OU softball’s Player of the Year candidates stay humble (page 7) The University of Oklahoma’s independent student voice since 1916
T U E S DAY, A P R I L 2 4 , 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
HOUSing & fOOD
Dorm, food costs could go up 5-7% Increase likely coming next year, OU official says EMMA HAMBLEN Campus Reporter
Students may be paying up to $282.17 more each semester administrators prepare to cut services and possibly increase room and board rates by up to 7 percent.
A 5- to 7-percent increase in OU Housing and Food Services’ room and board rates is likely in the coming academic year and Housing and Food Services’ Cate ala Carte room service will be cut to address increased costs, Housing and Food Services David Annis said. The potential rate increases will address a 3.5-percent increase in food costs and
an increase in labor costs, Annis said. Members of the university’s Facilities Management department DaviD i n f o r m e d anniS Annis of an upcoming $500,000 increase in utilities and a $600,000 increase in custodial
housekeeping costs in the next year, Annis said. “So those two figures alone necessitate us going in and making some adjustments to our rates,” Annis said. Cutting Room Ser vice will save $125,000, which means that with a 5-percent rate increase, Housing and Food Services will still face a $170,000 budgetary
shortfall, according to the coming academic year’s rate proposal. A 6 -p e rc e nt i n c re a s e would get Housing and Food Services above the needed amount, which is why there is an opportunity for an increase between 5 and 6 percent, Annis said. “Now at this point in time we’re still looking at other areas where we could save. I
personally would like to keep the rate increase at about 5 percent but to provide all the services that HCSA is wanting, we may have to go to 6 percent. But I’m not sure of that yet, we’re still working on some numbers there,” Annis said. “And again, it’s a balancing act. We have to balance the income with the see HOUSING page 5
aCaDemiCS
Sooners fall into world record
Peers join study forces Student group seeks to provide support for pupils RACHAEL CERVENKA Campus Reporter
Kelsey Higley/tHe daily
More than 250 students gather to attempt to break the guinness World Record for the world’s largest simultaneous trust fall on Monday in the Oklahoma Memorial Union’s Molly Shi Boren Ballroom. initially, not enough people came to the event, but attendees called on friends and broke the record. The event was hosted by Sooners Helping Sooners, a new student initiative raising money for OU students in financial crisis. The group said it wanted to physically represent the act of supporting other students as a way to raise awareness about its new program. (visit OUDaily.com to see a photo gallery of the event.)
StUDY aBrOaD
OU professors preparing for Arezzo program Family takes opportunity to experience world culture for upcoming school year COCO COURTOIS Campus Reporter
Students aren’t the only ones preparing to go abroad this summer or next semester. Monica Sharp, director of International Student Services, and her husband, Jason Houston, Italian literature professor, will serve as the faculty-in-residence family next year in Arezzo, Italy. OU has a campus and study abroad program in the Tuscan city. “We’re really happy because the application process was very competitive,”
AT A gLAnCE While Sharp’s away
Sharp said. • Monica Sharp will remain Sharp and Houston have director of international been at OU for seven and Student Services and eight years, respectively, and manage the staff. are ready for a new environ• Mariana Mircheva will be assistant director and ment, Houston said. work closely with Sharp to But moving out will not support the office. be easy, especially with their • in addition, the office has 1-year-old son, Victor. four international student “It’s always a big decision,” advisers and three student Sharp said. “There was the assistants. house, our jobs, Victor.... Source: Mariana Mircheva But it’s a great opportunity. Victor will learn English and Italian, and Jason is really “It’s great for us as a famlooking forward to introduc- ily,” he said. “Monica and I ing him to gelato (ice cream) thought about raising Victor and olive oil.” Houston said he agrees. see AREZZO page 3
JosH BlanCo/tHe daily
Monica Sharp (center), international services director, plays with her 1-year-old son, Victor (right), beside her husband, Jason Houston (left), an italian literature professor, in their backyard Friday. They will spend next year in Arezzo, italy, as the faculty-in-residence family.
eDitOrial VOL. 97, NO. 144
© 2012 OU Publications Board FREE — Additional copies 25 cents Campus ........................ Classifieds .................. Life & Arts ................... Opinion ...................... Sports .........................
2 6 8 4 7
nOW Online at Junior college All-American Portia Durrett signs national letter of intent with the Sooners on Monday. (Sports)
Requested document and purpose
The expansion of one of OU’s most popular study abroad programs will benefit students if it is self-sufficient. (page 4)
life & artS Daily staffers review recent releases from Jason Mraz, Train and Black Dice in a new music triple feature. (page 8)
see GROUP page 2
The Daily’s open record requests
new arezzo monastery a worthy investement
Sophomore slump? new women’s basketball signee will add size, depth pop artist turned folksy?
Sometimes a class can prove too difficult for one person to handle on his or her own, something a new OU student organization is working to help. The Oklahoma Teaching Alliance is a way for students to form communities within their major to find support and student-led learning, group president Jake Morgan said. The group officially registered April 16 and is looking for students to serve as academic mentors to teach groups of other students, especially in general chemistry, zoology and economics, University College freshman Morgan said. The goal is to create long-lasting learning communities for freshman students that they can utilize for their entire undergraduate career. The program lends itself to freshmen, but it would not be exclusively for them, Morgan said. “What I hope students find with this is that they have people they can count on in terms of not just their peers, who they are taking the courses with, but also the academic mentors,” Morgan said. “I want them to feel like they always have a lifeline whenever it is.” Morgan got the idea after taking a statistics for non-majors course in the fall, he said. He had previously taken a similar course, so he knew the mater ial w ell, he said. He started spreading the word to his fellow
Ben Williams/tHe daily
Sophomore Drew Krittenbrink launches a pitch against Alabama State during OU’s 7-0 win Sunday at L. Dale Mitchell Park. The Sooners visit Oklahoma State for a midweek Bedlam battle at 6:30 tonight. (page 7)
Date requested
most recent contract between OU and apple inc. — To better understand Apple’s relationship with OU’s journalism college after it was named to the Apple Distinguished Educators program.
Friday
list of events that served alcohol during fiscal year 2011 at the Oklahoma memorial Union — To better understand the number and types of events granted the ability to serve alcohol.
April 13
Commission received by the Oklahoma memorial Union from the University Club for liquor catering sales for the 2011 fiscal year— To learn how much money the university makes from events at which alcohol is served.
April 13
Visit OUDaily.com/openrecords for a complete list of The Daily’s requests
2
CAMPUS
• Tuesday, April 24, 2012
Campus
Laney Ellisor, campus editor Kathleen Evans, assistant campus editor Chris Miller, assistant campus editor dailynews@ou.edu • phone: 405-325-3666
group: Struggling students unite for support Continued from page 1 classmates about a studentled study group he would lead for anyone and everyone interested. Psychology sophomore Courtney Searles was one of those students beginning to feel hopeless and defeated toward the end of the class, she said. She was yearning for an A but felt this was nearly impossible to do alone, she said. Initially, a small group of students began to meet regularly, and Morgan explained the material in simpler terms in hopes of making it less daunting for the students, he said. As word began to spread, more and more students began attending the meetings, and, by the end of the semester, the group consisted of nearly 20 students, including Searles, Morgan said. “It really helped knowing that you weren’t alone in the class,” Searles said. “Most of the things you were struggling with, other students were struggling with as well.” Searles ended up receiving a high B in the course, she said. If the study group had formed at the beginning of the semester, rather than toward the end, she said she is confident she would have made an A. Morgan saw a change in the students over the course of the study group meetings, he said. By the end of the semester the students were no longer hopeless and defeated; instead they were pumped up and ready to succeed. Morgan thought about bringing this idea to the rest of OU and other courses, he said. He brainstormed ideas for how to accomplish this and shared the idea with his peers to get feedback. He also consulted with several professors to gain their insight, including Gregg
Today around campus A seminar about managing final exams will take place at 4 p.m. in Wagner Hall, Room 245. Write Club Creative Writers Writing Group will meet at 6 p.m. in Wagner Hall, Room 280. An OU Jazz Bands concert featuring guest artist Drew Zaremba, a saxophonist from the University of North Texas, will be held at 8 p.m. at Catlett Music Center’s Sharp Concert Hall. Tickets are $5 for OU students, faculty and staff.
