Support animal sanctuaries to improve wildlife welfare (page 4) The University of Oklahoma’s independent student voice since 1916
T H U R s DAY, D e C e M B e R 8 , 2 011
W W W.O U DA I LY.C O M
2 010 G OL D C ROW N W I N N E R
researcH
occupY norman
past could have impact on stress Camp Bad backgrounds tame young adults’ stress, study says CHASE COOK
Managing Editor
The psychological stress brought on by final exams and projects may be better managed by young adults with a troubled past, according to
research by an OU College of Medicine professor. Research done at OU’s Health Sciences Center shows adults with adverse backgrounds — including being mugged, robbed, sexually assaulted or separated from ones parents before the age of 15 — had lower heart rates and cortisol levels when exposed to psychological
stress. These results could allude that adults with adverse backgrounds have adapted to stress in a different way than other people, said William Lovallo, psychiatry and behavioral sciences professor. These people could be “more stress-hardy.” While being more resilient to stress sounds like a good
thing, Lovallo said any alteration in the normal biological responses of the body could be cause for concern. “[These] systems built into our body for stress are essential to our survival,” he said. The stress tests were performed on a total of 354 healthy, young adults both
AT A GLANCE stress symptoms • your heart rate increases • you begin to breathe more as the lungs dilate • you feel less hungry as digestive activity decreases Source: simplypsychology.org
see FINALS paGe 2
group takes walk Protesters picket Main Street bank over 2008 bailout
“dr. Indestructo” saYs GoodBYe
COCO COURTOIS Campus Reporter
Despite the biting cold, Occupy Norman took its message on the move Wednesday on a walk from its headquarters at Andrews Park to Chase Bank on Main Street. “[JPMorgan Chase & Co.] is one of the biggest recipients of the government bailout. They were directly involved in the economical crisis,” said Grant De Lozier, political science and geographic information see WALK paGe 2
eartHQuake
Issues brought above ground Sooner state has experienced 1,047 quakes in 2011 KinGsLey Burns/tHe daiLy
Physics professor Stewart Ryan, dressed as “Dr. Indestructo,” blows clouds of liquid nitrogen in Nielsen Hall on Wednesday. The physics professor, known among both students and faculty for his zany costumes and lively demonstrations, is retiring this semester and has been recognized with the title of professor emeritus. “I’ve been here for 150 years,” Ryan said. “It’s time to let someone else come in and do this.”
Campus Reporter
“Dr. Indestructo” is finally hanging up his hero attire after a 35-year teaching career. Longtime OU physics professor Stewart Ryan will retire at the end of the semester; however, Ryan isn’t leaving quietly. During last week’s Board of Regents meeting, Ryan was presented with the David Ross Boyd Professor Emeritus award for his unusual, but effective, student-oriented style of teaching. Ryan said he could not have been more surprised after he was invited to the meeting for what he thought was the announcement of a gift to the physics department. “I’m retiring, and normally all awards like this were given in April,” Ryan said.
The award was established in 1945 to recognize superior teaching ability, leadership and student guidance, named after OU’s first president, university spokesman Michael Nash said. Ryan has traveled throughout the state giving about 500 shows of his famous alter-ego “Dr. Indestructo” skits, sharing his love of physics not only with university students but high school and elementary students as well. His alter ego was made famous by his multi-colored wigs and science-oriented attire. Ryan is lauded as one of the best educators at OU, physics department Chairman KinGsLey Burns/tHe daiLy Gregory Parker said. Parker said he has enjoyed watching Dr. Dr. Indestructo (retiring associate professor of physics Stewart Ryan) lies on a bed of nails in Nielsen Hall. Ryan has taught for 35 see INDESTRUCTO paGe 3 years and is retiring at the end of the semester.
see GROUND paGe 3
news VOL. 97, NO. 77 © 2011 OU Publications Board FREE — Additional copies 25 cents www.OUDaily.com www.facebook.com/OUDaily www.twitter.com/OUDaily
INsIDe News .......................... Classifieds .................. Life & Arts .................. Opinion ...................... Sports .........................
2 6 8 4 7
NOw ON
Campus Reporter
Record seismic activity has highlighted the use of hydraulic fracturing in Oklahoma, which houses a growing number of active fracturing wells. T h e r e a r e 2 4 0 c u rrently active fracturing wells. Apache Corp. built 20 wells between January and March 2011, while BP has started the operation of 13 wells between June and October in eastern Oklahoma, according to Frac Focus, the Chemical Disclosure Registry. Chesapeake currently leads the state in fracturing activity, operating 155 active sites, with 94.1 percent of them located west of Interstate 35. Austin Holland, Oklahoma Geological
Longtime physics figure to retire VICTORIA GARTEN
UNY CHAN
ou latest college on itunes u store
Screaming Sooners off to 5-1 start
Free service gives access to college-, departmentspecific content. (page 3)
sports women’s hoops set to face fresno state Sophomore guard waiting in the wings for a repeat win in matchup. (page 7)
multImedIa
lIfe & arts
students manage finals week stress
student society to close exhibit friday
The Daily talks to several Sooners about their study habits. (oudaily.com)
The F-Stop Society’s first show features motion in many media. (page 8)
astrud reed/tHe daiLy
Sophomore guard Cameron Clark reacts after a big play during OU’s 82-53 win against Sacramento State on Friday. The Sooners host Oral Roberts at 7 tonight at Lloyd Noble Center. (page 7)
The Daily’s open record requests Requested document and purpose
Date requested
all documents produced or submitted to the advisory committee on tobacco policy — These documents were requested to gather information on the processes and actions of the committee.
Nov. 15
emails received or sent by the advisory committee on tobacco policy’s email address — These documents were requested to what information is being distributed through the email address.
Nov. 17
fiscal year 2010 and 2011 financial reports for the cleveland area rapid transit system — These documents were requested to compare financial data between the fiscal years.
Monday
all financial reports by ou Information technology store since its august 2008 opening — These documents were requested to compare the entire financial history of the IT store.
Wednesday
2
News
• Thursday, December 8, 2011
news
Today around campus An exhibit of students’ photos will be on display all day at the Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art’s Lightwell Gallery. The display is a presentation from the F-Stop Society, a new student-art organization. The exhibit will be on display until Dec. 9. A holiday grab bag sale is being held from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. at Muse, the store within Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art. Grab bag discounts will range from 15 to 20 percent. A free holiday harp concert will take place from 2:30 to 3:30 p.m. at Catlett Music Center’s Gothic Hall. The men’s basketball team will play Oral Roberts at 7 p.m. at Lloyd Noble Center. A lecture on preparing for veterinary and medical school interviews will take place from 7:30 to 9 p.m. at Oklahoma Memorial Union, Suite 323. Free Raising Cane’s and cookies will be provided. A free chamber concert will take place from 8 to 10 p.m. at Catlett Music Center’s Pitman Recital Hall.
Friday, Dec. 9 Final day of classes. Final day for thesis defense. Final day for oral defense of dissertation. Final day for comprehensive exam. A lecture on antisemite beliefs and actions of Oklahoma’s politicans will take place from 6 to 7 p.m. at OU Hillel. A Shabbat service and kosher dinner will follow. The lecture is free. A performance of “The Nutcracker” will take place at 8 p.m. at the Fine Arts Center’s Rupel J. Jones Theatre. For more information, contact OU Fine Arts Box Office at 405-325-4101 or online at theatre.ou.edu. A free screening of “Our Idiot Brother” will take place at 6, 9 p.m. and midnight at Oklahoma Memorial Union’s Meacham Auditorium. The movie is sponsored by the Union Programming Board and Campus Activities Council.
Saturday, Dec. 10 The men’s basketball team will play Arkansas at 2 p.m. at Lloyd Noble Center. A performance of “The Nutcracker” will take place at 3 and 8 p.m. at the Fine Arts Center’s Rupel J. Jones Theatre. For more information, contact OU Fine Arts Box Office at 405-3254101 or online at theatre.ou.edu. A free recital benefitting Special Olympics Oklahoma will take place from 5 to 7 p.m. at Catlett Music Center’s Pitman Recital Hall. The concert is free and open to the public. A free showing of “Our Idiot Brother” will take place at 8 p.m. at Oklahoma Memorial Union’s Meacham Auditorium.
