arizona daily wildcat - aug 24

20
DW monday, august 24, 2009 Save 25% over new. See back page all about textbooks! We do more than exchange product for money.™ uofabookstores.com Arizona Daily Wildcat Start the presses! dailywildcat.com Nearly 300 students who moved into residence halls on campus this week- end will likely experience another move before the fall semester is over. All of the UA’s 22 residence halls have created temporary housing in or- der to provide students a place to live until space clears up in the dorms, said Jim Van Arsdel, director of Residence Life and University Housing. The university expects to begin mov- ing students out of temporary living spaces as early as next weekend, but it may take up to a semester to relocate students into their permanent dorm rooms, he said. “Will we move all of them by the first weekend? Probably not, but we’ll have a good number (moved),” he said. Students who applied last for campus housing, before Residence Life started to waitlist applicants, were placed in temporary housing. Currently, these students are being charged the lowest on-campus housing rate of $2,904 for the whole semester. If and when they move to permanent housing, their rent will be adjusted based on their new hall assignment. A handful of residence hall guest apartments, usually reserved for visitors to the university, have been temporarily assigned to some of the displaced stu- dents. Aerospace engineering freshman John Inman is living in one of these apartments in Coronado Residence Hall. Inman said that while the room is large and well-furnished, its location on the ground floor of the hall, where there are no other rooms, has made it difficult for him to meet new people. However, Inman added, “I have my own kitchen, so I have a massive Students face dorm shortage As women took their seats yesterday in the Grand Ballroom of the Student Union Memorial Center, the room filled with excitement and nervous energy. So- rority recruitment counselors stood on chairs above a crowd of around 1,100 potential new members. They began a 15-second countdown to the final moment of rush week, Bid Day. Liz Hudson, a psychology freshman and Alpha Delta Pi new member, could hardly contain her ex- citement. “This whole week has been crazy and it’s nice to know it’s coming to an end,” she said. When the countdown reached zero, envelopes ripped open and screams filled the hall as the women discovered which house they received a bid from. Taylor Hall , an accounting freshman, let out a yell as she climbed over chairs to reach friends’ rows ahead of her after finding out which sorority she had been accepted into. “I got in Pi Phi!,” Hall said. During rush week, women formally meet all the houses and use a process known as mutual selec- tion — prospective members and sororities submit electronic lists of preferences and are matched by a computer — to find their ideal house. On Bid Day, houses get to welcome and celebrate with their new members. Hall and her eager peers quickly rushed outside and began the run to their new houses while active sorority members lead them through the streets of the UA. Fortunately, the University of Arizona Police De- partment was on hand to prevent any running-of- the-bulls-style chaos. BID DAY, page A12 Rita Lichamer/Arizona Daily Wildcat Members of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority run north on Mountain Avenue leading new members to their house on the corner of First Street and Mountain Avenue on Sunday, Aug. 23. By Michelle Monroe ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT Running of the greeks: By Lance Madden ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT HOUSING, page A3 The new Fourth Avenue under- pass is open, though not totally fin- ished, and despite criticism of the structure’s aesthetic appeal, it has succeeded in uniting two neigh- borhoods. Students are traveling downtown with greater ease, while downtown- ers are arriving at the UA less sweaty and with fewer pedal pumps. Busi- ness owners on both sides are al- ready feeling the economic benefits, while artists and community leaders are thinking of new ways to use the link to unite downtown, Fourth Av- enue and Main Gate Square. Thousands of people flooded the wide pedestrian paths of the new Fourth Avenue underpass on Thursday, Aug. 20, to see the ribbon cutting ceremony hosted by Mayor Bob Walkup. The mayor thanked the organi- zations and people who struggled through the more than two-year construction process but admitted the battle wasn’t over. Then, with the mayor at the con- trols, the electric trolley connecting the two construction-bludgeoned neighborhoods started rolling. Hundreds of cameras flashed as the trolley burst through the blue ribbon, destroying the last barrier between downtown and Fourth Avenue. Then the trolley stalled and rolled backwards a few yards. After two more jerky starts and about a minute of awkwardness and doubt, the trolley emerged in downtown. It was a moment of jubilation: the crowd cheered as prominent busi- ness leaders, city council members and UA President Robert Shelton waved from the trolley as it finally arrived downtown. But whether the underpass open- ing was a total success still remains in doubt for some.The concrete and steel blandness of the $46 million structure brought criticism from people at the ceremony, though most were careful to mention that functionally it’s great. By Hank Stephenson ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT Pass gets mixed buzz UNDERPASS, page A19 “I hate newspapermen … if I killed them all there would be news from hell before breakfast.” – Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman I hated journalists too. I first made it into the newspaper when my friends and I wrote a three-act comedy in high school,“Don’t Correct The Boss!” If it ever hits YouTube I’ll never be elected to anything — ever. Even though we were a bunch of acne-faced drama kids, our hometown newspaper, The Glen- dale Star, sent a reporter. We were excited. We’d hit the big time. Then the article came out. I guess publicist-types would say I went off message. You see, during the interview I men- tioned this other student who’d written and produced his own musical a year earlier — Kevin Frei. I’d been an extra in his play. When I mentioned Kevin Frei, the reporter’s eyes caught fire. She’d done a story on this guy before. Thinking back on it, I can see the lead forming in her reporter’s brain as she scratched away at her notepad. “Oh, Kevin,” she said.“He’s brilliant.” “Yeah, he is,” I said.“Anyway, we’ve been working on this play for about—” “No, no, you don’t understand,” she said. “Nothing is good enough for Kevin Frei. He is a genius.” And then we talked about Kevin Frei for something like 10 minutes. You can see where this is going. When the article hit the newsstands, the story I thought was going to be about our play turned out to be a Kevin Frei lovefest. “Don’t Correct the Boss!” we read, was in- spired, fueled and nourished by the incandescent spirit of Kevin Frei. I never even clipped out the article. We would joke for years that if I were ever horribly killed the obituary would read something like this: “Alex Dalenberg, who had a chorus role in Kevin Frei’s groundbreaking musical, ‘Final Vinyl,’ was among the victims in Sunday’s explosion.” We also used to sing this song called,“What if God was Kevin Frei?” Man, we were pissed. We even wrote in another villain, the smarmy newspaper reporter Madeline Hitchcock. Things re- ally went south for our heroes after she showed up. So if you’ve ever felt burned by the media, trust me, I’ve been there. I felt like my whole life got boiled down to Kevin Frei by a journalist, a damned journalist. And now here I am, editor of your Arizona Daily Wildcat. What a life. EDITOR, page A4 News happens all the time Visit the all new dailywildcat.com Quarterback questions Turn to page B1 for updates on the battle for the quarterback position between Matt Scott and Nick Foles. SPORTS Bid Day 2009 A word from the editor in chief Editior in Chief, Alex Dalenberg Ashlee Salamon/Arizona Daily Wildcat

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Page 1: Arizona Daily Wildcat - Aug 24

DWmonday, august 24, 2009

Save 25% over new. See back page

all about textbooks!We do more than exchange product for money.™ uofabookstores.com See back page

all about textbooks!

Arizona Daily WildcatStart the presses! dailywildcat.com

Nearly 300 students who moved into residence halls on campus this week-end will likely experience another move before the fall semester is over.

All of the UA’s 22 residence halls have created temporary housing in or-der to provide students a place to live until space clears up in the dorms, said Jim Van Arsdel, director of Residence

Life and University Housing.The university expects to begin mov-

ing students out of temporary living spaces as early as next weekend, but it may take up to a semester to relocate students into their permanent dorm rooms, he said.

“Will we move all of them by the first weekend? Probably not, but we’ll have a good number (moved),” he said. Students who applied last for campus housing, before Residence Life started

to waitlist applicants, were placed in temporary housing. Currently, these students are being charged the lowest on-campus housing rate of $2,904 for the whole semester. If and when they move to permanent housing, their rent will be adjusted based on their new hall assignment.

A handful of residence hall guest apartments, usually reserved for visitors to the university, have been temporarily assigned to some of the displaced stu-

dents. Aerospace engineering freshman John Inman is living in one of these apartments in Coronado Residence Hall. Inman said that while the room is large and well-furnished, its location on the ground floor of the hall, where there are no other rooms, has made it difficult for him to meet new people.

However, Inman added, “I have my own kitchen, so I have a massive

Students face dorm shortage

As women took their seats yesterday in the Grand Ballroom of the Student Union Memorial Center, the room filled with excitement and nervous energy. So-rority recruitment counselors stood on chairs above a crowd of around 1,100 potential new members. They began a 15-second countdown to the final moment of rush week, Bid Day.

Liz Hudson, a psychology freshman and Alpha Delta Pi new member, could hardly contain her ex-citement.

“This whole week has been crazy and it’s nice to know it’s coming to an end,” she said.

When the countdown reached zero, envelopes ripped open and screams filled the hall as the women discovered which house they received a bid from.

Taylor Hall , an accounting freshman, let out a yell as she climbed over chairs to reach friends’ rows ahead of her after finding out which sorority she had been accepted into.

“I got in Pi Phi!,” Hall said. During rush week, women formally meet all the

houses and use a process known as mutual selec-tion — prospective members and sororities submit

electronic lists of preferences and are matched by a computer — to find their ideal house. On Bid Day, houses get to welcome and celebrate with their new members.

Hall and her eager peers quickly rushed outside and began the run to their new houses while active sorority members lead them through the streets of the UA.

Fortunately, the University of Arizona Police De-partment was on hand to prevent any running-of-the-bulls-style chaos.

BID DAY, page A12

Rita Lichamer/Arizona Daily WildcatMembers of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority run north on Mountain Avenue leading new members to their house on the corner of First Street and Mountain Avenue on Sunday, Aug. 23.

By Michelle Monroe ArizonA DAily WilDcAt

Running of the greeks:

By Lance Madden ArizonA DAily WilDcAt

HOUSING, page A3

The new Fourth Avenue under-pass is open, though not totally fin-ished, and despite criticism of the structure’s aesthetic appeal, it has succeeded in uniting two neigh-borhoods.

Students are traveling downtown with greater ease, while downtown-ers are arriving at the UA less sweaty and with fewer pedal pumps. Busi-ness owners on both sides are al-ready feeling the economic benefits, while artists and community leaders are thinking of new ways to use the link to unite downtown, Fourth Av-enue and Main Gate Square.

Thousands of people flooded the wide pedestrian paths of the new Fourth Avenue underpass on Thursday, Aug. 20, to see the ribbon cutting ceremony hosted by Mayor Bob Walkup.

The mayor thanked the organi-zations and people who struggled through the more than two-year construction process but admitted the battle wasn’t over.

Then, with the mayor at the con-trols, the electric trolley connecting the two construction-bludgeoned neighborhoods started rolling.

Hundreds of cameras flashed as the trolley burst through the blue ribbon, destroying the last barrier between downtown and Fourth Avenue. Then the trolley stalled and rolled backwards a few yards.

After two more jerky starts and about a minute of awkwardness and doubt, the trolley emerged in downtown.

It was a moment of jubilation: the crowd cheered as prominent busi-ness leaders, city council members and UA President Robert Shelton waved from the trolley as it finally arrived downtown.

But whether the underpass open-ing was a total success still remains in doubt for some. The concrete and steel blandness of the $46 million structure brought criticism from people at the ceremony, though most were careful to mention that functionally it’s great.

By Hank Stephenson ArizonA DAily WilDcAt

Pass gets mixed buzz

UNDERPASS, page A19

“I hate newspapermen … if I killed them all there would be news from

hell before breakfast.” – Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman

I hated journalists too.I first made it into the newspaper when my

friends and I wrote a three-act comedy in high school, “Don’t Correct The Boss!” If it ever hits YouTube I’ll never be elected to anything — ever.

