Tuesday, September 4, 2012

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T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 4 , 2 012

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Sports: The Oklahoma volleyball team to face Arkansas (Page 6)

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L&A: oU graduates to release app (Page 5)

STUDeNT LIFe

Coed floor residents form community 15 percent of applicants received coed housing for 2012-2013 year PAIGHTEN HARKINS campus reporter

This fall, the east wing of Walker Center’s fifth floor looks a little different than it has in past semesters. This summer, an unprecedented option was added to the list of available freshman residence communities. The new option called for a co e d flo or, where women and men could live together in the same community, just not in the same room or the same suite. This option was added

this summer after the proposal for gender-neutral housing — which would allow men and women to live together in the same ro om — was denie d by President David Boren, The Daily reported on June 19. The coed floor takes up an entire wing of Walker Center’s fifth floor, and the wing was chosen because the resident director, in addition to a resident adviser, lives on the floor. It also is smaller than a typical wing in Walker, holding 50 to 60

residents. A normal floor holds about 70 residents, Walker Center Coordinator Erin Simpson said. “With a new program, you want to have as many eyes on it as possible to assess and make sure we’re doing the right things for our students”, Diane Brittingham, associate director of Housing and Food Services and director of Residence Life, said. When the emails were sent out in mid-June to gain residence in the new coed wing, the response was astounding, Brittingham said. There were more than 400 students interested in the

the student completed their applications and paid their enrollment commitment contracts, Brittingham said. “If you completed your Location: Walker contract in February and center, fifth floor, east paid your enrollment comwing mitment by March 1, that Applicants: more than put you at the top of the list,” 400 Brittingham said. In Brittingham’s 23 years Residents: Between of working with various 50 and 60 selected types of communities in a Source: Housing and Food Services residence hall, she’s found that students on a coed floor form more of a community floor. and are a lot more social, The students were chosen she said. for the floor based off their That’s exactly the case for priority number, which is determined by how early see COED pAGe 2

At A gLAnce Coed Floor

Sooners scramble for victory

mARK LAmBie/tHe AssociAted pRess

UTeP defensive lineman horace Miller, left, rushes OU quarterback Landry Jones (12) during Saturday’s 24-7 win in el Paso, Texas. Jones completed 21-of-36 passes for 222 yards and two touchdowns to up his career total to 95 touchdowns, which is good for a four-way tie for 18th most all-time in NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision history. The senior entered the season already holding the OU program record for career touchdowns. One of his two touchdown passes was a 68-yard connection with junior wide receiver Kenny Stills, who totaled six catches for 121 yards in the victory.

CITy OF NOrMAN

Norman resident struck, killed by train Victim not OU student, police say LINDSEY RUTA campus editor

A Norman resident was killed by a train Saturday morning near campus, according to the Nor man Police Department. A north-bound train struck a man at the intersection of Boyd Street and Classen Boulevard shortly before 10:30 a.m. Saturday, Lt. Chris Amason said. Police know the individual’s identity but will not release it until they can notify the family. The identity will be released sometime today, Amason said. He said they did not believe the person was an OU student. The only witness as of now is the train’s conductor, he said. There is no information

oud-2012-9-04-a-001,002.indd 1

yet as to whether alcohol was a factor in the accident, Amason said. Lt. Eric Lehenbauer said it will be several weeks before the medical examiner will announce whether or not alcohol played a role in the accident. Boyd Street was closed in the east-bound lane from Jenkins Avenue, along with the intersection at Lindsey Street and Classen Boulevard into mid-afternoon. Joe Bogan noticed the train going by this morning from the top floor of Loft 401 — the living complex on the corner of Boyd Street and Classen Boulevard — where he lives. Bogan, who used to work on trains, said he didn’t see the accident but noticed the train had abruptly stopped. He said he found that to be odd. As he looked over his west-facing balcony, he saw

the police beginning to put up tape, so he decided to go down to figure out what was going on, he said. Once down on Boyd Street, he said he could see a body lying under one of the train’s cars. “Then a police officer came up and kindly asked me to leave,” he said. Lehenbauer said accidents involving trains and individuals happen several times a year in Norman. There has been a decrease in train accidents involving cars over the past few years, he said, but he attributes this to construction shutting down intersections with tracks. Amason reminded people that walking along the train tracks is not only dangerous, it also is illegal. Lindsey Ruta lruta@ou.edu

ASTrONOMy

Physics team verifies theory Researchers first to prove Einstein’s theory of relativity ARIANNA PICKARD campus reporter

A team of researchers that included an OU physics professor recently became the first to prove Einstein’s theory of relativity. By observing the orbit of two stars, Mukremin Kilic, OU physics and astronomy professor, and his team detected the gravitational waves that gave proof to the theory. Other Einstein theories have been confirmed before, but this is the first time the theory of relativity has been verified, said Alexandros Gianninas, postdoctoral researcher in the Physics and Astronomy Department at OU. “This discovery confirms Albert Einstein’s general theory of relativity, which says that mass bends space, and if there are two massive objects in a confined amount of space, the two objects will accelerate each other,” said team member Warren Brown, astrophysicist at the Harvard Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics. The team observed two white dwarf stars — stars with burnt-out cores that used to shine as bright as the Sun— orbiting each other, Kilic said. One is about the size of Neptune, and the other is about the size of the Earth. “They orbit each other every 12 minutes, roughly speaking,” Brown said. “That means they eclipse each other every six minutes — one goes in front of the other one.” The research team — which includes members see THEORY pAGe 2

