The Vista Oct. 10, 2000

Page 1

UNIVERSITY OF CENTRAL OKLAHOMA • Sports

PAGE

6, 7, 8

• Crossword

PAGE

18

• Horoscopes

PAGE

18

• Classifieds

PAGE

19

(27`.

X-Games

camp trains bladers, bikers and other nuts. PAGE

The Student Voice Since 1903

WWW.THEVISTAONLINE.COM

BRIEFS >News coming Out Day G.A.T.E will host National Coming Out Day with a "Stop Hate' candlelight vigil Oct. 11. ✓ Page 3

>Sports Women's Team Wins No 8 Women's SoccerTeam worn its school-record eighth straight win against East Central Oct. 7. ✓ Page 6

>Features Dead King Lives Dr. Steven Law takes on the persona of King William the Conqueror for an educational presentation. ✓ Page 3

TUESDAY •

15

OCT. 10, 2000

Alumni Relations to overhaul database is being degree year and geographic The project undertaken by the alumni office location. Staff Writer The office to update all contacts alumni ith help from each files with the "We want to alert the through mail and academic department on name, address, receives updates from phone number, campus, the UCO departments' office the U.S. Postal Alumni Relations Office wants to e-mail address experts whose jobs it Office. dramatically increase the database and educational The database can it generates with usable data in information of is to track alumni that be updated and alumni. Also, one year. information can be The office is looking for alumni the database's we will be the resource processed quickly by contact information and mailing absent alumni the alumni office. for them and help files will be lists from each department. Some or all of the "We want to alert the located. them." department's work of The alumni departments' office experts whose maintaining and job is to track alumni that we will database holds be the resource for them and help other types of —Lisa Craddock generating mailing lists can be removed. Director of Alumni them. They may not have the information Relations The office is time," said Lisa Craddock, director about UCO graduates including major, degree, familiar with the details of of alumni relations. BY SARAH DAVIS

W

communicating with alumni. "We have learned cost-efficient ways to help with contacting them," Craddock said. The Alumni Relations Office has three main goals: reaching alumni, involving alumni and enhancing the university. "We want to have the most comprehensive database the university has ever had," Craddock said. Anyone who wants more contact with alumni or has information on alumni that needs to be updated or researched should call the alumni office at 974-2421. •

TODAY IN HISTORY 1972- The Washington Post, in articles by reporters Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward, uncovered a massive effort on the part of the Committee for the Reelection of the President (CREEP) to disrupt the Democratic campaign. Their findings were later immortalized in the film All the President's Men.

QUOTE OF THE DAY "The world is an oyster, but you don't crack it open on a matress." — Arthur Miller

WEATHER Tue.

Sunny and mild. High near 66. PHOTO BY TSUYOSI-11 SHIRAI-SIT

It's a small, small world Wed.

Partly cloudy. High near 69.

...

At the UCO International Fest, students Qi. Shang demmonstrated Chinese caligraphy, Rahia Siddiqui demmonstrated Henna tattooing, and Crystal Pui demmonstrated Kwan Lo dancing. The International Fest was held in the UC ballroom Oct. 6th and included many more exhibits, foodstuffs and entertainment.


PAGE

2

THEVISTA

OCTOBER 10, 2000

EDITORIAL

Students should research the issues before voting

U

CO students, our days our numbered.

No, the end of the world is not just around the corner. But, the day the world as we know it is changed forever and yet another United States President is written into the history books is quickly approaching. We as students, citizens, and yes, registered voters have the privilege of making our opinions known as to who we want to sit in the Oval Office. The question is, what are we going to do about it? In an informal survey done by The Vista staff, it was uncovered that many students do know who they plan to vote for in the upcoming election. The only problem with that is that very few people could actually come up with concrete reasons as to why one candidate is better than another. Even fewer people could give a list of issues that the candidates differ on,

VOLUME 102

E

ISSUE 14

www.. thevistaonline .com

Editor in Chief Allison Franklin Associate Editor Michael Ross Managing Editor Emily Bullard Copy Editor N. David Owens Sarah Davis Writer Writer Mena Ganesan Mike Greer Writer Writer Sara Morrell Writer Jayna Ornelas Writer Tiffany Watkins Sports Editor Traci Starkey Director

and some of the differences are vast. The survey also revealed that very few students watched the televised presidential debates, thus missing yet another opportunity to learn more about the candidates. One of these men will soon be responsible for running our nation. One of these men will make daily decisions affecting the cost and quality of everything from education to health care, and we as students turned our televisions elsewhere. It is our mission, if not our duty, as U.S. citizens to research the presidential candidates and to learn as much as possible in the remaing days before the Nov. 7 election. We should make an effort to know where each of the candidates stand on the issues, (abortion, social security, health care and education to name just a few) and make a more educated decision on the future of our country. •

CAMPUS QUOTES HOW DO YOU EDUCATE YOURSELF ON WHERE THE PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES STAND ON THE ISSUES?

