Want to know Hellogoodbye’s pre-show rituals? (Page 7) The University of Oklahoma’s independent student voice since 1916
F R I DAY, A P R I L 2 0 , 2 012
W W W.O U DA I LY.C O M
2 011 S I LV E R C R O W N W I N N E R
state leGIslatIon
Higher-ed funding in danger of cuts Representatives consider trashing state income tax sARAh MARTiN Campus Reporter
State higher-education funding could be on the chopping block if lawmakers’ plans to eliminate the state income tax are passed. David Blatt, political analyst
and director of Oklahoma Policy Institute, said he is concerned higher-education funding will not withstand the major budget cuts that would accompany eliminating the income tax. If lawmakers passed the most radical plan to completely eliminate the income tax in seven years, higher education would be devastated, Blatt said.
“ The competition for scarce dollars would become even more fevered, and K through 12 [education] and transportation and health care would win out,” Blatt said. However, four lawmakers have outlined $90 million in higher-education funding that could be eliminated over two years in order to make room in the budget to
eliminate the income tax. Higher education was just one area of government spending among $853 million in spending cuts suggested by Rep. Leslie Osborn, R-Mustang; Rep. Tom Newell, R-Seminole; Rep. David Brumbaugh, R-Tulsa; and Rep. Charles Ortega, R-Altus. The state government could save at least $90 million by resolving inefficiencies in the
higher-education system, Brumbaugh said. These inefficiencies are created when multiple colleges within the state offer the same services, Brumbaugh said. He said there are multiple administrators and instructors performing the same services within the state that could be consolidated and, in turn, cut costs in higher education.
“Higher [education] is a monster. It is out of control,” said savings plan proponent Rep. Jason Murphey, R- Guthrie. For reduced spending in statewide higher-education funding to become reality, Murphey said the state first needs to come up with a fair system for evaluating the see STATE PAGe 2
tUItIon
stUDent lIfe
Men’s GYMnastICs
Sooner leaves positive legacy
Reps address regents on fees UOSA president stresses long-term effects of raises
Resident director remembered for kindness, lessons
ChRis MilleR
Assistant Campus Editor
hillARy MClAiN Campus Reporter
Ennis Koonce never left a day of work without stopping by each coworker’s desk to say goodbye. Those same coworkers now walk past the same neatly kept, now-vacant desk as a reminder of his untimely passing April 5. Koonce had a multifaceted career at OU. He served as an Adams Center resident director, higher education administration graduate student and Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity member. Those who worked with him said he had a passion for helping others. “He loved helping students, mentoring, just stopping and talking to people,” resident director Lauren Carter said. B efore his passing, Koonce helped develop a program intended to help transport injured students living in residence halls to and from classes, said Jennifer Doughty, Housing and Food director of operations. Koonce’s fondness for amusing wordplay inspired him to push for the name “Lending a Limb,” Doughty said. Colleagues said he was clever and had a sharp wit. “He created words, he coined phrases that became parts of his peers’ vocabulary,” said T. Elon Dancy, higher education professor. “He was very creative.” Koonce was at OU to study higher education administration, and his dissertation was focused on African American male performance in college,
kinGsley burns/the dAily
Junior Jacob Dalton crosses over on the high bar during the second session of the NCAA qualifying round Thursday night at Lloyd Noble Center. The Sooners finished second in the session behind Illinois but advance to tonight’s NCAA team championship finals. OU rested several key contributors, including all-arounders Dalton and freshman Dylan Akers.
Primed for championship Sooners advance past qualifier round to tonight’s team finals GReG FeWell Sports Editor
The No. 1 OU Sooners advanced to the NCAA team finals by finishing in second place in the 7 p.m. session of Thursday’s qualifying round. Oklahoma finished just behind first-place Illinois (356.25) with a total team score of 356.2. California rounded out the top three and took the final spot in tonight’s championships with a 351.15. The three teams will join the top three teams from the 1 p.m. session — Michigan, Penn State and Stanford.
Oklahoma and Illinois made it clear from the first rotation that they would be the teams to beat in the second session of Thursday’s qualifiers. With one competitor left for each team in the first rotation, the squads were deadlocked at the top with 58.85 points each. The Sooners still had their ace in the hole, though. Junior Jake Dalton was the final competitor for OU on the parallel bars, and he made the most of his position at the anchor spot, scoring a 15.4 to lead all competitors and give the Sooners the early lead. However, Illinois soon made the lead a moot point. After two events, the Illini had captured a 119.7117.6 lead that they would not relinquish until the final rotation of
AT A GLANCE Qualifier results 1st session 1. Michigan 2. Penn state 3. stanford 4. Ohio State 5. Nebraska 6. Iowa
2nd session 1. Illinois 2. oklahoma 3. California 4. Minnesota 5. Temple 6. Air Force Bold advanced to today’s team finals
the night. Both teams competed in their best events for the third rotation, with the Sooners grabbing a 60.15 on the floor even without Dalton, see SOONERS PAGe 5
see KOONCE PAGe 3
see TUITION PAGe 3
eDItorIal VOL. 97, NO. 142
© 2012 OU Publications Board FREE — Additional copies 25 cents
OU student representatives stressed the impact of tuition and fee raises on the campus community to the Oklahoma State Regents for Higher Education during the group’s Thursday meeting. The addresses came during a public hearing focused on tuition and mandatory fee limits for undergraduate, graduate and professional programs, according to the regents’ agenda. UOSA President Joe Sangirardi participated in the hearing and said he wanted to bring the longterm consequences of tuition raises to the regents’ attention. During what he called a re f l e c t i v e a d d re s s, Sangirardi asserted that the higher education system is one of America’s greatest institutions. “A lot of [the public hearing participants] spoke about the immediate impact of tuition and fee raises,” Sangirardi said. “When I spoke, I took a little different approach. I spoke about the long-term effect of raising those fees.” Members of the State Regents expressed the group’s desire to keep any potential tuition raises minimal, but even consistently small increases can add up over time, Sangirardi said. Sangirardi made it a point to state the case for higher-education funding as a crucial aspect of the nation’s future, he said. “If there’s one thing we should be investing in, it’s higher education,” Sangirardi said. “That is the foundation of a society.” The regents will not act
The Daily’s open record requests
share your voice with us at the Daily’s open house
Requested document and purpose
date requested
Come by today to share thoughts, ask questions or learn about opportunities to work with us. (Page 4)
Most recent contract between Gaylord College of Journalism and Mass Communication and apple Inc. — To better understand Apple’s relationship with Gaylord College after the college was named to the Apple Distinguished Educators program.
Wednesday
noW onlIne at
softBall
Friday
sooners look back on oKC bombing memories
Conference rivalry down to last regular series
list of current tenured professors — To find tenured professors and ask them about Oklahoma’s attempts to eliminate tenure.
Friday
OU students share their stories and thoughts about the OKC bombing 17 years ago on Thursday. (Multimedia)
The Missouri Tigers, who ended OU’s national title hopes last year, will visit Norman for the last time as a Big 12 foe. (Page 5)
list of events that served alcohol during fiscal year 2011 at the oklahoma Memorial Union — These documents were requested to better understand the number and types of events granted the ability to serve alcohol.
Campus ........................ Classifieds .................. Life & Arts ................... Opinion ...................... Sports .........................
2 6 7 4 5
nikki selF/the dAily
Erin Weese, microbiology sophomore, checks out OU Housing & Food Services’ new fitter foods menu, which increases the healthy choices on campus, Thursday.
