10
A student panel questioned ASUA Senate candidates about their plans to involve stu- dents in the campus community and make the governing body more visible during a fo- rum on Thursday. Senate candidate Emily Smith, a politi- cal science sophomore, said she would at- tend more events as a representative of the Associated Students of the University of Arizona. At these events, she said, she would simply introduce herself as a senator and ask students their thoughts and feelings about the events. For Daniel Marks, a creative writing sopho- more, the best way to increase ASUA visibil- ity is to introduce freshmen to the organiza- tion at orientation. This would allow students to know what the organization is and what it does from the get-go, he said. In addition to plans to make ASUA more visible, candidates were also asked about how involved they are in the campus community and how they plan to involve constituents. Justin Evans, a political science sopho- more, said he plans on getting Greek Life or- ganizations, diversity centers and clubs more involved in ASUA. To do so, he said he would attend each organization’s meetings. Then he would ask club members if they would like to help ASUA in any way or if there is anything ASUA can do to better serve them. He would tell the organizations, “Hey, we (ASUA) have the resources to help you out.” This will help get more organizations in- volved with the governing body, he said. If elected as a senator, Joel Torres, a senior studying Spanish, said he plans on promoting Scholarship Universe, a service that allows students to search for specific scholarships at the university. Additionally, he said he wants to help students become more ed- ucated on how to apply for financial aid. Vinson Liu, a pre-physiology fresh- man, said one of his plans as senator would be to help promote online ad- vising. The adviser-to-student ratio on campus is quite low, he said, and he hopes that by promoting services like degree checks and trackers, students will have a better understanding of what they need to do to graduate and be suc- cessful. These services provide a per- sonalized four-year graduation plan for students and will help them academi- cally, he added. D AILY W ILDCAT DAILYWILDCAT.COM Friday, March , SERVING THE UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA SINCE 1899 HOOPS HEADS NORTH FOR RIVALRY SHOWDOWN CATWALKING: WHAT DO YOU WANT IN A VENDING MACHINE? FROZEN YOGURT MARKET HEATS UP SPORTS — 6 DAILYWILDCAT . COM ARTS & LIFE — 5 ASUA looks to up visibility Primary results President Katy Murray, 990 votes Chad Travis, 829 votes Executive vice president Krystina Nguyen, 1,095 votes Kevin Elliott, 872 votes Administrative vice president Paige Sager, 1,259 votes Dani Dobrusin, 609 votes For full primary election results, visit DailyWildcat.com. 65 37 HI LOW Grant, Ala. 76 / 48 Makemo, France 85 / 80 Motherwell, U.K. 47 / 34 QUOTE TO NOTE It quickly blooms into a palm-muted chromatic fren- zy, serving the band’s canon right by inspiring the listen- er to drink 100-proof liquor and make bad decisions.” ARTS & LIFE — 5 WORTH NOTING This day in history >> 1917: Puerto Rico becomes a U.S. territory and Puerto Ricans gain U.S. citizenship. >> 1923: The first issue of Time magazine is published. >> 1962: Philadelphia Warriors center Wilt Chamberlain scores an NBA record 100 points in a basketball game. By Stewart McClintic DAILY WILDCAT UA gets grant to help poor mothers battle drug abuse ONLINE AT Check out reaction from ASUA presidential candidates inside on page 2 By Brittny Mejia DAILY WILDCAT Faculty and students gather for discussion on proposed gun bill WILL FERGUSON / DAILY WILDCAT Faculty, students and other groups met on the UA Mall on Thursday to discuss proposed gun legislation that would allow concealed firearms on campus. Concealed carry sparks conflict The costs and effects of allowing guns on cam- pus were discussed Thursday during a press con- ference on the UA Mall. Student leaders, university administrators, the University of Arizona Police Department and the Students for Concealed Carry on Campus club were just some of the individuals who came out to discuss Senate Bill 1474, the proposed legislation that would allow anyone with a permit to carry concealed weapons on campus. A majority of speakers spoke against the bill, cit- ing safety concerns as well as the cost of installing gun lockers. There is concern about spending “academic dollars” to install gun lockers in buildings, which would be necessary if guns were allowed on cam- pus, when the university budget was cut by ap- proximately $180 million, according to a statement released by UA President Eugene Sander. In addition to the cost of allowing guns If you go Free screening at 1 p.m. in the Gallagher Theater for “Living for 32” a documentary on Colin Goddard, a survivor of the 2007 Virginia Tech shooting. GUNS, 2 Low-income mothers battling substance abuse now have another ally to assist them in their fight, thanks to a $1.6 million grant award- ed to the UA by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Admin- istration. The grant will be used by the UA’s Southwest Institute for Research on Women to establish a drug treat- ment program called Working Poor Mothers of Minors, or MOMs. The program will provide resources to mothers struggling with substance abuse so they can redirect their lives without sacrificing their jobs, their homes or the time they spend with their children. About 126 women and 214 children are expected to participate. Some 189 “appropriate family members,” like fathers, will also benefit from the grant. Rosi Andrade, an associate re- search professor at the institute, began developing the program in March of 2011. Her brown eyes lit up as she spoke of the opportunities the program will offer its participants, who are often denied drug treat- ment because their incomes are just high enough to exempt them from qualifying for state-funded health care. “Drug addiction is the ultimate ball and chain,” Andrade said. “What I anticipate and hope the program will do is lift the veil of a drug addiction and open up a dif- ferent world for the women to en- gage in.” By Savannah Martin DAILY WILDCAT SAVANNAH MARTIN / DAILY WILDCAT Rosi Andrade, an associate research professor at the Southwest Institute for Research on Women, examines a quilt made by hand to honor AIDS victims. SIROW, 2

3.2.12

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daily wildcat 3.2.12

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Page 1: 3.2.12

A student panel questioned ASUA Senate candidates about their plans to involve stu-dents in the campus community and make the governing body more visible during a fo-rum on Thursday.

Senate candidate Emily Smith, a politi-cal science sophomore, said she would at-tend more events as a representative of the Associated Students of the University of Arizona. At these events, she said, she would simply introduce herself as a senator and ask students their thoughts and feelings about the events.

For Daniel Marks, a creative writing sopho-more , the best way to increase ASUA visibil-ity is to introduce freshmen to the organiza-tion at orientation. This would allow students to know what the organization is and what it

does from the get-go, he said.In addition to plans to make ASUA more

visible, candidates were also asked about how involved they are in the campus community and how they plan to involve constituents.

Justin Evans, a political science sopho-more , said he plans on getting Greek Life or-ganizations, diversity centers and clubs more involved in ASUA. To do so, he said he would attend each organization’s meetings. Then he would ask club members if they would like to help ASUA in any way or if there is anything ASUA can do to better serve them.

He would tell the organizations, “Hey, we (ASUA) have the resources to help you out.” This will help get more organizations in-volved with the governing body, he said.

If elected as a senator, Joel Torres, a senior studying Spanish , said he plans on promoting Scholarship Universe, a service that allows students to search for specific scholarships at

the university. Additionally, he said he wants to help students become more ed-ucated on how to apply for financial aid.

Vinson Liu, a pre-physiology fresh-man , said one of his plans as senator would be to help promote online ad-vising. The adviser-to-student ratio on campus is quite low, he said, and he hopes that by promoting services like degree checks and trackers, students will have a better understanding of what they need to do to graduate and be suc-cessful. These services provide a per-sonalized four-year graduation plan for students and will help them academi-cally, he added.

DAILY WILDCATDAILYWILDCAT.COMFriday, March ,

SERVING THE UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA SINCE 1899

HOOPS HEADS NORTH FOR RIVALRY SHOWDOWN

CATWALKING: WHAT DO YOU WANT IN A VENDING MACHINE?

FROZEN YOGURT MARKET HEATS UP

SPORTS — 6 DAILYWILDCAT.COM ARTS & LIFE — 5

1

ASUA looks to up visibility Primary resultsPresident

Katy Murray, 990 votes

Chad Travis, 829 votes

Executive vice president

Krystina Nguyen, 1,095 votes

Kevin Elliott, 872 votes

Administrative vice president

Paige Sager, 1,259 votes

Dani Dobrusin, 609 votes

For full primary election results, visit DailyWildcat.com.

6537

HI

LOW

Grant, Ala. 76 / 48Makemo, France 85 / 80Motherwell, U.K. 47 / 34

QUOTE TO

NOTE

It quickly blooms into a palm-muted chromatic fren-zy, serving the band’s canon right by inspiring the listen-er to drink 100-proof liquor and make bad decisions.”

