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T H U R S DA Y, J U N E 16 , 2 011

W W W.O U DA I LY.C O M

2 010 G OL D C ROW N W I N N E R

Weather surprises Norman

MEMORIAL

Civil rights activist passes

Oklahomans owe Luper a debt of gratitude, Boren says ALYSSA GRIMLEY The Oklahoma Daily

SUBMITTED BY DYLAN ERWIN, OU LAW STUDENT

A Norman resident wades through flooding waters on his street Tuesday at 637 Jenkins Ave. after a severe thunderstorm. The storm produced an inch of rain in 20 minutes, and the entire storm lasted more than an hour.

Storm damage widespread OU cleanup effort Homes, businesses hit by severe thunderstorm, minor flooding ENJOLI DI PATRI

The Oklahoma Daily

Autumn McMahon was in her Norman home listening to a severe thunderstorm pelt her home with hail and wind Tuesday night when a large crash followed by rushing water startled her. Those sounds led McMahon to her bathroom, where she was shocked to discover that a tree had fallen through her roof. McMahon, director of development for the College of Education, tried to remove the six inches of rainwater that had quickly accumulated in the bathroom and adjacent hallway. The same tree that crashed through her bathroom roof also caved in her bedroom ceiling. McMahon was one of many victims of Tuesday’s severe thunderstorm that damaged homes and businesses, destroyed trees and roofs and caused

sweeping power outages for more than 33,000 OG&E customers across the city. The storm also flooded streets and closed down Murray Case Sells Swim Complex and the Norman Public Library due to facility damage, according to press releases. McMahon estimates the damage on her home will be $35,000. She said that while her home is in disarray, she will stay with family in Norman.

Businesses not spared

Walmart, located on Northeast 12th Ave. in Norman, experienced roof damage from an air conditioning unit, torrential flooding and loss of power. Walmart was closed last night due to the power outage, said Walmart spokeswoman Dianna Gee. Crews worked through the night to clean up damage caused by the storm, and Walmart reopened at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday, shortly after power was restored at 9 a.m. SEE DAMAGE PAGE 2

VETERANS

effective, quick

Campus suffers light damage with broken windows, uprooted trees and scattered power outages CHASE COOK

The Oklahoma Daily

The cleanup of the Norman campus after a severe thunderstorm, which caused light damage, is going well and should be completed by the end of the week, the Facilities Management director said. The light damage included uprooted trees, broken windows in several buildings and multiple power outages across the north and south campus, said Brian Ellis, Facilities Management director. Cleanup crews began clearing roads and pathways after the storm Tuesday night, Ellis said. At 5 a.m., a larger crew assembled and started clearing the bigger damages such as knocked over trees. Main portions of the cleanup should be completed by Friday or Saturday, and by next week, students won’t even notice a storm came through, Ellis said. OU employees are cleaning up after a severe thunderstorm that slammed into Norman with wind speeds up SEE CLEANUP PAGE 2

A memorial service to honor one of Oklahoma’s most influential civil rights activists will be held at 11 a.m. Friday at the Cox Convention Center in Oklahoma City. Clara Luper passed away June 8 at the age of 88 after a long struggle with illness. Sharri Coleman, African and African-American Studies adjunct instructor, said she attended the same church as Luper. “She was very Clara Luper serious, very motivated, very driven,” Coleman said. “Every moment with her was a teachable moment — she was always teaching.” Luper included teens and preteens in her nonviolent sit-ins at an Oklahoma City drugstore in 1958, Coleman said. Luper helped spark civil rights movements on campuses across the country after her sit-ins and continued to fight for civil rights even after being arrested more than 20 times. “She realized that no matter how old you are, you can participate in your own liberation,” Coleman said. President David Boren said Luper’s accomplishments have touched many lives. “All Oklahomans owe a debt of gratitude to Clara Luper,” Boren said. “She taught us that we are all members of the same human family, and that when we allow the rights of any person to be violated, we jeopardize the rights of all. She will be remembered and honored for her moral courage.”

BASEBALL

Financial assistance New bats hurting hitters’ stats program expanded Offensive production numbers down to lowest in 30 years

Program to offer aid to all qualified out-of-state student veterans at OU in upcoming fall semester after successful trial run

TOBI NEIDY

ALYSSA GRIMLEY

The new bats the NCAA rolled out at the start of baseball season have not been a home run. Though the tweaks were meant to improve player safety from line drives, the decreased power led to a drop in hitting numbers across the board in college baseball. Compared to last season’s numbers, most teams’ batting averages, runs per game, ERAs and number of home runs all dropped. The OU baseball team hit 105 home runs in 68 games last season for a 1.55 per-game average, but that number fell to 41 in 60 games this season (.690). Big 12 Conference teams hit 619 home runs collectively in 2010. This year, the conference hit 300 fewer home runs. The silence of the “ping” substantially affected batting lineups in every conference, most notably the renowned power-hitting Southeastern Conference.