Visit oUDaily.com/openrecords for a complete list of The Daily’s requests
2
CAMPUS
• Friday, April 20, 2012
CAMPUS
Laney Ellisor, campus editor Kathleen Evans, assistant campus editor Chris Miller, assistant campus editor dailynews@ou.edu • phone: 405-325-3666
faCUltY PUBlICatIon
oU book centers on Indians
Professor looks to modernize view of American Indians AJiNUR seTiWAldi Campus Reporter
todAy Around CAMPus A symposium about art of the American west such as furniture, pottery and saddles will be held from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art’s Mary eddy and Fred Jones Auditorium. A lecture by former senator and presidential candidate George McGovern will be held at 3 p.m. at the thurman J. white Forum building. La Tomatina water balloon toss, hosted by the ou spanish Club, will take place at 3 p.m. on the walker-Adams Mall. there will be free snow cones. An open house at The Oklahoma Daily will be held at 5 p.m. in the newsroom (Copeland hall, room 160). The baseball team will play Alabama state at 6:30 p.m. at l. dale Mitchell Park. The softball team will play Missouri at 7 p.m. at Marita hynes Field. The men’s gymnastics team will compete in the team championship finals at 7 p.m. at lloyd noble Center. A concert featuring russian folk and classical songs, dances, arias and poetry will be held at 8 p.m. in Catlett Music Center’s Pitman recital hall. Admission is free.
sAturdAy, APril 21 The women’s tennis team will play texas at noon at headington Family tennis Center. The baseball team will play Alabama state at 2 p.m. at l. dale Mitchell Park. The softball team will play Missouri at 2 p.m. at Marita hynes Field. The men’s gymnastics team will host nCAA individual championship finals at 7 p.m. at lloyd noble Center.
sundAy, APril 22 The women’s tennis team will face texas A&M at noon at headington Family tennis Center. The baseball team will play Alabama state at 1 p.m. at l. dale Mitchell Park.
CorreCtions The Oklahoma Daily is committed to serving readers with accurate coverage and welcomes your comments about information that may require correction or clarification. To contact us with corrections, email us at dailynews@ou.edu. A Tuesday life & arts story, “Mosque near campus opens doors to Muslims, residents,” misidentifies Omar Alamoudi as president of the Islamic Society of Norman. He is president of the Muslim Student Association. A Thursday photo caption about the OU Queer Royalty Pageant misreported that Wednesday’s event was GLBTF’s inaugural drag show. The group has hosted an annual drag show for several years, but Wednesday’s event was the organization’s first pageant. Visit oUDaily.com/corrections to see an archive of our corrections
A recently published book by an OU professor hopes to shed insight on the mainstream media’s impact on American Indian history, culture and communities. “American Indians and the Mass Media,” by Gaylord Family Endowed Professor Meta Carstarphen , asserts that stereotypical images of American Indians are so widespread and interwoven into the fabric of the American life that many hardly notice them. The initial inspiration for the text came from questions raised during a Gaylord College of Journalism and Mass Communication “Native Americans and Mass Media: Issues and Answers” symposium in 2004, Carstarphen said. To get the project on track, Carstarphen accessed microfilms of American Indian newspapers published before Oklahoma’s statehood t h rou g h t h e O k l a h o ma Historical Society. Carstarphen initially began the project with Peter Gross, a former OU journalism professor who now teaches at the University of Tennessee. After Gross left the project, Carstarphen said she reached out to John Sanchez, a professor at Pennsylvania University, who became her coeditor. “We have known each other for 15 years, and we are both interested in diversity issues and media impacts on American Indian cultures,” Sanchez said. The point of Carstarphen’s book is not to eliminate historic and cultural images of American Indians but to depict them in a contemporary light in modern media, Carstarphen said.
above: Professor Meta Carstarphen explains how census data in a Cherokee newspaper, shown on the microfilm slide at right, prompted her to look into Native American newspapers. Carstarphen said the data revealed Oklahoman majorities were black and Native American initially, a subject that interested her. left: Professor Meta Carstarphen points out the portion of a newspaper written in Cherokee on a microfilm slide Tuesday. This newspaper was written in both English and Cherokee so that it was more accessible to more people. Photos by Melodie lettkeMAn/the dAily
“I don’t think whatever American Indians bring to the table in terms of their own distinct culture, language and customs should be ignored in the goal of fair portrayal in the media,” Carstarphen said. “But the challenge is to reflect the complexities. There is no ‘one way fits all.’” The media is a powerful force in the development of ideas and images, Carstarphen said. “If these things are repeated over and over again through mass media, the rest of us accept them as the truth,” Carstarphen said. The media influences how we identify people, and the imagery associated with
Continued from page 1 unique functions of each state higher education institution. Once there is an evaluation system, there would be a means to measure which universities should be closed or consolidated with other institutions that offer the same services in the same region. Universities like Rogers State University, Cameron University and Langston University offer similar services and graduate a small percent, which adds to the cost relayed to taxpayers and students, Brumbaugh said. While these colleges are all in different areas of the state, Murphey said the state could save money if smaller universities were consolidated into either the OU or Oklahoma State University systems. Under this model, a few universities would take a region of the state and have several branches within that region, Murphey said.
“Then you won’t have all of these small little splinter universities competing,” Murphey eMIlY said. The num- VIrGIn ber of public higher-education institutions in Oklahoma is currently comparable or below the number in surrounding states. The state has a total of 29 public colleges and universities, which ranks below the U.S. average of 32 public higher-education institutions, according to the National Center for Education Statistics. Kansas and Arkansas, both with lower overall state populations and lower highereducation enrollment numbers, have more public higher-education institutions than Oklahoma, according to the National Center for Education Statistics. Consolidation of state universities is just one of the
Continued from page 1 Dancy said. “He saw himself in a professional role of serving this population of students, either through mentoring or broader student affairs work,” Dancy said. Koonce practiced kindness to those around him, but in a humble manner. “He did it in such a way that it wasn’t a big show, being kind,” Doughty said. “He was very quietly and privately kind, like leaving notes on your desk.” Doughty said Koonce never left the office without saying goodbye to each employee, and his loss is devastating. “It sounds like such a small thing, but it’s really meaningful when someone takes the time out from everything else that’s going on,” Doughty said. “Every single day.” Despite his passing,
“like his big heart, it’s still impacting us on a day-to-day basis. he is still teaching us stuff, even though he’s not physically here.” LAUREN CARTER, RESIDENT DIRECTOR
lessons learned from Koonce still linger. “Like his big heart, it’s still impacting us on a day-today basis,” Carter said. “He is still teaching us stuff, even though he’s not physically here.” Koonce taught her to be honest and true to herself, Carter said. Koonce also inspired others to do whatever they could to help people. An avid cook, Koonce also informed Carter that he made the best turkey burger, though she never had the chance to try one. “I’ve heard nothing but good reviews of all of his food,” Carter said. “If you gave that man a kitchen, he’d make you a meal.”
Still, he taught coworkers other lessons. Resident director Klint Neal said Koonce taught him to follow his passions and helped him plan out his own career path. Resilience is another lesson Koonce left behind. “He hadn’t been well for some months, and he never gave up,” Klint said. “He was still very much involved in pursuing his Ph.D. and completing his classes, on top of his work in Housing and Food.” After graduating, he planned to work helping students. He was interested in being a vice president of student affairs, directing resident life or deanship of
student life, Dancy said. “He wanted to do work that mattered to the issues around African American male performance in colleges and universities,” Dancy said. His leadership skills sprang from his strong sense of self, Dancy said. “He was not the type to succumb to peer pressure,” Dancy said. “He was often the leader in groups because of that.” This quality made people want to be mentored by Koonce, Dancy said. He earned his undergraduate degree in his home state of Georgia and left behind a similar legacy there. “By the time he left Georgia to come to [OU], he left behind a countless number of students who missed him very much,” Dancy said. “He lived life, with not one bad memory,” Carter said. “I can honestly say that he served every day with great purpose.”
BooK: Proceeds to go to NAJA scholarships
tUItIon: Regents will not act until June 21
Continued from page 2
Continued from page 1
work also looks to media issues through a historical lens. American Indians were perceived as threats and obstacles to expansion, and our media tried to justify the atrocities against American Indians by creating a certain image of them, Carstarphen said. “Our media depicted them as savages, heathens or simplistic,” Carstarphen said. The book allows American Indians to present stories in their own voices and offers a more accurate view of their identities, said Alessandra Tamulevich, OU Press acquisitions editor. “In a time when the media landscape is changing rapidly through new technologies and social media, it is important for the OU Press to have a book on how this shift affects Native Americans,” Tamulevich said. OU Press has made an agreement with the Native American Journalist Association to provide copies of the book to the Unity Journalists conference that will take place in August. Some of the proceeds from the book will go to support the Native American Journalist Association’s scholarships for aspiring American Indian journalists.
on proposals regarding tuition and mandatory fees until their June 21 meeting at their office in Oklahoma City, according to Daily archives. State Regents for Higher Education Student Advisory Board chairman Steve Sichterman said the regents seemed receptive to the concerns raised during the public hearing. “It was surprisingly good, as all of the speakers — including myself and Joe Sangirardi — were very understanding that in today’s economy, [the regents] have done everything they can to cut costs in the past three years,” he said. Sichterman’s remarks focused on the impact tuition and fee raises can have on students, even if they’ve budgeted and saved for college for years, he said. “Students that may have prepared for college may not have foreseen the increases,” Sichterman said. “It’s forcing them to work more outside of class and even take on second jobs.” The Oklahoma State Regents for Higher Education will convene again May 24 and May 25 at their office at 655 Research Parkway, Suite 200, in Oklahoma City.
