Thursday, April 24, 2014

Page 1

Sports: Big 12 championships are this weekend (Pages 6&7)

L&A: Get to know two headlining bands from the Norman Music Festival (Pages 4&5)

Opinion: Completing course evaluations helps students and professors (Page 3)

The University of Oklahoma’s independent student voice since 1916

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2 014 S I LV E R C R O W N W I N N E R

T H U R S D A Y , A P R I L 2 4 , 2 0 14

NECTAR OF THE GODS Specialty brew culture ferments

Norman City Council takes steps to increase craft brewers in town

Oklahomans find ways to create small-batch brews and create brewer culture in Oklahoma

ALEX NIBLETT ASSISTANT CAMPUS EDTIOR

TONY BEAULIEU Life&Arts Editor @tonybe787

Walking into McNellie’s any day of the week, and you’ll be handed a paper menu of Oklahoma beers. That’s because, despite some of the strictest alcohol laws in the U.S., Oklahoma has been fostering a small but growing specialty and small brew community. Craft breweries lightly pepper the entire state and drive a diverse small brew culture, not only in Oklahoma but also around the world. “There are three to four times as many breweries in this state now as there were when we started six years ago,” said Eric Marshall, founder of Marshall Brewing in Tulsa. Marshall grew up in Tulsa, where he attended the University of Tulsa for international business and German. “My junior year, I studied over in Germany and really feel in love with beer and brewing from the cultural perspective,” Marshall said. The trip to Germany only heightened Marshall’s interest, which started with home brewing. “I started thinking about the need for fresh, local beer in Tulsa, which was not an option, and decided I wanted to do something about that,” Marshall said. After graduating, Marshall returned to Germany to study brewing, apprenticing at six different breweries across the country. He moved back to the United States as a brewer for Victory Brewing Company in Pennsylvania. But the dream of starting a company in Tulsa remained.

ILLUSTRATION BY ORIANA LOVERA

T

he Norman City Council approved a special license Tuesday for Oklahoma beer brewers, considerably lowering the price to craft beer in Norman. A regular brewer’s license costs brewers $1,200 a year, but this new license will only cost Oklahoma brewers $50. The license is specifically for companies who manufacture and make wholesale distributions. Anyone interested in obtaining this license has to be an Oklahoma resident. Brenda Hall, Norman City Council city clerk, said the council demanded Norman’s local ordinance add an Oklahoma brewer category to lower the fee cost, an effort that could potentially attract more brewers to the Norman community. “We don’t have any brewer’s permits in Norman, and we’ve had that license on our books for 30 years, and we’ve never had anyone get one of those permits,” Hall said. Now there is a company interested in brewing beer in Norman, which prompted city officials to reconsider their regulations to bring more commercial businesses to Norman, Hall said. This license is not for people selling beer individually from their home — there’s a different license for individuals interested in selling their home-brewed beer. Those individuals usually obtain a low point beer license for beer with an alcohol point below 3.2.

SEE BEER PAGE 4

SEE POLICY PAGE 2 Poll standings as of 9 p.m. April 23, 2014. Submit your vote at OUDaily.com

CONFLICT

Policy displaces smokers With ‘Cancer Corner’ under state law, smokers find issues AMBER FRIEND Campus Reporter

On the corner of Elm Avenue and Elmwood Street, OU student smokers gather to light up. They sit on the cigarette butt-littered ground, talking, laughing and making sure they stay in the decided rectangle of public property they are allowed. Across the street, they can see the tops of the trees shading the area where smokers once went to get their fix, an area in Stubbeman Villiage across from the residence halls, formerly known as Cancer Corner. On Nov. 25, OU officially became the owners of the property. All that remains are a few forgotten cigarette butts several feet away from some recently placed Breathe Easy signs, signifying smokers to go elsewhere because smoking is banned on all state-owned property. In the future, the property may house OU tenants, but currently it’s running as a self-supporting retail center, university spokesman Michael Nash said. Though the property was purchased because of its proximity to campus, Nash said its transition to university ownership has affected certain OU students — the smokers and those who live on the property where the smokers have migrated.

WEATHER Partly cloudy with winds WNW at 23 mph. High of 75F.

BUSINESS

Quiznos, Sbarro here to stay after bankruptcy Two branches remain profitable on OU campus KELLY ROGERS

Campus Reporter

JESSICA WOODS/THE DAILY

Students walk by numerous “no smoking” signs on their way to school and home. Many students don’t notice the signs but for those who smoke, it’s a constant reminder to curb the urge or find another area to smoke.

Other locations have dealt with the influx of smokers before the University purchased Stubbeman Village because of the smoking ban that pushed smokers away from campus. For students at the St. Ans elm of Canterbury Episcopal University Center on Elm Avenue, smokers gathering at the north end of their property have become a common sight all year. Though they haven’t asked the smokers to leave, members of St. Anselm are frustrated by what the smokers leave behind. “We try to take care of our yard, so if there’s

a lot of cigarette butts in it, then it’s a little frustrating,” said Kirsten Rysted, elementary junior and St. Anselm member. “This is a private space, and even though they’re on the public part, it kind of brushes into our part.” Even with the frustrations, the two groups get along. One woman who smokes near the property baked the St. Anselm students a cake to thank them for allowing smokers to use the space, University College freshman Kevin Rysted said. SEE CONFLICT PAGE 2

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OU students will not have to say goodbye to toasted subs and pizza by the slice just yet. Both Sbarro and Quiznos in Oklahoma Memorial Union’s food court will remain open despite filing for bankruptcy protection last month. The restaurants opened in the early 2000s at OU, but with customer traffic declining as the years progress, sales have declined. Sbarro’s change in sales from fiscal year 2012 to 2013 decreased 11 percent, according to requested records. The Sbarro store is privately owned and operated, but the university owns Quiznos. making each situation different because of the difference in lease agreements, said Amy Buchanan, assistant director of marketing communications for OU Housing and Food Services, in an email. More online at OUDaily.com

VOL. 99, NO. 144 © 2014 OU Publications Board FREE — Additional copies 25¢


2

• Thursday, April 24, 2014

OUDaily.com ››

CAMPUS

Paighten Harkins, campus editor Alex Niblett, assistant editor dailynews@ou.edu • phone: 405-325-3666 oudaily.com • Twitter: @OUDaily

Look online for a Storify of tweets about OU’s first Teach-In on race Wednesday morning.