Wednesday, April 25 A Latin Americanist Lunch featuring Marcelo Rioseco, assistant professor of Spanish literature, will be held from noon to 1:30 p.m. in Hester Hall, Room 160.
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 Monday news story, “Relay for Life raises nearly $100K,” used an outdated figure for how much the event raised. The relay raised $100,349, said Elizabeth Auld, OU Relay for Life chairwoman. The story also misreported the beneficiary of the money raised. The funds go to support the American Cancer Society. A photo caption accompanying the story also misspelled University College freshman Tanner Linn’s name. Visit OUDaily.com/corrections to see an archive of our corrections
Being
NUMBER ONE is nothing
Kingsley Burns/The Daily
“The very best undergraduates often times are more aware of what people need to learn than a lot of the older faculty and administrators.” David ray, ou honors college Dean
Garn, dean of the Rainbolt College of Education and group adviser, he said. The world is changing in terms of the global economy and technology, said David Ray, dean of the OU Honors College and supporter of the alliance. Higher education has not necessarily kept up with preparing college students for this new economy, he said. “The very best undergraduates often times are more aware of what people need to learn than a lot of the older faculty and administrators,”
making it America’s
9
crisis line
325-6963 (NYNE)
OU Number Nyne Crisis Line
8 p.m.-4 a.m. every day
except OU holidays and breaks
8
Days UOSA’s Department of Health will have lasted if Student Congress approves President Joe Sangirardi’s Department Consolidation Act on Tuesday. Former president Hannah Morris created the department April 15.
Source: Former UOSA president Hannah Morris, Undergraduate Student Congress agenda
those departments would be distributed throughout the executive branch’s Interior and Exterior departments, which are placed under the executive branch’s Department of the Association, according to the UOSA Code Annotated.
Source: Undergraduate Student Congress Rules of Order and By Laws, Undergraduate Student Congress Secretary Sean Bender
The consolidation legislation is part of Sangirardi’s platform he campaigned on with UOSA Vice President Rainey Sewell. This legislation should make UOSA more effective because we will have fewer people working on projects that happen infrequently, Sangirardi said. Sangirardi met resistance from current Student Congress vice chairwoman Kelbie Kennedy, who disagreed with Sangirardi’s vision of consolidating the executive branch, during Sunday’s executive committee meeting. Cutting these departments limits the ability of future UOSA presidents, Kennedy said. The debate between Kennedy and Sangirardi boiled down to a
Campus Brief Publication
OU magazine to celebrate 350th issue, 85 years Thursday A bimonthly OU publication will celebrate its 350th issue Thursday by giving away prizes and discounted issues of its magazine at a launch party. World Literature Today will host the party at 6 p.m. at Café Plaid, 333 W.
Boyd St. The party will feature a drawing to win a Kindle Fire, as well gift subscriptions to the magazine. Discounted single issues and subscriptions will also be available at the party, and some of the magazine’s authors will attend to sign autographs, magazine executive director Robert Con Davis said. The party comes during the magazine’s 85th year of publication and will allow the local community to see what the magazine is doing, Davis said.
Although the party is open to anyone, the magazine is trying to target students especially to get them to appreciate the work, Davis said. “I’ve heard from students who didn’t know the magazine was such a big deal until they moved away,” he said. The magazine staff is trying to change that perception and is thinking of making the party an annual event where it shows off the best of what’s going on in the magazine, Davis said. Paighten Harkins, Campus Reporter
bilingually, but it’s a hard thing to do in the U.S. We have no fear going in Italy.” The transition to Italy will be a little easier because it is not Houston’s first time in Italy or even Arezzo. “I’ve lived in Arezzo before (nine months in 2000), so it’s a coming back to old friends and colleagues,” Houston said. “I know the roads around Arezzo better than I know the roads around Norman.” The family will live in a building for the faculty-in-residence across from the student center, and both will teach classes in the summer, fall and spring. This summer, Sharp will teach the international internships in Arezzo for OU students, and Houston will lead OU in Arezzo’s 2012 and 2013 summer programs. Throughout the year, Sharp also will assist with the planning and execution of the “Getting to Know Arezzo” course, which is offered every semester, she said. She also will teach “Italy at the Crossroads: Immigrant Experiences in Italy,” a course studying immigration in Italy since 1880, including historical emigration from Italy and immigration to Italy, she said. In the fall, Houston will teach the “World of Dante,” a course about his favorite Italian author, Dante Alighieri. “Dante was from the area around Arezzo,” he said. “We’re going to do small trips to read it in the battlefields he fought, in the churches he visited ... to see the world Dante lived in.” He also will teach “Contemporary Literature,” in the spring. “We’ll have the chance to have Erri de Luca, Dacia Maraini and Andrea de Carlo, the greatest contemporary Italian authors, to come to Arezzo to speak about their books,” he said. “It’s the point of studying abroad — you have access to different resources.” The students aren’t the only ones accessing different resources, he said. Living in Italy will let him look at 14thcentury texts in Florence and Rome for his research. Sharp, too, will be busy, she said. In addition to teaching, she will still keep her role as director of International Student Services, despite the 5,400 miles separating her from OU. Mariana Mircheva will become the assistant director and work closely with Sharp to support the office, Sharp said. The family will replace Suzette Grillot, associate dean of the College of International Studies, who has been faculty-in-residence at Arezzo since last August with her husband and daughter. “I work with Jason and Monica all the time, and I can say without a doubt they’ll be an outstanding faculty-inresidence,” Grillot said. “I don’t even know if they need any advice. They know so much already.” Houston said the family is ready for the trip. “We don’t realize yet — we’re still taking care of the visas and the paperwork — but we have this smile deep down because we both know that June 4, we’re going to be on that plane,” Houston said. “I can’t wait for the new students to meet us because they’ll have a blast.”
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Ray said. “The idea that OU students would step up and talk about teaching each other, that seemed to me like cutting edge.” Ray said he thinks there is a lot of intellectual energy at OU that is still untapped, and this idea could be a way to energize students to help save their own education. There are eight confirmed academic mentors, and Morgan has yet to meet with others who have expressed interest, he said. Officers in the organiza- Editor’s Note: Jake Morgan is a tion plan to implement the campus reporter for The Daily.
• Do pass — The committee supports the legislation and thinks the full body should pass it. • No recommendation — The committee has allowed the legislation to pass through committee to the full body, but the committee doesn’t want to influence the decision of the
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first set of learning communities in the fall, said Bryce Fugate, vice president of the organization. However, the exact details of the organization are still being worked out, he said. “We are a really fluid organization because we are new, and there is nothing like this,” Fugate said. “We are still trying to fully grasp every little detail and put it all together.” There are a lot of plans in store for the organization, but for now officers are just going to experiment to see what actually works, he said. “It’s not a one-hit wonder,” Fugate said. “We really want to establish roots.”