Penn State begins Bill O’Brien era with loss to Ohio Sports: saturday’s loss to Bobcats signals start of long line of struggles on the football field for former power (Page 6)

Taxpayers should not fund party conventions Opinion: the political party conventions are glorified pep rallies, not public events deserving public funding (Page 3)

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• Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Campus

Lindsey Ruta, campus editor Chase Cook and Jake Morgan, assistant editors dailynews@ou.edu • phone: 405-325-3666 oudaily.com • Twitter: @OUDaily

Theory: Gravitational waves explain eclipse Continued from page 1

Today around campus Resume-writing presentations will be offered during the Sooner Showcase Career Fair and the Engineering Career Fair from 1 to 1:30 p.m. and 3:30 to 4 p.m. respectively in Oklahoma Memorial Union’s Sooner Room.

WEdnesday, SEPT. 5 A Student Success Series seminar about choosing a major will be held from 2 to 3 p.m. in the Housing Learning Center of Adams Center. A workshop about interview skills will be held from 3:30 to 4 p.m. in Oklahoma Memorial Union’s Sooner Room. An interest meeting for the Miss OU Pageant will be held from 7 to 8 p.m. in Oklahoma Memorial Union’s Scholars Room.

THURsday, sept. 6 A Student Success Series seminar about studying for online courses will be held from 3 to 4 p.m. in Wagner Hall, Room 245.

Friday, sept. 7 A presentation about dressing professionally for interviews will be held from 12:30 to 1:20 p.m. in Oklahoma Memorial Union’s Regents Room. A foam party will be held from 8 to 11 p.m. in the Oklahoma Memorial Union parking garage.

Do you want to see your organization’s campus event here? Visit OUDaily.com/events/submit to add your entry.

from Boston, the University of Texas and Spain — discovered these stars in March 2011 while they were doing a survey with a telescope in Arizona, Kilic said. By watching the light on one star dim as the other star moved in front of it, the astronomers were able to precisely measure the change in the orbital period, Brown said. “When we look, we see that this star gets fainter by 20 percent, and this will last 70 seconds, and then it moves away,” Kilic said. After observing and timing the eclipses for a year, the team found that the eclipses were happening six seconds earlier, he said. “We can tell that the system is shrinking very rapidly, and we think it’s because the system is emitting gravitational waves,” Kilic said. These gravitational waves t a k e e n e r g y aw ay f ro m the two stars, and when the stars lose energy, they begin rotating faster and more closely to each other, he said. This explains why the stars are eclipsing each other sooner than they were a year ago. Gianninas described the effect as an ice skater who is spinning and then brings her arms in closer. The result? She starts spinning faster. “Normally, the way we think about gravity is we take something and it goes dow n,” Kilic said as he picked a pen up from his desk and dropped it on the floor. “Einstein thought about gravity in a different

Illustration Provided

The above illustration is a binary star system where two white dwarf stars are orbiting each other only 50,000 miles apart, making it one of the smallest known binary orbits in the Galaxy.

AT A GLANCE White dwarfs Stars with burnt-out cores that used to shine as bright as the Sun Source: Professor Mukremin Kilic

way.” Understanding gravitational waves is important, because it is such a fundamental element of the universe, Kilic said. “In Einstein’s general relativity theory, two massive objects ripple space time, and this ripple is what we call gravitational waves,” Brown said. “As this pair of very close white dwarfs go

around each other every 12 minutes, they’re rippling space time, and that takes energy away from the orbit of the pair of stars.” Right now, these stars are closer to each other than the moon is to the Earth, Kilic said. They are close enough that they could both fit into the size of the Sun, and they will continue to lose energy and move closer to each other until they merge and become one star, Kilic said. “We think it’s going to merge in a million years,” Kilic said. “It’s a long time for us, but, you know, in terms of the universe and how old the universe is, it’s actually very quick.” Brown said their experiment is notable because two

physicists won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1993 by measuring a change of five seconds in the orbit of two pulsars 10 years, whereas the stars Kilic and the team studied lost five seconds in their orbit in only one year.

Arianna Pickard Arianna.J.Pickard-1@ou.edu

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COed: Floor may become permanent option Record requests The Oklahoma Daily regularly asks for access to public information from OU officials. Here is a list of the most-recent requests our reporters have submitted to the university. Requested document and purpose

Date requested

The number of bike thefts reported on campus during the past five years — To learn if the number of reported thefts has decreased or increased.

Wednesday

Any emails related to the budget cuts of the Women’s and Gender Studies department from Jan. 1 to Aug. 29 — To better understand the current financial status of the department and to access any discussion regarding the cuts.

Wednesday

Nike’s current contract with OU — To learn the terms and conditions of the contract as well as its value.