ACADEMICS

Honorary scholarship named after Oklahoma professor Chemistry lecturer inducted into Ed. Hall of Fame in 2013 MICHELLE JOHNSTON Campus Reporter

An OU chemistry professor known for her role in the hit show “Breaking Bad� is receiving recognition from a place few Sooners expect — the University of Texas. Donna Nelson was visiting the rival university to discuss science advising for the television show to an audience of about 500 students when she found out the university had

established an honorary scholarship in her name, she said. The scholarship, called the Donna J. Nelson Honorary Scholarship in Chemistry, is for former students who have excelled in science and who are good role models, Nelson said. The scholarship is meant to promote scientific discovery and excellence in higher education, Nelson said. Nelson, an OU and Texas alumna, said she’s been dealing with the rivalry for most of her life and said both universities are good schools, so the rivalry doesn’t faze her much. “Both schools may claim me,� Nelson said.

Ultimately, Nelson was just honored to have a scholarship in her name, she said. “I was extremely flattered, thrilled and a little surprised. You always want your Alma Mater to be proud of you, and so it meant a lot to me,� Nelson said. Nelson was inducted into the Oklahoma Higher Education Hall of Fame in December 2013, along with Nancy Mergler, senior vice president and provost. Donna Nelson Michelle Johnston, michelle.johnston-1@ou.edu

PROFESSOR OF CHEMISTRY

CONFLICT: Smoker, ‘Just let us be’

POLICY: Course teaches brew chem

Continued from page 1

Continued from page 1

While the St. Anselm students say the situation could be worse, they don’t necessarily enjoy the smokers being there. “It’s not nice dealing with that smell. It’s bearable, just not nice,� Rysted said. The Delta Gamma sorority house, adjacent to St. Anselm, has recently put up no-smoking signs around their property. Delta Gamma president Morgan Peccarelli wasn’t available for comment by press time. Down the street near Stubbeman Village, smokers have moved across the street near the Alpha Chi Omega sorority house. Though the situation has calmed over the past several weeks after OU Police Department clarified the property line at Alpha Chi Omega’s request to show where smokers were legally allowed to smoke, the two groups remain wary of each other. Kris Crumpton, criminology junior and Alpha Chi Omega member, said several students smoking on the corner have verbally harassed girls walking to the house, making hostile comments about the sorority. Several Alpha Chi Omega members have also called OUPD from the police pole on the opposite corner of the smokers, Crumpton said. Three students who regularly smoke on the corner — University College freshmen Sarah Mangan, Bradford Burr and Daniel Hembree — said they hadn’t seen any smokers harass the sorority members, and that they only talk to passersby if they initiate the interaction. The three did say they’ve dealt with the police several times on the corner, though. Crumpton said she was concerned with how the smokers and leftover cigarette butts on the corner may affect the sorority’s brand. “Our rule is that we’re not supposed to give off that image,� Crumpton said. “Whenever people are smoking on our property, it looks like we condone it.� Alpha Chi Omega president Brooke Buckmaster wouldn’t comment on the

allegations that smokers had harassed Alpha Chi Omega members. She did say she and the other sorority members know it’s difficult for students to find places to smoke under the smoking ban. “We understand the situation is difficult for those who smoke,� Buckmaster said. For Mangan, since coming to OU, smoking has been difficult. When she found out she’d have to leave the shaded area for smokers in Stubbeman Village, she was disappointed because Cancer Corner was close to the residence halls. Now Mangan said she doesn’t have any other good options. Smokers now stand in the sun to smoke with no trashcans nearby and have dealt with adversity from passersby. Burr said that he was tired of people harassing them when they smoke and telling them to move. “We don’t know where we’re safe, and we don’t know if we’re going to get a ticket or not. It causes a lot of stress that isn’t needed,� Burr said. Mangan, who has been smoking since her senior year in high school, said she did not face such severe anti-smoking harassment until she came to college. “You feel bad when people drive by in their cars and scream at you. It’s crazy. It’s like you’re not a person,� Mangan said. “People will throw money at us, people will curse at us all the time and insult [us]. It’s just weird.� Burr said he feels like others judge him solely on his decision to smoke. “I’m not just a smoker,� Burr said. “I’m a human being.� The students — smokers and non-smokers alike — speculated that a designated smoking area near campus would solve some of their problems. Burr had a different opinion though. “Just let us be,� Burr said, “Let public property be public property.�

This new license will permit brewers to brew stronger beer, with higher alcohol content. The company looking to locate in Norman is interested in brewing 6-point beer and higher, Hall said.

Beer brewers may soon be calling Norman home, but students at OU are learning all the tricks of the trade in a JANUX course called Chemistry of Beer. JANUX is an online interactive learning community where students and nonstudents can take courses. Students currently enrolled in the course can take it during a semester and receive one credit hour, and those who take the course on their own can receive a badge after completion. Mark Morvant, OU chemistry and biochemistry professor, teaches the course, which examines different types of beer and uses chemistry to answer questions regarding the chemical processes of brewing beer. The course integrates the organic chemistry and biochemistry involved in the brewing process.

There are 42 OU students enrolled in the course this semester, and 8,500 people are registered for the course online, Morvant said. This is the course’s first semester. In the past, Morvant has taught another one-credit course called Consumer Chemistry with Paul Sims, chemistry and biochemistry assistant professor. In the course students analyzed the chemistry of common products including toothpaste and cheese. “Learning how to translate things [they’re] learning in [their] classes and connecting it to things they use on a daily basis, and the peer-to-peer action ‌ it’s interesting to see,â€? Morvant said. The open Chemistry of Beer course is free for anyone and is an online-only class. Students signed up will watch educational videos and will have quizzes throughout the course. For class credit, students must have taken organic chemistry. Students can enroll through oZONE. For the open course, the only requirement is an email address, and students can sign up at the JANUX website. Alex Niblett, alexandra.g.niblett@ou.edu

TONY RAGLE/THE DAILY

Amber Friend, ambermfriend@ou.edu

A beer sits on the table at McNellie’s Abner Ale House in downtown Norman. The extensive beer menu at the pub includes various locally brewed beers.