2 1 3 natIon neWs BrIefs 1. CHANTILLY, VA.
Smithsonian museum receives Discovery shuttle for display NASA turned over space shuttle Discovery on Thursday to the Smithsonian Institution, the first in its orbiter fleet to be transferred to a U.S. museum. The U.S. Marine Drum and Bugle Corps, astronauts including former Sen. John Glenn and several thousand visitors with American flags greeted Discovery. It will retire as an artifact representing the 30-year shuttle program. The Associated Press
2. CLEVELAND
Ohio’s Amish plead not guilty when caught in hairy situation Sixteen men and women pleaded not guilty Thursday in beard- and hair-cutting attacks against fellow Amish in Ohio. The latest indictment added allegations that suspects tried to hide or destroy evidence, including a disposable camera, shears and a bag of hair from victims. Members of the Amish community who were in court left through a rear enclosed walkway without speaking. The Associated Press
3. NEW ORLEANS
Government grants additional funds to victims of BP oil spill The Justice Department said more than $64 million will be paid to about 7,300 people and businesses whose claims with BP’s $20 billion compensation fund were shortchanged or wrongfully denied after the 2010 oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. The department announced Thursday that an independent audit of the Gulf Coast Claims Facility found “significant errors” in its processing of claims. The auditor also found claimants who were erroneously overpaid. The department says the GCCF isn’t trying to recover those overpayments. The Associated Press
authors: Meta Carstarphen, John Sanchez Publisher: OU Press
see BOOK PAGe 3
bigger ideas put forth for reducing higher-education spending. Lawmakers also are considering eliminating a formula the regents use for distributing funds called the peer factor multiplier and reforming faculty workloads, according to savings plan documents. The number of employees at state higher-education institutions is a specific area of waste, Murphey said. “There are thousands and thousands of employees in that system that just shouldn’t be there,” Murphey said. As of fall 2007, there were 11,149 faculty members at Oklahoma public institutions for higher education, according to Oklahoma State Regents for Higher Education data.
Rep. Emily Virgin, D-Norman, said OU is a major employer in her district. If eliminating the income tax is intended to attract jobs, it would make no sense to cut jobs in order to eliminate the tax, Virgin said. A more educated state would be better for the Oklahoma job market than eliminating the income tax, Virgin said. “I really don’t think higher [education] is a waste of money like some of my colleagues do,” Virgin said. Virgin said she is glad the state is looking into improving efficiency of higher-education spending. “In no way do we think that everything in higher [education] is perfect, but to attack it as a whole is really unfair,” she said.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC ACCESS During the Regular Meeting Of The University of Oklahoma PUBLICATIONS BOARD
stop by the daily’s open house to chat with editors about job opportunities for the summer and fall
9:30 a.m. TODAY Copeland Hall, Room 146
5 p.m. today student Media is a department within ou’s division of student Affairs. ou is an equal opportunity employer. For accommodations on the basis of a disability, call 405-325-2521.
AT A GLANCE ‘american Indians & the Mass Media’
KoonCe: Sooner planned to work with students
state: Consolidation of universities possibility
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160 Copeland hall
American Indians through the media is stuck in the past, Sanchez said. “In a recent study I completed, 100 percent of fourth graders drew pictures of Indians in 17th century garb — beads and feathers, breech cloths and standing in front of tepees,” Sanchez said. “American Indians are the only ethnic cultures that continue to have their identities continually shaped by the media as we existed 300 years ago and not as cultures that have evolved or progressed beyond the beadsand-feathers image.” Carstarphen said that their
Friday, April 20, 2012 •
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Open Tues-Sat 11am-8pm 100 S. Main Street Noble, OK 405.872.0303 kendallsrestaurant.com
Students, staff, faculty and others in the community are invited to express their views concerning The Oklahoma Daily or Sooner yearbook to the Publications Board.
*Some restrictions apply. Offer valid April 2nd-8th. *Some
3
2
CAMPUS
• Friday, April 20, 2012
CAMPUS
Laney Ellisor, campus editor Kathleen Evans, assistant campus editor Chris Miller, assistant campus editor dailynews@ou.edu • phone: 405-325-3666
faCUltY PUBlICatIon
oU book centers on Indians
Professor looks to modernize view of American Indians AJiNUR seTiWAldi Campus Reporter
todAy Around CAMPus A symposium about art of the American west such as furniture, pottery and saddles will be held from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art’s Mary eddy and Fred Jones Auditorium. A lecture by former senator and presidential candidate George McGovern will be held at 3 p.m. at the thurman J. white Forum building. La Tomatina water balloon toss, hosted by the ou spanish Club, will take place at 3 p.m. on the walker-Adams Mall. there will be free snow cones. An open house at The Oklahoma Daily will be held at 5 p.m. in the newsroom (Copeland hall, room 160). The baseball team will play Alabama state at 6:30 p.m. at l. dale Mitchell Park. The softball team will play Missouri at 7 p.m. at Marita hynes Field. The men’s gymnastics team will compete in the team championship finals at 7 p.m. at lloyd noble Center. A concert featuring russian folk and classical songs, dances, arias and poetry will be held at 8 p.m. in Catlett Music Center’s Pitman recital hall. Admission is free.
sAturdAy, APril 21 The women’s tennis team will play texas at noon at headington Family tennis Center. The baseball team will play Alabama state at 2 p.m. at l. dale Mitchell Park. The softball team will play Missouri at 2 p.m. at Marita hynes Field. The men’s gymnastics team will host nCAA individual championship finals at 7 p.m. at lloyd noble Center.
sundAy, APril 22 The women’s tennis team will face texas A&M at noon at headington Family tennis Center. The baseball team will play Alabama state at 1 p.m. at l. dale Mitchell Park.
CorreCtions The Oklahoma Daily is committed to serving readers with accurate coverage and welcomes your comments about information that may require correction or clarification. To contact us with corrections, email us at dailynews@ou.edu. A Tuesday life & arts story, “Mosque near campus opens doors to Muslims, residents,” misidentifies Omar Alamoudi as president of the Islamic Society of Norman. He is president of the Muslim Student Association. A Thursday photo caption about the OU Queer Royalty Pageant misreported that Wednesday’s event was GLBTF’s inaugural drag show. The group has hosted an annual drag show for several years, but Wednesday’s event was the organization’s first pageant. Visit oUDaily.com/corrections to see an archive of our corrections
A recently published book by an OU professor hopes to shed insight on the mainstream media’s impact on American Indian history, culture and communities. “American Indians and the Mass Media,” by Gaylord Family Endowed Professor Meta Carstarphen , asserts that stereotypical images of American Indians are so widespread and interwoven into the fabric of the American life that many hardly notice them. The initial inspiration for the text came from questions raised during a Gaylord College of Journalism and Mass Communication “Native Americans and Mass Media: Issues and Answers” symposium in 2004, Carstarphen said. To get the project on track, Carstarphen accessed microfilms of American Indian newspapers published before Oklahoma’s statehood t h rou g h t h e O k l a h o ma Historical Society. Carstarphen initially began the project with Peter Gross, a former OU journalism professor who now teaches at the University of Tennessee. After Gross left the project, Carstarphen said she reached out to John Sanchez, a professor at Pennsylvania University, who became her coeditor. “We have known each other for 15 years, and we are both interested in diversity issues and media impacts on American Indian cultures,” Sanchez said. The point of Carstarphen’s book is not to eliminate historic and cultural images of American Indians but to depict them in a contemporary light in modern media, Carstarphen said.
