november 21, 2012

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DUEL IN THE DESERT ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT F or a head coach at a new school, it’s hard to just jump head first into a new rivalry. UA coach Rich Rodriguez wasn’t here to experience the infamous collapse of former kicker Alex Zendejas two years ago, or last year when Arizona spoiled ASU’s chances at winning the Pac-12 South. ASU’s Todd Graham is new to the duel too. This isn’t the first time Graham and Rodriguez have crossed paths, though. The familiarity between the two staffs might not make the game any more meaningful than it already is, however, as both Graham and Rodriguez quickly pointed out. “Obviously this game is bigger than any individual or any person,” Graham said. “This is what college football is all about to me: these rivalries. It’s big enough in itself.” The coaches might not admit it, but the existing relationship between the two adds a nice element to the rivalry and a crash course for Rodriguez and Graham. Back in 2001, when Rodriguez first took over as head coach at West Virginia, he hired Graham as his linebackers coach. Graham was then promoted to defensive co-coordinator the next year before bolting to greener pastures in Tulsa, Okla. Graham was first the defensive coordinator for the Golden Hurricane before eventually becoming the head coach in 2007 — with a brief stint as Rice University’s head coach in between. Morgantown, W. Va., wasn’t where Rodriguez and Graham first met on the football field, though. That was in 1993. In those days, Rodriguez, the head coach at Glenville State, lost 49-35 to the East Central and its defensive coordinator Graham in the NAIA National Championship. Even with the loss, Rodriguez was the NAIA National Coach of the Year that season, and his success with the Pioneers eventually led to his job at West Virginia, where he hired Graham. Friday will mark the first time the two have met on the gridiron since their West Virginia days together. Rodriguez has stressed that the game is about the players and winning another football game, not the coaches. “If they change the rules and me and Todd can go at it one-on-one maybe [it’ll be personal],” Rogriguez joked. “I’ll try to be ready for that, but that’s not gonna happen. I’m not playing … our coaches aren’t playing, it’s all the players.” One thing the work history will bring to the table is a familiarity in philosophy and style. And with how close Arizona (7-4, 4-4 Pac-12) and ASU (6-5, 4-4) are in the conference, any little advantage could help. No matter what the two say, though, the water isn’t completely clear of blood. When Rodriguez decided to come to Arizona, three of the coaches working for Graham in his one season as head coach at Pittsburgh last year — co- offensive coordinator Calvin Magee, receivers coach Tony Dews and safeties coach Tony Gibson — left to join Rodriguez in Tucson. According to Paul Zeise of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Graham referred to Magee, Gibson and Dews as “nothing but mercenaries” at the time. Graham later said that the comments were taken out of context, but either way it adds an extra layer of intrigue to a rivalry that really doesn’t need much more. “From a preparation standpoint,” Rodriguez said, “I think that helps them know us a little bit and us know them a little bit. But other than that we’re competing now, I’m not calling them up and trading bedtime stories.” ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT FILE PHOTO ARIZONA AND ARIZONA STATE have one of the oldest rivalries in college football — the first Territorial Cup was played in 1899 — and new head coaches Rich Rodriguez (UA) and Todd Graham (ASU) are eager to continue the tradition after years of experiencing similar rivalries. Rodriguez said the UA-ASU dynamic is especially intriguing because of its same conference, same state status. KYLE JOHNSON Arizona Daily Wildcat As Arizona renews its longtime rivalry with Arizona State, UA head coach Rich Rodriguez will meet a familiar face in ASU’s Todd Graham Obviously this game is bigger than any individual or any person. This is what college football is all about. ASU head coach Todd Graham seniors enter last ‘duel’ A3 A comparison: Rich Rod vs. Todd Graham A2 Rivalry 101: what you need to know A3 Arizona against ASU When: Friday, 8.pm. Where: Arizona Stadium TV: ESPN

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In this issue of the Arizona Daily Wildcat: - As Arizona renews its longtime rivalry with Arizona State, UA head coach Rich Rodriguez will meet a familiar face in ASU’s Todd Graham - SENIORS BID FAREWELL - What to know about the UA-ASU rivalry - Students push for smoke-free UA - Barber win a sign of Democrats’ growing influence

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: November 21, 2012

1

DUEL IN THE DESERT

ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT

For a head coach at a new school, it’s hard to just jump head first into a new rivalry.

UA coach Rich Rodriguez wasn’t here to experience the infamous collapse of former kicker Alex Zendejas two years

ago, or last year when Arizona spoiled ASU’s chances at winning the Pac-12 South. ASU’s Todd Graham is new to the duel too.

This isn’t the first time Graham and Rodriguez have crossed paths, though.

The familiarity between the two staffs might not make the game any more meaningful than it already is, however, as both Graham and Rodriguez quickly pointed out.

“Obviously this game is bigger than any individual or any person,” Graham said. “This is what college football is all about to me: these rivalries. It’s big enough in itself.”

The coaches might not admit it, but the existing relationship between the two adds a nice element to the rivalry and a crash course for Rodriguez and Graham.

Back in 2001, when Rodriguez first took over as head coach at West Virginia, he hired Graham as his linebackers coach. Graham was then promoted to defensive co-coordinator the next year before bolting to greener pastures in Tulsa, Okla. Graham was first

the defensive coordinator for the Golden Hurricane before eventually becoming the head coach in 2007 — with a brief stint as Rice University’s head coach in between.

Morgantown, W. Va., wasn’t where Rodriguez and Graham first met on the football field, though. That was in 1993.

In those days, Rodriguez, the head coach at Glenville State, lost 49-35 to the East Central and its defensive coordinator Graham in the NAIA National Championship. Even with the loss, Rodriguez was the NAIA National Coach of the Year that season, and his success with the Pioneers eventually led to his job at West Virginia, where he hired Graham.

Friday will mark the first time the two have met on the gridiron since their West Virginia days together.

Rodriguez has stressed that the game is about the players and winning another football game, not the coaches.

“If they change the rules and me and Todd can go at it one-on-one maybe [it’ll be personal],” Rogriguez joked. “I’ll try to be ready for that, but that’s not gonna happen. I’m not playing … our coaches aren’t playing, it’s all the players.”

One thing the work history will bring to the table is a familiarity in philosophy and style. And with how close Arizona (7-4, 4-4 Pac-12) and ASU (6-5, 4-4) are in the conference, any little advantage could help.

No matter what the two say, though, the water isn’t completely clear of blood.

When Rodriguez decided to come to Arizona, three of the coaches working for Graham in his one season as head coach at Pittsburgh last year — co-offensive coordinator Calvin Magee, receivers coach Tony Dews and safeties coach Tony Gibson — left to join Rodriguez in Tucson.

According to Paul Zeise of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Graham referred to Magee, Gibson and Dews as “nothing but mercenaries” at the time.

Graham later said that the comments were taken out of context, but either way it adds

an extra layer of intrigue to a rivalry that really doesn’t need much more.

“From a preparation standpoint,” Rodriguez said, “I think that helps them know us a little bit and us know them a little bit. But other than that we’re competing now, I’m not calling them up and trading bedtime stories.”

ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT FILE PHOTO

ARIZONA AND ARIZONA STATE have one of the oldest rivalries in college football — the first Territorial Cup was played in 1899 — and new head coaches Rich Rodriguez (UA) and Todd Graham (ASU) are eager to continue the tradition after years of experiencing similar rivalries. Rodriguez said the UA-ASU dynamic is especially intriguing because of its same conference, same state status.

KYLE JOHNSONArizona Daily Wildcat

As Arizona renews its longtime rivalry with Arizona State, UA head coach Rich Rodriguez will meet a familiar face in ASU’s Todd Graham

Obviously this game is bigger than any individual or any person. This is what college football is all about.

— ASU head coach Todd Graham

““

seniors enter last ‘duel’

A3

A comparison:Rich Rod vs.Todd Graham

A2

Rivalry 101: what you need to know

A3

Arizona against ASU When: Friday, 8.pm. Where: Arizona Stadium TV: ESPN

Page 2: November 21, 2012

A2 • ArizonA DAily WilDcAt SportS • WeDneSDAy, november 21, 2012

2

In each of the last three Territorial Cup games, the road team has won. The Sun Devils will try to extend that streak, but unlike recent years, the Wildcats have an opportunistic defense that thrives on turnovers and a potent and balanced offensive attack.