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Thursday April 24, 2014 •

OPINION

3

Kaitlyn Underwood, opinion editor Rachael Montgomery, assistant editor dailyopinion@ou.edu • phone: 405-325-3666 oudaily.com/opinion • Twitter: @OUDailyOpinion

Editorial

Photo illustration by Tony Ragle/The Daily

It’s the time of the year when teachers are constantly reminding students to complete course evaluations. Course evaluations help teachers and faculty members improve for future semesters.

Evaluations help students, professors out. Even better, filling out the class assessments is as simple as logging into a website — eval.ou.edu, to be more precise. Although we want all OU students to fill out the digital evaluations, we don’t We know probably all OU students are accustomed to waking up to multiple OU mass emails, want students to rush through the online form. or OUMMs, on a daily basis. And we know most of Clicking random buttons and finishing the evaluation as fast as you can doesn’t help anyone. us ignore those emails, but there’s one OU mass email you received this week that is imperative to Professors and college departments use the evalupay attention to. Course evaluations are now open ations to judge instructor performance and make decisions about future curriculum, which is why for all OU students, and while providing honest, fair answers in the evaluations The Our View evaluating your classes and prois the majority fessors might seem like one more is so important. opinion of As students, we are on the receiving end of any chore to do, it’s actually vital to the The Daily’s class changes made as a result of our feedback in university and to our educations eight-member editorial board that students fairly and accurately the course evaluations, and we think all Sooners want to improve our educations, not confuse procomplete those evaluations. fessors with bogus evaluations. The evaluations We implore Sooners to take a provide students with an opportunity to give honfew minutes out of their day between now and est input about their classes and instructors anonthe start of finals week, May 4, to complete their ymously. While anonymity is helpful in encourcourse evaluations. We aren’t asking students to aging truthful responses without fear of punishdevote hours to finish the evaluations; the form is relatively short and should take only a few min- ment, it can also be dangerous when students use utes to complete. In fact, students might not even it to bash professors without accountability. Sure, you might have disagreed with how your have to set aside any of their own time to fill out professor graded one of your essays, but that the evaluations because many professors allot a few minutes of class time for students to fill them doesn’t give you the right to crucify the instructor

Our View: Students should fill out course evaluations to provide feedback on how to make our university better.

in your evaluation under the veil of anonymity. Rather than “sticking it to the man” in the evaluations, it’s much more beneficial to professors, college deans and future students to accurately evaluate the professor’s performance and the course as a whole. Every part of the evaluation form is essential, but we think it’s especially important for students to faithfully complete the short answer portion of the evaluation, or the “comments about the course and instructors” portion. The numerically scaled evaluations provide general information about the class, such as how a certain aspect of the class contributed to your learning and if assignments were graded and returned appropriately. But the open-ended section allows students to specifically address weak or strong points of the course and provide professors with more detailed information about how to improve their classes. We all pay tuition and attend classes every day, so why not get the most out of your money and evaluate your courses to make them better? Constructive criticism helps everyone, so take a few minutes to fill out your course evaluations and improve our university.

Comment on this at oudaily.com

Column

Football isn’t the only notable sport at OU I

n light of the OU Assistant opinion editor As with all other traditions, women’s gymnasit had to begin somewhere, tics team winning and that’s where you come its first NCAA National in. If more students attend Championship on the games and meets of Saturday, I think it’s only non-football related sports, appropriate to do a little those sports might finally bragging about OU’s athget the big-time attenletic department, and that tion and audiences they Rachael Montgomery praise extends to intramudeserve. rachaeljmo94@gmail.com ral athletes as well. Even though the student It goes without saying turnout at baseball games that OU’s football team has been one of and gymnastics meets isn’t on par with the best for the past couple of decades and the student section at football games, the will no doubt continue to be for years to football team isn’t the only athletics group come. OU’s football department brings on campus with national championships. in sizable revenue, which helps boost our There is absolutely no reason for Sooners university’s economy. However, football not to flock to future women’s gymnastics is not the only sport that OU excels at, and meets to cheer on their peers and their the results of last weekend’s gymnastics school. meet prove that. Life can get dull during football’s Athletes in OU’s various sports all off-season. Finding other sports to peak Jacqueline EBy/The Daily demonstrate exceptional skill and work your interest not only gives you something Freshman McKenzie Wofford does a flying jump during her balance beam routine on March 7 against extremely hard to perform their best. It to do and follow, but it also provides supArizona State at Lloyd Noble Center. The Sooners beat the Sun Devils 197.45-194.150. is this level of performance that draws us port to sports that still involve just as much to attend sporting events. However, the strategy, talent and action that is displayed student attendance levels for these games during football games. and meets never come close to those of OU has so much to offer in terms of its school, so what’s to lose by showing them event? Plus, you have every right to be at football games. sports, and as a student, now is the best a little support? those meets and games. Those athletes While it is undeniable that the experitime to attend games for all sorts of sports. you see on the balance beam, baseball dience of attending an OU football game is When else in your life will you be able to amond, wrestling mat or soccer field are incomparable to really anything short of get your hands on reduced-price tickets students just like you. They are your class- Rachael Montgomery is a public relations the Super Bowl, it didn’t start out like that. or free admittance to a Division 1 sporting mates and are competing on behalf of your sophomore.

The Oklahoma Daily is a public forum, the University of Oklahoma’s independent student voice and an entirely student-run publication.

Kyle Margerum Blayklee Buchanan Paighten Harkins Arianna Pickard Kaitlyn Underwood

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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. Our View is the voice of the Editorial Board, which consists of eight student editors. The board meets at 2:30 p.m. Sunday and at 12:30 and 4:30 p.m. Monday to Thursday in 160 Copeland Hall. Board meetings are open to the public.

