Arizona Daily Wildcat Online
sections
Front Page
News
Opinions
Sports
Go Wild
Live Culture
Police Beat
Datebook
Comics
Crossword
Special Sections
Photo Spreads
Classifieds
The Wildcat
Letter to the Editor
Wildcat Staff
Search
Archives
Job Openings
Advertising Info
Student Media
Arizona Student Media Info
UATV -
Student TV
 
KAMP -
Student Radio
The Desert Yearbook
Daily Wildcat Staff Alumni

Scams involving Wildcat, AZ Republic circulate on campus


By Jesse Lewis
Arizona Daily Wildcat
August 23, 2005
Print this

Students being approached by newspaper solicitors should be cautious of their claims after an unknown man has reportedly been telling students The Arizona Republic is a requirement for UA courses.

Students have reported being approached at their homes by an unknown person wearing a UA T-shirt and claiming the university is requiring a subscription to the Phoenix-based paper for the semester, said journalism adviser Paul Johnson.

Johnson said he has been telling anyone reporting a similar incident the Republic is not a requirement for journalism courses and to make sure they give their information to a legitimate sales person.

"If someone shows up claiming to represent the Arizona Republic, definitely check further with their instructor and check your syllabus for required reading," Johnson said.

The University of Arizona Police Department received one report of a similar incident occurring at 6:10 p.m. Sunday when a student reported that a clean-cut, suspicious looking white man came to her door, reports stated.

She said the man told her the UA had paid for subscriptions of the Republic for students. The man allegedly told the student all she had to pay for was the delivery fee and delivery could begin as early as yesterday morning, reports stated.

According to the report, when the student said she was not interested, he asked if her neighbor was a student. The student said she felt the man was knocking on doors at random with a scam, reports stated.

Students have also reported being approached by an unknown man who was urging students to purchase a home-delivery service for the Arizona Daily Wildcat.

Wildcat Editor in Chief Aaron Mackey said the Wildcat is free for all students and does not offer a delivery service.

Anyone who is asked to pay for a Wildcat delivery service should contact police, Mackey said.

UAPD spokesman Sgt. Eugene Mejia said if students see anyone who looks suspicious or out of the ordinary to contact UAPD.

Mejia said if the man is misrepresenting himself he is committing a crime and police will investigate.

"If the person is representing themselves as a vendor and is not, he is misrepresenting himself and we want to investigate," Mejia said.

Anyone with information on suspicious solicitations can contact UAPD at 621-8273.



Write a Letter to the Editor
articles
Book prices soar on campus
divider
UA cracks top 100 of best universities
divider
No insurance needed for health center
divider
Setting tuition, finding Likins' replacement top ASUA agenda
divider
Diversity not about numbers, officials say
divider
Scams involving Wildcat, AZ Republic circulate on campus
divider
Construction projects work to minimize mess
divider
Fast Facts
divider
Police Beat
divider
Datebook
divider
Restaurant and Bar Guide
Housing Guide
Search for:
advanced search Archives

NEWS | SPORTS | OPINIONS | GO WILD
CLASSIFIEDS | ARCHIVES | CONTACT US | SEARCH



Webmaster - webmaster@wildcat.arizona.edu
© Copyright 2005 - The Arizona Daily Wildcat - Arizona Student Media