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LIFE & ARTS • PAGE 8

Reworked classic tale short on humor, but well performed The University Theatre production of “The Odyssey” featured a strong cast — including Stella Highfill and Madison Neiderhauser (shown right) — but the attempted humor was a little heavy handed at times, The Daily’s Sydney Allen writes.

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Tuesday, April 5, 2011

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Regents address debt refinancing Boren points out improvements at OU, tuition and fees to be discussed next NICHOLAS HARRISON The Oklahoma Daily

The Oklahoma State Regents for Higher Education held its first meeting on OU’s campus since January 2008 Monday in Wagner Hall. The regents — which oversee the state’s

higher education system — opened the meeting with an address from OU President David Boren, who discussed the advancements made at OU since he took office in 1994. Boren pointed to improvements in graduation rates, ACT test scores, library acquisitions, faculty salaries, endowed chair positions, scholarship availability for students and National Merit scholarship recipients on campus as indicators the university was doing well.

After hearing from Boren, the state regents voted to certify statements necessary to refinance university debt obligations. Under the plan, the university will issue bonds to raise $73.8 million. In other OU business, the state regents approved changes to the requirements for the Master of Education in Special Education, SEE REGENTS PAGE 2

MEDICAL

Sooner recovers from head injury Freshman football player resumes active role after suffering concussion

BOOMER KRUGER

RENEÉ SELANDERS The Oklahoma Daily

HILLARY MCLAIN/THE DAILY

Taking hits is defensive tackle Daniel Noble’s job, but one blind-side hit in the first half of the Oct. 16 Iowa State football game packed a punch he wasn’t expecting. The University College freshman remembers chasing down Iowa State’s quarterback before an offensive lineman brought him down. The next couple of plays are a foggy blur, Noble said, recalling the moments leading up to a physical and neurological assessment that diagnosed him with a concussion. No b l e’s c o n cussion was one of 12 total conDaniel cussions for the Sooner football Noble team in the 2010 season that resulted in six missed games, 53 missed practices and 222 missed days, according to an OU report submitted to the NCAA and Datalys Center for Sports Injury Research and Prevention. After the hit in the Iowa State game, Noble said he remembers feeling disoriented and unsure of what he was supposed to be doing. He said he turned to teammate Adrian Taylor while still on the field, and Taylor got the attention of OU trainers. At that time trainers and team physicians led Noble off the field and performed and assessed his cognitive function, memory and limb movement. He had an X-ray immediately after the game, and eventually had two MRIs, an EEG, a computer exam that tested his reflexes and memory and a written test that examined his ability to memorize sequences. Noble was out for the rest of the season recovering from a concussion. He underwent repeated tests, physical and mental examinations and rehabilitation. The last two months of the semester were particularly difficult, Noble said. He hadn’t expected his concussion to keep him out of the game for so long. Once it became apparent that he wouldn’t be back on the field the rest of the season, he focused on his schoolwork and recovery process. “It just felt like time went by real fast. Like it felt like days and it had been weeks,” Noble said. “You just kind of lose track of time. I was just trying to keep up with my school work and that was it.” The recovery time from a concussion varies among individual cases, said Brock Schnebel, OU Athletics head physician. Because concussions are a risk in any athletic sport, a routine procedure is in place to assess the severity of the injury. Schnebel said he and a team of physicians and trainers first make sure athletes are safe with whatever cognitive deficit they may have and are able to breathe and function properly. Next, once the concussion has

Garrett Stowe, sculpting graduate student, smooths out clay to make a bone model for a baby Apatosaurus at the Sam Nobel Museum of Natural History. Stowe is helping create and paint the bone models to construct a juvenile SEE BONES PAGE 2 of the species for the museum”s “Little Apatosaur Project.”

SEE INJURY PAGE 3

JAMES CORLEY/THE DAILY

OU men’s basketball coach Lon Kruger and Athletic Director Joe Castilione walk in to a crowd of students Monday afternoon at McCasland Field House. The university announced Kruger as its new men’s basketball coach Friday and held a rally and press conference Monday. For complete coverage, see page 7.

Student sculpts dinosaur bone models Bones will be used to build natural history museum’s Apatosaurus exhibit HILLARY MCLAIN The Oklahoma Daily

An OU student is painting history as he works with the Sam Noble Museum of Natural History to create and build the museum’s first juvenile Apatosaurus dinosaur exhibit. Garrett Stowe, sculpting graduate student, was hired by the museum as temporary help to give the “Little Apatosaurus Project” a jump-start. Stowe has been sculpting, modeling and painting bones to take on the appearance of real fossils. Other students have volunteered with the project to learn the process. So far, the project has been

A LOOK AT WHAT’S ON Visit the news section to read about a symposium that will be held to inform students about entrepreneurship opportunities

THE OKLAHOMA DAILY VOL. 96, NO. 125 © 2011 OU Publications Board www.OUDaily.com www.facebook.com/OUDaily www.twitter.com/OUDaily

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TODAY’S WEATHER

72°| 53° Tomorrow: Mostly sunny, high of 84 degrees


2 • Tuesday, April 5, 2011

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CAMPUS

Chase Cook, managing editor dailynews@ou.edu • phone: 405-325-3666

REGENTS: OU tuition on upcoming agenda Continued from page 1 the creation of the College of International Studies, the renaming of the Department of Geography as the Department of Geography

Today around campus » Gray Hale’s Exhibition will be on display from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art’s Lightwell Gallery. » A librarian will host a “Search Factiva” workshop to provide tips to navigate and search the online Factiva database. It will be from 10 to 11 a.m. in Bizzell Memorial Library, Room 149D. » A noon pianist concert will be held noon to 12:30 p.m. in the Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art’s Sandy Bell Gallery. » The E. Deane Kanaly Lecture Series presented by Michael F. Price College of Business will feature James R. Young, chairman, president and CEO of Union Pacific Corp. The lecture will be held at 1 p.m in the Union’s Meacham Auditorium. » The Writing Center and Student Learning Center will hold “Research Writing II” for students from 3 to 4 p.m. in Wagner Hall, Room 280. » 2011 Student Film Festival submissions are due at 5 p.m. in the Student Life office located in the Union, Suite 370. » A member of University College’s action staff, Sarah Swenson, will present a seminar titled “Preparing for Medical School” from 5 to 6 p.m. in Wagner Hall, Room 245. » OU baseball will play Oklahoma State at 6:30 p.m. at L. Dale Mitchell Park. » Mezzo-Soprano Marilyn Horne will begin her master classes for OU School of Music singers from 7 to 9 p.m. in Catlett Music Center’s Morris R. Pitman Recital Hall.