Guest columns are accepted and printed at the editor’s discretion. Columnists’ and cartoonists’ opinions are their own and not necessarily the views or opinions of The Oklahoma Daily Editorial Board. To advertise in The Oklahoma Daily, contact advertising manager Kearsten Howland by calling 405-325-8964 or emailing dailyads@ou.edu. One free copy of The Daily is available to members of the OU community. Additional copies may be purchased for 25 cents by contacting The Daily business office at 405325-2522.


4

• Thursday, April 24, 2014

LIFE&ARTS beer: More breweries calling Oklahoma home Continued from page 1 When he returned to Tulsa to start Marshall Brewing Company, Marshall said he was met with overwhelming support. “I think the best thing about having a brewery in Oklahoma is the people,� Marshall said. “Oklahomans are very passionate people and love supporting the local guys, and the pride that people have in what we are doing is extremely gratifying.� As the craft brewing industry continues to grow, Marshall believes regional breweries offer freshness not available from larger companies. “Most of the draft beer that goes out of here on a weekly basis was kegged within 48 hours of it going out the door, and most of the bottles are not much more than that,� Marshall said. OUDaily.com His goals for the future are Beer playlist on to keep the company small to Spotify continue providing freshness to customers. Chase Healey founded Prairie Artisan Ales with his wife and brother after graduating from OU with a degree in journalism and advertising in 2009. Healey started, like so many others, as a home brewer in 2005 after his wife, Erica, bought him a home brewing kit while they were both still dating at OU. “My roommates loved the beer I was making,� Healey said. “We pulled out all the food in our fridge so we could have three beers on tap at all times.� What started as a hobby quickly fermented into a passion for making great beer. Healey helped start COOP Ale Works, a craft brewery in Oklahoma City, in 2008 while still a student, but he always wanted a brewery all his own. Oklahoma’s highly-prohibitive alcohol laws didn’t stop Healey from setting up shop in Tulsa. “Tulsa is home to me,� Healey said. “It would have been just as easy to do Prairie (Artisan Ales) in Dallas, but we believe in Tulsa and the opportunity to help build its identity.� Prairie Artisan Ales primarily produces beer aged in barrels, like wine and spirits. “I shoot to offer beers that are exciting and, more or less, sell themselves,� Healey said. Healey said Prairie Artisan Ales’ selection mainly appeals to specialty and experimental beer markets in Oklahoma and across the world. “We sell beer in places like Paris and Singapore,� Healey said. “People think its cool when they find out where we are located.� Prairie Artisan Ales have been featured on “Brew View,� an Oklahoma beer-centric podcast, which is undergoing the transition to a full-blown beer blog “Adventures in Pints.� Norman resident Chris Crockett started the podcast “Brew View� in 2012 with friend Matt Cash. What began as a weekly show about beer, sports and video games morphed into a podcast all about Oklahoma-bred beers. “We started by drinking whatever was new or caught our eye at the liquor store,� Crockett said. “But shortly after, we started finding all these great beers that were being released from Oklahoma. So, we started just drinking Oklahoma beers.� Crockett believes Oklahoma’s small brew culture is on the rise. “We only have a few breweries in the state, but they are high quality, and there are more in the planning stages,� Crockett said. It’s not only breweries that are growing in number, Crocket said, but also festivals, tastings and beer-centric bars. Crockett admits Oklahoma’s “dark age� alcohol laws are a major hindrance to the further growth of the state’s small brew culture but also acknowledges some benefits. “Our strict laws are keeping out a lot of the competition,� Crockett said. “That makes Oklahoma beer more attractive on the shelf and in bars.�

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Previous Solution

Monday- Very Easy Tuesday-Easy Wednesday- Easy Thursday- Medium Friday - Hard

0(',80 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.

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Listen to the Norman Music Festival playlist attached to all our NMF coverage online.

NMF Exclusive

Band combines retro genres La Femme plays in state for first time as part of Norman Music Festival ESCAPE Reporter, Life & Arts Reporter

French psychpunk outfit La Femme started playing its own brand of high-tempo dance tunes in 2010. And while the collective is notoriously reclusive and secretive about its complete line up, known members include keyboardist Sacha Got, guitarist Marlon MagnĂŠe, bassist Sam LefĂŠvre and drummer NoĂŠ Delmas. La Femme will make the journey from Bairritz, France, to the Norman Music Festival, where it will play at 4:15 p.m. Saturday on the main stage. From San Rafael, Calif., MagnĂŠe and Got spoke with The Daily about La Femme’s music, touring schedule, and future plans. La Femme’s music combines many popular genres of yesteryear, MagnĂŠe said. “On our new album, ‘Psycho Tropical Berlin,’ we’re kind of old school, like ’60s, and new wave,â€? Got said. MagnĂŠe said he is satisfied with all the songs on the new album. The album cements the group’s disparate influences into an idiosyncratic sound. “It’s a good record to play in the car on a long trip, you know,â€? MagnĂŠe said. Got and MagnĂŠe agree that the goal of La Femme is to have fun with their music, which won’t be any different when they stop by Norman for the music festival, Got said. Later this year, La Femme will play about 40 shows in the U.S. then travel to Mexico, South America, Australia, Iceland and England, MagnĂŠe said. Afterward they plan to play even more festivals in Europe before settling down to record again, Got said. Got plans to make La Femme’s first show in Oklahoma a memorable one, and she said she enjoys the festival atmosphere because it allows the group to interact with fans and other bands. “I think at the end of the tour there will be more people who know us,â€? Got said.

Norman Music Festival April 24 - April 26

When: 4:15 p.m. Saturday Where: Main stage, downtown Norman

Price: Free Info: French psychepunk band Le Femme plays their first show in Oklahoma as headliners for Norman Music Festival.

By Bernice Bede Osol

Copyright 2014, Newspaper Enterprise Assn.