Sports Writer Mary Hall Photographer Molly Mathis Photographer Tsuyoshi Shiraishi Cartoonist Nick Bayer Ad Manager Mike Thiessen Tay Gavin Ad Sales Ad Sales Susan Keinroth Ad Sales Kelly Lauderdale Web Editor Shauna Hardway Web Assistant Wenida Nova Circulation Shane Pratt Rhonda Bowden

The Vista is published as a newspaper and public forum by UCO students, semi-weekly during the academic year except exam and holiday periods, and on Thursdays only during the summer term, at the University of Central Oklahoma, 100 N University Dr, Edmond, OK 73034-5209. Telephone: (405) 974-5549. A one-year subscription rate is $12. Postmaster: Send address changes to The Vista, 100 N. University Drive, Edmond, OK 73034.

to half of what they say, and throw out the other half."

"Joseph Lieberman for President 2000. I would vote if he were running."

—KEN HURST

—DEREK TUNSTALL

"I listen

senior photojournalism major

"How do you educate yourself properly when the education available is only what you want to hear?"

"I don't feel you can get a good education because the media sensationalizes their favorite candidate."

—JESSICA YOUNGKER

senior music education

senior history major

—KEVIN SHARP junior music major

EDITORIALS The Vista's Editorial Board meets once a week. Editorials represent the views of at least one member of the board. Opinion columns, reviews and commentaries represent the views of the writer and not necessarily the views of The Vista Editorial Board, the department of journalism, UCO, or the Board of Regents of Oklahoma Colleges. Editorial cartoons do not necessarily represent the views of the artist. The Vista is not an official medium of expression for the Regents or UCO.

LETTERS The Vista encourages letters to the editor. Letters should address issues and ideas, not personalities. Letters must be typed, double-spaced, with a maximum of 150 words, and must include the author's printed name, major, classification and phone number. Non-students must include a title and daytime phone number. Letters are subject to editing for libel, clarity and space, or to eliminate statements of questionable taste. The Vista reserves the right not to publish submitted letters and does not publish anonymous letters. Address letters to: Editor, The Vista, 100 N. University Drive, Edmond, OK 73034-5209 or deliver in person to the editor in the Communications Building, Room 107. Letters can be sent via e-mail to thevista@hotmail.com .

"I watch the debates."

"Watch television and go to the meetings."

—LARRY CLAYTON sophomore business major

—ERI YAMAGUCHI

"Keep reading the newspaper, and watching the debates is always fun."

sophomore economics major

—RON HARRIS freshman business major

"I watch the news a lot."

—J.B. WORKMAN senior communication major


OCTOBER 10, 2000

PAGE 3

THEVISTA

Gage to speak at Nat'l Coming Out Day event for UCO's G.A.T.E. BY MENA GANESAN

After last "Dr. year's Gage spoke impromptu at a UCO "The point of the candlelight vigil is not CO student organization vigil, the leadership G.A.T.E. (Gay Alliance for just to remember people who have been conference. organization Tolerance and Equality) will decided that We felt host a "Stop Hate" candlelight vigil this year they victimized for their sexual orientation, that her for National Coming Out Day, Oct. wanted to speech but also for any minority beliefs." 11 invite guest about "The point of the candlelight speaker, Dr. diversity vigil is not just to remember people —Mandy Whitten Kathryn was very who have been victimized for their G.A.T.E. president Gage, viceinclusive of sexual orientation but also for any president of all minority minority beliefs," said Mandy Student Affairs, to enhance the groups and exemplified the message Whitten, G.A.T.E. president. day. of G.A.T.E.," said Whitten. Staff Writer

U

G.A.T.E exists to provide peer support for the gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgendered community at UCO. They also promote education and tolerance for homosexuals in the UCO community. "There are a lot of closeted gay people on this campus and I don't think this is the safest or most nurturing environment for gays and lesbians," said Whitten. "The things that most people have to think about, I have to think about a little more. It shouldn't be an issue if I want to walk around

campus holding hands with my girlfriend," she said. The vigil will be held at 7:30 p.m., Wednesday Oct. 11 at Broncho Lake. There will also be an informational booth from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Oct. 11 at the University Center. G.A.T.E. meets at 6 p.m. every Tuesday in the University Center, Room 201. For more information, call 9746410. •