ARTS & LIFE — 5

WORTHNOTINGThis day in history>> 1917: Puerto Rico becomes a U.S. territory and Puerto Ricans gain U.S. citizenship. >> 1923: The first issue of Time magazine is published. >> 1962: Philadelphia Warriors center Wilt Chamberlain scores an NBA record 100 points in a basketball game.

By Stewart McClinticDAILY WILDCAT

UA gets grant to help poor mothers battle drug abuse

ONLINE AT

Check out reaction from ASUA presidential candidates inside on

page 2

By Brittny MejiaDAILY WILDCAT

Faculty and students gather for discussion on proposed gun bill

WILL FERGUSON / DAILY WILDCAT

Faculty, students and other groups met on the UA Mall on Thursday to discuss proposed gun legislation that would allow concealed firearms on campus.

Concealed carry sparks conflict

The costs and effects of allowing guns on cam-pus were discussed Thursday during a press con-ference on the UA Mall.

Student leaders, university administrators, the University of Arizona Police Department and the Students for Concealed Carry on Campus club

were just some of the individuals who came out to discuss Senate Bill 1474, the proposed legislation that would allow anyone with a permit to carry concealed weapons on campus.

A majority of speakers spoke against the bill, cit-ing safety concerns as well as the cost of installing gun lockers.

There is concern about spending “academic dollars” to install gun lockers in buildings, which would be necessary if guns were allowed on cam-pus, when the university budget was cut by ap-proximately $180 million, according to a statement

released by UA President Eugene Sander . In addition to the cost of allowing guns

If you goFree screening at 1 p.m. in the Gallagher Theater for “Living for 32” a documentary on Colin Goddard, a survivor of the 2007 Virginia Tech shooting.

GUNS, 2

Low-income mothers battling substance abuse now have another ally to assist them in their fight, thanks to a $1.6 million grant award-ed to the UA by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Admin-istration.

The grant will be used by the UA’s Southwest Institute for Research on Women to establish a drug treat-ment program called Working Poor Mothers of Minors, or MOMs. The

program will provide resources to mothers struggling with substance abuse so they can redirect their lives without sacrificing their jobs, their homes or the time they spend with their children. About 126 women and 214 children are expected to participate. Some 189 “appropriate family members,” like fathers, will also benefit from the grant.

Rosi Andrade, an associate re-search professor at the institute, began developing the program in March of 2011. Her brown eyes lit up as she spoke of the opportunities the

program will offer its participants, who are often denied drug treat-ment because their incomes are just high enough to exempt them from qualifying for state-funded health care.

“Drug addiction is the ultimate ball and chain,” Andrade said. “What I anticipate and hope the program will do is lift the veil of a drug addiction and open up a dif-ferent world for the women to en-gage in.”

By Savannah MartinDAILY WILDCAT

SAVANNAH MARTIN / DAILY WILDCAT

Rosi Andrade, an associate research professor at the Southwest Institute for Research on Women, examines a quilt made by hand to honor AIDS victims. SIROW, 2

Page 2: 3.2.12

on campus, speakers were also concerned about campus safety if the legislation were to pass.

“I am not anti-weapons, anti-gun,” said UAPD Police Chief Anthony Daykin. “Firearms are incredibly good tools, but everyone who uses them and knows them understand they are a liability — a liability that has to be managed.”

The position has been and re-mains that the campuses are safer if the Arizona Board of Regents has the ability to set the policies and rules that govern safety on campuses as well as keep guns off campus, Daykin added.

Coty McKenzie, the state director of Students for Concealed Carry, spoke about why he supports SB 1474. He emphasized the lack of negative re-ports in universities that allow guns on campus.

“I hear so much coming out

against the bill, but what do you have to back that up?” asked McKenzie, a political science senior. “There is no statistical evidence that shows that if guns are put on campus that it will be detrimental to that campus.”

McKenzie asked what the signs on campus indicating it is a weap-ons-free zone do to protect people. All this bill does is give you the op-tion to protect yourself on campus, he added.

Students shouted out questions that interrupted McKenzie during his speech, but were quickly silenced by ASUA President James Allen. Some attendees shared McKenzie’s opinion.

“I believe students should have a right to defend themselves on campus if they prove themselves to be law-abiding citizens,” said CJ Rodriguez, a junior studying Eng-lish. “To anyone who is opposed to guns on campus, just remember signs that say ‘no guns’ don’t stop bad guys.”

But some speakers argued crime

on campus is so low that there should not be a need for guns on campus.

“We think that the arguments that guns are needed for safety, and this whole bill to allow guns on campus, is solving a problem that does not exist,” said Jay Sanguinetti, co-pres-ident of Students Against Guns in Education and a third-year psychol-ogy graduate student. “There is no safety issue on campus, or if there is, it’s very small.”

After hearing speakers, some stu-dents agreed that the lack of crime on campus did not warrant the use of guns.

“Like the speakers were men-tioning, there haven’t really been that many problems and that much violence happened on the campus this last year,” said Alex Hernandez, a pre-physiology freshman. “I feel like if we have guns it could lead to a lot of acci-dental shootings. Also, I feel many students would not feel comfort-able coming on campus where people are going to be with guns.”

2 • Daily WilDcat NeWs • FriDay, March 2, 2012

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Daily WilDcatserving the university of arizona since 1899

Vol. 105, Issue 111

2

2011 Oscar-winning director visits UA to talk filmmaking

Janice biancavilla / Daily WilDcat

Oscar-winning filmmaker Mike Mills speaks to media arts students during a story-telling workshop in the louise F. Marshall building on thursday.

gunsfrom page 1

What theysaid

i am honestly so shocked, i cannot believe it. i am so grateful for all the support that i’ve had so far.

— Katy Murray,leading presidential candidate

““

i feel fantastic, it’s a tight race, we knew that coming into it. it’s just the nature of the candidates this year. it is incredibly competi-tive this year and i think it shows in the voting.

— Chad Travis,presidential candidate

“it is pretty apparent that it (being the write in candi-date) was something that i couldn’t overcome, but i couldn’t just not give it a shot. the chips fall as they may.

— Reid Nelson,defeated write-in candidate

““

Winning, losing and runner-up ASUA presidential candidates spoke about how they felt when the primary elections results were announced on Thursday.

Mac Miller, an American rapper from Pittsburgh, will be giving a free public concert on the UA Mall at 7 p.m.

The Associated Students of the University of Arizona is bringing Miller to campus because he is an up and coming artist, according to Jennifer Hernandez, associate di-rector of the ASUA Wildcat Events Board. Miller’s album Blue Slide Park debuted at No. 1 on the U.S. Billboard 200 chart on Nov. 16, 2011.

“We want people to check him (Miller) out,” Hernandez aid. “He just keeps getting bigger and bigger. We wanted to jump on the opportu-nity so we could get him to come.”

The concert will cost about $60,000 in total to put on. Miller’s artist fee cost is $40,000, and produc-tion costs are about $20,000, accord-ing to ASUA President James Allen.

Out of the total cost, ASUA’s special events budget covered $15,000. Allen raised the rest from various UA orga-nizations such as Student Affairs, the Student Union Memorial Center, the Center for Student Involvement and Leadership and Business Affairs.

Because the governing body doesn’t have the money to bring big artists to campus, Allen said, they wanted to bring someone that stu-dents could get excited about who

was rising in popularity.“Students pay for a lot already,” he

said. “The least we could do is make the concert free, public and fun.”

Another reason ASUA asked Miller to perform is because his artist fee was not nearly as expensive as past performers. Jay-Z, who came to campus in 2009, was paid $750,000 to perform. The 2009 concert in to-tal cost $1.4 million, but ASUA only collected a little more than $500,000 through merchandising and ticket

sales. To cover this loss, ASUA en-tered in an agreement with the UofA Bookstore, and is paying the book-store back in increments until 2014.

if you goMac Miller concert

Ua Mall

tonight at 7

Free to the public

MC Mac Miller to hold campus concert tonight

Photo courtesy of rostrum records

Rapper Mac Miller will hold a free concert on the Ua Mall tonight. Miller’s debut al-bum, Blue Slide Park, debuted at No. 1 on the U.S. Billboard 200 chart.

By Eliza MolkDaily WilDcat

Christopher Plummer’s mention of Mike Mills in his acceptance speech on Sunday could have gone unno-ticed, but Tucson’s film community met the man behind the Oscar.

In partnership with the Loft Cine-ma and Film Forward, the writer and director of the 2011 film “Beginners” led a storytelling workshop for stu-dents in the School of Theatre, Film and Television.

“You make a ton of mistakes as a director,” Mills said. “The trick is learning how to recover.”

A graduate from the School of Art at the Cooper Union for the Ad-vancement of Science and Art in New York City, Mills seeks ways to connect visual images with an audi-ence. After designing some album covers for Sonic Youth and The Beas-tie Boys, Mills had the opportunity to direct a music video for the band Air. It was through this experience that Mills discovered what he wanted to do, he said.