Your keen interest in helping others will come to the forefront this year. You will have to decide which among many options will be the most valuable. By developing a friendship with an older person, you will gain knowledge, expertise and profound perception.

Opt for a creative outlet that will let you use your teaching skills. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -- Don’t feel overwhelmed by your long list of chores or responsibilities. Negative thinking will only slow you down. If you take the tasks one at a time, you will accomplish what’s necessary.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -- Don’t get drawn into any arguments. Even though things may not work out as planned, you should accept the changes happening around you. Compromise will eventually lead to victory.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -- You should consider ditching your regular routine in favor of something different. A day trip or talk with people from different backgrounds will spark new concerns as well as a solution.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -- You are on an upward trend right now, so enjoy the ride. If you take advantage of your wealth of experience, nothing will hold you back. Embrace the future.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- Your curiosity and adaptability will lead to favorable changes in your life. Head in a new direction, and you will be applauded for your innovative and inspirational ideas.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) -- Mull over an investment, but don’t wait until it’s too late to make your move. Be prepared to make the choice that is most likely to benefit both you and your family.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -- You will be respected for your opinions and insight if you have the courage to speak out. Your clarity and vision will draw attention and lead to improvements.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Your goals and lifestyle need a little adjustment. Be receptive to new ideas, and make a change if you want to feel better about the direction you are heading.

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) -- Take a moment to adjust to the necessities of a demanding situation. A small respite from daunting responsibilities will help recharge your batteries as well as encourage innovative solutions.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- Your leadership qualities will help you gain control. You will attract individuals who want to support your plans. Much can be accomplished if you take action. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) -- You can gain valuable insight if you include youngsters or seniors in your plans.

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PAID EGG DONORS. All Races needed. Non-smokers, Ages 18-27, SAT>1100/ACT>24/GPA>3.00 Contact: info@eggdonorcenter.com Part Time After School Staff The Community After School Program is now hiring for the remainder of this school year and for the 2014-15 school year. We are looking for fun, energetic people who want to work with school age children. Excellent job for future teachers. Competitive pay starting at $7.75 per hour. Higher pay for those with experience working with children with special needs or special education majors. Work hours are college student friendly, M-F 230-6:00, with some flexibility for the right people. Weekends and most holidays off. Apply at www. caspinc.org. Email brenda@caspinc.org

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small step no. 34

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HOROSCOPE THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 2014

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Graham Dudley, Sarah Pitts

GO AND DO La Femme at Norman Music Festival 2014

CLASSIFIEDS

ARIES (March 21-April 19) -- Get involved in a cause and interact with interesting people. You will fare best with a serious-minded group striving to implement positive social change. Your contribution will be valued.

Universal Crossword Edited by Timothy E. Parker April 24, 2014 ACROSS 25 Rosh 63 “___ Tuâ€? 48 Car buyer’s 1 Desert plants Hashanah (’70s hit) option 6 Shah Jahan’s observers 64 Prefix 49 Memorable NOTE TO PUB: INFO BELOW, FOR ID ONLY. NO ALTERING PSAs. building site DO NOT PRINT 26 ___ vera OF AD COUNCILHeston meaning role Healthy Disease Prevention- Newspaper HLDYR1-N-12037-N this They’re Paperâ€? 85 line screen 10Lifestyles GOPand rival 28 -Open central “Fetch50 “trillionâ€?- (4 1/4 x 3 1/2) B&W often digital files at Schawk: (212) 689-8585 Ref#: 211169 13 Hearingcourts 65 Certain placed on related 29 Kind of booth Arabian the back 14 Opposing or opposition burner Peninsula sides 30 Muscleman’s 52 The Who’s native 15 Martial arts pride rock opera 66 Hotel units school 32 Banned 54 Obtained (abbr.) 16 They may insecticide’s water from 67 Container of break your letters a well pre-plumbing bones? 34 Vocalized 55 Ireland, days 19 Large grunt another way 68 Imitative birds handbag 35 Native of 56 Powerful DOWN 20 Beginning of Ljubljana businessper1 Start fishing a conclusion 36 Widely used son 2 Prefix for 21 Draw forth currency 58 Arm bone “pilotâ€? 22 Abbreviation 37 Farmer’s 59 Helicopter 3 Touchstone meaning locale in song runners 4 “Be silent,â€? “and othersâ€? 39 Uneaten 61 All-terrain in music 24 Type of pine morsels vehicle, 5 Sort or kind 25 Honey holder 40 Acting lover briefly 6 Whence to 27 Open truck of Charles II 62 One of admire from, 31 Leave out in 44 Sometimesbaseball’s for some pronunciation cracked DiMaggio 7 Bad sound 33 Guided trip container brothers at a talent 34 Employed 45 One way to show 38 Furniture cook clams 8 Modernize, maker’s 47 It loses to as a room adhesive scissors 9 Biblical 41 Dispatched mount 42 Cambodian 10 Car trick, PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER coin briefly 43 Fingerprint 11 Kick out part 12 Take one’s 44 Airline time walking passenger 15 Winged one status, in Wondersometimes land 46 Remote 17 Do a control abbr. spokesper47 Grassy son’s job Argentine 18 Watch the plains bar or the 51 Poker buy-in goal 53 Lacking 23 Words on human Marine warmth posters 54 All 52 cards 24 Adjust letter 4/23 57 Difficult duty spacing Š 2014 Universal Uclick www.upuzzles.com 60 Dairy offering in type

4/24

ATTACHMENTS By Holly Copeland


Life&Arts

Thursday, April 24, 2014 •

5

nmf exclusive

Group causes chaos with music Tony Beaulieu • Life & Arts Editor • @tonybe787 Diarrhea Planet creates rowdy crowds across U.S., visits Norman Saturday

caring about what we do and it was just kinda like how can we be goofballs. And that element still comes out sometimes. But I know personally I keep trying to figure out new ways to write songs and bring new style into the band. The direction the band is going in now is going to be one of two things: either it’s going to be more extreme than what it already is — like the quiet parts will be quieter, the loud parts will be louder, the heavier parts will be heavier — or it will be completely different, if that makes sense. We may move in a direction that is totally different. It’s just kinda what song do I want to write, and that’s how I’ve been doing it. But the last year and a half I’ve been trying to push myself as a songwriter to not just come out guns blazing but be a little more dynamic.

