house located on Adams!! It doesn’t get any better than this!! 2Kitchen, 2Living areas, LOTS of storage, closet space, large bedrooms, private parking. 2Sets full size W/D, Air conditioning. Call now before it’s gone! Tammy 520-398-5738 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. 3AND4 BEDROOMS AVAILABLE for August 2014. Call for more information. 520-245-5604

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 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 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. BIKE TO CAMPUS IN FY13! 1,2 & 3bdm Townhomes & Condos! A/C, Gar, FREE WIFI & all appl. www.GoldenWestManagement.com 520-790-0776 HAVE A LARGE GROUP??? LOTS OF ROOMATES??? We have 6and7 bedroom houses available for August 2014! LOOK early; get EXACTLY what you are looking for!!! Please call 520-3985738 to view any of these homes. SPACIOUS 5BEDROOM 3BATH, 2story homes available, within walking distance to Campus. Private parking, W/D, A/C, ideal roommate setup! 520-398-5738 SPECTACULAR 3BEDROOM, 3BATH, 2car garage, big rooms, A/C, W/D, Available for August 2014. 520-398-5738 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 4193787. 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 Hughes2, 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

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 All this for $309,300!

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

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