Corrections The Oklahoma Daily has a commitment to serve readers with accurate coverage and analysis. Readers should bring errors to The Daily’s attention by emailing dailynews@ou.edu. In Wednesday’s page one headline about hydraulic fracking, The Daily incorrectly stated relationship between the process and the recent earthquakes in Oklahoma. No evidence has been found linking the two together.
Thursday, December 8, 2011 •
3
Ground: State home to 240 fracking wells
Chase Cook, managing editor dailynews@ou.edu • phone: 405-325-3666
walk: Local occupiers facing cheers and jeers
Continued from page 1
Continued from page 1
Survey expert, published a report in August examining the impact of fracturing on seismic activity in Garvin County’s Eola Field. In his research, he neither confirms nor denies the possibility of fracturing wells inducing earthquakes. His research identifies cases of “enhanced geothermal systems where there is a clear correlation between injection and earthquakes” in Colorado, New Mexico and Australia. He also identifies cases in Nebraska, Ohio and France with “less clear examples in which earthquakes may not have been triggered by fluid injection at a well.” “We have been trying to understand those relationships,” Holland said. “Our biggest issue is incomplete data in Oklahoma.” Oklahoma recently has experienced a massive spike in earthquakes. In the last decade, Oklahoma has averaged about 50 earthquakes a year. In 2011, the state has been shaken by 1,047 earthquakes, according to data from Leonard Geophysical Observatory in the Oklahoma Geographical Survey.Holland said he doesn’t think these earthquakes are relevant to the study. “The other earthquakes we are talking about are 2 kilometers deep only. But even the aftershocks in Oklahoma happened at a depth of 4-14 kilometers,” Holland said. Holland argues that Oklahoma’s geology is very complex across the state, and because Oklahoma has rocks near the surface that contain oil, he can’t put a flat line on anything at this depth that equates an earthquake to hydraulic fracturing. “Back in the ’40s, they were fracturing the well by using explosives,” Holland said. “In my mind, water would the more preferable constituent. Hydraulic fracturing is an incredibly important technology. It’s better than us getting addicted to fossil fuels.”
science senior. De Lozier said if people place their money in local banks, it would diminish the biggest ones’ power. That’s one thing Scott Hellman, computer science graduate student, did not hesitate to do. “I just went there (into a Chase Bank) and closed my checking account,“ Hellman said. “I moved it to the OU Federal Credit Union, a more local bank.“ Hellman said he closed his savings account before he joined the Occupy Norman movement. “I had been following the movement, and I wanted to move my money so it just gave me the motivation to do it,” Hellman said. In front of the bank, honks and cheering gave the protesters some warmth while some stopped to ask questions, take a flier or voice a complaint. But not all have been friendly or cordial toward the movement. A few hours before the walk, a man intruded into the media room and main living space of Occupy Norman. “There were four of us, and this guy walks in, shaking
Occupy Norman protesters (left to right) Steven Lanik, Alisa Herring, Josh Wicker, Grant De Lozier, Peyton Gates and Scott Hellman stand outside the Chase Bank on Main Street on Wednesday afternoon, in objection to the bank’s national bailout receival in 2008. coco courtois/the daily
AT A GLANCE Occupy Norman • The Occupy Norman movement will walk to Bank of America at 2:30 p.m. Friday. • General assemblies are open to anyone every night at 7 p.m. at Andrews Park.
angrily, and asks us where we are from. Right after our answers, he asked, ‘Are you ready to die? Are you ready to die for your liberalism?’” said Peyton Gates, who said
he is still shocked by what happened. “Then we asked him to leave, and he took our hammer. We asked him, ‘Excuse me, sir, are you taking our hammer?’ and he threw it at us. Then we realized he had slashed my tent with it.” Aside from incidents such as this, most people show the group their full support, Gates said. The members of the protest walk are not limited to young college students. “It’s the first time I’m doing that,” said an older woman who identified herself as “Edie.”
What really bothers the 67-year-old retired nurse are the corporations that take so much money when so many people actually need it, she said. “It’s not just about politics — it’s about having a better world for everyone,” she said. De Lozier agreed. “The type of democracy I would like is the grassroots democracy where people actually go in the street, not the type of democracy where you throw a vote every one or two years for a politician who is already bought off by corporate interest,” he said.
Finals: 354 adults involved in testing
Indestructo: Professor receives career award Continued from page 1 Indestructo perform many times. Ryan has subjected himself to dipping his hand in molten lead, drinking liquid nitrogen and driving on a rocket-propelled bicycle while at the same time using sound scientific fact to justify each demonstration, according to his award. Ryan said the act started after he and colleague Stanley Babb were asked to perform a show for a group of
schoolteachers. Each performed half of the show, and it was a hit. After the second show, Babb was informed he had a brain tumor and passed away soon after. Babb’s family gave his cap and gown to Ryan, and he wears it for his shows in memory of Babb. The emeritus award is one of many for Ryan during a long career at OU, but he said the best part of working at the university has been the students. “Physics can be intimidating, and I want to make it fun for them,” he said.
Campus Brief
Study Abroad
Students now can travel to Israel for summer studies The OU Study Abroad program is offering students the opportunity to travel to Israel for a month in the summer. The trip begins on June 1, 2012 and ends on June 30.
Continued from page 1 with and without family histories of alcoholism. Subjects were put into a room to read magazines before they were exposed to psychological stress from public speaking simulations and arithmetic exercises, according to the research. The group of 354 is a much larger group than typical stress tests’, which average from 50 to 70 people, Lovallo said. The larger group was selected to help researchers detect differences in the data, which can be small, he said. Research participants with and without a family history of alcoholism were selected because the study is part of a broader project, titled the Oklahoma Family Health Patterns Project, Lovallo said. The project was created to compare data between groups of people with a family history of alcoholism and groups of people with no family history of alcoholism. The ultimate goal of the project is to “better understand predisposed motivational characteristics of persons at risk for alcoholism,” according to its website. Lovallo’s stress research has been published online in the scientific journal Biological Psychiatry and will be available in the journal’s print version in February. Lovallo said more research on this group should be released soon. He said he finished a paper with other researchers recently with data showing that young adults with adverse backgrounds take more risks than others. The paper currently is under peer review.
KINGSLEY BURNS/THE DAILY
Physics professor Stewart Ryan, dressed as “Dr. Indestructo,” stands with his classroom props — a bed of nails and a rocket bike — in Nielsen Hall on Wednesday. Ryan began his act with colleague Stanley Babb, who later died because of a brain tumor.
To participate in the program, undergraduate and graduate students must have a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or above, have at least sophomore standing and an active passport. Students will receive six credit hours for the trip, professor Nina Livesey said. “OU is coming in on the second year of this five-year-
long excavation, and we are fortunate to participate with one of the nation’s leading biblical archaeologists, Jodi Magness, from UNC-Chapel Hill,” Livesey said. The program will be led by the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill and Livesey, who works in the religious studies department and the College of Liberal
Looking for a course to fulfill Gen-Ed requirements in the spring semester? These courses still have seats available. Enroll now, before someone else takes your seat!