Professor reinvents self as thousand-year-old monarch BY MENA GANESAN

Staff Writer

r. Stephen Law, chairman of the humanities and philosophy department reinvented himself Oct. 4 to portray King William the Conqueror. Dr. Law began his portrayal with a monologue of the king addressing the problems of the conquest of England and within his own family. Dressed in a medieval steel helmet, chain link outerwear, knight's sword and a medieval

D

leather and steel shield, Law covered the events of the six years since the conquests of England. After his monologue, Law fielded questions as King William. Maintaining the time period of the imaginary present day being Nov. 1, 1072, King William answered questions from the audience much like the modern day presidential candidates have for current election debates. The evening concluded with Law returning to present day UCO as himself and entertaining

S orld

Tanning Co.

PHOTO BY TSUYOSHI SHIRAISHI

Dr. Stephen Law dressed in medieval attire for a presentation Oct. 4.

J

1904 Ei 2M Edmond

m fs Climb

Mon/ 8-11 $1 longnecks, 8-1:30 $.75 draws Tues/ Dart Night Wed/ Drown Night 8-12 All the beer you can drink for $5 Thurs/ Karaoke Night 9:30-1:30 $1Longnecks 8-10 Fri and Sat Live Music and $1 Longnecks from 8-10

Fri/ 13 Semetrical Alliance Sat/ 14th Groove Diggers 3 Pool Tables * Shuffleboard * 2 Dart Machines Large Dance Floor 2nd & Santa Fe 341-7582

audience questions that couldn't be answered while he was portraying William the Conqueror. Law also discussed the impact of the Norman conquest on Western civilization. Approximately 200 peopled attended Law's reenactment as William the Conqueror. The presentation was sponsored by the Liberal Arts Speaker Series in conjunction with the UCO Medieval Society and the History Alive! program of the Oklahoma Humanities Council. •

Hours

330-0641

Monday-Fria* 9AM-9PM Saturday 9AM-5PM * Sunday 1 PM-6PM

I

r

Bring in this coupon end receive Bring in this coupon and receive

ONE MONTH UNLIMITED

TANNING

ONLY

$23as00

i

20% OFF ALL TANNING

— — .11 _ _ _ lia.wizieramitatt-116ginituttbantt _


PAGE

4

THEVISTA

Nationally recongnized herbalist speaks at UCO BY SARAH DAVIS

Staff Writer

A

lecture on the use of herbal medicines in the treatment of illnesses and for maintaining good health in women was given by speaker Tieraona Low Dog, M.D. on Sept. 27 in Constitution Hall. Herbal medicine, the use of natural plant substances to treat and prevent illness, has become a widespread remedy for many forms of ailments including memory loss, colds, low stamina, mild depression and insomnia. "I became a physician to enhance what the medicine men and women and midwives of the deserts, mountains and plains of the United States taught me so I might be able to offer those who seek my help the best of alternative and mainstream medicine," Low Dog said. Over 80,000 species of plants are used to treat as many as 80 percent of people in the world. Prescription drugs made from plants sold in the United States total 25 percent. Overthe-counter drugs, such as laxatives and aspirin, are made from herbal ingredients. Although interest in herbal treatments is not as popular in the U.S. as in Asia and Western Europe, millions of Americans do use herbal medicines like ginseng, St.-John'swort and ginkgo biloba to treat ailments. "I use multi-vitamins and essential oils and herbs," said Kendall Deaton, sophomore community health major. Herbal medicine is also used as a replacement of hormone therapy for symptoms faced by women going through menopause. Low Dog is a member of the American Medical Association and the Holistic American Medical Association, and she is the past president of the American Herbalist

Guild. She served in an advisory capacity for the Women's Health Journal, Alternative Health for Women Newsletter, the California Institute of Integral Studies and the Native Health Research Database. Low Dog also served as chair of the Dietary Supplements Expert Committee for the United States Pharmacopoeia. "Dr. Low Dog is one of the country's most recognized experts in the use of herbal medicine, which can be a controversial topic in the health care community," said Stan Tatum, chief executive officer, Edmond Medical Center. There is debate over the government's regulation of herbal remedies as drugs, due to the question of botanicals' validity and safety as medicines. Medical testing is difficult to apply to herbs because of their many interacting ingredients. In 1994, Congress passed the Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act, which reclassifies herbs as dietary supplements rather than food additives. The Act makes it the FDA's job, rather than the manufacturer's responsibility, to prove that a marketed herb product is unsafe. Another herbal medicine concern is the threatened supply of known wild herbs by overharvesting and habitat loss. Large pharmaceutical companies have contributed to conservation of tropical rain forest efforts in hope of isolating beneficial drugs from plants. Biologists are currently studying medicinal plants, regarding harvesting and the effects of cultivation on the performance of herbs as medicines. Despite controversial issues in herbal medicine, interest in using the alternative form of treatment continues to grow in the U.S. and elsewhere. "There is definitely a greater acceptance of herbal medicine now, more-so than before," Deaton said. •