Undergraduate Student Congress’ last meeting of the semester will be filled with executive elections, awards and an agenda packed full of legislation. Student Congress’ 7 p.m. meeting today in Adams Hall, Room 150 will begin with the final reports of the current executive Student Congress members. This will be followed by the handing out of annual awards and either the selection of the new Student Congress chair, vice chair and secretary or voting on legislation depending on the motion by the body, according to the agenda. Congress will vote on nine pieces of legislation, according to the agenda. The most notable piece of legislation on the agenda is UOSA President Joe Sangirardi’s Department Consolidation Act, which would eliminate UOSA’s Academics, Off-Campus Living and Transportation and Health departments. The responsibilities of
AT A GLANCE Recommendation types
philosophical agreement. “I have a different philosophy in how the organization is run,” Sangirardi said. The Department C o n s o l i d at i o n Ac t w a s passed through committee with no recommendation unanimously after Kennedy’s initial objection. The decision to pass with no recommendation was made after Secretary Sean Bender raised concerns. “I don’t feel comfortable just the three of us deciding this bill can’t be seen in Congress simply because we don’t like it,” Bender said. Congress’s other legislation features potential changes to the way UOSA advertises positions, further defining the duties of UOSA’s webmaster and resolutions thanking various students, staff and faculty, as well as a resolution regarding potential cuts to OU’s Women’s and Gender Studies Program. Student Congress Chairwoman Alyssa Loveless said she will be thanking the body for its service during her final chair report at the beginning of the meeting, especially Kennedy and Bender. “[This] has literally been the best year I could ask for at college,” Loveless said.
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163,000 will die —
Congress to close out year
Managing Editor
to celebrate.
This year, more than
Student Government
CHASE COOK
Connor Walters, University College freshman, (left) breaks down types of oil and gas resources during a Petroleum Engineering study session Sunday in David L. Boren Hall. The session, organized by University College freshman and Oklahoma Teaching Alliance member Wes Herron (right), was modeled after the types of academic and networking programs the student group hopes to develop next year.
Tuesday, April 24, 2012 •
2657 CLASSEN BLVD | NORMAN OK 73071
2
CAMPUS
• Tuesday, April 24, 2012
Campus
Laney Ellisor, campus editor Kathleen Evans, assistant campus editor Chris Miller, assistant campus editor dailynews@ou.edu • phone: 405-325-3666
group: Struggling students unite for support Continued from page 1 classmates about a studentled study group he would lead for anyone and everyone interested. Psychology sophomore Courtney Searles was one of those students beginning to feel hopeless and defeated toward the end of the class, she said. She was yearning for an A but felt this was nearly impossible to do alone, she said. Initially, a small group of students began to meet regularly, and Morgan explained the material in simpler terms in hopes of making it less daunting for the students, he said. As word began to spread, more and more students began attending the meetings, and, by the end of the semester, the group consisted of nearly 20 students, including Searles, Morgan said. “It really helped knowing that you weren’t alone in the class,” Searles said. “Most of the things you were struggling with, other students were struggling with as well.” Searles ended up receiving a high B in the course, she said. If the study group had formed at the beginning of the semester, rather than toward the end, she said she is confident she would have made an A. Morgan saw a change in the students over the course of the study group meetings, he said. By the end of the semester the students were no longer hopeless and defeated; instead they were pumped up and ready to succeed. Morgan thought about bringing this idea to the rest of OU and other courses, he said. He brainstormed ideas for how to accomplish this and shared the idea with his peers to get feedback. He also consulted with several professors to gain their insight, including Gregg
Today around campus A seminar about managing final exams will take place at 4 p.m. in Wagner Hall, Room 245. Write Club Creative Writers Writing Group will meet at 6 p.m. in Wagner Hall, Room 280. An OU Jazz Bands concert featuring guest artist Drew Zaremba, a saxophonist from the University of North Texas, will be held at 8 p.m. at Catlett Music Center’s Sharp Concert Hall. Tickets are $5 for OU students, faculty and staff.
Wednesday, April 25 A Latin Americanist Lunch featuring Marcelo Rioseco, assistant professor of Spanish literature, will be held from noon to 1:30 p.m. in Hester Hall, Room 160.
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 Monday news story, “Relay for Life raises nearly $100K,” used an outdated figure for how much the event raised. The relay raised $100,349, said Elizabeth Auld, OU Relay for Life chairwoman. The story also misreported the beneficiary of the money raised. The funds go to support the American Cancer Society. A photo caption accompanying the story also misspelled University College freshman Tanner Linn’s name. Visit OUDaily.com/corrections to see an archive of our corrections
Student Government
Congress to close out year
Awards, legislation, executive awards to fill agenda CHASE COOK
Managing Editor
Kingsley Burns/The Daily
Connor Walters, University College freshman, (left) breaks down types of oil and gas resources during a Petroleum Engineering study session Sunday in David L. Boren Hall. The session, organized by University College freshman and Oklahoma Teaching Alliance member Wes Herron (right), was modeled after the types of academic and networking programs the student group hopes to develop next year.
“The very best undergraduates often times are more aware of what people need to learn than a lot of the older faculty and administrators.” David ray, ou honors college Dean
Garn, dean of the Rainbolt College of Education and group adviser, he said. The world is changing in terms of the global economy and technology, said David Ray, dean of the OU Honors College and supporter of the alliance. Higher education has not necessarily kept up with preparing college students for this new economy, he said. “The very best undergraduates often times are more aware of what people need to learn than a lot of the older faculty and administrators,”
first set of learning communities in the fall, said Bryce Fugate, vice president of the organization. However, the exact details of the organization are still being worked out, he said. “We are a really fluid organization because we are new, and there is nothing like this,” Fugate said. “We are still trying to fully grasp every little detail and put it all together.” There are a lot of plans in store for the organization, but for now officers are just going to experiment to see what actually works, he said. “It’s not a one-hit wonder,” Fugate said. “We really want to establish roots.”
Ray said. “The idea that OU students would step up and talk about teaching each other, that seemed to me like cutting edge.” Ray said he thinks there is a lot of intellectual energy at OU that is still untapped, and this idea could be a way to energize students to help save their own education. There are eight confirmed academic mentors, and Morgan has yet to meet with others who have expressed interest, he said. Officers in the organiza- Editor’s Note: Jake Morgan is a tion plan to implement the campus reporter for The Daily.
Tuesday, April 24, 2012 •
Undergraduate Student Congress’ last meeting of the semester will be filled with executive elections, awards and an agenda packed full of legislation. Student Congress’ 7 p.m. meeting today in Adams Hall, Room 150 will begin with the final reports of the current executive Student Congress members. This will be followed by the handing out of annual awards and either the selection of the new Student Congress chair, vice chair and secretary or voting on legislation depending on the motion by the body, according to the agenda. Congress will vote on nine pieces of legislation, according to the agenda. The most notable piece of legislation on the agenda is UOSA President Joe Sangirardi’s Department Consolidation Act, which would eliminate UOSA’s Academics, Off-Campus Living and Transportation and Health departments. The responsibilities of
AT A GLANCE Recommendation types • Do pass — The committee supports the legislation and thinks the full body should pass it. • No recommendation — The committee has allowed the legislation to pass through committee to the full body, but the committee doesn’t want to influence the decision of the
BY THE NUMBER Consolidation
8
Days UOSA’s Department of Health will have lasted if Student Congress approves President Joe Sangirardi’s Department Consolidation Act on Tuesday. Former president Hannah Morris created the department April 15.
