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Family, friends mourn loss of OU student After reported missing for two days, senior found in overturned vehicle LEIGHANNE MANWARREN Daily Staff Writer
As the new semester begins, students prepare to get back to a normal routine, but for friends of Julia Kathryn Gilbert, the normal routine will be harder to fall into. Gilbert, French education senior and member of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority, was reported missing Jan. 8 and later found dead in her overturned silver 2002 Volkswagen Jetta Jan. 10. “Her life was short, but it was full,” said Reverend John Metzinger, St. John the Baptist Catholic
Church pastor during Gilbert’s funeral mass. “Julia was everything you could want in a best friend, student and person,” said Taurie Fraser, radiation therapy senior. “I will miss her every day.” The attendance of more than 600 people at Gilbert’s funeral was “proof of her ability to make friends wherever she went,” said Andy Collins, Gilbert’s friend. Friends remembered Gilbert as someone who loved to have fun, was passionate and who loved to play practical jokes on friends. Fraser, Gilbert’s friend since middle school, said one of Gilbert’s favorite practical jokes was to give out Fraser’s phone number to people because it was one of the only numbers she had
still memorized. Erica Pletan, international and area studies senior, who met Gilbert two summers ago while studying abroad in France, said Gilbert had a lot of passion that was hard to ignore. “Julia had an ability to just make friends so easily and we hit it off right away,” Pletan said. “I hadn’t known anyone when I was studying abroad, but she just took me under her wing and we became best friends soon after that.” G i l b e r t h a d b e e n a t a B C S Na t i o n a l Championship watch party at a friend’s house about five miles away from her parents’ house in Edmond and was last seen leaving her friend’s house at 3 a.m. Her vehicle was found almost 18 miles away on Waterloo Road near Council Road.
Students employ various methods to raise for Haiti From cooking to texting, students can find a way to get involved in relief efforts CHARLES WARD Daily Staff Writer
Michelle Sutherlin used to bake so she’d have something to bring to her Bible study group. Now, she, along with 22 other bakers, is whisking, chopping and blending to raise money for the Red Cross’ earthquake relief efforts in Haiti. Sutherlin, human relations graduate student, actually started her project, Confections for a Cause, last year as a fundraiser for the United Way of Norman. “We just didn’t have a lot of extra [money], so I decided that I needed to figure out a way to make my dollar go farther,” said Sutherlin, also an adjunct professor of AP PHOTO journalism. “And so, I started Rescue workers from Russia, Nicaragua, Peru and Israel team up to pull a woman from the rubble of a collapsed building in Port-aubrainstorming [about] what can I sell. What am I good at, Prince, Monday. The woman was one of two survivors pulled from the building just minutes apart from each other. what can I do?” With the help of a friend, friend of hers started the Initiative at Florida State University. she set up a Web site, www.confectionsforacause.com, and set a goal of Eventually, when the immediate needs of earthquake relief have passed, raising $500. Hoffman said the group will focus on ways to develop Haiti’s infrastructure, Confections eventually raised more than $2,500, which led Sutherlin to which was limited prior to the earthquake, according to the CIA World plan for another round of baking this year. Factbook. She also said she would like to send members of OU’s chapter of “We knew that it was really successful and we wanted to do it again,” she the Initiative to Haiti, when conditions in the country allow for it. said. “But we knew we had to do better this time. The group will hold its first meeting Jan. 26 at a campus location to be “Then the earthquake in Haiti happened, and my best friend called me determined. on Wednesday night and said ‘We’re baking for Haiti.’ And I said ‘OK, let’s Issac Freeman, international security studies senior, is also working to do it.’” raise money for Haiti relief. His goal is to have a table at Winter Welcome Confections is offering 27 menu items, including vegan and gluten-free Week events and around campus this week to raise money for Haiti. options. She said she plans to take orders through Feb. 8, but if demand “This is something I could do,” Freeman said. “I’m supportive of other warrants, she may extend the deadline. Orders can be picked up on four efforts and everything, but this is not instead of other things. This is on top different dates in the coming month at the Red Cross office in Norman, 1205 of all those things.” Halley Ave. Sutherlin also plans to add a drop-off day in Oklahoma City. Texting allows anyone with a cell phone and a few spare seconds to make Other OU students have plans of their own to help relief efforts in Haiti. a donation to a Haiti relief organization. Donations can be made with a text Amanda Hoffman, geography junior, laid the groundwork last semester to one of several different relief organizations, and spokespeople for Sprint, to start a chapter of the Global Haiti Initiative at OU. Verizon and AT&T stated in e-mails that those texts will not count against “We were just going to try to help in any way we could,” she said. customers’ texting plans, nor will they incur the usual texting fee. For the coming semester, however, Hoffman said the group’s efforts will Typically, when cell phone companies coordinate charitable giving focus on fundraising for earthquake relief in Haiti, and channeling that through text messaging, they wait until donors pay their phone bills before money to organizations that already have a presence in Haiti, such as the giving the funds to the designated charities, a process that can take 30 to Red Cross. 60 days, according to a statement on Sprint’s Web site. However, Sprint The Initiative is an intercollegiate clearinghouse for developmental is advancing 80 percent of the pledged donations immediately, Sprint programs in Haiti, according to the Initiative’s Web site. Hoffman said a HAITI CONTINUES ON PAGE 2
House candidate charged with DUI OU student, District 44 candidate admits ‘error in judgment’ CHARLES WARD Daily Staff Writer
An OU student who is running for the Oklahoma House of Representatives was charged with driving under the influence New Year’s Eve. Matthew Hecox, history senior, declined to discuss the charge on the record, but later released a
statement to The Daily. In an e-mail, he stated, “I made an out of character error in judgment by drinking and driving. I know this type behavior is unacceptable, not only for the office I am seeking, but as a community member in Norman. I am currently dealing with this issue, and I truly appreciate the support from my family, friends, and the community of Norman.” Hecox was pulled over for turning right on red somewhere in the 200 block of West Boyd Street,
according to documents available on the Oklahoma State Courts Network’s Web site. According to the documents, right turns against a red light are not permitted where Hecox made the turn. The officer who pulled Hecox over “detected an odor of alcoholic beverage consumption” on Hecox, along with red and watery eyes and slurred speech, according to the documents. The officer also noticed Hecox was slow and unsteady on his feet.
Hecox later refused to take a blood alcohol test, according to the documents. Hecox was released from the Cleveland County jail when he posted a $1,000 bond through a bail bondsman. His release on bond continued after a Jan. 8 hearing. His next scheduled court date is set for Feb. 9. Hecox announced his candidacy for the Democratic nomination for the District 44 seat on Jan. 12.
GILBERT CONTINUES ON PAGE 2
Therapy reduces tumor size KATHLEEN EVANS Daily Staff Writer
O K L A H O M A C I T YChemotherapy coupled with a new microwave heat therapy from OU Health S ciences Center shows success in reducing large tumors. Because of the microwave t h e r a p y ’s s u c c e s s i n shrinking tumors, the number of women needing mastectomies, surgical breast removals, was reduced by 90 percent, said Dr. William Dooley, a researcher at the OU Cancer Institute and director of surgical oncology at OU Medicine. “This therapy is a major advancement for women w i t h l at e r-s t a g e b re a s t cancer,” Dooley said. “Right now, most patients with large tumors lose their breast. With this treatment, along with chemotherapy, we were able to kill the cancer and save the breast tissue.” Large tumors range in size from 1- to 1 1/2 inches and usually require a mastectomy, Dooley said. The therapy, called focused microwave thermotherapy, is similar to that used in the Star Wars defense system. Two microwaves intersect at the tumor, becoming stronger, and focus that energy on the tumor, Dooley said. During treatment, doctors heat the breast to about 110 degrees Fahrenheit, Dooley said. “ The microwave eats up the tumor cells much faster than it eats up the surrounding breast tissue,” he said. “We’re not exactly sure why this is. The best guess is that … tumors are saltier and have more ions in them than the breast tissue.” The therapy will also help those with breast cancer b e c a u s e i t w i l l re d u c e the number of needed chemotherapy treatments and their toxicity, Dooley said. Dooley is currently in the process of getting a redesigned machine approved by the Food and Drug Administration to start a new trial using the therapy on even larger cancer cells, ranging from 1 1/2- to 5 inches, he said. Ellen Hopper, a breast cancer patient from Tuttle, Okla., participated in one of Dooley’s trials on earlystage breast cancer after doctors found a lump in her breast during a routine mammogram, she said. Hopper decided not to undergo chemotherapy treatments but received one TUMOR CONTINUES ON PAGE 2
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Gilbert Continues from page 1 When she heard her friend had gone missing, Fraser came straight back from her vacation in Colorado to help look for Gilbert. “When I heard Julia had gone missing, I knew something was wrong,” Fraser said. “Even if she had been angry with her parents and ran off, she would have called me. The thought [of her being dead] had crossed my mind, but I still had hope she was missing.” As people began calling other friends, trying to find Gilbert, Pletan said she was in
Haiti Continues from page 1 spokesman Alex Hahn stated in an e-mail. T-Mobile will forward the money pledged by text donations to the intended agencies sometime this week, spokeswoman Amanda Ginther stated in an e-mail. Last week, Verizon made a $2.9 million donation to the Red Cross based on text donations received to that point, spokeswoman
a state of disbelief Gilbert was missing and started crying. “After I calmed down, the first thing I thought to do was, how could we get everyone to know about [Julia’s disappearance] as soon as possible and knew everyone was already on Facebook,” she said. The Facebook group, now with more than 32,000 members, as of Monday, has become a site where friends of Gilbert come together and share memories of their friend. “[When I found out about Gilbert’s death], I started screaming ‘no’ over and over again, and I wanted to go and see her but I couldn’t ,so I went to be with her parents to comfort them,” Fraser said.