Wednesday, April 6 » Gray Hale’s Exhibition will be on display from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art’s Lightwell Gallery. » OU Fitness and Recreation will feature a health and fitness seminar about designing and sticking to an exercise plan from noon to 12:45 p.m. » University College’s UC Action Staff will present “Time Management” from 2 to 3 p.m. in Adams Center’s Muldrow Tower, Room 105.

BRIEF

Students to write letters to support Africa A student organization is hosting an event tonight to write letters to an Oklahoma senator concerning foreign aid budget cuts. The Facilitating African Rehabilitation student organization will partner with the ONE effort to write letters to Sen. Jim Inhofe, R-Okla., concerning possible budget cuts to foreign aid, said Erin Weese, University College freshman and organization president. The ONE effort is a group whose focus is fighting poverty and preventable disease in Africa, according to the group’s website. The hope is to complete at least 50 letters by the end of the event, Weese said. The budget cuts would affect organizations working to alleviate hunger problems and provide vaccinations to people in Africa, Weese said. Weese said her student organization has invited other student groups across campus to participate in the event and expects to have several members from those groups participate. The event will begin at 7:30 tonight in the Henderson-Tolson Cultural Center. All students are welcome to attend. — Hillary McLain/The Daily

» Corrections The Oklahoma Daily has a commitment to serve readers by providing accurate coverage and analysis. Errors are corrected as they are identified. Readers should bring errors to The Daily’s attention for further investigation by emailing dailynews@ou.edu. » In Monday’s Our View, the organizers of the Big Event were incorrectly identified. The event is organized through Student Affairs.

Stay connected with The Daily on Twitter for campus, sports and entertainment news

@OUDaily @OUDailySports @OUDailyArts

and Environmental Sustainability, and the awarding of honorar y Doctor of Humane Letters d e g re e s t o f i v e p e o p l e — G e o r g e He n d e r s o n , Timothy Headington, J. Clifford Hudson, Rev. Dr.

Serene Jones and Secretary of Defense Robert Gates. The next state regent’s meeting will be a public hearing on tuition and fees at 10:30 a.m. April 20 on the second floor of 655 Research Parkway in Oklahoma City.

Anyone who wishes to address the state regents regarding tuition and fees must notify the Chancellor’s Office by 5 p.m. April 15. The Chancellor’s Office can be contacted by calling 405-225-9116.

BONES: First two dinosaur skeletons will be fabricated in August Continued from page 1

When it lived under way for nearly two months. In that time, Stowe and Kyle Davies, museum preparator, have worked to give the dinosaur as realistic an appearance as possible. The Apatosaurus is a long-neck sauropod from the Jurassic Period, said Nick Czaplewski, vertebrae paleontology curator. Formerly known as the Brontosaurus, the Apatosaurus could reach up to 75 feet fully grown, according to the National Geographic website. This Apatosaurus is estimated to be one to two years old, and will be about 12- to 13feet long from head to tail, Davies said. The museum is in possession of a few, but not all, of the juvenile’s bones. Missing bones are estimated and sketched by Davies, Stowe said. Clay models are made and then scanned and printed by 3D machines into hard plastic models in conjunction with OU Engineering, Davies said. After the plastic models are made, molds are created from the models out of silicone, rubber and plaster. The molds will be used by the museum for up to 10 years, Stowe said. The new models are made and set up with the rubber mold, and Stowe paints them to look like authentic fossils. Other museum staff and volunteers are working to learn this process. The museum will be making eight of these models and possibly trading them with other museums or selling them, Stowe said.

The Apatosaurus is from the Jurassic Period, part of the Mesozoic Era, which is divided into three periods: » Triassic (248 to 206 million years ago) » Jurassic (206 to 144 million years ago) » Cretaceous (144 to 65 million years ago) — Source: University of California

Because of how fast the project is moving, it is an expensive process, Davies said. “It is a large budget project, partly because we are pushing it along,” Davies said. “It is based on donated money.” Bones of the baby Apatosaurus were uncovered in the 1930s and 1940s and have been housed in collections since, Czaplewski said. The casts are now being made because of new funding through donations and an increased interest in dinosaurs. Stowe said this job has also helped him to refine his technique and further his skills while doing something he enjoys. “I’ve had a bunch of really crappy jobs, you know like just to support yourself,” Stowe said. “To have a job doing what I’m studying is really rewarding.” Stowe said he will probably continue to work on this project until the first two skeletons are fabricated, likely in August. The casts will be used in teaching a dinosaur class at the museum, and for research of graduate students and visiting researchers, Czaplewski said.


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NEWS

Tuesday, April 5, 2011 • 3

INJURY: Helmet sensors help trainers monitor impacts of game hits

STUDENTS CARVE NAME INTO HISTORY

Continued from page 1

CHRIS MILLER/THE DAILY

Aaron Blackerby, management information system systems and finance senior; Kylie Cowan, human relations junior; and Brianne Barker, communications junior, carve their names into the 2011 OU Leadership Table on Monday in the Oklahoma Memorial Union. Many campus organizations leaders and OU athletics team captains were invited to carve their names into the table, which will be stained, varnished and placed in the union’s Clarke-Anderson Room with a plaque, according to a press release.

Google includes Cherokee option Exposure should help native language’s conservation, history professor says

of the Cherokee nation who reside in the state and support their culture and history, Yarbrough said. “The Cherokee members living in Oklahoma can bring attention to some of the unique and interesting compoJIYEUN HEO The Oklahoma Daily nents of the state and their history,� Yarbrough said. Charles Foster said he has been teaching Cherokee for A traditional Native American language recently met the nine years at OU and is excited about Google supporttechnological cutting edge when the search engine Google ing it because of the increased visibility it can lend to the allowed users to read, write and access inCherokee nation. formation in Cherokee. Spoken Cherokee has been around for The Cherokee members millennia, but the written language has Google users can now select Cherokee from the website’s language tools page only been around for an estimated 200 living in Oklahoma to translate all text accessed through the years, Foster said. can bring attention to website into the Cherokee language. With the implementation of Cherokee some of the unique “I think it will give positive impact, esby Google, Foster said he feels positiveand interesting pecially for the younger members of the ly about the continued existence of the components of the Cherokee nation who are more comfortCherokee language. state and their history.� able with using computers and more faMary Linn, associate professor of anmiliar using that kind of equipment,� thropology, said Google’s support can said OU history professor Fay Yarbrough. help support a revival of the language. — FAY YARBROUGH, “In order for the language to continue to “Also not just Cherokee nation, but HISTORY PROFESSOR exist, there has to be many different ways other people can get interested in the nafor people to access the language as often as possible.� tive culture through the avenue of language, so I think it is Access to the Cherokee language through Google is im- really important and vital that Google is doing this,� Linn portant for Oklahoma because of the numerous members said.

