The Oklahoma Daily

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FRIDAY FEBRUARY 5, 2010

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Hearts for Haiti walk-a-thon has beenn rescheduled. For details see page 2.

Check out The Daily’s take ake on Nicholas Spark’s most ost recent romance. See pagee 3. re

Weather

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The men’s basketball team hosts Texas in the first game of the Red River Rivalry series. See page 6.

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Winter weather to revisit Norman Meteorologists say storm won’t be as severe as last week’s but advises checking the forecast, taking precautions CAROLINE PERRYMAN Daily Staff Writer

Ready for more winter weather? Another winter storm is approaching OU this weekend. Patrick Marsh, meteorology graduate student and National Severe Storms Laboratory employee, said rain will begin Sunday afternoon before turning into light freezing rain and snow Sunday night. Marsh said the storm should not be as bad as last week’s and the worst of it will be the cold air that may not

get above freezing for days. There is always a possibility for more winter weather late next week, he said. Although Marsh said not to expect too many road problems, Monday would be the worst day to drive. “There should be one to two inches around OU campus and in the Norman area,” Marsh said. “A lot can happen and a lot will happen. The best thing you can do is be aware that winter weather is possible and cold weather is coming. Pay attention to how the forecast changes and prepare yourself with food, flashlights and blankets.” Jenifer Bowen, National Weather Center meteorologist, said the storm is currently off the West Coast, which makes the exact forecast

uncertain. Nevertheless, Bowen urged precautions. “From Sunday to around Tuesday morning there should be a mix of rain and snow, depending on the temperature,” Bowen said. “The storm will not be nearly as bad as last week’s road conditions and power outages. The most accumulations will be in western and northwestern Oklahoma. People should exercise the same precautions, especially with traveling, and pay attention to the up-to-date forecasts on our Web site.”

UP-TO-DATE WEATHER The Norman National Weather Center www.weather.gov/norman

NEIL MCGLOHON/THE DAILY

The Pastoral Dreamer, located on the North Oval, was covered with snow as a result of the most recent winter storm which hit Norman last Thursday.

NEW BIKE RACKS LOCK OUT THIEVES Planned racks will be more secure and provide more spaces, say Student Congress spokesmen TROY WEATHERFORD Daily Staff Writer

NEIL MCGLOHON/THE DAILY

University College freshman Andy Cheng locks his bike at the bike racks outside of Adams Center. OU will spend $18,500 to replace bike racks around campus.

OU is replacing racks that leave bikes vulnerable to thieves with ones that are designed to be safer and provide more spaces. The university is spending $18,500 to replace bike racks outside of Monnet Hall ($1,325), Burton Hall ($9,600) and Copeland Hall ($7,575), said Taylor Bitting, vice chairman of the Student Congress Problems and Projects Committee. The new racks should effectively double the number of bikes that can be locked outside the buildings, he said. The current racks are vulnerable to bike thieves because their low placement means many locks can only reach through the front wheel. A thief could leave the wheel and take the bike, said Jonathan Vann, chairman of the Student Congress Problems and Projects Committee. The new racks allow bike owners to use U-shaped locks to affix the bike’s frame to the higher rack, making it impossible to steal the bike by dismantling the wheel. UOSA contributed $1,000 to the project, Vann said. The OU Bike Initiative, sponsored by the office of Nick Hathaway, executive vice president and vice president of administrative and finance, paid the remainder. The Problems and Projects Committee had decided to make the racks a priority last fall, when they discovered OU administration had the same intent. “The administration was already going to replace many of the racks anyway,” Bitting said. Bitting said the committee next will try to get racks replaced south of Lindsey Street, where many freshmen park their bikes to be near the dorms, he said. “It’s a pretty terrible way to start your career at OU, by having your bicycle stolen,” Bitting said.

Student takes magic act to the pros NBA teams around the league hire OU student to perform at halftime shows CASEY PARVIN Daily Staff Writer

At age 7, J.P. Wilson, business sophomore, performed his first magic show at a children’s birthday party. Thirteen years later, he presents his seven-minute, magic-filled act to sold out NBA crowds across the country. “He is the hottest halftime act around the league,” said Dan Mahoney, vice president of corporate communications for the Oklahoma City Thunder. “He has a great work ethic. He is a student as well and it’s incredible that he balances it all. It must be magic.” In addition to the Thunder, Wilson has performed his halftime act for the Phoenix Suns, Utah Jazz, Denver Nuggets, Golden State Warriors and Chicago Bulls. He said he became interested in magic after his parents returned from a trip to Las Vegas with a magic set. “They brought me back a magic set with about 10 different tricks in it,” Wilson said. “They taught me one and once I mastered that one, a week later I got another trick and that went on. I’d master a trick and they’d get me a new one.” PHOTO PROVIDED After magic lessons in multiple states, Wilson began to J.P. Wilson, sophomore business major, performs magic during an Oklahoma Thunder halftime form a relationship with the New Orleans Hornets in 2005 MAGIC CONTINUES ON PAGE 2

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show at the Ford Center in Oklahoma City. Wilson has been performing magic since he was 7 years old. © 2009 OU PUBLICATIONS BOARD

Obama pushes for education increases President’s administration calls for more student aid, lower student loan payments JONATHAN BROU Daily Staff Writer

President Barack Obama’s 2011 budget has “historic” increases for education, U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan said Thursday. Most of the budget is frozen at the 2010 levels — the current fiscal year — but increases include early childhood education, K-12 reform and college access and affordability, he said. “It’s a cradle-to-career objective,” Duncan said during a national conference call held with student reporters. “(Obama) sees it as the key to our economic future.” Duncan said a goal of the Obama administration is to dramatically increase college readiness for high school students and college completion rates, both of which are important in order to get the highest proportion of college graduates in the world by 2020. College graduates make up about 40 percent of young people today, Duncan said. A generation ago that was enough to lead the world, but at least 10 countries have surpassed that rate, he said. An additional 10 million students will need to graduate with either bachelor’s or associate’s degrees to meet the goal set by the administration. The Obama administration has allotted $173 billion to education in its budget for the 2011 fiscal year. The money is intended to give more students access to a college education by increasing Pell Grants amounts 1 percent above inflation each year, improving the quality of community colleges through increased funding, better preparing students for college and strengthening the income-based repayment program. The administration also plans to end federal subsidies for higher education loans OBAMA CONTINUES ON PAGE 2

VOL. 95, NO. 91


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