Even though we were a bunch of acne-faced drama kids, our hometown newspaper, The Glen-dale Star, sent a reporter.

We were excited. We’d hit the big time. Then the article came out.I guess publicist-types would say I went off

message. You see, during the interview I men-tioned this other student who’d written and produced his own musical a year earlier — Kevin Frei. I’d been an extra in his play.

When I mentioned Kevin Frei, the reporter’s eyes caught fire. She’d done a story on this guy before.

Thinking back on it, I can see the lead forming in her reporter’s brain as she scratched away at her notepad.

“Oh, Kevin,” she said. “He’s brilliant.”“Yeah, he is,” I said. “Anyway, we’ve been

working on this play for about—”“No, no, you don’t understand,” she said.

“Nothing is good enough for Kevin Frei. He is a genius.”

And then we talked about Kevin Frei for something like 10 minutes.

You can see where this is going. When the article hit the newsstands, the story I thought was going to be about our play turned out to be a Kevin Frei lovefest.

“Don’t Correct the Boss!” we read, was in-spired, fueled and nourished by the incandescent spirit of Kevin Frei.

I never even clipped out the article. We would joke for years that if I were ever horribly killed the obituary would read something like this:

“Alex Dalenberg, who had a chorus role in Kevin Frei’s groundbreaking musical, ‘Final Vinyl,’ was among the victims in Sunday’s explosion.”

We also used to sing this song called, “What if God was Kevin Frei?”

Man, we were pissed. We even wrote in another villain, the smarmy

newspaper reporter Madeline Hitchcock. Things re-ally went south for our heroes after she showed up.

So if you’ve ever felt burned by the media, trust me, I’ve been there. I felt like my whole life got boiled down to Kevin Frei by a journalist, a damned journalist.

And now here I am, editor of your Arizona Daily Wildcat. What a life.

EDITOR, page A4

News happens all the timeVisit the all new

dailywildcat.com

Quarterback questionsTurn to page B1 for updates on the battle for

the quarterback position between Matt Scott and Nick Foles.

sports

Bid Day 2009

A word from the editor in chief

Editior in Chief, Alex Dalenberg Ashlee Salamon/Arizona Daily Wildcat

Page 2: Arizona Daily Wildcat - Aug 24

A2

Contact Us Editor in Chief | [email protected]

News Editor | [email protected] Editor | [email protected] Photo Editor | [email protected]

Sports Editor | [email protected] WildLife Editor | [email protected]

Newsroom615 N. Park Ave.

Tucson, Arizona 85721520-621-3551

Advertising Department520-621-3425

Arizona Daily WildcatVol. 103, Issue 1

The Arizona Daily Wildcat is an independent stu-dent newspaper published daily during the fall and spring semesters at the University of Arizona. It is dis-trubted on campus and throughout Tucson with a circu-lation of 15,000. The function of the Daily Wildcat is to disseminate news to the community and to encourage an exchange of ideas. The Daily Wildcat was founded under a different name in 1899.

All copy, photographs, and graphics appearing in the Arizona Daily Wildcat are the sole property of the Wildcat and may not be reproduced without the specific consent of the editor in chief. A single copy of the Daily Wildcat is free from newsstands. Unauthorized removal of mutiple copies will be considered theft and may be prosecuted. Additional copies of the Daily Wildcat are available from the Student Media office.

The Arizona Daily Wildcat is a member of The Associated Press and the Associated Collegiate Press.

News Tips621-3193

The Daily Wildcat is always interested in story ideas and tips from readers. If you see something deserving of cover-age, contact news editor Tim McDonnell at [email protected] or call the newsroom at 621-3193.

CorrectionsRequests for corrections or complaints concerning

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

Weather

Tomorrow: H: 96 L: 75

DatebookAug24

Health helpLearn about the health, well-

ness and sports opportunities the UA has to offer with the “Fusion” programs. Stop by the Student Recreation Center from 6 to 9 p.m. to kick-start your semester with a healthy step forward.

Get activeWant to get more involved in

campus life, make new friends and get in shape? Play an in-tramural sport! A tent with in-formation about all intramural sports will be on the UA Mall from 10 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.

Career aidNeed a job or internship?

Stop by the Career Services Center this week, sign up for campus interviews and receive a surprise giveaway. The Career Services Center is located in room 411 of the Student Union Memorial Center and open from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

New question: Did you attend the open-

ing of the new Fourth Avenue underpass?

So you’re from El Paso, Texas. Why did you choose to come to Ari-zona for college?

There’s actually many reasons that I chose to come to Arizona. Proba-bly the main one was I’m an English major and the English department is re-ally good here and it’s like perfect weather here. And I just wanted to get out of Texas and leave that stuff behind. Oh, and the bas-ketball team here.

So you’ve been living here for a little while now. What are your first thoughts on the campus?

I love the campus. It’s so beautiful, just walk-ing up and down the campus. One of my roommates, she lives in Tucson so she was kind of showing us around everywhere. It’s so pretty, all the green and all the pretty buildings and how no building is the exact same shape as any other. It’s really cool.

Do you know your roommates?

No.

Are they kind of weir-dos?

No, they’re all really cool. I got placed into temp housing so I have four roommates, but all of them are really cool. Two of them are my new best friends. We have so much in com-mon it’s ridiculous. I’m kind of glad I got thrown into that situation.

So how many credit hours are you taking?

I’m taking 13.

What class are you dreading the most?

Probably Spanish.

Why Spanish?I’m half Mexican so I

know Spanish, but the Spanish that me and my family speak is Spang-lish, pretty much. So I’m dreading that because I’m actually going to have to get things correct instead of just making up my own phrases and random nonsense.

— Brian Kimball

Peeps

LOS ANGELES — Michael Jackson won’t be laid to rest on what would have been his 51st birthday after all.

A spokesman for the Jack-son family says the King of Pop’s funeral has been post-poned until Sept. 3, five days after the singer’s birthday.

Spokesman Ken Sunshine, in a statement Friday, offered no reason for the delay.

Jackson’s family had planned a private daytime service for Aug. 29. The pop superstar will now be interred in The Great Mausoleum at Forest Lawn in Glendale at a private evening ceremony.

The cemetery is spread over several hills on land roughly eight miles north of down-town Los Angeles. The mauso-leum includes a stained-glass replica of Leonardo da Vinci’s “The Last Supper” and replicas of Michelangelo’s statues.

— The Associated Press

Pop king’s funeral postponed

Speedo-clad car burglar tracked, bitten by police dogEAST HARTFORD, Conn. — A bur-

glary suspect wearing only a Speedo-style swimsuit has been arrested in Con-necticut after a police dog tracked him down and bit him on the leg.

Police say they spotted the suspect in East Hartford on Thursday wearing the

bathing suit and holding a toolbox that had been stolen from a truck. They say he tried to steal several vehicles and also took items from them.

Police say he tried to run from them, but a police dog found him hiding behind a car.

The Journal Inquirer of Manchester reported that he was being held af-ter his arrest on $50,000 bail. He was scheduled for arraignment Friday, but the result of that hearing was not immediately available.

— The Associated Press

Today’s High: 93 Low: 74

On the Spot

Fast FactsAlexander Graham Bell re-

fused to have a phone in his study — the ringing drove him nuts.

Buzz Aldrin’s mother’s maiden name was Moon.

Cyndi Lauper’s 1984 hit

“Girls Just Want to Have Fun” was written by a man.

Fish can get seasick.

Pierre Michelin, inventor of super-safe Michelin tires, died in a car accident.

John Wilkes Booth’s brother once saved the life of Abraham Lincoln’s son.

English freshman

submit at dailywildcat.com or twitter @overheardatua

• monday, august 24, 2009 • arizona daily wildcat

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odds & ends

Girl: I just got out of an interview. They asked me to act out “Bear Down” like I was a cat.

— Student Union Memorial Center

Michael Jackson

The AssociATed Press

Costumed pigs run during a pig race in Stefanshart, Lower Austria, on Sunday.

Not just lipstick

Lyndah Anderson

Spanglish speakerraves about UA

Worth noting

Editor in ChiefAlex Dalenberg

Managing EditorShain Bergan

News EditorTim McDonnell

Sports EditorKevin Zimmerman

Opinions EditorSamantha Luvisi

Calendar EditorJaclyn Lee Applegate

Design EditorMarisa D. Fisher

Arts & Features EditorJustyn Dillingham

Photo EditorRita Lichamer

Copy ChiefHeather Price-Wright

Online EditorBryan Roy

Asst. News EditorHank Stephenson

Asst. Photo EditorColin Darland

Asst. Copy ChiefKenny Contrata

News ReportersAngel AllenMichelle CohenCourtney CollenWill FergusonMarissa HopkinsDeclin HouserLance MaddenRikki MitchellMichelle MonroeOtto RossYael Schusterman

Sports ReportersVincent BalistreriNicole DimtsiosBrian KimballTim KoschTyler KurbatMike SchmitzMaggie SimpsonBobby Stover

Arts & Feature WritersAda DiekeAli FreedmanAlex GendreauIzajah GordonAmanda JohnsonSteven KwanTauni MalmgrenEmily MooreAmanda SeelyBrandon SpecktorAnne Swenson

ColumnistsRemy AlbillarJames CarpenterArianna CarterTiffany KimmelGabrielle Matthew SchivoneDunja NedicDan SoteloChris Ward

PhotographersAmir AbibRachel CastilloMike ChristyLisa Beth EarleTimothy GalazTim GlassMichael IgnatovAllison MullallyAshlee SalamonAlan Walsh

DesignersJaclyn Lee ApplegateJessica LeftaultChris LegerePatrick MurphyAlisa Wilhelm

Copy EditorsKathryn BanksVeronica CruzChristy DelehantySteven KwanRachel LeavittMichelle MonroeJayge RossZachary Schaefer

Online staffBenjamin Feinberg

Advertising Account ExecutivesKourtnei BrieseAlex CastilloJason ClairmontAmanda ConditHarry LexKaiti MurphreeNoel PalmerDaniela SaylorJet SettapanichKate StrombergKyle Wade

Sales ManagerNate Palmer

Advertising ProofreaderSara McGrath

Advertising DesignersJason BartonLindsey CookJharnys HankeMichael HumeNoe KaurDalia RihaniKhanh Tran

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Sales CoordinatorEleni Miachika

AccountingGenevieve MilonasMariah PollockAshley Watson

DeliverySam GleischmanMike KarneyNoe KaurAndrew Rozen

Jaclyn Lee ApplegateCalendar [email protected]

Page 3: Arizona Daily Wildcat - Aug 24

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The trial date has been set for a former UA student who allegedly gave birth in her dorm room and left the infant in a plastic bag, an official said.

Sarah Tatum , 19, will stand trial May 25, 2010, said David Ricker, Commu-nity Relations Coordinator for the Arizona Superior Court in Pima County.

Tatum was charged with attempted first-degree mur-der and child abuse.

University of Arizona Po-lice Department reports said Tatum gave birth Feb. 23 in a bathroom at the Arizona-Sonora residence hall. Police found a newborn baby boy tied in a plastic bag at the foot of Tatum’s bed.

Tatum appeared at a hear-ing before Superior Court Judge Richard Fields last week. Tatum is not currently being held but will report to pre-trial services until her trial date, Ricker said.

The baby was released from University Medical Center in mid-March and is currently in foster care.

BRIEF

Sarah Tatum

refrigerator and freezer. I’m making breakfast in the morn-ing, and I have popsicles and stuff, so it’s pretty cool.”