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been diagnosed, athletes are protected from loud noises or other stimuli. A gradual, repeated succession of tests track athletes’ recovery progress, and athletes’ teams also work to ensure they are keeping up with their academics. “They may have some cognitive function that slows down their ability to take tests and function academically,� Schnebel said. Noble said he was able to maintain a high grade-point average, but simple tasks like working on a computer were difficult due to a high sensitivity to light. He also said frequent throbbing headaches persisted throughout his recovery time. Physicians and trainers associated with Sooner football have been learning more about the causes and effects of concussions that occur on the They held me football team. out when, of The Head Impact Telemetry course, us System is a technology replayers want search tool that allows OU football trainers and physito get back cians to analyze forces that in there. But may result in concussions. The they told me HIT System gathers data from I couldn’t. I a tiny computer sensor in a listened to them helmet, and allows trainers on and I’m thankful the sidelines to monitor the impact of certain hits taken in for that.� a practice or game. The technology is a research — DANIEL NOBLE, tool, and not an instrument for FRESHMAN diagnosis, head football trainDEFENSIVE TACKLE er Scott Anderson said. The team implemented the technology in 2004 to gather more information about concussive forces. “It isn’t going to dictate to us that we hold a player out, and it isn’t going to help us particularly in our returnto-play decision,� Anderson said. “It’s really a research tool, and we have used it for that. We take our data and put it into a body of data, just seeing what we can learn as much as anything at this point.� Noble is back in the game this spring. He began practice once classes resumed after spring break. He credits the football training staff with his recovery. “They held me out when, of course, us players want to get back in there,� he said. “But they told me I couldn’t. I listened to them and I’m thankful for that.� He also said the athlete’s academic center psychiatrist gave him lots of support, since being out of practice and away from his teammates was difficult. Though the nature of football puts Noble at risk for other injuries, including another concussion, he said he’s ready to be back in the game. “I’m not gonna change the way I play,� Noble said.


4 • Tuesday, April 5, 2011

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OPINION

THUMBS UP ›› OU welcomes Lon Kruger as next men’s basketball coach (see page 7)

Tim French, opinion editor dailyopinion@ou.edu • phone: 405-325-3666

OUR VIEW

COLUMN

The limits of free speech

Senators fail to understand professor’s roles on campus

Last September, pastor Terry Jones planned to hold a pub- includes some very pertinent language in regards to Jones’ aclic burning of the Quran, the Islamic holy book. Due to public tions: “the Government may not prohibit the verbal or nonoutcry condemning the Florida pastor, he decided to forgo his verbal expression of an idea merely because society finds the book burning. idea offensive or disagreeable.” Fast forward six months later. Jones carried out his pubWe believe a majority of citizens would agree the burning lic condemnation of the Quran. To further of the Quran is offensive and disagreeable, prove his point, he even held a mock trial, but even this deplorable act is protected by Even though our which found the Quran guilty of crimes the precedent set by Texas V. Johnson. government will protect against humanity. The punishment: death Even though President Barack Obama by fire. our freedom of speech, and U.S. General David Petraeus have What Jones didn’t plan for was the expublicly condemned Jones’ trial and exit does not mean other tent Afghan protestors were willing to go to ecution, Congress has yet to address the country’s citizens will condemn the pastor’s actions. After news of issue. Meaning, until an amendment is look at symbolic speech added to the Constitution, the burning Jones’ actions reached Afghanistan, mobs in the same way.” formed protesting the Florida pastor and of religious texts will be protected by the his congregation. Violence broke out, killUnited States. ing more than 20 individuals and injuring more than 150, all As Americans we should be careful how we use our freebecause one preacher chose to burn another group’s religious doms. Just because we have the ability to burn a religious text text. doesn’t mean we should use it. As Jones has proven, even Despite how deplorable Jones’ actions were and how dire though our government will protect our freedom of speech, the consequences are for his choices, the burning of the Quran it does not mean other country’s citizens will look at symbolic is protected by the First Amendment defining it as symbolic speech in the same way. speech. Instead of using our rights to free speech to push people’s In 1984, Gregory Lee Johnson stood outside the Republican buttons, we should look to extend an invitation to discuss National Convention in Dallas and set fire to an American flag. our differences and create understanding among our global Johnson was protesting Ronald Reagan’s platform issues and community. wanted to destroy a symbol of America in response. Johnson While Jones should be condemned for his actions, murwas initially convicted of desecrating “a venerated object,” dering innocent bystanders only reinforces stereotypes and which violated Texas statutes, according to court documents. makes discussing the topic of religious understanding that The case was appealed all the way to the U.S. Supreme much harder. Court where it ruled Johnson’s actions were protected as symbolic speech under the First Amendment. The decision Comment on this column at OUDaily.com