“The ability to communicate with people … that’s what a director re-ally does and it’s what I love to do,” he said.

During the workshop, Mills screened a collection of commer-cials he directed in the past, identi-fying certain technical and artistic challenges that arose in the produc-tion process. Mills said the role of a director is “the blend of being a

cocktail party host and a psychia-trist.” Students need to be prepared to handle any kind of dilemma with the utmost confidence and calm-ness, he said.

“It’s very vulnerable to step in front of the camera,” Mills said. “And I fall in love with anybody who steps in front of my camera.”

Mills told students who want to become directors that they must constantly be kind, because it al-lows the actors to relax into their characters.

“After hearing him talk, I want to work with him now,” said Bryn Booth, a theater arts freshman. “His good character is so awe-inspiring.”

As an acting student, Booth said she hopes to work with a director like Mills who can easily articulate what he wants the actors to do.

“We put an emphasis on personal voice,” said Lisanne Skyler, an assis-tant professor in the School of The-atre, Film and Television, “and our students want to find a voice that is similar to Mike Mills.”

In addition to the workshop, Mills attended a free screening of his film the night before at the Loft Cinema. During a question and an-swer session that followed, he told attendees that seeing parallels to his life in the film was both thera-peutic and honest.

“Every way of making a film is dif-ferent,” Mills said. “But first you have to figure out who you are before you can begin.”

By Kevin ReaganDaily WilDcat

One of the largest obstacles wom-en in this situation face is qualifying for medical insurance. They may have a job baby-sitting, cleaning houses or waiting tables, but they do not earn a living wage, according to Andrade. Still, their income levels are too high to receive assistance. The MOMs program has been cre-ated to provide care to women who fall in this category.

“This (the grant) was so excit-ing because it allows us to serve a population we can’t normally serve,” said Nancy Hopping, direc-tor of outreach at the Haven, the lo-cal treatment center that will house the program.

Unlike other drug treatment ser-vices, MOMs will be compatible with participants’ schedules.

“They wake up at 4 a.m., they go to groups all day long, and then they also have to go to court,” said Corrie Brinley, the institute’s lead health educator and assistant re-search social scientist. “We can’t just expect people to put their life on hold for six months.”

Treatment will include 60 days of residence at the Haven. Here, the women will address addiction issues through support groups and therapy. They will also receive health care, educational assistance and professional support.

The women’s children will be able to stay at the center during

their mothers’ rehabilitation as well. Many children whose mothers are drug addicts have mental and emotional problems that go unad-dressed because their mothers’ treatment takes precedence over their needs, according to Andrade.

“We’re looking at the drug treat-ment not as a temporary response, but as taking the family unit through the treatment,” she said.

With support from the MOMs program, women and their chil-dren will attempt to address the intergenerational nature of sub-stance abuse. Many women start using drugs in their adolescence as a way to cope with poverty and abuse, according to Brinley. Later in life, the addiction influences their children, who often fall vic-tim to the same circumstances that forced their mothers to start using in the first place.

“Children model the behavior they see,” Hopping said. “It keeps going and going and going.”

Part of breaking the cycle means raising awareness about the chal-lenges addicted mothers must overcome and removing the stigma associated with substance abuse, Andrade said.

“There’s a silence about the trau-ma that accompanies addiction, for women, for their children and for their families,” she said. “I think as a community we need to step up and talk about the topic openly and begin to address the issues openly. Too often we hide, we hide just as the women hide.”

siRow from page 1

Page 3: 3.2.12

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

Police Beat

Daily WilDcat • 3

By Elliot P. HopperDaily WilDcat

3

To sponsor this calendar, or list an event, email [email protected] or call 621.3425 Deadline 3pm 2 business days prior to publication

March 2-4Campus Events Campus Events

Wildcat Calendar“Serving by Doing” - Honors College Volunteer Week Want a fun and interactive way to support the community you live in? Looking for a way to interact with fellow students while assisting the less fortunate? The University of Arizona Honors College is hosting its inaugural volunteer week called “Serving by Doing.” In addition to the free fun, those who participate in three or more of these service days will receive a T-shirt. The events are open to all students, including non-honors students.Register online and fi nd more information on specifi c events and locations at honorsstudentcouncilaz.com and direct any questions to [email protected]. Monday, February 27, 2012 - Saturday, March 3, 2012. We look forward to seeing you!Exhibit “Company Town: Arizona’s Copper Mining Communities During 100 Years of Statehood” This exhibit at the UA Science-Engineering Library, shares 100 years of stories, struggles and triumphs from Arizona’s copper mining communities. It features an in-depth selection of photographs, pamphlets, original manuscripts, federal and state reports and personal papers drawn from UA Special Collections. The materials on display detail the history of eight Arizona mining communities – Ajo, Bisbee, Clifton-Morenci, Globe-Miami, Jerome, Ray-Sonora, San Manuel and Superior – and show that these communities were more than just a mine, and the people more than just mining workers. January 6, 2012 - March 9, 2012. Visit www.library.arizona.edu/applications/hours/ to view the hours of operation.

Celebrate Nurses Shaping Our Future: A Learning Intensive Honoring the 2010 Institue of Medicine “Future of Nursing” Report Celebrate Nurses Shaping Our Future --- That’s the topic for discussion on Saturday, March 3, 2012 at the UA College of Nursing. Keying off the 2010 Institute of Medicine Report “The Future of Nursing: Leading Change, Advancing Health”, the full-day event is designed for forward thinking nurses, alumni, faculty and students. Featured speakers include Joan Shaver, PhD, RN, FAAN (Professor and Dean at the University of Arizona College of Nursing), Jennifer Mensik, PhD, RN, NEA-BC, FACHE (Administrator for Nursing & Patient Care Services at St. Luke’s in Boise, Idaho), Kristen Swanson, PhD, RN, FAAN, (Alumni Distinguished Professor and Dean at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill) and Jean Baruch, PhD, RN, BSN (Executive Director and Founder at Beads of Courage). Audience dialogue in a town-hall format will be facilitated. The full-day will cost $50 with early registration and includes course materials (USB fl ash-drive loaded with the 2010 IOM Report and presentation slides), seven Continuing Education Units (CEUs) and lunch. Registration is available at nursing.arizona.edu and is limited to 100 participants. UA College of Nursing, 1305 N. Martin, 7:30am to 4:30pm Saturday, March 3rd.High School Shakespeare Competition Students from 20 high schools around southern Arizona will compete at the Marroney Theatre on the U of A campus Saturday, March 3, 9:30 a.m., to see who will go to New York for the National Competition. The winner there will receive a study tour in England. They will recite monologues from Shakespeare’s works. Free. Public is invited. Info: 975 2437. Marroney Theatre on UA campus.

Ansel Adams: The View from Here Perhaps no photographer’s work has enjoyed such popularity as Ansel Adams’s awe-inspiring views of the natural world. His early trips to the Yosemite wilderness in the 1910s, 1920s and 1930s informed the stylistic approach that made him famous. These treks included not only the physical activities of hiking, camping, and mountain climbing, but also social, intellectual, cultural, and spiritual elements. With forty photographs and supporting documents from the Ansel Adams Archive, Ansel Adams: The View from Here explores the relationship between Adams’s magical photographs of the American landscape - both its panoramic vistas and its intimate details - and how he came to understand the importance of his natural environment. Monday – Friday, 9am – 5pm, Saturday & Sunday, 1pm – 4pm through March 4th at The Center for Creative Photography: 1030 North Olive Road.“Mapping Arizona: From Mexican Territory to U.S. State” (exhibit) This is new exhibit on display in the UA Main Library from Jan. 6 – March 28, 2012, details the path Arizona took to become a state – fi rst as part of the Territory of New Mexico, then as the Territory of Arizona, fi nally attaining statehood in 1912. In addition to an array of historical maps, “Mapping Arizona” also includes books and unique documents selected from Special Collections extensive holdings. These additional materials offer insight into the stories that accompany the lines, boundaries, and borders within the maps. UA Main Library, 1510 E. University Blvd.