Aug. 26

Visit OUDaily.com/openrecords for a full list of requests

Continued from page 1 this floor, resident adviser Scott Moses said. “The students are loving it,” he said. “From day one, they’ve just been hanging out in social lounges and stuff. It’s a really interesting dynamic. They really enjoy it.” One of the residents said she especially enjoys living on the floor because the men on the floor can help her out. “I’ve really enjoyed it all … [I like] having the boys around to help move f u r n i t u r e ,” U n i v e r s i t y College freshman Morgan Dunnagan said. Despite the energetic and jovial atmosphere on the floor now, Brittingham,

Moses and Simpson were afraid there might be some problems early on during move-in day. “O u r b i g g e s t f e a r o n move-in day was that their parents weren’t going to know it was a coed floor,” Simpson said. Because requests were sent to the students’ email inboxes, Brittingham, Moses and Simpson worried that a student would make the decision without consulting their parents, Brittingham said. “We were concerned we were going to have to make some pretty quick room changes…but there was none of that,” she said. Dunnagan said her mother supported her decision to live on the floor because of her brother’s positive

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experience with living on a coed floor in Colorado. Another concern for the floor was how they were going to deal with “hygienic issues,” Simpson said. Last year, Moses’s floor ended up smelling pretty bad toward the end of the year because men aren’t as clean as the women typically are, Simpson said. Brittingham said this isn’t

students a serious illness could

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To report news: dailynews@ou.edu

Diane Brittingham, director of Residence Life

an issue so far as the students are “trying to impress each other” and are competing to keep their bathrooms and rooms cleaner than others. “I think my hall smells great right now,” Moses said. Because this is the coed floor’s pilot semester, everyone is still watching it closely to see how it works out, and if the results are positive, the coed floor may become a permanent housing option for freshmen, Brittingham said.

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“We were concerned we were going to have to make some pretty quick room changes ... but there was none of that.”

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9/3/12 10:27:31 PM


Reader comment on OUDaily.com ›› “... may we all experience not just good but great policing which is accomplished by police who are well-trained and led, restrained in their use of force, honest, and courteous to every citizen.” (davidcouper, RE: ‘COLUMN: Unchecked police power causes atrocities’)

OPINION

Tuesday, September 4, 2012 •

3

Mary Stanfield, opinion editor Kayley Gillespie, assistant editor dailyopinion@ou.edu • phone: 405-325-3666 oudaily.com/opinion • Twitter: @OUDailyOpinion

THUMBS UP: The coed freshman floor organized in response to calls for gender-neutral housing is flourishing and saw more than 400 room requests this year. (Page 1)

editorial

Parties, not public, should pay for conventions Our View: Taxpayers should not foot the bill for political party conventions.

They are, of course, highly partisan affairs that serve no purpose other than attempting to influence the oucomes of various elections. The Republican National Convention has just They are party masturbation at its finest. wrapped up and Democrats have descended on That is not the kind of thing that merits federal Charlotte, N.C., this week for a convention of their funding. There is no arguable public service inherown. While watching all the pomp and circument in these conventions — at least none that isn’t stance, would you ever guess that some of the accomplished more readily in other ways. money for those balloons, giant screens and gift Why should taxpayers pay for either party to wine bags comes from taxpayers? and dine its influential supporters and make a big Rep. Tom Cole, R-Okla., has joined forces with show out of party unity? Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., to introduce a bill in It’s not like losing this federal funding will cripple both the House of Representatives and the the parties’ ability to hold conventions. Senate that would bar federal spending on Each party received a little more than The Our View political party conventions. is the majority $18 million from the federal government. H.R. 5912 would eliminate grants funded This contribution from taxpayers only opinion of The Daily’s by taxpayer money from aiding the parties funded about 23 percent of the cost in eight-member 2008, according to the Federal Election in their presidential election year circuses. editorial board Commission. Neither bill has made it out of committee yet, but both Coburn and Cole deserve It wasn’t always this way. Public funding Sooners’ support in this effort. of the conventions originally was mandated in the This isn’t to say that the parties’ conventions Nixon era to fight corruption. aren’t important features of the election process. In 1971, the federal government set up the public But they are flashy, lavish affairs designed to bolster financing system for conventions, mandating that support for each party’s candidate by drawing big the events be funded through a federal grant. This names to endorse them. was in response to events that illustrated how easy

column

it was for private interests to use convention funding to buy politicians. Unfortunatly, in the 1980s, the Federal Election Commission decided that the parties should be able to raise money from donors while still receiving the federal grant. That led to the situation today, where federal money makes up a minority of the funding for the conventions. The federal grant obviously is not accomplishing its goal of reducing corruption anymore. So why, in a time with a high unemployment rate, a higher deficit and enforced budget cuts, is taxpayer money still funding these events? The conventions may give candidates a chance to speak directly to the voters, but given the freedom of current technology, that isn’t exactly a rare opportunity. President Barack Obama even had a chance recently to answer voters’ questions posed directly to him through Reddit. In the end, the conventions are nothing more than glorified, four-day pep rallies. Taxpayer funds should not be used to pay for politicians’ public preening.