T

he music of Nashville rockers Diarrhea Planet has been loosely classified as pop punk by many critics. Their latest record, “I’m Rich Beyond Your Wildest Dreams,” swings from musical branches on the rock ‘n’ roll family tree on hooks of pure lead and youthful vigor. Tracks juxtapose everything from the bombastic guitar-singed swagger of ’70s hard rock to the dreamy introspective angst of the grunge era. Power, noise, pop, punk — call it what you want — Diarrhea Planet just wants to have fun while riding waves of undeniably catchy riffs on a nightly basis. The tongue-in-cheek nonchalance of their name pretty much sums up that attitude. Lead singer and guitarist Hodan Dickie attested to this when he sat down for a Q&A with The Daily ahead of Diarrhea Planet’s headlining performance at the Norman Music Festival 6 p.m. on the main stage:

Q: What is the craziest thing that’s ever happened at a Diarrhea Planet live show? A: We were playing a house show in Columbus, Ohio— I think there’s video of it on YouTube— but in the middle of our set a possum just drops down from the ceiling, so that was super weird. At South By (Southwest Music Festival) just a couple weeks ago, we played this show at the Sailor Jerry’s stage that was so rowdy that they actually shut it down 20 minutes early. It was just super chaotic, kids were diving off everything, so they cut our set short. And there’s a video of this dude coming up on stage — I never saw this while we were playing — but this dude just walks up on stage and he lifts up his shirt and his pants and underwear are down flashing his dong, and this guy just stage dives nude, basically. Most of the crazy stuff that happens at shows is just because the crowd is so rowdy because the venue were we’re playing is getting rocked so hard, at South By Southwest the tents were shaking and falling apart.

Q: Diarrhea Planet has four guitarists, which on paper seems like it would be a pretty cumbersome set up. How have you been able to pull that off and make it work? Were there difficulties making that work at first? A: Our first show with this line-up was a disaster and we had to sit down and pretty much reconfigure how the band worked. So, what we initially did was me, the drummer and the bass player functioned as a unit, and Emmett (Miller, guitarist) and Evan (Bird, guitarist) functioned as like one person, and then Brent (Toler, guitarist) just functioned by himself, so we were basically like a three piece. Emmett and Evan would always play off of each other and then me, Mike (Boyle, bassist) and Casey (Weissbuch, drummer) would write stuff that would play off each other and be like the backbone. Brent always writes really unique parts, so he just started functioning with his own stuff. So, initially we just had to learn to work as a three piece, sort of. Now we all just understand each other’s playing style really well. Like when I bring in a new song now, typically everyone just falls into roles pretty quickly. Or if I have stuff already written, I can just go like, ‘Yo! You play this, you play this, you play this.’ Now everybody plays well enough with each other after being a band for a while. It’s not really that difficult anymore, but initially it was pretty tough.

A: We met at Belmont (University), and originally there was another guy named Evan Donohue— who’s no longer in the band — me and him just started messing around and making noise demos and jokingly calling it Diarrhea Planet. Then we ended up playing an actual show, but just me and him playing guitar and Casey on drums. It was one year when we were on spring break and didn’t go anywhere. So I wrote a couple songs and we played them. And then I met Evan and Emmett through playing in another band with them, and then Mike and Brent we knew from another band that they were playing in that we liked. We all just jokingly started playing together and everybody ended up sticking. Diarrhea Planet is preparing to tour this summer — Pretty much everything about the band, from one phase to during which time they will appear at the Bonnaroo Music another, started out as a joke. and Arts Festival in Manchester, Tennessee — while also recording their next EP for a fall release. Q: Your latest album, “I’m Rich Beyond Your Wildest Dreams,” shows a bit of a maturation from your early EPs. So a song like “Skeleton Head” is obviously very different Tony Beaulieu anthonybeaulieu78@gmail.com from a song like “Ghost With A Boner.” How did that evolution happen and is there a direction the group is headQ: Could you briefly describe how Diarrhea Planet ing in or is it just growing organically? Photo provided came together? Four members of Nashville band Diarrhea Planet pose for a photo. The A: You know, all the initial songs were just written very band will play at 6 p.m. Saturday on the main stage at Norman Music half-assedly, you know, there was just not an element of Festival.

Apr. 24-27

Thursday, Thur ursd Apr. 24 Student Success Series: Stress Management | 4 p.m. in Wagner S gner Hall Roo Room 245. Don’t buckle under stress and learn how to manage anage it instead with Nicole Kendrick from the Department of Freshman Programs. No registration is required, but come on time to make sure you get a seat. For more information, please contact Student Learning Center, studentlearning@ou.edu. Speaker: Holocaust Survivor, Eva Unterman | 6:30 p.m. at Robert S. Kerr Auditorium, Sam Noble Museum. Since 1978 Eva Unterman has told her story to thousands of students. Her commitment to Holocaust education has become her lifelong mission. Eva has truly shaped the way Oklahoma communities understand, learn, and commemorate the Holocaust. For more information, please contact Hillel, jason@ouhillel.org “Shakers” | 8 p.m. at Gilson Studio Theatre, Old Science Hall. Helmerich School of Drama presents SHAKERS a comedy by John Godber & Jane Thornton. This is a student-directed production. uction. r. For more ore Additional showings: April 25 & 26. Tickets $5 at the door. 21. information, please contact School of Drama, 405-325-4021.

Friday, Apr. 25 Friday Frid Sooner Idol | 7 p.m. in Meacham Auditorium, Oklahoma Memorial Union. Come enjoy the annual American-Idol based signing competition, where 10 of the best singers on campus compete against each other to win scholarships and the title of Sooner Idol. This event is FREE and open to all students. Presented by the Union Programming Board, upb.ou.edu. Singing Sooners Spring Show | 8 p.m. at Sharp Concert Hall. The Scholl of Music presents this show that is free and open to the public. For more info, contact 405-325-2081. Contemporary Dance Oklahoma | 8 p.m at the Rupel J. Jones Theatre. University Theatre presents Contemporary Dance Oklahoma, an exciting mix of new choreography and works from the CDO repertory. Rated PG. Additional showing: April 26. Tickets: $22 Adult, $18 Senior Adult, Military, OU Faculty and Staff, $14 Student. dent.