COLUMN

Triumphs of the modern CEO Imagine you are responsible for hiring 12 times that of a university professor, 18 someone to run a company and you are trytimes that of a police officer, 20 times that STAFF COLUMN UMN ing to determine how much to pay them. How of a teacher or 26 times that of a U.S. army would you calculate what a fair wage would sergeant., according to figures provided by Tom Taylor or be? Here’s one way to do it. the U.S. Department of Labor. Consider the fact that Americans have Other than Hercules, it is difficult to bedeemed the minimum value of one hour of lieve that an hour of one man’s labor can be labor from one individual to be worth $7.25 per hour. This worth that of 15 men, let alone 63. The compensation given is the labor cost for someone with minimal education and to executives isn’t because of their intelligence, as this would minimum experience. suggest executives are smarter than chemical engineers and Now as you want the company to be a success, it is prob- professors. It’s not compensating for stress, as this would ably prudent to hire someone who has more than just a high imply CEO’s undergo more stress than the president, police school diploma. In fact, someone with a Bachelor’s degree officers and combat soldiers. It’s not compensating for their or Master’s degree is probably preferred. As higher educa- contribution to society, as this would imply they contribute tion costs time and money, your new executive should be more to society than teachers. Lastly, it’s not compensating compensated for undergoing these expenses. For argu- for experience as, this would suggest they have more experiment’s sake, let us assume the labor of someone with this ence than the perpetually elected members of Congress. level of education is worth five times the labor of someone Corporate executives are not even paid in relation to their with no education. This works out to be $36.25 per hour. contribution to the company’s success as most compaAs you will probably want to hire nies rely on the engineers and the sales someone who possesses both an educapeople to invent and market the prodThe compensation given to ucts that bring the company a profit. tion and experience, we must determine executives isn’t because what the experience is worth. In this Companies can exist without a compeof their intelligence as this tent CEO, but no company can survive if case, we’ll say it’s worth double the salary of someone with an education and it doesn’t have competent sales people would suggest executives no experience. This brings the hourly are smarter than chemical and innovators. wage to $72.50. the average CEO of a Fortune engineers and professors.” 500Consider The position you are hiring for is one company makes $12.8 million a year. that is potentially stressful so we’ll comThis is the equivalent of the combined pensate our new executive by paying him or her an extra labor of 848 minimum wage workers. If the CEO of a chemi$36.25 hour. This brings our total hourly wage to $108.75 — cal company is compensated at this amount, the company which is a pretty decent wage any way you look at it. is essentially stating that the work of this one man is worth As the job will probably entail many nights of working more than the combined contributions of 151 of its chemilong hours, we should probably pay our new hire more than cal engineers — the same engineers that keep the company he would make if we only expected him to work 40 hours per competitive by developing new products. week. As it is difficult to estimate just how many hours per The outrageous salaries of CEO’s are being driven by a week he will work, we’ll just assume that he works 24 hours runaway executive compensation system where the corpoa day, seven days per week, and does not receive vacation rate boards setting the salaries of executives benefit by seedays or sick days. This brings the yearly salary to just under ing their own salaries increase as well. a million dollars a year ($952,650). Anyway you look at it, there is no justifying how these exEvery time our executive sleeps for eight hours, we can as- ecutives are paid in relation to their education, stress, intelsume that his dreams are more productive than 120 hours of ligence or productivity. labor by a minimum wage employee. By the time the year is over we can assume his productivity is worth more than the — Tom Taylor, work of 63 minimum wage workers. In fact, his annual pro- political science graduate student ductivity should be twice that of the U.S. President, five times that of a congressman, 11 times that of a chemical engineer, Comment on this column at OUdaily.com

LETTER TO THE EDITOR

Students’ rude behavior intolerable I have been going to OU for almost six years now. In all that time, Brother Jed or some other group has been calling students whores and whoremongers and every other awful word. Sometimes I snicker, sometimes I stop and listen, but most of the time I walk away. What Brother Jed — or anyone like him on campus — thinks is of no consequence. They want to simply rile people up in order to spread their form of evangelizing. I have even seen the best professors debate them publicly and win. I was proud of this moment. However, I was not proud to see the rude, callous and violent behavior OU students displayed toward these preachers. I saw people yell and scream about those preachers going to hell or telling them simply to go to

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hell. I saw a man walk right up to a woman and yell in her face I don’t care so loud she physically moved away. This action was cheered for by the crowd. I saw OU students not being scholars or diplomats, but an unruly mob that for a moment I feared would attack a woman. We are students of the arts and sciences. We are not a device to lynch or persecute people for their beliefs no matter how ridiculous or callous they are. For the first time, I am more ashamed of the student body than some crazy preacher. I can ignore a crazy preacher, but I have to live with all of you.

Autumn Huffman Ashley West Chris Lusk Michael Lloyd Judy Gibbs Robinson

160 Copeland Hall, 860 Van Vleet Oval Norman, Okla. 73019-0270

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Footage of people protesting cuts to elSTAFF COLUMN ementary school education from Wisconsin Kate McPherson on to Texas has dominated the airwaves lately, but primary education isn’t the only thing facing cuts. Recent proposed legislation to cut higher education budgets has been remarkably misguided. In a budget crunch like the one we’re currently in, it is understandable some of the money currently allocated for education will be cut. Tuition will probably rise. Programs might be downsized. It’s unfortunate but expected in today’s economic climate. However, some of the proposed time and moneysaving efforts in the area go too far, including one introduced piece of legislation in Oklahoma. State Rep. Mike Reynolds, R-Oklahoma City, proposed a bill on March 1 requiring full-time university faculty to spend at least 20 On the surface, hours a week interacting with students. Reynolds’s Though the proposal will proposal not go to the Oklahoma State seems like a House floor, the fact Reynolds great idea. considered this to be a good I, like most idea is indicative of a larger people, am problem: the government is meddling in education affairs always in it does not truly understand. favor of more On the surface, Reynolds’s accessible proposal seems like a great teachers, but idea. I, like most people, am alto require ways in favor of more accessible teachers, but to require proprofessors fessors to spend a minimum of to spend a 20 hours in a teaching capacity minimum of is absurd. Although professors’ 20 hours in primary purpose is to educate a teaching students, they serve their unicapacity is versities in many other ways. Professors serve on comabsurd.” mittees that essentially run the university. A quick glance at the College of Arts and Sciences’s website shows faculty members hold eight positions on OU’s Executive Committee as well as 31 positions in committees dealing with courses and curriculum, teaching and research support, information technology, nominations, student scholarships and awards. Faculty members can also serve in the Faculty Senate. All of these committees are essential to the way OU is run, and they take up substantial amounts of professors’ time — time Reynolds apparently thinks is plentiful. After teaching, perhaps the most important thing tenure-track faculty do is research. It is this research that not only can further knowledge in a given topic but also bring prestige to a university. Professors who are well known for their research have the opportunity to lecture at other universities or events or be guest commentators on television and radio shows. They can apply for Fulbright grants, a very prestigious award allowing professors to take a sabbatical to focus on their research in a foreign country. Extensive research can be translated into books or documentaries. All of these things raise OU’s prestige. Our professors’ high level of research activity led to OU recently being named a Carnegie Foundation Very High Research university, the foundation’s highest designation. OU is the only university in Oklahoma to achieve this designation. President David Boren said in a press release this award would help Oklahoma grow economically because business start-ups frequently look to be near high-performing research institutions. Forcing professors to spend less time doing research of this kind would be a mistake affecting not only the university but also the surrounding communities. Though this particular bill has been tabled, we should be cautious and ensure our government leaders continue to respect higher education. — Kate McPherson, journalism sophomore

Comment on this column at OUDaily.com

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— Joshua Drake, educational psychology graduate student

Life & Arts Editor Photo Editor Online Editor Multimedia Editor Editorial Adviser

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The Oklahoma Daily is a public forum and OU’s independent student voice.

Guest columns are accepted and printed at the editor’s discretion.