The Oklahoma Daily

OU is opening its Yellow Ribbon Program to any out-of-state vetQualifying criteria eran who is an OU student starting this fall. Students must... The Yellow Ribbon Program, » Have Chapter 33, Post-9/11 100which offers financial aid to outpercent eligibility (not serving active duty and not a spouse of someone of-state veterans, was first impleserving active duty) mented in fall 2010, said Jennifer » Be a non-resident student admitted T r i m m e r, Ve t e r a n s S t u d e n t to a Norman campus degree program Services coordinator, in an email. for Fall 2011 or earlier During the program’s first se» Be enrolled for the Fall 2011 term mester at OU, the university only applied the program’s benefits to Visit OUDaily.com to learn how to 10 students who met the criteria; submit an application. however, the program will now open to any out-of-state veteran seeking financial aid, Trimmer said. Starting in the 2011-2012 school year, OU will no longer limit the number of eligible students awarded the Yellow Ribbon. The total amount of funds a veteran can annually receive through the Yellow Ribbon Program is $10,000, according to OU’s enrollment website. SEE RIBBON PAGE 2

A LOOK AT WHAT’S ON Video gamers strengthen social ties by playing games together in Oklahoma Memorial Union

The Oklahoma Daily

THE OKLAHOMA DAILY VOL. 96, NO. 154 © 2011 OU Publications Board www.OUDaily.com www.facebook.com/OUDaily www.twitter.com/OUDaily

HUNTER CLAUSEN/THE DAILY

Junior third baseman Garrett Buechele prepares to hit during a game at the Big 12 Championship in Oklahoma City. Eve n t h e t h re e S E C t e a m s that advanced to this weekend’s College World Series — Florida, South Carolina and Vanderbilt — had a dip in production. The Gators’ home-run

WHAT’S INSIDE News .......................... Classifieds .................. Opinion ...................... Sports .........................

2 3 2 4

average dropped from 1.30 in 2010 to .93 this year, the Gamecocks dropped from 1.39 to .73 and the Commodores slipped from .95 to .70. SEE BATS PAGE 4

TODAY’S WEATHER

99° | 79° Tomorrow: Cloudy, high of 100 degrees


2

• Thursday, June 16, 2011

OUDaily.com ››

NEWS

OU making progress toward relying solely on wind power

Carmen Forman, managing editor dailynews@ou.edu • phone: 405-325-3666

Life & Arts on OUDaily.com | NEW MUSIC » Vetiver’s “Errant Charm” perfect background music | NEW MUSIC » Fresh Bon Iver album another dose of greatness

DAMAGE: Some residents still without power When winds picked up the store went to code black, which activates emergency procedures, Gee said. Employees were able to quickly lead customers to the store’s safe zone, which is located at the back of the store where there is a reinforced wall. Gee estimated approximately 200 people were in the 12th Avenue Walmart when the power went out. “I applaud our quickthinking associates who followed the emergency plan and led our customers to the safe zone without any injuries,” Gee said.

Power outages still linger

OG&E is continuing its work to restore power to the more than 2,000 customers — including sections of OU — that remain without service, but those restorations could linger into Friday as the company reconstructed power lines and telephone poles, OG&E spokesman Brian Alford said. Alford said that their priority begins with restoring power to essential personnel such as hospitals and police stations and then moves forward with repairs where the greatest number of customers are located. The Norman campus experienced multiple power outages on the research campus and the north campus after

CASEY WILLIAMS/THE DAILY

A tree uprooted by Tuesday’s storm lies across a front yard off of Beaumont Street in Norman. The severe thunderstorm produced winds up to 82 mph.

the storm severed transmission lines and knocked over power poles Tuesday night. Merrick Computing Center, located near OU’s Research Park, is still without power as of Wednesday afternoon, said Becky Grant, marketing manager for OU Information Technology. A blown out circuit has prevented Merrick’s air conditioning unit from functioning, resulting in systems in the building going offline due to the high temperatures,

BEFORE

Grant said. “This has resulted in a building temperature of 109,” Grant said. The north campus — the area north of Robinson and Flood which houses the Max Westheimer Airport — is still without power and will probably not have power restored for another 48 hours, Brian Ellis, Facilities Management director said. OG&E has to fix two major transmission lines. The power outage won’t have a

severe negative impact on the north campus because generators are powering critical areas, Ellis said. The research campus and some of its laboratories lost power for several hours last night, Ellis said. However, like the north campus, critical areas of the research campus were protected by generators. OU Facilities Management worked throughout the day Wednesday to clear fallen trees across campus.