Source: Former UOSA president Hannah Morris, Undergraduate Student Congress agenda
those departments would be distributed throughout the executive branch’s Interior and Exterior departments, which are placed under the executive branch’s Department of the Association, according to the UOSA Code Annotated.
public body. • Do fail — The committee does not support the legislation. The legislation will not be placed on the fully body’s items to be considered or new business. Source: Undergraduate Student Congress Rules of Order and By Laws, Undergraduate Student Congress Secretary Sean Bender
The consolidation legislation is part of Sangirardi’s platform he campaigned on with UOSA Vice President Rainey Sewell. This legislation should make UOSA more effective because we will have fewer people working on projects that happen infrequently, Sangirardi said. Sangirardi met resistance from current Student Congress vice chairwoman Kelbie Kennedy, who disagreed with Sangirardi’s vision of consolidating the executive branch, during Sunday’s executive committee meeting. Cutting these departments limits the ability of future UOSA presidents, Kennedy said. The debate between Kennedy and Sangirardi boiled down to a
philosophical agreement. “I have a different philosophy in how the organization is run,” Sangirardi said. The Department C o n s o l i d at i o n Ac t w a s passed through committee with no recommendation unanimously after Kennedy’s initial objection. The decision to pass with no recommendation was made after Secretary Sean Bender raised concerns. “I don’t feel comfortable just the three of us deciding this bill can’t be seen in Congress simply because we don’t like it,” Bender said. Congress’s other legislation features potential changes to the way UOSA advertises positions, further defining the duties of UOSA’s webmaster and resolutions thanking various students, staff and faculty, as well as a resolution regarding potential cuts to OU’s Women’s and Gender Studies Program. Student Congress Chairwoman Alyssa Loveless said she will be thanking the body for its service during her final chair report at the beginning of the meeting, especially Kennedy and Bender. “[This] has literally been the best year I could ask for at college,” Loveless said.
Campus Brief Publication
OU magazine to celebrate 350th issue, 85 years Thursday A bimonthly OU publication will celebrate its 350th issue Thursday by giving away prizes and discounted issues of its magazine at a launch party. World Literature Today will host the party at 6 p.m. at Café Plaid, 333 W.
Boyd St. The party will feature a drawing to win a Kindle Fire, as well gift subscriptions to the magazine. Discounted single issues and subscriptions will also be available at the party, and some of the magazine’s authors will attend to sign autographs, magazine executive director Robert Con Davis said. The party comes during the magazine’s 85th year of publication and will allow the local community to see what the magazine is doing, Davis said.
Although the party is open to anyone, the magazine is trying to target students especially to get them to appreciate the work, Davis said. “I’ve heard from students who didn’t know the magazine was such a big deal until they moved away,” he said. The magazine staff is trying to change that perception and is thinking of making the party an annual event where it shows off the best of what’s going on in the magazine, Davis said. Paighten Harkins, Campus Reporter
arezzo: Professors to teach variety of classes Continued from page 1 bilingually, but it’s a hard thing to do in the U.S. We have no fear going in Italy.” The transition to Italy will be a little easier because it is not Houston’s first time in Italy or even Arezzo. “I’ve lived in Arezzo before (nine months in 2000), so it’s a coming back to old friends and colleagues,” Houston said. “I know the roads around Arezzo better than I know the roads around Norman.” The family will live in a building for the faculty-in-residence across from the student center, and both will teach classes in the summer, fall and spring. This summer, Sharp will teach the international internships in Arezzo for OU students, and Houston will lead OU in Arezzo’s 2012 and 2013 summer programs. Throughout the year, Sharp also will assist with the planning and execution of the “Getting to Know Arezzo” course, which is offered every semester, she said. She also will teach “Italy at the Crossroads: Immigrant Experiences in Italy,” a course studying immigration in Italy since 1880, including historical emigration from Italy and immigration to Italy, she said. In the fall, Houston will teach the “World of Dante,” a course about his favorite Italian author, Dante Alighieri. “Dante was from the area around Arezzo,” he said. “We’re going to do small trips to read it in the battlefields he fought, in the churches he visited ... to see the world Dante lived in.” He also will teach “Contemporary Literature,” in the spring. “We’ll have the chance to have Erri de Luca, Dacia Maraini and Andrea de Carlo, the greatest contemporary Italian authors, to come to Arezzo to speak about their books,” he said. “It’s the point of studying abroad — you have access to different resources.” The students aren’t the only ones accessing different resources, he said. Living in Italy will let him look at 14thcentury texts in Florence and Rome for his research. Sharp, too, will be busy, she said. In addition to teaching, she will still keep her role as director of International Student Services, despite the 5,400 miles separating her from OU. Mariana Mircheva will become the assistant director and work closely with Sharp to support the office, Sharp said. The family will replace Suzette Grillot, associate dean of the College of International Studies, who has been faculty-in-residence at Arezzo since last August with her husband and daughter. “I work with Jason and Monica all the time, and I can say without a doubt they’ll be an outstanding faculty-inresidence,” Grillot said. “I don’t even know if they need any advice. They know so much already.” Houston said the family is ready for the trip. “We don’t realize yet — we’re still taking care of the visas and the paperwork — but we have this smile deep down because we both know that June 4, we’re going to be on that plane,” Houston said. “I can’t wait for the new students to meet us because they’ll have a blast.”
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Reader comment on OUDaily.com ››
• Tuesday, April 24, 2012
“The author is saying that the media is not Republican or Democrat but supports the ‘Business Party’. He makes a very astute observation on this point that I find very true and revealing about our nation and how we have turned our government over to the corporations. How sad but true, all else argued about is wasted words.” (tractorman, RE: “‘Liberal media’ a popular myth, but a myth nonetheless”)
OPINION EDITORIAL
Students shouldn’t pay for Arezzo Our View: The OU in Arezzo expansion is worth the money, as long as it doesn’t mean future costs for students.