Science Downtown: Mars & Beyond “Mars and Beyond” brings you the wonders of Earth’s neighborhood, our solar system, in stunning color and clarity. The emphasis is on Mars, the “Red Planet,” which has fascinated Earthlings from earliest recorded history to today. You’ll see stunning space imagery from the Red Planet and the solar system, including samples of some of the latest NASA Mars mission spacecraft - the robotic planetary science tools that, after millennia of wondering, are now answering some of Mars’ and the solar system’s mysteries. “Mars and Beyond” digs deep into the mysteries of the Red Planet, including some of the latest cutting edge scientifi c work by UA teams on NASA’s HiRISE Mars high-resolution orbiting camera, the Phoenix Mars Mission science lab lander, the upcoming OSIRIS-REx, and more. Closed Tuesday-Wednesday. Monday, Thursday, and Sunday 9-5 p.m. Friday and Saturday 9-6 p.m. Admission prices vary. 300 E. Congress StreetErik Hite Foundation 5K Fun Run and 2-Mile Family Fun Walk A community event to remember the life and sacrifi ce of Tucson Police Offi cer Erik D. Hite. All proceeds will support the Erik Hite Foundation Child Care Center whose sole purpose is to provide affordable child care for active duty military and emergency services personnel. Early registration and check-in will take place on Friday, March 2 from 3:30 p.m.-6:00 p.m. at Performance Footwear located at 5350 E. Broadway Blvd, #170 (intersection of Broadway and Craycroft; southwest quadrant). Participants may also register on-line at www.erikhitefoundation.org or on the day of the event, March 3 at Reid Park, Ramada 22 from 7:00 a.m. - 8:00 a.m. Free breakfast will be provided by Chick-fi l-A for all participants. In addition, the Tucson Police, Tucson Fire Department and Davis Monthan Air Force Base will have exhibits at the event. Reid Park Ramada 22. Saturday, March 3rd. 8:00am to 11:00am

Campus Events Tucson

NatioN & World • Friday, March 2, 2011

Tornadoes in Illinois leave 5 dead, 1 wounded

HARRISBURG, Ill. — Nowhere in this town of about 9,000 felt the heartbreak of six lives lost in Wednesday’s tornado more deeply than Brady Street.

A short avenue known as a tight-knit neighborhood, Brady is where five of those killed in the storm had lived. Before the twister tore a nearly 8-mile path through Harrisburg and sur-rounding areas, 10 new duplexes stood on this street. After the storm, three duplexes remained.

“We’re in disbelief,” said Dena McDonald, daughter of victim Mary Ruth Osman, a Brady Street resident killed in the tornado. McDonald re-turned to the neighborhood Thursday to an empty lot that had been Osman’s home, and tried to salvage family me-mentos.

“There are no words to describe this,” she said, watching her husband dig through debris.

The personal effects of everyday life — family photos, bank statements,

holiday cards — were strewn about the neighborhood Thursday, soaking in puddles or sticking out from col-lapsed roofs. As residents continued to pick through the rubble, officials announced they were preparing for yet another band of storms Friday, al-though the latest National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration predic-tions showed the storms may not be as severe in Southern Illinois.

“We’re looking at the possibility of weather tomorrow, the severity we don’t know but we have to make sure that we are prepared,” said Stan Krushas, Illinois Emergency Management Agency Regional Coordinator.

On Brady Street, residents talked about the neighborhood’s closeness, how they often invited one another for dinner and regularly would cook meals for those too ill or otherwise unable to do so for themselves, residents said.

But now, cinderblocks littered the ground like discarded Lego pieces. Refrigerators and cars were crushed

beneath mountains of plywood and siding.

“It’s just devastating,” said Danny Morse, who with his wife over the past eight years built the neighborhood’s 10 duplexes. Morse, who also owns the homes, helped with the cleanup Thursday.

“One night you go to bed and ev-erything’s fine,” he said, “and the next morning you see this. ... It’s all gone.”

Nearby lay bare the concrete slab that used to anchor the home of Jaylynn Ferrell, 22, who lived next door to Osman. Ferrell, a registered nurse who worked nights in the intensive care unit at Harrisburg Medical Center, was killed in the tornado.

She had grown up in Herod, about 15 miles southeast of Harrisburg, rel-atives said. “A go-getter” who attend-ed First Baptist Church in Harrisburg, Ferrell “always wanted more,” said her paternal grandmother, Ann Ferrell.

“She would always go the extra mile to better herself,” Ann Ferrell said.

Senate halts measure reversing new contraceptives mandate

WASHINGTON — Senate Republicans, who narrowly lost a bid to roll back new federal rules requiring contraceptive cov-erage, were decidedly circumspect after being portrayed by Democrats as trying to interfere with women’s health options.

“I don’t have anything else to say,” said Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., after the GOP’s effort Thursday to curb the rule failed on a 51-48 vote.

Other Republicans were only a bit more talkative, and quickly shifted their remarks to the other issues — jobs and the economy — suggesting that the contraception fight may have waning appeal for the GOP.

“It was a good vote, but we do need to be focused on some of these debt is-sues — they’re just huge,” said Sen. Jeff Sessions of Alabama, the chairman of the Budget Committee.

All Republicans, except retiring Sen. Olympia J. Snowe of Maine, vot-ed for the legislation. Championed by Sen. Roy Blunt of Missouri, the bill would have allowed any employer to decline to cover contraception or any other health care service that it ob-jected to on moral grounds. Only such a broad exemption, Republicans ar-gued, could preserve employers’ reli-gious liberty.

But even as she voted with her party, Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, said she

hoped the chamber would “move for-ward to address the many important, pressing issues facing in our nation, and stop engaging in what is clearly an election-year ploy.”

Three Democrats joined the GOP on the vote: Bob Casey of Pennsylvania, Joe Manchin III of West Virginia and Ben Nelson of Nebraska joined Republicans to support the measure.

House Speaker John A. Boehner, R-Ohio, has vowed to continue to press the legislation.

The contraceptive rule springs from the nation’s new health care law, which requires employers to cover pre-ventive care, including contraceptives, at no cost. The Obama administration initially granted an exemption from the requirement to churches and syna-gogues, but not to religiously affiliated organizations such as Catholic hospi-tals and universities.

Facing blow-back from sought-after Catholic voters, the White House craft-ed a further compromise that directed insurers to pay for the birth control — a change that appeased key Catholic leaders but not the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.

Vice President Joe Biden acknowl-edged Thursday that the administra-tion’s first pass at the new rule “got screwed up,” according to video of his talk at Idaho State University, as

Politico first reported.Still, Americans support the Obama

administration’s current approach, according to new Kaiser Family Foundation poll.

The battle over birth control cover-age is occurring as a historic number of women are running for the male-dominated Senate.

Both sides have used the issue for fundraising efforts, but Democrats be-lieve they have found a potential open-ing with sought-after independent women voters they will need this elec-tion year.

Almost all of the leading Democratic women candidates for Senate — a re-cord six incumbents and five chal-lengers — will embark next week on a Western state campaign swing, in-cluding a stop in Los Angeles and one in San Francisco hosted by Twitter founder Jack Dorsey and Laurene Powell Jobs, the widow of Apple’s Steve Jobs.

“If you don’t like what Republicans are doing, send a woman to the Senate,” says a new online ad featuring the 11 women. “In fact, send them all.”

Republicans believe this is a risky strategy for the Democratic wom-en candidates, especially those in more conservative leaning states where there is broader support for the measure.

Mcclatchy tribune

Mcclatchy tribune

Take the money and runUniversity of Arizona Police Department officers got a call

from the surgery club’s administrative assistant at 11:41 a.m. on Wednesday about potentially stolen funds from the club’s bank account. The assistant told officers that a representative from JPMorgan Chase bank in Phoenix called the club, and said some-one had taken $1,283.87 from the account over multiple charges on Tuesday. Charges to the card included $277.84 from the Home Depot in Phoenix, $675.84 from a Kmart in Phoenix and $330.37 from the Home Depot in Tempe. The bank representative told the club’s assistant that they would not be reimbursed for these funds, since the card belonged to a club, not a single individual. The as-sistant canceled the card, but the card has yet to be returned or turned in. There are no suspects at this time.

Grab and goA UofA Bookstore employee caught a student trying to

steal textbooks at 3:24 p.m. on Tuesday. Bookstore employees watched the store’s surveillance camera and saw the man stuff two textbooks into his backpack and walk out the door. The un-dercover security officer followed the student until UAPD offi-cers were able to arrive.

UAPD officers and the undercover security officer caught the student at Speedway Boulevard and Mountain Avenue, where they asked him to walk back to the bookstore and pay for the books. The student grabbed the books from his backpack and asked, “If I give you these books back, will you let me go?” He then threw the books on the ground and crossed the intersec-tion illegally. Police chased him.

The student was arrested and booked at the Pima County Jail for theft and failing to comply with an officer. The bookstore priced the two books to total $280. The student was on proba-tion, and this was not the first time he had stolen from the book-store. UAPD called the student’s probation officer and informed him of the incident.