above: Professor Meta Carstarphen explains how census data in a Cherokee newspaper, shown on the microfilm slide at right, prompted her to look into Native American newspapers. Carstarphen said the data revealed Oklahoman majorities were black and Native American initially, a subject that interested her. left: Professor Meta Carstarphen points out the portion of a newspaper written in Cherokee on a microfilm slide Tuesday. This newspaper was written in both English and Cherokee so that it was more accessible to more people. Photos by Melodie lettkeMAn/the dAily
“I don’t think whatever American Indians bring to the table in terms of their own distinct culture, language and customs should be ignored in the goal of fair portrayal in the media,” Carstarphen said. “But the challenge is to reflect the complexities. There is no ‘one way fits all.’” The media is a powerful force in the development of ideas and images, Carstarphen said. “If these things are repeated over and over again through mass media, the rest of us accept them as the truth,” Carstarphen said. The media influences how we identify people, and the imagery associated with
Continued from page 1 unique functions of each state higher education institution. Once there is an evaluation system, there would be a means to measure which universities should be closed or consolidated with other institutions that offer the same services in the same region. Universities like Rogers State University, Cameron University and Langston University offer similar services and graduate a small percent, which adds to the cost relayed to taxpayers and students, Brumbaugh said. While these colleges are all in different areas of the state, Murphey said the state could save money if smaller universities were consolidated into either the OU or Oklahoma State University systems. Under this model, a few universities would take a region of the state and have several branches within that region, Murphey said.
“Then you won’t have all of these small little splinter universities competing,” Murphey eMIlY said. The num- VIrGIn ber of public higher-education institutions in Oklahoma is currently comparable or below the number in surrounding states. The state has a total of 29 public colleges and universities, which ranks below the U.S. average of 32 public higher-education institutions, according to the National Center for Education Statistics. Kansas and Arkansas, both with lower overall state populations and lower highereducation enrollment numbers, have more public higher-education institutions than Oklahoma, according to the National Center for Education Statistics. Consolidation of state universities is just one of the
Continued from page 1 Dancy said. “He saw himself in a professional role of serving this population of students, either through mentoring or broader student affairs work,” Dancy said. Koonce practiced kindness to those around him, but in a humble manner. “He did it in such a way that it wasn’t a big show, being kind,” Doughty said. “He was very quietly and privately kind, like leaving notes on your desk.” Doughty said Koonce never left the office without saying goodbye to each employee, and his loss is devastating. “It sounds like such a small thing, but it’s really meaningful when someone takes the time out from everything else that’s going on,” Doughty said. “Every single day.” Despite his passing,
“like his big heart, it’s still impacting us on a day-to-day basis. he is still teaching us stuff, even though he’s not physically here.” LAUREN CARTER, RESIDENT DIRECTOR
lessons learned from Koonce still linger. “Like his big heart, it’s still impacting us on a day-today basis,” Carter said. “He is still teaching us stuff, even though he’s not physically here.” Koonce taught her to be honest and true to herself, Carter said. Koonce also inspired others to do whatever they could to help people. An avid cook, Koonce also informed Carter that he made the best turkey burger, though she never had the chance to try one. “I’ve heard nothing but good reviews of all of his food,” Carter said. “If you gave that man a kitchen, he’d make you a meal.”
Still, he taught coworkers other lessons. Resident director Klint Neal said Koonce taught him to follow his passions and helped him plan out his own career path. Resilience is another lesson Koonce left behind. “He hadn’t been well for some months, and he never gave up,” Klint said. “He was still very much involved in pursuing his Ph.D. and completing his classes, on top of his work in Housing and Food.” After graduating, he planned to work helping students. He was interested in being a vice president of student affairs, directing resident life or deanship of
student life, Dancy said. “He wanted to do work that mattered to the issues around African American male performance in colleges and universities,” Dancy said. His leadership skills sprang from his strong sense of self, Dancy said. “He was not the type to succumb to peer pressure,” Dancy said. “He was often the leader in groups because of that.” This quality made people want to be mentored by Koonce, Dancy said. He earned his undergraduate degree in his home state of Georgia and left behind a similar legacy there. “By the time he left Georgia to come to [OU], he left behind a countless number of students who missed him very much,” Dancy said. “He lived life, with not one bad memory,” Carter said. “I can honestly say that he served every day with great purpose.”
BooK: Proceeds to go to NAJA scholarships
tUItIon: Regents will not act until June 21
Continued from page 2
Continued from page 1
work also looks to media issues through a historical lens. American Indians were perceived as threats and obstacles to expansion, and our media tried to justify the atrocities against American Indians by creating a certain image of them, Carstarphen said. “Our media depicted them as savages, heathens or simplistic,” Carstarphen said. The book allows American Indians to present stories in their own voices and offers a more accurate view of their identities, said Alessandra Tamulevich, OU Press acquisitions editor. “In a time when the media landscape is changing rapidly through new technologies and social media, it is important for the OU Press to have a book on how this shift affects Native Americans,” Tamulevich said. OU Press has made an agreement with the Native American Journalist Association to provide copies of the book to the Unity Journalists conference that will take place in August. Some of the proceeds from the book will go to support the Native American Journalist Association’s scholarships for aspiring American Indian journalists.
on proposals regarding tuition and mandatory fees until their June 21 meeting at their office in Oklahoma City, according to Daily archives. State Regents for Higher Education Student Advisory Board chairman Steve Sichterman said the regents seemed receptive to the concerns raised during the public hearing. “It was surprisingly good, as all of the speakers — including myself and Joe Sangirardi — were very understanding that in today’s economy, [the regents] have done everything they can to cut costs in the past three years,” he said. Sichterman’s remarks focused on the impact tuition and fee raises can have on students, even if they’ve budgeted and saved for college for years, he said. “Students that may have prepared for college may not have foreseen the increases,” Sichterman said. “It’s forcing them to work more outside of class and even take on second jobs.” The Oklahoma State Regents for Higher Education will convene again May 24 and May 25 at their office at 655 Research Parkway, Suite 200, in Oklahoma City.
2 1 3 natIon neWs BrIefs 1. CHANTILLY, VA.
Smithsonian museum receives Discovery shuttle for display NASA turned over space shuttle Discovery on Thursday to the Smithsonian Institution, the first in its orbiter fleet to be transferred to a U.S. museum. The U.S. Marine Drum and Bugle Corps, astronauts including former Sen. John Glenn and several thousand visitors with American flags greeted Discovery. It will retire as an artifact representing the 30-year shuttle program. The Associated Press
2. CLEVELAND
Ohio’s Amish plead not guilty when caught in hairy situation Sixteen men and women pleaded not guilty Thursday in beard- and hair-cutting attacks against fellow Amish in Ohio. The latest indictment added allegations that suspects tried to hide or destroy evidence, including a disposable camera, shears and a bag of hair from victims. Members of the Amish community who were in court left through a rear enclosed walkway without speaking. The Associated Press
3. NEW ORLEANS
Government grants additional funds to victims of BP oil spill The Justice Department said more than $64 million will be paid to about 7,300 people and businesses whose claims with BP’s $20 billion compensation fund were shortchanged or wrongfully denied after the 2010 oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. The department announced Thursday that an independent audit of the Gulf Coast Claims Facility found “significant errors” in its processing of claims. The auditor also found claimants who were erroneously overpaid. The department says the GCCF isn’t trying to recover those overpayments. The Associated Press
authors: Meta Carstarphen, John Sanchez Publisher: OU Press
see BOOK PAGe 3
bigger ideas put forth for reducing higher-education spending. Lawmakers also are considering eliminating a formula the regents use for distributing funds called the peer factor multiplier and reforming faculty workloads, according to savings plan documents. The number of employees at state higher-education institutions is a specific area of waste, Murphey said. “There are thousands and thousands of employees in that system that just shouldn’t be there,” Murphey said. As of fall 2007, there were 11,149 faculty members at Oklahoma public institutions for higher education, according to Oklahoma State Regents for Higher Education data.
Rep. Emily Virgin, D-Norman, said OU is a major employer in her district. If eliminating the income tax is intended to attract jobs, it would make no sense to cut jobs in order to eliminate the tax, Virgin said. A more educated state would be better for the Oklahoma job market than eliminating the income tax, Virgin said. “I really don’t think higher [education] is a waste of money like some of my colleagues do,” Virgin said. Virgin said she is glad the state is looking into improving efficiency of higher-education spending. “In no way do we think that everything in higher [education] is perfect, but to attack it as a whole is really unfair,” she said.