OCTOBER 10, 2000

Free presentation to focus on women and depression

A

public discussion on "Women and Depression" will be held Tuesday evening at All Souls Episcopal Church in Oklahoma City. The topic will be presented by Phoebe Tucker, MD. The program will explore factors contributing to depression in women, symptoms of depression, and treatment options, including antidepressant drugs. Tucker will explain what depression is, and the biological and psychosocial factors involved in depression. She will also discuss family life issues affected by women suffering from depression. According to Tucker, there are times in a woman's life cycle when she is most susceptible to

mood changes or major depression. These include premenstrual periods, postpartum periods and menopause. Tucker is a former president of the Central Oklahoma Psychiatric Association. Tucker is an associate professor in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at the OU Health Sciences Center. The presentation is part of the Mental Health Association of Oklahoma

County's educational series. "Women and Depression" is a free presentation open to the public. All Souls Episcopal Church is located at 6400 N. Pennsylvania in Oklahoma City. The presentation begins at 7:00 p.m. and will end at approximately 8:30 pm. •

The Vista. Read by more parakeets than any other college newspaper in Edmond. Every Tuesday and Thursday.

Shutterbugs in the gardens.. .

PHOTO BY TSUYOSHI SHIRAISHI

Senior photojournalism major Masayuki Kobori, right, discusses the finer point sof photograpy with instructor Mark Zimmerman during the special photo project class at the Myriad Botanical Gardens on Oct 5th.


OCTOBER 10, 2000

THEVISTA

PAGE 5

MY TUR Dr. Richard Crum, professor of photo editing, magazine editing, and production

MIDDLE EAST

AFRICA

YEMEN, Sana'a—Yemen and neighboring Saudi Arabia are struggling to control an outbreak of Rift Valley fever, which has so far claimed scores of lives and devastated thousands of livestock in both countries.

HARARE—Despite government threats to shut them down, the privately-owned Capital Radio and FM-100 are still on the air. The two stations went on air on Sept. 28 to test their equipment. They have been broadcasting since then without a hitch, playing music and calling on listeners to give- them feedback on the reception.

ASIA MALAYSIA, Penang— Every evening, a few young Malaysians huddle in a second-floor room in a suburb of this northern city, working feverishly on the country's first independent Chinese-language newspaper on the Internet Their work on Mytianwang aims to sidestep the country's tight controls on the print media, even while established media firms consolidate their Internet editions.

%frxkavoivnpvigtglipm,?;', (

You don't have to go to far away places to find talent, it dwells among us. Woody Gaddis is one of the most ingenious photographers of our time. He has built the most authentic and practical photography discipline on any campus in the Southwestern United States. More often than not, genius is found right here at our fingertips, just as close as Woody Caddis has been to UCO for the past 30 years. The decisive moment. This incomparable photograph by Woody Gaddis captures the instant Vista director Richard Crum's eight-foot bullwhip snapped a cigarette held by Vista editor Jeff Baker in 1969.

SOUTH AMERICA COLUMBIA, Bogota—Violent gun battles between leftist guerrillas and right-wing paramilitaries in the southeastern department of Putumayo, the country's top supplier of coca leaf, have left at least 15 people dead and 23 injured, and forced

60 families from their homes.

COMPILED FROM DONATED AND GOVERNMENT SOURCES BY N. DAVID OWENS

.1111111111140

Jack• Nk.klarits speaks The "My Turn" column is written by UCO personalities and represents the views of the author, not necessarily those of The Vista staff. "My Turn" appears in every Tuesday issue. For information on submitting a column, call 974-5569.

Christianity and the Bahati Faith Saturcby October 14th, 2000 7:30 p.m.

LOOKING FOR A

Everything You Could Want from a Job

...along with some ghosts, goblins, and ghouls to scare the living daylights out of visitors at Frontier City. That's right! We're hiring for:

So join us for some fearsome fun! To apply, stop by Human Resources on:

Mondays and Wednesdays between 2:30 and 5:00 p.m.