A runaway UAPD officers were on patrol at 12:05 a.m. on Saturday when

they noticed a student on the ground inside the Park Avenue Parking Garage. Officers watched as he tried to pick himself up off the ground and attempt to walk again. Officers noticed that his jeans and white T-shirt were dirty. The man then saw the pa-trol car, instantly stood up and attempted to run away.

The man ran across Sixth Street to the 7-Eleven gas station. He walked inside as officers pulled into the store’s driveway, snuck past the store employee and continued to run. An unmarked patrol car was down the street when the officers in the car saw the student run away and hide behind several bushes. The un-marked car then turned on its emergency lights and the student stopped.

When officers arrested him, they saw that his palms were bleeding and that his breath smelled strongly of alcohol. UAPD called the Tucson Fire Department to help bandage his hands. They cited the student for minor in possession of alcohol in body.

Noticed clocks on campus not working? Don’t know what ABOR is? Just wonder why something is the way it is?

Ask the Daily Wildcat! In the Daily Wildcat’s new column UA Eureka, editors will search out the answers to your questions.

Tweet questions with #uaeureka or email us at [email protected].

Abel Uribe/ MCT

Jeff Street, center, helps volunteer Melissa Cullison, left, emerge from his destroyed house as she and volunteer Heather Thompson help with cleanup efforts along brady Street in harrisburg, ill., on thursday.

Page 4: 3.2.12

• Email letters to: [email protected]

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

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

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

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

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

Columns, cartoons, online comments and letters to the editors represent the opinion of their author and do not represent the opinion

of the Daily Wildcat.

PERSPECTIVES DAILY WILDCAT • PAGE 4Perspectives Editor: Michelle A. Monroe • 520.621.7581 • [email protected]

4

President John F. Kennedy declared in 1961 that by the end of the decade, Americans

would set foot on the moon. On July 21, 1969, Neil Armstrong took his first step on the moon and accomplished that goal .

Chinese officials declared in late December 2011 that by the end of the decade, Chinese would set foot on the moon.

If they went there, the initial reaction of most Americans would probably be, “Been there, done that.” While the moon does lack diversity — only Americans and Russians have been there — China could probably do something better.

China may be 40 years behind our space program, but the speed at which it has advanced is pretty remarkable. In 2008, China sent three astronauts on a spacewalk, then successfully docked two unmanned spacecraft in orbit.

Granted, the missions aren’t very exciting. It’s not like China will put a giant wall around its flag on the moon that we could see from Earth. But, while Americans have been carpooling space shuttles with Russians, China has created a well-financed and quickly advancing space program.

Americans are still the leaders in space. The U.S., with some help from

the UA, has had some successful missions sending devices to Mars, and is seeking more knowledge about the rest of the universe with projects such as landing devices on asteroids. So, really, the U.S. should treat China’s space program as if it’s like a little brother taking his first steps. It’s pretty adorable.

But what if that adorable little brother gets better, farther and faster than the U.S.?

With each new political wave that washes over Washington, D.C., the space program gets questioned. Without the need to one-up the communists, politicians have little interest in space. Space won’t get them re-elected, and a manned flight to Mars costs at least $500 billion, so investing a lot of money into the program is not on the top of the political to-do list.

Space may not seem like the best place to make technological advancements, but since the Cold War, an excelling space program

has served as a symbol of the most powerful country in the world.

When a country is powerful enough that it can invest money on programs out of this world, it says a lot about its standing. And the fact that the U.S. can’t afford its space program right now is telling of how far it has fallen. America has to bum rides from Russia to get into orbit, and China just bought a brand new vehicle.

China’s rapid development of its space program indicates that it is making the technological advancements that the U.S. no longer can. While the Chinese explore space and new technology, Americans are left digging around for spare change to fund bombs and missiles. The U.S. should start worrying about being left in the space dust.

— Dan Desrochers is a chemistry freshman. He can be reached at

[email protected] or on Twitter via @WildcatOpinions.

If you’re looking for an excellent April Fool’s Day prank, tell your friends texting is legal while

driving.Starting April 1 , texting while

driving will be illegal in Tucson. If caught, drivers will have to pay a fine of at least $100 . If a driver gets in an accident because he or she was texting, it will cost them at least an additional $250 .

Police officials in Phoenix, where there is already a texting law, say it’s a hard law to enforce and is rarely upheld. University of Arizona Police Department officers won’t enforce the ban because they follow state law, not city ordinances .

The idea may appear to be a step toward making the streets safer, but it’s hard for anyone, even the police, to control what people do in the confines of their own vehicle.

For example, Tucson Mayor Jonathan Rothschild rear-ended a truck when he tried to grab a notebook from the passenger seat. He may not have been texting, but he was still distracted enough to be at fault for an accident.

Should the city then ban the act of reaching over to grab stuff in your car? Eating? Drinking your morning coffee? Changing the radio station?

Anything you do in your car that doesn’t deal with actually driving could be grounds for outlawing it.

The National Transportation Safety Board recommended all 50 states ban using cellphones and all other electronic devices while driving, including hands-free devices. But, while officials may have good intentions with these recommendations, studies show that these laws have little to no effect on traffic accidents.

The Highway Loss Data Institute released a study in 2010 that showed there hadn’t been a significant change in the rate of car accidents since before and after California’s 2008 anti-texting law was enacted.

“We’re not saying cellphone use is less risky than we thought,” said Russ Rader , a spokesman for the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, in an interview with the Los Angeles Times. “What we’re seeing in this study is that the hand-held cellphone laws are not reducing crashes.”

The institute also looked at three other states that had implemented texting bans and found that the number of accidents had actually increased, according to CBS News . Researchers told CBS that one reason could be that people text despite the law, but now hold their phones below the dashboard, taking their eyes off the road entirely.

Tucson’s ordinance allows police officers to pull drivers over for reading or composing a text message. So of course drivers are going to hold their phones in their laps to keep a police officer from seeing them.

Officials attempting to make the roads safer are actually increasing the danger.

Implementing a ban on using cellphones while driving is extreme and ineffective. And the Tucson City Council is naive to think people will suddenly stop texting and driving.

People will always find ways around the law.

So come April, Tucson drivers will be looking out for lurking police officers while they inevitably are texting and driving — just one more thing for drivers to do besides look in front of them. Congratulations, council members, can’t wait to text “LOL,” when this all blows up in your face.

— Serena Valdez is a journalism junior. She can be reached at

[email protected] or on Twitter via @WildcatOpinions.

The moon? Been there, done that

Texting ban sends wrong message

Dan Desrochers

DAILY WILDCAT

The moon? Been there, done that

Trending upCAT TRACKS

Trending down

A tough pill to swallow: The U.S. Senate voted Thursday to table a bill that would have allowed employers to opt out of providing health care coverage for procedures or treatments they morally disagree with. One reason cited for the failure of the bill, which was proposed by Republican Sen. Roy Blunt, was its ambiguous language that gave employers latitude to deny coverage for anything they disagreed with. Another reason is probably that senators heard the bill referred to as the “Blunt Amendment” and assumed they were voting against medical marijuana again.

A Syria’s situation: The United Nations voted Thursday to condemn the government of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, even as the regime ramps up attempts to quash a months-old rebellion in the country. Naturally, the measure was opposed by Russia, China and Cuba, those old bastions of progress. This marks the fourth time the council has approved measures decrying human rights violations in Syria since last March. Some would use this as further proof that the U.N. is little more than the Little League of Nations, but they’re super serious about this condemnation, for real. Well, you know what they say; fourth time’s the charm.

Davy Jones, rocker: Davy Jones, the front man for everyone’s favorite band The Monkees, died this week at the age of 66. While Jones and his mates are often regarded as a second-rate ripoff of The Beatles (right down to the notion that poor literacy is kewl), there’s no denying that The Monkees paved the road for all the commercially engineered pop groups that followed. OK, maybe that won’t make a daydream believer out of anyone, but there’s no denying Jones’ impact on the music industry. Rest in peace and soft rock on.

A tough bill to swallow: Students have 2,000 reasons to rejoice after Arizona state Rep. John Kavanagh said Wednesday that he would not include House Bill 2675 on any future agendas. The bill would have made students pay $2,000 of tuition out of pocket, unless they were on a full athletic or merit-based scholarship. It appears Kavanagh finally realized that an education is not like a bicycle, and students won’t “appreciate it more” if they pay more for it themselves.

Potshot the sheriff: Arizona’s own Sheriff Joe Arpaio is back in the news for an independent investigation he is conducting into President Barack Obama’s citizenship status. On Thursday, Arpaio released preliminary findings, which included such bombshells as the fact that they haven’t found anything yet. Regardless, Sheriff Joe has vowed to view all the evidence to see if he draws the same conclusion that every other logical person has. And you have to admit that, despite all his flaws, he knows how to spot reliable evidence. After all, he’s been withholding it for years.