Comment on this on OUDaily.com column

Space flight not scientifically valuable Communication key

T

opinion columnist he recent death of Neil Armstrong — the American icon for manned space flight — hammers another nail into the coffin of human space exploration. Within the last years of his life, the rather reticent Nathan Cranford Armstrong railed against Nathan.A.Cranford-1@ou.edu the Obama administration’s budget cuts in NASA’s human space-flight program. With the current economic downturn, many American’s fear the U.S. no longer is at the forefront of scientific discovery. The equivocation of human space exploration with scientific advancement is outlandish. Originally, NASA space flight was predicated upon the fear of Sputnik and Russia dominating the skies — not the advancement of scientific discovery. Once the Berlin Wall and the Soviet Union collapsed, manned moon missions were aborted. Space enthusiasts insist the technology gained by manned missions produces technological and scientific advancement. The technological benefit gained by unmanned satellites, ranging from GPS to computer programs, far exceeds the technological benefit invested in astronauts scavenging for moon rocks. Indeed, the greatest astronomical breakthroughs of the last century, such as confirmation of the Big Bang and the existence of black holes, have required technology extending beyond the confinements of the five senses. Renowned physicist Stephen Hawking has argued the human race’s survival depends upon the colonization of space. This is because of a variety of cosmic factors, such as the eventual implosion of the sun; however, more immediate concerns include resource consumption, global warming and nuclear danger. The colonization of other planets does not actually resolve environmental and nuclear danger. Climate change is not a phenomenon unique to Earth. The runaway greenhouse effect on Venus, for example, has produced temperatures hot enough to melt led on the planet’s surface. Despite the astronomical search for habitable worlds, the earth is the only known planet capable of sustaining human life. Given the stakes, the only environmental attitude worth investing in is one of global preservation rather than global

BY THE NUMBERS Cost of space exploration

$656

$6

$60.5

$850

billion: Cost of the manned Apollo missions in 2011 dollars

billion: Cost of the unmanned Hubble Telescope

and Harry Truman (Democrat) also handled unemployment increases of 3 percent or more. In fact most spikes in unemployment seemed to have been handled within a few years regardless of the party “in charge.” My conclusion is that if blame must be given, it falls on the people in charge, not the parties. The parties have both dealt with this in the past, the current people have failed. Patrick O’Keefe, economics and psychology senior

Trent Cason is a literature and cultural studies senior.

billion: Cost of the manned space shuttle program

million: Cost of the unmanned Mars Rover Source: NASA data

retreat. Those eager to invest in the colonization of space are ahead of themselves. To put this into perspective, physicists place civilization into three categories — type one, type two and type three. A type one civilization consists of planetary control, a type two civilization consists of stellar colonization and a type three civilization consists of galactic colonization. The human species is a type zero civilization — meaning energy sources are primarily found in coal and oil. The transition into a type one civilization is currently underway. But this transition likely will not be fully completed for another hundred years. Investing in the colonization of space will first require investing in the colonization of Earth. Despite the impracticality of manned space missions, advocates insist space exploration promotes a public good, breeding a new generation of scientists and engineers. Developments in cosmology and genomics have proven capable of capturing public attention without appeal to the expenses of manned space flight. The television show “Cosmos” originally aired in 1980, captured worldwide attention and still is the most watched television program in PBS history. With the economy at the center piece of the presidential election, students would be well advised to invest interest in each candidate’s vision for NASA. Despite public denunciation, the Obama administration deserves applause for investing in science rather than a science gimmick. Nathan Cranford is a philosophy senior.

People, not parties, to blame for unemployment had to deal with unemployment even higher than what we’ve had, but he managed to get it lower than our current 8.2 percent in less than two years. Okay, so that was a Democrat handing it off to a Republican. In 1990-92, unemployment shot up 3 percent and then went down during the transition from George Bush Sr. to Bill Clinton; possibly an example of a Republican to Democrat transition. F ro m 1 9 7 4 - 1 9 7 7 G e ra l d Fo rd (Republican) handled a spike in unemployment without handing off power to another party. Dwight Eisenhower (Republican),

T

he bike lane on the South Oval seems to get more dangerous every year. Just this semester, I’ve witnessed two collisions, one of which involved serious blood and tears. I decided to compile data on the subject, and the results were encouraging — I believe we can come to an understanding. The tension behind this issue seems to be about a lack of communication. We all want to coexist on the sidewalk. In two days during peak traffic times, I interviewed 50 pedestrians who were walking or standing in the bike lane. I asked what year they were and if they knew where they were walking. Who walks in the bike lane? Not surprisingly, freshmen top the list — 44 of the 50 people I pulled out of the bike lane to interview were first-year students. The other six were upperclassmen who were text messaging while walking. Sophomores have the honor of appearing nowhere in my data. Of the 44 freshmen interviewed, 41 expressed having no idea they were in a marked “bicycles only” lane of the sidewalk. When I described crashes that have taken place, the overwhelming majority gave some version of the long whistle through the teeth. The three freshmen who did realize it was a bike lane claimed to have drifted into it accidentally. Of the entire test group, there was one oddity. A male junior, standing in the bike lane while talking to someone in the grass. When asked about it, he replied, “I hope one of these [expletive] hits me. I dare them to.” I could only laugh and suggest Newton’s laws of motion give no credence to bad attitudes. I hope he changes his mind before he gets his wish. I also talked to a handful of cyclists and one brave long-boarder. As a cyclist, I will be the first to admit the bikes need to slow down a notch or 10. There is an appropriate place to be going in excess of 10 mph: The road. Elm Avenue, Van Vleet Oval East and Asp Avenue offer basically the same number of building accesses as the main pedestrian walkway. Play life on hard mode for a change and take the paved roads. There is just no logical defense for going as fast as you do around people who, regardless of blame, aren’t always paying attention to where they are walking. After a short discussion, almost every cyclist I interviewed agreed they sometimes went too fast and not just on the South Oval. Direct communication is key. Let’s develop a language of safety here. If you are about to pass someone on the sidewalk, shout out which side you will be passing on. “On your right/left.” If someone is walking in the bike lane, just shout “Excuse me/us!” as politely as possible. Finally, if someone steps blindly into your path talking on a cell phone — you know what to yell before impact. Let’s pay attention, slow down and mutually enjoy the walk or ride to class.