DONATIONS
The State Medical Examiner’s office ruled the death as accidental and the cause as an atlanto-occipital dislocation, more commonly known as a neck fracture, said Cherokee Ballard, State Medical Examiner spokeswoman. Ballard said the medical examiner concluded Gilbert’s death would have been really quick, but there was no real way to tell definitively. “At this time, [Oklahoma Highway Patrol] knows [Gilbert] was in a car accident, her car overturned when she drove off the road into a ditch and she died from the car crash,” said Capt. Chris West, OHP spokesman. West said the investigation is still open until
the State Medical Examiner’s office has the results to Gilbert’s toxicology report, which can take between a month and six weeks. In memory of their daughter, John and Laurel, Gilbert’s parents, set up “The Julia Kathryn Gilbert Memorial Fund” to support Lyme disease research and to provide scholarships for French majors at OU. Having struggled against Lyme disease for more than six months, Gilbert’s friends said Gilbert also struggled with how no one understood or knew what Lyme disease was and wished for more awareness. Fraser said Gilbert went six months undiagnosed because medical professionals were unsure of what it was.
Tumor
DONATIONS BY TEXT
On campus or in Norman: Confections for a Cause is selling baked goods, with the proceeds going to Haiti relief. Visit www.confectionsforacause.com to place an order or for more information, or search for “Confections for a Cause” on Facebook. The Global Haiti Initiative is an intercollegiate clearinghouse for developmental programs in Haiti. A chapter is in the beginning stages at OU. Search for “The Global Haiti Initiative — OU Chapter” on Facebook or e-mail Amanda Hoffman at a.hoff@ou.edu for more information. The group’s first meeting is Jan. 26.
OU Helping Haiti will be collecting donations as part of Winter Welcome Week. Search for “OU Helping Haiti” on Facebook for more information. By text: Text “HAITI” to “90999” to donate $10 on behalf of the American Red Cross. Text “YELE” to “501501” to donate $5 on behalf of Wyclef Jean’s Yéle Haiti Foundation. Text “QUAKE” to “20222 to donate $10 on behalf of The Clinton Bush Haiti Fund. Text “HAITI” to “85944” to donate $5 on behalf of the Rescue Union Mission and MedCorp International. Text “HAITI” to “25383” to donate $5 on behalf of the International Rescue Committee.
Continues from page 1 dose of the microwave therapy before her lumpectomy, the surgical removal of her lump, she said. “I am very proud to say that I am an eight-year survivor of breast cancer, thanks to Dr. Dooley,” Hopper said. Although Hopper’s cancer was caught early and she did not need a mastectomy, she said she thinks the new therapy is important because it saves breasts and helps women feel better about their image and body. Hopper is also a registered nurse at OU Medical Center.
Online: The Clinton Bush Haiti Fund: www.clintonbushhaitifund.org American Red Cross: www.redcross.org Wyclef Jean’s Yéle Haiti Foundation: yele.org International Rescue Committee: www.theirc.org
AP PHOTO
Rescue workers from Russia, Nicaragua, Peru and Israel team up to pull a woman from the rubble of a collapsed building in Port-au-Prince Monday. The woman was one of two survivors pulled from the building just minutes apart from each other.
Sources: Alex Hahn, Sprint spokesman; Clinton Bush Haiti Fund Web site; American Red Cross Web site; Yéle Haiti Web site; International Rescue Committee Web site; Michelle Sutherlin, Confections for a Cause founder; Amanda Hoffman, Global Haiti Initiative — OU Chapter president; Issac Freeman, OU Helping Haiti founder.
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Tuesday, January 19, 2010
Former OU philanthropist, professor and football player die over break CAROLINE PERRYMAN Daily Staff Writer
WALTER NEUSTADT JR. Walter Neustadt Jr., former trustee of the OU Foundation and OU Regent, died Jan. 5 after a short illness. He was 90 years old. Neustadt served on the Board of Regents from 1969 to 1976 and as a trustee on the OU Foundation board from 1965 to 1996. The University of Oklahoma Student Association founded the Walter Neustadt Jr. Award in 1976, which is given annually to someone who strives to help students. Neustadt was the first recipient of the award. “Oklahoma has lost one of its finest sons,” OU President David Boren said in a news release. “Few people in the history of the University of Oklahoma have contributed as much to its achievement of excellence as Walter Neustadt.” Neustadt and his family donated $2 million for the Bizzell Memorial Library’s expansion, which opened in 1982. CHARLES “NED” HOCKMAN Charles “Ned” Hockman, a war veteran and OU photojournalism professor, died Dec. 20. He was 88 years old. Hockman established OU’s Film and Video St u d i e s P ro g ra m i n 1949 and was one of the founders of National Press Photographers Association’s NewsVideo Workshop at OU. He also directed and co-produced the independent film “Stark Fear,” which was the first major theatrical film completely produced in Oklahoma, his family said.
“No member of the OU family has been more devoted to the university than Ned Hockman,” Boren said in a statement released by the university. “As a photojournalist with an international reputation, he chose to come to OU and invest his life in the education of students. He will be greatly missed by the many friends whose lives he has touched.” Hockman was known for filming the sports programs at OU. There is a bronze plaque at the Oklahoma Memor ial Stadium naming the “photo deck” in honor of Hockman. Hockman said recording national championship football seasons with Bud Wilkinson and Barry Switzer “were some of the best times of my life, other than coming home to my family from World War II and Korea.” Hockman was awarded OU’s highest academic rank, the David Ross Boyd Distinguished Professorship, in 1984. Hockman retired from OU in 1987. STEVE “DR. DEATH” WILLIAMS Steve “Dr. Death” Williams, former OU football player and wrestler, died Dec. 29 from throat cancer at age 49. Williams was an offensive guard on Barry Switzer’s Big Eight and Orange Bowl championship teams in 1979 and 1980. He became an all-conference lineman his senior season in 1982. As a wrestler, Williams was coached under Stan Abel and was a four-time AllAmerican. During Williams’ first three seasons he placed sixth, fifth and third in the heavyweight division at the NCAA championships. He had a career as a professional wrestler for 20 years. Williams has spent recent years battling cancer. In 2004 he was unable to speak after his larynx was removed in a throat cancer surgery. -Associated Press contributed
AFRICAN-AMERICAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION TO HOST MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR. CELEBRATION The OU community will commemorate Martin Luther King Jr. Day later this week due to classes starting after the holiday, said Jay Doyle, OU press secretary. Doyle said the only OU-sponsored event scheduled is a celebration Thursday in the David L. Boren Student Union at the Health Sciences Center in Oklahoma City hosted by the HSC African-American Student Association. The event will start with a silent march at 11:45 a.m. from the campus clock tower to the union, where the celebration will feature a student gospel choir and keynote speaker. Dionne Buxton/The Daily
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POLICE REPORTS The following is a list of arrests and citations, not convictions. The information given is compiled from the Norman and OU Police Departments. At times, the Cleveland County Sheriff’s Department and the Oklahoma City FBI will contribute to these reports. All those listed are innocent until proven guilty. POSSESSION OF A CONTROLLED DANGEROUS SUBSTANCE Dustin Wayne Argo, 20, 221 McCullough St., Sunday POSSESSION OF MARIJUANA Mitchell John Hack, 23, 2300 W. Main St., Saturday, also possession of drug paraphernalia Timothy David Griffs, 20, 400 12th Ave., Saturday, also possession of a controlled dangerous substance with intent to distribute Andario Dewayne Cheadle, 34, East Lindsey Street, Friday, also possession of a controlled dangerous substance (cocaine), and county warrants DRIVING UNDER THE INFLUENCE Joshua Lee Hickok, 32, West Lindsey Street, Sunday, also leaving the scene of an accident John David Hall, 22, 700 Asp Ave., Sunday Thaddeus Raymond Komula, 25, 400 12th Ave. S.E., Saturday, also transporting an open bottle Arin Jo Hurst, 33, 1200 W. Lindsey St., Saturday Tyler Robert Zukerman, 21, Triad Village Drive, Saturday Travis Laverne Smith, 22, 100 26th Ave. S.W., Friday, also driving under a suspended license, and a county warrant Matthew T. Clark, 24, 400 12th Ave. S.E., Saturday Gilbert Marion Carmen Aitken, 23, 12th Ave. S.E., Saturday ASSAULT AND BATTERY Christopher Brian Lewis, 42, 10808 E. Alameda Drive, Saturday Dusty Raymond Dvoracek, 26, 747 Asp Ave., Saturday, also