In addition, some residence hall study rooms have been converted into bedrooms fur-nished with beds, dressers, desks and chairs. Unlike the apartments, the study rooms are located on the same floors other students live on. Resi-dence Life keeps some surplus furniture in storage for tem-porary housing. Also, some converted study rooms were furnished with new furniture already purchased for the new residence halls.

“The study rooms are usu-ally a little bigger than stu-dent rooms, so they’re cer-tainly not bad places to be,” Van Arsdel said.

Faith Flynn, an undecided freshman from North Hale-don, N.J., is staying in a con-verted study room of Nava-jo-Pinal residence hall with a roommate.

Flynn said the situation isn’t that bad, but there is no cable hookup for television, and the room is furnished with two metal racks to hang clothes on, instead of closets. “It’s good that I have a place to live, but it’s just annoying that I have to move again, especially not knowing how far I’ll have to move,” Flynn said. “But, I do have a place to live, and I’m on campus, so it is what it is.”

Flynn wasn’t completely sure she was going to attend the UA until close to the ex-tended deadline to sign up for on-campus housing in May. This is the reason she was chosen as one of the tempo-rary residents, although she wasn’t told until the first week of August, she said.

“They said I’m guaranteed a spot with housing, but it’s going to be temporary,” Flynn said.

Residence Life told Flynn

she would either be living in a study area, with a resident as-sistant, or even in a hotel as a last resort.

“And they didn’t know for how long,” Flynn said. “It could be for a few days, a few months or a whole semester.”

Pre-business freshman Naish Malisetty faces a similar situation in Graham-Greenlee Residence Hall, although his temporary housing is in an actual dorm room. Until vacancies open up — either through late cancellations, no-shows or students who decide to move out of the residence halls — Malisetty is staying with a resident assistant, one of about 130 of approximately 200 campus-wide RAs who currently have a temporary roommate, Van Arsdel said.

Malisetty, like Flynn, applied for campus housing late, as he chose the UA from seven other schools the Boston native was accepted into.

“It’s a big school,” Malisetty said. “But it’s partially my fault because I applied so late.”

An estimated 38,800 stu-dents begin classes today, in-cluding about 7,000 freshmen. The UA houses approximately 6,350 students, made up mostly of freshmen.

“We just live in an unpredict-able world,” Van Arsdel said. “Some years are up and some years are down. We started out thinking this year might very well be a down year (as far as freshmen attendance goes) because the economy was so unpredictable.”

Van Arsdel added that this unpredictability is a primary factor in the space crunch, because it can be difficult to know until very late how many students will actually need rooms.

Some help is on the way in the form of two new residence halls currently being built near Sixth Street. These halls will

house 1,088 students when they open in the fall of 2011.

In the meantime, Residence Life has leased the former Alpha Chi Omega sorority house to serve as a permanent residence hall for the next three years, providing much-needed housing while the new dorms are built. Forty-eight students are assigned to that living space for the year, Van Arsdel said.

This isn’t the first time temporary housing has been used for residence life stu-dents. In 2001, computer labs were converted into tempo-rary living areas.

“The university is trying to make the best of the situation, and tries to use spaces that won’t have a negative impact on residents,” Van Arsdel said. “It is actually having a significantly positive impact on those 290 people who otherwise wouldn’t be living on campus.”

HOUSINGNew students placed in temporary housing continued from page A1

Parker House, previously home to Alpha Chi Omega sorority, has opened its doors as a dorm this semester.

The house, located at 1775 E. First St., is a single-sex undergraduate dorm which houses about 50 women.

The sorority moved out of the house after its charter was revoked in February by the Alpha Chi Omega national council due to low enrollment.

Jim Van Arsdel, director of Residence Life and University Housing, said the transition from greek house to dormitory has been smooth. “Typically we have to do a lot of work to privately-owned facilities that are not main-tained as well as university-owned facilities,” Van Arsdel said.

“With a sorority house that has been main-tained well over time, it’s a really easy thing for us to do and a really affordable thing for us to do.”

Students say that because the dorm is a house it provides a unique atmosphere.

“There’s more of a sense of community,” said un-decided freshman Carolyn Ehat. “We can all leave our doors open and get to know each other.”

Pre-business and marketing freshman Cammie Budde agreed.

“It’s more homey definitely,” she said. “All the girls are really sweet and you can really get to know each other.” The location of the house is ideal for stu-dents interested in Greek Life, she added. “I love it. It’s really convenient because I’m rush-ing and it’s right on greek row,” Budde said.

The house has also recently been updated with wireless Internet, according to family studies and human development senior An-drea Wheeler, undergraduate community di-rector for Parker House.

“I would definitely recommend living here,” Wheeler said. “It’s a nice place, the rooms are pretty big, and the friendly atmo-sphere makes it nice.”

By Michelle Cohen ArizonA DAily WilDcAt

Tim Glass/Arizona Daily WildcatNaish Malisetty, a pre-business freshman from Boston, is greeted by a Graham Greenlee RA before being escorted to his temporary room on Thursday, Aug. 29.

Parker Hall, formerly soror-ity house Alpha Chi Omega, opened as a new resi-dence hall on Thursday, Aug. 19. The dorm houses about 50 female residents.

Rita Lichamer/ Arizona Daily

Wildcat

Women’s dorm opens

Page 4: Arizona Daily Wildcat - Aug 24

The Fourth Avenue underpass is hailed as an incredible achievement

by more than one onlooker, all sweating conspicu-ously now, because the air is stifling from so many bod-ies packed together. Ideally, it won’t be the case at future events, I’m told, because the east-facing walkway was deliberately designed speciously wide, apparently to accommodate street fairs ad infinitum. The actual unveiling of the under-pass is symbolically eclectic, but what’s being symbolized isn’t all that clear. On one hand we’re all gathered to celebrate a finished roadway and the vast commercial benefits a new and direct thoroughfare to downtown Tucson will pro-vide. On the other hand, we’re basically honoring the idea of the underpass, and what said idea actually is, is nebulous and weirdly exemplified.

A troupe of bagpipers leads the parade, playing in regimented unison with what look like Scottish “Great Highland” bagpipes and one guy thumping a huge bass drum. Everyone around me says they’re here because some official founder of Tucson was Irish, but no one knows his name.

Five or six models for some designer whose business is going to get way better now that there’s easy access walk behind the bagpip-ers, all dressed and smiling prettily

along the center shoulder while the musicians take a water break. The trolley follows shortly after, and the speakers clamor out in suits,

all well-to-do and important members of the Tucson commu-nity (including UA President Robert Shelton and Mayor Bob

Walkup) and the trolley driver, who actually gets the biggest reaction from the crowd after his speech.

The problem is that the acous-tics in the big new underpass actually suck, and unless you’re one of the fortunate few jammed into plastic patio chairs right in front of the speaker system, most of the speeches sound like magnified indistinctiveness. I definitely caught “achievement,” “testament,” “good things don’t come to those who wait, they come to those who struggle” and, from the same speaker, “a great city is one that admits it’s wrong.” I also joined in singing “Happy Birthday” to Tucson.

Fruits of the Tucson Portrait Project are there, too, in a small space on the northwestern side of the walkway. The most distinctive part of the display are the red dots taped to certain tiles, justified by a disclaimer to the right saying that they are either the incorrect image or are damaged, and will be replaced immediately. Weird little exclamatory stuff like this is pervasive in the underpass right now, since a lot of things — like the Portrait Project — aren’t quite finished, but that’s not to say they aren’t finished enough, at least, to be celebrated as

a citywide, communal achievement. Then again, if it’s the building of a “historic bridge” or “communal walkway” being celebrated here, rather than just the completion of an underpass, maybe they should have taken the extra time to get things 100 percent finished.

To be fair though, we’re all told multiple times to “support local businesses” throughout the speeches, and I was handed a couple of fliers for events happen-ing downtown the very same eve-ning. So at least the powers that be understand the actual reasons why the underpass is important — again, connecting the massive Fourth Avenue and UA crowd with revitalized downtown businesses. But the extent of emphasis placed on the underpass itself, rather than the function it provides, is still odd.

The symbolism here is meant to

imply that the underpass is a bridge between past and present Tucson, just as much as it connects the older part of the city with the new. In truth, anyone who has taken a walk or even just driven through the Sixth Street underpass, or pretty much any underpass in an urban area like Tucson, might wonder just how long symbolic ornamentation can be maintained. Yes, we have graffiti-proof finish now and better lighting and space, but whether that, and the initial sense of com-munal victory, was worth the extra time deterring businesses which needed easy access to downtown, and whether it will retain its polish or effect remains unclear.

— James Carpenter is a senior majoring in creative writing.

He can be reached at [email protected].

This is your space — use itThe Wildcat invites readers to weigh in

early and often

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 85721 • 

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

CONTACT US | The Arizona Daily Wildcat accepts original, unpublished letters from all of its readers.

• monday, august 24, 2009 • arizona daily wildcatA4

DWopinions Samantha LuvisiOpinions Editor520•621•7581

[email protected]

Alex DalenbergEditor in Chief520•621•[email protected]

Community perhaps too hasty in celebrating underpass

columnist

James Carpenter

Maybe you didn’t know it, but you write for the Arizona Daily Wildcat.

This is your space. This page, more than any other, belongs to you.

Of course, we believe the entire Wildcat belongs to the university community, but the opinions page is your section to sound off, share ideas, tell a joke, tell us we suck, pretty much anything. Whatever comes to your mind, we promise to read it.

But here’s the thing — there are literally no letters in our inbox.

Therefore, we have to run this unsigned editorial.

But we’d prefer to hear from you. We want this semester’s opinions page to contain as many voices from the campus and the community as possible — to ex-press the collective zeitgeist to the fullest extent. That’s our mission.

So congratulations, you all write for the Wildcat. Get cracking because your job starts now. Here are some handy tips to get you started:

Write LettersWell, e-mails actually. But if you want to

send something by snail mail, that’s pretty vintage and cool, too.

Submit Guest EditorialsEverybody’s an expert at something.

We hope to publish guest columns from student leaders, activists, professionals, politicians, professors, administrators — anyone and everyone.

Call us up or drop us a line if you’ve got an idea or opinion you want everyone to know about.

Meet with the Editorial BoardThe editorial board is the voice of the

Wildcat. They’re the not-so-shadowy figures behind the nebulous “We” and “Us” in this unsigned editorial. The editorial board includes the editor in chief, man-aging editor, opinions editor and other members of our staff.

Schedule a time to stop by and see us. We hold regular meetings. If your organi-zation is working on a project or promot-ing a cause, come talk to us about it.

Don’t be shy! Maybe you represent an issue you feel the public, or even the Wildcat, doesn’t understand and you’re concerned about its coverage. Maybe you’re running for elected office. Maybe you’ve actually been elected to something. If you think you meet any of these criteria, please, please meet with us because we want to talk.

As Facebook would say, “What’s on your mind?”

Editorials are determined by the Wildcat opinions board and written by one of its members. They are Alex Dalenberg, Shain Bergan, Samantha Luvisi, Heather Price-Wright and Justyn Dillingham.

E D I T O R I A L

Ashlee Salamon/Arizona Daily WildcatPipe-major William Don Carlos, Tanner Wolverton and Ricky Price lead the Seven Pipers Band down Fourth Avenue during the opening ribbon cutting ceremony on Thursday, Aug. 19.

We’re in the truth business, so let us know when we screw upEditorcontinued from page A1

I’ll tell you something though; I’ve worked at the Arizona Daily Star and The Arizona Republic. I even did a short stint at the late Tucson Citizen. I can say now from being on the other side of the fence that the real journalists try like hell to get the story right every single day. They wouldn’t do what they do, often for peanuts, if they didn’t care deeply about their community and the people in it.