letter to the editor

With the upcoming election, people like to point fingers at the other party and blame them for current problems. The economy is the big one right now. Republicans like to point out that Democrats really haven’t put a dent into unemployment. Democrats like to point out that they were handed a mess to begin with. Looking through the Department of Labor’s website, I thought of checking to see if other generations have had similar problems. From the graphs, it looks as though Jimmy Carter handed off a fairly bad economy to Ronald Reagan. Reagan

to solving bike lane pedestrian issues

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• Tuesday, September 4, 2012

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Recreation Technician (PPT), Parks and Recreation, Senior Citizens Center. Two year college degree in Recreation and Physical Ed, or related field, or any equivalent combination of education and experience which provides the required knowledge, skills and abilities. $13.06 per hr. Work period: hours vary between 8 am and 4:30 pm, Monday to Friday. Must be able to work a minimum of 25-30 hrs. per week. Application deadline: September 7, 2012. A complete job announcement available at www.normanok.gov/hr/hr-job-postings. To request an application, email HR@NormanOK. gov, call 366-5482, or visit us at 201-C W. Gray, Human Resources Dept., City of Norman. EOE FINANCE/ACCOUNTING INTERN The City of Newcastle is taking applications for part-time pd. finance/accounting intern. Pay $10/hr - $??/hr, depending on college credits. Position will report to City Manager. Candidate must be seeking accounting degree. Intent of permanent position with the City of Newcaslte. City is willing to work with school schedules. Valid driver’s license, drug screen and satisfactory background check required. Applications may be obtained at City Hall, 422 S. Main or online at www.cityofnewcastleok.com. Return complete app to office or mail to City of Newcastle, ATTN: Human Resources, PO Box 179, Newcastle, OK 73065. The City of Newcastle, Okla, is an EOE. Note Takers Wanted! Avail. positions in the OU Athletics Department! Junior, Senior, Graduate and Post-graduate applicants only! Hiring for Fall 2012. Call 325-4828 for more info! TUTORS WANTED! Avail. positions in the OU Athletics Department!! Junior, Senior, Graduate and Post-graduate applicants only! ACCT, ANTH, ASTR, COMM, ECON, ENGL, GEOG, GEOL, HES, METR, PSY, SOC, BIOL, MATH! Hiring for Fall 2012. Call 325-0554 for more info!

Full or part-time Clerk and licensed Pharmacy Tech needed. Apply in person, M-F, 9-7 at Noble Pharmacy, 125 S Main. STUDENT ASSISTANT needed in Student Media! Assist with phone, copying, filing, other duties. $7.25/hr. TUE-FRI 12-5pm. Apply in person at Student Media Business Office, Copeland Hall Rm. 149A: 325-2521

J Housing Rentals HOUSES UNFURNISHED 502 Fleetwood: 4bd/2ba, CH/A, wood floors, all appliances, lawncare incl. $1350/mo, $1000 dep. No pets. CALL 550-7069 BILLS PAID, 1bd & 2bd - 360-3850

ROOMS FURNISHED NEAR OU, privacy, $250, bills paid, neat, clean, parking. WiFi available. Prefer male student. Call 405-410-4407.

A drunk driver ruined something precious. Amber Apodaca. Friends Don’t Let Friends Drive Drunk.

Photo by Michael Mazzeo

4

2 col (3.25 in) x 2.25 inches

2 col (3.25 in) x 2 inches Sudoku ..............$760/month Boggle ...............$760/month Horoscope ........$760/month

Crossword ........$515/month

POLICY The Oklahoma Daily is responsible for one day’s incorrect advertising. If your ad appears incorrectly, or if you wish to cancel your ad call 3252521, before the deadline for cancellation in the next issue. Errors not the fault of the advertiser will be adjusted. Refunds will not be issued for late cancellations. The Oklahoma Daily will not knowingly accept advertisements that discriminate on the basis of race, color, gender, religious preference, national origin or sexual orientation. Violations of this policy should be reported to The Oklahoma Daily Business Office at 325-2521.

Being

NUMBER ONE is nothing to celebrate.

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.

This year, more than 163,000 people will die from lung cancer—making it America’s

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™ & Š 2003 The Jim Henson Company

NUMBER ONE cancer killer.

But new treatments offer hope. Join Lung Cancer Alliance in the fight against this disease. lungcanceralliance.org

HOROSCOPE By Bernice Bede Osol

Copyright 2012, Newspaper Enterprise Assn.