321 E Carptri 11A1 woo of LICO CIO, 4i 5:SW(1,')

AND MORE! Earn

E dr31011 B1 [1<'1' C

$12—$16/hr.

ROBODY DOES BREAKS BETTER! January 2-15, 2001

and More!

Steamboat CO

$8/h r.

Breckenridge CO)

Guaranteed Paid Weekly Hours AM/PM Shifts Paid Training Bonuses Motivational Contests Advancement Opportunities

CALL TODAY FOR AN INTERVIEW: OKC

Aspen CO Winter Park CO 24-Mar 31, 2001

C( Panama City FL South Padre TX ?aytona Beach F

843-0735

Destin FL

MOORE

Hilton Head SC

ext. 26

793-0400 ext. 27

OR APPLY ONLINE: www.dialamerica.com/okc www.dialamerica.com/moore

• DialAmerica Must be 18 or older

Feb 23-Apr 1, 2

SPRING Steamboat CO SKI TRIPS

www.sunchase.com

1.800•SUNCHASE


PAGE 6

OCTOBER 10, 2000

THEVISTA

SPORTS Loss to Bulldogs put Bronchos in the dog house On their next possession, tailback Justin Matthews hit pay dirt on an eight-yard carry after eluding a swarm of SWOSU Sports Editor defenders. Evan Luttrell's two extra point kicks gave the urnovers proved to be the difference in UCO's loss to Bronchos a 14-point advantage with 10:55 left in the half. It seemed almost too good to be true when Claude Davis division rival, Southwestern Oklahoma on Saturday, Oct. 7 in Weatherford. After starting with a 14-0 lead, intercepted Josh Allen inside the SWOSU 20-yard line on the Bronchos gave up 18 points to the Bulldogs on two the Bulldogs next possession, and it was. An offsides penalty gave the ball back to SWOSU, and they capitalized on the fumbles and an interception. The 27-21 loss put the Bronchos at 2-4 on the season, 2-2 opportunity when Allen hit Shevron Glover with a 59-yard in overall Lone Star Conference standings and 1-1 in the touchdown pass. The Bulldogs missed the PAT to trail 14-6. The Broncho defense saved a late touchdown before the LSC North, with their sixth straight road loss dating back to half, forcing the Bulldogs to settle for a 32-yard field goal to last year. make it 14-9. Cornerback Jerry Gardner swatted away a "When you're on the road in a close football game, you can't afford to turn the ball over and we did that three times touchdown pass in the end zone, and linebacker Lucas Kerr in our own territory," UCO coach Gary Howard.said. "We had a big stop on second down. Jermaine Birdow chased basically gave them 18 points and that was too much to Allen out of bounds on third down with under a minute to play before intermission. overcome." Things started to unravel for the Bronchos early in the The Bronchos were on top 14-0 early in the second quarter. Their first scoring drive covered 78 yards in four second half, as SWOSU scored 15 unanswered points on plays with Brett Manning hitting split end Chad Hacker with UCO turnovers. James Washington picked up and returned a Manning a 67-yard touchdown pass. BY TRACI STARKEY

T

fumble 35 yards to the UCO one-yard line. The Bulldogs scored on the next play, then added a two-point conversion to make it 17-14. Minutes later, Bennie Mims picked off a Manning pass at the UCO 43. The Bulldogs turned the mistake into six points on the next play, Shevron Glover took a short pass from Allen and took it 43 yards for the touchdown. The PAT gave the Bulldogs a 24-14 lead with 7:28 left in the third quarter. UCO scored one more time late in the third quarter when Manning hit flanker Don Harris with a 49-yard touchdown pass, and Luttrell's PAT cut SWOSU's lead to 24-21. The Bulldogs left the final mark on the scoreboard with a 45-yard field goal, making it 27-21 with 12:04 left to play. The Bronchos got the ball back twice in the last seven minutes with the help of Mark Helton's interception at the UCO 49, but the Bronchos were unable to pick up a first down either time. "I thought our defense really played hard keeping us in the game, but we couldn't establish anything offensively," Howard said. "It's a tough loss. Southwestern has a good football team, but this is a game we felt we could have won." Sophomore Don Harris (far left) goes into the air to make a catch in the Bronchos game aganist Southwestern Oklahoma. Harris scored on a 49-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Brett Manning. Jess Loepp and Lucas Kerr (left) contain a Southwestern opponent in the Bronchos loss to the Bulldogs.

UCO defenders Raider McHugh, Lucas Kerr and Claude Davis bring down the ball carrier during the Bronchos game in Weatherford. The loss to Southwestern was the Bronchos sixth straight road defeat dating back to last year. The team will travel to Kingsville, TX. Saturday Oct. 14 to take on Texas A&M Kingsville.