will encourage students to take part in cultural, language and academic activities. And it will increase the safety of students. This kind of guided, supervised program isn’t OU has purchased and is in the process of reno- for every student who wishes to study abroad. vating an 18th century monastery in Arezzo, Italy. But it makes the study-abroad experience accesThe project, which will take $20 million of prisible to whole swaths of students who otherwise vate donations to complete, will conwouldn’t — or couldn’t — participate in solidate the OU in Arezzo study abroad more traditional programs. The Our View program by housing students, faculty and In short, OU in Arezzo is the perfect is the majority program operations in one location. opinion of program to be expanding (especially with The Daily’s It may seem strange for OU to be investprivate donations) — on the caveat that it nine-member ing in such an expansion during the curremains self-sufficient. editorial board rent budget crisis, and we’re quick to critiIf the upkeep and operation of this new cize expensive building projects while OU facility is funded with the housing costs is cutting academic funding to save money. But of the students studying there, it won’t increase the Arezzo monastery project balances self-suffi- whatever operating budget the Arezzo program ciency and benefit to students. already has. The OU in Arezzo program is an essential part But it can’t become a tuition burden on uninof OU’s study abroad efforts and is one of the most volved students, particularly in this time of everpopular options. dwindling budgets. Because it is a centrally organized program feaTargeted private donations are one thing, but as turing OU faculty and requiring no language skills, academic departments face difficult choices and it opens study-abroad opportunities for students courses are on the chopping block, OU cannot afwho might otherwise be unqualified or intimidat- ford to spend money on a lavish Italian complex ed by intense immersion programs. that could otherwise benefit academic programs. Given the benefits of studying abroad, OU Building projects are about more than the initial should make sure it is an option for as many stuprice: They cost money every year for upkeep and dents as possible. operations. Studying abroad exposes students to new culThe OU in Arezzo program is an unusual and tures and new perspectives. It drastically benefits highly beneficial program, which opens up oplanguage learning and retention. It brings maturi- portunities for many students to study abroad. ty, growth and real-world experiences to students. The new monastery will help it better achieve that Not to mention how it looks on a résumé. goal. The new facility will consolidate and improve That said, no increase in efficiency or improvethe efficiency of operations, keeping students ment in programming is worth taking on more from living scattered across the city. yearly costs at the expense of academic programs The dedicated space will make it easier for OU that need funding. in Arezzo to continue to expand its offerings, as it So good work, administrators, for supporting has with the recent addition of the honors and en- OU’s flagship study abroad program. gineering tracks. We just hope any future growth is paid for by doThough living in a dedicated space will mean nations and by the students who benefit from the students will lose out on some of the necessary program — not by everyone. interactions with the local culture, it will help the program offer more organized programs, and it Comment on this at OUDaily.com
Housing and Food has proposed cutting Room Service. Have you ever used it? To cast your vote, log on to COLUMN
US Gov. must be involved to help pay student loans
T
Just at that moment, the manager appears. In an attempt to assuage me, she says, “Why yes, I am the manager. How can I make this experience better for you?” If my looks could kill, I would be in a criminal lineup. The people in the line waiting to order see my frustration and see that justice must be given to me. So, I guide her over to my seat where the horrific crime scene of inexcusable culinary failure sits. She takes one look, gasps and blurts out, “We apologize for this mishap. We will set this right. Let me get you free new food. Plus we will fire this cook. He’s been messing up for a while.” I give no response. I stoically shake my head to show I am pleased. The moment has been officially diffused. Although many people may feel this situation was easily solved — and it was — the issue is this: It only took a few steps up the proverbial ladder to quiet me in this situation. It seems to be the same with cases of racial injustice. The racial power structure only gives as much as it sees necessary to diffuse the situation; nothing more, nothing less. In this well-known situation, just to beat a dead horse, I would call Zimmerman the cook who will get fired, the manager the sentencing judge, and the jury the crowd of people. Although I seemingly did get what I wanted, it was only for that one moment. It didn’t ensure that this would never happen again. Moreover, the food chain probably didn’t even adjust its service to uphold its standards, which are supposed to serve me. That could be translated to everyday laws. The stand your ground law is still here. There still are laws in effect that do not uphold the standards of equality and safety for all. So, the question now is what to do? We must know that we are dealing with the lower parts of the ladder I previously mentioned. In the imagined scenario, I didn’t speak to the general manager, district manager or anyone of higher status — let alone did I want to see the CEO, president or franchise owner. In order to make an effective change that suits all of us, we must be prepared to work all the way up the ladders to fight these injustices. I charge all of us to find how this law even started. The trail first points to the National Rifle Association. Then, it points to the American Legislative Exchange Council. But I don’t know how far the rabbit hole goes. I do know one thing: It’s not over if and when the cook gets fired. Jason Quaynor is an English writing senior.
Mark Brockway is a political science junior.
Unequal, unsafe laws still exist
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» Poll question of the day
here has been OPINION COLUMNIST much talk this past week about the grim employment situation facing college graduates. With rising tuition costs and student loan debt, many students are facMark Brockway ing difficulty when they mark.d.brockway@ou.edu graduate and enter the job market. Half of new college graduates are either unemployed or underemployed, the Associated Press reported this week. Simple unemployment is not the only issue; many students are underemployed, working jobs that do not fit with their level of education. Underemployment is just as much if not more of a problem than unemployment because it devalues the significance of a college education. Students are led to believe that simply receiving a college degree will allow them to earn more than they would without one. These types of promises lead students to assume that they will have a well-paying job when they leave college and loans are taken out based on this assumed future earning power. The trouble comes when students attempt to repay the loans and find their post-graduation income insufficient to make the payments. With student loan debt now surpassing credit card debt, there seems to be little hope of cessation. While student loans do help and, coupled with grants, can fund nearly all of a student’s college education, not all loans are created equally. The two types of loans, subsidized and unsubsidized, have very different impacts and consequences. Subsidized loans are given by the government based on the financial need of the student and do not accrue interest while the student is enrolled at least part-time in college. The interest on these loans begins upon graduation. Unsubsidized loans begin gaining and compounding interest from the time they are given while the student is in school. The current rate is 6.8 percent. In both loan types, students still are responsible for interest after they graduate, although unsubsidized loans begin gaining interest earlier. Because these loans do not take into account the level of income after graduation, they treat all college graduates equally, whether they have gotten a successful position. Loan companies make a significant profit selling these loans as a good investment, whether they are or not — sound familiar? This is an area in which government involvement has the potential to do a lot of good for the college students of America. The first step would be to apply a subsidized structure to all student loans. Students should not have to pay for interest while in school. This would allow the student some breathing room in paying back the loan, at least while still enrolled. Next, the labor department could take control of the loan program as a whole and eliminate interest payments altogether. Because the government is not a business and does not have any monetary interest in giving out loans, it would be able to fund the loan programs without the need for interest payments from students at any point. Of course, this would involve significant loan enforcement mechanism to regain the principle of the loan itself. The loan process does offer deferred and lower payments for those in financial need, but these systems are temporary and do not effect the cause of loan trouble directly. By eliminating compounding interest in student loans, graduates will be more able to pay back the loans themselves over longer periods of time. Many folks are incredibly wary of government involvement in these types of financial matters. Libertarians, who seem to have increasing popularity on college campuses, especially tout the benefits of private sector loans systems. These students ignore the plight of the larger student population that faces unemployment and underemployment upon graduation. OU, like many universities, is a public university that receives much of its support from government sources. There is no reason why greater loan involvement can’t be one of those areas. How many of the “libertarian” students have received Pell grants or student loans themselves? Just by attending OU, they are engaging in a government-funded institution for their education. It is time to get off our high philosophical horses and connect with the reality of education funding in the United States. Direct government involvement can benefit students who are struggling today with the prospect of applying to a highly competitive and dwindling job market.