Applications now available tedxou.com
If you think you might have ADD or ADHD call now for an appointment
ON CAMPUS CORNER 730 Asp Ave. Suite 210 Norman, OK 73069
LTRS 2103 Introduction to Constitutional Studies (Butterfield, Porwancher, CRN 27469) CL C 3113 Greek Epic Poetry in English Translation (Knudsen, CRN 23214) CL C 3613 Classical Influences on Modern Literature (Coodin, CRN 26526) LTRS 3143 The Examined Life (R. Huskey, CRN 27509)
Consider taking one of our elective courses LTRS 3510 Supreme Court and the U.S. Constitution (Lomazoff, CRN 27471) LTRS 3923 Oklahoma and the U.S. Constitution (Lomazoff, CRN 27810) LTRS 4970 Revenge Tragedy, Ancient and Modern (Coodin, CRN 27475)
(405) 310-4477
CL C 2413 Medical Vocabulary (Wagner, CRN 28694)
For addtional information on any of these courses, contact the Department of Classics and Letters at 325-6921 classicsandletters@ou.edu or visit us in the Carnegie Building, room 100
Studies, will be the faculty leader from OU. “We will be in the location of the earliest Christian communities, at the Sea of Galilee, places of Jesus’ adult life and teachings,” she said. Participants will live in guest houses close to the site of the dig. Marissa Pittman, Contributing Reporter
Campus Brief technology
OU added to iTunes university store with college-specific digital content OU is now on iTunes with the iTunes U store. The free online service allows students to find a wide variety of course lectures, presentations, university news, departmental and program information, training sessions and guided tours, according to a press release. The iTunes presence gives departments, colleges, faculty and staff the means to widely distribute digital content. The collection of content on iTunes U includes the colleges and departments of Journalism and Mass Communication, Engineering, Liberal Studies and International Studies, with categories within subjects. Students can access OU material by launching iTunes, clicking on iTunes U and searching for OU under “Universities and Colleges.” Jalisa Green, Staff Reporter
2
News
• Thursday, December 8, 2011
news
Today around campus An exhibit of students’ photos will be on display all day at the Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art’s Lightwell Gallery. The display is a presentation from the F-Stop Society, a new student-art organization. The exhibit will be on display until Dec. 9. A holiday grab bag sale is being held from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. at Muse, the store within Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art. Grab bag discounts will range from 15 to 20 percent. A free holiday harp concert will take place from 2:30 to 3:30 p.m. at Catlett Music Center’s Gothic Hall. The men’s basketball team will play Oral Roberts at 7 p.m. at Lloyd Noble Center. A lecture on preparing for veterinary and medical school interviews will take place from 7:30 to 9 p.m. at Oklahoma Memorial Union, Suite 323. Free Raising Cane’s and cookies will be provided. A free chamber concert will take place from 8 to 10 p.m. at Catlett Music Center’s Pitman Recital Hall.
Friday, Dec. 9 Final day of classes. Final day for thesis defense. Final day for oral defense of dissertation. Final day for comprehensive exam. A lecture on antisemite beliefs and actions of Oklahoma’s politicans will take place from 6 to 7 p.m. at OU Hillel. A Shabbat service and kosher dinner will follow. The lecture is free. A performance of “The Nutcracker” will take place at 8 p.m. at the Fine Arts Center’s Rupel J. Jones Theatre. For more information, contact OU Fine Arts Box Office at 405-325-4101 or online at theatre.ou.edu. A free screening of “Our Idiot Brother” will take place at 6, 9 p.m. and midnight at Oklahoma Memorial Union’s Meacham Auditorium. The movie is sponsored by the Union Programming Board and Campus Activities Council.
Saturday, Dec. 10 The men’s basketball team will play Arkansas at 2 p.m. at Lloyd Noble Center. A performance of “The Nutcracker” will take place at 3 and 8 p.m. at the Fine Arts Center’s Rupel J. Jones Theatre. For more information, contact OU Fine Arts Box Office at 405-3254101 or online at theatre.ou.edu. A free recital benefitting Special Olympics Oklahoma will take place from 5 to 7 p.m. at Catlett Music Center’s Pitman Recital Hall. The concert is free and open to the public. A free showing of “Our Idiot Brother” will take place at 8 p.m. at Oklahoma Memorial Union’s Meacham Auditorium.
Corrections The Oklahoma Daily has a commitment to serve readers with accurate coverage and analysis. Readers should bring errors to The Daily’s attention by emailing dailynews@ou.edu. In Wednesday’s page one headline about hydraulic fracking, The Daily incorrectly stated relationship between the process and the recent earthquakes in Oklahoma. No evidence has been found linking the two together.
Thursday, December 8, 2011 •
3
Ground: State home to 240 fracking wells
Chase Cook, managing editor dailynews@ou.edu • phone: 405-325-3666
walk: Local occupiers facing cheers and jeers
Continued from page 1
Continued from page 1
Survey expert, published a report in August examining the impact of fracturing on seismic activity in Garvin County’s Eola Field. In his research, he neither confirms nor denies the possibility of fracturing wells inducing earthquakes. His research identifies cases of “enhanced geothermal systems where there is a clear correlation between injection and earthquakes” in Colorado, New Mexico and Australia. He also identifies cases in Nebraska, Ohio and France with “less clear examples in which earthquakes may not have been triggered by fluid injection at a well.” “We have been trying to understand those relationships,” Holland said. “Our biggest issue is incomplete data in Oklahoma.” Oklahoma recently has experienced a massive spike in earthquakes. In the last decade, Oklahoma has averaged about 50 earthquakes a year. In 2011, the state has been shaken by 1,047 earthquakes, according to data from Leonard Geophysical Observatory in the Oklahoma Geographical Survey.Holland said he doesn’t think these earthquakes are relevant to the study. “The other earthquakes we are talking about are 2 kilometers deep only. But even the aftershocks in Oklahoma happened at a depth of 4-14 kilometers,” Holland said. Holland argues that Oklahoma’s geology is very complex across the state, and because Oklahoma has rocks near the surface that contain oil, he can’t put a flat line on anything at this depth that equates an earthquake to hydraulic fracturing. “Back in the ’40s, they were fracturing the well by using explosives,” Holland said. “In my mind, water would the more preferable constituent. Hydraulic fracturing is an incredibly important technology. It’s better than us getting addicted to fossil fuels.”
science senior. De Lozier said if people place their money in local banks, it would diminish the biggest ones’ power. That’s one thing Scott Hellman, computer science graduate student, did not hesitate to do. “I just went there (into a Chase Bank) and closed my checking account,“ Hellman said. “I moved it to the OU Federal Credit Union, a more local bank.“ Hellman said he closed his savings account before he joined the Occupy Norman movement. “I had been following the movement, and I wanted to move my money so it just gave me the motivation to do it,” Hellman said. In front of the bank, honks and cheering gave the protesters some warmth while some stopped to ask questions, take a flier or voice a complaint. But not all have been friendly or cordial toward the movement. A few hours before the walk, a man intruded into the media room and main living space of Occupy Norman. “There were four of us, and this guy walks in, shaking
Occupy Norman protesters (left to right) Steven Lanik, Alisa Herring, Josh Wicker, Grant De Lozier, Peyton Gates and Scott Hellman stand outside the Chase Bank on Main Street on Wednesday afternoon, in objection to the bank’s national bailout receival in 2008. coco courtois/the daily
AT A GLANCE Occupy Norman • The Occupy Norman movement will walk to Bank of America at 2:30 p.m. Friday. • General assemblies are open to anyone every night at 7 p.m. at Andrews Park.
angrily, and asks us where we are from. Right after our answers, he asked, ‘Are you ready to die? Are you ready to die for your liberalism?’” said Peyton Gates, who said
he is still shocked by what happened. “Then we asked him to leave, and he took our hammer. We asked him, ‘Excuse me, sir, are you taking our hammer?’ and he threw it at us. Then we realized he had slashed my tent with it.” Aside from incidents such as this, most people show the group their full support, Gates said. The members of the protest walk are not limited to young college students. “It’s the first time I’m doing that,” said an older woman who identified herself as “Edie.”
What really bothers the 67-year-old retired nurse are the corporations that take so much money when so many people actually need it, she said. “It’s not just about politics — it’s about having a better world for everyone,” she said. De Lozier agreed. “The type of democracy I would like is the grassroots democracy where people actually go in the street, not the type of democracy where you throw a vote every one or two years for a politician who is already bought off by corporate interest,” he said.
Finals: 354 adults involved in testing
Indestructo: Professor receives career award Continued from page 1 Indestructo perform many times. Ryan has subjected himself to dipping his hand in molten lead, drinking liquid nitrogen and driving on a rocket-propelled bicycle while at the same time using sound scientific fact to justify each demonstration, according to his award. Ryan said the act started after he and colleague Stanley Babb were asked to perform a show for a group of
schoolteachers. Each performed half of the show, and it was a hit. After the second show, Babb was informed he had a brain tumor and passed away soon after. Babb’s family gave his cap and gown to Ryan, and he wears it for his shows in memory of Babb. The emeritus award is one of many for Ryan during a long career at OU, but he said the best part of working at the university has been the students. “Physics can be intimidating, and I want to make it fun for them,” he said.