Here’s our breakdown of Friday’s game:

UA pass offense vs. ASU pass defense

ASU boasts the No. 1 pass defense in the conference, allowing only 174.2 yards per game. Arizona has the fourth-best pass offense, but the Sun Devils have the most sacks in the nation, in large part due to the NFL-level talent of defensive tackle Will Sutton. The junior has 10.5 sacks, good for eighth in the nation and UA quarterback Matt Scott didn’t exactly look 100 percent against Utah last week.

Advantage: ASU

UA rush offense vs. ASU rush defense

The Wildcats have the leading

rusher in the nation in Ka’Deem Carey, who is also tied for third in the nation with 19 touchdowns. He has an opportunity to set the school record for single season rushing yardage against the Sun Devils, but Sutton will likely have something to say about that. Sutton leads the conference in tackles for loss, with 18. If the Wildcats’ offensive line can limit Sutton and defense’s impact, Carey will break the record in the early going. But that’s a big “if.”

Advantage: Even

UA pass defense vs. ASU pass offense

The Wildcats have the worst pass defense in the league, giving up 305.5 yards per game. Arizona has allowed multiple quarterbacks to have career days against them, and receivers to run amuck in open field (see: Marqise Lee, USC) — but the UA has still found ways to win games. ASU has played two quarterbacks for most of the season and average 264.6 yards per game through the air, and the Sun Devils’ offensive line has allowed 37 sacks this year.

Advantage: Even

UA rush defense vs. ASU rush offense

Again, the Arizona defense simply hasn’t tackled well this season, and recently the formula for teams to beat the Wildcats or keep games close has been to pound the ball in the run game. The Wildcats allow 182.5 yards per game and allowed UCLA and Oregon to rush for a combined 536 yards against them. The Sun Devils, with senior back Cameron Marshall, are fourth in the conference in rushing, at 183.6 yards per game.

Advantage: ASU

Special TeamsThe Arizona return game on

both kicks and punts is almost non-existent, but the Sun Devils allow 23 yards per return. Kicker John Bonano has improved on his shaky start to the season and punter Kyle Dugandzic is fourth in the conference, averaging 43.3 yards per punt — but the Sun Devils’ Josh Hubner bests that mark with 46.8 yards per punt. ASU has not been as consistent as Arizona in field goals though, making 13-of-21 compared to Arizona’s 12-of-18.

Advantage: Even

CoachingRodriguez and his offense have

shown they are as relevant as ever, with players getting career highs in many offensive statistical categories left and right. Todd Graham and his defense have left quarterbacks and pass offenses reeling all season, but his offense has not been able to keep up, and the Sun Devils have lost four of their last five games after starting things off by going 5-1.

Advantage: Arizona

CAMERON MOONArizona Daily Wildcat

HEAD HONCHOSComparing the Wildcats’ and Sun Devils’ head coaches

Rich RodriguezAge: 49Hometown: Grant Town, W. Va.College: West VirginiaPlaying position: defensive backHead coaching stops:

• Glenville State (1990-96)• West Virginia (2001-07)• Michigan (2008-10)

Career record: 127-88-2Record in bowl games: 3-4BCS bowls: Two – 2005, 2007Years with eight or more wins: 6 (2002-2007)Record in rivalry games: 0-3 against Ohio State, 4-3 against PittsburghNotable pros coached: QB Pat White, RB Steve Slaton, CB Adam Jones, WR Chris HenryBest season: West Virginia (2005) 11-1, beat Georgia 38-35 in the Sugar BowlWorst seasons: Michigan (2008) 3-9, West Virginia (2001) 3-8

Todd GrahamAge: 47Hometown: Mesquite, TexasCollege: East Central UniversityPlaying position: defensive backHead coaching stops:

• Rice (2006)• Tulsa (2007-10)• Pittsburgh (2011)

Career record: 49-26Record in bowl games: 4-1BCS bowls: NoneYears with eight or more wins: 3 (2007, 2008, 2010)Record in rivalry games: 0-1 against West Virginia, 2-3 against HoustonNotable pros coached: WR Jonathan Baldwin, RB Jabaal Sheard, RB Dion Lewis, FB Charles ClayBest season: Tulsa (2008) 11-3, beat Ball State 45-13 in the GMAC BowlWorst season: Tulsa (2009) 5-7

Breakdown: Who has the advantage?

kyle newman/state press ASU DEFENSIVE TACKLE WILL SUTTON is a force to be reckoned with on the defensive line. The junior has 10.5 sacks on the season, and UA head coach Rich Rodriguez considers him a future NFL first round draft pick.

Kyle Johnson

STAFF PICKS They said it

“We need to come out here and prepare the same way we always do. Everyone needs to focus, I guess. Not prepare different, do different things, just focus more mentally.”

— quarterback Matt Scott

“No game means more than another but we def got a little extra for ASU.”

— fullback/defensive lineman Taimi Tutogi

“It’d be awesome [to win]. Be a great way to close out my career, its been an amazing four years, five years now. Just go out there one last time and play under the lights. It’s be a great crowd, great atmosphere and I’m really looking forward to it.”

— center Kyle Quinn

“[Matt Scott’s] been through a lot. When he first got here to now. Sending him out on the right note means a lot. He’s a warrior. That USC game, I’ve never seen that before, being on the field seeing him do the things he did. We want to win for him.”

— receiver Garic Wharton

“This is definitely the game we look forward to the most all year. We focus a little harder. Everyone knows whats at stake.”

— kicker John Bonano

“I mean last year playing for them seniors there and making sure they got the win, just seeing the look on their face when they got to bring this home was unforgettable. You can’t replace something like that. To keep it here for these seniors is just as important. I think that’s big for the seniors. I’m gonna play my hardest for them.”

— running back Ka’Deem Carey

“There’s going to be a lot of intensity. This shouldn’t be a game where I have to do all the motivational tactics to get the guys ready to play. We gotta keep our poise, composure.”

— head coach Rich Rodriguez

Cameron Moon

Zack Rosenblatt

Courtesy of Arizona State Athletics

Arizona players and coaches give their thoughts on Friday’s game

UA over ASU,28-25

UA over ASU, 34-29

UA over ASU, 35-31

KYLE JOHNSONArizona Daily Wildcat

Page 3: November 21, 2012

TWITTER.COM/WILDCATSPORTS

Editor: Zack Rosenblatt [email protected]

(520) 626-2956SPORTSPage A3

9

The rivalry between Arizona and ASU is nothing

new, as the first Duel in the Desert occurred way back in 1899.

Here’s a look at some information you should know about the longstanding showdown between Arizona’s biggest universities.

• In case you didn’t already know, the winner

gets the Territorial Cup trophy.• The Territorial Cup was first awarded after

the Thanksgiving 1899 game in Tucson, to Arizona Territorial Normal School, what ASU was called then.

• The Territorial Cup is the second oldest trophy, following the Little Brown Jug of the Michigan/Minnesota rivalry by eight years.

• The cup was lost for eight decades, before being found in the basement of a church near ASU in the early 1980s, and then it was displayed in various ASU collections. In 2001, then-ASU president Lattie Coor led a campaign to share the trophy with the UA.

• Arizona has won three of the last four games against ASU. If not for two missed extra points in 2010, the Wildcats would have won four in a row against the Sun Devils, which would have been the longest win streak in the rivalry since the 1980s.

Senior fullback/defensive lineman Taimi Tutogi said it’s difficult to say what the outcome might be because the game is always so unpredictable.

“I’d like to say we’ve taken control,” Tutogi said.

“It’s been a tough battle through my years here. I know we lost my sophomore year here with the [extra point] and that was a big thing, but we’re just going to try and keep the tradition going as best we can.”

• Arizona leads the series 47-37-1.“The crowd gives the home team advantage,

but coming in as the road team, the away team knows that they have to prepare harder,” said junior running back Daniel Jenkins.

• From 2005 to 2007, ASU won three in a row. Arizona went 3-0 from 1993 to 1995.

• The Wildcats won five in a row in the 1980s, during “The Streak,” when Arizona went 8-0-1 against the Sun Devils from 1982 to 1990. ASU’s streak was 1965-1973, when it went undefeated in the rivalry.

• In 2010, former Wildcats kicker Alex Zendejas missed an extra point with the game tied to send the game into overtime. Then with the UA trailing by one, he missed another point after a touchdown to give the Sun Devils a 30-29 win.

“That was a tough loss,” senior quarterback Matt Scott said. “Obviously we felt like we had them late in the game. We had a couple chances to score and you know we just didn’t work, didn’t come through with the points we needed.”