For example, that Glendale Star reporter whom I hated for years — nobody else was going to put the word out about a bunch of geeky high

school kids trying to put on a show. I see now I was mostly mad because she didn’t tell the story I wanted her to — the story of Alex Dalenberg’s playwrit-ing awesomeness.

And maybe that was the story; it’s certainly one angle. But more likely, Kevin Frei was the story.

Yes, I now recant. We never would have written that play if he hadn’t produced his first.

But this confession doesn’t mean you should cut us journalists any slack. The Glendale Star may have been right in this case, in spite of all my media

relations savvy, but you and I both know news organizations are wrong all the time, or half-wrong, or just slightly wrong, or the angle is wrong, or just off-kilter.

But my promise to you is that we’re in this business because we don’t want to be wrong — ever. We’re here be-cause we’re passionate about informa-tion, ideas, opinions, truth.

In some ways the job is impossible. It’s a dicey business, jumping into a situation, talking to everyone you can and then trying to come up with some sort of definitive “truth” for the record.

For example, my friends and I knew we could produce our own student-written play because Kevin Frei accomplished the same thing at his school. But we didn’t think about him much aside from that. Did we really follow his lead like a pied piper? I don’t think so, but who’s to say?

This job may be tough, but it’s just that — our job. We’re charged every day with getting as close to that ideal of truth as possible. It’s not easy. And like all of you, we are learning every day. But I can tell you there will be reporters, photographers and editors

in the office on campus every day working toward that goal.

And if we’re truly wrong about something, you need to call us on it. Any journalists worth their salt wouldn’t complain if you did.

— Alex Dalenberg is the editor in chief of the Daily Wildcat. He can be

reached at 621-7579 or at [email protected]. He also

had a bit part in the 2003 production of ‘Final Vinyl,’ written, produced

and directed by Kevin Frei, the greatest human being to ever live.

Page 5: Arizona Daily Wildcat - Aug 24

A5 arizona daily wildcat • monday, august 24, 2009 •

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UApresents’ first-ever country music show drew a crowd of just over 1,800 Saturday night at Centennial Hall.

Grammy winner Randy Travis’ stop on the UA campus had garnered about 1,700 ticket sales going into Saturday, the show’s final day of sales. Centennial Hall has a capacity of about 2,500.

The almost-packed house of mostly middle-to-older-aged spectators gathered in groups just outside the venue 30 minutes before the doors opened, many dressed in cowboy hats and shirts depicting Travis.

Travis sang some of his newer material from his most recent album, Around the Bend , along with some old favorites that span more than 20 years.

Having toured consistently over the past 24 years, the 50-year-old artist’s higher notes were noticeably harsh at times, but Travis tran-sitioned seamlessly into the lower baritone voice his fans have become accustomed to.

Travis ended the night on a note of juxtapo-sition, singing two number-one singles whose releases were separated by 16 years.

“Three Wooden Crosses,” released in 2003, reflects the artist’s gospel-sounding recent work. Travis’ last song of the night, “Forever and Ever, Amen,” debuted in 1987 and utilizes the quicker rhythm that launched Travis into stardom in the 1980s.

“For our first country show, I think it went great,” said Mario Di Vetta, UApresents market-ing associate. “We always want to appeal to a large variety of people with our shows.”

Having lost 75 percent of its state funding over the last year, UApresents turned to an e-mail and

listserv campaign to attract attention to the con-cert, Di Vetta said.

“We’ve stepped up our community and fundraising efforts,” he said. “The show met expectations.”

Travis has 22 number one hits to his name, along with six number one albums, fi ve Gram-my Awards and a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, according to a UApresents press release.

By Shain BerganARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT

Randy Travis UA set list:•Better Class of Losers•Look Heart, No Hands•Before You Kill Us All•He Walked On Water•Deeper and Deeper•Whisper My Name•Diggin’ Up Bones•On the Other Hand•Don’t Think Twice•If I Didn’t Have You•Horse Called Music•King of the Road•Peace in the Valley•Rise and Shine•Heroes and Friends•1982•Hard Rock Bottom of Your Heart•It’s Just a Matter of Time•Deeper Than the Holler•I Told You So•Three Wooden Crosses•Forever and Ever, Amen

Randy Travis sings newer material, old favorites at Centennial Hall

UA goes country

Rita Lichamer/Arizona Daily WildcatFive-time Grammy winner Randy Travis performs at Centennial Hall in front of an audience of more than 1,800 people on Saturday, Aug. 22.

Page 6: Arizona Daily Wildcat - Aug 24

A6 • monday, august 24, 2009 • arizona daily wildcat

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Once exposed, all viruses remain in a person’sbody, presumably for life. The good news is that many people’s immune systems learn torecognize and overcome the symptoms of viralinfections. Just as you get a cold virus, showsymptoms (sneezing, runny nose, etc.) and thenget better, the same thing is often true for HPV

infection. While it takes just two weeks to getover a cold, it can take up to 2-3 years for HPVsymptoms to disappear.

Many students with genital warts don’t want towait for months to see if they clear up on theirown. Typically, people seek treatment to removethe warts since they may be uncomfortable and unattractive. Common options includeprescription creams like Aldara, freezing wartsoff with liquid nitrogen, or laser surgery. Eventhough removing warts helps with physicalappearance, the skin around the warts is likelyto contain infectious viral particles. After wartsare removed, a person can still infect others –now and in the future. Consistent use ofcondoms (or latex dams) to reduce skin-to-skin contact is still one of the best ways to reduce the risk of transmission.

If someone gets genital warts and gets themtreated, they still have the virus, right? Do they have to use condoms and be careful of not transmitting the virus all their life? Or, does the virus go away with the warts, too?

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ATHENS, Greece — A partial drop in gale-force winds early Monday offered hard-pressed Greek firefighters a brief respite after wildfires raged unchecked for two days north of Athens, burning houses and swathes of forest while forcing thou-sands to flee their homes.

But fire brigade officials cautioned that the fires still threatened inhabited areas on the capital’s northern fringes, the eastern coastal town of Nea Makri and nearby Marathon — site of one of his-tory’s most famous battlegrounds.

“There are fewer hazardous points,” fire brigade spokesman Yiannis Kappakis said. “But the blaze is still developing.”

Several houses were gutted but there were no reports of deaths or injuries. There was huge damage to the countryside, however, with thou-sands of hectares of the area’s rapidly dwindling forests gone.

Prime Minister Costas Karamanlis said the fire — one of more than 90 that broke out across Greece over the weekend — was hard to tame.

“The situation remains very difficult,” he said after a fire brigade briefing. “The enormous (fire-fighting) effort will continue on all fronts through-out the night.”

In Nea Makri, south of Marathon, local authori-ties said blaze stretching for 2.5-miles (four-kilo-meters) was tearing down a hillside towards some houses, and a dozen nuns were evacuated from a nearby Christian Orthodox convent.

“The situation is tragic right now, there’s a huge fire coming our way” Nea Makri mayor Iordanis Loizos said. “There is nothing we can do … but wait for the (water-dropping) planes at dawn.”

Water-dropping aircrafts were to resume op-erations at first light Monday, assisted by aircrafts from France, Italy and Cyprus. More than 2,000 firefighters, soldiers and volunteers are fighting the blaze on the ground.

Officials have not said what started the fire. Hundreds of forest blazes plague Greece every summer and many are set intentionally — often by unscrupulous land developers or animal farm-ers seeking to expand their grazing land.

In many afflicted areas, despairing residents pleaded for firefighters and equipment that were nowhere to be seen.

On Sunday, thousands of residents of Athens’ northern outskirts evacuated their homes, flee-ing in cars or on foot. The fire destroyed several houses as it advanced across an area more than 30 miles in circumference.

Six major fires were burning early Monday across Greece. The Athens blaze started north of the plain of Marathon, and spread over Mount Penteli — on the city’s limit to the north — threat-ening outlying suburbs.

Driven by gale-force winds, the blaze grew fast-est near Marathon, from which the long-distance foot race takes its name, born from a legendary run after the 490 B.C. Athenian victory over an in-vading Persian army.

A guard at the nearby Museum of Marathon said the fire at one point came within 50 yards of the building, which includes exhibitsof weapons and skeletons from the battle. However, its main front was moving south toward Nea Makri.

The fire also threatened the ancient fortress town of Rhamnus, home to two 2,500-year-old temples.

The mayor of Marathon said he had been “begging the government to send over planes and helicopters” to no avail.

“There are only two fire engines here; three houses are already on fire and we are just watching helplessly,” mayor Spyros Zagaris told Greek TV.

Zagaris was among several local leaders who

accused the government of having no plan to fight the fire.

Finance Minister Yiannis Papathanassiou re-sponded: “This is not the time for criticism un-der these tragic conditions. We are fighting a difficult fight.”

Another official said emergency workers were exhausted.

“The firefighters, soldiers and volunteers fighting the fire are tired and their equip-ment is being used constantly and there is fa-tigue there too,” said Deputy Interior Minister Christos Markoyiannakis.

Opposition politicians have been restrained in their criticism so far.

But both Communist Party leader Aleka Pa-pariga and Giorgos Karatzaferis, head of popu-list right-wing Popular Orthodox Rally, said the government had learned nothing from the cata-strophic summer fires of 2007, when 76 people

died and several villages were totally destroyed in southern Greece.

A shift in wind helped halt the flames in the town of Agios Stefanos, a township on the fringes of Athens on the opposite side of Mount Penteli from Marathon. Most of its 10,000 inhabitants had evacuated Sunday afternoon. By nightfall, the town was empty, authorities said.

About 58 square miles of forest, brush and olive groves have burned, according to Athens Prefect Yiannis Sgouros. The highly flammable pine for-ests around Athens’ northern suburbs helped the fire spread.

Sgouros said the full extent of the damage would take days to estimate.

Authorities evacuated two large children’s hospitals, as well as campsites and homes in vil-lages and outlying suburbs threatened by blazes that scattered ash across Athens. The flames also threatened a large monastery on Mount Penteli.

Thousands flee raging wildfires in GreeceThe AssociATed Press

Petros Giannakouris/The AssociATed Press

A firefighter tries to extinguish a burning olive tree during a fire in the village of Dombrena about 120 km north of Athens on Aug. 17. Authorities in Greece say wildfires are threatening homes in southern and central Greece where strong winds are hindering firefighters.

Page 7: Arizona Daily Wildcat - Aug 24

A7

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.

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Give me that blade! A woman was transported to a mental facility on Aug. 11 for at-

tempting to harm herself. At approximately noon, the University of Arizona Police Department responded to 1541 E. University Blvd. in reference to two women fighting. Upon the officer’s arrival, another officer had already restrained one of the women after a short chase on foot. The women had taken the fight west down the UA Mall. Both women were soon detained near the benches at the intersec-tion of University Boulevard and Cherry Avenue.

One woman stated that she and her friend were walking down the Mall when her friend said she wanted to cut herself with a razor. In an effort to prevent this, the friend tackled the woman to the ground and threw the razor off into the grass. She told the officer she was “just trying to keep her friend from harming herself.”

“I’m going to kick your ass and stop you from doing this,” the friend reportedly said. The woman complained of a swollen elbow and said she was under copious amounts of stress, wanting to cut herself in order to “deal with it.”

No charges were filed. According to reports, the friends have known each other for almost 19 years and the woman later saw her friend as just wanting to help. The woman was transported to CODAC Behavioral Health, 127 S. 5th Ave. Her backpack with the razor and property were kept as evidence.

Easy as 1, 2, 3…A UAPD officer observed a male driver littering at the intersec-

tion of Drachman Street and Mountain Avenue on Aug. 19 around 2:30 a.m. An alternate officer responded to the man’s residence on Mountain Avenue to conduct a DUI investigation.