COLUMN
o, George OPINION COLUMNIST Zimmerman might go to jail. Is it celebration time? Not at all. Just because one person has gone to jail for a crime, does not mean we have reached the mountain top — I would say we are just putJason Quaynor ting our climbing spikes on. jquaynor4@gmail.com If we are just happy one person may be brought to justice, then we do not care about justice for anyone else. A wise man once said, “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.” With that said, let me paint a picture for you, courtesy of the mind of hip-hop artist KRS-One. Since my cup does not runneth over yet, I find happiness in the small things, like having spare money after paying my monthly bills. With that spare money, I treat myself to a fast food meal. As most of my friends know, I like to gorge on food every chance I get. Even when I am purchasing off of the value menu, my bill is at least in the double digits. With my mouth watering and stomach grumbling, I order the works: two bacon cheeseburgers, extra fries, a large shake and a low fat pie — got to make sure I’m not too unhealthful. The cashier takes my bankcard, swipes it and tells me my number. Now, I wait, impatiently. As I anxiously await my feast, I begin to daydream about what I will eat first. Before I can even put my meal in order in my mind, it’s ready. I think to myself, “that was fast!” No time to think. It is time to eat. I sit right down again, with food in hand, and unwrap my first burger. My jaws nearly unhinge as I take my first bite into the patty. Something is wrong. My brow scrunch together as I discover the problem: halfway cooked burger. Before I lose my cool, I move on to my fries — they would pick me back up. No. The fries are cold. My eyes shoot toward the milkshake, the saving meal’s saving grace. I take one sip. How could this be the runniest milkshake in the history of “milkshakedom?” That was it. Something had to be done. I storm up to the register, not thinking about how I probably look like I’m robbing the place; that doesn’t matter for now. The male cashier looks startled, and in a stuttering, hesitant tone asks, “May I help you?” I abruptly say, “Yo! All my food was messed up. You better let me see the manager before you see —”
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NEWS
Tuesday, April 24, 2012 •
Election 2012
Romney backs student loan proposal Obama supports ASTON, Pa. — Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney on Monday embraced a student loan proposal that President Barack Obama is selling on the campaign trail and refused to endorse Sen. Marco Rubio’s conservative immigration plan aimed at helping young illegal immigrants. The two policy positions signaled an effort by Romney to move to the political center as he works to court critical general election swing voters — including young voters and Hispanic voters — after a brutal primary fight. “I think young voters in this country have to vote for me if they’re really thinking of what’s in the best interest of the country and what’s in their personal best interest,” Romney said as he stood next to Rubio, R-Fla. Romney was campaigning in Pennsylvania a day before the state’s primary and answered reporters’ questions for the first time since effectively securing the GOP presidential nomination. House Republicans oppose legislation to extend temporarily low-interest rates for student loans. Obama has been pushing Congress for the extension and planned a three-state tour this week to warn students of the potential financial catastrophe they will face if Congress fails to act. Interest rates are set to double on July 1, from 3.4 percent to 6.8 percent, on a popular federal loan for low- and middle-income undergraduates. “I support extending the temporary relief on interest rates for students,” Romney said Monday. He said he supports the extension because of “extraordinarily poor conditions in the job market.”
Jae C. Hong/The Associated Press
Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney (right) said he would support extending temporary relief on interest rates on a popular federal loan for low- and middle-income undergraduates.
“I think young voters in this country have to vote for me if they’re really thinking of what’s in the best interest of the country and what’s in their personal best interest.” Mitt Romney, Republican presidential candidate
Romney’s language on loans was different from the answer he gave when he was last asked about the issue. Prior to the Illinois primary on March 20, he told a young woman concerned about student debt to “get ready for President Obama’s claim.” “I know he’s going to come up at some point and talk about how he’s going to make it vanish. And that’s another, ‘Here, I’ll give you something for free.’ And I’m not going to do that,” Romney said. Romney also tacked to the right on immigration during the primary. In recent days, he’s been highlighting Hispanic concerns at events
while leaving out much of the rhetoric he embraced earlier this year. He said Monday that he would outline additional changes to the immigration system in the coming months, particularly with the visa system that governs who is allowed to work in the U.S. “I anticipate before the November election we’ll be laying out whole series of policies that relate to immigration, and obviously our first priority is to secure the border, and yet we also have very substantial visa programs in this country,” Romney said. The Cuban-American senator is considered a top
potential pick for vice president. He’s the latest in a string of possible running mates to campaign with Romney. Romney declined Monday to say if Rubio was on his list of vice presidential candidates. He said his campaign is still setting up the infrastructure that’s required to scrutinize potential nominees, including hiring legal and accounting staff. The former Massachusetts governor also refused to say whether Rubio is experienced enough to serve as his No. 2. Romney often criticizes Obama, who was a first-term senator when he was elected president, as a “nice guy” who is “in over his head,” implying that the Democratic incumbent didn’t have the experience he needed for the job. The Associated Press
HOUSING: Regents to hear proposal in June Continued from page 1 services we provide.” Annis and Diane Brittingham, Housing and Food Director of Residence Life, met with Housing Center Student Association representatives for about an hour April 9 to discuss potential 5-, 6- and 7-percent increases, Annis said. He and Brittingham presented HCSA members with options for services that could be cut, and HCSA likewise made its own suggestions, Annis said. Additionally, HCSA presented Housing and Food Services with different services that it would like to be added, Annis said. The three services and practices Annis and Brittingham proposed eliminating were food delivery Room Service, keeping Cate Center restaurants open on weekends and allowing unlimited card swipes for guests per visit to the Couch Cafeteria, Annis said. HCSA did not want to close Cate Center restaurants on weekends or limit card swipes, so HCSA’s Food Committee voted to cut room service, Annis said. HCSA is not opposed to closing Cate Center, but there must be a cheaper AT A GLANCE or meal points-based Added cost option to replace Cate Center in order for HCSA If the cost of room and to consider it, Kallmann board is increased by 5 said. Annis did suggest percent, tower residents that Couch Express could will pay about $201.55 replace Cate Center’s sermore and Cate Center vices on the weekends, residents will pay about $183.10 more. Kallmann said. Based on repeated reIf the cost of room and quests made by students board is increased by 6 to the HCSA, members percent, tower residents proposed to Annis and will pay about $241.86 Brittingham that meal more and Cate Center exchanges be acceptresidents will pay about ed at any time during $219.72 more. Crossroads Restaurant’s Source: Calculations made by The Daily using Housing & Food cost documents operating hours, Kallmann said. Currently, Crossroads does not accept meal exchanges between 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. and HCSA requested that the Oklahoma Memorial Union’s restaurant accept meal exchanges all day, Annis said. “Since Crossroads isn’t a branded concept that we have to pay commissions and royalties on, they thought maybe Crossroads would be the best place to give that a try,” Annis said. Housing and Food Services is considering this request and the additional costs it might incur, Annis said. HCSA representatives were willing to implement as high as a 6-percent increase to obtain the requested services, Annis said. Housing and Food Services administrators will request the 5- to 7-percent increase during the Oklahoma Board of Regents’ June retreat meeting in Ardmore, Annis said.
Quit for the health of it... OU will be tobacco-free in July! It’s never too early to quit.
Make a commitment to quit smoking or using tobacco forever by enrolling in a free class based on the QuitSmart program. Open to all OU students, faculty and staff. The class is designed to help smokers and tobacco users break the addiction while making healthy, long-term lifestyle changes.
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my friend’s got mental illness
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To a friend with mental illness, your caring and understanding greatly increases their chance of recovery. Visit whatadifference.samhsa.gov for more information. Mental Illness – What a difference a friend makes.
Spring Specials
HOROSCOPE By Bernice Bede Osol
Copyright 2012, Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
TUESDAY, APRIL 24 TUESDAY 24, 201 2012 In the year ahead, try to arrange your life in ways that allow you to take some brief trips to places you’d like to visit. Excursions of this ilk will attract new people into your life who’ll make a big difference in terms of happiness.
$445 $515 $440 $510 $700
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -Because material conditions are holding steady at this point in time, there’s a strong likelihood that you could have a little surplus in hand. Why not get yourself something special? GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -- If you are planning on going someplace where you could run into someone whom you’re anxious to impress, take extra time to primp a bit. Feel good about yourself, and others will too.