• Zendejas’ family has played a major role in the rivalry. In 2009, Alex Zendejas kicked the game winning field goal at ASU after Sun Devils’ Kyle Williams muffed a punt.

Senior John Bonano would replace Alex Zendejas at kicker and set the UA record for consecutive PATs, currently 73 in a row, passing

Max Zendejas, Alex Zendejas’ uncle, who had 68 straight. His other uncles, Luis and Alan, kicked for ASU.

• With the UA’s Rich Rodriguez and ASU’s Todd Graham, this year’s game is a rare match-up of coaches making their debut in the rivalry. The last was in 2001, John Mackovic led the UA and Dirk Koetter led ASU.

• The last time the rivalry game featured two bowl teams was in 1997, when the UA won 20-14 and went to the Insight.com Bowl — now known as the Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl — while ASU went to the Sun Bowl.

This year the Wildcats have, for all intents and purposes, clinched a bowl and the Sun Devils are expected to go bowling even with a potential loss.

• The last time Arizona was ranked for the ASU game was 1998, when it was No. 7 in the AP poll. During the 50-42 win against ASU in 1998, Trung Canidate rushed for 288 yards, a record sophomore running back Ka’Deem Carey broke a couple weeks ago against Colorado with 366 yards.

• Canidate is the current UA single season record holder for most rushing yards, but Carey trails him by just 18 yards. Former Wildcat great Art Luppino’s record of 21 touchdowns is in jeopardy as well, as Carey has rushed for 19 touchdowns.

• Carey, a Tucson native and graduate of Canyon del Oro High School, chose between the UA and ASU. Obviously, Arizona won that battle.

“There’s nothing better than being a Wildcat. At the end of the day,” Carey said, “red and blue just fits me more.”

SENIORS BID FAREWELL

Kyle Quinn has been at the UA for five years. Coming into his fourth “Duel in the Desert,” Quinn knows what to

expect. He has experienced the fervor that accompanies an Arizona-ASU battle for the Territorial Cup.

“There’s electricity in the air,” said Quinn, Arizona’s starting center.

To prepare for his past match-ups with ASU, Quinn would watch highlight tapes of past year’s games “to see the great things that have happened in this rivalry,” which he considers one the best in college football.

This year marked Matt Scott’s first full season as the starting quarterback, but he’s already made two appearances against the Sun Devils as a backup behind former Wildcat Nick Foles, in 2009 and 2010. He completed 2-of-2 passes for four yards and ran seven times for 39 yards in the two games.

“I can’t even explain how I feel about these guys,” said Scott, a fifth-year senior. “Obviously we don’t like them, they don’t like us. It’s a big rivalry game.”

For Quinn, Scott and 17 other seniors, this will be their last “duel.”

It’s head coach Rich Rodriguez’s first. On Thursday, it will be a year since Rodriguez was introduced at McKale Center as Arizona’s new head honcho.

Rodriguez said he doesn’t remember if he watched last year’s game, where a two-win Arizona squad upset ASU, a team in pursuit of the top spot in the Pac-12 South.

He didn’t have to.“I don’t think it’s a revelation to say, ‘Boy

this is a big game,’” Rodriguez said. “It’s a rivalry game. It’s a huge game, it always will be.”

At West Virginia, both as a coach and player, Rodriguez had the “Backyard Brawl” with rival Pittsburgh.

He also coached at Michigan for three seasons and was at the helm for three losses to Ohio State. In one of the most heated rivalries in sports, with some of the most fanatic fans in the country, that didn’t

exactly cut it in Ann Arbor.Rodriguez knows what he has to

do to appease his fans, as if winning seven games and clinching a bowl berth wasn’t enough.

“I know a lot of people say ‘If you’re gonna win one game, make sure it’s the ASU game,’” Rodriguez said. “’Then we’ll be happy.’ I don’t think you will be, but I think it’ll at least make them less angry if that’s the one game you win.”

But, as the Wildcats celebrate this year’s seniors in their last game at Arizona Stadium, Rodriguez wants to give them a proper send-off, because that’s what he promised when he spoke with them for the first time.

“He just told us ‘Guys, its your team. It’s the seniors’ team,’” Quinn said. “He said, ‘I may not have recruited you guys and it’s your last year. I want you to have the best senior year possible. I may not have recruited you, but you’re my guys.’ We really bought into that and we bought into his philosophy, his mindset.”

Now, the Wildcats sit at 7-4, with the possibility of getting two more against ASU and whatever bowl Arizona gets invited to.

Perspective: In eight years with Mike Stoops as head coach, Arizona won seven or more games just three times and made three bowl games.

Much of that success has come thanks to Ka’Deem Carey’s rise to superstardom at running back — the sophomore leads the nation in rushing yards — but seniors have played an integral part.

Offensive lineman Quinn and Trace Biskin, receiver Dan Buckner and fullback/defensive lineman Taimi Tutogi, punter Kyle Dugandzic and even kicker John Bonano have all contributed.

“We’ve come a long way,” Tutogi said. “We

lost some games, some crucial games but a lot of people can see we fought our tails off. It’s gonna be my last regular season game against ASU. Next time I see Wildcats and Sun Devils play, I’ll probably be watching from my TV, or on the field and not in the helmet that has the ‘A’ on it.”

Scott, though, has been the headliner in Rodriguez’s successful first season at the UA.

After losing his starting job to Nick Foles in 2009, and redshirting in 2011, Scott had one last chance to prove he belonged.

And he did. The 3,008 passing yards, 443 rushing yards and 26 total touchdowns can

attest to that. Just imagine what he could have done with another year in Rodriguez’s system.

“Matt’s been a leader for this team ever since Coach [Rodriguez] came here,” Quinn said. “We grew up together. We’ve both been here since we were 18 — well, he was 17 — but we’ve just grown up together and we’re ending our career on a positive note.”

— Zack Rosenblatt is the sports editor. He

can be reached at [email protected] or on Twitter

via @ZackBlatt.

larry hogan/arizona Daily WilDcat QUARTERBACK MATT SCOTT will play in his last ever game at Arizona Stadium as an Arizona Wildcat on Friday.

What to know about the UA-ASU rivalry

arizona Daily WilDcat file photo CORNERBACK SHAQ RICHARDSON (NO. 5) and safety Jourdon Grandon spend a little extra time rubbing the Wildcats’ 31-27 win against ASU at Sun Devil Stadium into a Sun Devil’s re-ceiver as the rest of the team celebrates the upset victory. Arizona has won three of the last four games against ASU, but the home team has lost three straight games.

JAMES KELLEYArizona Daily

Zack Rosenblatt

ArizonA DAily WilDcAt

Wildcats to wear red helmets for first time

since 1980

This week, for the first time in 32 years, Arizona football will wear red helmets and the Wildcats are excited.

The UA will debut the helmets this week for a “red out” against ASU.

“I love them,” sophomore running back Ka’Deem Carey said. “I think it’s a great thing that we get to wear them out there against ASU. It brings that much more to the rivalry.”

During previous red outs, the Wildcats have worn red jerseys and red pants, but with white or blue helmets. Arizona last wore red helmets during then-head coach Larry Smith’s first season in 1980.

“Oh man, these are nice,” senior quarterback Matt Scott said. “I was hoping we’d get them. I wasn’t sure if we were. They were trying to keep it a secret but I’m excited.”

In 1981, Arizona switched to white helmets with the block “A,” a look the team essentially kept from 1981 to 2004. Arizona did change logos in 1990, from the ‘80s thick, red block “A” that looked like the same font as Michigan’s “M” to the current block “A.”

Arizona previously wore red helmets from 1967 to 1972 and 1977 to 1980.

“They look pretty good with our uniforms and we’re doing a red out, so they should look pretty nice with the whole stadium red,” said senior fullback/defensive lineman Taimi Tutogi. “It’s going to be a pretty tough environment for the Sun Devils to play in.”

In 2004, the UA introduced blue helmets when Mike Stoops became head coach. In 2009, Arizona used more than one helmet during a season for the first time, wearing a white helmet without stripes, for the Holiday Bowl.

The next season, white helmets with stripes entered the UA’s uniform rotation.

On Sept. 29, against Oregon State, Arizona wore copper helmets for the first time.

Arizona is 14-7-1 in white helmets against ASU, 1-9 in red helmets and 3-3 in blue helmets.

— James Kelley

In their final home game, Matt Scott and Kyle Quinn aim to keep Territorial Cup in Tucson

So long, seniorsArizona has 19 players whose

eligibility will run out after the Wildcats play in whatever bowl they are invited to.