The man had bloodshot, watery eyes with a moderate odor of intoxicants. The man was driving home from Subway and said he felt “perfectly normal.” During the routine test for DUI cases, the man was unable to count the way the officer had instructed prior to the test. Instructions were to count upwards from 1,000 — the man counted to 1,019 and skipped to 2,000.

The man was notified that he had violated the UA Code of Con-duct, and was cited and released.

Pornography and a pipe earn man a trip to jailThe Tucson Police Department arrested a man for two warrants of

possession of drug paraphernalia. Police responded to the UA Main Library on Aug. 18 in reference

to a man viewing pornography in the public computer area around 3 p.m. The man noticed police when they arrived and quickly ex-ited the site. After making contact with the man, an officer escorted him out of the library. The man already had two warrants out for shoplifting and criminal trespass to the third degree. While the of-ficer waited for warrant confirmation, he noticed an object hanging outside the man’s pocket: a marijuana pipe. When the officer asked what he uses the pipe for, the man replied, “to smoke weed.”

The man was taken to Pima County Jail where he was booked for his warrants.

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WASHINGTON — An independent sena-tor counted on by Democrats in the health care debate showed signs of wavering Sunday when he urged President Barack Obama to postpone many of his initiatives because of the economic downturn.

“I’m afraid we’ve got to think about putting a lot of that off until the economy’s out of re-cession,” said Connecticut Sen. Joe Lieberman. “There’s no reason we have to do it all now, but we do have to get started. And I think the place to start is cost health delivery reform and insurance market reforms.”

The Senate requires 60 votes to overcome a fi libuster and advance a measure to an up-or-down vote. Senators from both parties said that Democrats might use a voting tactic to overcome GOP opposition, abandoning the White House’s goal of bipartisan support for its chief domestic priority.

Democrats control 60 votes, including those of two independents, but illness has sidelined Sens. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., and Robert Byrd, D-W.Va. The party’s leaders also cannot be as-sured that their moderate members will support every health care proposal.

“I think it’s a real mistake to try to jam through the total health insurance reform, health care reform plan that the public is either opposed to or of very, very passionate mixed minds about,” Lieberman said.

Talk about resorting to this maneuver comes as Republicans dig in against the idea of a gov-ernment-run insurance program as an option for consumers and a requirement that employers provide health insurance to their workers.

Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell said Republicans would like to start over “with a genuine bipartisan approach.”

“The American people will be very troubled by a single political party’s ‘my way or the highway’ at-titude to overhauling their health care, especially when it means government-run health care, new taxes on small businesses, and Medicare cuts for seniors,” McConnell, R-Ky., said in an e-mail.

Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said Democrats would consider the voting tactic, known as rec-onciliation, if necessary to pass a bill by year’s end if Republicans won’t work toward a bipar-tisan solution.

To Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, “that would be an abuse of the process.”

Even Sen. Kent Conrad, the Senate Budget Committee chairman, acknowledged that “it’s an option, but it’s not a very good one.” He has warned that nonbudget items in health care legis-lation would be challenged under the rules allow-ing reconciliation.

Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Ind., also suggested that a fresh start was needed.

“Bringing up of the health care situation in the midst of recession, the unemployment problems … was a mistake,” Lugar said. “For the moment, let’s clear the deck and try it again next year or in subsequent times.”

Kennedy, one of the major proponents of health care reform, has missed most of the recent debate because of cancer. Both Hatch and Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., said Kennedy’s absence has taken a toll on the process.

“He had a unique way of sitting down with the parties at a table and making the right conces-sions, which really are the essence of successful negotiations,” McCain said.

Lieberman and Lugar appeared on CNN’s “State of the Union” while Hatch and Schumer appeared on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” Conrad spoke on CBS’ “Face the Nation” and McCain on ABC’s “This Week.”

Leading Dem wavers on health care reform

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NATIONAL NEWS

Page 9: Arizona Daily Wildcat - Aug 24

A9 arizona daily wildcat • monday, august 24, 2009 •

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As the fi rst few drops of rain pelted the Cat-Tran windows, a handful of freshmen darted glances out at the gray Tucson afternoon. By local standards, it was a pleasant day, but it offered a somewhat grim landscape for these newcomers as they rolled out on what, for some of them, may well have been their fi rst cross-town bus trip.

For the past 11 years, the UA has offered free shuttle transportation to local stores — this year, Fry’s and Tucson Mall — as a way to help out newcomers who might feel stranded in their new homes.

“The intent is to give new students a way to get some shopping done,” said Jim Van Arsdel , director of Residence Life and University Housing.

The CatTran drivers chatted with the passen-gers, pointing out local sights and tossing free bottles of water to newcomers. Sal Aguilar , a shuttle driver, said he’d mostly seen freshmen on the trips.

Becky Cothard , a nutritional sciences freshman, said she was on the hunt for new gym shoes.

“I think it’s really nice that they’re offer-ing this,” she said. “I knew about the shuttles

(before coming here) but I didn’t know they were going to be free.”

Adam Weiner , a physiology freshman, said he was going to look for hats, clothes and shoes.

What kind of groceries are the class of 2012 stocking up on?

“Turkey sandwiches,” Weiner said. “Ramen noodles, and PB & J,” Cothard

chimed in. Deena Markind, a psychology freshman, said

she just wanted to walk around the mall. Morina Pierce, a veterinary sciences fresh-

man, hopped on the bus around noon for a trip to the mall and Fry’s, then missed her stop and found herself on a second go-round. Under her arm was a set of twin sheets she’d picked up at Macy’s that afternoon for $100.

“I way overpacked for groceries,” she said. “I stocked up on a bunch of lunch meat and bread, and it’s gonna go bad before I can eat it.”

Juliette Moore , co-chair of Wildcat Welcome and director of Campus Recreation , likes to hop on the fi rst shuttle every year just to make sure things are running smoothly. Moore started the program in 1999.

“We were looking at ways to allow students to have access to the mall, especially incoming freshmen,” Moore said. “Possibly even to go see a movie if they wanted to.” Moore said Wildcat Welcome approached the different businesses involved and got support from them in order to fi nance the shuttle trips.

The first shuttles on Friday morning drew handfuls of students every half-hour. As the afternoon came, the rush came and went. By late Friday, the crowd had dwindled to a handful of graduate students in search of groceries. The next day, shuttle traffic was up considerably.

“It ebbs and fl ows,” Moore said, adding that Saturday was usually the biggest draw for the shuttle. “By that time, they’ve had a chance to settle into their apartment and see what the need is.”

Driver Lu Donahue said she’s seen several parents come along for the ride.

“The parents sometimes take the ride too so they don’t have to park!” Moore said, laughing. “Save some gas.”

The trips aren’t over. Moore said two more shuttles will be available next Saturday, Aug. 29, from noon to 6 p.m.

As her fi nal stop approached on Saturday, Pierce seemed worn out from her afternoon’s travels.

“I’m probably just gonna go back to my dorm and take a nap before the whole block party thing tonight,” she said.

By Justyn DillinghamARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT

Students hop shuttles to mall, supermarket to grab essentials before classes begin

Rita Lichamer/Arizona Daily WildcatMorina Pierce, a veterinary sciences freshman, prepares to get off the CatTran with her goods at the end of a long afternoon’s travels.

DWLIVECULTURE

Page 10: Arizona Daily Wildcat - Aug 24

A10 • monday, august 24, 2009 • arizona daily wildcat

If Dr. Ricardo Sanfelice gets his way, robotic and autonomous vehicles will be a huge part of the future of defense and security.

Sanfelice, an assistant professor in the UA department of aerospace and mechanical engineering, is using his small research grant to focus on developing a systematic platform to produce reliable control of groups of autonomous vehicles. He hopes for his research to be applied to future defense systems.

“This grant has enabled me to purchase additional equipment and support two students to build a testbed for indoor automatic control of autonomous vehicles and robotics,” Sanfelice said. “The grants program promotes quality and cutting-edge research within the University.”

If you could turn a $10,000 investment

into $150,000, would you do it? The program funds faculty and student projects ranging from pilot research and community

workshops to valuable equipment and staff time.Over a two-year period, $300,000 in UAF grant funding resulted in more than $5 million

in external support for UA researchers. That’s a 15:1 return on investment.Research funding accounts for about 25 percent of the UA’s annual $1.5 billion budget. Since 1986, the UA Foundation has used the grants program to advance the innovations and

discoveries of UA faculty, staff and students.

Sharon MegdalDirector, Water Resources Research CenterOrganizing an international symposium and workshop on water policy in semi-arid regions

Marilyn RobinsonAssociate Director, Drachman InstituteCreating a regional plan for sustainable affordable housing, which includes energy efficiency, sustainability and transportation

Erik BergProgram Coordinator, College of MedicineCreating a cultural competency program for the care of HIV patients along the Arizona-Mexico border and Native American reservations

Corey KnoxResearcher, SW Institute for Research on WomenConducting workshops on women and poverty in Tucson

Ana Maria LopezAssociate Professor of Clinical Medicine, Medical Director of Telemedicine ProgramWorking to create alternative medicine programs that enhance the quality of life at the end of life for cancer hospice patients

Greg DussorAssistant Professor, PharmacologyStudying brain imaging in rats to model migraine medication and treatment

Eric SnyderAssistant Professor, Pharmacy Practice and ScienceStudying the amount of exhaled condensate in Cystic fibrosis patients

Ray UmashankarAssistant Dean, Industrial Relations, and Director, Multicultural Engineering ProgramOperates a summer engineering academy for high school and middle school students to getkids interested in math and physics

James WatsonAssistant Curator of Bioarchaeology,Arizona State MuseumDating anthropogenic landscapes with terrestrial gastropods and human skeletons

Gayle DeDeAssistant Professor, Speech, Language and Hearing SciencesTesting the effects of aging on sentence comprehension

Shari MeyersonAssistant Professor, SurgeryStudying the effect of thoracoscopic lobectomies on the delivery of adjuvant chemotherapy treatments

Ann-Eve CunninghamDirector of Development, Arizona Public MediaPlanning and implementing outreach for children’s programs

Matt GoodeResearch Scientist, School of Natural ResourcesAnalyzing isotopes in rattlesnake rattles to reveal environmental changes in the rattlesnakes’ habitat

Mary AltAssistant Professor, Speech, Language and Hearing SciencesStudying the factors that influence word learning in bilingual children using computer games and analysis

Lisanne Skyler Assistant Professor, School of Media ArtsDirected an independent film this summer in New York City based on an adaptation of “Capture the Flag,” a novel by Rebecca Chace

Ricardo SanfeliceAssistant Professor, Aerospace and Mechanical EngineeringDeveloping a systematic platform to produce reliable control of groups of autonomous vehicles

Russell WitteAssistant Professor, Radiology, Optical Sciences and Biomedical EngineeringWorking in a collaborative effort with Raytheon to test unique devices that will be the first step in overcoming the limitations in X-ray mammography

Michelle PerfectAssistant Professor, Special Education, Rehab and School PsychologyStudying glucose regulation and sleep architecture in pediatric Type I diabetes patients

Robert SchonAssistant Professor, ClassicsStudying the archaeology of cultural contact in Northwest Sicily

Brian LeRoy Assistant Professor, PhysicsStudying the imaging of the local electronic properties of graphene

Patrisia GonzalesAssistant Professor, Mexican-American StudiesStudying the preservation and adaptation of indigenous and Mexican traditional medicine

Craig AspinwallAssociate Professor, ChemistryStudying the effectiveness of a new radiochemical detector for biomedical applications

Virinchipuram ViswanathanAssistant Professor, Veterinary Sciences and MicrobiologyStudying the role of host cell survival in enteropathogenic Escherichia coli pathogenesis

ToTAL AWARDS: $150,000

Migraines affect millions of Americans each year. The cause of these debilitating headaches is still a mystery to researchers and physicians, and treatment is hit-or-miss at best.