Letters should concentrate on issues, not personalities, and should be fewer than 250 words, typed, double spaced and signed by the author(s). Letters will be edited for space. Students must list their major and classification. Submit letters Sunday through Thursday in 160 Copeland Hall. Letters also can be emailed to dailyopinion@ou.edu.

Our View is the voice of The Oklahoma Daily Editorial Board, which consists of the editorial staff. The board meets at 5 p.m. Sunday through Thursday in 160 Copeland Hall. Columnists’ and cartoonists’ opinions are not necessarily the opinions of The Daily Editorial Board.


WORLD

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Tuesday, April 5, 2011 • 5

U.N. opens fire in Ivory Coast

13 4

Fighters aiming to topple country’s strongman after decade in power

2

WORLD NEWS BRIEFS 1. Brussels

U.S. to withdraw strike jets from front-line Libya mission The U.S. military will pull its warplanes from front-line missions Monday and shift to a support role in the Libyan conflict, a NATO official said. Britain, France and other NATO allies will now provide the fighter and attack jets to conduct intercept and ground attack missions as they enforce a no-fly zone over this North African country. The hand-over is expected to take place later on Monday, a NATO official said.

2. Kinshasa, Congo

1 survivor in Congo plane crash Only one survivor has been confirmed among the 33 U.N. personnel and crew members aboard a plane that crashed in Congo on Monday, a U.N. spokesman said. U.N. spokesman Farhan Haq said the plane crashed Monday as it was landing in the city of Kinshasa. Haq did not say exactly how many people were believed killed so it was unclear whether anyone else may have survived. The cause of the crash was not immediately known.

3. Vienna

ABIDJAN, Ivory Coast — The United Nations and French forces opened fire with attack helicopters Monday on the arsenal of this country’s entrenched ruler, as columns of Ivorian fighters allied with his challenger finally pierced the city limit. The fighters are aiming to topple strongman Laurent Gbagbo after a decade in power had succeeded in taking nearly the entire countryside in just three days last week, but they faltered once they reached the country’s largest city, where the presidential palace and residence are located. M o n d a y ’s o f f e n s i v e marked an unprecedented escalation in the international community’s efforts to oust Gbagbo, who lost the presidential election in November yet has refused to cede power to Alassane Ouattara even as the world’s largest cocoa producer teetered on the brink of all-out civil war. The postelection violence has left hundreds dead — most of them Ouattara supporters — and has forced up to 1 million people to flee.

AP PHOTO

This handout photo provided by the French Defense Ministry on Sunday shows a French soldier patrolling as part of the French Force Licorne on Saturday in Port Bouet district of Abidjan. The United Nations mission in Ivory Coast began moving some 200 employees out of the main city Sunday after repeated attacks on its headquarters, as fighters loyal to the internationally recognized president prepared for a battle to oust the incumbent leader. Ouattara has used his considerable international clout to financially and diplomatically suffocate Gbagbo and pro-Ouattara forces before launching a dramatic military assault last week. On Monday, the U.N. fired on the Akouedo military base at around 5 p.m. local time to prevent Gbagbo’s forces from using heavy weapons against civilians, said the spokesman

for the U.N. Department of Peacekeeping Operations Nick Birnback. Explosions resonated from the city’s downtown core a few blocks from the presidential palace and near the base of the republican guard, and those living nearby barricaded their windows with mattresses. Flames could be seen licking the sky above the home of the staunchly pro-Gbagbo

republican guard. French President Nicolas Sarkozy said in a statement that he had authorized the 1,600-strong French Licorne force based here to help in the operation following an appeal from U.N. SecretaryGeneral Ban Ki-moon, who said that the use of force was necessary to prevent further attacks on civilians. — AP

Japan crisis a ‘major challenge’ Japan’s reactor crisis poses a major challenge with enormous implications for nuclear power, the head of the U.N.’s atomic watchdog said Monday, while separately appearing to criticize the operator of the crippled complex. Yukiya Amano, head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, also stressed the global nuclear community cannot take a “business-as-usual approach.” Lessons must be learned from the fact that the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant has been leaking radiation into the environment ever since it was hit March 11 by a massive tsunami, he said. Amano spoke at a meeting for experts from about 70 countries on scrutinizing the safety of nuclear power plants.

4. Acapulco, Mexico

Soldiers, gunmen clash kills 3 Authorities say a clash between soldiers and gunmen in the Mexican resort city of Acapulco left three people dead and caused a fire that destroyed a supermarket, movie complex and stores in a shopping center. The Public Safety Department in Guerrero state says a soldier and two gunmen were killed in the clash early Monday along a major thoroughfare in Acapulco. Acapulco police also found two human heads along a main avenue in the exclusive Las Brisas neighborhood. Factions of the Beltran Leyva cartel have been fighting for control of Acapulco since the December 2009 killing of cartel boss Arturo Beltran Leyva. — AP

Google Street View must offer anonymity Swiss court rules company must protect personal privacy before publishing faces, car tags GENEVA — A Swiss court has ruled that Google Inc. must guarantee anonymity before publishing faces and license plates captured in Switzerland for the popular street view service. The Federal Administrative Court largely sided with Switzerland’s data protection commissioner who claimed that Google was breaching citizens’ right to personal privacy, according to the ruling published Monday. Google said it was disappointed by the

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verdict and is considering an appeal to the Swiss supreme court. The Bern-based court said Google needs to ensure that all faces and vehicle license plates are blurred before uploading pictures to the service that provides panoramic views from various positions along the world’s streets. It also ordered the company obscure other identifying features, such as skin color and clothing, from people photographed in the vicinity of “sensitive establishments,” such as women’s shelters, retirement homes, prisons, schools, courts and hospitals. Google’s right to pursue its commercial

interests does not outweigh Swiss privacy laws, the court said. “What is at stake here is ultimately not a blanket prohibition of Google Street View but merely the publication on the Internet of images of individuals only where they have been made unrecognizable or, as the case may be, only where the consent of the individuals in question has been obtained,” the court said. It dismissed Google’s argument that if it ensured all photos were unrecognizable, it would have to pass on the cost to users. — AP


6 • Tuesday, April 5, 2011

The Oklahoma Daily | OUDaily.com

CLASSIFIEDS

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

Fax: 405-325-7517 Campus Address: COH 149A

HELP WANTED

AUTO INSURANCE

STUDENTPAYOUTS.COM Paid survey takers needed in Norman 100% FREE to join. Click on Surveys.

Auto Insurance

DEADLINES

Quotations anytime Foreign students welcomed JIM HOLMES INSURANCE, 321-4664

Line Ad ..................................................................................3 days prior Place line ad by 9:00 a.m. 3 business days prior to publication.