Campus Brief
Study Abroad
Students now can travel to Israel for summer studies The OU Study Abroad program is offering students the opportunity to travel to Israel for a month in the summer. The trip begins on June 1, 2012 and ends on June 30.
Continued from page 1 with and without family histories of alcoholism. Subjects were put into a room to read magazines before they were exposed to psychological stress from public speaking simulations and arithmetic exercises, according to the research. The group of 354 is a much larger group than typical stress tests’, which average from 50 to 70 people, Lovallo said. The larger group was selected to help researchers detect differences in the data, which can be small, he said. Research participants with and without a family history of alcoholism were selected because the study is part of a broader project, titled the Oklahoma Family Health Patterns Project, Lovallo said. The project was created to compare data between groups of people with a family history of alcoholism and groups of people with no family history of alcoholism. The ultimate goal of the project is to “better understand predisposed motivational characteristics of persons at risk for alcoholism,” according to its website. Lovallo’s stress research has been published online in the scientific journal Biological Psychiatry and will be available in the journal’s print version in February. Lovallo said more research on this group should be released soon. He said he finished a paper with other researchers recently with data showing that young adults with adverse backgrounds take more risks than others. The paper currently is under peer review.
KINGSLEY BURNS/THE DAILY
Physics professor Stewart Ryan, dressed as “Dr. Indestructo,” stands with his classroom props — a bed of nails and a rocket bike — in Nielsen Hall on Wednesday. Ryan began his act with colleague Stanley Babb, who later died because of a brain tumor.
To participate in the program, undergraduate and graduate students must have a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or above, have at least sophomore standing and an active passport. Students will receive six credit hours for the trip, professor Nina Livesey said. “OU is coming in on the second year of this five-year-
long excavation, and we are fortunate to participate with one of the nation’s leading biblical archaeologists, Jodi Magness, from UNC-Chapel Hill,” Livesey said. The program will be led by the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill and Livesey, who works in the religious studies department and the College of Liberal
Looking for a course to fulfill Gen-Ed requirements in the spring semester? These courses still have seats available. Enroll now, before someone else takes your seat!
Applications now available tedxou.com
If you think you might have ADD or ADHD call now for an appointment
ON CAMPUS CORNER 730 Asp Ave. Suite 210 Norman, OK 73069
LTRS 2103 Introduction to Constitutional Studies (Butterfield, Porwancher, CRN 27469) CL C 3113 Greek Epic Poetry in English Translation (Knudsen, CRN 23214) CL C 3613 Classical Influences on Modern Literature (Coodin, CRN 26526) LTRS 3143 The Examined Life (R. Huskey, CRN 27509)
Consider taking one of our elective courses LTRS 3510 Supreme Court and the U.S. Constitution (Lomazoff, CRN 27471) LTRS 3923 Oklahoma and the U.S. Constitution (Lomazoff, CRN 27810) LTRS 4970 Revenge Tragedy, Ancient and Modern (Coodin, CRN 27475)
(405) 310-4477
CL C 2413 Medical Vocabulary (Wagner, CRN 28694)
For addtional information on any of these courses, contact the Department of Classics and Letters at 325-6921 classicsandletters@ou.edu or visit us in the Carnegie Building, room 100
Studies, will be the faculty leader from OU. “We will be in the location of the earliest Christian communities, at the Sea of Galilee, places of Jesus’ adult life and teachings,” she said. Participants will live in guest houses close to the site of the dig. Marissa Pittman, Contributing Reporter
Campus Brief technology
OU added to iTunes university store with college-specific digital content OU is now on iTunes with the iTunes U store. The free online service allows students to find a wide variety of course lectures, presentations, university news, departmental and program information, training sessions and guided tours, according to a press release. The iTunes presence gives departments, colleges, faculty and staff the means to widely distribute digital content. The collection of content on iTunes U includes the colleges and departments of Journalism and Mass Communication, Engineering, Liberal Studies and International Studies, with categories within subjects. Students can access OU material by launching iTunes, clicking on iTunes U and searching for OU under “Universities and Colleges.” Jalisa Green, Staff Reporter
4
• Thursday, December 8, 2011
Comment of the day on OUDaily.com ››
OPINION
“On a general note, maybe the university and students would be better off if we weren’t running businesses on the side.” (TheJeff, Re: OU IT Store fails to earn profit.)
EDITORIAL
Help save animal sanctuaries Our View: Don’t just protest for animal welfare; put your money where your mouth is.
animal welfare awareness does. And in many AT A GLANCE cases, since other sancHow to help From the recently passed $3 million bond to tuaries are also strug• Donate directly at www. renovate the Norman animal shelter to the show- gling, the only option GWPark.org. ing of a film about the rescue of chimps used in once resources run • Call 405-665-1003 to OU research in the 1970s, it’s clear that Norman out is to euthanize the organize scrap metal pickup benefitting the can be an animal-friendly community. animals. park. Animal welfare is certainly a worthy cause, and This would have been • Visit the park. Go to www. we’re sure many of our readers have strong feelthe case with one sancGWPark.org for information ings about the issues of animal cruelty and retuary in Texas, until and directions. • Donate to their associate, search. But sometimes passion about an issue can G.W. Exotic Animal the Rare Species Fund, blind individuals to the practical concerns. Park decided to dip www.RareSpeciesFund.org. Take the issue of exotic animals. There has been into its already limited • Friend the park on a concerted effort in recent years to “free” exotic resources and donate Facebook and help spread the word. breeds from private ownership. There is little 5,000 pounds of meat Source: ASPCA.org doubt that private ownership of exotic animals is every few weeks until problematic — an issue demonstrated clearly by the facility can get back the incident in Ohio in which a man released his on its feet, according to private zoo into the city and most of the animals a press release. were killed. If courts and activists are going to purBut have you stopped to think about sue the often worthy goal of moving these The Our View where those animals go after their liberais the majority animals to better environments, they opinion of tion? Their wild habitats are disappearing, can’t forget the practical aspects of those The Daily’s movement regulations are strict and these decisions. In a time of such a serious bud10-member breeds require specialized care and habiget crunch, the government cannot afford editorial board to increase federal funding for sanctuartats. The only option for most of these animals is to go to a wildlife sanctuary. ies. So it’s up to individuals to help keep Thankfully, many such facilities exist across the these facilities open and these animals alive. U.S., such as the G.W. Exotic Animal Park just an Whether you’re a passionate animal welfare achour away in Wynnewood, which houses big cats, tivist, appreciate the need for biodiversity or just primates and many other exotic breeds. But as think tiger cubs are cute, you can help save these federal law tightens and more exotic pets are forc- exotic and endangered animals and give them a ibly turned over to the sanctuaries, resources are chance for a peaceful, natural life. Donate to the stretched thin. park or make a visit on your next free weekend. All These facilities are almost exclusively run by of your donation or $15 admissions fee will go divolunteers and funded by donations, with occarectly to the care of these animals. sional small grants from the government. Their resources don’t magically increase just because Comment on this at OUDaily.com
COLUMN
Depression requires discussion
I
t seems that Americans are depressed. According to the Centers for Disease Control, one in 10 Americans takes antidepressants. And a recent report published by the health care company MedCo revealed that 25 percent of women take antidepressants and 15 percent of men take antidepressants. The report also said that antidepressant use has risen steadily since 2001, with an almost 30percent increase in use by men and women. There are multiple ways that this information can be interpreted. Some people believe that the reason more Americans are taking antidepressants is because depression is being diagnosed more than it was in the past. Some think that doctors are simply more apt to prescribe them, or that there is more commercial exposure about antidepressants. Antidepressants can also be used to treat conditions other than depression such as obsessive compulsive disorder, bulimia or migraine headaches. Obviously, there are a variety of reasons why so many Americans could be on antidepressants, but it doesn’t change the reality that so many Americans are taking antidepressants. So why isn’t antidepressant use talked about more? Unfortunately, even though American society has made a lot of strides when it comes to discussing difficult topics, this remains something that is still taboo. As someone who has taken antidepressants for three years, this is frustrating. I began taking antidepressants consistently my freshman year of college, when my mother decided that it was not normal that I was crying four times a day. It took me a
OPINION COLUMNIST
long time to feel that taking antidepressants wasn’t something that is shameful. I interpreted my environment’s lack of discussion on the topic as a judgment that taking antidepressants is shameful. Since I have been taking Janna Gentry antidepressants for quite a janna.f.gentry@ou.edu while, the shock of feeling ashamed at taking them has worn off, and it has just become a part of my life. When I read about the prevalence of antidepressant use in America, especially among women, it made me feel like I was less abnormal in my struggles — that many women need chemical help to maintain a healthy mental state and this is OK. I do wish I had sought out the community and help that is available at large universities. There is an organization at OU, “Talking Helps,” which supports people who might be struggling with depression or some other mental illness, and Goddard Health Center offers counseling and crisis services. With the prevalence of antidepressant use in America, it should not be something that can’t be talked about, especially in a university setting. Janna Gentry is an English education senior.