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American Indians through the media is stuck in the past, Sanchez said. “In a recent study I completed, 100 percent of fourth graders drew pictures of Indians in 17th century garb — beads and feathers, breech cloths and standing in front of tepees,” Sanchez said. “American Indians are the only ethnic cultures that continue to have their identities continually shaped by the media as we existed 300 years ago and not as cultures that have evolved or progressed beyond the beadsand-feathers image.” Carstarphen said that their
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Opinion
“The event should be recognized as an important piece of Oklahoma’s history but should we really “celebrate” cheaters and thieves?” (reed4591, RE: ‘EDITORIAL: Land run celebrations need to acknowledge complete history’)
Editorial
Daily to open its doors to you Our View: Today’s open house is a chance for you to express your thoughts, get questions answered and find out if working at The Daily is right for you.
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Every day, The Daily staff works behow we make the decisions that affect hind newsroom doors — locked for sewhat our readers see. curity — to create the paper you’re readThis transparency holds us accounting. Today, we’re unlocking the doors. able and makes our audience stronger We want to hear your thoughts and readers, more capable of effectively answer your questions. We’ve often questioning our decisions and providing championed transparency and urged feedback that will help us improve. Our the administration to take stumission is to serve the OU camdent opinions into account. So pus by providing local, reliable The Our View we want to be sure we’re followis the majority news and giving a voice to coming our own advice. munity members who would opinion of Sooners already can come to otherwise remain unheard. The Daily’s nine-member our public editorial meetings To accomplish this mission, editorial board our readers’ needs and quesat 12:30 and 5:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday and at 2:30 tions must remain at the forep.m. Sundays in Copeland Hall, front of our minds. Room 160. And, of course, letters to the So if you have something to say, come editor or emails to section editors are see us today. If you have a burning quesgreat ways to express an opinion or get a tion, we have the answer. If you’ve ever question answered. thought about working here, come find But today’s open house at 5 p.m. in out what opportunities we provide. the newsroom is a special time we’ve In general, come meet the people who set aside to answer questions, receive will form the backbone of OU’s indepenfeedback and meet with students inter- dent student voice — your paper — this ested in joining next semester’s staff. It’s summer and fall. important to us that our readers understand the ins and outs of what we do and Comment on this at OUDaily.com
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Editorial roundup
Join unheard in GLBT’s national Day of Silence Today is the national Day of Silence, organized by the Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network. OU students will join university and high school students across the country in a pledge of silence, which represents the silence faced by gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender individuals in their struggles. While some issues, such as gay marriage, receive a lot of attention and discussion, many other difficult issues are all but ignored. And in places like Oklahoma, the discrimination inherent in simple social interactions can be the hardest to face — and the hardest to talk about. If you’re concerned with the treatment of GLBT individuals in our country — particularly GLBT youth — join in the pledge of silence today. Then, go to OUDaily.com for a list of things you can do to make it better for GLBT youth.
Sangirardi aims to gain efficiency, decrease staff New UOSA President Joe Sangirardi has proposed cuts to UOSA’s executive branch. The Student Congress Executive Committee discussed Sangirardi’s bill Sunday but postponed it for a week. The committee will discuss Sangirardi’s revised version of the bill at
Guest Column
next Sunday’s meeting. We’re proud to see the student body’s new president immediately getting to work on his strongest campaign promise. Restructuring UOSA’s executive branch to increase efficiency can only benefit both students and UOSA operations. And who better to head the restructuring than someone with Sangirardi’s experience and knowledge of UOSA? We urge the committee — and then Student Congress — to approve his plan quickly.
Caucus refuses to hear personhood bill The Oklahoma House Republican Caucus voted Thursday not to hear the personhood bill, Senate Bill 1433. The controversial bill would define life as beginning at conception and give all the rights of a citizen to unborn fetuses at any stage of development. House Speaker Kris Steele, R-Shawnee, said in a press release the legislation will not be heard because it mimics the message of several other pro-life bills passed by Oklahoma’s legislature and “would not have any substantive policy effect.” Either abortion rights activists are correct and this bill would significantly harm women’s access to birth control, fertility treatment and other rights, or Steele and the bill’s supporters are correct and the bill would have no practical effect and is simply a waste of time and resources. Either way: We’re happy to see it go.
COLUMN
Oklahoma bills may destroy film industry if passed
A
AP Photo
This Sept. 7, 2010, photo provided by the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement shows more than 110 kg of marijuana seized from a vehicle that attempted to enter the U.S. near San Diego. The driver of this vehicle had stated he responded to a newspaper ad allegedly placed by drug smugglers to recruit drivers to unwittingly take drugs across the border. Starting this week, U.S. Immigration and Customs and Enforcement began warning job applicants in two Tijuana newspapers that they may be unwitting targets for drug cartels.
Legalize drugs to reduce crime
F
rom a young age, we are taught to view drugs with carrying out raids and heinous murders on their competicontempt. But the older we get, the less ominous tors and the families of anyone who trifles with them. they appear. Drug usage is not the only aspect of American involveIf the entire American public refused to use them, then ment. Another factor is our guns. Cartels pay individuals prohibition wouldn’t be an issue. But our indecisiveness is with no criminal history to purchase these weapons in working against us. The violence in Mexico is because of a American to smuggle them back across the border. Mexico single cause: American demand for drugs. has strict gun laws, and 90 percent of weapons recovered The battle rages between three main cartel groups all bat- from the cartels have serial numbers traced back to gun tling for the distribution rights to America’s southern border. shops in the U.S. It is the perfect symbiotic relationship: The heroin addicts do not carry the weight of this boomweapons for drugs. And no matter how many seizures or ing underground drug economy alone — the recreational drug arrests the DEA and other agencies makes, this market pot smokers, whom many among us are or shows no signs of losing value. know, also carry their share of blame. If we It is a hard decision, but sentencing offend“In all this had a consensus on this issue, there wouldn’t ers to years in prison is not a means to correct struggle, how be such a market, but the fact that we outlaw behavior or cure addiction. Legalization is a something that many people use or tolerate dirty word to some, but it would reduce the do you engage gives rise to tragic consequences. profits made by the cartels and others who a substance, The title “War on Drugs” implies this conbenefit from organized crime. Prohibition with a rifle or flict is a contest between two belligerents was at the time meant to uplift the quality of — the United States vs. drugs, which preAmerica as a whole, but in the end it was a faildiplomacy?” cedes immorality, self-destruction and dirty ure and the only amendment ever repealed. needles. But in all this struggle, how do you Who or what are we defending with antiengage a substance, with a rifle or diplomacy? The biggest drug laws — friends, family, junkies or super-inflated drug problem associated with this “war” is that it will not eventu- profits? This is the single largest underground industry, of ally end when two nations reach an agreement. which almost everyone on Earth has seen one section. Mexico is the closest thing to an enemy nation in the war In the great Mexican-American drug war, drugs look like on drugs. According to the United Nations, Afghanistan the victor. produces about 90 percent of the world’s supply of opium, In this case, the law has done more to incite violence than which is used to produce heroin, but Mexican production of it has to prevent it. The supply and demand of narcotics will the narcotic now ranks the country as the second largest ex- always make them extremely profitable, but the most colosporter in the world. The meaning of the war on drugs is lost sal mistake of all is not to make an ally of our enemy. We give on us in Norman. But in Mexico, this is an all-out criminal these drugs notoriety by not speaking about them. Yes, they insurgency. have the potential to kill an abuser. But if they were legal, the In his book “El Narco,” Ioan Grillo describes a Mexico rav- user would be the only one at risk, not the public. aged by kidnappings, turf wars and car bombings, all funded by the U.S. and Europe’s obsession with indulgence. . This is a multi-billion dollar industry with military-style tactics, Ricky Williams is an English junior.
