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Tuesday, February 22, 2005

Bill could help rape victims

Phoenix - Health professionals are not required to provide information about emergency contraception when treating a rape victim, but a bill at the Legislature would require them to do so and help to prevent thousands of unwanted pregnancies from rape each year, say supporters.

An Arizona Senate bill would require any health professional treating a victim of sexual assault to provide the patient with information on emergency contraception and then, if the patient requested it, to provide them with the contraception. [Read article]

· Girl first in Arizona to get heart surgery through veins
· Greeks collaborate to enhance black awareness
· Caffeine craze unhealthy for study habits
· Small crowd for senate candidates
· Admin propose to slash budget by 1/2 percent, centralize funds
· Program fees not a focus for NAU, ASU
· Café Sonora gets a menu makover
· Author preserves Mexican culture
· ASU Student Tries to Win Big on Who Wants to be a Millionaire
· On the spot!
· Fast facts

Men's Hoops: Wildcats crack top 10 in polls

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With a number of significant losses in the top 10 last week, the Arizona men's basketball team moved up in the rankings to No. 8 in the ESPN/USA Today coaches poll after being No. 11 last week.

In The Associated Press poll, the Wildcats currently stand at No. 9, up one spot from last week.

Teams who are ahead of Arizona in the rankings, but lost last week include No. 5 Kentucky, No. 6 Wake Forest, No. 7 Duke and No. 8 Kansas, who lost twice. [Read article]

· Commentary: NHL should take cues from college
· Senior swimmer Mason puts in work
· New tennis coach shapes players, people
· Women's golf tied for second at season's lone home meet

Point/Counterpoint: Should military recruiters be allowed access?
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While the UA still allows them, a consortium of 26 law schools has been denying military recruiters access to campus as a response to the military's "don't ask, don't tell" policy toward gays. Should schools be allowed to keep recruiters off campus?

Law schools have right to oppose a government policy without losing funding

Law schools around the country determine who is allowed to recruit on their campuses based on strict anti-discrimination policy under the guidelines of the American Association of Law Schools. These guidelines and bylaws state that professional recruiters at law schools may not engage in hiring discrimination on the basis of race, gender, religion or sexual orientation. Law schools deny access to any employer that would violate this edict. [Read article]

· Editorial: Mall evangelist takes advantage of free speech
· Mailbag

Latest Issue: February 22, 2005

Hookah offers safe and relaxing alternatives

College students are always looking for the newest, hippest and easiest trends to keep their bored little minds occupied. While smoking weed will always be fashionable, it's illegal too. As an alternative, locals, young and old, are getting together to smoke the legal way, with the help of the hookah.

The pastime has become even more popular in Tucson since Roger Smiley and his wife Sarah opened Smiley's Ultimate Hookah Lounge and Coffee last year. [Read article]

Latest Issue: February 17, 2005


 

If you slapped some fake tits on him, then dolled him up in a wig and makeup, Gael García Bernal would be just as hot as a woman. Fortunately, he's still all man after filming "Bad Education," in which he plays a gender-bending director trying to turn a friend's traumatic childhood into a film.

At 27, Bernal is a rarity in cinema, rising to fame and heartthrob status by acting exclusively in Spanish-language films. He banged his brother's wife in "Amores Perros," had a three-way with his real-life best friend in "Y Tú Mamá También" and played a seductive priest in "El Crimen del Padre Amaro." [Read article]

· Tucson and Campus Calendar
· 'Krazy Kat' was all that
Campus
· Poet Laureate to visit UA
· Student gallery draws on love for horses
Film
· A good 'Bad Education'
Music
· The Blood Brothers revive punk
· Blonde Redhead takes it easy on tour
· Modest Mouse amazes Mesa
· KC brings sunshine to Tucson
· The Milli Vanilli Factor

Literature
· 'Sight Hound' a great first novel
 

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