“Not all of them are playing,” head coach Rich Rodriguez said. “But they’ve been really good in practice and their attitude has been really good. A few guys have not just been good leaders, but great leaders, and that’s really helped in this year of transition.”

OFFENSE: Matt Scott (quarterback)Taimi Tutogi (fullback)Dan Buckner (receiver)Drew Robinson (tight end)Kyle Quinn (center)Trace Biskin (right guard)Addison Bachman (center)Shane Zink (offensive lineman)Jowyn Ward (offensive lineman)

DEFENSE: Willie Mobley (defensive tackle)Christian Upshaw (defensive

lineman)Chris Merrill (defensive lineman)Dominique Austin (defensive end)Lamar De Rego (defensive

lineman)Greg Nwoko (linebacker)Mark Watley (safety)

SPECIAL TEAMS:John Bonano (kicker)

Jaime Salazar (kicker)Kyle Dugandzic (punter)

Page 4: November 21, 2012

A4 • ArizonA DAily WilDcAt WeDnesDAy, november 21, 2012

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Wednesday, November 21, 2012DAILYWILDCAT.COM VOLUME 106 • ISSUE 66

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December 3rd-18th

LOOK FOR US ALL OVER CAMPUS! Student Union Memorial Center • Campus Rec Center • Arizona Health Sciences Center McClelland Hall • UA Mall • Bookend Café • The A-Store at Maingate • UA South BookStore

Students push for smoke-free UA After the approval of a smoking

ban at the Arizona Health Sciences Center , the Student Health Advocacy Committee hopes to put out cigarettes all over campus.

The Faculty Senate approved

AHSC’s tabacco-free initiative in November , and it will go into effect on Jan. 1 . SHAC created a student and employee petition to urge the UA to go tobacco-free campuswide.

The director of human resources for the AHSC, Cathy Nicholson , became involved in shaping the center’s tobacco-free policy two years

ago, when Dr. Scott Leischow came to her.

“Initially they asked for my help and it’s my job,” Nicholson said. “But when I did background research I thought, ‘Wow, OK, it is a huge public issue.’ The implications for health policy are huge and I really was persuaded by the material.”

To implement such a policy, the center’s faculty had to research and look at other schools’ academic medical settings . “I felt very strongly [about the tobacco-free policy] because we are a medical and educational facility,” Nicholson added.

J. Lyle Bootman , the former vice

president for Health Sciences , sponsored the center to move forward with the policy. The Faculty Senate passed the policy, but it still needs UA President Ann Weaver Hart’s approval.

The petition to ban tobacco use

RACHEL MCCLUSKEYArizona Daily Wildcat

Thanksgiving presentation aims to celebrate history, offends some

People stopped on the UA Mall Wednesday afternoon to listen, and to take photographs and video of the UA Gatekeepers club Thanksgiving choir program. But some said they were shocked that the UA would allow such an event to take place.

The Christian club sang and told the story of the pilgrims coming to America, forging relationships with

the Native Americans and celebrating a fruitful harvest.

“Historically this is one of the few times where the whites and the Indians had a bonding experience,” said John Winchester, UA alumnus, historian and former member of the club for 14 years.

But some students weren’t as amused with the presentation as others. Nazune Menka, a graduate student studying soil, water and environmental science, said she first noticed the choir after leaving class.

She said she was shocked by the mockery of a white man assuming the role of a Native American for the sake of the performance.

“At least consult the Native American Student Affairs on campus,” Menka said. “I just wish what they were doing was culturally competent.”

The club, which also holds a Christmas performance, gets the most negative feedback for the Thanksgiving performance, Winchester added.

The intent of the performance is to

honor the bond between pilgrims and Indians, according to Winchester, and to remind people to be thankful for what they have and teach them about why Thanksgiving is celebrated.

“We take it a step further also and believe we should be thankful to God for the things that he’s done in our lives, and the mercy he’s shown us,” Winchester said.

The club projects religion in its performance, something some

STEPHANIE CASANOVA, KYLE WASSONArizona Daily Wildcat

KYLE WASSON/ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT THE UA GATEKEEPERS CLUB Thanksgiving choir gave a presentation about the history of the holiday on the UA Mall on Wednesday. The choir, which performed dressed as pilgrims and Native Americans, aimed to enlighten campus-goers about the country’s history, but ended up offending a number of students, who were displeased with how the group portrayed Native Americans.

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PERSPECTIVES — 4

Plan will provide new bike routes

STEPHANIE CASANOVAArizona Daily Wildcat

CYCLISTS, 2

Vigil remembers victims of anti-trans violence

A vigil Tuesday night left more than 60 candles floating in the Old Main fountain, representing a small fraction of people in the worldwide transgender community who were killed because of their transgender identification.

The event was the seventh annual Transgender Day of Remembrance at the UA, and was hosted by Wingspan, Southern Arizona’s primary LGBTQ community center, said Rae Strozzo, Wingspan’s Southern Arizona Gender Alliance program coordinator. The vigil was the final event of the UA’s Transgender Awareness Week .

The event also featured 61

handmade kites, which were lined up around the fountain, each representing a victim. The kites were created by Made for Flight , a local transgender ally project started by TC Tolbert, an adjunct lecturer of English.

People gathered around the fountain as both Strozzo and Tolbert gave brief speeches, and Tolbert read two of his own poems before the 61 names were read by attendees. As each name was read, a candle was placed in the fountain.

While 265 transgender people worldwide have been murdered since Nov. 20, 2011, Tolbert said only 61 names were read due to the amount of time it would take to get

KYLE MITTANArizona Daily Wildcat

VIGIL, 2

ROBERT ALCARAZ/ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT CANDLES LEFT FLOATING in the Old Main fountain represented transgender people who have been killed worldwide over the past year. The vigil recognized 61 of the 265 people.

A city department’s plan aims to increase bicycle safety by introducing new cycling routes along the proposed route for the Sun Link Modern Streetcar .

The Tucson Department of Transportation’s Bicycle and Pedestrian Program is working on providing an alternative bicycle route to the streetcar corridor, which will add green paint, signs and road markings along the route to provide a safer riding experience for bicyclists.

The city already has funding and is moving forward with adding a bicycle boulevard to Fifth Street, from Fourth Avenue to Euclid Avenue. The program is also looking to install a toucan signal crossing, a signal that accommodates bicyclists and pedestrians, across Euclid Avenue on Fifth Avenue.

Ann Chanecka , bicycle and

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All copy, photographs, and graphics appearing in the Daily Wildcat are the sole property of the Wildcat and may

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The Daily Wildcat is an independent student newspaper published Monday through Friday during the fall and

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circulation of 10,000. The function of the Daily Wildcat is to disseminate news to the community and to encourage

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All copy, photographs, and graphics appearing in the Daily Wildcat are the sole property of the Wildcat and may

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pedestrian coordinator for the city, said that they are trying to provide alternate routes for cyclists who prefer to stay away from busy streets. Bicycle boulevards in residential areas throughout Tucson are one way to hopefully attract more riders, she added.

“Different types of cyclists prefer different types of routes, and even without the streetcar at Main Gate [Square], you have a lot of pedestrian traffic and a lot of cars backing up,” Chanecka said. “I think providing a balance of options is always important.”

While there is funding to install the signal crossing and the bike boulevard, Chanecka said there aren’t sufficient funds to repair Fifth Street from cracks and potholes at the moment, but that the city is always looking to improve roads when there is funding.

“The street on Fifth is really messed up — it’s like riding off road basically because there’s so many cracks,” said Michael Giansiracusa, a junior at Pima Community College who bikes through and around the UA campus often. “If it were nice and paved it would be awesome, because then you could bike on a non-main car street.”

For those who wish to continue

riding along Fourth Avenue and University Boulevard, there will also be improvements along the streetcar corridor. Green paint in the pavement will guide cyclists across curved tracks.

Michael McKisson, an adjunct professor at the UA School of Journalism and publisher at TucsonVelo.com — a news website that focuses on local cycling — said green paint is only good if cyclists are educated about what it means.

“If you put it down, that doesn’t mean people know what to do,” McKisson said. “You have to let them know why the green paint is there, what it’s for and how to use it.”

Shared lane markings and bicycle drawings followed by two arrows will be placed between the door zone of parallel parking and the streetcar track to help position cyclists away from both danger zones. McKisson said that the area between the two leaves about one foot for cyclists to work with.

“It’s frustrating in that our safety wasn’t really a primary concern and so now bicyclists are having to be relegated to other routes,” McKisson said, “pushing us off the routes that we’ve used for years and putting us somewhere else to make us safe.”

