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Caliente Contest
UA homecoming this weekend is
all about Wilbur the Wildcat - the
beloved and furry mascot turns
50 on Saturday.

The UA used real animals as
mascots off and on between the
early 1900s and the late 1950s
(with at least one tragic mishap),
until two UA students (Richard
Heller and John Paquette)
pitched the idea of using a
costume-wearing human.

Wilbur made his first appearance
at the UA vs. Texas Tech football
game on Nov. 7, 1959, and was
an immediate hit, according to a
UA Web site.

Wilbur's look has evolved over the
years. It was during one of those
costume makeovers that Wilma
the Wildcat was created.

She made her first public
appearance on March 1, 1986,
during a "blind date" with Wilbur.
The pair later "married" before an
Arizona-Arizona State football
game.

For a chance to win a a set of
three audio books, tell us the
date of their wedding.

Click here to submit your
answer.

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Caliente Cover
Click image below to download a PDF of this week's Caliente cover.

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Aznightbuzz Calendar
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.l...
Frank Costello (Jack Nicholson) talks business with his new employee, Billy Costigan (Leonardo DiCaprio), in director Martin Scorsese's "The Departed."
courtesy of warner bros. pictures
Phil's review
The Departed
****
Rated: R for strong brutal violence, pervasive language, some strong sexual content and drug material
Cast: Leonardo DiCaprio, Matt Damon, Jack Nicholson, Mark Wahlberg
Director: Martin Scorsese
Family call: Not at all for kids
Running time: 150 minutes
Opens Friday at: Park Place, El Con, Century Park, Foothills, Cinemark
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Scorsese scores big-time with 'Departed'

By Phil Villarreal
pvillarreal@azstarnet.com
Tucson, Arizona | Published: 10.05.2006
Martin Scorsese's sense of the underworld certainly hasn't departed.
Bashing through the theater doors with guns blazing and sewermouth yapping, supernova-studded "The Departed" takes your imagination hostage for an incredibly brisk 150 minutes.
This is a mob movie the way it should be done, with tragic overtones, memorable dialogue and penetrating acting from a pitch-perfect cast. If not for the cell phones, you'd think the film was made in the 1970s.
"The Departed" is Scorsese grabbing New Hollywood by its ear to teach it a lesson the old-fashioned way.
Set in South Boston and filmed in Boston and New York, the thriller slinks across a complex web of crossed alliances between the Massachusetts State Police and the Irish mob. The two main figures are cops working deep undercover.
Matt Damon is Colin Sullivan, a bright-eyed up-and-comer no one realizes is a mole for kingpin Frank Costello, played by a seething Jack Nicholson. A parallel story follows Billy Costigan (Leonardo DiCaprio), who trained in the academy at the same time as Sullivan (but the two never met), and is assigned to infiltrate Costello's ranks.
Sullivan and Costigan do their jobs so well that their bosses realize their enterprises must be infested with rats. Thus begins a chess game between the two ruthless sides. Bones crack, bullets fly and the two leads maneuver like terrified quarterbacks scrambling to make something of a broken play.
Further complicating matters, Sullivan and Costigan become interested in the same woman, a state psychiatrist played by Vera Farmiga.
Based on the 2002 Hong Kong thriller "Infernal Affairs," William Monahan's script snarls like a chained, underfed pit bull with a spiked collar. The dialogue is as funny as it is harsh, and the script is only a half-step behind Nicholas Pileggi's "GoodFellas" effort.
Martin Sheen, Alec Baldwin and Mark Wahlberg storm in for impressive bits as hardcase cops that would leave you clamoring for more if you weren't enraptured by the DiCaprio and Damon story lines.
Under a lesser director, a cast this big could run away with the film, turning it into a scene-stealing derby like "Con Air." Scor-sese has such command that the huge stars relegate themselves into characters who form a stunning tableau of underworld ferociousness.
The action and dialogue delivered by this strong cast would be enough to make the movie a must-see, but Scorsese is never content to simply skim along the surface. His film probes the tortured psyches of the two principals, who lose sight of who they are. The filmmaker also vents his frustration with the Catholic Church, taking some pointed swipes at the hypocrisy that allowed the priest molestation scandal to mushroom unchecked.
Themes of duality, loyalty and trust — both of oneself and the fabric of society — sling alongside every word and bullet.

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