interference with an official process, and public intoxication SECOND DEGREE BURGLARY Taylor Sturges Obannon, 22, 2200 Classen Blvd., Sunday SECOND DEGREE ROBBERY Jerry Louis Sims, 52, 401 12th Ave. S.E., Saturday COUNTY WARRANT Jay Dustin Privett, 29, 2820 Dewey Ave., Sunday Gregory Allen Barnard, 31, 1729 E. Alameda St., Saturday, also seatbelt violation, driving under suspended license and no insurance verification Kadron Gerard Jordan, 25, 1201 12th Ave. N.E., Saturday Cody Wayne Garlett, 22, 1578 24th Ave. S.E., Friday, also driving with a suspended license MUNICIPAL WARRANT Eric Roger Bannister, 32, 129 W. Gray St., Sunday Gary George Hile, 38, 1403 Dorchester Drive., Saturday Nathaniel Thaniel Griffin II, 24, 1201 12th Ave. N.E., Saturday Cassandra Victoria Pharis, 23, 1526 E. Lindsey St., Saturday Dustin Bree Storey, 31, 518 Ed Noble Pkwy., Saturday April Heather Rogers, 35, 2708 Wyondotte Way, Saturday Walter Scott Lemmones, 38, 200 12th Ave. S.E., Friday, also obstructing an officer Robert E. Peeler, 35, Stubbeman Avenue. and W. Robinson Street., Friday, also possession of drug paraphernalia Dustin Shea Richard, 18, 581 W. Acres St., Friday Lindy Paul Deltorto, 48, 761 Kansas St., Saturday, also interference with an official process Cynthia Louise Goode, 52, 3126 Pheasant Run Road, Saturday OUTRAGING PUBLIC DECENCY Bradley Wayne Williams, 23, 700 Asp Ave., Sunday, also for
interference with an official process, and public intoxication Brian Michael Williams, 28, 700 Asp Ave., Sunday Clinton James Casperson, 25, 700 Asp Ave., Sunday PUBLIC INTOXICATION Michael Ray Williams, 46, 750 E. Lindsey St., Saturday Brandon Dale Babb, 31, 747 Asp Ave., Sat Jennifer Ann Coleman, 24, 26th Avenue, Friday Shaun Paul Thompson, 32, 759 Asp Ave., Sunday, also arrested for a municipal warrant Timothy Calvin Harpole, 28, 1111 Oak Tree Ave., Sunday Cason Grant Hill, 29, 747 Asp Ave., Saturday Jamie Don Morris, 35, 901 N. Porter Ave., Friday Kathleen Renee Paquin, 19, 1111 Oak Tree Ave., Friday Jacob Ralph Fullerton, 24, 211 E. Main St., Friday Justin Michael Stuart, 32, 211 E. Main St., Friday INTERFERENCE WITH AN OFFICIAL PROCESS David Wayman Baker, 25, 300 Hal Muldrow Drive, Friday AGGRAVATED DRIVING UNDER THE INFLUENCE Matthew Dillon Carroll, 23, 1001 Drake Drive, Saturday Jimmy L. Williams, 55, Triad Village Drive, Saturday MOLESTING PROPERTY Jerald Thomas Garretson, 43, 1806 S. Texas St., Saturday PETTY LARCENY Stephen Zachary Knippenberg, 22, 333 N. Interstate Dr. E., Friday DOMESTIC ABUSE Leroy McRae, 50, 119 Crestland Drive, Friday, also a municipal warrant
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Tuesday, January 19, 2010
Max Avery, opinion editor dailyopinion@ou.edu • phone: 325-7630 • fax: 325-6051
STAFF COLUMN
OUR VIEW
Confessions of a former cynic
We should donate to Haiti despite bad press It seems international crises strike over our breaks; Haiti’s earthquake is by no means the beginning of the trend. Last summer there was the coup in Honduras and the fraudulent elections in Iran, the winter before that was the assassination of Benazir Bhutto, and we can’t forget the Tsunami in the Indian Ocean. The list goes on. Just because crises keep happening does not mean we should take them lightly, but we should be prepared to help. Some of the talking heads of cable “news” have politicized the event. They’ve made news by their outlandish comments rather than talking about the tragedy. Unfortunately, stories about deals with the devil and “that’s what they get” comments seem to be getting as much coverage as the disaster itself. Others have already begun calling Haiti “Obama’s New Orleans,” as though enough time has passed for the crisis to officially be declared botched. Unfortunately, it seems natural disasters and tragedies have to be politicized today. But rather than bickering about pundits and politics, we should be saving our change and donating money to legitimately helpful organizations. There are many stories about fake relief organizations pocketing money rather than using it to help Haitians whose homes were destroyed in this earthquake. Do not let this deter you from donating. Just make sure whichever relief organization you donate to is legitimately helping. Three great organizations include: The Red Cross/Crescent has done an excellent job of stepping up and leading the humanitarian relief. They have been leaders both on the ground and in the technology of donations. Partners in Health has been in Haiti for 20 years and has been providing health care for Haitians. They are uniquely entrenched to provide medical aid to Haitians in need. Doctors Without Borders (Medecins Sans Frontieres) has already sent more than 800 doctors to Haiti. They’ve treated more than 3,000 people and performed more than 500 surgeries. We should be helping those who need it, not bickering about politics or finding excuses for apathy. There’s been a tragedy, and we should all be trying to help.
STAFF CARTOON
For many people, a new year brings with it a resolution: a promise to ourselves that we’ll stop smoking, get in shape, earn a higher GPA, steal a monkey, learn to play the accordionthat we’ll better our lives in general somehow. I’ve never been one to make these resolutions, knowing deep down inside I wouldn’t keep them. However, I realized this view is defeatist and pessimistic, and so my resolution for 2010 is just that: I’m going to stop being defeatist, pessimistic and cynical, and I invite you to join me. JEROD COKER Everyone knows someone with exactly the attitude I’m talking about. We’re the ones who ruin Christmas for everyone in kindergarten by telling our peers that Santa’s not real. We’re the ones who discourage voters by telling them their vote doesn’t count. We see Murphy’s Law as a universal constant, expecting everything that can go wrong to do just that. Maybe you don’t have this attitude toward everything in life, but it seems many people have this kind of defeatist attitude about one thing or another. You may think the American political system is a joke of a democracy, and the average citizen can do nothing to influence it, so why bother? You may think religious fundamentalists will never change, eventually they’ll nuke the entire planet one way or another, so rational discussion and diplomacy with them is pointless. You may believe the federal government can never do anything right, all politicians
are selfishly motivated, so we should always distrust and reject any government intervention. You may see the mainstream media as useless and idiotic, obsessing over Tiger Woods while ignoring the health care debate, so you simply don’t watch it, assuming it will never change. As legitimate as these laments may be, a defeatist attitude ultimately gets us nowhere; to hang our heads and resign from action out of pessimism is ultimately an act of cowardice. And while sitting around and complaining can be beneficial (to a point) by fleshing out issues that need to be resolved, it is imperative we don’t stop there. After identifying the problems, we need to offer solutions or alternatives, not throw up our hands and give up. The sheer volume and severity of the issues we face may seem overwhelming at times, and we may never see them resolved in our lifetimes. However, if we refuse to act or offer solutions, we are guaranteeing they will never be solved. Defeatists and pessimists didn’t end slavery, activists did. Had the abolitionists of the time hung their heads and given up, thinking their efforts would ultimately do no good in face of The Establishment, we may well still have slavery today. The same could be said about women’s suffrage. Had its supporters cowered down in fear of the status quo, women may still be entirely shut out of the political sphere. Regarding Civil Rights, if its advocates had thought that Jim Crow was invincible, there would have been nobody to march on Washington in 1963 no one to hear about Martin Luther King’s dream. And so it goes for all landmark
social movements in our nation’s history. Real social progress takes a generation with the guts to stand up and do something, not just sit around and complain. The simple fact remains a lack of action gets nothing done. So let’s take the lessons of history and apply them today. If you think it’s time for a federal law in the U.S. guaranteeing gays the right to get married, stand up and do something about it. That could be anything from voting for a pro-gay rights candidate for your representative in 2010, marching in a gay-rights rally, or simply joining the Gay Lesbian Bisexual Transgendered and Friends at OU. If you think all U.S. citizens should be entitled to Medicare, the war in the Middle East should end now, marijuana should be legalized, the drinking age should be 18, or the dorms at OU should be unlocked again, do whatever is in your power to make those things happen. Whatever issues you care about and whatever your stance on those issues, the last thing you should be doing is nothing. This is a call to arms, to myself and anyone who reads this. Enough sitting around campus, pointing out the problems around us without offering solutions or alternatives. Enough defeatist resignation in the face of a tough issue. My fellow cynics, we have been the ones halting the change we want by refusing to act, so I say it’s time to stand up, get pissed off and make some noise. Jerod Coker is a Professional Writing, Political Science, and philosophy Junior
J. Schuyler Crabtree is a Public Relations Senior
This cartoon was inspired by actual events.