COLUMN
Finals week poses some challenges
I
s it almost finals week OPINION COLUMNIST again? Time to clean the apartment, call the folks, do laundry and find a new, obscure hobby to pursue. America is definitely the procrasti-Nation. You like that? I came up with it instead of working on an essay. Jacob Oller Or, for some of us, this jacoboller@ou.edu week is when we do more math than we’ve done all year: calculating the minimum scores needed to pass. Everyone’s biggest fear is to go into his last exam and find out that somehow, inexplicably, the test is in Mandarin Chinese, and your classmates, who earlier could barely be trusted not to fall down while holding sharp objects, are blazing through it like a plate of hot wings at a frat house. A second fear is that you just completely miss a final. Check your schedules people!
Chris Lusk Chase Cook Annelise Russell James Corley Katherine Borgerding
contact us
Editor in Chief Managing Editor News Editor Sports Editor Life & Arts Editor
And remember not to stress out when it’s game time. Imagine your test in its underwear. Finally, the debate on cramming. I say go for it. Everyone loves a good information binge right before your test, and honestly, when will you ever have to use geology again? Hell, in Japan, there are specialized schools specifically for cramming. These so-called cram schools let students spend up to 18 hours a day studying to take their standardized tests. Ouch. I don’t think I’ll be bringing my sleeping bag to the library any time soon, so score another victory for Japanese kids. The schools enable students to “parrot,” or unthinkingly repeat, information they need just for exams. Sound familiar? Sure, cramming’s criticized for its lack of critical thinking and analytic training and will probably hurt you in the long run. But wouldn’t you be a walking regurgitation of information for a letter grade higher? Thinking is overrated anyway. Jacob Oller is a management information systems sophomore.
Kingsley Burns Mary Stanfield Lindsey Ruta Chris Miller Judy Gibbs Robinson
160 Copeland Hall, 860 Van Vleet Oval Norman, OK 73019-0270
phone:
405-325-3666
Photo Editor Opinion Editor Multimedia Editor Online Editor Editorial Adviser
email:
dailynews@ou.edu
?
Mary Stanfield, opinion editor dailyopinion@ou.edu • phone: 405-325-3666
» Poll question of the day Do you plan to donate to help save the G. W. Exotic Animal Park?
To cast your vote, visit COLUMN
Going home shouldn’t be that stressful of a situation S
o you know that OPINION COLUMNIST little bit of freedom you get when you go away to college? Well I’ve discovered that it slowly disappears when you go back home. But I’m here to say that the “smothered” feeling Kimm Johnson we all have from time to kimm.johnson@ou.edu time is a good thing. It has gotten us where we are, and it is more an act of tough love than we will ever know. My parents — and maybe all parents — are terrified when their kids go to college. They simply do not know who their children will be anymore. And it troubles them. So they try to handle us like horses. They grip on to the reins so tightly that all we want to do is buck and run wild. This is not the same grip they had during high school. Times were different. If they didn’t like or approve of our actions, they could tame us. At least, in my situation they could. They could keep us in the stable. They could choose who we saw (or so they thought). But when their children go to college, they know that none of this is possible. It bothers them because they have to trust themselves more than they ever have. Our parents have to trust that the times they held us back were not in vain. And when they start to doubt that, they slip back into their old habits of treating you as the high-school “you.” They miss the “you” that could not run “Life is hard. College away legally. They miss the “you” they could guarantee is hard. Work is was safe and sound every hard. You are harder. night. And they want that back. Don’t you see They want to know you: that? You survived the changing, morphing, confused you. And somehigh school and they don’t really know the things people times how to react to you. You said you couldn’t want all this independence, but you are still under their accomplish.” roof for that short Christmas or summer break. And they know these are the last few months that they will have you living with them. So maybe when you were away at college, they evaluated their life and yours. Maybe they saw the mistakes that they made, and they just want you to know they still care. Perhaps they’ve noticed that we realized the mistakes we were making back in high school. After all, aren’t we at an age where we are constantly changing? Therefore, they might be domineering when you come back home, but it’s not that way in their minds. It might just be making up for lost time, which sounds like absolute nonsense to some people. Think about it. Consider it. Remember it. Remember right now how much you want to be an adult, a complete adult during your Christmas breaks and summers of college. And then breathe. Look at how much you have finished. Look at what your parents and friends and guardians have helped you finish. Sometimes we are so busy that we are just looking forward to the next flight, the next conference, the next board room, the next time when we feel like we are doing something that matters. But don’t you realize that you have finished something that many people couldn’t even start in the first place? Life is hard. College is hard. Work is hard. You are harder. Don’t you see that? You survived high school and the things people said you couldn’t accomplish. So remember that next time your visit home makes you feel like an awkward teenager again. Your accomplishments make you an adult. You don’t need anymore validation than that. So breathe. Praise the God-of-your-choosing for all the craziness He or She brings you through. And be patient. Maybe your parents weren’t the ones who made it all happen, but someone did. You did. That’s right. Give yourself some credit, and do not be so hard on yourself — or on them. They love you more than you can know. Kimm Johnson is an environmental design sophomore.
The Oklahoma Daily is a public forum, the University of Oklahoma’s independent student voice and an entirely student-run publication.
Columnists’ and cartoonists’ opinions are their own and not necessarily the views or opinions of The Oklahoma Daily Editorial Board.
Letters should concentrate on issues, not personalities, and must be fewer than 250 words, typed and signed by the author(s). Letters will be edited for accuracy, space and style. Students must list their major and classification. To submit letters, email dailyopinion@ou.edu. Letters also can be submitted in person Sunday through Thursday in 160 Copeland Hall.
Our View is the voice of The Oklahoma Daily Editorial Board, which consists of nine members of the editorial staff. The board meets at 5 p.m. Sunday through Thursday in 160 Copeland Hall. Board meetings are open to the public.
Guest columns are accepted and printed at the editor’s discretion.
One free copy of The Daily is available to members of the University of Oklahoma community. Because of production costs, additional copies may be purchased for 25 cents by contacting The Daily business office.