Are you outgoing, energetic and charismatic? Do you enjoy a fun working environment? If so, WE WANT YOU! Traditions Spirits is accepting applications for COCKTAIL WAITRESSES/WAITERS for Riverwind Casino. No experience necessary. We offer flexible schedules and an enjoyable environment in which to work.

Auto, Home, & Renters Insurance Want a quote? fespinoza@farmersagent.com

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.

PAYMENT s r

r

Seasonal Retail! Earn extra summer money now! Sooner Bloomers is now accepting applications for Spring season: Apr, May, June. FT/PT. Call Debbie at 476-2977 for interview.

TM

Payment is required at the time the ad is placed. Credit cards, cash, money orders or local checks accepted.

RATES

Walden Cleaners is now hiring for part time positions. 4-close M-F, 8:15-2:15 Sat. Apply in person at 505 Highland Parkway.

There is a 2 line minimum charge; approximately 42 characters per line, including spaces and punctuation. (Cost = Days x # lines x $/line)

JET Productions in Norman, OK is a production company specializing in enthusiastic live events. We are currently accepting applications and resumes for Interns. This is a non-paying internship position. Qualified candidates will be 21 years of age or over. Interns can expect to receive practical training and experience in the concert production industry including marketing, production, hospitality, event coordination and strategic planning. Applications can be sent to wta.1313@gmail.com

Line Ad

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

Eskimo Sno NOW HIRING for ALL locations. Fun & Energetic people for Spring/ Summer. Full/Part Time. Must be able to work weekends and have reliable transportation. Apply at 867 12 Ave NE or 1202 N Interstate Dr - 321-SNOW or 573SNOW - www.eskimosno.com Sanctuary Water Gardens: job opportunities working with mature wetland plants. Career opportunity for individuals ready to graduate and take over the state’s only aquatic nursery. Call Victoria at 761-5601

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

Next to OU Med Ctr, 727 E. Culbertson, 2 bd w/ofc, $560; 1 bd, 1 bth, $375, 90% med student occupied, cozy & quiet apts, water pd. Haley, 405-826-0983.

PT Switchboard Receptionist M-F 8:00AM - 2:00PM Rotating Saturdays

2 bd apt, BILLS PAID, smoke free, no pets - 360-3850

J Housing Rentals

TOWNHOUSES FURNISHED Large T/H for rent! 2bd/1.5ba, patio, pool! $649 - Call 290-8864.

TOWNHOUSES UNFURNISHED Taylor Ridge Townhomes 2 Bdrm, 2.5 Bath, Fully Renovated Townhomes near OU! Pets Welcome! • Call for current rates and Move-in Specials!!! Taylor Ridge Townhomes (405) 310-6599

APTS. FURNISHED Summer Rental at Campus Lodge - April or May 1 through August 15, $400/mo includes all utilities, cable, internet, swimming pool, gym, free tanning. Furnished, private bedroom & bath, shared kitchen with all appliances. Can choose own unit & roommates. Call Phil 313-2337

J

APTS. UNFURNISHED

PAID EGG DONORS up to 6 donations, + Exps, non-smokers, Ages 18-29, SAT>1100/ACT>24/GPA>3.00 Contact: info@eggdonorcenter.com

STOP! LOOK! LEASE! Students Receive 5% Discount! Sooner Crossing 321-5947 www.soonercrossing.com FREE Basic Cable & Water Sparkling Pool, 24/7 Laundry on site!

Wanted: Enthusiastic, Motivated Individuals. Republic Bank & Trust currently has openings for Part-Time Bankers at our Norman locations. Ideal candidates would possess previous banking experience, 10-key skills, dynamic personality and excellent customer service skills.

RENT NOW!! $99 DEPOSIT! NO APP FEE! 2 Bedrooms Available! Pets Welcome! Alarm Systems! Models open 8a-8p Everyday! Elite Properties 360-6624 or www.elite2900.com

$5,000-$7,000

Bartending! Up to $300/day. No exp nec. Training provided. 1-800-965-6520 x133.

Part-Time Tellers M-F 3:00PM - 7:00PM, 8:00AM 1:00PM Rotating Saturdays

Qualified applicants are encouraged to apply in person or send resumes, along with cover letter to Human Resources by fax to (405) 573-7048. Republic is an Equal Opportunity Employer. Email arazor@rbt.com

AVG $1,000-$3,000/mo Part-Time!! 15 yr Est Norman Co. needs Friendly, Reliable + Confident People in our Advertising Crew Hrs 4 pm - 8 pm, Mon-Fri Call Mike, 321-7503

HELP WANTED

APTS. UNFURNISHED

HELP WANTED

Housing Sales

HOUSES 3 BR/2 BA for sale. 1712 Sumac Dr. Shown appointment only. Amanda Thompson 641-2409. Email amanda. m.thompson-1@ou.edu

MOBILE HOMES Mobile Home For Sale in Goldsby: 1999 Clayton, 3bd/1ba, 3 car port, fenced yard, covered front deck. $20,000 - 301-5105

2 col (3.25 in) x 2.25 inches Crossword ........$515/month

YOU are responsible for the world you live in...

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. 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.

9

help is just a phone call away

number

FIND A JOB in the CLASSIFIEDS

crisis line

325-6963 (NYNE)

OU Number Nyne Crisis Line

www.wildcareoklahoma.org

8 p.m.-4 a.m. every day

except OU holidays and breaks

Spring Specials

dowellproperties.com

HOROSCOPE

Best apartment value in Norman!!!

By Bernice Bede Osol

Copyright 2010, Newspaper Enterprise Assn.

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

w/d hook ups, westside

w/d hook ups, westside

1 bd 1 ba 748 SF $430 2 bd 1 ba 832 SF $465 2 bd 2 ba 880 SF $475 2 bd 2 ba 968 SF $505 2 bd 2.5 ba 1150 SF - TH $595 3 bd 3.5 ba 1350 SF - TH $695 364-3603 No Pets

Georgian Townhomes 1 bd 1 ba 675 SF $425 2 bd 1 ba 875 SF $485 Apartments 1 bd 1 ba 748 SF $420 2 bd 1 ba 900 SF $485 3 bd 1 ba ABP 1000 SF $670

Monday- Friday 8:30-5:30 Saturday 1-5 p.m. 2072 W. Lindsey BISHOP’S LANDING

Monday- Friday 8:30-6 p.m. Saturday 1-5 p.m. 1932 W. Lindsey

ARIES (March 21-April 19) -- Through the good auspices of a friend, something of a material nature could develop for you. Whatever it is, it is likely to put you in a wonderful frame of mind all day long.