That’s why Dr. Greg Dussor, an assistant professor in the pharmacology department at the UA, plans to use his small grant funding to study a migraine’s effect on specific areas of the brain.

“With this funding, we hope to be able to make significant progress in finding causes of and treatment for migraine headaches,” Dussor said.

IMAGE MAPPInG MIGRAInES

Cystic fibrosis, a chronic disease that affects the lungs and digestive systems of thousands of Americans each year, could be better diagnosed and treated as a result of research by Dr. Eric Snyder.

Snyder is an assistant professor of pharmacy practice and science in the UA College of Pharmacy. He received small grant funding to study the amount of exhaled condensate in Cystic fibrosis patients and has plans for non-invasive assessment and treatment methods.

FIGhTInG CySTIC FIBRoSIS

“The UAF’s smAll ReseARch GRAnT PRoGRAm is An excellenT soURce oF FUndinG ThATReseARcheRs cAn Use To obTAin PReliminARy dATA FoR lARGeR, exTeRnAl GRAnTs FRom AGencies sUch As The nATionAl insTiTUTes oF heAlTh.”

Dr. GreG DussorAssistAnt ProfessoruA PhArmAcoloGy DePArtment

SELF-DRIVInG VEhICLES

08/09 GRAnT AWARD RECIPIEnTS “oUR FAcUlTy ARe FUndAmenTAl To The UniveRsiTy’s sUccess. This yeAR, sTUdenTs ARe cominG To The UA in RecoRd nUmbeRs. We ATTRibUTe oUR enRollmenT sUccess To The siGnATURe edUcATion, ReseARch, And oUTReAch oPPoRTUniTies AvAilAble To oUR sTUdenTs, As They WoRk side-by-side WiTh PRemieR FAcUlTy. smAll ReseARch GRAnT AWARds FoR eARly cAReeR FAcUlTy cAn be cATAlysTs FoR FUndinG ThAT beneFiT FAcUlTy And sTUdenTs Alike.”

Dr. robert n. sheltonPresiDentthe university of ArizonA

That’s exactly what The University of Arizona Foundation is doing with its Small Grants Program.

LeARn mORe At UAFOUndAtIOn.ORG

Dr. Eric Snyder (right) and his team of student researchers work in the Cystic fibrosis lab

Dr. Ricardo Sanfelice and Ryan Jones, a senior in Mechanical Engineering

Dr. Greg Dussor and Xiaomei Wei

Page 11: Arizona Daily Wildcat - Aug 24

A11 arizona daily wildcat • monday, august 24, 2009 •

If Dr. Ricardo Sanfelice gets his way, robotic and autonomous vehicles will be a huge part of the future of defense and security.

Sanfelice, an assistant professor in the UA department of aerospace and mechanical engineering, is using his small research grant to focus on developing a systematic platform to produce reliable control of groups of autonomous vehicles. He hopes for his research to be applied to future defense systems.

“This grant has enabled me to purchase additional equipment and support two students to build a testbed for indoor automatic control of autonomous vehicles and robotics,” Sanfelice said. “The grants program promotes quality and cutting-edge research within the University.”

If you could turn a $10,000 investment

into $150,000, would you do it? The program funds faculty and student projects ranging from pilot research and community

workshops to valuable equipment and staff time.Over a two-year period, $300,000 in UAF grant funding resulted in more than $5 million

in external support for UA researchers. That’s a 15:1 return on investment.Research funding accounts for about 25 percent of the UA’s annual $1.5 billion budget. Since 1986, the UA Foundation has used the grants program to advance the innovations and

discoveries of UA faculty, staff and students.

Sharon MegdalDirector, Water Resources Research CenterOrganizing an international symposium and workshop on water policy in semi-arid regions

Marilyn RobinsonAssociate Director, Drachman InstituteCreating a regional plan for sustainable affordable housing, which includes energy efficiency, sustainability and transportation

Erik BergProgram Coordinator, College of MedicineCreating a cultural competency program for the care of HIV patients along the Arizona-Mexico border and Native American reservations

Corey KnoxResearcher, SW Institute for Research on WomenConducting workshops on women and poverty in Tucson

Ana Maria LopezAssociate Professor of Clinical Medicine, Medical Director of Telemedicine ProgramWorking to create alternative medicine programs that enhance the quality of life at the end of life for cancer hospice patients

Greg DussorAssistant Professor, PharmacologyStudying brain imaging in rats to model migraine medication and treatment

Eric SnyderAssistant Professor, Pharmacy Practice and ScienceStudying the amount of exhaled condensate in Cystic fibrosis patients

Ray UmashankarAssistant Dean, Industrial Relations, and Director, Multicultural Engineering ProgramOperates a summer engineering academy for high school and middle school students to getkids interested in math and physics

James WatsonAssistant Curator of Bioarchaeology,Arizona State MuseumDating anthropogenic landscapes with terrestrial gastropods and human skeletons

Gayle DeDeAssistant Professor, Speech, Language and Hearing SciencesTesting the effects of aging on sentence comprehension

Shari MeyersonAssistant Professor, SurgeryStudying the effect of thoracoscopic lobectomies on the delivery of adjuvant chemotherapy treatments

Ann-Eve CunninghamDirector of Development, Arizona Public MediaPlanning and implementing outreach for children’s programs

Matt GoodeResearch Scientist, School of Natural ResourcesAnalyzing isotopes in rattlesnake rattles to reveal environmental changes in the rattlesnakes’ habitat

Mary AltAssistant Professor, Speech, Language and Hearing SciencesStudying the factors that influence word learning in bilingual children using computer games and analysis

Lisanne Skyler Assistant Professor, School of Media ArtsDirected an independent film this summer in New York City based on an adaptation of “Capture the Flag,” a novel by Rebecca Chace

Ricardo SanfeliceAssistant Professor, Aerospace and Mechanical EngineeringDeveloping a systematic platform to produce reliable control of groups of autonomous vehicles

Russell WitteAssistant Professor, Radiology, Optical Sciences and Biomedical EngineeringWorking in a collaborative effort with Raytheon to test unique devices that will be the first step in overcoming the limitations in X-ray mammography

Michelle PerfectAssistant Professor, Special Education, Rehab and School PsychologyStudying glucose regulation and sleep architecture in pediatric Type I diabetes patients

Robert SchonAssistant Professor, ClassicsStudying the archaeology of cultural contact in Northwest Sicily

Brian LeRoy Assistant Professor, PhysicsStudying the imaging of the local electronic properties of graphene

Patrisia GonzalesAssistant Professor, Mexican-American StudiesStudying the preservation and adaptation of indigenous and Mexican traditional medicine

Craig AspinwallAssociate Professor, ChemistryStudying the effectiveness of a new radiochemical detector for biomedical applications

Virinchipuram ViswanathanAssistant Professor, Veterinary Sciences and MicrobiologyStudying the role of host cell survival in enteropathogenic Escherichia coli pathogenesis

ToTAL AWARDS: $150,000

Migraines affect millions of Americans each year. The cause of these debilitating headaches is still a mystery to researchers and physicians, and treatment is hit-or-miss at best.

That’s why Dr. Greg Dussor, an assistant professor in the pharmacology department at the UA, plans to use his small grant funding to study a migraine’s effect on specific areas of the brain.

“With this funding, we hope to be able to make significant progress in finding causes of and treatment for migraine headaches,” Dussor said.

IMAGE MAPPInG MIGRAInES

Cystic fibrosis, a chronic disease that affects the lungs and digestive systems of thousands of Americans each year, could be better diagnosed and treated as a result of research by Dr. Eric Snyder.

Snyder is an assistant professor of pharmacy practice and science in the UA College of Pharmacy. He received small grant funding to study the amount of exhaled condensate in Cystic fibrosis patients and has plans for non-invasive assessment and treatment methods.

FIGhTInG CySTIC FIBRoSIS

“The UAF’s smAll ReseARch GRAnT PRoGRAm is An excellenT soURce oF FUndinG ThATReseARcheRs cAn Use To obTAin PReliminARy dATA FoR lARGeR, exTeRnAl GRAnTs FRom AGencies sUch As The nATionAl insTiTUTes oF heAlTh.”

Dr. GreG DussorAssistAnt ProfessoruA PhArmAcoloGy DePArtment

SELF-DRIVInG VEhICLES

08/09 GRAnT AWARD RECIPIEnTS “oUR FAcUlTy ARe FUndAmenTAl To The UniveRsiTy’s sUccess. This yeAR, sTUdenTs ARe cominG To The UA in RecoRd nUmbeRs. We ATTRibUTe oUR enRollmenT sUccess To The siGnATURe edUcATion, ReseARch, And oUTReAch oPPoRTUniTies AvAilAble To oUR sTUdenTs, As They WoRk side-by-side WiTh PRemieR FAcUlTy. smAll ReseARch GRAnT AWARds FoR eARly cAReeR FAcUlTy cAn be cATAlysTs FoR FUndinG ThAT beneFiT FAcUlTy And sTUdenTs Alike.”

Dr. robert n. sheltonPresiDentthe university of ArizonA

That’s exactly what The University of Arizona Foundation is doing with its Small Grants Program.

LeARn mORe At UAFOUndAtIOn.ORG

Dr. Eric Snyder (right) and his team of student researchers work in the Cystic fibrosis lab

Dr. Ricardo Sanfelice and Ryan Jones, a senior in Mechanical Engineering

Dr. Greg Dussor and Xiaomei Wei

Page 12: Arizona Daily Wildcat - Aug 24

A12 • monday, august 24, 2009 • arizona daily wildcat

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Job #: 91298 AZ Daily Wildcat Final size: 1/2pg Horizontal - 11” x 10.5” Colors: 4C Bleed: No Ins Date: 8/24/09 Pub: AZ Daily Wildcat Materials: PDF/X-1a to [email protected] (under 5mb) Include name, co. name, ad run dates and account exec (Kristine Rasgorshek). Fax ad copy o 520-621-3094CRAMER-KRASSELT • 1850 NORTH CENTRAL AVENUE, SUITE 1800 • PHOENIX, ARIZONA 85004 • 602-417-0600

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BID DAYCampus works to make rush safercontinued from page A1

UAPD began working with the Center for Student Involvement & Leadership and the Fraternity & Sorority Programs a few years ago to make the event safer for the women, said Jenny French Nirh , senior coordinator for Fraternity & Sorority Programs , the branch of CSIL that oversees Greek Life.

“Both Parking and Transpor-tation and UAPD have a pro-cess for closing the streets that involves notifying the area resi-dents or offi ce buildings, creat-ing safe plans and staffi ng struc-tures,” she said.

Nevertheless, for pre-physi-ology freshman and new mem-ber of Pi Beta Phi Jessie Oliver , the event was hardly a walk in the park.

“I was afraid I was going to fall,” she said. “All the boys started throwing water bal-loons and we were dodging them while running.”

But a few balloons weren’t enough to dampen Oliver’s excitement.

“I’m so stoked for meeting all the new girls, living there for the next four years and having a new family,” she said.

Each sorority house plans a

series of events for their new members to participate in. Alpha Phi for example, has active members drive the new women to a park where they have a barbecue, a DJ, infl atable slides and swimming to enjoy, said Alpha Phi member and speech, language, and hearing sciences senior Alexa Kramer .

Pi Beta Phi member and philosophy junior McKen-zie Sheldon said her sorority had other fun planned for the new members.

“We’re tie-dyeing shirts, our cook is making Mexican food for us and (we’re) just spending quality time with our new girls,” she said.