s a broadcast and Opinion columnist electronic media major, working in the film industry is an entirely probable and realistic choice for me. Though Oklahoma is not traditionally thought of as a “movie” state, there Paige Willett have been several signifipaigewillett@ou.edu cant cinematic adventures filmed, at least partially, in Sooner land. “Rain Man,” “The Outsiders” and “Twister” were filmed here, as well as part of “The Killer Inside Me.” In recent years, the film industry here has grown at quite a rapid pace. Opportunities for actors and actresses have become more readily available, and Oklahoma is a cost effective and creatively stimulating place to make movies. The state’s diverse terrain provides a wide variety of locations; scenes can be shot to look like anything from big cities to backwoods with ease. Unfortunately, two Oklahoma Senate bills threaten to collapse the Oklahoma film industry, just as it is beginning to truly bud. Right now, the state offers a tax rebate incentive for production companies filming in Oklahoma, with $5 million — a small sum compared to the total budget — set aside in the state budget for this purpose. The program generates jobs and stimulates the economy, and the return is much greater than the investment. Film is a small industry here, but its rapid development has been promising. If this program is reduced or eliminated, it would mean the end of Oklahoma movie making. Legislators do not see the advantages of keeping the tax incentive because to them the number of full-time jobs in the industry looks small. What they fail to realize is that the majority of jobs in the movie industry are fluid. Professionals work from one job to the next. In that sense, it’s difficult to determine what constitutes a full-time job. Many broadcasting and production professionals also work on a freelance basis, carefully picking the projects they work on. These situations are not conducive to the traditional “9 to 5” thinking, but are common practice. The passing of these bills would be detrimental to jobs and state revenue. Proposed legislation suggests that tax rebates for films made in Oklahoma be reduced by half for the first year or two and reduced to zero after that. Right now, one bill is being considered for revisions by the House and has already passed the state Senate. I understand strictly budgeting the economy, but nickel-and-diming programs that are helping the state and fostering innovation helps no one. Oklahoma is a beautiful place to make movies, and it saddens me to potentially never have the opportunity to work on a film crew here. Contact your House representative about this issue. Voicing your opinion is crucial. As long as the House has not voted on it yet, there is still time to take action. Paige Willett is a broadcast and electronic media senior.
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Friday, April 20, 2012 •
OUDaily.com ››
SPORTS
Keep up with the OU men’s and women’s gymnastics teams competing in the NCAA championships this weekend.
Softball
OU seeks Big 12 revenge Sooners to face Missouri Tigers in 3-game series Tobi Neidy
Sports Reporter
The No. 5 Oklahoma softball team (36-6, 11-3 Big 12) seeks its final revenge against SEC-bound Missouri (33-8, 10-5 Big 12) in a pivotal threegame series beginning at 7 tonight in Norman. A season-high four errors by OU helped Missouri crush the Sooners’ chances of winning a second national championship during last year’s trip to the Women’s College World Series. However, Oklahoma will look to defend its current No. 1 Big 12 ranking in the friendly confines of Marita Hynes Field during this weekend’s series. “Missouri will want to come in and go out with a bang,” OU coach Patty Gasso said. “What we have to do is take care of business on our home field. We’ve got two tough opponents coming up in both Missouri and Texas, but both series are here, and that means we just need to defend our territory.” OU leads the overall series with Mizzou, 49-40, and the two programs combine for 285 wins over the past three seasons with three Big 12 titles and four WCWS appearances. Missouri is looking to capture its third Big 12 title in four years and make its fourth consecutive WCWS appearance, but the Tigers will have to go through the Sooners, who still remember last year’s series sweep, to get there. “We faced Missouri three
Rebekah Cornwell/The Daily
Freshman Georgia Casey bunts and makes a dash for first base during the Sooners’ game against North Texas on Wednesday. OU won, 9-4. Oklahoma hosts Missouri this weekend, the final meeting of the conference rivals before the Tigers join the Southeastern Conference in July.
UP NEXT vs. Missouri When: 7 tonight, 2 p.m. Saturday, 2:30 p.m. Sunday Where: Marita Hynes Field
times last year, and we lost them all,” junior pitcher Keilani Ricketts said. “[Missouri junior Chelsea Thomas] is a great pitcher, and they have a great offense, but we’re definitely looking for our revenge when we play them again this year.” The Sooners also enter this season’s series with the most offensive fire power in the league.
Junior catcher Jessica Shults is one of the only two Big 12 players to be hitting at or above .400 this season. Shults leads the Sooners with 52 hits, and she is tied for third in the Big 12 with battery mate Ricketts, both with 12 home runs each. Freshman infielder Lauren Chamberlain gets her first shot at MU ace Thomas this weekend, coming into the series as the Big 12 home run (19) and RBI (54) leader. Both programs also ride the coattails of their respective, dominant pitchers in Ricketts and Thomas. Ricketts leads the Big 12 in strikeouts (259) and shutouts
(10), while Thomas currently has the best ERA (0.97) in the league through 24 games. With only five returning starters who faced Thomas during last year’s clash, Gasso chose to be creative with practice techniques this week to get her team ready. “We’ve had (senior pitcher) Kirsten Allen simulate Thomas’ release in practice,” Gasso said. “It’s really helped our girls see the ball delivery to better prepare for this team.” OU will face Missouri for the second-round contest at 2 p.m. Saturday before concluding the series action at 2:30 p.m. Sunday.
Greg Fewell, sports editor Kedric Kitchens, assistant sports editor dailysports@ou.edu • phone: 405-325-3666
Sooners: Team didn’t field complete lineup Continued from page 1 the nation’s best on the event, in the lineup and the Illini countering with a solid 60.1 on high bar. The back-and-forth between the two teams continued, but Illinois slowly began to build a lead over the favored Sooners. Next up for OU was the pommel horse, the team’s weakest event this season. Prior to Thursday night, the Sooners had failed to score above a 59 on the event, but they came through when it mattered, coming up with a 59.1 behind freshman Dylan Akers’ 14.9 and junior Troy Nitzky’s 14.85. Coach Mark Williams said he was pleased with the way his team handled the nerves of the event. “I was really happy with that,” Williams said. “They did really, really well there, and that’s what we have to do tomorrow if we expect to stay in the hunt.” After their highest score of the season on the event, the Sooners were right back in the hunt for the No. 1 spot heading into the finals. However, two events still remained and Illinois was not done. Going into the final rotation of the night, OU was down by two points. After battling back to take the lead with only one Illinois competitor remaining, it seemed as if the Sooners might claim the No. 1 spot after all. As close as the team came, there was little disappointment from the Sooners at the end of the meet. After all, the goal was to make the top three and have a chance for a national title on the big stage tonight. “All we wanted to do is make tomorrow, just hit our routines,” Dalton said. “We didn’t put our full lineup out there, so we went out there and did what we wanted to do today.” The Sooners knowingly left a lot of points out on the floor in order to rest all-arounders Dalton and Akers, both of whom will be competing full out tonight. The Illini, on the other hand, went with their full lineup and had a much higher start value than OU. Though the Illinois edged out Oklahoma by a slight margin, it’s a good omen for OU heading into the day that really matters. “Jake and I will both be doing all-around, and we’ll have it readjusted to where everybody is comfortable competing,” Akers said. “So, I’m really excited. It’s going to be a fight to the finish, but I have a good feeling about what we can do.” Akers and the rest of the Sooner squad have every right to have a good feeling. Going with a low-scoring lineup and still grabbing the third seed in the finals, along with being in the comfort of Lloyd Noble Center, where the team is undefeated in NCAA finals, gives OU a big advantage. “I think Sooner fans across the state know tomorrow’s a big deal for OU athletics, and it’s just a great opportunity,” senior Patrick Piscitelli said. “It’s a good atmosphere to contend for a national title.”
Baseball
Sooners look to continue win streak against Hornets The Apple Distinguished Program designation is reserved for academic units that are recognized centers of educational excellence and leadership both on their home campus and nationwide.
John, Overton to start in Friday, Saturday games Dillon Phillips Sports Reporter
Oklahoma has an opportunity to extend its fivegame winning streak this weekend against Alabama State and head into Bedlam on an eight-game tear if the Sooners can sweep the Hornets. After a disappointing start to the season, the Sooners (23-14, 7-8 in Big 12 play) have begun to turn the tide thanks to a 4-0 blanking of No. 17 Arkansas on April 10. Since then, the Sooners have rattled off five straight victories — outscoring their opponents, 29-16. Sophomore Jordan John is slated to pitch Friday night, and sophomore Dillon Overton is projected to start Saturday. Coach Sunny Golloway has yet to announce Sunday’s starter. H o w e v e r, o n e o f t h e potential starters for the Sooners is Big 12 Newcomer of the Week, sophomore Damien Magnifico. Magnifico shut out the Razorbacks in an impressive outing last week, but he most recently pitched against Oral Roberts on Tuesday night. A rejuvenated Sooner
Astrud Reed/The Daily
Junior second baseman Jack Mayfield makes the throw to first during OU’s 5-4 win against Missouri on Sunday. The Sooners host nonconference foe Alabama State this weekend.