Near Campus Across from Duck Pond

360-7744

M-F 8:30-5:30, Sat 1-5p.m.

Eff, 1 & 2 Bed Apartments

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -- Unselfishly putting the needs of another above your own will be noticed by those who are on the spot. Don’t think the word won’t get out regarding your kindness, gaining you much applause.

From $263/mo

333 E. Brooks (one block east of OU.) ** No pets *Effective rent allows for comp. with apts. that are not all bills paid

8 3 6 8

1 4 2 7

5 3 9

4 2 3 6 9 1 7 3 5 8 2 3

1 7 2 3

Previous Solution

7

6 4 8

8 2 5 9 3 1 7 6 4

4 7 1 5 2 6 3 8 9

3 9 6 7 4 8 2 5 1

1 8 7 4 9 3 6 2 5

9 3 4 2 6 5 1 7 8

6 5 2 8 1 7 4 9 3

2 4 3 6 5 9 8 1 7

5 6 8 1 7 4 9 3 2

7 1 9 3 8 2 5 4 6

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

2

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.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -- A collective activity with chums is apt to be placed under your direction. You won’t mind being put in charge and calling the shots for everyone concerned.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) -Gentle tactics will be most effective when dealing with others. You’ll find that using honey will catch more flies than vinegar. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Because you’ve earned someone’s respect and generosity, this person is likely to treat you very kindly by doing something for you that he or she wouldn’t normally do for others. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- Team up with another to form a much-needed partnership arrangement. If your choice is a wise one, the results will be very much to your liking.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) -- Just when you’ll need help the most, an ally is likely to show up and help you to successfully manage a huge task that otherwise would have been overwhelming. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -- You should take advantage of an unplanned social involvement with some close friends. It’ll make what started out as a bad day into something quite pleasant. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -You aren’t likely to find a better day to make some artistic changes around the house that you’ve been contemplating. You’ll like the results, and so will everybody else. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -Friends are making some plans for a diversion and, of course, you’ll be included in them. You are apt to learn about them sometime today or early tomorrow. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -Something you’ve been craving for a long time could come into your possession through the kindness of a relative or loved one. Whatever it is, it will be meaningful. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) -Charm, humor and wit are the tools you use to your advantage so well. You’ll make the most of them when brightening the day of friends and colleagues.

Universal Crossword Edited by Timothy E. Parker April 5, 2011

ACROSS 1 Type of guitar 5 ___, beta, gamma 10 Clickable desktop image 14 Racetrack shape 15 More in need of a massage 16 City in Alaska 17 Romance novelist Roberts 18 Frighten 19 Baroque and Big Band 20 Three that run after run? 23 “___ boom bah!” 24 Abyssinian or Siamese 25 Point at a target 28 Sovereign’s representative 32 Confederate soldier, for short 35 25-Across aid 37 Laundry unit 38 Office reminder 39 Three that run after run? 42 Unbeatable rating 43 A Great Lake 44 Driving-test ritual 45 Wedded title 46 Popular Pontiac of the past 48 Pyramid topper on a dollar bill

4/5

49 Worm container? 50 Where you’ll find “The Office” 52 Three that run after run? 61 Month on the Hebrew calendar 62 Western “necktie” 63 Worshipped object 64 “The Biggest Little City in the World” 65 Anatomical backs 66 Refer to 67 Word said while tipping one’s hat 68 Tie ___ (drink to excess) 69 Strike-zone boundary DOWN 1 ___ fide 2 Swear 3 1986 Starship hit 4 Dispatches, as a dragon 5 Franciscan Order founder’s birthplace 6 Out of one’s ever-lovin’ mind 7 Word before “fall” 8 Berlin mister 9 407 in Orlando, e.g. 10 Bumbling 11 Wife of Mr. Dithers 12 Yemen neighbor

13 Place to brood 21 Bit of fastening hardware 22 “Can” alternative 25 Indian silk center 26 Mythological blood 27 Natural satellites 29 Silent screen sensation Bow 30 Red dye used in cosmetics 31 Like most movies 32 Las Vegas show 33 Beautician’s board 34 ___ out (proven) 36 “Post-” antonym 38 Bon ___ (clever remark)

40 ABBA hit 41 Cuban dance 46 Swimmer with long jaws 47 From the mountains of Peru 49 Computer game format 51 Fit together well 52 Close, in a search 53 Clever thought 54 Turner of Hollywood 55 Mob enforcer 56 Loser to Bush in 2000 57 Certain gas brand 58 Norse war god 59 Written reminder 60 ___ club (school singers’ group)

PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER

4/4

© 2011 Universal Uclick www.upuzzles.com

RUNNING AMOK By Jill Pepper


The Oklahoma Daily | OUDaily.com

Tuesday, April 5, 2011 • 7

SPORTS

OUDAILY.COM ›› Burch Smith (shown left) and the Sooners play rare home Bedlam matchup tonight

James Corley, sports editor dailysports@ou.edu • phone: 405-325-3666

Sooners on way to the top, Boren says OU welcomes new basketball coach Kruger should hire UCO hoops’ Evans

Kruger receives formal introduction as next men’s hoops leader

and you’ll like what they’re doing.” The Sooners are among tough competition in the Big 12 Conference, but Kruger said he isn’t worried. “We’re going to be right there and hopefully set the bar for everyone else in the league,” he said. “That’s how it’s going to be.”

Lon Kruger signed a STAFF COLUMN UMN contract Friday that will reportedly pay him more RJ Young than $2.2 million per year to take over the OU men’s basketball program. Aside from the seven-figure contract he’s received, Kruger is a good hire. He has NBA experience and two conference Coach of the Year honors in his pocket. Since taking over UNLV in 2004, the program made four trips to the NCAA tournament, including one Sweet 16 appearance. The timing of former coach Jeff Capel’s firing was regrettable. In the five years he coached OU, he was asked to do more with less in three of them. Maybe turning Norman into Krugertown will be just the change needed to bring luster back to the men’s program. However, with the recruiting period for the year nearly over, Kruger will have his start with current team members and a Capel recruiting class. That’s a tall task, turning a 14-18 team that did not make the NCAA tournament into a contender. The Big 12 isn’t the Mountain West, and Kruger will have to coach with the same fire that led Florida to the 1994 Final Four. Can Kruger do it again? Of course he can. Adding Central Oklahoma’s Terry Evans, one of the top Division-II coaches, to his staff wouldn’t hinder his efforts either. Evans has already said on record he would be more than happy to serve under Kruger at Oklahoma. Plus, an Evans hire would leave the men’s program with a future candidate familiar with the program. So, Kruger, do us all a solid and hire the man. Evans has proven he can do less with more and has the ability to do what OU couldn’t do last season — win consistently.