The blue signs showing cyclists that their tire can get stuck in the tracks if they don’t cross properly are currently in temporary

positions but will be permanently placed along the route as construction is completed.

The old yellow trolley signs that tell riders to cross the tracks with care will also stay in place for the modern streetcar. Giansiracusa admitted that signs aren’t very helpful, though.

“A green paved section that shows you how to cross the tracks would be more helpful than, say, a sign, because people are looking at the ground while they’re biking and not at the signs,” Giansiracusa said.

Chanecka said cyclists are still expected to ride along University Boulevard and Fourth Avenue because of the many destinations in those areas. Cyclists are not being banned from the streetcar corridor, she added.

“We’re trying to make improvements on the streetcar route but also provide some alternatives where we can for those that prefer to take a different route,” Chanecka said.

Although the streetcar is a good mode of alternative transportation, McKisson said, other cities with a streetcar have found ways to accommodate the needs of bicyclists better.

“I think there are going to be a lot of people who are not going to feel safe,” McKisson said. “Right now it’s just a track you have to worry about, but then you’ll have a streetcar on the track that you’ve got to worry about.”

people don’t like, he said.Koiya Tuttle, a graduate student studying soil, water and environmental

science, said he was surprised that the UA allowed the performance because of how inclusive the school usually is.

“The University of Arizona is a place that many of us [Native Americans] come to get away from things like this,” Tuttle said.

Winchester said that the performance is truthful in depicting the historical event that is celebrated today as Thanksgiving. While some are offended by the performance, others appreciate the festivities, decorations and education it provides.

“We’re not racist, we’ve been called that and it’s just not true,” Winchester said. “We’re trying to do the best we can to honor the heritage and the story. It’s the best we can do.”

SMOKINGfrom page 1

campus-wide is already up on SHAC’s website.

“We made it simple, we made it straightforward,” said Stephanie Kha, a member of SHAC’s health and wellness committee. “We want to affect the student population by creating a healthy environment for them to breath in. We feel as a higher academic institution, the University of Arizona should go tobacco-free.”

As of Tuesday afternoon, 292 people had signed the petition. SHAC hopes to get 4,000 to 5,000 signatures.

The next step would be to go through the same process that the ACHS campus did, getting a faculty senate sponsor, drafting a petition for the faculty senate to vote on and then ultimately getting President Hart to sign for the policy.

After collecting enough signatures, SHAC would need a member of the Faculty Senate to sponsor the endeavor, in addition to a draft that the senate would vote on before sending to Hart for approval.

Currently on campus, the only restrictions that smokers face are a requirement that they be 25 feet from a building while smoking. There are also designated smoking areas

on campus. The smoke-free policy would require students to go entirely off campus to smoke.

Laura DiFrancisca, a communica-tions senior, said she did not think the ban would be effective, if it were implemented campuswide.

“I don’t think it really matters,” DiFrancisca said. “Because even if they do ban it, unless they have people enforcing it, no one is going to abide by it.”

As for punishments or sanctions for violating the policy, if it were to go into effect, Kha said SHAC has yet to work out the details. SHAC’s policy would likely require disciplinary or corrective action such as being directed to resources like the Arizona Smokers’ Helpline to help smokers quit, Kha said.

Other students said they thought the ban would be a great step for the university. Marketing junior Jared Erman’s grandmother died of lung cancer when he was 13, he said.

“Ever since that point, it felt like smoking is a person’s own choice,” Erman said. “But it shouldn’t impede on people who don’t want it. On campus there are plenty of people who don’t want people smoking around them and so it would be important to me to walk around campus in a smoke-free environment.”

Hailey eisenbacH/arizona Daily WilDcat an initiatiVe by the Student Health Advisory Council aims to make the UA a tobacco-free campus. The push for a campus-wide smoking ban comes just weeks after the Faculty Senate passed a policy that bans smoking from the Arizona Health Sciences Center campus.

thaNKSGIvING from page 1

CYCLIStSfrom page 1

Hailey eisenbacH/arizona Daily WilDcat a toUcan bicycle crossinG like the one at University Boulevard and Stone Avenue will be installed at Euclid Avenue and Fifth Street thanks to a new plan by Tucson’s Department of Bicycle and Pedestrian Program.

vIGILfrom page 1

through every one, adding that 61 was “already devastating enough.”

Kathe Young, a psychologist for UA Counseling and Psychological Services, attended the event because of its connection to her line of work.

“I work with the OASIS Program, which is for sexual assault and relationship violence,” Young said. “So coming out to support something like this is important to me.”

Carmen Love, a junior studying history and Spanish, came to the event as part of an assignment for a gender and women’s studies class, which required students to attend events outside the classroom specifically during Transgender Awareness Week.

“I came from more of a sheltered family,” Love said, “So it’s been nice being able to celebrate different paths of life.”

The UA’s Office of LGBTQ Affairs

also supported the event, said Juan Pereyra, the office’s assistant intern supervisor and a graduate student studying higher education and administration.

“The transgender community is really important to us because it’s part of LGBT,” Pereyra said. “So we have to show support for the communities that show support for us as well.”

Chance Mora spent much of his time handing out sheets of paper listing the victims’ names and encouraging people to come to the microphone to read them.

“What I’m here to do is show support for and remembrance for all of the transgender individuals who have been murdered in the past year,” Mora said.

The event ended with a performance by Desert Voices, a local LGBTQ chorus, as some attendees walked in a procession back to Wingspan carrying the kites.

Although none of the victims named during the event were from Arizona, Tolbert said 15 were from the U.S.

robert alcaraz/arizona Daily WilDcat local transGenDer ally GroUP Made for Flight handmade 61 kites to represent people killed in the last year because of their transgender identification.

Page 7: November 21, 2012

Police Beat is compiled from official University of Arizona Police Department reports. A complete list of UAPD activity can be found at www.uapd.arizona.edu.

Police Beat

Wednesday, november 21, 2012 • 3

KYLE MITTANArizona Daily Wildcat

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November 21Wildcat CalendarCampus Events Campus Events TucsonCampus Events

Financial Aid Candy Sale to Support UA Cares Need to soothe a sweet tooth? Stop through the lobby of the Administration building or Bear Down Gymnasium between now and the end of the month and pick up some candy for $1. It’s one of a series of fundraisers the Offi ce of Scholarships and Finan-cial Aid is hosting to benefi t the Arizona Assurance Scholars Program as part of UA Cares. Repeats daily Monday-Friday through Nov 30 .Financial Aid ‘I Dare You’ Nomination Jars in Support of UA Cares This is one of a series of fundraisers the Offi ce of Scholarships and Financial Aid is hosting to raise money for the Arizona Assur-ance Scholars Program in support of UA Cares. The “I Dare You” Nominations consist of nominating a colleague to do something you would like to see them do. At the end of the competition, the winning dares (ones that earn the most money) will be performed. For example, let’s say John does not like to wear T-shirts with the ASU logo, but Leah would like to see John in a T-shirt that has the ASU logo, so Leah visits the OSFA and puts any amount of money she wants into a jar with John’s “dare” written on the side of it. If John’s jar has the most money at the end of the nomination period, John will have to wear the ASU T-shirt. Any donation will be accepted. But remember, if you really want to see a specifi c dare performed (or want to avoid doing a dare), the jars with the most money will win. There’s a fi rst, second and third place. Administration, inside the Offi ce of Scholarships and Financial Aid (ask at the counter where to go. Repeats every weekday until Nov 30. K7UAZ Amateur Radio Club Meeting Did you

know that the UA has its very own amateur radio club? Amateur radio is a means of communicating with other operators all around the world. K7UAZ is a place for students and community members to come together and learn about this exciting and rewarding hobby. The club looks forward to meeting you! Repeats every month on January, February, March, April, May, September, October, November, December on the third Wednesday until Fri May 31 2013. 6 p.m. - 8 p.m. on Nov 16. Engineering 303 ‘Made in Arizona: Photographs from the Collec-tion’: To celebrate the Arizona centennial, a selection of diverse photographs created in the state during the 20th century are on display. In addition to iconic views of iconic sites by photographic masters, this presentation embraces the unexpected and shows the rich breadth and scope of the Center for Creative Photography’s fi ne print collection. Open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on weekdays and 1 to 4 p.m. on Saturdays and Sundays. Ongoing until Nov. 25. Center for Creative Photography, 1030 N. Olive Road. ‘From Here and Far Away: Artist’s Books, Pages and Paintings’ by Beata Wehr: This exhibition will consist of artist’s books and mounted pages as well as encaustic paintings on the subjects of time, transience, immigration, memory, human behavior and place. There will be two kinds of books in the exhibit: mixed-media using tactile materials that reinforce content, and others printed in editions that mostly derive from the fi rst group or are digitally composed. Ongoing until Dec. 7, UA Poetry Center, 1508 E. Helen Street. University of Arizona History Tour Experience

the UA campus through the eyes of an alumnus, and learn about local history and traditions associ-ated with the foundation of the University 128 years ago. This event is ongoing. 10 a.m. - 11:30 a.m. beginning at the UA Visitor Center, 811 N. Euclid Ave. 520-621-5130