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) -- Follow your compassionate instincts when they urge you to do something nice for another. However, it’s important that you do so with as little fanfare as possible if you want to make the correct impression. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -- A huge hope or an expectation might be fulfilled through the good auspices of an old friend. Be sure to acknowledge with proper gratitude all that he or she does for you. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- There’s a strong possibility that you could learn a very valuable lesson: Happiness is not based on how much you possess, but by interacting with loving people whom you respect. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) --You never underestimate the power of kind
words, and you’ll use them to bolster the spirits of another who is down on his or her luck. What you offer will be the encouragement that is needed. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -- One of your biggest breaks will come from being in the right place at the right time in order to profit from some solid foundations laid by others. It’s a momentary cycle, so make the most of it. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -- You’ll be amazed at how giving others the benefit of the doubt actually profits you. Its magic works in your favor with all your relationships and on all levels. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) --Take advantage of every opportunity you get that can put you on better terms with co-workers. Now’s the time to amass a huge surplus of goodwill -- it will come in handy later. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) --Cupid is singling you out for special attention by making it possible for you to attract the regard of someone who may have never noticed you previously. Just be yourself and everything will fall into place. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) --There is no one better than you at sorting out complicated developments. Now is the time to figure out you need to attract someone who’ll be as focused as you are. ARIES (March 21-April 19) --Because you’ll coat your requests in a hint of sugar, others will be more likely to do your bidding. However, you’d better follow through or it’ll be the last time such favors are bestowed.
Universal Crossword Edited by Timothy E. Parker April 24, 2012 ACROSS 1 Striking success 6 It put a man on the moon 10 Bad cut 14 Tombstone’s place 15 Nails it, say 16 Division problem word 17 Left the straight and narrow 19 Prez’s second-incommand 20 In short supply 21 Right-angled annex 22 Roof’s overhang 23 ___ de toilette (perfume) 25 Candycoated 27 It could be fallow or verdant 32 Pas’ spouses 33 Realtor’s calculation 34 Last day of Caesar’s term 36 Ermine by another name 40 Be offended by 41 Little litter members 43 “... ___ to leap tall buildings� 44 Cafeteria patron 46 Case for needles and pins
4/24
47 Bookbinding material 48 Bering Sea diving bird 50 Ore refiners 52 Woolen fabric 56 Poker tour player 57 Dismounted, as a horse 58 Period for historians 60 Unrepairable 65 Common way to charge 66 How something heavy drops 68 “___ Cowgirls Get the Blues� 69 Morally wicked 70 Celebrity bovine 71 Transmit 72 Forbid 73 Descends a hill, perhaps DOWN 1 Baker’s dozen? 2 Jockey’s tool 3 Turner in flicks 4 Assert confidently 5 Plant with prickly leaves 6 Turner of history books 7 Part of the back 40 8 Marine frolickers 9 Political shelter 10 Jump out and shout “Boo!�
11 “That was ___ death experience!� 12 A Wynn in Vegas 13 Was optimistic 18 Sailor’s lungful 24 Excessive, as influence 26 You may step on it in a rush 27 Fortune partner 28 Highlight at La Scala 29 Price of quarters 30 Was defiant, in a way 31 Body shop corrections 35 Go on the campaign trail 37 It gives the orchestra an A 38 Apple spray of old
39 Till compartment 42 Bogart film “High ___� 45 Boring thing to be stuck in 49 ___ over (capsized) 51 Jerks 52 Silent hellos and goodbyes 53 “Drab� army color 54 Gone heavenward 55 “Home, James� 59 Cut from the same cloth 61 “___ put hair on your chest!� 62 It may really smell 63 Oklahoma town 64 “Disco Duck� DJ Rick 67 “Tarzan� star Ron
PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER
4/23
Š 2012 Universal Uclick www.upuzzles.com
MIDDLE EAST By Hank Bowman
Tuesday, April 24, 2012 •
7
OUDaily.com ››
SPORTS
The OU women’s basketball team added another All-American to its recruiting class Monday. Junior college transfer will add depth in paint.
softball
Sooner trio earns POY nod Finalists include Ricketts, Shults and Chamberlain
Greg Fewell, sports editor Kedric Kitchens, assistant sports editor dailysports@ou.edu • phone: 405-325-3666
Baseball
OU to clash with in-state rivals Sooners hope to continue win streak during Bedlam preview in Stillwater
Tobi Neidy
Sports Reporter
Dillon Phillips
No red carpet. No comeand-go reception. No onthe-field acknowledgement during a home game after USA Softball announced its top-25 Player of the Year finalists. Instead, after learning that the team placed a leaguehigh three players in the finalist group, the Oklahoma locker room operated business as usual. “(That type of acknowledgment) is really just not in our vocabulary,” OU coach Patty Gasso said. “It’s an amazing honor for the voters to recognize the efforts of all three players within the same program, but we really don’t talk about it around here.” Batting mate juniors Keilani Ricketts and Jessica Shults were recognized on the nation’s top-25 finalist list after being named to the watch list in the preseason. Both veterans continue to lead the team by example, carrying .391 and .374 batting averages, respectively, while Ricketts also connecting for 274 strikeouts this season. Freshman Lauren Chamberlain joined the pair as the only rookie on the list, leading the Big 12 with 29 home runs and 55 RBIs while toting a .353 batting average. With three representatives in the final 25, OU ties top-ranked California with the most players represented from a single program. Although that distinction shows the level of athleticism on this Sooner team, Gasso said she hopes that doesn’t end up turning against her top players. “I’m sure they know about it and read it in the papers, but I have to trust in the maturity of the players to not think about it going into a game,” Gasso said. “Because if it’s on her mind, the player will just press it to get it over with, and that’s usually when
Sports Reporter
Astrud Reed/The Daily
Junior catcher Jessica Shults gets the pitch call from the bench in a 7-0 Sooner win over LSU on March 2. Shults carries a .374 batting average and a .691 slugging percentage for the Sooners with 12 home runs.
UP NEXT vs. Oklahoma State When: 7 p.m. Wednesday Where: Marita Hynes Field
they start making errors.” The wise words coming from the 18th-year coach shows why Gasso continues to produce quality teams. And this isn’t Gasso’s first time to coach the nation’s best; she also was the head coach when OU produced its first top-three finalist for the 2007 Player of the Year honors in Samantha Ricketts, older sister of current top-25 finalist Keilani Ricketts. But the attitude of being the first OU team to put three team members in the finalist group is something Ricketts, who was nominated to the top-25 list last season, said is expected from a team that has dominant players in the lineup from top to bottom. “It was exciting to be nominated again, but I honestly believe that it also shows how good our team is this year,” Ricketts said. “I wasn’t really
surprised that we have three players on the list because we have a lot of impactful players, and we’re beating some good teams.” The list will shrink down to 10 finalists before the beginning of NCAA postseason action, and the final three players will be announced just before the start of the 2012 Women’s College World Series in early June. No Sooner has won the Player of the Year award, but there is plenty of opportunity for these three Sooners to make their cases for the coveted award, Until then, Gasso said she wants her players to remain humble about the nomination and not let the overall pressure of being one of the top-25 come back to hurt them in the end. “You attribute the recognition to those athletes because it’s an honor to get to be recognized as one of the nation’s best,” Gasso said. “It speaks volumes for an athlete to be on that top watch list, but if it’s meant for you to get it, then you’ll get it.”
Keilani Ricketts Year: Junior Position: Pitcher Hometown: San Jose, Calif.
Jessica Shults Year: Junior Position: Catcher Hometown: Valencia, Calif.
Lauren Chamberlain Year: Freshman Position: Infielder Hometown: Trabuco Canyon, Calif.
Rebekah Cornwell/The Daily
Sophomore pitcher Damien Magnifico tossed 8 2/3 innings, allowing only three hits for the Razorbacks in a single game with OU on Tuesday evening. OU won, 4-0, to bring its record to 19-14.