UP NEXT vs. Alabama State When: 6:30 p.m. today, 2 p.m. Saturday, 1 p.m. Sunday Where: L. Dale Mitchell Park
lineup is clicking and producing offensively at a higher level than it has all year. According to Golloway, despite a few missed
opportunities earlier in the season, the team is now playing its best baseball. “We understand that now we can score runs (because) we’ve got hitters in better positions,” Golloway said. “I’ve said it all along: There’s five or six games [during the season] where we just didn’t finish. If we win those games, I bet we’re in everybody’s top-12, top-10.”
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Spring Specials
HOROSCOPE By Bernice Bede Osol
Copyright 2012, Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
FRIDAY, APRIL 20, 2012 A couple of major changes could be in store for you in the year ahead. One could pertain to an excellent career shift, while the other might have to do with a change of residence. Both could be rather unexpected.
$445 $515 $440 $510 $700
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -- It’s OK to take on a new project as long as it doesn’t interfere with what you already have on your plate and you can devote quality time to both. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -- You may feel you’re ably taking care of something that you promised friends you’d handle, but if it doesn’t look that way to them, your pals will feel manipulated.
Previous Solution
Monday- Very Easy Tuesday-Easy Wednesday- Easy Thursday- Medium Friday - Hard
Instructions: Fill in the grid so that every row, every column and every 3x3 box contains the digits 1 through 9. That means that no number is repeated in any row, column or box.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) -- In order to achieve an important assignment, you must give the powers that be the impression that you are totally dedicated to doing the job right. Anything less will not go over too well. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) --Your associates are likely to have a strong influence on your attitude and performance. If they tend to be negative thinkers, you will be one too. Try to hang out with positive types. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- It doesn’t matter if you’re managing an important financial matter for another or for yourself, in both instances it must be skillfully handled. Anything less won’t suffice. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) --Be supportive of your mate instead of locking horns. A lack of allegiance
may cause your spouse to behave in a poor manner when you need bolstering at a later date. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -- Nothing constructive will result if you attempt to get others to handle certain responsibilities that are exclusively yours. If you don’t want to do these tasks, why should your friends feel differently? SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -- It might prove wise to reject being treasurer for your club or a group activity. If you have trouble collecting the funds, you could get blamed for the venture falling apart. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) --Be as tactful and diplomatic as you can when it comes to handling things for your club. If you’re not, you’ll catch a lot of heat for being too pushy and assertive. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -No matter how hard you try to be purposeful and methodical, certain of your projects might still look like they were handled in a slipshod fashion. Let others do some of the work. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) --Try to make some kind of arrangement to clear up an obligation you have to a friend. Not only will small tokens have a way of adding up, they’ll make your pal feel appreciated. ARIES (March 21-April 19) --Someone who is usually agreeable might do an about-face and could handle things in a manner that would cause problems, just to get even with you for ignoring him or her lately.
Universal Crossword Edited by Timothy E. Parker April 20, 2012 ACROSS 1 Whacks, as a housefly 6 Mythical Olympus residents 10 Astronaut’s drink 14 Around-theworld trip 15 Alternate for butter 16 Dish of many ingredients 17 Catcher in the Rhine? 18 ___, but not least ... 19 Used the restroom 20 With hope of a rare occurrence 23 “The Simpsons� Kwik-EMart operator 24 “Arabian Nights� birds 25 Bed support piece 28 “What were ___ thinking?� 31 Lead-in to “fare� (Var.) 35 Sunbather’s aim 36 Detach from a source of dependence 37 Skull-andcrossbones stuff 38 Motorcyclist’s spot for shelter 41 Hunting document 42 What you pay at sales 43 Thing that begins gradually? 44 Far from bungling
4/20
45 More than satisfy 46 School event 47 Slang for old, dilapidated car 49 What it takes to tango 51 Close to China, Japan and Korea 58 Muscle-mag displays 59 Address for the king 60 Angle that’s smaller than 90 degrees 61 “The Gift of the ___� 62 “Camelot� character 63 Site of the Louvre 64 Partners of wherefores 65 Fells a tree, say 66 Engages in violent practices? DOWN 1 “Nothing to write home about� 2 Brown songbird 3 “This won’t hurt ___� 4 Soldier’s helmet, in slang 5 Cheap’s rhyming opposite 6 Augusta activity 7 Big name in Norwegian royalty 8 Catch sight of from afar 9 Group of Bantu languages
10 Administrative division of a county 11 Oscar winner Guinness 12 “... in the pot, ___ days old� 13 Was infected with 21 Beat in a hot dog competition 22 All the stage is their world 25 Buddhist shrine 26 Striped, as highways 27 Agassi of tennis 29 “Star Wars� pilot Solo 30 ___ Gay (WWII plane) 32 Tributary of the Missouri River 33 Bouquet flowers 34 Beginning stages 36 Author
37 Coin replaced by the euro 39 Stress on a word or phrase 40 Pup’s doc 45 Egyptian tourist attraction 46 Boot part 48 Sailing the waves 50 Rolled-up sandwiches 51 Ancient ark builder 52 Likely to offend some people 53 U.S.-Canada border lake 54 DEA employees, e.g. 55 Surrounding glow 56 Wield a swizzle stick 57 “Guarding ___� (1994 Shirley MacLaine movie) 58 Big name in luxury autos
PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER
4/19
Š 2012 Universal Uclick www.upuzzles.com
SO WHICH IS IT? By Kathy George
Friday, April 20, 2012 •
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OUDaily.com ››
Life&arts
Looking to get out of the library this weekend and de-stress? Check out the full list of the life & arts staff’s weekend suggestions.
Lindsey Ruta, life & arts editor Mariah Webb, assistant life & arts editor dailyent@ou.edu • phone: 405-325-3666
concert
Hellogoodbye says ‘hello’ to Sooners Editor’s Note: This interview was conducted via email because the band is still on the road.
I
think I can speak on the behalf of most females my age when I say Forrest Kline’s catchy, innocuous lyrics to “Here in Your Arms� and “Oh, It Is Love,� at one point or another, became a relationship or two’s “song.� Hellogoodbye released their first album “Zombies! Aliens! Vampires! Dinosaurs!� in the midst of our peaking hormones and fruitless search for indie-pop bands to provide relevant lyrics for our endless strife in love. At 8 tonight on the Oklahoma Memorial Union lawn, Kline and his fellow Huntington Beach, Calif., band mates will perform those all-too-familiar power pop ballads from their 2006 album, along with material from their newer album, “Would It Kill You?� (2010). Don’t forget to practice your best shimmy-shimmy quarter-turns. The Daily: What is the origin of your band’s name? Kline: I was a senior in high school at the time, and it was about opportunities and people coming and going. Everything in the band has always represented an informal reminder for me, so this was a little note-toself to try to take advantage of and enjoy the moments you have at hand. The Daily: How did everyone in your band come together? Kline: Well, we’ve been through many, many incarnations at this point. Originally, I started recording things in my bedroom; I wasn’t really trying to start a band. I built up enough songs that we got some chances to open up some shows, and I got my friends together to do it. The Daily: What are the goals of Hellogoodbye? Kline: I would love to be able to do this for a long time. Creating something — especially music — is really, really rewarding, and everything else that comes along with that is awesome. The Daily: What would you be if you were not a musician? Why? Kline: To be honest, I’m not sure. I freelanced as a graphic designer for a little bit after high school, and I’ve got a hobbyist’s passion for nerdy coding sort of stuff, but I’m probably really only good at that by pre2000 standards. I’d never land a job in this market. The Daily: What is your music writing process like? Kline: First, you wait until something strikes you — a melody or words or whatever — and then it’s just a lot of work to build up the rest of it to be worthy of that first bit. I built a studio in my garage, so I have access to everything I need: drums, guitars, keys, toys, etc. The Daily: What has been your best experience with music? Kline: There’s something kind of magic about festivals. Sometimes they’re crap, but sometimes they are just ineffable. You get the opportunity to play with bands you might never get to outside of a fest environment, and there’s something unique about festival performances, like it’s an important occasion for the band, too. The Daily: What kind of crowd is your favorite to perform in front of? Kline: I’d like to say I’m cool with real mellow crowds, and I am to a degree, but when people give you energy, it makes all the difference in the world.
photo provided
Electronic-pop band Hellogoodbye performs at 8 p.m. on the Oklahoma Memorial Union lawn tonight. The Huntington Beach, Calif., band released its first full-length album, “Zombies! Aliens! Vampires! Dinosaurs!,� in 2006 with Drive Thru Records. Since then, the band has released two more full length albums including, ““EP/DVD Split� and “Would it Kill You.� Hellogoodbye frontman Forrest Kline (middle front) chatted with The Daily about the upcoming show and what he knows about OU.