AFTER

RIBBON: Program to benefit OU’s veterans The Yellow Ribbon Program supports an admirable cause, university spokesman Chris Shilling said. “It’s a good way to recognize those who have served and are seeking an education,” Shilling said. “It’s something President (David) Boren feels strongly about.” Austin Hopkins, an OU graduate and a veteran of the Navy, said in an email that while he was at OU, the people working for the Veterans Student Service program were helpful and sensitive to the needs of veterans. “The staff of OU’s veteran’s aid program did a great job of maintaining the connection between myself as a student and the veteran’s aid administration,” Hopkins said. “The OU advisors helped me with the paperwork and the filing and allowed me to completely focus on my studies.” The Yellow Ribbon Program is not only a means for providing veterans with financial aid but also an incentive for out-of-state students to remain in Oklahoma, Shilling said. “We want to keep good talent in Oklahoma,” Shilling said. “We want to encourage them to make Oklahoma their home.” Hopkins said the new Yellow Ribbon Program will help individual veterans and, by extension, the entire veteran community. “As brothers and sisters in arms, I feel that we recognize more than most how contributions to any one of our community is a benefit to us all,” Hopkins said.

CLEANUP: Employees eager to help campus to 82 mph and golfball-sized hail, meteorologist Brian Holland said. The storm caused minor flooding, damage to homes and businesses and caused more than 33,000 OG&E customers to lose power. The speed of the cleanup can be attributed to the positive response by landscaping and Facilities Management employees, Ellis said. They could be seen across campus blowing leaves and branches off of pathways and hauling larger debris away. Once the storm came through and damage was reported, employees started calling and asking, “how can I help?” “When we have extraordinary events, they rise to the occasion,” Ellis said. “Our [employees] are eager to contribute and restore campus.”

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Left: A bridge at the Colonial Estates Park in Norman, taken in May 2011. The bridge normally links two sides of the park seperted by a ditch. Right: The same bridge after Tuesday’s storm.

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OPINION

Yellow Ribbon program provides financial support for OU’s out-of-state veteran students (see page 1)

EDITORIAL

Cultural center should be saved Our View: The American Indian Cultural Center

expense of long term fiscal wisdom. is a boon to Oklahoma heritage and should be The cost to taxpayers for putting the project on funded. hold for a year (money will run out in January) is estimated at about six million dollars. Another four If you have driven by I-40 recently, you may have million will be lost in potential revenue for each noticed a grand structure rising near the intersecyear the opening of the center is delayed. tion with I-35. On the shores of the Oklahoma River, Such shortsightedness, on the national and on the American Indian Cultural Center has the state level, is something we have come been planned for nearly two decades and to expect from our elected officials. But The Our View under construction for more than six years. however many times they do it, it is still is the majority If the Oklahoma Legislature has its way, appalling when short term political gains opinion of the cultural center will stay frozen in pertake precedence over a long view. The Daily’s petual construction for two decades if The senate’s actions are all the more five-member the Oklahoma Senate does not authorize editorial board wrong for neglecting Oklahoma’s Native the bond issue required to complete the American heritage. While several individproject. ual tribes have their own cultural centers, The total cost of the project is estimated to be this project could be the capstone in our state’s ap$170 million. The state has already provided $58 preciation of the past before the Sooners. million in bond issues. The remaining costs were This will not be the first time this year that supposed to be covered by charitable contributions Oklahoma state government has neglected minorand federal money, but when the economic crisis ity initiatives. In the spring, Gov. Mary Fallin disstruck, donations dried up. solved three minority advisory committees, though The project almost stalled last year, but former she did support funding for the museum. Gov. Brad Henry used $6 million in stimulus money Stopping construction now will cost us money to keep construction going, according to a report by in the long run, and this cultural center will be a The Oklahoman. The move attracted condemnaboon to Oklahoma’s heritage. We hope that the tion as fiscally irresponsible, and is unlikely to be Oklahoma Senate will reconsider funding for this repeated. important project. In tough economic times it is wise and necessary to make cuts, but such cuts should not come at the Comment on this at OUDaily.com

Chase Cook Carmen Forman James Corley

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Andrew Slagle, opinion editor dailyopinion@ou.edu • phone: 405-325-3666

» Poll question of the day Should the state Senate approve the American Indian Cultural Center construction project?

