3.9.15

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

DAILYWILDCAT.COM

MONDAY, MARCH 9, 2015

IN THE NEWS Two men charged with killing of Kremlin critic Boko Haram declares allegiance to Islamic State Unarmed man fatally shot by police in Wisconsin

VOLUME 108 • ISSUE 112

ASUA ELECTIONS

Presidential candidates to face off BY ADRIANA ESPINOSA The Daily Wildcat

Presidential candidates Manny Felix and Hannah Sager will face off in a debate today at noon in the race to become the 20152016 Associated Students of the University of Arizona president. Candidates will be asked various questions from a panel, which includes Issac Ortega, current ASUA president, Jordan Allison, current executive vice president and Nicole Thill, editor-in-chief of the Daily

Wildcat. Ortega said he believes this event is “hugely important” to the student body. “You have the two candidates who are going to be representing all 42,000 students, and there’s going to be, hopefully, some really tough issues talked about in terms of budget cuts,” Ortega said. “I think it’s really important for students to get perspective on the two choices that they’re going to be voting on.” According to Diego Alvarez, elections

commissioner for ASUA, the panelists have thoroughly researched the candidates and prepared questions for them based on their platforms and other subjects. Ortega said his questions will be based on the challenges and difficult situations that he had to face throughout his current tenure as president. “My questions are more based on how I viewed my role this year as president and questions that resemble how they would really carry out a task, given some tough

HANNAH SAGER

MANUEL FELIX

situations,” Ortega said. Ortega added that audience members will

have the chance to write down their own questions

HACK ARIZONA

DEBATE, 2

SPORTS

Arizona has hit stride at right time

SEE THE PHOTO GALLERY ON

DAILYWILDCAT.COM

Obama claims no knowledge of Clinton’s private email account — The New York TImes

SPORTS

BYJAMES KELLEY

The Daily Wildcat

W

Computer science sophomore Ian Tracey, the InnovateUA director of Hack Arizona, said everything went very smoothly this weekend, especially considering this is their first time ever throwing an event like this. Tracey said he’s impressed and proud of the way he and his InnovateUA teammates were able to pull this off. Friday afternoon, students checked in and had the chance to network with some of the biggest names in the business. Hack Arizona’s sponsors, such as Raytheon, Amazon, Wolfram Alpha, USAA, State Farm and

esley Snipes uttered the now famous line, “ever play roulette … always bet on black,” in the early 1990s film “Passenger 57”, but fans in Las Vegas, Nev., should probably bet on red this week. March Madness is here, and Arizona men’s basketball is playing so well, it looks like a shoe-in to win big in Las Vegas at the 2015 Pac-12 Men’s Basketball Tournament. The No. 5 Wildcats (28-3, 16-2 Pac-12 Conference) beat Stanford 91-69 to win their eighth game in a row and 38th consecutive home game, and finished undefeated at home for the second straight season. Arizona is playing its best basketball of the season. “I’d say you could say so,” Arizona guard T.J. McConnell said. “We’ve been playing really good basketball, but it doesn’t stop here. We have to keep playing like that in Vegas and just like I said, take it one day at a time.” Arizona won its second straight, outright Pac-12 regular season championship by three games over Oregon, a team that lost by 18 in Eugene, Ore., and by 34 in Tucson. During the current eight-game win streak, the Wildcats only played one close game, at Utah, where the Utes had won 18 straight. The UA won four games on the road, improving its road record to 8-3. It also beat good teams such as UCLA, Utah and Stanford and, perhaps more importantly, cured its one Achilles heel of overlooking bad teams: The UA pounded Washington, Washington State, USC, Colorado and California.

HACKATHON, 2

BASKETBALL, 9

UA baseball sweeps Portland over three games Page 7

Softball hits snag at Judy Garman Classic Page 7

ARTS & LIFE

Avoid ‘Move Over Mrs. Markham’

ANGELINE CARBAJAL/THE DAILY WILDCAT

TOMMY PRYOR, freshman at the University of Washington and Tucson native, demonstrates his sign language translator on Sunday in the Science-Engineering Library. Pryor is studying aerospace and electrical engineering and won Hack Arizona’s Hardware Prize.

36 hours of creation BY CHASTITY LASKEY The Daily Wildcat

It’s 5:47 a.m. Students are sprawled out in the ScienceEngineering Library, passed out. In a frenzy to finish and submit on time, others are stressfully working out the semantics of their hack. All that can be heard is a loud snore rumbling throughout the fifth floor. Hack Arizona, the largest hackathon in the Southwest, brought a new meaning to student commitment and drive. Over 400 students from schools across the country and from Tucson worked for 36 hours straight to build and innovate anything they dream possible. Students were

encouraged to get creative with the hardware and software. Among the works created were drones and robots reliant on algorithms that individuals spent the weekend working on. Another hot topic of the weekend was the American Sign Language translator created by Tommy Pryor, who was the winner of Hack Arizona’s Hardware Prize. Other creations consisted of apps such as “Gridlock,” developed by ASU students Connor Davey, Christian Robles and Aritro Majumdar, which helps change the way traffic lights are controlled, and “Half Full,” an app that focuses on mood disorders through the use of an algorithm.

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OPINIONS Playing college basketball should not be a salaried position Page 4

QUOTE TO NOTE “But some way, somehow, we must make social media sites more responsive to blocking abuse.” — Tom Johnson OPINIONS 4

ASUA ELECTIONS

Primaries narrow candidate field BY ADRIANA ESPINOSA The Daily Wildcat

Two presidential candidates remain in the running in the 2015-2016 Associated Students of the University of Arizona elections following the primary elections last week. Presidential candidate Manuel Felix , a junior studying political science and Spanish, plans to strengthen the relationship with various cultural centers on campus as well as between Greek Life and the Dean of Students

Office, increase advocacy for the services available to students on campus, and introduce new ideas into academics. Felix said it is important to embrace the diverse student population the UA caters to. He said he hopes to create a mutually beneficial relationship between ASUA and cultural centers. Felix added that giving a voice to all the groups on campus is vital in order to sustain a culturally diverse student body. Working at the Dean of Students Office for the past few

Today

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years and as the former president of the Delta Sigma Phi fraternity up until this spring, Felix said that preserving a strong relationship between Greek Life and the Dean of Students Office is crucial to maintain a well-rounded greek community. Felix said he wants to further the impact of the “It’s On Us” campaign on campus while supporting the “Good Samaritan” law. Felix said he also wants to work to create more upper division tutoring and a class to help students study for exams such as

Tomorrow

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the LSAT, MCAT and GMAT that counts as a credit or hour toward students’ majors. Hannah Sager, a marketing junior, is also in the running for ASUA president. The current presidential chief of staff said her involvement on the “It’s On Us” campaign is what inspired her to run for the presidency. Sager is basing her campaign under giving students the ability to find their voice on campus. She said the latter is especially vital for the upcoming year,

ELECTIONS, 3

Wednesday

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