'1‘

neho rts

PHOTO SERVICES


OCTOBER 10, 2000

THEVISTA

PAGE 7

SPORTS Bronchos take it to a record eighth straight win BY MARY HALL

Sports Writer

C

limbing, climbing and more climbing. UCO women's soccer team has proven that luck is no factor in this game. The Bronchos won its school-record eighth straight game Saturday afternoon, defeating Lone Star Conference rival East Central, 3-0 at UCO's Tom Thompson Field. The No. 8 ranked Bronchos have climbed steadily in the rankings and improved to a 12-1 on the season and 2-0 in the Lone Star Conference. They haven't lost a game since Sept. 8, 2-1 loss to Lindenwood. UCO soccer coach Mike Cook was impressed of how the team played. "We played really well today, I am really proud of the girls," UCO head coach Mike Cook said.

"ECU has been playing really well and to beat them was a big win." UCO standout senior Sally Holmes scored her first of three goals of the day, taking a Jill Matsumoto pass and beating East Central goalkeeper Lori McGowen at "Our attitude is the 19th minute of the contest to give the Bronchos a 1-0 lead. that we have to The Bronchos took a 2-0 lead at the 51:18 mark when Holmes scored off an work a lot harder assist from Freshman Valerie Gutierrez. Gutierrez made her second assist of now, we have the game when Holmes scored her continuos record-setting 21st goal of more to prove." the season at the 60:56 mark to give UCO a 3-0 lead. —Sally Holmes Holmes knows that this win puts a UCO soccer player bigger target on the team to continue

Freshman Gina Mix (left) fields the ball in UCO's eight shutout of the year against East Central Oct. 7. The Bronchos won 3-0 at Tom Thompson Field.

Valerie Gutierrez (right) battles an ECU opponent on the field. Gutierrez had two assists in the game. The win improved UCO's season record to 12-1 and the Lone Star Conference record to 2-0.

PHOTO SERVICES

All New: All Yours: All Free

welcomes University of Central Oklahoma

4 NAILS & TAN Complete Nail Care C e nter

$ 5.00 OFF !

Any Nail with Pedicure Purchase.

Full Set: $23.00 Pedicure: $25.00 Fill In: $13.00 Spa Pedicure: $30.00

Tan for $27.00 a month unlimited! $4.00 Single Tans!

7 Days a Week 13728 N. Penn Ave. Mon.-Sat. 10AM-8PM Oklahoma City, OK 73134 Appointments Call 405-748-3330 Sun. 12PM-5PM "At Memorial Square" Coupon Required Expires 12/30/00

Th, Inst. th re e; olat

:OS

,let a free T-shirt. Ju:.1 ,111001C't `1,1,/ 1VladAdz.eorti y.t1

Limit one T-shirt per student.

to perform well. "Our attitude is that we have to work a lot harder now, we have more to prove," Holmes said. This was the _eighth shutout for the Bronchos in 13 games, outshooting ECU 28-9. Defensively, fullbacks Lisa Hansen and Courtney Lindsey led the way, while goal keeper Lauren Vogel had four saves. The Bronchos will take a break from LSC conference play when they travel to Tulsa Oct. 8 to confront Division I team Oral Roberts. UCO lost 1-2 to the Golden Eagles last year. Holmes is anxious to face the challenge and see how the team will match up. "Every season is a bigger challenge to us, this is a Division I school, this is our chance to prove our program and compasre ourselves to a Division I program," Holmes said. UCO will resume LSC play Oct. 13 when they travel to Weatherford to face Southwestern Oklahoma.


PAGE 8

THEVISTA

SPORTS

OCTOBER

10, 2000

%OM

SPORTS BRIEFS UCO VOLLEYBALL The Bronchos routed Texas A&M Kingsville Saturday, Oct. 6, 3-0 to finish 1-2 in the Lone Star Conference Crossover Tournament. The sophomore trio of Alma Brahimaj, Lexy Fortner and Katy Wallace led the Bronchos, dominating Kingsville 15-6, 15-4, 15-13 in their final match of the tournament. Senior setter Jennifer Steinmeitz aided UCO with 13 sets and six digs. The Bronchos improve to 14-8 on the season and will be back in action on Oct. 12 aganist Southeastern Oklahoma in Hamilton Field House at 7 p.m.