STAFF COLUMN
Dorm room halls need to be unlocked
I hope you are all enjoying your first day panic, OU included. I remember the campus of classes and new syllabi, those magical pa- being locked because someone was seen on pers that show you all the neat knowledge campus with a gun (which turned out to be you will gain come May. And I hope you an umbrella. Oops!). The dorm rooms were freshmen enjoy carrying your things back immediately locked. We were all under the into your dorm rooms and having to repeat- impression that the change was temporary, edly swipe your cards and bang loudly on until the storm calmed a bit. other doors to gain entrance. The locked dorm rooms sucked. We all The dorm hallways didn’t used to be like hated it. The last two months of my freshthat. They used to be unlocked all men year were incredibly inhibited day until a set curfew late at night. by the lockdown. Lots of people reAnd guess what? It was awesome. sponded by taping down the locks. After talking extensively with many But those two months passed freshmen today, I find they generand August brought new freshmen ally have friends on their own hallwho often didn’t know life without way, and that’s it. That would have the locks. There were still some of been bad news for me; I had no us making noise about it, but not friends on my hallway when I was enough. And then, my Crimson JORDAN ROGERS a freshman. Yet, seeing and making hero came to save the day. friends in other hallways and buildI attended a “Pizza with the Prez” ings was a breeze. You just showed up and event (which you should all attend, by the walked in. way), and OU President David Boren gave I was one of the freshmen living in the a wonderful speech. Questions followed. dorms during the unfortunate incident that One of the first was this: “President Boren, occurred at Virginia Tech in April 2007. The we feel the dorms being locked jeopardizes shooting left 32 dead. The shooter was a the incoming freshmen’s ability to meet and student. interact with the diverse crowd that OU has Many across the country went into a to offer. Also, didn’t you all tell us the dorm
rooms would only be locked temporarily?” Then, President Boren made my heart sing. He leaned into the microphone and said, with a gentle touch, something to the effect of, “The dorms are still locked? I didn’t know that. We’ll change that right away.” He whipped out a little white note pad and jotted something down. Our goal had been achieved: The dorms were going to be unlocked again. I haven’t forgotten that day, D-Bo. Two years later, they are still locked. That’s why this whole venture has been so frustrating. It seems like President Boren would be the last person to lock dorm rooms. He loves undergraduates, encourages community, loves nothing more than forcing us outside of our comfort zones to make us learn and be better people, loves making us interact, loves getting foreign exchange students to come to the university so us Oklahoma natives learn about the outside world and they can learn about Oklahoma. Locking the dorms prevents all of these things from happening, at least as optimally as they could be. But not only that, it encourages us to fear the people around us. Surely, the dorms would not be locked
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unless someone on the other side was trying to hurt us. Over time, we start to believe it. But that’s not true. It’s just 5,000 other freshmen who might have been your friend if you weren’t trapped in Couch 5 East. And that’s why we need to get these dorms unlocked again, like they used to be. We need students to have the opportunity to meet and interact with others who are different than them in the interest of learning and growing, as a person, a university and a state. I know Student Congress is proposing legislation to get the dorms unlocked, but that and my column aren’t enough to make it happen. We need to be loud as a collective body. That’s why I’m calling on the freshmen and all others who care about this issue. There should be another “Pizza with the Prez” in the coming months. Keep an eye out for it, and when it comes, show up in large numbers and voice your opinion about the dorm rooms being locked. I’ll be there, too.
Jordan Rogers is an Industrial Engineering Senior
The Oklahoma Daily is a public forum and OU’s independent student voice. Letters should concentrate on issues, not personalities, and should be fewer than 250 words, typed, double spaced and signed by the author(s). Letters will be cut to fit. Students must list their major and classification. OU staff and faculty must list their title. All letters must include a daytime phone number. Authors submitting letters in person must present photo identification. Submit letters Sunday through Thursday, in 160 Copeland Hall. Letters can also be submitted via e-mail to dailyopinion@ ou.edu.
Guest columns are accepted at editor’s discretion. ’Our View’ is the voice of The Oklahoma Daily. Editorial Board members are The Daily’s editorial staff. The board meets Sunday through Thursday at 4:30 p.m. in 160 Copeland Hall. Columnists’ and cartoonists’ opinions are not necessarily the opinions of The Daily Editorial Board.
Tuesday, January 19, 2010
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NEW HEART HOSPITAL OPENS TO PUBLIC Smaller nurse-to-patient ratio creates comfortable environment CASEY WILSON Daily Staff Writer
The new Oklahoma Heart Hospital South Campus in Oklahoma City opened its doors to the public Monday. John Austin, chief operating officer for Oklahoma Heart Hospital South Campus, said all of the hospital’s services are open, and the first day of operation went well. Built by a consortium of hospitals, including Oklahoma
Heart Hospital North, Mercy Health Center, Midwest Regional Medical Center and Norman Regional Health System, Oklahoma Heart Hospital South Campus cost $98 million over a two-year period to build, said Austin. “For the last couple of weeks, we’ve been working very hard to get everything up to speed,” Austin said. He said because the hospital specializes only in cardiovascular disease treatment, it is very good at what it does. Austin also said Oklahomans are not very healthy when it comes to cardiovascular care. This means the services the hospital provides will always be needed. The new hospital provides superior services when
compared to other hospitals. Because of a nurse-to-patient ratio of 1-4, the Oklahoma Heart Hospital South Campus has more frequent contact between those who are sick and those who are caring for them, Austin said. “The ability to provide excellent service to the patients and the family is the distinguishing factor between our hospital and other hospitals,” he said. “The staff have been very nice,” said Susha Sharma, a vistor and daughter of a patient at the hospital. She said when compared to other hospitals she had visited, the new hospital fostered a more comfortable environment. The new south campus is located at 5200 E. Interstate 240 Service Road.