— The Associated Press contributed to this report.

— RJ Young, professional writing graduate student

JAMES CORLEY The Oklahoma Daily

The last time Lon Kruger was in McCasland Field House, he was wearing a purple jersey. The new OU men’s basketball coach was formally welcomed to the university Monday in the same building he competed and lost in as a Kansas State player four decades ago. “A little bit of a cruel joke, I think, because I don’t have fond memories about this building,” Kruger said. Kruger returns with 25 years of college basketball coaching experience to replace Jeff Capel, who was fired three weeks ago after two straight losing seasons. But Kruger said his tenure as coach will not be a rebuilding project. “This program has got great tradition, so we’re not rebuilding,” he said. “We’re not bringing it back — we’re just hoping to continue what’s been very good here for a long time.” Even so, Kruger has experience rebuilding teams.

JAMES CORLEY/THE DAILY

OU men’s basketball coach Lon Kruger addresses the media following his official welcome to the university Monday at McCasland Field House. Kruger led UNLV to a 24-9 record last season. He’s taken four different programs — Kansas State, Florida, Illinois and UNLV — to the NCAA tournament. President David Boren said the Kruger hire marks a new era for the Sooners. “OU basketball is on its way to the top,” Boren said. Kruger signed a contract Friday worth about $2.2 million a year to come to Oklahoma from UNLV, where he led the Rebels to a

24-9 record last season. He inherits a program that suffered its first consecutive losing seasons since 1967 and struggled with a dwindling fan base — a relationship Kruger vowed to repair. One solution Kruger offered was opening practices to fans. “We have no secrets,” Kruger said. “Our guys are going to work really hard. You guys watch them work,

Kruger coaching timeline Pittsburg State Graduate assistant 1976-77

Kansas State Graduate assistant (1977-78) Assistant coach (1979-82)

UT-Pan American Head coach 1982-86

Kansas State Head coach 1986-90

Florida Head coach 1990-96

Illinois Head coach 1996-2000

Atlanta Hawks Head coach 2000-03

New York Knicks Assistant coach 2003-04

UNLV Head coach 2004-11


8 • Tuesday, April 5, 2011

The Oklahoma Daily | OUDaily.com

LIFE&ARTS REVIEWS, PREVIEWS AND MORE

Autumn Huffman, life & arts editor dailyent@ou.edu • phone: 405-325-5189

PLAY REVIEW

THE DAILY’S

NEW MUSIC TUESDAY Read more at OUDaily.com

THE PAINS OF BEING PURE AT HEART “Belong” (Slumberland) Rating:

The Pains Of Being Pure At Heart enjoy juxtaposition. They operate in the art of contrast, and they make most, if not all, of their contradictions work. The Pains Of Being Pure At Heart have injected their music with louder guitars and more driving beats since their 2009 self-titled debut, but lead singer Kip Berman’s vocals are still precious and dreamy, almost feminine. They have a pretty bad band name, to be sure, but it fits them in a lot of ways. Their music has a childlike purity to it, as if these 20somethings lived in a vacuum, but their influences are clear. They sound like a time capsule, capturing all the best things about ’80s and ’90s alternative rock. This familiarity is the album’s biggest drawback. The songs are catchy and clever, but they fail to bring anything terribly new to the table. It’s a nice ride, with songs like “Anne With An E” and the title track showing how good the Pains Of Being Pure At Heart can be when they’re at their creative peak, but here’s hoping that next time these guys use their talents to brave more original paths. — Conor O’Brien/The Daily

‘The Odyssey’ lacks comedic value, but has good cast and flawless set O

pening Friday, University Theatre’s “The Odyssey” presented a carefully reimagined version of Homer’s classic tale of Odysseus attempting to return to his family after years at sea. Directed by Matthew Ellis, the play attempts to weave comedy into the text, and while this isn’t always successful, the show is nevertheless solid and wellperformed. The show opens with a bored woman, performance sophomore Taylor Schackmann, sarcastically mocking Homer’s text until she is inspired by a muse and transforms into Athena, who appeals to the gods to allow Odysseus, performance junior Madison Niederhauser, to return home. Shackmann is perhaps the shining muse for the entire production, flitting from one role to the next and performing them all well as Athena transforms herself to assist Odysseus. Odysseus acts the title character well, portraying the well-worn and witty sailor with strong conviction. The rest of the ensemble cast is also to be rewarded for their work, comprising four or five roles each and maneuvering the revolving stage element smoothly. Scenic designer Jon Young also did an excellent job transforming the Weitzenhoffer Theatre into an almost ethereal space that felt open and quite suitable for the arena staging that the show required. Minimal visual obstructions occurred due to the audience being on all four sides, but these were easily ignored due to the actors’ clear inflection and acting.

PHOTO PROVIDED

Drama junior Tiffany Mack, as Circe, and drama junior Madison Neiderhauser, as Odysseus during a performance of the tale of “The Odyssey.” The University Theatre production opened Friday will run until Sunday.

STAFF COLUMN MN

Sydney Allen n

The Cyclops also is a technical trick that is quite enjoyable to watch. The text is both the best and worst part of the show. While all of the actors appeared to understand

the meaning of what they were saying, something that is necessary when performing old texts, the comedic elements that Mary Zimmerman’s adaptation added seemed too heavy handed and did not appear evenly enough throughout the show. Hermes, played by Tyler Brodess, performance junior, was charmingly funny, but one comedic character does not make a comedy. Other actors also attempted to recite their lines with a

YOU ARE INVITED! Public Master Classes

Marilyn Horne

7 p.m. Tuesday, April 5 and Friday, April 8 Pitman Recital Hall Catlett Music Center OU Arts District Free and Open to the Public For more information, go to http://music.ou.edu/home/news.html

- THE PRIDE OF OKLAHOMA

OU Student Media is a department within OU’s division of Student Affairs. For accommodations on the basis of disability, please contact 405.325.2521. The University of Oklahoma is an equal opportunity institution.

Former Star of the Metropolitan Opera, praised by critics as having “the greatest voice of the 20th Century”

lighter or funnier inflection. While the comedy may not have been all that the author desired, “The Odyssey” is worth seeing for the impeccable set and talented cast alone. The show runs until Sunday and tickets can be purchased in the Catlett Music Center box office, which will be open one hour prior to the production. — Sydney Allen, University College Freshman


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