To cast your vote, visit COLUMN

Barack Obama is not a socialist I am frustrated by conSTAFF COLUMN stant assertions from politicians, journalists and the public that Barack Obama Zac Smith is a socialist. Broadly, socialism is a system in which productive assets are owned by the people who use them. For instance, an isolated socialized factory would be managed by the factory workers. Neither control nor profit would be ceded to a non-working capitalist. However, dictators like Hitler and Stalin have also selfdescribed themselves as socialists in an attempt to borrow the credibility of socialism. In reality, they were no more socialistic than the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea is democratic. READ THE FULL COLUMN ON OUDAILY.COM

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 must be fewer than 250 words, typed, double spaced and signed by the author(s). Letters will be edited for accuracy, space and style. Students must list their major and classification. To submit letters, email dailyopinion@ou.edu. Letters also can be submitted in person Sunday through Thursday in 160 Copeland Hall.

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


Thursday, June 16, 2011 •

Classifieds Phone: 405-325-2521 E-mail: classifieds@ou.edu

Cameron Jones, advertising manager classifieds@ou.edu • phone: 405-325-2521

J Housing Rentals

For Sale

PLACE AN AD Fax: 405-325-7517 Campus Address: COH 149A

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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.

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Auto Insurance

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HOUSES 2 STORY, 3 BDRM HOUSE, basement, perfect for small family, CH/A, hardwood floors, 4 blocks to OU, built in 1924, restored old faculty house, large yard, good neighbors, old neighborhood, available now. Appointment only: contact 6416411. Close to campus! 24th Ave SE & Lindsey: $117,500, 3bd/2ba, 2 car garage, 1276 sq ft. Mother in law plan, loads of updates (granite). Owner/agent contact Liz Dotson @ Keller-Williams 831-8872

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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.

HOROSCOPE By Bernice Bede Osol

Copyright 2010, Newspaper Enterprise Assn.

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Previous Solution

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

Instructions: Fill in the grid so that every row, every column and every 3x3 box contains the digits 1 through 9. That means that no number is repeated in any row, column or box.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -- Whether it comes from a good friend or a stranger, any kind of proposal brought to you should be examined for strings attached. Thoroughly check things out first.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -- If your fear of losing is taking precedence over your will to win, you’ve already been defeated before you’ve even begun. Believe to achieve.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) -- Resources shared by you and your mate might be in hot demand from each party. Instead of letting a blow-up occur, give in to certain demands and inspire your other half to do so as well.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- As resistance to your aims stiffens, so will your possibilities for accomplishment. In order to get things done, you must be tenacious. Fight for your right to get what you want.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -- When having work or a service done for you, be on the spot as much as possible in order to prevent a bad job. Unless you’re there to check on what’s being done, things could go awry.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -- Think before you act, instead of creating unnecessary problems through uninformed, knee-jerk reactions. Be your own sagacious adviser, not your worst enemy.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -Guard against not only your own extravagance urges, but against friends who prod you into spending far more than you should. Both situations bear watching very closely. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) -Instead of attempting to do far too many things at once, concentrate on only one job at a time, regardless of how much needs to be accomplished. You’ll botch up the works if you don’t. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -- Don’t even try to talk another into doing something for you that she or he knows you can easily do for yourself. It won’t work, because the person will see you as being nothing but a shirker.

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) -- Be realistic in assessing your finances and then budget your spending accordingly. Don’t pauper yourself through extravagance and/or borrowing more from others. ARIES (March 21-April 19) -Unless you focus on a specific goal or objective, something you’ve wanted for a long time that you believe could help you will slip through your fingers. Be dogged and precise. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -- If you want to maintain a healthy perspective on issues, temper your grandiose conceptions with a large dose of realism. A balanced outlook will bring you the best results.