Ex-housekeeper alleges abuse by Israeli PM’s wife JERUSALEM — A former housekeeper has filed a lawsuit accusing the Israeli prime minister’s wife of abusing her in the first scandal to hit Benjamin Netanyahu’s yearold administration, bringing memories of the domestic distractions that clouded his tumultuous first term in office a decade ago. Lillian Peretz, who worked as the Netanyahu family housekeeper in their beachside home in the town of Caesaria for six years, claims Sara Netanyahu verbally abused her and forced her to change clothes and shower several times a day to keep a “sterile” environment. It also alleges she was paid less than minimum wage and forced to work on the Jewish Sabbath even though she is an observant Jew. The prime minister’s office called the lawsuit “false and full of lies and defamation” in a statement Sunday alleging the housekeeper was part of a media-
orchestrated political conspiracy. Peretz is asking for about $80,000 in the lawsuit filed last week and publicized on Friday in the Yediot Ahronot daily. Sara Netanyahu, a former flight attendant who is now a practicing psychologist, also stirred during her husband’s first term as prime minister from 1996 to 1999. She came under fire several times for squabbling with her staff, flaunting her young children in public and meddling in state affairs. Among the scandals, she was accused of firing a nanny for burning a pot of soup and of throwing a pair of shoes at an assistant. But Netanyahu’s third wife has kept a low profile since her husband’s return to power last March. She rarely generates headlines and the couple has enjoyed favorable public approval ratings. The couple has two children. Netanyahu has said he learned important
lessons from his first go-around as prime minister. He has kept a tight lid on leaks and members of his staff and Cabinet have avoided the financial and ethical missteps that have tarnished his predecessors. According to the lawsuit, Sara Netanyahu “like in the story of Cinderella, burdened her (Peretz) with impossible chores, tyrannized her and screamed to the point of terror.” The lawsuit alleges that Peretz was not allowed to drink the family’s bottled water, only tap water. The Netanyahus dismissed the allegations, saying that Peretz received warm and loving treatment in their home. They produced pictures of the two women embracing, a copy of Peretz’s letter of resignation signed “with lots of love and appreciation,” and a newspaper clipping of Peretz expressing her love for Sara Netanyahu. “As a psychologist, she needs to know how
to behave to human beings, and she doesn’t,” Naomi Igos, who worked as Sara Netanyahu’s secretary in the 1990s, told Army Radio. “Sara Netanyahu is an employer who breaks the law in every possible way ... the yelling, the losing control, the calls in the middle of the night.” The report sparked heated debate on whether the domestic distraction would affect the conduct of the prime minister. One prominent columnist, Ben Caspit, went so far as to say that Netanyahu is “unfit” for the job. “The fact that he permits that problematic woman to decide, to appoint, to fire, to upset, to dictate and to apply pressure on organizations in their entirety renders him unfit,” he wrote in the Maariv daily. —AP
SENATE SUPERMAJORITY AT STAKE IN RACE TO REPLACE TED KENNEDY Outcome could affect future of health care debate Massachusetts Senate candidates battled to the wire Monday in an election that threatened President Barack Obama’s agenda and reflected voters’ frustration with the status quo. Democrat Martha Coakley and Republican Scott Brown scoured the state for votes on the eve of the special election to succeed the late Edward M. Kennedy, with the Democrats’ 60-vote Senate supermajority at stake. From a distance, the president made one last appeal in a TV ad for Coakley, his words reflecting how much was on the line for Democrats in the face of a surprisingly strong challenge by Republican Scott Brown in a state that hasn’t elected a Republican senator since 1972. “Every vote matters, every voice matters,” Obama said in the ad that showed him campaigning with Coakley a day earlier. “We need you on Tuesday.” Obama needs Coakley, the state’s attorney general, to win to deny Republicans the ability to block his initiatives — specifically the near-complete health care plan — with a filibuster-sustaining 41st Republican vote. A Coakley loss also would be an embarrassment, particularly because Obama has put so much political capital on the line. Special elections tend to draw relatively few voters, but Republicans and Democrats predicted a high turnout Tuesday. Internal polling in the state shows Coakley and Brown in a statistical dead heat. Democrats, who until just a week ago considered the race
a lock for Coakley, have been forced to scramble for votes in a state where Democrats outnumber Republicans 3-1. Brown has thrown Democrats for a loop, riding a wave of voter anger with Obama’s health care plan and what critics call big government spending to pull the race even. Trying desperately to slow Brown’s momentum, Coakley and fellow Democrats rolled out a fresh round of automated calls to voters from Vice President Joe Biden and from Vicki Kennedy, the late senator’s widow. They were targeting voters who propelled Obama to victory in 2008. Obama’s TV appeal mostly was intended to encourage the Democratic base to vote. Democrats need their base to turn out big, given that surveys showed Brown leading among independents and Republicans incredibly energized about his candidacy. “Martha knows the struggles Massachusetts working families face because she’s lived those struggles. She’s fought for the people of Massachusetts every single day,” Obama said in the spot, filmed during Sunday’s rally with Coakley at Northeastern University. Brown was trying to capitalize on his advantage among men. He appeared before a heavily male crowd at a Boston Bruins hockey game. A day earlier, he surrounded himself with several well-known male sports celebrities, including former Red Sox pitcher Curt Schilling. -AP
FDA plans to toughen tanning bed warnings The Food and Drug Administration will debate how to toughen warnings of sunlamp cancer risks as millions head to tanning beds to prepare for spring break. Yes, sunburns are particularly dangerous. But there’s increasing scientific consensus that there’s no such thing as a safe tan, either. This is a message that Katie Donnar, 18, dismissed until a year ago when, preparing for the Miss Indiana pageant, she discovered a growth on her leg — an early-stage melanoma, the most dangerous form of skin cancer.
She can’t prove tanning beds are to blame, but she started using them as a sixth-grade cheerleader, says she stepped under the bulbs about every other day during parts of high school, and at one point even owned one. No more. “It seemed somewhat of a myth that I was putting myself at risk,” says Donnar, of Bruceville, Ind., who found the melanoma before it spread. “The [tanning bed’s] warning label was so small, nothing to make me stop and think, ‘This is real.’”
AP PHOTO
President Barack Obama waves with Democratic senate candidate Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley at a campaign stop at Northeastern University in Boston Sunday.
CAMPUS EVENTS
WEDNESDAY CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST Campus Crusade for Christ will host a Bible study at 9 p.m. in the Santee Lounge of the Oklahoma Memorial Stadium.
Note: To post a campus event to be published in The Daily, click on the “Submit Event” tab underneath the calendar on OUDaily.com. All event postings are subject to approval of The Daily Editorial Board.
-AP
Chicago Bears’ defensive tackle arrested on Campus Corner Former OU and Chicago Bears defensive tackle Dusty Dvoracek has been arrested on charges of public intoxication, assault and battery and interference with official process. Norman police records stated the 26-year-old Dvoracek was arrested around 1 a.m. Saturday at Seven47 on Campus Corner. Dvoracek appeared in 13 games in four seasons with the Bears after being drafted in the fourth round in 2006. He was placed on the waived/injured list in August because of a torn ACL in his right knee.
While at OU, he was temporarily dismissed from the Sooners after an altercation at a bar in Norman. He was reinstated after anger management and alcohol-related counseling. Norman Police Capt. Darry Stacy said an arrest report won’t be available until Tuesday. -AP
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Tuesday January 19, 2010
« TRACK & FIELD Read more about the Track & Field meet in College Station at OUDAILY.COM
Aaron Colen, sports editor dailysports@ou.edu • phone: 325-7630 • fax: 325-6051
SOONER MEN SEARCH FOR CONSISTENCY Youthful Sooners get big wins and tough losses over break
they were not playing in an official game, because the team did not deserve either privilege. Since the first road loss, the team has put up two conference wins at home, first dropping the Oklahoma State Cowboys 62-57 in overtime and then ending Missouri’s ninegame win streak with a 66-61 victory. The only consistent thing about the team is its home record, as they are a perfect 10-0 this season, and usually do not show up on the road as they are 1-6 for the season. The trend was the same over the break as the team won all four of its games at home and lost all three on the road. A theme that will be ever-present throughout the year is the team’s youth. The 15 man roster is composed of just six junior and seniors, three of which (junior guard Cade Davis, junior center Ryan Wright and senior forward Tony Crocker) receive consistent minutes, and one, Orlando Allen, who makes his occasional appearance, depending on the other team’s lineup. The team continues conference play with back-to-back road games against Texas A&M on Tuesday and Texas Tech Saturday evening.
CLARK FOY Daily Staff Writer
While many students were taking a load off this winter break, the men’s basketball team was hard at work playing seven games over the course of the month-long hiatus. The Sooners accrued four wins and three losses out of the seven game span, leaving a lot of Sooner fans somewhat stunned. So far, the team has lost six games which is just as many as last year’s Blake Griffin-led team lost all season, including tournament play. Each loss was troubling in its own way. The first one came to the UTEP Miners on a “road game” that was actually played in Oklahoma City, making it about as close to a home game as the team can come without actually playing at the Lloyd Noble Center. Maybe it was the different hardwood, maybe UTEP is just the better team, but it definitely was not UTEP’s fan base having an effect on the game, as they were not in very strong attendance. 10 days later, the team took on Gonzaga in Spokane, Wash., losing the game 83-69. This game actually received a lot of media attention as freshman forward/center Tiny Gallon broke the backboard on an (attempted) dunk. Granted the play would have been more incredible had he made the dunk, it still managed to make Sportcenter’s top 10 plays of the day. The tragedy of the game was Gonzaga’s 20 points off OU’s 10 turnovers. OU opened conference play in Waco, Texas against the Baylor Bears. This was certainly a blow to
TEXAS TWO-STEP After a couple of home wins against Big 12 opponents, the Sooner men head south for a Texas road trip.