Saturday, Apr. 26 Softball vs UAB | 2 p.m. & 4 p.m. at Marita Hynes Field. The OU Softball regular season is winding down as they host perennial Conference USA power UAB in a late-season non-conference matchup. Come check out the defending National Champions in a doubleheader before Dead Week studying begins. Mr. & Miss Black OU Scholarship Pageant | 7 p.m., Reynolds Performing Arts Center. The Mr. & Miss Black OU Scholarship Pageant is an annual competition hosted by the Black Student Association that promotes the excellence of African American men and women on our campus. OU Student Tickets: $5; Non-OU Student Tickets: $7 Presale, $10 At Door. To purchase tickets visit, http://www.stubwire.com/t/lb7kxlsg. Concert Gala | 8 p.m. in Sharp Concert Hall. School of Music and Sutton Concert Series present Concerto Gala, OU Symphony Orchestra Winners of this year’s OU School of Music Concerto Competition. Tickets: $9 Adult, $5 Student. For more information, contact ontact 405-325-4101. 405-325

Sunday, Apr. 27 Softball vs UAB | 12 p.m. at Marita Hynes Field. The Sooners close out their series with UAB. Hornsemble | 6 p.m. in Sharp Concert Hall. The School of Music presents Hornsemble, a concert that is free and open to the public. For more info, contact 405-325-2081. Collegium Musicum | 8 p.m. in Sharp Concert Hall. The School of Music and Sutton Concert Series present Collegium Musicum, directed by Eugene Enrico. Tickets: $9 Adult, $5 Student. For more information, contact the he Fine Arts Box Office (405) 325-4101.

This University in compliance with all applicable federal and state laws and regulations does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, sex, sexual orientation, genetic information, age, religion, disability, political beliefs, or status as a veteran in any of its policies, practices or procedures. This includes but is not limited to admissions, employment, financial aid and educational services, www.ou.edu/eoo. For accommodations on the basis of disability, please contact the sponsoring department of any program or event.


6

• Thursday, April 24, 2014

SPORTS

OUDaily.com ››

Julia Nelson, sports editor Joe Mussatto, assistant editor dailysports@ou.edu • phone: 405-325-3666 oudaily.com/sports • Twitter: @OUDailySports

Find out how the softball team beat central Arkansas and North Texas earlier this week.

BIG 12 CHAMPIONSHIPS

As the semester comes to a close, teams are wrapping up their seasons with conference championships women’s golf

OU to tee off against UT Trent Crabtree Golf Beat Reporter

Astrud Reed/The Daily

Then sophomore Anne-Catherine Tanguay tees off on hole four in the Bedlam Cup’s 2012 morning alternate shot match against OSU.

Presidential Dream Course Public Lecture: Fifty Years of Family Change: From Consensus to Complexity Frank F. Furstenberg, Jr. is the Zellerbach Family Professor, Emeritus of Sociology and Research Associate in the Population Studies Center at the University of Pennsylvania. His interest in the American family began at Columbia University where he received his Ph.D. in 1967. He is author of 0DQDJLQJ WR 0DNH ,W 8UEDQ )DPLOLHV LQ +LJK 5LVN 1HLJKERUKRRGV (University of Chicago Press, 1999) and 'HVWLQLHV RI WKH 'LVDGYDQWDJHG 7HHQDJH &KLOGEHDULQJ DQG 3XEOLF 3ROLF\(Russell Sage Foundation, 2007). His previous books and articles center on children, youth, families, and the public. His current research projects focus on the family in the context of disadvantaged urban neighborhoods, adolescent sexual behavior, cross national research on children's well-being, and urban education. He is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the Institute of Medicine.

Dr. Frank Furstenberg, Jr. April 29th, 2014 • 7:30pm Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History Robert S. Kerr Auditorium The mission of the University of Oklahoma is to provide the best possible educational experience for our students through excellence in teaching, research and creative activity, and service to the state and society.

The OU women’s golf team will be in enemy territory Friday as they travel to Austin for the Big 12 championships. The Sooners are looking to win their sixth conference title their second in three years. Oklahoma will also try to regain its early season form. The team has struggled lately, placing outside the top five in the last two tournaments. H e a d c o a c h Ve r o n i q u e Drouin-Luttrell believes that this week will be a chance to start with a clean slate. “I tell the girls all the time it’s a different season. We’re starting over,” Drouin-Luttrell said. The No. 11 Sooners are one of only two teams in the Big 12 currently ranked in the top 25. The defending Big 12 champions, No. 16 Oklahoma State, is the squad likely to give OU the most trouble. The Texas Longhorns will be playing on their home course, so there is an outside possibility they could make a run come Sunday. “Anything can happen, and you kind of have to go one tournament at a time. Just play your game and see what happens in the end,” Drouin-Luttrell said However, Drouin-Luttrell said her team will be ready. She said they can’t afford to worry about their recent play. “What happened in the spring with scores and tournaments

and everything, it doesn’t matter now. The girls know and they’ve really been focused on their games,” Drouin-Luttrell said. The University of Texas Golf Club is a relatively long layout at a little over 7,000 yards but is also a large and wide-open golf course. Meandering through Texas Hill Country, the course consists of various water hazards and natural brush just off the fairways that should cause problems for the players. “We’ve played out here quite a bit the last few weeks and hopefully that’s what we needed. We’ve played well and had some good scores, so hopefully that boosts their confidence,” DrouinLuttrell said. The tournament is a three-day, 54-hole event. Live scoring available at golfstat.com. Trent Crabtree trent.j.crabtree-1@ou.edu

Are you on Twitter? Stay connected with The Daily

@OUDaily, @OUDailyArts, @OUDailySports @OUDailyOpinion

FRESHMEN ENROLL NOW! DID YOU KNOW THAT ENROLLING IN AT LEAST 15 HOURS EACH SEMESTER OR 30 HOURS EACH YEAR HELPS YOU STAY ON TRACK FOR GRADUATION?