They take the “A” out of accountability: The Associated Students of the University of Arizona Senate tried to strike club funding decisions on Wednesday because of allegations of inappropriate messages between appropriations board members. ASUA President James Allen said the measure was unnecessary because ASUA is not beholden to open meetings laws. Technically true, but don’t students have a right to know what goes into decisions that impact them? Every Skype or instant message written during ASUA meetings should become part of the official meeting, “totes,” “lols” and “OMGs” included. How else are we supposed to know why they decided to foist Mac Miller on the UA?

Serena Valdez

DAILY WILDCAT

— Daily Wildcat staff

Page 5: 3.2.12

Arts & Life DAiLy WiLDcAt • Page 5Arts & Life Editor: Jazmine Woodberry • 520.621.3106 • [email protected]

5

In the modern metal scope, bands are revered as classic if their longevity spans more than five years. Somewhere in the oppressive atmosphere of metalcore, cookie-cutter touring acts, and hairstyles that make most girls envious, Buffalo, N.Y.’s Every Time I Die remains on its own plane.

Most groups in the ever-shifting metal category should never last as long as this group has, yet the quintet defies traditional industry logic with its inventive style, timeless lyricism and relativity. This is the band that can go from onstage gods to the guys at the bar with an approachable nonchalance, making Every Time I Die an absolute rarity in music today.

Personas aside, Every Time I Die has been cranking out consistently incredible music for 14 years — and the latest album release, Ex Lives, is a highly anticipated addition that delivers riots by drawing on old formulas and new inspiration.

Of the entire Every Time I Die catalog, no album has felt so collectively self-aware as Ex Lives. Vocalist and lyricist Keith Buckley has channeled a quarter-life crisis into a relatable sentiment that muses on the herd mentality of his peers. Buckley’s lyrics, which include Friedrich Nietzsche references and violent sarcasm, have always been a treat to hear and to dissect, but one feels familiarly uneasy listening to Ex Lives. However, this fact shouldn’t scare off listeners. Solace can be found in Buckley’s miserably thematic musings without feeling self-deprecating or pretentious.

The frenetic opener “Underwater Bimbos From Outer Space” captures this motif perfectly with a distorted Buckley chanting, “I want to be dead with my friends,” over a mathcore melody. The song only pauses three-quarters through to dive into a swaggering downtempo riff that’s far slower than any other track to date, yet just as brutalizing. It’s clear from this introduction that Ex Lives

is a calculated clusterfuck, perfect for flipping cars and inciting riots.

Although the overall theme of the album is brooding introspection, there’s always that one song

on any ETID album that is the ideal soundtrack to slamming tequila shots. “Partying Is Such Sweet Sorrow” is a tongue-in-cheek masterpiece with its banjo opening and Buckley’s Southern crooning. It quickly blooms into a palm-muted chromatic frenzy, serving the band’s canon right by inspiring the listener to drink 100-proof liquor and make bad decisions.

“The Low Road Has No Exits” breathes fire while incorporating all of the post-The Big Dirty ETID elements. A bouncy two-note opening line makes way for a melodic onslaught ravaged by Buckley’s strained vocals. Vicious halftime breaks are a hallmark of the album, and even they feel faster than they should be on this song, which closes with a minute of atmospheric noise akin to a cleaner version of the intro to “Roman Holiday.”

If there were a post-apocalyptic land dominated by leather-clad strippers and ruled by Mad Max, “Revival Mode” would be its national anthem. It’s a slower, woozy headbanger that fully expresses Ex Lives’ dark sentiment, with guitarist

and sibling Jordan Buckley shredding his ass off halfway through. The track is a reflective breather from many of the other tracks, allowing the listener to give their neck muscles a break before diving into the power-chord bulldozers that encompass the album’s last three songs.

Ex Lives’ slightly remodeled take on ETID’s sound will definitely polarize some of the band’s cult following. Like any hardcore band, fans whip themselves into a frenzy at the first inkling of a new musical direction, but everything on Ex Lives seems positive. The most prominent example is the energy that drummer Ryan “Legs” Leger brings to the album. Rather than other band members driving the tempo, as they have on previous albums with former drummer Mike Novak, Leger’s tailored style puts the band through the paces on “Holy Book of Dilemma” and “I Suck

(Blood).” This welcome addition to the ETID lineup seems to have incited a revival for a tenured act, making its musical interaction tight from experience yet simultaneously bright-eyed and raw.

Throughout its entirety, Ex Lives hardly lets up on its auditory onslaught. Between crisp vocal lines and larynx-shredding screams, the

angular guitar parts, and the most technical drumming on an album to date, it’s clear that Every Time I Die still reigns supreme. The band has transcended typical demographics and defied genres for years, and here’s hoping that doesn’t change anytime soon.

The university is packed with frozen yogurt joints on and around campus, but Josie’s on Park Avenue and Speedway Boulevard brings something different to the scene. Josie’s, a self-serve frozen yogurt shop, prides itself on its healthy treats, which contain antioxidants and added vitamins, according to Josie’s owners.

All flavors are gluten-free as well, with the exception of peanut butter and cookies and cream, said Adina Knell, an employee at Josie’s. There is no high fructose corn syrup in any of the yogurt and stevia, a natural sweetener that can be used in much smaller quantities than sugar, is used in the pecan pie flavored yogurt. Josie’s is also free of emulsifiers, artificial stabilizing chemicals that keep ice cream frozen for longer.

Josie’s offers a bank of about 50 flavors that are featured and switched out every so often, including vanilla, milk chocolate, orange Creamsicle, mango tart, margarita and dark chocolate.

“I’ve sold mostly cookies and cream and peanut butter because they taste so much like what they are,” Knell said.

Seasonal flavors like eggnog and pumpkin also grace the Josie’s menu from time to time, according to Austin Sandiford, a Josie’s employee.

Josie’s may allow UA students to use their CatCards eventually, but “it’s not set in stone,” Knell said. She is, however, confident that her place of employment outshines Pinkberry by a mile.

“Pinkberry sticks your toppings on for you,” she said. “We’re self-serve. This is more fun.”

Josie’s toppings include everything from “poppers” (juice-filled boba), various fruits, brownie bites, peanuts, M&M’s, gummy worms, and Ghirardelli caramel and chocolate sauces.

“It’s retro and very youthful,” said customer Angela Smith, 19, of the look and feel of the joint. Smith said its gluten-free options is one

of her favorite aspects of the shop. So, what about Pinkberry? “I like the vibe and the

decorations inside,” said Marie Cox, a pre-retail and consumer science sophomore. “And I like the plain yogurt because it tastes like actual yogurt.”

It seems that Pinkberry’s location in the Student Union Memorial Center also makes it a worthy adversary.

“It’s on campus so it’s convenient,” said Pinkberry employee and pre-family studies and human development student Taylor Piazza. She also commented on its fresh ingredients and said you don’t feel heavy after eating the frozen yogurt.

It looks like students and yogurt lovers alike will have to try both shops and see which one satisfies their sweet tooth most.

Review

By Alyssa DeMemberDAiLy WiLDcAt

By K.C. LibmanDAiLy WiLDcAt

If you goEx Lives drops on Tuesday, on

Epitaph Records. Every Time I

Die will be supporting The Devil

Wears Prada at the Rialto Theatre

on March 17.

GRade: a+

As brutal as ever: Every Time I Die’s Ex Lives The esteemed Buffalo, N.Y., quintet delivers its most vicious album to date

Campus-area yogurt shop hopes to give Pinkberry new rival

With a free Mac Miller concert on the UA Mall you might think that your weekend plans are set, but there are other options to spice up the weekend.

That is all: an evening with John Hodgman

“The Daily Show with Jon Stewart” regular John Hodgman is coming to the Rialto Theatre this weekend. Also a regular on NPR’s “This American Life,” the comedian “will explain and illustrate most every subject you can imagine, including: how to enjoy fine wine, how to commit the perfect crime, how to make money and find happiness as a deranged millionaire, the coming global superpocalypse known as RAGNAROK, and also, if pressed, SPORTS,” according to a media release.

Ninth annual Moda Provocateur show

The Southern Arizona AIDS Foundation is hosting the ninth annual Moda Provocateur fashion and fundraising show at the Tucson Convention Center this weekend. The event will showcase local salons such as Avalon for Hair, Skin & Nails, Ahead of Style, Aveda Institute of Tucson, J. Scordato, Mia Bella and Style 7 as well as dancers from Fourth Avenue’s Breakout Studios. The main show begins at 6 p.m., with pre-show dinner and entertainment for those with VIP tables or runway tickets. All event proceeds will go to the Southern Arizona AIDS Foundation.