MARCIN RUTKOWSKI/ THE DAILY
Freshman Tiny Gallon (24), comes down after making a dunk during the men’s basketball game against Oklahoma State University on Jan. 11. the team’s morale as they lost 91-60 allowing Baylor to shoot a deadly taking away the team’s locker room after shooting just 35.7 percent 58.6 percent from the field. This privileges as well as their privilege over the course of the game and game ultimately led to Coach Capel of wearing any OU apparel when
Women’s gym rolls vs. Auburn BRANDON BROADHURST Daily Staff Writer
T h e N o . 2 O k l a h o m a W o m e n ’s Gymnastics team (2-0, 0-0 Big 12) traveled to Beard-Eaves-Memorial Coliseum to face the Auburn Tigers (0-2, 0-1 SEC) for their second straight test against a top ten SEC opponent. Leading the Sooners to a victory against the No. 4 Florida Gators (0-1, 0-0 SEC) in Norman only a week earlier was Big 12 Specialist of the Week, senior Jackie Flanery. After Oklahoma posted a team tally of 49.050 on the apparatus, aided by junior Natalie Ratcliff ’s 9.85, the Sooners had bagged the vault title. Along with Flanery and senior Mary Mantle’s stunning 9.8 performances, sophomore Sara Stone’s 9.825 was the final blow to quiet the 5,750 crowd in Alabama. Flanery, along with Hollie Vise and Kristin Smith, who posted season high numbers (bars-9.925, beam-9.875) and (beam9.875) against the Tigers, led the Sooners to their first tough road victory. All three of the women were individual title winners in their victory over Auburn. “It is very exciting to be on the road for the first time and see how tough you are, in particular because our warm up was not one without a couple of hiccups,” said head coach K.J. Kindler. “I felt that they really regrouped and got their heads together. I’m very proud of how they performed. We were solid throughout, but the girls realize there is so much room for improvement, which is the exciting part.” Kindler is 43-6 as she rolls into only her fourth year as head coach of the lady Sooners. Friday’s victory over the Tigers was OU’s
“It is very exciting to be on the road for the first time and see how tough you are, in particular because are warm up was not one without a couple of hiccups.” HEAD COACH K.J. KINDLER third straight over Auburn and evened the all-time series at four apiece. Through two meets, Oklahoma has won 15 of a possible 16 combined team and individual event titles. OU next travels to Champaign, Ill., for a meeting with 2009 NCAA Championship qualifier Illinois on Jan. 23 at 7 p.m. (CT). The Fighting Illini entered the weekend ranked No. 23 in the country.
IN CASE YOU MISSED IT... The Sooners opened the season with an upset of the fourth-ranked Florida Gators. The win helped catapult OU to No. 2 in the national rankings. OU Individual Titles: Jackie Flanery (Bars and Floor) Hollie Vise (Bars and Beams) Natasha Kelley (Bars)
Individuals shine in College Station GEORGIA BASORE Daily Staff Writer
The OU track and field teams won five individual titles during Saturday’s Texas A&M Invitational. Both OU veterans and newcomers dominated events, combining to win seven qualifying marks to be considered for the NCAA Indoor Championships. Senior Neelon Greenwood (men’s long jump), Junior Ti’Anca Mock (women’s long jump), redshirt freshman Karen Shump (shot put), K.P. Singh (weight
throw), and Kevin Snyder (high jump) were the Sooners’ recording wins in field events. Senior Amy Backel followed Shump, not only finishing second, but recording the fourth longest throw in Oklahoma history. Both athletes qualified for the Championships. Two other throwers made their mark in the OU record book: Redshirt freshman Tia Brooks with the University’s fifth longest throw and sophomore Brittany Borman with the eighth longest. Redshirt junior K.P. Singh earned the team’s second win in
weight throw; beating the nearest competitor by almost two feet. Winning the men’s high jump proved to be a simple feat for Snyder when he cleared a height of 6-8.75 (2.05) on the first jump. Junior Jasmine Simmons jumped the third best distance in OU history in her first NCAA competition in the triple jump. Greenwood packaged a victory when he conquered the men’s long jump event. To read more, see OUDaily.com.
1/19 @ Texas A&M 1/23 @ Texas Tech
Tuesday, January 19, 2010
Sooners struggle against top 10
7
BUSINESS AS USUAL FOR MEN’S GYMNASTICS The 3rd-ranked OU Men’s Gymnastics team won its first competition of the season, taking the title at the Rocky Mountain Open in Colorado Springs, Co. Starting with such a high-rank, the Sooners lived up to preseason expectations and performed like the top-5 team they are, although it is clearly very early in the season. The win marks the 11th consecutive time OU has won the Rocky Mountain Open. Other teams competing included No. 9 Nebraska, which finished 2nd, host team Air Force in 3rd, and Arizona State and Washington rounding out the top 5. The OU men will travel to Iowa City to face Big 10 foe Iowa on January 23 at 2 p.m. - Daily Staff
Wrestling off to strong start MJ CASIANO Daily Staff Writer
Junior guard Danielle Robinson (13) tries to get past opposing players during the Sooner women’s game against Oklahoma Christian on November 11, 2009. Neil McGlohon/The Daily
The OU Women lost two games to top-10 teams over the break ANNELISE RUSSELL Daily Staff Writer
While most students headed home for the winter holidays, the Sooner women’s basketball team was hardly on a break. Over the break, OU faced three top-10 programs, three Big 12 opponents and went undefeated at home. The Daily’s Annelise Russell gives a quick recap of what you missed.
BY THE NUMBERS Record: 12-4, (Big 12: 2-1) Record over the break: 4-2 Results: Dec. 20 OU v. Creighton W, 67-58 Dec. 30 OU v. Cal State Fullerton W, 96-75 Jan. 3 OU v. Tennessee L, 96-75 Jan. 9 OU v. Texas Tech W, 73-58 Jan. 13 OU v. Baylor L, 57-47 Jan. 17 OU v. Texas A&M W, 74-65
Highlights: •Against Cal State Fullerton, senior center Abi Olajuwon posted a career high 25 points on 11-16 shooting. Olajuwon spent most of her OU career backing up the Paris twins until this season. •The game against Tennessee was the second year in a row OU faced legendary coach Pat Summitt and her Lady Vols. Last year, OU hosted Tennessee at the Ford Center in OKC where OU took the win and denied Summitt her 1,000th win. •The Sooners concluded the majority of their non-conference play. The last nonconference opponent will be top-ranked Connecticut, who OU hosts Feb. 15 in Norman. • OU opened up conference play at home against Texas Tech. The Sooners are now 12-2 in conference home openers under head coach Sherri Coale. •The losses to Tennessee and Baylor marked the Sooners’ third and fourth losses to top-10 programs. All of OU’s four losses this year, including Notre Dame and Georgia, have been to top-10 ranked programs. • OU rounded out the break with the win over the Texas A&M Aggies. OU dropped both games to the Aggies last year, led last year by Putnam City West graduate Danielle Gant.
The OU wrestling squad may have enjoyed winter break more than other groups of students – they dominated opponents in the Lonestar Duals and placed in the Virginia Duals, furthering the team’s chances of climbing in rankings. The No. 11 ranked OU grapplers (121-1) beat four universities by an average score of 39-4 at the Lonestar Duals on Saturday in Arlington, Texas. The opposition never scored in the double digits, as OU beat Northwestern (40-3), Harvard (44-6), Brown (36-4), and Nebraska-Kearney (34-4). The 12th win of the season marks the 15th straight year of 10-plus dual wins under OU head coach Jack Spates, and it came easily this weekend as OU trailed only once – a 0-3 deficit to start the Harvard dual. Ten non-starters saw action for OU, going 10-2 on the day. OU also defeated Penn State, 22-15, to earn third place at the Virginia Duals January 9 in Hampton, Va. The win over PSU was the second top10 win for OU in the duals and the fourth of the season. “Overall, it was a good weekend for the Sooners,” Spates said. “We had an exceptional first day and then dropped a heartbreaker in the semifinals today, where we failed to seal the deal against Lehigh. Our team was greatly disappointed, and we had an opportunity
to bounce back against a great Penn State team this evening, which we did. I think it shows the character of our guys by not hanging our heads and ending with a great win.” The only negative the team witnessed at the Virginia Duals was a brutal comeback from No. 11 Lehigh, where OU led 16-0 after four bouts, only to see the Hawk rally six straight bouts to win 18-16. OU started the Virginia Duals by assaulting Bucknell, 28-7, and defeating No. 18 Virginia 21-13, where the team won the first six bouts in dominance. “I’m really proud of our team today,” Spates said. “We won a lot of close, tough matches, and I thought our guys really showed up to compete. We had some heartbreakers, but guys battled through and came up with some big wins.” There was also some home action over the break. OU won the final five matches against No. 17 Cal Poly to roll 27-13 on January 3 at the Howard McCasland Field House in Norman. “Cal Poly is a good team and we knew that coming in,” Spates said. “We knew we had to come to wrestle. One big positive for us is the third period belonged to us. If you look at the third periods in all of our matches, we did most of the scoring. That is a compliment to our training.” The OU grapplers will next face No. 2 Iowa State, which comes to Norman on January 22. The Sooners will attempt to snap a seven-match losing streak.