According to Nirh, student recruitment counselors are required to be disaffi liated with their sorority through-out the week so that they do not infl uence the decisions of the women going through re-cruitment. For these women, holding back during the week means there is more of a rea-son to celebrate the organiza-tion they are a part of with a special song performed before the bids are opened.

But the event is not a free-

for-all. As with any other greek registered event, there are rules for Bid Day.

“Some specifi c rules are that Bid Day activities are not to in-volve men or alcohol because they are celebrating getting to know their new sorority sisters,” Nirh said.

A recent addition to rush process policy is an educa-tional session on the first day of rush week for every poten-tial new member, on the use and abuse of alcohol and the policies and laws concerning both alcohol and hazing. This education session is unique to the UA campus.

Also, there are set hours for the event to ensure that the new women attend Freshman Convocation, residence hall meetings and get rest before the fi rst day of classes.

But despite anxiety, hectic antics, and rigid rules, Bid Day is still a celebration for most women.

“I remember my Bid Day,” said Gina Cesare a member of Alpha Phi and a commu-nication senior. “It was over-whelming and I was anxious but excited.”

Rita Lichamer/Arizona Daily WildcatMembers of Alpha Phi stand in front of their house on First Street as they wait for their new sisters to arrive on Sunday, Aug. 23.

Page 13: Arizona Daily Wildcat - Aug 24

A13 arizona daily wildcat • monday, august 24, 2009 •

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nSuitesWELCOME STUDENT AND FAMILIESSomeone eat your bike???

Find a new one in the Wildcat Classifieds!

Call to place your classified today:621-3425, email classifieds @ wildcat.arizona.edu

or go online to wildcat.arizona.edu

THE ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT

k n o w swhat’s on your

M I N D

and we have all ofthe good stuff you

want to read toprove it.

STIMULUS SWEEPSActions by the state legislature

in early June put the UA in serious danger of losing its federal stimulus money. The state legislature passed, but Gov. Jan Brewer has not yet ap-proved, a budget that included $50 million in funds sweeps from the universities. If enacted, these funds sweeps could disqualify the univer-sities from receiving federal stimu-lus dollars. However, the balanced budget required to move ahead with these sweeps remains in limbo at the state capitol. The Arizona Board of Regents said it would sue the state if such a budget went into effect. “These sweeps are, in fact, illegal,” said Student Regent David Martinez . “The regents are willing to take that to court if necessary.”

NOT JUST FOR CONCERTS Centennial Hall will open as a class-

room for the fi rst time. The hall holds up to 1,200 students per class and will combine technical innovations and peer mentor programs to help deal with the increased student presence. Gail Burd, vice provost for academic affairs , told the Summer Wildcat on June 18, 2009, that the courses were needed in order to alleviate the UA’s budget problems and to advance its educational mission.

COMPOUNDING CULTUREThe UA looked to combine the

many cultural centers on campus into one overarching Unity Center. The move could have saved the uni-versity up to $1 million. However, the plan was met with so much op-position that university officials an-nounced that the centers would re-main separate.

ENGLISH ONLINEFreshman composition English

courses will incorporate a trial online writing component this year. The one-credit course is designed to promote information literacy and to introduce students to the new research lab in the Manuel T. Pacheco Integrated Learning Center. The program will diagnose stu-dents’ individual strengths and weak-nesses and work to improve problem areas. A student’s performance on an information literacy test, taken prior to the course, will determine how much time and engagement the course will require. The program should be fully up and running by the spring semester, during which between 5,000 and 6,000

freshmen will enroll in it.

HONORS HYBRIDSThe Honors College will introduce

two new non-traditional general educa-tion classes that are “hybrid classes” — a combination of online and traditional lecture classes. Students enrolled in these classes will solve mysteries based on this year’s theme: memory. They will use traditional methods such as texts, homework and exams and also fl ash mobs, hidden Web sites and Twitter.

PAULY SHORE CALLED, HE WANTS HIS HABITAT BACK

In July, the UA acquired control of Biosphere 2 in Oracle, Ariz. and

has finally opened it to the public. The Summer Wildcat reported on July 18, 2009, that UA-affiliated re-searchers have used Biosphere 2’s artificial environments to develop models and instruments to answer questions about Earth’s ecospheres. Visitors to the Biosphere can experi-ence every environment on Earth in just an afternoon.

BOOKSTORE REMODELINGThe UA Bookstore is remodeling its

lower level to make more informa-tion technology resources available to students and to optimize space. The bookstore knocked down one wall to provide more space and will have

a new on-demand printing station under the stairs with a new Apple display next to the stairs by Sept. 15. Offi cials say the project should be completed around May 2010 .

CAMPUS RENTAL RIDESHertz, a car rental company, has a

contract with the UA for a Connect-by-Hertz program for students and university employees. Individuals can register for a free membership that allows access to a fleet of 10 rental cars for $8 per hour and up to 180 miles per reservation. Driv-ers must be over the age of 18 and not have any major offenses on their driving record.

By Michelle MonroeARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT

A look back at the news on money, classes, rental cars and everything in between

Giuseppe DeMasi/Arizona Summer WildcatThe UA’s Biosphere 2, located in the desert just outside of Oracle, researches clilmates by incorporationg several different ecosystem biomes under one roof.

Summer of ‘09: UA headline rewind

Page 14: Arizona Daily Wildcat - Aug 24

A14 • monday, august 24, 2009 • arizona daily wildcat

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PHOENIX — Trash is piling up in forests around Arizona as offi cials say sloppy hikers, campers and other people are using the land as a dumping ground and workers don’t have the time or the staff to keep up with it.

“Frankly, there are areas out there that are pig-sties,” said Paige Rockett, spokeswoman for the Tonto National Forest, which covers nearly 3 mil-lion acres of desert, mountains, lakes and other terrain northeast of Phoenix.

In July, the Coconino National Forest posted a plea on Twitter for people to pick up after themselves.

Brienne Magee, a spokeswoman for the north-ern Arizona forest, said some people deliberately don’t pick up their garbage.

Then there are those that put it in big garbage bags and leave them next to forest roads as though there’s a scheduled service to pick them up.

And when people leave human waste in their bags, forest employees with hazardous-materials training have to be called to handle it.

Magee said that takes workers away from their main duties, such things as responding to fi res and building and maintaining trails.

“There isn’t a trash crew on the forest,” she said.

“Any trash you create has to go out with you.”Offi cials say there are more people using the

forests, so there’s more trash.Rockett called the Tonto an “urban forest”

since it’s so close to the Phoenix metropolitan area and gets an estimated 5 million to 6 million visitors a year.

Since people pay a fee for certain access, they might see the forest like a sports stadium or a movie theater where they believe someone will come in and clean up after them, Rockett said.

Rob Mannhard of Goodyear camps, hunts and fi shes in the state’s forests and other public lands. He agrees that there’s too much trash out there.

“It’s really sad,” Mannhard said. “Every time I stop to go through a gate, I stop to pick some up. . . . There’s a lot out there, and the stuff I’m picking up is old.”

Mannhard thinks that the people who camp and hunt and fi sh often aren’t the problem. In-stead, he said it’s the weekend party crowd that is throwing around the most stuff.

The trash isn’t just bad to look at. It can hurt wildlife. Some of it takes years to decompose if it does at all. Aluminum cans don’t break down and some plastics take decades to do so, according to environmentalists.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — Yahoo Inc. and Microsoft Corp. hope that by joining forces, they can tilt the balance of power in Internet search away from Google Inc. First, however, Yahoo and Micro-soft have to convince regulators that their plan won’t hurt online advertisers and consumers.

As the U.S. Justice Department reviews the proposed partnership, approval fi gures to hinge on this question: Will the online ad mar-ket be healthier if Google’s domi-nance is challenged by a single, more muscular rival instead of two scrawnier foes?

The fi rst step toward getting an

answer came this month when Microsoft and Yahoo fi led pa-perwork with federal regulators to comply with the Hart-Scott-Rodino Act, an antitrust law governing mergers and alliances between competitors. The Justice Department has until early Sep-tember to approve the agreement or — as is likely in this case — re-quest additional information.

European regulators are also expected to review the deal. Microsoft and Yahoo are brac-ing for the probes to extend into early next year, and the outcome is far from certain.

Just nine months ago, Google abandoned its own proposed partnership with Yahoo to avoid

a showdown with the govern-ment, which had concluded that Google was already too powerful in the lucrative market for selling ads alongside search results.

Google had hoped to extend its reach even further by selling ads next to some of Yahoo’s search results, and in the process, keep Yahoo out of Microsoft’s clutches. Microsoft aggressively lobbied against the partnership.

With the Google-Yahoo in-quiry behind them, U.S. antitrust regulators are likely to enter this examination with a clearer defi ni-tion of the Internet search land-scape and a better understanding of how it affects the steadily grow-ing online advertising market.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Will antitrust probe keep Microsoft, Yahoo apart?

Trash poses forest hazard

Page 15: Arizona Daily Wildcat - Aug 24

A15 arizona daily wildcat • monday, august 24, 2009 •

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SUEZ, Egypt — A group of Egyptian fishermen who were kidnapped by pirates off the Somali coast four months ago and managed to overpower their captors sailed home to a hero’s welcome Sunday, but some details of their dramatic escape remained a mystery.

Wearing brand new tracksuits, the nearly three dozen fishermen disembarked in the port city of Suez into the waiting arms of hundreds of relatives and friends, as tradition-al Egyptian drummers and dancers performed in the background. One mother fainted from the joy of see-ing her son return.

“We were very sad, and I was crying for the past months,” said 21-year-old Nagwa Ibrahim, who was at the port with her young son to welcome home her husband. “Now we are so excited, and I just can’t believe that he will be back with us.”

The fishermen, whose two vessels

were hijacked in the pirate-infested Gulf of Aden, spoke freely of how harrowing the experience had been, but were cagey about exactly how they managed to overpower their captors and seize eight of them, who they brought back to Egypt to stand trial.

“There were days we didn’t think we’d survive,” said Syed Sobhi, a 20-year-old fisherman from Kafr el-Sheik, 110 miles (180 kilometers) north of Cairo. “We were so humili-ated and went to sleep hungry ev-ery day.”

The pirates initially demanded millions of dollars to free the cap-tives but eventually lowered their ransom demand to $800,000.

When pressed on how they man-aged to escape, Sobhi he said they were aided by Somali gunmen who boarded the ship and helped attack the pirates — corroborating the version of events provided by the owner of one of the boats, Mohammad Nasr, who said the owner of the second vessel, Hassan

Khalil, hired the Somalis.But Khalil, who was present at

Sunday’s homecoming, denied he hired the gunmen. He refused to comment on Nasr’s claim that he paid the pirates a down payment of $200,000 in order to board his boat, Momtaz 1, and set in motion the rescue plan. Khalil said any ransom paid was a “secret matter.”

Nasr has said that once on the boat, Khalil signaled to the captive fishermen to distract the pirates while the Somali gunmen clam-bered on board. They succeeded in killing two of the pirates and taking eight others hostage, he said.

Osama Watan, a 34-year-old fish-erman who is also from Kafr el-Sheik, also denied that Somali gun-men helped the captives, saying they waited for a moment when the pirates were resting to stage their attack.

“One of us who delivered their lunch signaled to us when they had laid down their weapons,” said Watan. “That’s when we knew it was time to

either attack or be killed. The rest was taken care of by God.”

It was unclear why the fishermen were reluctant to talk about their escape and provided conflicting stories. But some suspect possible pressure from the Egyptian govern-ment, which has been criticized by some newspapers and politicians as having done nothing to help the fishermen.