NEWS
Thursday, December 8, 2011 •
CALIFORNIA
Cannonball stunt goes awry
2 1
3
‘MythBusters’ cannonball rips through house, van SAN FRANCISCO — Zany experiments testing scientific theories in real-world settings have earned the TV show “MythBusters� a devoted following, but a stunt gone awry met an unhappy audience when an errant cannonball went shooting through a California family’s bedroom. Sheriff’s deputies are still measuring how, exactly, the cannonball flew from a bomb range in the rolling hills flanking a suburban San Francisco Bay area neighborhood and rocketed into the front door of a home and through a bedroom before landing in a neighbor’s parked minivan. Hosts for the Discovery Channel show fired the cannonball Tuesday as they filmed an episode testing whether other types of projectiles shot from a cannon would pick up the same speed and have the same impact as the steel ball. Instead of hitting a string of water-filled garbage cans, the cannonball passed over the barrels, crashed through
NATION NEWS BRIEFS 1. CHICAGO
Blagojevich gets 14 years in prison for corruption tied to Senate seat
BEN MARGOT/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
“Mythbusters� stars Adam Savage (left) and Jamie Hyneman approach the home damaged by an errant cannonball fired during a filming of an episode of their show Wednesday in Dublin, Calif.
a protective cinderblock wall and careened off the hill behind it, said Alameda County Sheriff’s Department spokesman J.D. Nelson. No one was injured, and the home’s residents didn’t even wake up until the broken drywall settled on top of them, Nelson said. Once it was launched, the cannonball traveled 650 yards, tore
through the front door and exited through a back wall. The projectile then bounced at least once more and crossed the road before smashing the window and dashboard of a gold minivan, where it came to rest. Jasbir Gill, who owns the minivan, said he and his children had just gotten home. “It’s scary,� Gill said. “I was
in the van five minutes before this happened.� “Mythbusters,� which is produced for Discovery Channel by the San Franciscobased Beyond Productions, issued a statement through publicist Katherine Nelson on Wednesday saying all proper safety protocol had been observed. The Associated Press
A federal judge has sentenced Rod Blagojevich to 14 years for corruption that included trying to sell or trade an appointment to the Senate seat vacated by President Barack Obama. It’s one of the stiffest penalties for corruption in a state with a history of crooked politics. Blagojevich’s attorneys had said the sentence of 15 to 20 years prosecutors wanted was too harsh. The Associated Press
2. DES MOINES, IOWA
Game on as GOP attacks target Gingrich’s marriage history Republican Mitt Romney is emphasizing his 42-year marriage in a new ad airing in early voting states, a contrast with thrice-married Newt Gingrich, who leads in Iowa and is closing on Romney in New Hampshire. The commercial marks a new phase in the GOP presidential nomination campaign, one focused more on character issues than their policy differences. Romney’s ad is a montage featuring the former Massachusetts governor, wife Ann and their children and grandchildren. The Associated Press
MISSOURI
3. EAST LANSING, MICH.
Court to review funeral protest ban
USDA awards $10.4 million in food safety grants to universities
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A federal appeals court agreed Wednesday to take another look at whether a St. Louis suburb can enforce a funeral protest ordinance drafted in response to the picketing of an anti-gay Kansas church — a move that could push the issue closer to the U.S. Supreme Court. The full 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in St. Louis will meet Jan. 9 to reconsider a three-judge panel’s October ruling in favor of members of Westboro Baptist Church of Topeka, Kan. In the nowvacated ruling, the panel upheld a district court ruling, saying peaceful protests near
funerals are protected by the First Amendment’s right to free speech. Tony Rothert, an attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union, said the decision to rehear the case wasn’t surprising given that the circuit courts have been divided over the constitutionality of the laws that have been cropping up since Westboro members began protesting at military funerals. Last year, a federal judge in Kansas City, Mo., struck down Missouri’s funeral protest statute as unconstitutional and an appeal has been filed to the 8th Circuit. A ruling in the 6th Circuit in Ohio
True Sooners Don’t Haze. Report Hazing.
All calls are anonymous. The University of Oklahoma is an Equal Opportunity Institution.
9
crisis line
325-6963 (NYNE)
OU Number Nyne Crisis Line
8 p.m.-4 a.m. every day
except OU holidays and breaks
$100 Move-In Special - Rates Start at $319 -Fully Furnished Units -All Bills Paid ~Water ~Cable ~Internet ~Capped Elec - Shuttle to Campus -24 Hour Amenities ~Computer Lab ~Fitness Center ~Media Room - Free Tanning - Pets Welcome - Short Term Leases Available
The U.S. Department of Agriculture has awarded 17 grants totaling $10.4 million for university research projects designed to boost food safety. Deputy Agriculture Secretary Kathleen Merrigan said the funds are being divided among universities in 13 states. She made the announcement during a visit to Michigan State University, a recipient of three grants. One of the studies there will look for better ways to prevent harmful pathogens from contaminating packages of ready-to-eat, fresh-cut produce. The grants were made through the National Integrated Food Safety Initiative, which deals with food safety issues from the farm up to preparation. The Associated Press
)"*3$65 t Non-Requested Stylist Only
20% discount with OU ID or this coupon!
The Works $16.99 Shampoo/ Cut/Blowdry $6 Bang Trim
116 S. Main, Noble 127 N. Porter 1100 E. Constitution 129 N.W. Ave. 1215 W. Lindsey 872-1661 360-4247 579-1202 360-4422 364-1325
help is just a phone call away
number
should have blocked the Nebraska funeral picketing law from being enforced. Unless the full 8th Circuit reaches a different conclusion than the three-judge panel and sides with the 6th Circuit, the issue could be headed back to the Supreme Court, Rothert said. He said the Supreme Court rehears cases when there are splits in circuits or questions of exceptional importance. The Associated Press
HIGHLIGHTING OR COLOR 8*5) )"*3$65 t 8&"7& 03 '0*- "%%
Manicure $11.99
325-5000
favored the protest laws. Earlier this year, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled 8-1 in favor of Westboro Baptist Church in a lawsuit filed by Albert Snyder, the father of a fallen Marine who sued the church for the emotional pain they caused by showing up at his son Matthew’s funeral. The suburb of Manchester adopted its ordinance banning peaceful funeral protests in 2007. The 8th Circuit panel’s October ruling meant Manchester could no longer enforce the ordinance and stalled a Nebraska funeralpicketing law. The 8th Circuit panel found a district court
Ready to get out of town? Is your car? FREE 1 windshield wiper blade ($9.99 value) FREE Road Ready Check FREE Filter and Fluid Check FREE Tire Pressure Check CHECK Merry Christmas- no purchase necessary
Alameda Auto Lube & Car Care, LLC • 310-3555 1300 Alameda • Across Alameda from Homeland
The Commons on Oak Tree
JOIN US! Saturday, January 21, 2012 9 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.
Get inspired. Get motivated. Get ready. REGISTER NOW! $15 fee includes t-shirt, snacks, lunch, and conference Register by Dec. 16 Limited to the first 300!
1111 Oak Tree Ave Norman, OK 405-321-8877 commonsonaoaktree.net
leadandvolunteer.ou.edu OMU 249-253 405-325-4020
SEE YOU AT THE SUMMIT!
5
6
• Thursday, December 8, 2011
Classifieds Fax: 405-325-7517 Campus Address: COH 149A
HELP WANTED
AUTO INSURANCE
DEADLINES
Auto Insurance
Line Ad ..................................................................................3 days prior
Foreign Students Welcomed JIM HOLMES INSURANCE, 321-4664
Place line ad by 9:00 a.m. 3 business days prior to publication.
Display Ad ............................................................................3 days prior Classified Display or Classified Card Ad Place your display, classified display or classified card ads by 5:00 p.m. 3 business days prior to publication.
r
Quotations Anytime
Services MISC. SERVICES PAB Storage Indoor, security monitored, pickup & delivery available. Spaces as low as $50/mo. For more info, contact Jeff at 651-9484.
PAYMENT s r
J Housing Rentals
C Transportation
PLACE AN AD Phone: 405-325-2521 E-mail: classifieds@ou.edu
Cameron Jones, advertising manager classifieds@ou.edu • phone: 405-325-2521
TM
FIND A JOB in the Now Hiring for Spring Semester! CLASSIFIEDS
Payment is required at the time the ad is placed. Credit cards, cash, money orders or local checks accepted.
RATES
Now Hiring for Spring Semester! Community After School Program is now hiring part-time staff to work in our schoolage childcare programs in Norman Public Schools. Hours: M-F 2:30pm - 6:00pm. Begin working Jan 3rd. Closed for all Norman Public School holidays and professional days. Competitive wages starting at $7.25/hour. Higher pay for students with qualifying coursework in education, early childhood, recreation and related fields. Complete an application online at www.caspinc.org.