OU HOCKEY SWEPT OVER THE WEEKEND The #16 Minot State Beavers collected consecutive 3-2 victories over the #7 Oklahoma Sooners this weekend. Regulation could not decide either match as Friday’s contest went to a shootout and Saturday’s skate saw overtime. The Sooners will travel northeast to face Rhode Island in two consecutive game on January 22-23. -DAN HAYS/THE DAILY
8 Tuesday, January 19, 2010 Thad Baker, advertising manager classifieds@ou.edu • phone: 325-2521 • fax: 325-7517
Phone: 405-325-2521 E-mail: classifieds@ou.edu
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Employment HELP WANTED
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Applicant must be at least 16 years of age and have cash handling experience. $7.25 per hour. Work Period: No fixed schedule. Must be able to work evenings, weekends, and holidays. Application Deadline: Open Recruitment. Obtain application at: 201-C West Gray, Human Resources Dept., City of Norman (405) 366-5482, Web: NormanOK.gov EOE/AA Bartending! Up to $300/day. No exp nec. Training provided. 1-800-965-6520 x133. BEST ENERGY DRINK! AND INCOME FOR LIFE! GO TO: www.myandfriendsfuture.com TUTORS WANTED!!! Available positions in the OU Athletics Department!!! Junior, Senior, Graduate, and Post-graduate applicants only!!! ALL SUBJECTS!!! Hiring for Spring 2010. Call (405) 3254828 for more info!!! STUDENTPAYOUTS.COM Paid survey takers needed in Norman 100% FREE to join. Click on Surveys. MISAL OF INDIA BISTRO Now accepting applications for waitstaff. Apply in person at 580 Ed Noble Pkwy, across from Barnes & Noble, 579-5600.
ENGLISH TUTORS WANTED!!! Available positions in the OU Athletics Department!!! Junior, Senior, Graduate, and Post-graduate applicants only!!! Hiring for Spring 2010. Call (405) 3258376 for more info!!! TUTORS WANTED!!! Available positions in the OU Athletics department!!! Junior, Senior, Graduate, and Post-graduate applicants only!!! MATH - All Levels!!! Hiring for Spring 2010. Call 325-0554 for more info!!! Have the summer of your life at a prestigous coed sleepaway camp in the beautiful Pocono Mountains of Pennsylvania, 2 1/2 hours from NYC. We’re seeking counselors who can teach any Team & Individual Sports, Tennis, Gymnastics, Horseback Riding, Mt Biking, Theatre, Tech Theatre, Circus, Magic, Arts & Crafts, Pioneering, Climbing Tower, Water Sports, Music, Dance or Science. Great salaries and perks. Plenty of free time. Internships available for many majors. On-campus interviews on 1/21. Apply online at www.islandlake.com. Call 800-869-6083 on weekdays for more information. info@islandlake.com Autographs Sports bar, located inside Riverwind Casino in Norman, OK, currently has COOK, SERVER, HOST and KITCHEN MANAGER positions available. Please apply in person at Traditions Spirits Corporate Office. Directions: Follow Highway 9 West past Riverwind Casino, travel 2 miles, turn right on Pennsylvania, take an immediate left onto the service road 2813 SE 44th Norman, OK 405-392-4550, or online at www.traditionsspirits.com.
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PLACE AN AD
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Help Wanted ads in The Oklahoma Daily are not to separate as to gender. Advertisers may not discriminate in employment ads based on race, color, religion or gender unless such qualifying factors are essential to a given position. All ads are subject to acceptance by The Oklahoma Daily. Ad acceptance may be re-evaluated at any time.
Previous Solution 7 5 9 3 6 8 1 4 2
8 1 2 4 7 9 6 5 3
3 6 4 2 1 5 9 8 7
4 7 8 6 2 1 3 9 5
5 3 1 7 9 4 8 2 6
2 9 6 5 8 3 7 1 4
6 8 7 9 5 2 4 3 1
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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.
Universal Crossword Edited by Timothy E. Parker January 19, 2010
HOROSCOPE By Bernice Bede Osol
Copyright 2008, Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
Tuesday, Jan. 19, 2010 CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- That long-awaited opening may present itself without warning. You will finally get something off your mind that has been bothering you for quite some time.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) -- By not giving up on a close associate or family member, he or she will surprisingly keep the faith as well. Your support and persistence will inspire this individual to find success.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -- With a little expert financial gymnastics, this could be a surprisingly successful moneymaking day. Of course, you’ll have to use your ingenuity and resourcefulness.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -- If you are asked to make a decision off the top of your head without knowing all the facts, stall for time, especially if it affects others, too. Success can be magnified when all are in accord.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) -Someone you helped previously might request another favor. If this person has shown no signs of reciprocation, it might be better to say no until he or she can learn to show gratitude.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- It might become necessary to take a calculated risk on a slow-moving endeavor, or you’ll risk total collapse. If you believe the chances are good that you’ll succeed, go for it.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) -- Your spontaneous kindness won’t allow you to exclude anyone who wants to be recognized and counted, including someone who is stubborn and fastidious. This person’s gratitude will surprise you.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) -- An idea that pops in your head might be just what you need to prop up something in which everyone has already lost faith. It could produce the anticipated benefits.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -You can accomplish much more by not retaliating in the same harsh manner as another has behaved. In fact, your forgiving example might soften this person to the point of amenability.
Previous Answers
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -When witnessing someone mock the good idea of another, don’t sit idly by. Support the proposal by showing the detractor the merits of the concept.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -- A distasteful assignment might reveal a wonderful side that you never knew existed. It will no longer be the menace it once was. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -- This might not be a bad day to go shopping. There’s a good chance you will find item after item that you never thought you needed, but once discovered can’t do without.
ACROSS 1 ___ Peak (Colorado mountain) 6 Top cop 11 Not at all nerdy 14 Drop, as a vowel sound 15 Surpass in performance 16 Lennon spouse 17 Sponsored one, often 19 “What have we here?” 20 Ancient Icelandic settlers 21 More convenient 23 CEO’s degree, maybe 25 Feel intuitively 28 Shipping weight allowance 29 Europe’s high points 31 Mother’s new husband 34 Asian weight units 36 High-altitude clouds 37 In one end and out the other 40 Become more vulgar 44 Wish-granters of myth (Var.) 46 ___ of the ball (pretty woman) 47 Grandmother’s sibling 52 Pickle flavoring 53 Tack room item 54 Lions and
Tigers and Bears 56 “Aw, c’mon, be a ___!” 57 Acute anxieties 60 “Amadeus” director Forman 62 Extraordinary degree 63 He shares one parent 68 Gangster’s gun 69 Manage to dodge 70 Cheap cigar (Var.) 71 “Tarzan” star Ron 72 Prefix meaning “four” 73 “Podge” attachment DOWN 1 Where to hang one’s hat 2 U.N. body dealing with workers’ rights 3 Ransom seeker (Var.) 4 Caribbean taro 5 Roebuck’s partner 6 Believable 7 “Beg pardon?” 8 “Addams Family” cousin 9 Where it all began 10 Warning on the links 11 Cheering shout 12 “Where are you?” response,
maybe 13 More indigent 18 Swiss Army Knife’s array 22 Clad 23 “The Simpsons” creator Groening 24 Uninteresting 26 “Hold on just a ___” 27 “Gandhi” or “Cleopatra” 30 “Be all that you can be” and others 32 ’60s do 33 Jordanian, probably 35 Animal fat 38 Long-tailed antelope 39 “Getting warmer,” e.g. 41 Careless, as workmanship 42 “First Lady of Song” Fitzgerald 43 “Ain’t Misbehavin’”
actress Carter 45 ___ Capades (skating show) 47 Football’s “Galloping Ghost” Red 48 Kind of property 49 You might get a ticket for doing this 50 It resembles an inverted V 51 Kuwaiti VIP 55 What water in a pail may do 58 “Let’s have no more of ___!” 59 Command near “Open” 61 Sgt. Snorkel’s canine companion 64 Auction grouping 65 Spruce cousin 66 Cadbury confection 67 “American Pie” rhyme
PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER
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DISTANT FAMILY by George Darby
Tuesday, January 19, 2010
Joshua Boydston, L&A editor dailyent@ou.edu • phone: 325-5189 • fax: 325-6051
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Hear music samples from this week’s New Music Tuesday albums and catch an additional review of Carrie Underwood’s “Play On.”
CRIMSON AND LEAN: FITNESS BASICS THE DAILY’S GEORGIA BASORE HAS MADE IT HER ONE WOMAN MISSION TO WHIP SOONERS INTO SHAPE, ONE COLUMN AT A TIME Let’s admit it: we’re perhaps the most physically attractive student body to ever grace the planet. Although we have nearly mastered perfection, we are never completely immune to error. I know we all ask ourselves, “How can I maintain this awesome physique?” Here is a clear path to avoid all this needless hysteria and launch you to the next level of fitness. Being amazing is much easier than you may think.
NORMAN MUSIC FESTIVAL ANNOUNCES OPEN CALL FOR LOCAL BANDS Norman Music Festival organizers just announced local bands will be able to bid to play this year’s festival through an open call program, guaranteeing at least 20 bands will be selected through this manner. A selection committee will be accepting entries beginning immediately until Friday, Feb. 19. In addition to an appearance at a festival expected to draw a crowd of 25,000 people, bands will also receive various gifts. “Norman has always embraced its musical roots,” says Jonathon Fowler, Fundraising Committee Chair for the Norman Music Festival. “This open call is one way we can spread the opportunity and get more great Oklahoma musicians involved.” For more information concerning entry requirements, go to normanmusicfestival. com. National headliners for this year’s festival are expected to be announced in the coming weeks.