UCO Cross Country The Broncho women's cross country team had four top-eight finishers in the East Central Cross Country Invitational, but finished runner-up in the meet on Saturday, Oct. 6. Southeastern Oklahoma narrowly beat out the women 42-43 in the 5,000-meter race. Romy Krueger, Jamie Lucero, Miwa Isoe and Leah Loyd were the top finishers for the Bronchos. The men's team tied for third in the 8,000-meter race with 68 points. Dustin McClure, in usual fashion led the Bronchos, finishing second with a time of 26:40, just nine seconds behind the top-placed finisher. Both UCO teams are off this week in preparation for the Lone Star Conference Championships on Oct. 21 in Abilene, Texas.

UCO Golf and Baseball Weekend

IGNITE YOUR JOB SEARCH! Job Search Paperwork (resumes at cover letters) and Tactics Workshop... THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12

11:00 A.M. - 12:00 P.M. 312 UNIVERSITY CENTER

Golf Tournament and Alumni Baseball Game Oct. 27-28 Golf Tournament

Friday, October 27 Silverhorn Golf Club 11411 N. Kelley Ave. Buffet Luncheon- 12:00 Shotgun Start- 1:00

UCO CAREER SERVICES min University Center Room 338 InJU careers.ucok.edu 974-3346

C REER S ER ICES

Alumni Baseball Game

Saturday, October 28- 10:30 a.m. UCO Baseball Field All alumni, parents and boosters welcome. Free hot dogs and drinks for all participants For more information call

Wendell Simmons 974-2506- office

Receive a free Nokia 5100 Series phone when you donate $20 to Special Olympics

$

29 99

900 Minutes 150 Weekday 750 Weekend

$3999 $5499

$7499 $ 9999 $ 1 4999 2550 Minutes 3000 Minutes 4500 Minutes

1500 Minutes 1875 Minutes 375 Weekday 750 Weekday 1125 Weekend 1125 Weekend

1050 Weekday 1500 Weekday 2250 Weekday 1500 Weekend 1500 Weekend 2250 Weekend

TOTALLY

rArnpviEL.E.s.saf For AS Your Win

lc, COMM!,

OKC • 843-4700

Sales L Service Center • 734 NW 63rd

NORMAN • 329-8700 NOW OPEN • NE Corner of Boyd L Jenkins

3304434 EDMOND • 330-3434

106 S. Bryant • NE Corner of 2nd & Bryant

DEL CITY • 670-7800 4527 SE 29th

Urik fevax. 06EneOrt new wea acmficrun :43041e pilis and ton yaamrvice Tfeknet Onerra_ kicaxiySeeireb SEC kelet41 U,SA Parr*, SPxid Ottniz,

©Southwestern Bell

Authorized Wireless Agent

4825 NW Expwy OKC 3521 S. Broadway, Edmond

.99 Margaritas .99 Domestic Drafts All Day Everyday Always hiring A+ Staff College ID 10% off Meals excluding alcohol


OCTOBER 10, 2000

PAGE 9

THEVISTA

by John Sprengelmeyer & Rich Davis

APTAIN IB AN in Bi-Polar Disorder MEM

CAPTAIN RIBMAN ALWAYS ANSWERS E-MAIL FROM HIS LOYAL FANS...

CHANGE Dear CR,

2/3 Maximum portion of buttocks that one may legally bare next year in Manatee County, Florida

MZ

(4t;iggadgii<.;;,

DEAR ALEC, I'M NOT CONVINCED THAT POLAR BEARS FACE EXTINCTION...

Earth's POLAR BEARS face extinction!' Superheroes ought to help protect endangered species!!"

AFTER ALL, HOW COULD POLAR BEARS BE ENDANGERED WHEN

THEY TASTE SO BAD?

Sincerely, >Alec :(

...YOUR FRIEND, RIE38`1,

captainribman@supercomics.com

7 Number of dates since 1914 that the Jehovah's Witnesses have predicted as the start of the apocalypse

UNIVE SHY OF CEN T AL OKLAHOMA Y, EDMOND E S

3 Number of Kiss concerts that the band has postponed in Russia due to the country's instability and anti-American mood

2

If

Months after boxing promoter Don King was acquitted of fraud last year that he took his jurors to the Bahamas As reported in Harpers Magazine.

1 't Annual rienif oft& Egrary" Sooi Sath

WIN A TRIP FOR TWO TO

AFRICA This year the cast of MTV's 'The Real World' went to Africa. Now you can too!