$5,000-$7,000 PAID EGG DONORS up to 6 donations, + Exps, non-smokers, Ages 18-29, SAT>1100/ACT>24/GPA>3.00 Contact: info@eggdonorcenter.com
STUDENTPAYOUTS.COM Paid survey takers needed in Norman 100% FREE to join. Click on Surveys. Bartending! Up to $300/day. No exp nec. Training available. 800-965-6520, x133
Line Ad
APTS. UNFURNISHED $99 DEPOSIT! / 1/2 OFF 1ST MONTH* Immed. Move-Ins / 6 Mo. Free Gym 1 Beds starting at $465.00* 2 Beds starting at $525.00* Pets Welcome! Large Floor Plans! Models open 8a-8p Everyday! 360-6624 or www.elite2900.com Hunters Run 2 Bed T/H $99 Dep/ 1/2 off 1st mo/ free fit* Restrictions apply* $815/mo/Appr. 1400sqft, 2 Car Gar. Small Fenced Yd, Full size W/D Elite Properties 360-6624 www.elite2900.com
DUPLEXES UNFURNISHED $525/mo! Walk to OU! 2bd, 2 blocks from Sarkey’s Energy Center. Carpet, blinds, CH/A, appliances, W/D & storm shelter: 203-3493, 321-4404
Sell Your Car in the CLASSIFIEDS
J Housing Rentals ROOMS FURNISHED NEAR OU, privacy, $250, bills paid includes cable, neat, clean, parking. New paint, carpet. Prefer male student. Call 405-410-4407.
J
Housing Sales
CONDOS Westside, 3003 River Oaks Dr, #159, 2/2, 5/2, 1330 sq ft, $125K. (405) 642-9154, zillow.com
It’s the NUMBER ONE cancer killer. NO MORE EXCUSES. NO MORE LUNG CANCER.
lungcanceralliance.org
There is a 2 line minimum charge; approximately 42 characters per line, including spaces and punctuation. (Cost = Days x # lines x $/line) 10-14 days.........$1.15/line 15-19 days.........$1.00/line 20-29 days........$ .90/line 30+ days ........ $ .85/line
1 day ..................$4.25/line 2 days ................$2.50/line 3-4 days.............$2.00/line 5-9 days.............$1.50/line
Classified Display, Classified Card Ad or Game Sponsorship
Contact an Acct Executive for details at 325-2521. 2 col (3.25 in) x 2 inches Sudoku ..............$760/month Boggle ...............$760/month Horoscope ........$760/month
2 col (3.25 in) x 2.25 inches
my friend’s got mental illness
Crossword ........$515/month
POLICY The Oklahoma Daily is responsible for one day’s incorrect advertising. If your ad appears incorrectly, or if you wish to cancel your ad call 3252521, before the deadline for cancellation in the next issue. Errors not the fault of the advertiser will be adjusted. Refunds will not be issued for late cancellations. The Oklahoma Daily will not knowingly accept advertisements that discriminate on the basis of race, color, gender, religious preference, national origin or sexual orientation. Violations of this policy should be reported to The Oklahoma Daily Business Office at 325-2521.
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.
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.
HOROSCOPE By Bernice Bede Osol
Copyright 2011, Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 8, 2011
It might be highly advantageous to carefully investigate all developments that could produce a second source of income for you in the year ahead. Something you would enjoy doing might produce that extra cabbage you’d love to have.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -- Tried and true procedures may not be the best ones to follow any longer. If you hear about something better, don’t hesitate to discard old ideas in favor of new thinking. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- You’re likely to be more effective later in the day, after you’ve had time to study an important matter, than you will be in the early hours. Don’t rush any important decision.
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.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -- If your early efforts fail to bring you the success you’re seeking, don’t be a quitter -- try, try again. This is one of those days when perseverance pays off. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) -- There is a good chance that the advice you get from your mate might be vastly superior to any counsel you receive from outsiders, even from those who have impressive credentials. ARIES (March 21-April 19) -- Agreeing to do something for another merely to get that person to do something for you in return could be an exercise in futility. He or she is likely to reciprocate, but not necessarily how and when you want. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -- The only consideration you should have
is to make sure you’re moving in a positive direction. Even small gains can be good, as long as they get you closer to your goal. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -- Be sure you have all the facts and figures at hand before defending an unfamiliar position. If you don’t readily have them at your disposal, wait until you do to take action. CANCER (June 21-July 22) -- There is nothing wrong with curiosity, because it does have its place when employed constructively. However, don’t misuse it by prying onto somebody else’s private affairs. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Instead of paying for needed services or advice, first try to figure things out for yourself. If you probe a little, you may find that you already have the answers at your disposal. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- Adhere to proven procedures and methods in all work-related matters. Experimenting with unproven or untried procedures could be a career hazard. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) -- Don’t hesitate to warn a friend about someone who does not have his or her best interests at heart, even if the adversary is likely to hear about it. Doing what is right is what’s most important. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -- If you’ve made a commitment you now regret, try to rectify it immediately instead of disappointing the other party at the time when you’re expected to honor your pledge.
Universal Crossword Edited by Timothy E. Parker December 8, 2011
ACROSS 1 Backbreaker, in a proverb 6 Plan detail 10 Slays, in slang 14 Kind of stew 15 Jason’s fictional ship 16 China-North Korea river 17 Billiards option at the auto factory? 19 Sunflower support 20 “What did I tell you?� 21 Goes one better than 22 Shaping tools 24 One-horse carriage 25 Chaotic brawl 26 Professional fool 29 It pairs with “Faith,� in a saying 32 Sadat of Egypt 33 Sacred choral work 34 The Sopranos were here 35 Small river dam 36 Swim meet divisions 37 Before you know it 38 Oceanic eagle 39 “___ in Toyland� 40 Positive
12/8
electrode 41 Well-intentioned one 43 Game similar to bridge 44 Be in a bee 45 Dogpatch creator Al 46 Ending with “hemi� or “strato� 48 Isle near Mull 49 Aggressive lawyer’s advice 52 Cafe ___ (black coffee) 53 Guitar at the auto factory? 56 ___ Romeo (Italian car) 57 Annapolis institution, initially 58 Assuages 59 Fathoms 60 Those born in late July 61 Rodeo rope DOWN 1 A boy and his sis, e.g. 2 Common test answer 3 Hoarfrost 4 Slithery slayer 5 If or if not 6 Overly sentimental 7 Those in favor 8 I, to Claudius 9 Some may be junior or technical
10 Delicacy from the sea 11 Bill Cosby book read at the auto factory? 12 Beat it 13 Bottom-line figures 18 Lion’s bellow 23 Boatloads 24 Play the lead 25 Apportions (with “out�) 26 Shot the breeze 27 A month in Madrid 28 Certain work stint at the auto factory? 29 Embarrassing mistake 30 Domicile 31 Gives an edge to 33 Normand of silent movies
36 Gravy helping, perhaps 37 Break sharply 39 Dutch South African 40 Wearable wares 42 “Carmen� and “Norma� 43 Playing with a full deck 45 Musical finales 46 Stocking problem 47 Barber’s symbol 48 “I’m ___ mood to argue� 49 Talk back to 50 Takes advantage of 51 Exxon precursor 54 Suffix with “Japan� or “Taiwan� 55 Sheep’s cry
PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER
12/7
Š 2011 Universal Uclick www.upuzzles.com
AT THE AUTO FACTORY By Rob Lee
Thursday, December 8, 2011 •
OUDaily.com ››
SPORTS
Follow Daily staff writer RJ Young (@RJ_Young) for live updates during OU men’s basketball’s matchup against Oral Roberts at 7 tonight.