Tucson“A” Mountain Trail Name Dedication Join the Tucson community in a dedication as it renames the Sentinel Ridge Trail after Gilbert Escandon Jimenez. Gilbert has helped maintained the trail for over 70 years. The ceremeony is Nov 21, 2012 at 1pm. Dedication will be at the trailhead. To get there follow West Congrees Street west of Grande Avenue and turn left onto Cuesta Avenue. Follow Cuesta as it becomes the road leading up Sentinel Peak. The trailhead is along the road at the fi rst parking lot on the right. Cirque Du Soleil – Dralion Fusing the 3000 year-old tradition of Chinese acrobatic arts with the multi-disciplinary approach of Cirque du Soleil, Dralion draws its inspiration from Eastern philosophy and its never-ending quest for harmony between humans and nature. The show’s name is derived from its two emblematic creatures: the dragon, symbolizing the East, and the lion, symbolizing the West. In Dralion, the four elements that govern the natural order take on a human form. Thus embodied, each element is represented by its own evocative colour: air is blue; water is green; fi re is red; earth is ochre. In the world of Dralion, cultures blend, Man and Nature are one, and balance is achieved. Tucson Convention Center,

260 South Church Ave. Starts Wed Nov 21 ends Nov 25. Various times, visit ticketmaster.com for tickets.Anything Goes Anything Goes is one of the great-est musicals in theater history. Anything Goes is fast-paced and kid-friendly. Recommended for ages 8+. For more information go to www.AnythingGo-esTheMusical.com. Ticket prices range from $29 - $75. Tickets on sale at TCC Ticket Offi ce and all Ticketmaster locations. Tucson Convention Center, 260 South Church Ave. Wed, Nov 21 to Sunday, Nov 25 except Thanksgiving.Heritage and Harvest Festival. Join Old Tucson as we kick off our 2012-2013 event season over Thanksgiving weekend with a Heritage and Harvest Festival! Celebrate the Spirit of the Old West of the1880’s with gunfi ghts based on actual events that took place in 19th century Tucson. Step back in time with Living History Presentations on topics like History of the Stagecoach, the Mercantile and Sheriffs of the Old West. Enjoy a musical salute to life in a frontier town celebrating cowboys and our local Mexican heritage. Stroll down memory lane with Old Tucson, A Musical History of the Silver Screen recounting music from fi lms made on these dusty streets. Learn about local Native American culture from students of the Ha:San School – song, dance, and traditional foods to savor in our native village also featuring heirloom fi g and pomegranate trees introduced by our Spanish ancestors. Taste the nectar of the region’s abundant prickly pear. Be amazed by the colorful all-women Mexican precision horse riding team, Las Florecitas del Desierto. Nov 23-25. 10am-6pm. 201 S Kinney Road.

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Student has bone to pickA student who received a mysterious package containing

skeletal remains reported the incident to a University of Arizona Police Department officer at 4:40 p.m. on Nov. 19.

The student told the officer she had received an email from an employee working in the residence hall she lived in, informing her that a package was waiting for her. The student, who had not been expecting a package, told officers that when she opened the box, she was “extremely disturbed” by the remains. The word “PEOPLE” had been written on the remains in purple marker.

After examining the remains, the officer noted that it appeared to be a type of vertebrae with more skeletal structure around the bone. The officer was unable to determine if the remains were from an animal or human.

A return name and address were written on the box. The reporting officer called a police department in the city the return address was located, requesting that an officer go to the residence the package came from and interview the person living there.

When the officer arrived, he learned that one person and a caregiver lived in the apartment, and neither of them recognized the name of the student when asked, concluding involvement from the other police department.

The remains were entered into UAPD Property and Evidence. The UAPD officer requested that detectives follow up with the case. There is no further information.

Suicide threats make bad jokesA student who had sent messages referencing suicide

prompted UAPD officers to respond to her residence hall at 2:38 a.m. on Nov. 17.

Officers met at the Arizona-Sonora Residence Hall after the student’s boyfriend had called UAPD. The man requested a welfare check, explaining that his girlfriend had sent him text messages reading, “You lost me forever and you will never have me alive or dead.” Another text message followed, which read, “Have fun on your trip, hope it was worth it,” and then three more consecutive messages said, “I am killing myself,” “as we speak,” and “Goodbye.”

The student told officers he was on his way to the residence hall from a residence in the Foothills, and said that he thought his girlfriend was on her way to a party at the Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity house, but wasn’t sure.

Police met the man at the residence hall, and entered a room where the woman was supposed to be. No one was inside the room when police entered.

One of the officers called the woman four times to no avail, and left a message to call the department’s dispatch number. In the meantime, another officer went to the fraternity house, but found no one matching the woman’s description.

The woman finally called UAPD dispatch, who forwarded the call to one of the officers. The officer asked the student if she really wanted to harm herself. The woman said no, and explained that she sent the messages because she didn’t want her boyfriend to go on a trip to Las Vegas.

The officer noted that the student spoke in a normal manner, and was no longer concerned for her safety, and completed a referral to the dean of students office.

Medicine thief needs to cool itAfter a student assaulted a Highland Market employee,

UAPD officers arrested him on charges of shoplifting and for minor in possession of alcohol in body at 11:35 p.m. on Nov. 17.

When the officer arrived, he spoke with the store clerk who had reported the incident. The employee explained the student had come into the store and tried to buy two boxes of Mucinex with his CatCard. The clerk told the student that he couldn’t buy medicine with his CatCard, only food. The student became angry, yelling and slamming things on the counter.

The employee then began watching the store’s security camera, and noticed the student slip the item into his front pocket.

The student attempted to leave the store, but the clerk wouldn’t let him, standing in his way. The student pushed the employee out of the way, hitting his chin with his elbow. The student went back inside the store, and removed the items from his pocket just before officers arrived.

During questioning, the student told officers that he had purchased medicine on his CatCard before. When he couldn’t buy the medicine, he said he thought it would be “cool” to steal the item. The student said he got increasingly angry when the employee put his hands on him.

The student, who officers noted smelled of alcohol, was arrested for shoplifting and minor in possession of alcohol in body and taken to Pima County Jail.

Page 8: November 21, 2012

• Email letters to: [email protected]

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

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

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

CONTACT US | The Daily Wildcat accepts original, unpublished letters from all of its readers.The Daily Wildcat editorial policyDaily Wildcat sta� editorials represent the

o� cial opinion of the Daily Wildcat sta� , which is determined at sta� 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.

Editor: Kristina Bui [email protected]

(520) 621-7579PERSPECTIVESTWITTER.COM/WILDCATOPINIONS

Page 4

6

Trending upWomen are awesome, so affirmed the

Women’s Studies Advisory Council, which awarded UA President Ann Weaver Hart on Monday for her work with the UA.

At the 16th annual Women Who Lead reception, the council recognized Hart’s service to the university as its first female president. Her name was also engraved in the Women’s Plaza of Honor.

“I’ve been the first woman president in other positions,” Hart said during the event. “So for me, it’s ‘you’re the president’ and you just move in and get your work done.”

And that’s probably why she is where she is. Hart’s attitude — “just move in and get your work done” — is a model for other women. It’s the kind of attitude that be-longs to people, man or woman, who make things happen.

Global climate change has been a thing for a while, but the deniers are persistent. Still, more than 130 scientists from 27 Iowa colleges and universities issued a warning of climate change Monday.

The Iowa Climate Statement says the drought this year is consistent with a warmer climate. More droughts are to be expected, as well as flooding during wet years. The drought spread across two-thirds of the nation, and according to the statement, warming will continue.

Sounds pretty reasonable to us. But we never said the people who recognize that global climate change as a problem are trending up.

CAT TRACKS Potholes, hopefully, thanks to the passing of Proposition 409. Tucson voters OK’d the ballot initiative by 953 votes.