If you go That is all: an evening

with John Hodgman

The Rialto Theatre

318 E. Congress St.

Saturday, 6 p.m.

Tickets range from $36 for gold circle, $26 for floor reserve and $21 reserve seated balcony

740-1000

www.rialtotheatre.com

If you go Ninth annual Moda

Provocateur

Tucson Convention Center Grand Ballroom

260 S. Church Ave.

Sunday, doors open at 4:30 p.m., dinner at 5 p.m., show at 6 p.m.

General admission tickets begin at $35

628-7223

www.saafmoda.org

Our Weekend Picks

By Arts & Life StaffDAiLy WiLDcAt

KeiTH HicKMaN-PeRfeTTi / DAIly WIlDCAT

Austin Sandiford pours a sample at Josie’s, a new frozen yogurt shop on Speedway Boulevard and Park Avenue, on Thursday.

daily wildcaT file PHoTo

UA students wait to take the catwalk in 2009’s Moda Provocateur show.

PHoTos couRTesy of eveRy TiMe i die aNd billboaRd.coM

Throughout its entirety, Ex Lives hardly lets up on its auditory onslaught. It’s clear Every Time I Die still reigns supreme.

““

Familiar funny men and catwalkers for a cause to excite Tucson

Page 6: 3.2.12

SportS Daily WilDcat • Page 6Sports Editor: Alex Williams • 520.626.2956 • [email protected]

scoreboard: NBA Phoenix 104, Minnesota 95 NCAAB no. 16 Michigan 72, illinois 61 no. 1 KentucKy 79, georgia 49

6

Sunday’s game between Arizona and ASU isn’t about rivalries. It’s not about the Territorial Cup or the school up north versus the school down south.

For Arizona, it’s the game that could land the Wildcats a first-round bye in the Pac-12 Tournament while keeping their NCAA Tournament hopes alive.

“Our goal is to play on Thursday and

I know that we have to beat Arizona State to make that happen,” said UA head coach Sean Miller. “We’re just try-ing to focus on the task at hand.”

That task is taking care of an ASU team that sits in 10th place in the Pac-12 Conference and has played injury roulette all season long. But with little to play for besides the sheer joy of a rivalry victory, Arizona has to mind its P’s and

The Arizona men’s basketball team recharged its season by winning seven of its last eight games and working its way into NCAA Tournament bubble team talks by playing its best basketball in February.

The Wildcats hit the 20-win mark and this week’s ESPN Bracketology has the Wildcats as a No. 11/No. 12 seed in the Big Dance.

But the Wildcats’ ticket hasn’t been punched quite yet. CBSsports.com’s Jerry Palm has Arizona listed as part of the first four teams out of the tournament. And right now, head coach Sean Miller agrees with him.

On Thursday, Miller said he still thinks Arizona’s current resume, in-cluding a would-be win over ASU on Sun-day, isn’t enough for the Wildcats to make the NCAA tournament cut.

“We have to beat Arizona State,” Miller said. “I think if we (don’t), I don’t think that we’re going to have any merit. I re-ally look at us having to win the conference tournament. That’s our mindset.”

Miller’s goals for his team certainly make sense from a coach-

ing perspective, but many think the Wildcats should make the cut if they beat in-state rival ASU on Sunday and win at least one game in the Pac-12 Conference Tournament. Miller is set on a concrete plan: Get the automatic bid that comes with winning the confer-ence tournament, rather than sit and fidget with the rest of the country on Selection Sunday.

“We’re probably in a category of about 20 teams that’s trying to get eight, four, six spots, whatever it is,” Miller said. “And it’s so much about winning. You have to keep going.”

Forward Solomon Hill said the desire to win the Pac-12 Tournament has always been the team’s goal, but a few key losses along the way have changed

Arizona’s road to the NCAA Tournament.“We’ve heard every story, from losing at Washing-

ton makes it a not-for-sure for us, to go to March Mad-ness. We’ve heard we have to win it all,” Hill said. “We have to beat ASU and get as far as the second round. But I think everybody knows that we want to win.”

Miller said the team’s focus was to go as far as it can in the Pac-12 Tournament, and that’s a much safer bet than counting on the parity of the Pac-12 and other teams to help the Wildcats out.

Barring a Utah upset of Oregon on Saturday, the Wildcats are probably going to be the conference’s fourth seed, which would likely match them up against Colorado for the third time this season.

“There’s so many teams right now in the next 10, 14 days that are going to play themselves in by winning three or four games,” Miller continued.

Miller then cited Butler, UConn and Virginia

As the Arizona football team gears up for its first spring practice on Monday afternoon, head coach Rich Rodriguez is tempering his ex-pectations.

“This spring is different from our future springs in that it will be as much an evaluation as it will be teaching,” Rodriguez said at a Thursday press conference in McKale Center. “Obviously you want to teach fundamentals and teach your schemes, but for us, this being the first spring, we also want to do a good job of evaluating and seeing what our strengths and weaknesses are.”

Rodriguez said that while he was a little surprised about where the play-ers are at from a physical standpoint, it made sense, considering Arizona was unable to make a bowl game last season, thus extending the players’

offseasons. Rodriguez wasn’t sure if they even did a lot of lifting from

mid-season on.“Mentally they were ready (for

spring workouts),” Rodriguez said. “We were really weak, and still are as a football team. That’s the bad news. The good news is I think our guys have gotten stronger over the last month and a half and still have an-other five to six months to get ready.”

An adjustment period is to be ex-pected whenever a new coach takes over a college football program. From a recruiting standpoint, from a personnel standpoint, from a work-out standpoint and from a sche-matic standpoint, things will be dif-ferent. And it will be ugly at the first spring practice — a fact Rodriguez knows all too well.

“First spring in Glenville State, there were only about 25 guys on the team and I was bigger than all of them, so I knew we wouldn’t even get a first down,” Rodriguez

For the first time this season, the Arizona softball team will play a week-end series instead of a tournament. The College of Charleston will play the Wildcats in a three-game series that starts tonight at 6 at Hillenbrand Stadium.

While the College of Charleston may not sound like it is a serious threat to Arizona, C of C’s junior pitcher Stepha-nie Saylors was named the Southern Conference Pitcher of the Week fol-lowing a perfect game and career-high 12-strikeout performance. Arizona has struggled hitting early in games this season, and facing Saylors could pres-ent problems, said head coach Mike Candrea.

“Hitting is a very contagious skill,

a difficult skill,” Candrea said. Some-times you match up with pitchers you have a good database with, and the ball is big. Other times, it’s not that big and the ball looks like an aspirin. It’s hard to duplicate those things in practice.”

Arizona benefits from playing at home, where it is a perfect 5-0 after the Hillenbrand Invitational, while Charleston has yet to venture away from Patriots Point this season.

Last weekend, in the Cathedral City Classic, Arizona’s defense and pitch-ing were able to get them out of ruts against some of the better competi-tion it faced, but the real stars of the show were the younger players and role players that stepped up in lieu of the regulars getting it done. Candrea looks to have the same sort of luck this

When the Arizona baseball players receive their schedule at the beginning of the season, head coach Andy Lopez writes down the date and the time and nothing else.

No mention of the opponent because, for Lopez, it doesn’t matter.

“(I teach this every) day that they come out,” he said. “Really, our opponent is a secondary issue, whether it’s Harvard or Auburn or Stanford or ASU, it’s how Arizona plays the game, and we missed that the last couple of weeks.”

The No. 7 Wildcats (5-2) will have a chance to clinch their first series sweep of the season against the Harvard Crimson in a three game matchup this weekend.

Tonight’s contest will mark the first time in the 107-year history of Arizona baseball that it will take

on Harvard.The Wildcats have already had time to adjust with

seven games in the books so far, but tonight’s game is the first of the regular season for Harvard.

While the Crimson are not supposed to be con-tenders in the Ivy League this season, Arizona junior right fielder Robert Refsnyder knows that his oppo-sition certainly has the ability to pull an upset.

Refsnyder, who’s hit safely in all seven games and is leading the Wildcat starters with a .448 average, also said the series sweep will come eventually, it’s just going to take the right mindset.

“We just need to be mentally tough,” he said. “I’m sure it will help to get used to the three-game sched-ule, but it should be simple enough, we’re on the field for nine innings and we should give our all.”

This past offseason, Refsnyder got a chance to play some summer ball with a few of the guys from Harvard.

“We definitely won’t be the smartest guys on the field, I’m sure,” Refsnyder joked. “They execute the game well and I’m sure they’re conscious of every inning.”

keith hickman-perfetti / Daily WilDcat

arizona head coach Rich Rodriguez be-gins his first spring practice on Monday.