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2012 Eats flies. Dates a pig. Hollywood star.

LIVE YOUR DREAMS Pass It On. www.forbetterlife.org

WE DON’T JUST PROVIDE FOOD FOR THE HOMELESS.

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WE PROVIDE JOB TRAINING SO THEY CAN BUY GROCERIES.

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.

oud-2012-9-04-a-004.indd 1

Friends and associates are likely to play constructive roles in important affairs in the year ahead, especially in areas that you think need some improvement. With everybody pitching in to help, it’s inevitable that you’ll succeed. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- The social sphere in which you’ll be operating is likely to be charged with an air of expectancy. You’ll love it, because it tends to make everything seem more exciting. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) --Because you’re prepared to work for what you get, you’ll be in an extremely favorable financial cycle. You won’t expect any free rides, and the rewards will seem bigger because of this. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -- A friend in whom you place considerable confidence will have several constructive suggestions for you. Give his or her ideas a shot -- they are likely to help you resolve a problem. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -- Conditions look to be favorable, but your greatest breaks are likely to come in the financial or commercial realms, even though you may not be looking them in those quarters. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- You’re presently in an extremely favorable cycle in terms of popularity. Before the period is over, you could pick up scads of new friends and admirers. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -- Instinctively, you will know how

to make some pretty smart moves in order to give your family certain things they desire. Just do what comes naturally, and you’ll come out ahead. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) -- You always seem to have an abundance of ideas that are extremely satisfying and feasible, and they’ll be better than usual at present. Share your thinking with those who’ll appreciate it. ARIES (March 21-April 19) -- Your chances for getting something that you really want are better than usual at this time. If you have enough motivation, you won’t hesitate to go after the big fish. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -- It shouldn’t be too difficult for you to recognize that someone else’s idea is valuable. What you do with it, however, will make it either better or useless. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -- Being one of those days when you’re extremely resourceful, you should easily be able to put your talents to work, especially in matters that pertain to your career.

Universal Crossword Edited by Timothy E. Parker September 4, 2012

ACROSS 1 Wander widely 5 Wound reminders 10 Furnace’s output 14 Sheltered on the sea 15 Parcel out 16 Up to snuff 17 “Young Frankenstein� assistant 18 Object of prayers 19 Stir up, as muddy water 20 Beach Boys hit 23 Title woman in a Jim Carrey movie 24 County bordered by the Thames 25 Herd member 28 Bear lairs 30 It’s heard in Islamabad 31 Monopoly buy 33 Giant’s first word 36 Phrase from one in debt? 40 “Reach for the ___!� 41 Rice field 42 One of the tides 43 Successful job interviewee 44 Horticulturist’s study 46 Transparent, as hosiery 49 Play with

9/4

crayons 51 “Can you hear me now?� 57 Former senior, now 58 Occupy time and space 59 Palindromic ship deck 60 Manner of expression 61 Girder fastener 62 Park with the engine running 63 Proofreader’s direction 64 Court reporter 65 College head DOWN 1 Attack without warning 2 ’72 Olympics star Korbut 3 Millionmillennia period (Var.) 4 Forgiving 5 More melancholy 6 Spotless 7 Dress with some flare 8 Campus marchers, for short 9 Eyelid bulge (Var.) 10 Bother blatantly 11 Dark hardwood trees, poetically 12 Lewis Carroll’s rabbit

chaser 13 Fax forerunner 21 Literary “before� 22 Star in Cygnus 25 Major airports 26 Satie or Estrada 27 Stand ___ by (watch without acting) 28 How some things are noted 29 Suffix with “baron� 31 Go into seclusion 32 Having had many birthdays 33 Word with “circus� or “flicker� 34 Enthusiastic liveliness 35 See from afar

37 Veep after Hubert 38 Tavern 39 Courageous and daring 43 Protection for a skater 44 Plastered 45 Amazement utterance 46 Pillow coverings 47 Ancient serf 48 Get away from 49 Horror author Barker 50 Actress Mary-Kate or Ashley 52 That woman’s 53 Sign in the dark? 54 Valuable deposit 55 The Kinks sang about “her� 56 Frank and honest

PREVIOUS ANSWER PREVIOUS PUZZLE PUZZLE ANSWER

9/3 8/31

Š 2012 Universal Uclick Šwww.upuzzles.com 2012 Universal Uclick www.upuzzles.com

THREE-PEATS By Burt Henson

CANCER (June 21-July 22) -- Any suggestion you make is likely to be a good one, especially if it’s workrelated. Don’t hesitate to express what’s on your mind. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Don’t be intimidated by challenging developments, because you are likely to perform exceptionally well when your mettle is tested. The secret is to believe in your abilities.

9/3/12 7:50:15 PM


Tuesday, September 4, 2012 •

LIFE&ARTS

OUDaily.com ›› L&A columnist Tony Beaulieu reviews the latest installation in the comic book series “The Goon.”