With the bond’s passing, the city of Tucson will now have $20 million a year annually, beginning in 2014, to repair about 31 percent of major roadways and 7 percent of residen-tial streets.

Mayor Jonathan Rothschild praised voters for approving the bond, according to the Arizona Daily Star, as a sign that residents were responding to Tucson’s call for self-sufficiency.

“If we don’t invest in ourselves, nobody else will,” Rothschild said at a press confer-ence.

True. Being self-sufficient is a lot more pro-ductive than waiting for the state Legislature to restore millions of dollars in transportation funding. But we’re also just pretty grateful there will be fewer potholes to fall into on the drive home.

Smoking is on its way out, as the Faculty Senate approved a tobacco-free policy at the Arizona Health Sciences Center this month. Though the policy awaits final approval by UA President Hart, there are efforts to expand the policy to the rest of campus.

The Student Health Advocacy Committee has created a petition for students and em-ployees, urging the UA to adopt a campus-wide smoking ban. Currently, smokers are limited to designated smoking areas and 25 feet from any UA building.

SHAC hopes the UA will adopt a stricter policy that would require smokers to go off campus if they want to light up.

But don’t put out that cigarette just yet. The committee is seeking 4,000 to 5,000 signa-tures, but the petition has only a few hundred signatures so far.

Trending down— Arizona Daily Wildcat staff

Barber win a sign of Democrats’ growing influence

In response to “First female UA president, Hart honored for her service” (by Rachel McCluskey, Nov. 20):

Great article on President Ann Weaver Hart and the other trailblaz-ing women of Arizona.

— Zachary Brooks

In response to “Black Thursday deals not worth cost to retail workers” (by Andres Dominguez, Nov. 20):

What about people who work at restaurants, movie theaters, conve-nience stores, etc? Why no outrage for them?

— jsdc

First: Thanks Andres for writing about this. Second: I am proud to say no one I know of would dream of camp-

ing out to buy something, (well, I take that back … maybe my 19 year old grandson in S.D.).

Third: I just saw a news piece about how much profit Walmart made last year and how much the CEO makes. It’s obscene, to say the least, and a hallmark of why this country is in the financial mess it’s in. Corporate (and individual) greed has created so much unnecessary angst, now one more way a giant corporation can dishearten people.

I hope shoppers stay home out of respect for family and tradition. America needs time to be together.

— rjs12

In response to “Israel defense warranted, but unilateral support can be dangerous” (by Jason Krell, Nov. 20):

Nice to see someone at the Wildcat actually taking a sensible political position for once.

For the record, Hamas firing their rockets from population cen-ters and using the people therein as human shields is a war crime.

— thekevinshow1990

I agree that firing rockets from population centers could, in general, be considered a war crime. Now that you mention that, you have me thinking: the Gaza strip (141 sq miles) is smaller than the city of Tucson (227 square miles) and has over triple the population of Tucson (Gaza: 1.7 million, Tucson: 525,000).

Are there any areas in Gaza that are not dense population cen-ters? It is the seventh most densely populated place on the planet due to the ever-expanding Israeli occupation and apartheid.

Now, presumably launching rockets from densely populated areas is a war-crime because you cannot easily “remotely” kill those operating the rockets without having civilian casualties. That leaves Israel with a few options, for example: remotely bombing them and going in by land. I’m not advocating for ei-ther, but simply pointing out that Israel does have options.

Those living in Gaza likely do not have the ability to take down Israeli F-16’s with or without civilian casualties. Their hands (and feet) are tied. More specifically, Israeli F-16’s are “shooting fish in a barrel” without a chance of being shot down.

Isn’t that the worse than shooting rockets from a population center since the Palestinians have no way, whatsoever, of stop-ping them?

— Joe

Your views

Nyles KendallARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT

The winner of Arizona’s District 2 Congressional House race has been declared after nearly two weeks of

vote-counting kerfuffle.Democratic Rep. Ron Barber, who won

the special election to replace former Rep. Gabrielle Giffords in June, will return to Congress for a full two-year term, beating out his Republican challenger, Martha McSally.

The race, which seemed too close to call on Election Day, was decided last Saturday when Barber pulled ahead of McSally by 1,402 votes out of the more than 285,000 ballots counted.

“I’m really proud and honored that I’ve been given another opportunity to serve,” Barber told The Associated Press after being declared the winner. “I never expected to be in Congress. When I won the special election I was thrilled about that and now I have two years to get some work done, and I really understand what the issues are nationally and locally and I’m going to be working hard on those.”

Barber’s hard-fought victory increases the number of Arizona’s Congressional Democrats to five, marking the first time in 45 years that the state’s Congressional delegation has been composed of more Democrats than Republicans — an impressive achievement for a notoriously conservative state.

Arizona voters weren’t the only ones seeing blue on Nov. 6. In Florida’s 18th Congressional District race, Tea Party darling and titan of conservatism, Congressman Allen West conceded to Democratic challenger Patrick Murphy after his requested recount only increased the amount of votes he’d lost by.

Democrats on the whole should be delighted with the results of the 2012 election. Not only was an incumbent Democratic president re-elected, but both the House and Senate saw considerable increases in their respective Democratic delegations.

Barber’s victory, West’s trouncing and the Democratic Party’s sweeping gains this year are indicative of the direction the country is moving in ideologically.

For the first time since its shellacking in 2010, the Democratic Party’s message of inclusion, progressive taxation and collective welfare is reaching the American people.

Two years ago, the liberal brand was trampled by an insurgency of Tea Party Republicans who were intent on “taking the country back.”

Now that people realize that the GOP’s only intent is to take the country back to the Stone Age, they’ll start voting for representatives that actually stake out rational positions on the issues of the day. This means that talk of outlawing contraception and privatizing Social Security isn’t going to fly anymore.

Todd Akin may think he’s speaking on behalf of America’s anti-abortion majority when he spouts nonsense about conception and “legitimate rape,” but in reality he’s contributing to the marginalization of a growing segment of the population that values reproductive liberty.

In the same vein, Mitt Romney may think he’s wooing a sizeable portion of the electorate when he suggests that a minority’s vote can be bought with “gifts,” but what he’s actually doing is ticking off an electorate that becomes more diverse every election cycle.

Barber’s victory, in tandem with the Democratic Party’s sweep of the country’s competitive House and Senate races, is a sign that the party may finally have the support needed to eke out a governing majority and change the country’s ideological character.

— Nyles Kendall is a political science senior. He can be reached at

[email protected] or on Twitter via @WildcatOpinions.

ONLINE COMMENTS

Page 9: November 21, 2012

ArizonA DAily WilDcAt • 5clAssifieDs • WeDnesDAy, november 21, 2012

7

To be a part of our Guide to Religious Services, contact Samantha Motowski (520) 621-3425 or email classifi [email protected]

A Guide to Religious ServicesChurch of Christ Campus Ministry Ambassadors for Christ (A4C)

Campus Minister Jesse Warrena-4-c.org 2848 N. Mountain Ave 390-8115

Rising Star Missionary Baptist Church Sunday 9:00am & 11:00am Young Adult Bible Study Wednesday 7:00pm 2800 East 36th Street (520)791-3068

www.risingstarbaptist.org

L.D.S. Church- Institute of Religion. Sundays 9am, 11am, 1pm; Classes M-F

www.ldsces.org/tucson (520)623-4204

Presbyterian Campus Ministry Tuesday Nights at 6pm. Free dinner, great friends, fun worship!

Campus Christian Center 715 N. Park Ave. www.pcmarizona.orgEpiscopal Campus Ministry

Sunday 6pm Eucharist Wednesday 6pm Fellowship 715 N. Park Ave http://ua-canterbury.org (520)878-8774

First Christian Church Spiritually Growing & Socially Active. Church School 9am, Worship 10:30am

740 E Speedway 624-8695

Lutheran Campus Ministry At Campus Christian Center. Wednesday nights @6pm,

dinner and vespers/discussion. Sunday worship @10:30am. www.lcm-ua.org 715 N. Park Ave.