This lecture is free and open to the public. Accommodations on the basis of disability are available by contacting 325-1751. This publication, printed by the Sociology Department, is issued by the University of Oklahoma. 100 copies have been prepared and distributed at no cost to the taxpayers of the State of Oklahoma. The University of Oklahoma in compliance with all applicable federal and state laws and regulations does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, sexual orientation, genetic information, sex, age religion, disability, political beliefs, or status as a veteran in any of its policies, practices or procedures. This includes but is not limited to admissions, employment, financial aid and educational services. For questions regarding discriminations, sexual assault, sexual misconduct, or sexual harassment, please contact the Office(s) of Institutional Equity as may be applicable -- Norman campus at (405) 3253546, the Health Sciences Center at (405) 271-2110 or the OU-Tulsa Title IX Office at (918) 660-3107. Please see www.ou.edu/eoo

SO DON’T FORGET... The University of Oklahoma is an equal opportunity institution.


SPORTS

Thursday, April 24, 2014 •

BIG 12 CHAMPIONSHIPS MEN’S TENNIS

WOMEN’S TENNIS

OU gets second crack at TCU

Ritchie’s return boosts Sooners

BRADY VARDEMAN

ANDREW CLARK

Men’s Tennis Beat Reporter

After closing out its regular season with a Bedlam win, Oklahoma men’s tennis heads to Fort Worth, Texas, this weekend for the Big 12 Championship tournament. Because of conference tiebreaker rules, the Sooners, who finished 21-2 and 4-1 in Big 12 play, is seeded third in the tournament, despite being rated No. 3 nationally in the latest ITA rankings. Unlike the top two seeds Baylor and Texas, the Sooners will have to play a first round match. Head coach John Roddick says the extra match can help the team, however. “If we go out and play the way we know we can play, it can be a very good thing going into the tournament,” he said. “But if we have a tough match and don’t do things the way we are capable of doing, it can hurt us. It’s all about our mindset.” The first match is not going to be easy for OU, however. They face TCU, a team which the Sooners barely got by less than a month ago. “No one’s disappointed that we play TCU again,” junior Dane Webb said. “Last time it was way too close.” To make things even more difficult for Oklahoma, the Big 12 tournament is at the Horned Frogs’ facility, where Webb said the home-court advantage was noticeable earlier this season. “They were pretty annoying,” he said. “But if we go in professional and take care of business, it can be a totally different match than last time.” Despite a tough first round, no one on the team is turning a blind eye to the possibility of playing rival Texas, which awaits the winner of OU and TCU. The Longhorns are the Sooners’ only conference loss this season. They upended Oklahoma 3-4 in Austin. “Everyone wants another shot at Texas,” Webb said. “We know we can make it

different this time.” When the TCU match begins Friday, the Sooners will enter the final stage of their quest for a third consecutive Big 12 Championship, something no Oklahoma team has ever done before. Junior Nick Papac said this team is much different than other Sooner teams of the past. “What sets us apart is our competitiveness in practice,” he said. “In practice, we all want to kill each other. No one wants to lose. “There’s not one guy in the locker room who is going to let a point go and that translates to the actual matches.” Oklahoma tips-off against TCU at noon on Friday in Fort Worth. Coverage of the match can be found on Twitter at @ OU_MTennis. Brady Vardeman brady.vardeman@gmail.com

‘‘

No one’s diddapointed that we play TCU again. Last time it was way too close.” DANE WEBB, JUNIOR TENNIS PLAYER

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Women’s Tennis Beat Reporter

The OU women’s tennis team finished its regular season with a 4-3 Bedlam victory on Saturday and is now moving on to the Big 12 Championships. The team faces Texas Tech first, to which Oklahoma lost 2-5 in the regular season on March 21. The result of the upcoming match will more than likely be different from the last, as the Sooners were without reigning Big 12 Player of the Week, senior Whitney Ritchie. Ritchie played doubles with fellow senior Mia Lancaster, but could not muster the strength to play singles because of a stomach bug. As a result, every member of the team was forced to play one spot up from their normal spots, shaking up the lineup and the Sooners’ confidence. Sophomore Abbi Melrose, who clinched Saturday’s Bedlam victor y with a 3-6, 6-1, 7-6 match victory over Carla Tur Mari, said having Ritchie back in the lineup would tremendously help the team on Friday. “It will bump everyone down one spot,” she said. “She’ll be healthier in doubles, and the entire singles lineup will be better, so I think it will definitely help.” Ritchie’s importance to the team was on full display against Oklahoma State on Saturday. She defeated her opponent, No. 44 ranked Viktoriya Lushkova, 6-1, 6-1 after losing to her on March 9 in two sets. Ritchie said that not only will her return to the lineup make a big impact on the outcome on Friday against Tech, but the team has also grown since its first meeting. “It helps moving everyone down one spot back to their normal positions,” she said. “But I think if we keep playing the way we’ve been playing, we’ll be just fine.”

Head coach David Mullins is very confident that his team will beat Tech on Friday, and the Sooners are better than the Red Raiders with Ritchie in the lineup. “Overall, we’ve had the better year than Tech,” he said. “Having Ritchie back in the lineup makes the match so much different, and their coach knows it as well. ‘With Ritchie in the lineup, you guys beat us.’ We have to go and prove that.” The Sooners expect different results this time around against the Red Raiders with Ritchie back healthy in the lineup. The Big 12 Championships will be hosted by Texas Christian University in Fort Worth, Texas. The Sooners will face the Red Raiders at noon Friday. Andrew Clark andrew.t.clark-1@ ou.edu

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• Thursday, April 24, 2014

President David Boren

Invites All Students To an open discussion of the University’s budget, including possible impacts related to tuition and fees for the next school year.

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