GOLDEN GLOBE AWARD WINNERS Drama: Best Picture- “Avatar” Best Actor- Jeff Bridges “Crazy Heart” Best Actress- Sandra Bullock “The Blind Side” Comedy Or Musical: Best Picture- “The Hangover” Best Actor- Robert Downey Jr. “Sherlock Holmes” Best Actress- Meryl Streep “Julie & Julia” TV Drama: Best Series- “Mad Men” Best Actor- Michael C. Hall “Dexter” Best Actress- Julianna Marguiles- “The Good Wife” TV Comedy Or Musical Best Series- “Glee” Best Actor- Alec Baldwin “30 Rock” Best Actress- Toni Collette “United States of Tara”
RELEASED TODAY Music: *Spoon- “Transference” Eels- “End Times” Motion City Soundtrack- “My Dinosaur Life” *Surfer Blod- “Astro Coast” The Hotrats- “Turn Ons” RJD2- “The Colossus” Movies: “The Invention of Lying” Starring Ricky Gervais, Jennifer Garner “Gamer” Starring Gerard Butler, Michael C. Hall “Whiteout” Starring Kate Beckinsale “Pandorum” Starring Dennis Quaid *“Weeds: Season Five” Starring Mary-Louise Parker * The Daily’s Top Picks
First, it’s all about timing. To keep your metabolism running as fast as Usain Bolt, it is best to eat small, healthy meals every two to three hours during the day. A good rule to follow: do not deprive yourself. If you’re too hungry, not only will you reach out to comfort foods for a shoulder to cry on, but you lower your metabolic rate. Additionally, it’s best to be a ‘front loader.’ This means eat majority of your calories early in the day and taper towards the evening. Your body needs time to burn off calories as the day progresses. More specifically, reduce intake of questionable carbs in the evening such as: white bread, pre-sweetened cereals, desserts, sodas, fruit juices and presweetened coffee drinks.
Then comes exercise. It is important to never underestimate the significance of weight training. Weight training is the best form of exercise to build muscle, and plenty of muscle is necessary for kickin’ curves. If that hasn’t sold you on weight lifting, then you may be surprised to know that muscle burns more fat at rest than any other tissue, and the average person is at rest for 70% of their day. We all know that aerobics are beneficial to daily caloric deficit, but it affects metabolism much less than weight training at
the completion of exercise. Therefore, it takes a combination of aerobics and weight training to maintain that bangin’ bod. S o , follow this incredible advice, and watch yourself transform from cream to lean. You can thank me later. Georgia Basore is a communication junior.
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Tuesday, January 19, 2010
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THE FLAMING LIPS “THE FLAMING LIPS AND STARDEATH AND WHITE DWARFS WITH HENRY ROLLINS AND PEACHES DOING DARK SIDE OF THE MOON” KEY TRACKS: “THE GREAT GIG IN THE SKY,” “MONEY” SCORE: 7.1 WAYNE COYNE AND CO. TAKE A CRACK AT AN AMERICAN CLASSIC, NOW WITH MORE AIR TRAFFIC ALERTS Recording a track-for-track remake of history’s third-best-selling album ought to be considered either an act of conceited, ambitious delusion or the earnest homage of a starry-eyed devotee. Luckily for planet Earth, the intentions of one of her most bizarre and fun-loving inhabitants, Wayne Coyne, are pure. Coyne, of course, is the lead singer, confetti-blaster, gong-smacker, ocMATT CARNEY casional guitarist, oversized balloon enthusiast and Teletubby-wrangler for The Flaming Lips—Oklahoma’s greatest and strangest rock band—as anyone who has attended one of their New Year’s Eve Freakouts can testify. With the new decade came raised stakes,
The Daily’s Matt Carney and Alex Ewald review notable, recent album releases.
so the band answered by announcing their intention to play entirely through “The Dark Side of the Moon” on midnight, Jan. 1. Thus, we now have the band’s cover of Pink Floyd’s 1973 masterpiece “The Dark Side of the Moon.” There’s no musical or critical statement asserted here, no intention to rival or best one of the most important and seminal bands in the history of popular music. This is simply a homage, conceived, recorded, performed live and commercially released, because Wayne Coyne thought it would be cool to do, and also cool for his band’s fans to own. And cool it is. Cool, but not groundbreaking, neither more aesthetically pleasing, nor in any manner better than, the original (unless of course you thought the 1973 recording could’ve used more background flight departure broadcasts mentioning Oklahoma City). Steven Drozd doesn’t attempt to out-duel David Gilmour on guitar, and the original lyrics and general album structure are preserved almost completely, to the band’s credit. Even the spoken-word interludes are duplicated—in a sharp casting decision— by Mr. Rockstar/Comedian/Spoken Word Aficionado Henry Rollins himself. Also enlisted are Coyne’s nephew’s band, Stardeath and White Dwarfs and Canadian recording artist Peaches, who’s just the kind of electronic weirdo Coyne would contract out Clare Torry’s incredible spurts of vocals on “The Great Gig in the Sky” to. Coyne and company are at their best when they’re injecting weirdness and excitement into whatever they do, and this record is no different, evidenced by their echoey take on the trippy electronic jam “Any Colour You Like” and the muscular, bass drive on the opener, “Speak to Me/Breathe” (a pleasant face-lift to the serenity of the original). They rightfully eschew capturing the Syd Barrett-inspired paranoia that haunts Pink Floyd’s recording, instead replacing it with palpable tensions and excitement. The album is what its full title implies; it is The Flaming Lips and Stardeath and White Dwarfs with Henry Rollins and Peaches doing “The Dark Side of the Moon,” and it’s enjoyable. An appropriate interpretation of a classic for a live audience. Matt Carney is a professional writing junior.
ALICIA KEYS “THE ELEMENT OF FREEDOM” KEY TRACKS: “THIS BED” “EMPIRE STATE OF MIND PART II,” “PUT IT IN A LOVE SONG” SCORE: 7.5 R&B STALWART MIXES TRIED AND TRUE WITH A FLAIR FOR THE NEW
If “The Diary of Alicia Keys” was the soul singer-pianist’s foray into the older soul of the ’60s and ’70s, Keys’ latest release, “The Element of Freedom,” is a complete 180° from the trademark neo-soul; a continuation of her last album “As I Am’s” musical experimentation. T h e t h e mat i c subject of love and devoted commitment remains the same as always, but such can be expected of any contemporary R&B, of which Alicia Keys has beALEX EWALD come one of the masters. The vintage “Love Is Blind” uses both an old-school piano loop and a sonic voice echoer to give an other-worldly mood, continued with the next track “Doesn’t Mean Anything” as it
attempts to hit hard with heavy percussion and call-and-response chants of “Ooo” and “Aaah.” But they’re all typical Alicia Keys techniques, ultimately taking away the significance of the album’s theme of letting convention go to the wind, as the album cover elaborates, as Keys wears a halter top constructed from bird feathers. Instead, the experimental journey begins several tracks in with the lushly romantic synthpop single “Try Sleeping With A Broken Heart” and “Wait Til You See My Smile.” Strangely enough, while most Alicia Keys’ albums tend to falter halfway through, the second half instead offers more variety. Melodies are catchier, like the bouncy “This Bed.” Her third single, “Put It In A Love Song” (a collaboration with Beyoncé), lacks the latter’s known sheer ambition, but its animated African folk-styled staccato beats and hooks stick somewhat well enough. “Empire State of Mind, Part II,” Keys’ answer song to her own hit with Jay-Z, swells to a stirring climax with its soaring chorus and heavy-hitting drums as any anthem should —adding an optimistic shine with her own lyrics to celebrate her hometown, the Big Apple —and provides the best example of why Alicia Keys is one of the classiest artists of this generation. Alex Ewald is a University College freshman.
EARS WE TRUST
GUESTROOM RECORDS’ BEST SELLERS OF 2009
Oklahoma musicians share what they are currently listening to: This week features Tommy McKenzie, guitarist for garage rockers, The Boom Bang “Bangers Vs. F*ckers” by The Coachwhips “Bangers Vs. F*ckers” is a supersonic garage fuzzed out assault. This is John Dwyer’s band before Thee Oh Sees, and this is a very much more lo-fi and aggressive sound. Everything sounds like it is being blared out of amps that have been through a F-5 tornado.
1. The Flaming Lips- “Embryonic” 2. Animal Collective- “Merriweather Post Pavilion” 3. Grizzly Bear- “Veckatimest” 4. Starlight Mints- “Change Remains” 5. The Beatles- “Abbey Road” 6. Bon Iver- “For Emma, Forever Ago” 7. Beirut- “March of the Zapotec” 8. Neutral Milk Hotel- “In The Aeroplane Over the Sea” 9. Fleet Foxes- “Fleet Foxes” 10. The Beatles- “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band”
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