Just 1 left

Rodriguez tempering spring expectations

Gordon Bates / Daily WilDcat

arizona hosts Harvard this weekend for a three-game series. the Wildcats have battled shaky bullpen pitching and an inconsistent lineup so far this season.

Baseball hosts Harvard, still battling bullpen

Softball hosts first weekend series early in season

spring, 8

By Zack rosenblattDaily WilDcat

colin darland / Daily WilDcat

arizona forward Jesse Perry drives against aSU on Dec. 31, 2011. Perry and the Wildcats will take on aSU in tempe, ariz., on Sunday.

Arizona hoops takes on ASU on Sunday in the Wildcats’ regular-season finale

r i v a l r y w e e k e n d

UA’s resume isn’t enough, Miller says

colin darland / Daily WilDcat

arizona forward Solomon Hill said the Wildcats’ march to the postseason needs to start with a win over aSU.

By nicole DimtsiosDaily WilDcat

By Mike schmitzDaily WilDcat

We’re probably in a category

of about 20 teams that’s trying to get

eight, four, six spots, what-

ever it is. — Sean Miller,

UA head coach

Hoops head coach says the Wildcats need to win the Pac-12 Tournament

resuMe, 8 Asu, 8

By Cameron MoonDaily WilDcat

softBAll, 8

Arizona welcomes the Crimson in search of first sweep of season

By Dan KohlerDaily WilDcat

BAseBAll, 8

Page 7: 3.2.12

Daily WilDcat • 7Friday, March 2, 2012

7

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Page 8: 3.2.12

8 • Daily WilDcat SportS • FriDay, March 2, 2012

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weekend.“It was good that we had some

other people step up,” he said. “The thing about a long season is that you’re going to have a pocket of people that are hot and a pocket of people that are not. Hopefully, if the lineup is good, you’re not rely-ing on the same four all the time, it rotates. This team can rely on nine different people.”

Usually in midweek practice, players talk about trying to hit bet-ter or working on getting to the ball quicker, but this week senior Lini Koria wants to do something a little simpler.

“Most important is recovering,”

she said. “In practice we need to work on our offense. We could have done a lot better offensively and defensively against the teams we played. We need to see the ball a little bit better.”

Aside from the stellar pitching that Kenzie Fowler has provided, pacing the team with her 1.98 ERA, the Wildcats have been helped by senior transfer Jessica Spigner’s .368 batting average and junior Brigette Del Ponte, who was named Pac-12 Player of the Week this week.

Del Ponte hit .571 in the Cathe-dral City Classic with two home runs. She also had eight crucial RBIs in the tournament, which led the team. Del Ponte also did not strike out the entire weekend. On the season, Del Ponte is hitting .426 with five home runs and 18 RBIs.

softball from page 6

Q’s against a Sun Devils team coming off of a four-point win against USC in Wells Fargo Arena.

“It’s a great arena and a really hos-tile environment,” said UA senior guard Kyle Fogg. “It’s kind of fun just going in there and having all the fans yell at you. It should be a tough game.”

Mayes improvingThe days of Miller’s seven-man ro-

tation are coming to an end.Sophomore point guard Jordin

Mayes went through his first full prac-tice this week after missing five games due to a stress reaction in his foot and

will play against ASU.Mayes, who is averaging 5.6

points on 37.7 percent shooting and 31.9 percent from three, played just two minutes against USC last Thursday and was available for the UCLA game, although he didn’t see the floor. But after a couple days of rest, Mayes is now nearing 100 per-cent as the Wildcats enter the home stretch.

“This week is really a gift for him,” Miller said of Arizona only playing one game this week. “A week without a game and an opportunity for us to see him, and also I think, for him to see himself be successful and get up and down pain free.”

Mayes, who began the year as Arizona’s starting point guard before

moving to the bench and playing around 20 minutes per game, most likely won’t have the same role as he did before the injury.

“Our team has changed and I don’t want to put him in a bad position,” Miller said. “I do think he’ll be more ready to contribute as opposed to just getting him in the game.”

Natyazhko’s disappointing season continues

If there’s one time Arizona could use center Kyryl Natyazhko, it’s this Sunday.

ASU plays two traditional big men in 7-foot-2 center Jordan Bachynski and 7-foot center Ruslan Pateev, and

Arizona’s 6-foot-11 big man would appear to be the perfect matchup.

But if Natyazhko, who has been a major disappointment in his ju-nior season, playing in only an aver-age 7.8 minutes per game in 21 of 30 contests, continues to struggle with rebounding, he’ll remain planted on the bench.

“Rebounding is by far the thing that he needs to work on the most — and I don’t know through three years how you work on that — but until he’s able to contribute there, it’s just difficult to play him in the game,” Miller said of Natyazhko, who’s averaging 1.7 re-bounds per game.

Miller was counting on Natyazh-ko to have a big season for Arizona, evident by the fact that he started

Arizona’s first six games. But he said Natyazhko coming to Arizona con-siderably overweight set him back big time.

“You gain that much weight, al-though you’re working hard, you’re working hard to get back to the same place that you should have been at three months ago,” Miller said.

Natyazhko was able to rebound from an underwhelming season down the stretch last year and he could be-gin that process against ASU’s big men on Saturday, but he hasn’t shown any signs to suggest he will.

“I’m sure deep down he’s frustrated by that and I would say we are as well,” Miller said. “That’s the situation we’re in. Maybe, like a year ago, he can con-tribute down the stretch.”

asUfrom page 6

ColiN PreNger / Daily WilDcat

the arizona softball team is taking a break from playing tournaments to host the college of charleston for three games this weekend at Hillenbrand Stadium.

online at DAilYWilDCAT.CoM

check out updates on women’s basketball, track and tennis action over the weekend.

Commonwealth as examples of teams that were not in the NCAA tournament before winning their conference tournament. The comparison is clear: build momentum through the conference postseason and hope it punches a ticket to March Madness and carries throughout the tournament, just like it did for all three of the teams which were not NCAA Tournament locks until they won their conference championships.

Butler, UConn and VCU all went on to the Final Four round of March Mad-ness last year, with UConn eventually defeating Butler for the NCAA title.

“You look at successful teams that have won their conference tourna-ment and they keep going,” Hill said. “UConn did it last year. And they went and won the NCAA Championship.

“So building momentum is al-ways good for us. We build through the Pac-12 Tournament and get that automatic bid and then we don’t have to worry about it,” Hill contin-ued. “I think the guys will really feed off of that.”

said. “First spring at Tulane, it was really ugly. If there was an NCAA record for sacks allowed in spring practice then we would have won it for sure.”

He went on to describe much of the same ugliness at the beginning of his stops in Clemson, West Vir-ginia and, most recently, Michigan.

Rodriguez knows the first spring practice won’t be the prettiest sight, which is why the team is in for a rude awakening.

“The first couple of practices will be a surprise to them, just the pace and tempo and how fast we move,” Rodriguez said. “There’s not a lot of standing around, we blow

a siren when it’s game mode and everything is full speed. We have a stop light that tells everyone we’re in full speed mode, yellow when in teaching mode, or the one or two times in practice when it’s red, they can stand on their head and go in the shade. We’ll probably even have popsicles for them.”

When all is said and done this spring, Rodriguez knows two things, above all, will help determine if the team had a successful spring season: its physical and mental toughness.

“Mental toughness is gauged in a lot of areas,” Rodriguez said. “It’s gauged in the weight room, it’s gauged in early morning workouts and it’s gauged in the spring practic-es. We have no chance at success if we don’t get mentally and physically tough. None.”

Bullpen, bullpen, who’s got the bullpen

Friday and Saturday starters Kurt Heyer and Konner Wade have been lights out to start the 2012 campaign, but the guys waiting behind them, not so much.

So far, Lopez has been calling on his juniors, like Nick Cunning-ham and Stephen Manthei, to step up but nothing’s been doing it.

Cunningham is the owner of a horrendous ERA of 18.00 through

2.1 innings pitched and Manthei is not much better, with an ERA of 12.00 through three innings.

“I still want to see those ju-niors perform, and they should, they have a better resume,” Lo-pez said. “They’ve been in post-season games; they’ve pitched in postseason games, as opposed to some of the freshmen. They’re also at the end of their careers here and I want them to throw well on a consistent basis, and I haven’t seen that yet.”

As of now, it’s actually some of the freshmen that are showing a presence on the mound, like Lu-cas Long and Mathew Troupe, who’ve been dealing well for Lo-pez so far.

baseball from page 6

spring from page 6

resUme from page 6

Page 9: 3.2.12

DAILY WILDCAT • 9COMICS • FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 2012

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10 • Daily WilDcat FriDay, March 2, 2012

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