Men’s basketball
Coach to face former team OU assistant will be opposite old squad for first time
James Corley, sports editor dailysports@ou.edu • phone: 405-325-3666
women’s basketball
Sophomore sets tone for Sooners Fresno State will be ready to play, work hard in matchup with OU, Hook says
RJ Young
Annelise Russell
Sports Reporter
Oklahoma assistant basketball coach Chr is Crutchfield will coach against the team he helped build — Oral Roberts — at 7 p.m. Thursday at Lloyd Noble Center. Crutchfield spent four years as an assistant coach for the Golden Eagles before accepting his position at Oklahoma last April. While in Tulsa, Crutchfield helped Oral Roberts average 20 wins per season and earn postseason appearances in the 2008 NCAA tournament and 2011 CollegeInsider.com Tournament. Crutchfield helped coach and recruit many of ORU’s roster, and, with him courtside, Oral Roberts finished no worse than third in the Summit League. “As many jobs as I’ve had, this will be the first time I ever had to go play against a team that I’ve been involved with,” Crutchfield said. “It’s going to be different. It’ll probably be a little emotional in the beginning, but it’s going to be another ball game once it does start.” Oklahoma (5-1) beat its last opponent like it stole something. Its 82-53 shellacking of Sacramento State at home was one of its best of the early season and shows the team can play down a man. The Sooners’ game against Oral Roberts will be just its second without sophomore guard Calvin Newell, who informed coach Lon Kruger he will transfer at semester’s end. The team responded to the news with its fifth win of the season. “We miss Cal [Newell] because he was guy who could
News Editor
Melodie Lettkeman/The Daily
Junior guard Steven Pledger (2) drives to the basket during OU’s 92-65 win against Coppin State Nov. 18 at Lloyd Noble Center. Pledger is the Sooners’ offensive leader, averaging 17.2 points per game this year.
really score the ball and another good athlete coming off the bench in the rotation,” Kruger said. The team’s resolve will be further tested against an Oral Roberts team that claims four starters who average double figures in scoring and scores 70 points per game as a team. Senior forward Dominique Morrison leads the Golden Eagles with 16.4 points per game. The 6-foot-6-inch forward was selected to the 2011 All-Summit League First Team and has started every game for Oral Roberts this season.
Oklahoma matches up in the scoring categories with three of its own players averaging at least 10 points per game. Ju n i o r g u a r d S t e v e n Pledger has helped the Sooners average 79 points per game with 17.2 of his own on average. “We’ve got to continue to improve defensively, and we’ve got to continue to be aggressive offensively,” Kruger said. “We’re getting good shot selection, rebounding the ball aggressively right now. We’ve got to keep getting better every day.”
GO AND DO OU vs. ORU WHEN: 7 tonight WHERE: Lloyd Noble Center INFO: OU assistant Chris Crutchfield faces a former team for the first time.
Senior guard Danielle Robinson claims the tipoff and drives the lane for a quick two, followed by freshman guard Aaryn Ellenberg, who lays it in off the turnover. That was the scene last year when the OU women’s basketball team hosted Fresno State for an easy 84-66 Sooner win. But that season is history; Robinson is gone, and so too are the easy buckets. This time, when the Sooners face Fresno State on the road Thursday, they enter with a 3-2 record and a starting five with three sophomores and no seniors. Sophomore Morgan Hook has taken over the point for OU, and not only does she set the tone for the offense PLAYER TO WATCH but, more importantly for Morgan Hook the Sooners, also the defensive attitude. Year: Hook said a tremenSophomore dous and improved effort Position: on defense will be necGuard essary against the offenHometown: sive-minded, long-range Lowell, Ark. Bulldogs. Season stats: “Oh, they shoot so many 14.6 points 3-pointers,” Hook said. per game, 3.6 assists per game, 1.8 When OU hosted the steals per game Bulldogs last season, Hook was a freshman reserve, with nine points in the contest and four turnovers. Hook said she learned after last year’s game with Fresno that they come to play and work hard. OU’s goal will be to meet that effort, and for Hook, she said that means pushing the ball and staying together as a team. Luckily for Hook, she has a couple people to rely on. Ellenberg, now a sophomore, is averaging 20 points through five games, and junior guard Whitney Hand is averaging more than nine points each game. OU is coming off a 69-63 loss to No. 18 Ohio State on Sunday at home, where the Sooners could not finish a second-half comeback because their first-half struggles were too much to overcome. The Sooners have the opportunity against Fresno State to correct and learn from Sunday’s mistakes, and that starts with Hook.
Football
OU extends streak on All-Big 12 team Six OU football players were honored on the All-Big 12 first team, the league announced Wednesday. Four players earned second-team nods, and nine received honorable mentions. Oklahoma extended its streak of placing at least one player on the all-conference first team every season for 86 years, dating all the way back to 1926. S enior defensive end Frank Alexander became the second consecutive Sooner to win Big 12 Defensive Lineman of the Year (Jeremy Beal, 2010). Alexander shares CoDefensive Player of the Year honors with Iowa State linebacker A.J. Klein. Daily staff reports
AT A GLANCE Sooners on All-Big 12 team
OU Facilities Management’s
Bike Sale
(abandoned bikes left on campus)
Friday, December 9, 2011 9:00 am - 3:00 pm 160 Felgar Street, west side of Facilities Management compound Cash or checks
Senior DE Frank Alexander Senior WR Ryan Broyles Senior DB Jamell Fleming Soph OL Gabe Ikard Junior DE Ronnell Lewis Soph FB Trey Millard
Source: OU athletic department
re
w .s w
ca l
lt
o
pr
iv at
e
m se pa eet rv ck in oo e ne ag g r rb es oo o fo w on m r d l. lin et co e ai m ls
S AT
PARTIE HOLIDAY
HONORABLE MENTION
Junior OL Tyler Evans Soph RB Roy Finch Fresh K Michael Hunnicutt Soph DB Tony Jefferson Soph LB Corey Nelson Senior OL Donald Stephenson Junior P Tress Way Junior RB Dominique Whaley Soph LB Tom Wort
ENTER TO WIN A $500 VISA GIFT CARD WAIVE $174 MOVE-IN FEE* UNTIL DECEMBER 17, 2011
550 24th Avenue N.W. 405-360-3634
w
Senior TE James Hanna Junior DB Demontre Hurst Senior LB Travis Lewis Soph WR Kenny Stills
IT PAYS TO BE A CHAMPION
RATES FROM $419
FIRST TEAM
SECOND TEAM
7
Fully furnished | 24-hr fitness center | All bills paid* Gated community | Private bedrooms & Individual leases Campus shuttle | Resident social events Close to campus | Washer & dryer * 12-payment leases only. Excludes 1Bed/1Bath & 3Bed/3Bath Floorplans. $ 35 cap per person.
LIVE LIKE A CHAMPION
crimsonpark.com | 405.253.8000 2657 Classen Boulevard
8
• Thursday, December 8, 2011
Life&arts
OUDaily.com ›› Now that dead week is upon campus, let the procrastination begin. The Daily’s Megan Deaton shares her favorite dead week distractions.
Katherine Borgerding, life & arts editor dailyent@ou.edu • phone: 405-325-5189
Making
debut
their
Left: The exhibition is located in the Lightwell Gallery in the Fred Jones Jr. Memorial Art Center.
Show features variety of art media Society closes its first exhibit Friday Brooke Buckmaster Life & Arts Reporter
This Friday marks the ending of a whirlwind journey for the F-Stop Society as it closes its first art exhibit in the Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art. “‘Society Debut’ is your run-of-the-mill art exhibition with a twist,” F-Stop President Ryan Harris said. “The majority of the pieces are heavily based in media and will allow the audience to view a moving picture in a
static state.” The exhibit, titled “Society Debut,” represents the student photo organization’s start on OU’s campus. “It’s a significant indicator of [our club’s] potential capacity of what could be achieved,” F-Stop Officer of Records Tyson Manning said. “It also highlights the amount of talent we have as a club.” The exhibit, located in the Lightwell Gallery, features many different works, including both photography and video. The exhibit features a variety of work in many different media.
Top right: Shannon Shepherd, liberal studies junior, and OU alumnus Craig Dodds discuss photos Monday.
“It’s a significant indicator of [our club’s] potential capacity of what could be achieved.” Tyson Manning, F-Stop Officer of Records
“[The best part about the exhibit is] the diverse work that’s included; there’s no requirement on subject or scene,” Manning said. “Seeing how the pieces relate to each other, it’s diverse all together and creates a well-rounded exhibition.” The F-Stop Society, which
2nd 16th
photos by Kingsley burns/the daily
began its journey this semester, provides a good opportunity for students interested in photography, Manning said. “Although the organization
is still in its infancy, the F-Stop Society is already demonstrating its potential to provide this opportunity and hopefully similar future opportunities to students
Bottom right: Ryan Harris’ “The Creation Process,” a piece with photographs printed on blocks of wood, sits in the center’s Lightwell Gallery.
that may otherwise be difficult to come by, especially for new undergraduates in the beginning phases of the college career,” Manning said.