The Daily: Do you guys have any superstitions or preThe Daily: What is the extent of your experience with show rituals? Oklahoma? What do you think? Kline: Just to remember to pee. I usually sort of want Kline: It’s real pretty, and people are real nice. You to have five minutes to chill out, get a headspace going, guys get some scary weather, though! but that usually doesn’t happen. The Daily: If your music was a type of food, what The Daily: What are Hellogoodbye’s favorite touring would it be and why? snacks? Kline: Probably something sweet, but I think it’s the Kline: I eat Ritz and peanut butter just about every sort of food that comes with tons of dipping sauces and night. toppings. The Daily: Have you guys performed on other college The Daily: Name one thing you know about the campuses? University of Oklahoma. Kline: Yeah, we’ve got quite a few under our belt now. Kline: I know you guys just had a tornado, and I hope They’re always a special treat. everybody is OK. And that, if they are, they’ll hopefully invite us to the cool kids’ party after the show. The Daily: What do you guys think about the Norman music scene? How does it compare? Kline: Sadly, the only thing I know is that The Courtney Goforth is a journalism senior. Flaming Lips are from there. Luckily, that’s enough to say it’s better than most places ever.
GO AND DO Concert
South Canadian Valley Church of Christ
WHEN: 8 tonight WHERE: Oklahoma Memorial Union lawn PRICE: free
Come join us to learn God’s word. Sunday 10:00 a.m. 4th Sunday 1:00 p.m. Wednesday 7:00 p.m. 405.364.4051
2217 24th Ave. SW • www.normanchurch.com
HIGHLIGHTING OR COLOR
WITH HAIRCUT • $54.99 WEAVE OR FOIL ADD $10.00
HAIRCUT • $11.99 Non-Requested Stylist Only
Eyebrow Waxing $8.00
Discount with OU ID or this coupon!
127 N. Porter 360-4247
Be
Paint Your Own Pottery & Glass Fusing
The Works $16.99 Shampoo/ Cut/Blowdry
$6 Bang Trim
1100 E. Constitution 579-1202
129 N.W. Ave. 360-4422
1215 W. Lindsey 364-1325 Themaneman.net
University Theatre
Weitzenhoffer School of Musical Theatre
(405) 307-9971 bewildforart.com
t UI "WF /8 4VJUF /PSNBO 0,
An adventurous story of friendship for the young and the young at heart. Book by Lynn
Ahrens and Stephen Flaherty Flaherty, Lyrics by Lynn Ahrens
Music by Stephen
Co-conceived by Lynn Ahrens, Stephen Flaherty and Eric Idle Based on the books by Dr. Seuss
Saturdays & Wednesdays
8am - 12noon
Cleveland County Fairgrounds 615 E. Robinson
Norman, OK 73071
(405) 360-4721 or ccfb@sbcglobal.net
8 p.m. April 27-28, May 3-5 3 p.m. April 29, May 6 Rupel J. Jones Theatre www.ou.edu/finearts
Fine Arts Box Office
(405) 325-4101
Seussical the Musical is produced in arrangement with Musical Theatre International, WWW.MTISHOWS.COM The University of Oklahoma is an equal opportunity institution. For accommodations on the basis of disability call (405) 325-4101.
8
Life&Arts
• Friday, April 20, 2012
Shows, events and more
THe Daily’s
Oklahoma Weekender Read more at OUDaily.com
Game Review
‘Resident Evil’ trailer disappoints Life & Arts Columnist
Hellogoodbye
The Hellogoodbye concert is tonight on the lawn of the Oklahoma Memorial Union. Relive those memories of high school sweethearts and raging hormones. The concert starts at 8 p.m. — Courtney Goforth
’89er day
This weekend is a great time to celebrate, not only Oklahoma history, but also our mascot’s namesake. Celebrate the land run and the original Boomers and Sooners on ’89er Day this Saturday. The ’89er Day Parade will take place at 10 a.m. in downtown Norman on Main Street. — Westlee Parsons
record store day
Record Store Day is a must this weekend. There are crazy deals at all the Guestroom Records locations. Doors open at 11 a.m. Saturday — Shawn Stafford
“The Lucky one”
Grab a date and go see the new Nicholas Sparks novel inspired movie, “The Lucky One.” I have read the book, and I really hope the movie lives up to it because I never know with Nicholas Sparks novelsturned-movies. Go and see for yourself; it’s the perfect movie for couples or for a bunch of girlfriends. — Rachael Cervenka
Steven Zoeller stevenv.zoeller@gmail.com
M
any fans of the “Resident Evil” franchise were no doubt excited by this month’s trailer showing off the latest installment, “Resident Evil 6.” But I imagine some came away very disappointed. I know I did. The trailer showcased a very different kind of game than the one for which myself and other fans were hoping. Aside from some semieerie environments and the usual body horror, it was devoid of elements that distinguished earlier “Resident Evil” games as part of the survival horror genre. There was no real tension or isolation. Rather, we got what resembles a squadbased shooter starring monsters. From the looks of it, “Resident Evil 6” won’t be the much-desired return to the series’ roots. Rather, it will continue the same sort of action-oriented game play that took prominence in “Resident Evil 4.” To be clear, there’s nothing terribly wrong with this game-play style — most fans at least agree “Resident Evil 4” was good. However, it’s just not what the series is supposed to be, and if the focus on action continues to escalate as it’s done since “Resident Evil 4,” then pretty soon there will be little to distinguish it
Photo provided
The game trailer for the newest installment in the “Resident Evil” franchise seems to show the October release will be the next step down a path away from the franchise’s early game-play style toward the mass of shoot-’em-ups on the market, The Daily’s Steven Zoeller says.
from the multitude of other pretty shoot-’em-ups on the market. For better or worse, publisher Capcom seems to acknowledge this. The team refers to “Resident Evil 6” as a “dramatic horror” game, whereas previous entries had purported to simply be survival horror. After seeing the trailer, I’m sure this is a euphemism for “action game with some horror elements thrown in.” In an interview with Gamasutra, Capcom producer Masachika Kawata justified the shift by citing sales data, pointing out the market for survival horror was small. “Looking at the marketing data [for survival horror games] ... the market is small, compared to the number of units ‘Call of Duty’ and
all those action games sell,” Kawata said. “A survival horror ‘Resident Evil’ doesn’t seem like it’d be able to sell those kind of numbers.” That sentence alone has more scares packed into it than any of the recent “Resident Evil” games. First of all, why should “Resident Evil” aspire to the earning heights of shooters like “Call of Duty”? Though I admire Capcom’s ambition, it’s not reasonable to think any series ought to undergo a genre-switch in order to compete with one of the biggest shooters in the market. Furthermore, what about the art form? While this issue is distinct from the all-important matter of profit and loss, I don’t think it’s wholly irrelevant to point out the
damage Capcom is doing to the industry artistically. For years, “Resident Evil” was looked to by other survival horror series for guidance and inspiration. Now that its transformation into an action game is complete, we can expect other horror developers to follow suit. This is just sad. As games like “Amnesia: The Dark Descent” have shown, survival horror still has a place in gaming culture and the capability to sell well. All the genre needs is leadership and another chance. Instead, “Resident Evil” is jumping ship in the hopes it will land on another, more profitable boat. Steven Zoeller is a journalism sophomore.
At a glance ‘Resident Evil 6’
Release date: Oct 2 Company: Capcom Available platforms: • Xbox 360 • PlayStation 3 • PC
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