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BRIGHT, OPEN 3 OR 4 bedroom@835 E 7th St. $900 call D LWhite Real Estate 520-795-6262

4 - 5 BEDROOM houses avail-able, SUPER close to Campus,available now. A/C, W/D, Privateparking. 520-398-5738

INDIVIDUAL LEASES AVAIL-ABLE in these incredible houseslocated from 1-5 blocks of Cam-pus! Prices ranging from $300-$490 per bedroom, with total ac-cess to the whole house. Pleasecall Tammy for more info 520-440-7711

LARGE HOUSE FOR rent. 4BD3BA. 2900Sqft. Close to UMC. Ce-ramic tile, pond & grass (back-yard). Available Jan 1. $1500. 520-284-0273

ROOM IN WINTERHAVEN Neigh-borhood with private bath. Rent in-cludes utilities. Large beautiful,safe, quiet house. [email protected]

ARE YOU LOOKING for a mover?Same day service? Student ratesavailable. 977-4600

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EGG DONORS WANTED:Women 21-29 undergrad/grad stu-dents. Help a couple in need andmake $6500+ Apply at www.bhed.com

! CONSTRUCTION, LANDSCAP-ING, PROPERTY maintenancehelper wanted. P/T, fl exible sched-ule. No tools/ experience neces-sary. Must have vehicle. Campusarea. [email protected]

Silver Mine Subs! Graduating? Can’t fi nd job? Current ownerMUST relocate. Huge Opportu-nity. $225K/location OBO. Fi-nancing/training available. 520-668-6680

ADDICTED TO DRUGS? Readyto get clean? Private/Confi dentialtreatment by a Board Certifi edDoctor and Addictionologist.Dr. Austein (520)664-8240

WALK TO CAMPUS. FurnishedRemodeled One Bedrooms & TwoBedrooms. Available Immediately& Mid December. www.parkadams.-com 520-792-0700.

3BR 2BA FURNISHEDCONDO. 4BLK. S. OF CAM-PUS. POOL, GATED COM-PLEX. ALL UTIL. INC. W/D INUNIT. SEEKING 2ROOM-MATES. $550/MO. ON 6 MO.LEASE. 623-572-2532/SCOTT

! 5 BLOCKS NW UA HUGE Lux-ury Homes 4br/4.5ba + 3 cargarage + large master suitesw/walk-in closets + balconies+ 10ft ceilings up and down + DW,W&D, Pantry, TEP Electric Dis-count, Monitored Security System.Pool privileges. 884-1505 www.MyUofARental.com

!!! 3 -4 BEDROOM HOUSE VERYclose to Campus. Available now!Call for more details Tammy 520-398-5738/ 520-440-7711

!!!! 6BDRM 6.5BATH each hasown WHIRLPOOL tub-shower. Just a few blocks from campus.5car GARAGE, walk-in closets, allGranite counters, large outside bal-conies off bedrooms, very largemaster suites, high ceilings. TEPElectric discount. Monitored secu-rity system. 884-1505 www.MyUofARental.com

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!!!!!!!!! ABSOLUTELY GOR-GEOUS New 5Bedroom houses@ $2300/ mo ($460/ bdrm). Re-serve for December 2012. 2550 E.Water (Grant and TucsonBlvd). Washer/dryer, A/C, Alarm,http://www.UniversityRentalInfo.-com/water-fl oorplans.php Call 520-747-9331

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*** 8 BEDROOM 6 BATHACROSS the street from Campus,A/C, 2 W/D, LOTS of private park-ing! Available now. Will lease togroup or do individual leases perbedroom. 520-398-5738

***1BEDROOM ROOM FOR rentavailable now, VERY close toCampus. Prices starting at $400.For more info, please call Tammy520-398-5738

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EARN $1000 - $3200 a month todrive our cars with ads. www.VehiclePay.com

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P/T JOB COACHES 1 to 5days/wk, 3 to 5 hrs/day, adultsw/disabilities call Achieve BuildsConfi dence, Inc. 520-579-8824 toapply

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SPORTS VIDEOGRAPHERWANTED to shoot high schoolbasketball games. 1-3 times aweek. $10/hour. Call (520)603-1254 for more information

!!!***PRIME RENTALS w/GreatMgt Nr Campus/4th Ave. Univer-sity Lofts 11/1! Rare Mid-SemesterOpening! Gorgeous 1BR/1Bath-$850.00. Don Martin Apts-12/1-Small 1BR-$695.00- NOW-Huge 1BR+ Study! $900.00.Check site for 1/1 opportunities!www.Universityapartments.net520-906-7215.

1BLOCK FROM UA. Furnished orunfurnished.1BD from $610, 2BDfrom $825. Pool/ laundry. 746 E5th St. Shown by appointment 751-4363 or 409-3010

1BR FURNISHED AVAILABLEDec/Jan. $555/mo lease toMay 15. $510/mo to Aug 1 orJan 1. 3blks to campus, near reccenter. Quiet community Univ.Arms Apartments. 1515 E.10th St. 623-0474www.ashton-goodman.com

Modern Loft, eight blocks toCampus. Architect designed.1100sqft, polished concretefl oors, private fenced yard.$1115/mo. Info: 520-623-9565 http://pippelproperties.com/lofts/

LARGE STUDIOS 6BLOCKSUofA, 1125 N. 7th Ave. Walledyard, security gate, doors, win-dows, full bath, kitchen. Free wi/fi .$395. 977-4106 [email protected]

LUXURY STUDENT LIVING w/ex-citing new features! We offer spa-cious fl oor plans, beautiful land-scaping, gated community, awe-some pool, spa, & tanning island,new outdoor surround sound sys-tem around the pool, a new loungewith billiards, foosball, & digital en-tertainment, a 24-hour fi tness cen-ter, bbq grills, free cable TV, inter-net, washer/dryer all included!Great location near campus! 520-882-5656 www.stoneavenues-tandard.com

CLOSE TO UA. Nice apartment.Front and rear porches. Off-streetparking. Small pet okay. Lease.Deposit. $385/mo. 309-0792 or325-7674

ROOMMATE MATCH & INDV.leases. FREE dish & WIFI. Pets,pool, spa, fi tness & game rooms,comp. lab, cvrd park & shuttle.520-623-6600. www.gatewayattucson.com

!!! 5 BLOCKS UOFA 1201E. LeeSt. 2rm. Studio w/ kitchen. $560 re-modeled, polished cement fl oors,quiet, no pets, security patrolled.299-5020, 624-3080www.uofahousing.com

2BD UNIQUE RUSTIC Duplex3blocks from UofA. Central A/C,covered deck, off-street parkingand laundry. $750/mo water paid.Cats ok. 319-9339

2BDRM 1BATH DUPLEX. Grant/Tucson Blvd. Refrigeration andevap cooling, covered parking.W/D. $650/mo. Available now.Contact 520-325-2139

2BR IN WEST University. Woodfl oors, fi replace, A/C. 638 E 4th St#1 $825/mo. Call 798-3331 or 808-8472 Peach Properties HM, Inc. www.peachprops.com

2BDRM/ 1BATH SOME utilities in-cluded. Next to Tyndall garage. $825/mo. Call 798-3331 or 808-8472 for more information www.Peachprops.com

1BR 4BLOCKS FROM campus.$495/month 824 E. 10th StreetCall 798-3331 or 808-4872 PeachProperties HM, Inc. www.peach-props.com

2BR 2BA A/C. Fenced yard. Cov-ered parking. $825/month. 1239 EDrachman. Call 798-3331 or 808-8472. Peach Properties HM, Inc. www.peachprops.com

3-4 BR HOUSE, wood fl oors, fi re-place, 2bath, den/4th br, 1800sf,lots of built ins, big porch, dog run,new paint, all appliances, $1250/month (520)622-2929 or 205-1599

1BDRM 2BLOCKS WEST ofUMC. Full kitchen, bdrm, andbath. Off-street parking. $620/mo.Call Margo (520)444-1450. South-west Home Sales

3BDRM 2BATH WALK to cam-pus. 917 E. Elm off street parking.Tile fl oors $950/mo. Call for moreinformation 798-3331 or 808-8472www.Peachprops.com

Publisher’s Notice: All real estate adver-tised 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.

CLASSIFIED READER RATES: $5.00 minimum for 20 words (or less) per insertion. 25¢ each additional word. 20% discount for five or more consec-utive insertions of the same ad during same academic year. 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.

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Attention Classified Readers: The Daily Wildcat screens classified advertising for mislead-ing or false messages, but does not guarantee any ad or any claim. Please be cautious in answer-ing ads, especially when you are asked to send cash, money orders, or a check.

NOTICE

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STUDIOS FROM $400 spaciousapartment homes with greatdowntown location. 884-8279.Blue Agave Apartments 1240N. 7th Ave. Speedway/ Stone. www.blueagaveapartments.-com

Page 10: November 21, 2012

6 • DAILY WILDCAT COMICS • WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2012

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