Universal Crossword Edited by Timothy E. Parker June 16, 2011

ACROSS 1 Dissect grammatically 6 Network with an eye logo 9 Watchful and ready 14 That thing dangling in your throat 15 Umpire’s thumb signal 16 “24� agent Jack 17 Cigar type 19 Set out for display 20 Shirkers and loafers 22 Wander (about) 25 Shutout score 26 Type of seal 27 Aid in a felony 29 Sign of boredom 32 Magazine revenue sources 33 Ernie and Bert’s street 36 Food at the first Thanksgiving dinner 39 Cold War barrier 42 Brouhahas 43 Exit, to P.T. Barnum 46 Turf strip 49 Sport involving swords 51 Wide-spouted pitcher 52 The Queen of Soul 55 Greatest

6/16

(Abbr.) 58 Mai ___ (cocktail variety) 59 Motion picture industry 63 ___ problem with (finds fault) 64 Having a beaklike feature 68 Word said upon arrival 69 Toddling troublemaker 70 Having a sophisticated charm 71 Editors’ marks 72 Pod veggie 73 Georgia of “Mary Tyler Moore� DOWN 1 Litter member 2 Gardner of film 3 Be in a footrace 4 Metal refuse 5 Use, as a dish 6 In an unfeeling way 7 It’s often screwed up 8 Sheriff’s badge shape 9 Bananalike plant 10 Carefree or spirited adventures 11 California’s motto 12 Stood on

hind legs 13 Lovers’ meetings 18 Yale student 21 Set ablaze 22 Speeders step on it 23 “Simpsons� grandpa 24 He loved Lucy 28 Jam-filled pastry 30 Make someone laugh 31 “The ___ of the Roses� 34 Sound from a Holstein 35 Make lovable 37 Move after a zig 38 Dublin’s isle 40 Officer of the peace 41 Small salamander 44 Parting subject for Moses 45 ___ Lanka

46 Mouths off to 47 “Murder on the ___ Express� 48 Wipe out electronically 50 Icy moon of Jupiter 53 DVR companion 54 Uses one of the senses 56 Albanian coin 57 Walking on eggshells 60 Transport commercially 61 Johnny-___lately 62 Part of a sentence 65 Succumb to gravity 66 The day before the big day 67 ___ Monte (food giant)

PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER

6/15

Š 2011 Universal Uclick www.upuzzles.com

MATERIAL WORLD By Wilbur Pomett


4

• Thursday, June 16, 2011

SPORTS

Poll on OUDaily.com ›› Do you think the NCAA’s new bats caused the drop in offensive numbers in college baseball?

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

WOMEN’S GOLF

VOLLEYBALL

Rookie bound for Open

Oklahoma trio head overseas

Sooner freshman qualifies with sectional score for July’s U.S. Women’s Open

OU players, coach participating in 10-day tour in China; hope international experience will help team

RJ YOUNG

The Oklahoma Daily

LUKE MCCONNELL

Freshman golfer Emily Collins is only the second player in OU golf history to qualify for the U.S. Women’s Open. Collins, 18, also is the youngest player in school history to do so. Collins finished second in the Open’s sectional qualifier May 31 at the Prestonwood Country Club in Plano, Texas, after finishing at even-par for the tournament for a total score of 142. More impressive than the freshman’s second-place finish was the 5-under-par second-round 66 she shot to qualify for the Open. The tournament was just 36 holes, but both rounds were played on the same day, which meant she had to mentally and physically regroup quickly to finish strong. “In the second round, I was really consistent with my irons, and I made all my putts,” Collins said. Collins completed her first season at OU in May, competing in all 11 Sooner events. In her first 18 holes in crimson and cream, the Colleyville, Texas, native shot 71 (-1). Collins ended the season with two top-10 finishes and three top-20 finishes. During her senior year at Nolan Catholic (Texas) High School, Collins competed in the German Junior Masters, won the Kathy Whitworth Invitational and was named Golfweek’s Junior Golfer of

— pass, set, kill. While the Chinese phrase may not be common for most around these parts, it’s becoming a familiar saying for three Sooners. Junior setter Brianne Barker, freshman middle blocker Sallie McLauren and head coach Santiago Restrepo are participating in a 10-day tour of China with collegiate volleyball players from around America as part of USA Volleyball’s partnership with Bring It Promotions. USA Volleyball’s Tom Pingel emphasized this kind of experience cannot be gained strictly through domestic play, according to a statement on its website. “This is the 12th year that USA Volleyball has recognized a trip of this nature organized and managed by Bring It Promotions (BIP),” Pingel wrote. “The USAV/BIP partnership has worked well in that USA recommends coaches and athletes for invitation, and Bring It provides post-trip reports on everyone on the trip.” Two teams of 12 girls and three coaches each met in Anaheim, Calif., June 7 for two days of training before flying to China, where they will be through June 20. The teams are divided into red and blue teams. The Oklahoma trio is on the blue team. Over the course of the tour, the teams will face lots of international competition from different cities and universities in China. The teams will make two stops: Shouguang and Beijing. The red team has lost both its matches thus far, and the blue team split its matches. Restrepo said he hopes his players will benefit in the long run overseas. “It will be nice to get some international experience under our belts,” Restrepo said. “Hopefully, it will add up to a better season this upcoming year.” Restrepo, who is joined by Houston’s Molly Alvey and Purdue’s Kathy Jewell, said it was a great honor to be asked to coach one of the teams. Restrepo also coached two similar tours to Argentina in 2005 and 2006. “You can learn a lot on techniques and things like that,” Restrepo said. “You see what other people are doing. It’s important to go and do it and learn from other coaches because you can go and experience techniques and why they do this.”