Video Game review

Don’t look behind you Y

ou’re walking through the woods in the middle of the night. As you clutch your flashlight like a life preserver, the screen suddenly fizzles. You panic, turning off the flashlight and run into the forest, praying you’ve evaded the eerie presence behind you. When you finally stop running, you notice a child’s drawing on a group of rocks. It reads: “Always Watches. No Eyes.” You pick it up. Suddenly, you’re turned around. Your screen starts to fail, loud noises blare in your ears, and you stare into the haunting image of a man with no face. Welcome to “Slender,” an independent survival horror game created by Mark Hadle y of Pars e c Productions. It was released online as a free download for PC and Mac in June. The big difference between “Slender” and other survival horror games is the simple approach it takes. While other horror games l i ke “ D e a d Sp a c e” a n d “Resident Evil 4” emphasize fast-paced action, “Slender” takes advantage of the suspense and lack of action. The game starts with the title card, the flashlight turns on, and the game tells you to find eight manuscripts about the game’s monster. There is no context for a story, no explanation why. “Slender” just thrusts you in and forces you to adapt. The game play takes the same simplistic approach as the story. There is no information on the screen, no list of controls and no way

oud-2012-9-04-a-005.indd 1

Carmen Forman, life & arts editor Westlee Parsons, assistant editor dailyent@ou.edu • phone: 405-325-3666 oudaily.com/life&arts • Twitter: @OUDailyArts

technology

OU graduate builds iPhone application Designer uses Draw Something as inspiration Jared Glass

Life & Arts Reporter

photo provided

In “Slender,” players search for eight manuscripts about the game’s villain as he actively pursues them. “Slender” is an independent survival game created by Mark Hadley of Parsec Productions.

At a glance ‘Slender’ Rating: 4/5 stars Creator: Mark Hadley of Parsec Productions Available platforms: PC or Mac

to pause the game. By taking out these common game qualities, “Slender” pulls the player deep into the spooky experience. Unmentioned handicaps like a limited ability to sprint and very slow normal movement makes the player feel vulnerable and desperate to stay one step ahead for just a little while longer. The atmosphere “Slender”

creates is memorable alone. For every odd numbered manuscript page you get, another sound is played in the background, starting with page one. The instant the first note is played, a drumbeat is heard in the background, clueing the player to the presence stalking them. For the rest of the game, it never stops. And for every two pages you grab after that, the ambience adds another, spookier layer. Even though there’s nothing around but dark forest, the endless ambience keeps the player tense. “Slender’s” monster deserves credit for this game’s effectiveness as well. Seeing a ghostly image of a faceless man staring at you from across the map is nervewracking. The more pages you get, the more determined the monster is in

snatching you and the closer it will appear. Surprisingly, you won’t see it as often as you think. During my first play through, I never saw the monster until the screen forcibly turned me around mid-game, and I had lost. While some are reading this and probably thinking, “it’s obvious who the monster is” based on the title of the game, I won’t say the name. The mystery of not knowing adds more to the horror of the game for those who haven’t played. Kaylan Paizis is a film and media studies sophomore.

See more online Visit OUDaily.com for the complete story oudaily.com/life&arts

5

If you’ve ever wanted to know who makes the smart phone games that keep you entertained while your professor is droning on in class, you don’t have to look outside the OU community. OU computer science graduate, John Mosesman, used his degree to create an iPhone game. For the past eight months, Mosesman has been working on his first game for the iPhone, including setting up a company to publish it, Nevo Development LLC. “I had the idea last August and started actually doing work in December,” he said. He has submitted the game to Apple for approval and said the game should be out around the beginning of September. The game will be available for 99 cents or for free with advertisements. The game, Disguise It, takes inspiration from Draw Something and sets two players in a contest to disguise a given picture. The pictures switch when both players have drawn over the picture, and one of the players has to identify the disguised picture. Mosesman wasn’t alone in developing the game.

John’s brother, a junior trumpet performance major at OU, wrote the music for the game. B y r o n To w l e s , w h o graduated from OU with Mosesman in 2011, was a graphic design major and helped design the game. Early on in the development of the game, the original graphic designer had to back out. That’s when Towles stepped in to animate the game. Towles handled the animation of the game, which left the programming to Mosesman. The game ended up being more than 10,000 lines of code, Mosesman said. When asked what the hardest part of it all was Mosesman said, “I would have to say patience.” How e ve r, t h i s wa s n ’ t Mosesman’s first experience with app development. Mosesman said he spent about a year and six months in an internship with OU Information Technology and did work on the OU2GO app He hopes to continue app development with a version of Disguise It for the Android Marketplace. For anyone interested in app or game making, it’s easy to get started learning, he said. “There are a lot of really good resources online,” Mosesman said. Places like iTunes U or whole courses available for free online through various universities, he said. Jared Glass, jrglass@ou.edu

9/3/12 8:04:44 PM


6

• Tuesday, September 4, 2012

OUDaily.com ››

SPORTS

Check out five things we learned from Monday’s press conference, which came two days after a close win over UTEP on Saturday.

Volleyball

OU volleyball on a roll Team brings 5-2 record against Razorbacks Sports Reporter

After a weekend match against Colorado, the Oklahoma volleyball team continues its road trip with a stop in Fayetteville, Ark., Tuesday night to play the Arkansas Razorbacks. OU brings a 5-2 record into Barnhill Arena, which includes winning twoof-three in the Northern Colorado Invitational and a hard fought loss to No 24. Colorado State on Sunday.