“It’s not fair for the government to come now and claim glory for this rescue,” said Mohammad Essawy, a member of parliament who was in Suez because six of the fishermen were from his province of Dakahli-ya, 75 miles (120 kilometers) north-east of Cairo.

Essawy became frustrated when the fisherman were kept at sea until all the dignitaries had arrived at the port — including a final governor who emerged from his black Mer-cedes well-perfumed and in a tai-lored suit.

“Everyone in the government now

wants to make it seem like they are the saviors,” said Mohammad Matar, whose cousin was working on the Momtaz 1. “These people saved themselves by themselves.

Matar said he had been in touch with his cousin, Sami, and the cap-tain of the boat since they were kidnapped, and they both told him that “Khalil hired 11 Somalis who helped the Egyptians ambush the Somali pirates.”

Sobhi, the fisherman, said offi-cials took the captured pirates off the boat before they reached Suez.

Salahuddin Ghoneim, secretary general of the ruling National Dem-ocratic Party in Damietta, some 110 miles (175 kilometers) northeast of Cairo, said the pirates would be in-terrogated and tried in Egypt.

Pirate attacks worldwide more than doubled in the first half of 2009 amid a surge in the Gulf of Aden and the east coast of Somalia, according to an international mari-time watchdog.

Egyptians who overpowered pirates return homeThe AssociATed Press

INTERNATIONAL NEWS

Page 16: Arizona Daily Wildcat - Aug 24

A16 • monday, august 24, 2009 • arizona daily wildcat

Arizona Daily WildcatAvailable at more than 100

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WASHINGTON — As public support for the war in Afghanistan erodes, President Barack Obama soon may face two equally unat-tractive choices: increase U.S. troops levels to beat back a resilient enemy, or stick with the 68,000 already com-mitted and risk the political fallout if that’s not enough.

Army Gen. Stanley McChrystal, the top U.S. commander in Afghani-stan, is completing an assessment of what he needs to win the fight there. That review, however, won’t specifi-cally address force levels, according to Adm. Mike Mullen, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

But military officials privately believe McChrystal may ask for as many as 20,000 additional forces to get an increasingly difficult security situation in Afghanistan under con-trol. And one leading Republican is already saying McChrystal will be pressured to ask for fewer troops than he requires.

“I think there are great pressures on General McChrystal to reduce those estimates,” said Sen. John Mc-Cain, R-Ariz., in an interview broad-cast Sunday. “I don’t think it’s nec-essarily from the president. I think it’s from the people around him and others that I think don’t want to see a significant increase in our troops’ presence there.”

Mullen on Sunday described the situation in Afghanistan as “serious and deteriorating,” but refused to say whether additional forces would be needed.

“Afghanistan is very vulnerable in terms of (the) Taliban and extremists taking over again, and I don’t think that threat’s going to go away,” he said.

Mullen also expressed concern about diminishing support among a war-weary American public as the U.S. and NATO enter their ninth year of combat and reconstruction operations.

In joint TV interviews, Mullen and U.S. Ambassador Karl Eikenberry said last week’s presidential election in Afghanistan was historic, given the threats of intimidation vot-ers faced as they headed to polling stations. It could be several weeks, however, before it’s known whether incumbent Hamid Karzai or one of his challengers won.

“We’re not sure exactly what the level of voter turnout was,” said Eikenberry, a retired three-star Army general. “Taliban intimidation, especially in southern Afghanistan, certainly limited those numbers.”

Charges of fraud in the election are extensive enough to possibly sway the final result, and the num-ber of allegations is likely to grow, according to the commission inves-tigating the complaints.

The independent Electoral Com-plaints Commission has received 225 complaints since the start of Thursday’s vote, including 35 al-legations that are “material to the election results,” said Grant Kippen, the head of the U.N.-backed body.

President Obama’s strategy for defeating the Taliban and al-Qaida is a work in progress as more U.S. troops are sent there, Mullen said.

Three years ago, the U.S. had about 20,000 forces in the country. Today, it has triple that, on the way to 68,000 by year’s end when all the extra 17,000 troops that Obama an-nounced in March are to be in place. An additional 4,000 troops are ar-riving to help train Afghan forces. More civilian workers are going as well to help rebuild Afghanistan’s economy and government.

Mullen said the security situation in Afghanistan needs to be reversed in the next 12 to 18 months.

“I think it is serious and it is dete-riorating, and I’ve said that over the last couple of years, that the Taliban insurgency has gotten better, more sophisticated,” he said.

Just over 50 percent of respon-

dents to a Washington Post-ABC News poll released this past week said the war in Afghanistan is not worth fighting.

Mullen, a Vietnam veteran, said he’s aware that public support for the war is critical. “Certainly the numbers are of concern,” he said. But, he added, “this is the war we’re in.”

“I recognize that we’ve been there over eight years,” he said. “But this is the first time we’ve really resourced a strategy on both the civilian and military sides. So in certain ways, we’re starting anew.”

“We’re just getting the pieces in place from the president’s new strategy on the ground now,” he said. “I don’t see this as a mission of endless drift. I think we know what to do.”

McChrystal’s orders from Mullen and Defense Secretary Robert Gates was “to go out, assess where you are, and then tell us what you need,” Mullen said. “And we’ll get to that point. And I want to, I guess, assure you or reassure you that he hasn’t asked for any additional troops up until this point in time.”

McCain, the top Republican on the Senate Armed Services Commit-tee, said McChrystal should say ex-actly how many troops he needs, let the Congress debate it and Obama would make the ultimate decision.

McChrystal and other military leaders in Afghanistan should use the same aggressive “clear and hold” approach that Gen. David Petraeus used successfully in Iraq, McCain added. That will create a secure en-vironment for people so that eco-nomic and political progress can be made, he said.

On the question of what it will take to turn the tide in Afghanistan, McCain echoed Mullen’s projection: “I think within a year to 18 months you could start to see progress.”

McCain acknowledged that pub-lic opinion on Afghanistan is slip-ping. But he said that opinion could

be reversed.“I think you need to see a reversal

of these very alarming and disturb-ing trends on attacks, casualties, ar-eas of the country that the Taliban has increased control of.”

Sen. Richard Lugar of Indiana, the top Republican on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said Obama’s leadership on Afghanistan is key to bolstering public support.

“He really can’t just leave this to the Congress, to General McChrystal, and say, “Folks, sort of, discuss this,’ after the report comes in,” Lugar said.

Mullen and Eikenberry appeared on NBC’s “Meet the Press” and CNN’s “State of the Union.” Lugar was on CNN. McCain’s interview Friday with ABC’s “This Week” was aired Sunday.

Obama facing hard choices on Afghanistan war plans

Alex Brandon/The AssociATed Press

President Barack Obama talks about the the Afghan elections, Aug. 21, 2009, outside the White House in Washington, prior to boarding Marine One and departing for the presidential retreat at Camp David.

The AssociATed Press

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A18 • monday, august 24, 2009 • arizona daily wildcat

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A19 arizona daily wildcat • monday, august 24, 2009 •

4C-Half Wildcat Anatomy 08.pdf 8/17/09 4:28:54 PM

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Benjamin Poletta, a mathematics gradu-ate student, lives on the north side of the underpass and often rides his bike to the bars and restaurants downtown.

While handing out information on health-care reform along the western pedestrian path, just hours after the ceremony, Poletta said he likes the new underpass because it will make his ride downtown much easier, but has mixed feelings about the look of the long-awaited structure.

“I like it, it’s beautiful, it’s huge,” he said. “I guess … Yeah, no, it’s nice.”

Poletta added, “I guess I’m not really sure that they needed to shut it down so long, that it was worth it. I’m not saying it wasn’t worth it, I just don’t know what the new fea-tures are that made it worthwhile.”

“I think it’s ridiculous,” he concluded, as the trolley honked in the background, fin-ishing its one-block loop around the Rialto Theatre downtown. “It’s just not worth the amount of time that it was closed for.”

David Aguirre, a longtime Tucson gal-lery operator and arts advocate, isn’t look-ing back on the lost time with regret — he’s thinking ahead. The trolley extends down-town all the way to Main Gate, he says, and it’s his job to capture that market.

He prefers to talk about the function of the underpass and the opportunities it creates for downtown, and, for an artist, he didn’t have much to say about the aesthetics.

“It’s really clean right now,” he said. “It’s got that kind of minimalist look.”

Amber Plantz saw it differently. The an-thropology senior thought it “doesn’t look very Tucson-like.”

The ride is fun, she said, and structurally, the underpass is awesome — but she called the look bland and said it’s, “missing that graffiti, kind of dingy, kick-ass Tucson feel” which she hopes will come with time.

Graffiti and kick-ass Tucson feel aren’t the only things missing from the underpass.

The Tucson Portrait Project, made from roughly 6,000 photographs of Tucsonans taken at different places, times and public events (in-cluding the Fourth Avenue Street Fair), had only one of four planned panels displayed. And even that panel wasn’t actually complete. Many of the faces on the square tiles were marked with red dots, meaning they would be replaced.

Project designer Gary Patch said the holdup came from the tile printer, who was having a hard time printing in a consistent sepia tone. The other three panels, he said, would probably be up in September.

Landscaping on several plots around the underpass was still ongoing, adding to the unfinished, bare-bones look of the long-awaited project, and the courtyard fountain doesn’t yet have any water.

The trolley, which is operated by volun-teers at Old Pueblo Trolley, only runs on

weekends. The modern streetcar, which will run seven days a week, isn’t scheduled to be completed until 2011.

Harold Garland doesn’t mind the unfinished details. He travels from his home in Armory Park and work at Hotel Congress, to his intern-ship at UA at least four days per week and is happy to have the underpass open, with bike lanes, to make his trip safe and easy.

“More bike lanes are great,” he said. “It gives you that extra couple feet of safety when you’re riding with traffic. It makes all the difference in the world if I’m going to ride my bike down the major street.”

He used to ride down Broadway Boulevard to get to UA, and avoided the Sixth Avenue un-derpass, which has no bike lanes, at all costs.

Another biker, Dustin Chaber, described riding through the Sixth Avenue underpass, the major connecting thoroughfare from the university area to downtown while the Fourth Avenue underpass was closed, as “dark and hazardous” and “crowded and often filled with excrement.” He too, will be riding the Fourth Avenue underpass from now on.

With nostalgia in his voice, Aguirre men-tioned the old underpass — a historic struc-ture built in 1916 — but added, “In sort of an ironic twist, it helps more people access the historic buildings on Congress Street.”

Aguirre said he sees the underpass as not only a safe way to travel between the two neighborhoods, but as a missing link and an opportunity to extend downtown all the way to Main Gate.

He said he sees an untapped market for Tooley’s Café on Congress Street, which he manages along with Dinnerware Artspace and other galleries. He sees a chance to bring back Downtown Saturday Nights, an arts and entertainment block party, and bring new faces to the galleries on Congress Street. And he sees the future of both neigh-borhoods improved because events can stretch along the entire trolley route.

“We feel like the summer is over,” he said. “Like, ‘oh my God, we made it.’ We made the marathon through the summer — it’s over. (With) the underpass opening, we made it to the finish line and to a new beginning.”

Someone Here/Arizona Daily WildcatPhoto cutline information here. This is not a sideways soccer photo. This is not a sideways soccer photo. Please do not think this is a sideways soccer photo. Pho-to cutline information here. This is not a sideways soccer photo. This is not a

UA ecological anthropology senior Amber Plants can’t wait to ride from her house on the univer-sity-side of the underpass, to the nightlife downtown at Rialto and Hotel Congress on Friday, Aug. 19.

Allison Mullally/ Arizona Daily

Wildcat

Cyclists favor new 4th Ave. underpassUNDERPASScontinued from page A1

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