The Oklahoma Daily

PHOTO PROVIDED/OU ATHLETIC DEPARTMENT

Freshman Emily Collins follows through after driving during competition last season. Collins qualified for the U.S. Women’s Open after shooting a 142 in a sectional tournament May 31. the Week. Still, Collins is looking to push herself at the Open. “Making the cut is something that I want to do for sure, but I’m going to try not to get too excited and keep this all in perspective,” she said. OU women’s golf coach Veronique Drouin said she was excited for Collins and the exposure Collins’ finish at the Open qualifier has brought the program. “I think it’s going to be awesome for [Collins] to

experience this,” Drouin said. “It will be great for her to see what she has to do to take her game to the next level.” Drouin’s expectations for Collins aren’t to win the Open but to enjoy playing in the tournament and enjoy the experience of competing against the world’s best. “I just wanted her to play well and have a good time,” she said. “It would be great if she could make the cut.” Collins’ mother, Janet Collins, echoed Drouin’s sentiment.

BATS: Offense lowest since 1975 The plunge of offense — due to the new bat’s smaller sweet spot and slower ball speeds after impact — forced most teams to rethink their strategies. The lineups became dependent on all hitters producing, not just the threeand four-hole hitters. The Sooners actually saw their overall team batting average improve from .307 last year to .313 this season, but the drastic drop in home runs may have contributed to OU’s collapse in the postseason, causing the team to miss out on a return trip to the College World Series in Omaha, Neb. The national average for Division-1 teams was a .281 batting percentage, .52 home runs per game and a 4.76 ERA through the regular season. The last time colle ge baseball produced such low

Before and after the bat change OKLAHOMA 2010 Batting avg: .307 Home runs: 105 Hits per game: 7.72

NATIONALLY 2010 Batting avg: .305 Runs per game: 6.98 Homers per game: .94 ERA: 5.95

2011 Batting avg: .313 Home runs: 41 Hits per game: 6.92

2011 (regular season) Batting avg: .281 Runs per game: 5.60 Homers per game: .52 ERA: 4.76

* Source: Big12Sports.com

numbers was more than 30 years ago in 1975, when it switched to the aluminum bats it used up until this year. After that first big change, teams didn’t fully adjust and start producing recordhigh numbers in offensive categories until 1998 after a

* Source: NCAA.com

long, gradual rise. P o w e r- h i t t i n g t e a m s across the country, including Oklahoma, will have to put in extra time in the cages with hitting coaches to hash out the ins and outs of the new bats to eventually restore power to their lineups.

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CROSS-COUNTRY/TRACK & FIELD

Sooners finish fifth nationally The OU men’s cross-country and track and field programs finished fifth in the United States Track and Field and Cross Country Coaches Association’s John McDonnell Program of the Year race for 2010-11. The award, in its third year, is presented to the institution with the best combined team finishes in NCAA cross-country and track and field events throughout the year. Florida State finished atop the list this year. The OU men finished fifth at the NCAA Cross Country Championships in November, 13th at the NCAA Indoor Track and Field Championships in March and 20th at last week’s NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships. The Sooners led all Big 12 schools, beating next-best Texas at ninth among the 15 programs that recorded team finishes at each NCAA championship. Teams had to qualify for each championship to be included in the race. Oklahoma finished sixth last year. — Daily staff reports

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“I am extremely proud of Emily, but we’re trying to keep it all in perspective for her,” she said. “She’s had her ups and downs this year, but she’s putting well, she’s hitting well, she’s confident, and she’s happy.” The 2011 U.S. Women’s Open, with a field of 156 professionals and amateurs from around the world, is July 7-10 in Colorado Springs, Colo. “It’s an honor I’m really excited about it,” Collins said. “It’s kind of surreal; it hasn’t really hit me yet.”


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