Football

Saunders denied NCAA waiver, will not play in 2012 Transfer wide receiver Jalen Saunders was denied by the NCAA to play this season, OU coach Bob Stoops confirmed during Monday’s press conference. Saunders, who was expected to extend the depth at the receiver position, led Fresno State Jalen in receiving Saunders last season with 1,065 yards and 12 touchdowns.

COLLEGE SKI & BOARD WEEK

column

Penn State enters new era in football as mediocre team

W

Chris Tyndall

The Sooners are led by senior outside hitter Morgan Reynolds (74 kills) and sophomore Keila o u t s i d e h i tRodriguez ter Tara Dunn (3.64 killsper-set), who played for the first time last weekend after missing the first three games because of a leg injury. Senior libero Maria Fernanda, OU’s career digs leader, has 121 digs this year and now sits at sixth on the Big 12’s career digs list with 1,769. Coach Santiago Restrepo says he is proud of the way his young squad has started the season and of the leadership his two seniors, Reynolds and Fernanda, have shown. “With only two seniors and having freshmen starting, growing pains are to be expected, but it’s a very good

Kedric Kitchens, sports editor Dillon Phillips, assistant editor dailysports@ou.edu • phone: 405-325-3666 oudaily.com/sports • Twitter: @OUDailySports

ben williams/the daily

Freshman setter Julia Doyle (2) and freshman middle blocker Kierra Holst (7) jump to block the ball against Western Michigan on Aug. 25. The Sooners face Arkansas at 6 p.m. in Fayetteville, Ark.

start,” Restrepo said. Restrepo added that Reynolds has been reliable and crucial to the team’s success. “We need her to play well every night to win games,” Restrepo said. Arkansas (6-1) has started the season equally strong, winning five straight before falling to No. 22 Michigan in the finale of the Michigan Challenge. The Razorbacks are led by

a pair of seniors, outside hitter Jasmine Norton (96 kills, 3.84 k/s) and opposite hitter Roslandy Acosta (86 kills, 3.44 k/s). This is the fifth game of an eight-game road trip that concludes this weeke n d i n L i n c o l n , N e b. , for the Ameritas Player Invitational. “[We] scheduled tough opponents (during nonconference) to get the girls ready for the grind of the Big

He also was a key part of the Bulldogs’ special teams, returning 32 kickoffs for 743 yards during his first two seasons. Saunders will be eligible for the 2013 season. Staff Reports

will be available on a dedicated pay-per-view channel on participating Oklahoma and Texas program providers and nationwide via participating satellite and Telecom distributors. The game kicks off at 6 p.m. Staff Reports

Home opener only available on payper-view Saturday The OU football game against Florida A&M on Saturday will be offered exclusively on pay-per-view, FOX Sports Oklahoma announced Thursday. The game is being offered on pay-per-view because it wasn’t selected for on-air play by the channel, nor did any cable stations pick it up. The game

SPIRITS

breckenridge

12,” Restrepo said. The Razorbacks lead the all-time series 3-2, but the Sooners have won the past two matches in Norman and in Fayetteville, Ark. OU dominated the meeting last year in Norman in four sets, 3-1, and won a fiveset thriller in Fayetteville, Ark. Chris Tyndall ctynsports@cox.net

ith names Sports columnist freshly sewn on the back of the players’ jerseys and a blue ribbon on each helmet, Penn State took the field against the Ohio Bobcats on Saturday morning, hoping to rehabilitate its image and Dillon Phillips distance itself from the tardphillips@ou.edu nished Joe Paterno era. More than 90,000 fans showed up at Beaver Stadium to support the Nittany Lions in their first game under coach Bill O’Brien. Although the outcome of Saturday’s game certainly wasn’t the one Penn State wanted — a 24-14 win for the Bobcats — it showed that the team, and the university, is moving forward. Penn State no longer is the “Grand Experiment.” It’s a mediocre Big Ten team — one that will only get worse. Even with the loss of nine players to transfer, this is the best team Penn State will field for some time, and judging from the Nittany Lions’ performance on the field, it will be a long road ahead. That might be surprising to some considering the Nittany Lions lost their home opener to a Mid-American Conference school — albeit a good one — but the players already on the team signed up to play for a perennial college football power. O’Brien’s recruits won’t be doing the same. It’s much easier to convince players who already have committed to play for a football team, enrolled in a school and rooted themselves in the community to stay. Convincing a high school kid to come to a school where he can’t play in a bowl game until his senior year is another story. The Nittany Lions’ talent level will drop in each successive season, and the full effect of the NCAA sanctions won’t be felt fully until several years down the line. But O’Brien should be commended for what he’s done thus far. The man walked into a burning building and, instead of bailing out the nearest door, he hunkered down and tried to make the best out of a bad situation. However, with an uncertain future ahead, the Nittany Lions’ famed battle cry of “We are!” is now punctuated with an ellipsis and a question mark. Dillon Phillips is a journalism junior and assistant sports editor for The Daily.

Are you on Twitter? Stay connected with The Daily

@OUDaily, @OUDailyStudent, @OUDailyArts, @OUDailySports @OUDailyOpinion, @OUDailyGov

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