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Player Profiles
Oklahoma’s baseball team takes an eight-game winning streak on the road tonight when the Sooners travel to Stillwater for a one-game Bedlam preview. The Sooners are playing their best baseball of the season, outscoring opponents 43-17 during the streak. A key cog in the gear that has propelled OU’s recent success has been hot-hitting junior outfielder Max White. Last week, White went 8-for-14 with four RBIs and a slugging percentage of .857 during the four-game stretch. White’s .351 batting average ranks sixth in the Big 12, and he also leads the team with 16 multi-hit games. A solid rotation of pitchers also has contributed to the Sooners’ run, most notably sophomores Jordan John, Dillon Overton and Damien Magnifico. John threw his second complete game of the season and recorded the Sooners’ first complete game shutout in a 5-0 win over Alabama State on Friday. The Corpus Christi, Texas, native also set a new career high for strikeouts with 12 and picked his team-leading seventh win of the season. But OU must show signs of improvement at the plate if it plans on picking up another win Tuesday night. The Cowboys are riding a streak of their own — winning four straight since a 2-1, extra innings loss to Wichita State at Wichita — and OU’s erratic lineup will have to start swinging the sticks and conquer its hitting woes. Both teams’ coaches have listed the starting pitchers as TBA, but the favorite to throw for the Sooners is Magnifico, the Sooners’ mid-week starter three weeks running. After turning heads with a stellar performance against No. 17 Arkansas two weeks ago, Magnifico will look to return to form when he takes the hill for the Sooners in search of his second victory of the season.
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• Tuesday, April 24, 2012
Life&arts
OUDaily.com ›› Do you like green eggs and ham? The Daily’s Westlee Parsons previews the School of Musical Theatre’s upcoming production, “Seussical the Musical.â€?
Music review
Lindsey Ruta, life & arts editor Mariah Webb, assistant life & arts editor dailyent@ou.edu • phone: 405-325-3666
Train
Reviews, previews and more
“California 37� (Columbia Records)
THe Daily’s
New music Tuesday
Rating: ÂŤÂŤ
Train reemerged on the scene in 2009 with its fifth Read more at OUDaily.com release, “Save Me, San Francisco.� The album’s success made it seem the band would never have a dreaded “sophomore slump.� The group’s new release, “California 37,� shows it’s never too late to hit the slump. “Drive By,� the album’s first single, seems to be one of those hits whose radio airtime doesn’t really parallel its caliber — just simply one of those popular tunes due to its barnacle-like attachment to that portion of your brain that likes to hit the repeat button far too much. “Sing Together,� the seventh track on the album, is certainly a break in the clouds of “California 37� and is easily the best song on the record. Simplistic and sonically honest, “Sing Together� is a ukulele-driven, easy-going tune but has a potent emotive element underlying through its duration. Although “California 37� can claim to possess a radio smash in “Drive By,� quality-wise, it stays far under the masterpieces off Train’s first album. Nick Williams/The Daily Photo Provided
Black Dice, an experimental rock group from Brooklyn, N.Y., released its sixth album, “Mr. Impossible,� on April 10. The album doesn’t have a consistent feel; it sounds like a mix between J Dilla and Melt-Banana, The Daily’s Shawn Stafford says.
It might be ‘Impossible’ to define, but it’s an album to roll the dice on Life & Arts Columnist
Reviews, previews and more
THe Daily’s
New music Tuesday Shawn Stafford shawn.a.stafford@ou.edu
Read more at OUDaily.com
Black Dice
“Mr. Impossible� (Ribbon Music)
ÂŤÂŤÂŤ 1/2
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hen I first turned on experimental-rock-trio Black Dice’s newest album, “Mr. Impossible,� I wasn’t sure what kind of ride I was in store for. After some time with the album, the mix of minimalistic drum beats and heavy fuzzy bass makes for a cool rock experience with a few stand out tracks and a grab bag of cool ideas that could have been slightly more fleshed out. Black Dice has been on the experimental music scene since the ’90s — releasing its first major label EP in 2001. Over the years the band has released a handful of EPs and now a total of six albums. Black Dice’s brand of music is a unique style that mixes hip-hop drum and bass into a long, electronica-style song structure, all the while being guided by a synthesizer that can be anywhere on a continuum — from spacey phaser and chorus to super abrasive distortion, switching between these sounds throughout the album. The song structure revolves around these fewminute-long dance grooves that appear in almost every track. The movement to
Album: “Mr. Impossible� Released: April 10, 2012 Top tracks: Pinball Wizard, The Jacker, Spy Vs. Spy, Outer Body Drifter, Carnitas, Brunswick Sludge
Compiled by Shawn Stafford
the groove Black Dice creates is well done on most of the tracks, as the addition and change of the sounds give a mechanical, straightforward feel to the band’s tracks. The grooves these songs seem to showcase are in most cases pretty cool — sounding like a much darker version of your modernday dance hit while retaining the rhythm that keeps you nodding your head. The grooves also feel jam-like in their composition. This often leads to the band running with an idea so long in a single song it almost seems drawn out and monotonous. The tracks where Black Dice avoids this feel complete and really well thought out, notably on “Pinball Wizard,� “The
Be
Jacker,� “Outer Body Drifter,� “Carnitas� and “Brunswick Sludge.� The problem this album seems to run into is many of the tracks come off as great ideas, but not complete songs. There are a lot of times when I was left thinking, “Oh, I see what you did there� and then feeling they fell short of what that song could have been. So out of the nine tracks on the album, five really stand out as complete and stylish pieces of music. You can’t deny the style the other tracks possess, but the lack of completeness makes it hard to make them hold up after a few listens. It’s hard to nail down just what the Black Dice sound like on this album. The best way to describe this album is like J Dilla, but way heavier; like Melt-Banana, but a little bit tamer; like dance music, but a little more dark. It almost acts as a satire of modern popular music in many ways; listen for the mocking melody on the “The Jacker.� If you want something different in your day-today music listening routine, I recommend “Mr. Impossible.� If you are looking for an album to play during a party, you may want to look elsewhere because the noisier tracks tend to be a little more abrasive than a lot of people are comfortable hearing. Black Dice does a good job of playing within its style on this album. While the band doesn’t really step outside of its box or blaze any new trails for the genre, it creates a solid album. The only things that really hinder this album are the kind-of-gimmicky tracks that feel like cool ideas that needed to be more thought
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out. The other hindrance is how some of the jams tend to drag on, making you long for the next track. This is a good choice for anyone who likes experimental music, and I would recommend at least giving some of the stand tracks a listen on one of the free music sites and picking it up if you like what you hear. Shawn Stafford is an international and area studies junior.
JASON MRAZ
“Love is a Four Letter Wordâ€? (Atlantic) Rating: ÂŤÂŤÂŤÂŤ
Jason Mraz’s newest album, “Love Is a Four Letter Word,� shows his progression from a pop artist with a folky, bluegrass feel in his first album to the bluegrass folky artist with a hint of pop. Mraz still uses his writing skills to develop great lyrics, but complex sounds that have appeared on each of his albums. However, in songs like “Frank D. Fixer� and “The Freedom Song,� the lyrics are not as metaphorical as a lot of his songs on previous albums. The songs are straightforward, much like bluegrass or folk music, but Mraz does vary a bit with songs, such as “Be Honest.� In these select tracks, he breaks with the typical instruments of the album for keyboards, string sections and traditional drums. In true Mraz fashion, no song on the album sounds the same, but they all sound like Mraz — with a melodic voice blended with a smattering of instruments. As a whole, the album has a little bit for every mellow music taste. Mraz fans who have not listened to the three previous albums might not find their top-20 hit here, because there is not an overtly catchy song, but the talent still is there with deeper, folky roots. Westlee Parsons/The Daily
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