CAMPUS NEWS, PAGE 3
got civic illiteracy? 71 percent of 2,500 Americans surveyed fail basic test THE UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA’S I NDEPENDENT STUDENT VOICE
VOL. 93, NO. 74 FREE — Additional Copies 25¢
TUESDAY, DEC. 9, 2008 © 2008 OU Publications Board
Voters decide today on sales tax for new county jail • One-fourth penny sales tax could solve overcrowding CAITLIN HARRISON The Oklahoma Daily
Amy Frost/The Daily
The current Cleveland County Detention Center is located on Jones Avenue in Norman. Voters will decide today whether to implement a sales tax to build a new county jail.
Cleveland County citizens will vote today for a county-wide sales tax that plans to build a new jail in Norman. The one-fourth penny sales tax would fund a new facility located at Franklin Road and 24th Avenue N.W. Cleveland County is one of only three counties in the state that does not have a county sales tax, which has the least impact on individual taxpayers, according to a report from Cleveland County’s Web site. Funds from the new tax would replace the current jail, which has been overcrowded and is in violation of state jail standards, said Rusty Sullivan, Cleveland County District 3 commissioner. The coun-
ty’s population has increased from about 160,000 to a little more than 236,000 since the current jail was built 14 years ago, he said. Sullivan said he is confident most voters have realized the need for a new jail, and he has not talked to anyone who thinks otherwise. “I believe everyone realizes we’ve simply reached a saturation point in the jail,” he said. “I’m very hopeful that the people will pass that.” If the vote passes, the facility is slated to open in November 2011, and construction will begin next March, according to the report. A new jail would be safer for both inmates and detention officers, Sullivan said. He said the current jail was built up, requiring more guards for each floor, whereas the new facility would be built out instead. “It’s designed to use a lot less detention officers, which will make it a lot more economical to operate,” he said. The current jail does not have enough space to segregate male and female prisoners, or prisoners of different security
“Everyone realizes we’ve simply reached a saturation point in the jail.” Rusty Sullivan, Cleveland County District 3 commissioner risks, despite the fact it is required by law, the report stated. The new facility will cost slightly more than $40 million, according to the report. It will also include more high-tech equipment, including video visitation and video arraignment, Sullivan said. There will also be more land surrounding the new jail, so the county can costeffectively expand it in 20 or 30 years if necessary, Sullivan said. By the facility’s
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United Way struggles to meet goal
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT The Daily picks the top album releases of 2008. The list includes Kanye West, Cold War Kids, The Killers and more. Page 7.
• Uncertain economy causes greater need LEIGHANNE MANWARREN The Oklahoma Daily
SPORTS The Sooners have reached the end of their regular season, so it’s time for The Daily to hand some hardware. In today’s issue, we recognize the offense’s best players. Page 5. Photo provided
Shown in an artist’s rendition, Two Partners Place will provide 50,000 square feet of social and physical science research space and space for private sector companies.
CAMPUS BRIEFS Piano teacher grabs prize Professor Barbara Fast, a piano teacher and educator for more than 30 years, has been named the 2008 Irene and Julian J. Rothbaum Presidential Professor of Excellence for the Weitzenhoffer Family college of Fine Arts. “[She is] a remarkable, master teacher, whose passion for sharing her knowledge and wisdom with her students is unequalled,” said Rich Taylor, Weitzenhoffer College of Fine Arts dean. The Irene and Julian J. Rothbaum Presidential Professor of Excellence Award has been presented annually since 1995 in order to recognize the exemplary leadership in the fine arts and fine arts education programs at OU.
TODAY’S INDEX A&E Campus News Campus Notes Classifieds Crossword
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Horoscope Opinion Police Reports Sports Sudoku
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WEATHER FORECAST
TODAY LOW 45° HIGH 46°
40%
WEDNESDAY LOW 23° HIGH 38° Source: Oklahoma Weather Lab
Research campus nearly ready • Two new buildings slated to open in 2009, 2010 MEREDITH MORIAK The Oklahoma Daily dream from the early 1990s has become a reality during the past eight years on OU’s research campus. The campus, located on 271 acres of land north of State Highway 9 on Jenkins Avenue, is home to four state-of-the-art buildings. Additionally, construction has begun on two new buildings: Three Partners Place and the Stephenson Life Sciences Research Center. The buildings are the fifth and sixth to be constructed since the Oklahoma State Regents for Higher Education first approved breaking ground for the Stephenson Research and Technology Center in 2001, said Lee Williams, vice president of research and graduate school dean. The goal of the research campus is to create a place where researchers from various disciplines work together trading ideas about different projects, Williams said. “We wanted to bring different disciplines together and have them interact and recreate the classic university,” Williams said.
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Bringing it all together The research campus coins itself as the place to bring together the academics of the university, government programming and the private sector, said Melany Dickens, director of research campus operations. Williams said he feels the National Weather Center is the center of the research campus and is a good example of how the university and government can collaborate. “[The research campus] is designed to promote the scholarly, intellectual interaction that should happen at a university,” Williams said. “It reaffirms the core values of what a university should be.” The research campus is important to the university because it creates a community where scholars from different disciplines including science and math to come together and solve research problems, said Paul Risser, chair of the university research cabinet. Additionally, it allows for the university to engage and support the private sector that occupies some buildings. “It is one of the largest engines of economic progress for our state by creating more jobs based on new research discoveries and patents,” OU President David L. Boren said in an e-mail. “Ultimately, these new discoveries launch new businesses allowing more outstanding Oklahomans to stay and continue to live and work in
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Research Campus buildings National Weather Center • Completed in July 2006 • 244,000 sq. ft. housing academic and research meteorology programs and NOAA research Stephenson Research Technology Center • Completed in 2004 • 94,000 sq. ft. of research space for interdisciplinary programs Stephenson Life Sciences Research Center • Opening in summer 2010 • 165,000 sq. ft interdisciplinary facility housing advanced graduate and undergraduate student research laboratories One Partners Place • Completed in fall 2004 • 50,000 sq. ft. of research space for private sectors and OU researchers Two Partners Place • Completed in Spring 2007 • 50,000 sq. ft. of research space for private sectors and OU researchers Three Partners Place • Opening in summer 2009 • 75,000 sq. ft. of space for OU administrative areas, OU researchers and private sectors
The holiday season is traditionally the season of giving, but with the economic crisis, nonprofit organizations in the area are suffering a steep shortfall. The United Way of Norman’s Live United Annual Drive, which supports 29 other local nonprofit agencies, is falling short of its $2.1 million goal. “The drive is still going on but if the projected numbers stay as they are, we will be $400,000 short of our intended goal,” said Joe Siano,
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CAMPUS SAFETY
Report requests $16M for state campus security JAMES LOVETT The Oklahoma Daily More than half of Oklahoma’s higher education campuses have developed strategies to react to bomb threats and shooters, according to a survey from the Campus Life and Safety and Security Task Force. The task force, created in April 2007 by Gov. Brad Henry after the Virginia Tech shooting, discussed the survey at its meeting Monday in Oklahoma City. The survey also states that institutions now have more ways to notify students about campus emergencies, and 86 percent of campuses review their emergency plans annually. This year’s survey included information from more than 70 schools and universities across Oklahoma and will be included in the committee’s annual report. The report, which will be released
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