4.104„,j)

Day & Times:

When:

October 12th —

15th

8:00am - 8:00pm Thursday 8:00am - 5:00pm Friday 10:00am - 6:00pm Saturday 2:00pm 8:00pm Sunday

Enter for a chance to win at your local Council Travel office or at counciltravel.com „ 4:

This trip to Africa is provided by

workkonde vacations for1 9 to 35 yearolde

virgin atlantic

No Purchase Necessary. Open to residents of U.S., between the ages of 18 and 35 as of 9/5/00. Void where prohibited. See agency for Official Rules or go to counciltravel.com . Sweepstakes ends 10/15/00.

Council Travel counciltravekcorn 1-800-2COUNCIL

0" S'a . 11 410.1

4


PAGE 10

THEVISTA

OCTOBER 10, 2000

New drug treatment helps suppress HIV, study finds

I

ntense anti-viral drug therapy at the onset of HIV may help stunt the progression of the virus and protect the immune system, according to a study presented Thursday in the journal Nature. The study, which was authored by Eric S. Rosenberg, a research fellow in medicine affiliated with • Harvard University, found that with immediate drug treatment, people infected with HIV may be able to stay off of medicine for a longer period of time. "The goal is to salvage the immune system before it is completely wiped out," said Bruce D. Walker, an associate professor of medicine at Harvard and the supervisor of the study. When patients were treated with Highly Active Anti-Retroviral Therapy (HAART) at the onset of the virus, the study found that the treatment helped protect CD4 cells. These CD4 cells signal the growth of CTL cells, which can, in turn, kill HIV-infected cells. If patients are immediately treated with HAART, their immune systems may receive enough of a boost to interrupt drug treatment

HIV. He said the study could have important implications for future methods of combating HIV and AIDS. "Using modifications, this will be able to translate into a long-term way to treat the disease," Walker said. The Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation is currently participating in field research efforts to develop an HIV vaccine. While New York, California and Florida have the nation's highest infection numbers, Oklahoma is not left out of the picture. The Oklahoma State Health Department HIV/STD Service states that 3,554 people are living PHOTO BY TSUYOSHI SHIRAISHI with HIV or full blown AIDS in An intensive regimen of drug therapy may help stunt the progression of HIV, the virus that causes the Oklahoma. AIDS service organizations such as fatal disease, AIDS, as reported in the journal, Nature. Regional AIDS Interfaith Network (RAIN) of Oklahoma City provide for months at a time. Five patients were able to take a know what to aim for in creating a preventitive educational opportunities, as well as practical Sixteen patients were originally "drug holiday" for an average of six vaccine." involved in the study, and all began and a half months as a result of the Walker said that currently, the services to people living with HAART treatment within 72 hours treatment. study is limited to people who are AIDS. of diagnosis. Of the 16, 15 "This shows us what it can take to still in the early stages of the virus, —Compiled by Staff Writer Sara experienced complete suppression control the virus," Walker said. and have the flu-like symptoms that Morrell with information fromwire reports of the virus for several weeks. "It gives us better perspective so we are associated with the onset of

Open everyday from 11 am - 2am FULL MENU College Game Day NFL Ticket Package MONDAY / 2 for 1 Domestics durring game TUESDAY / Coin beer 9-1 1pm SUNDAY / Drown Night 8 11 pm -

Fieldhouse Sports Grill 1201 S. Broadway 348-3400


OCTOBER 10, 2000

THEVISTA

PAGE 11

Colleges required to make 'good faith effort' to register voters

S

tudents at New York University who miss a voter registration or absentee ballot deadline this fall probably won't cite a lack of information as their excuse. From advertising in the campus newspaper to stuffing registration forms in residence hall mailboxes, university officials say they are working to spread the word on how to sign up to vote. "We're trying to make this as easy a process as possible for them," said Alicia Hurley, a senior policy analyst at the university. That includes e-mails explaining how to register online or on campus and where to vote on Election Day. And at other colleges and universities around the country, officials are taking similar steps. Nov. 7 marks the first presidential election for which colleges and universities are required by federal law to make a "good-faith effort" to distribute voter registration forms to students 30 days before the state's deadline. The legislation was passed by Congress in 1998 as one of the amendments to the Higher Education Act. And it's a responsibility many school officials say they embrace. UCO faculty members have been encouraged to hand out voter

registration forms in their classes, according to Dr. Gatch, political science assistant professor. Pi Sigma Alpha, the political science honor society, has been manning tables in the UCO Liberal Arts Building handing out voter registration forms. "Every college president believes one of the most basic responsibilities of our institutions of higher education is to educate and motivate good citizenship," said Tony Pals, public information director for the National Association of Independent Colleges and Universities. Under federal law, how the information is disseminated is left largely up to the institutions themselves. Some youth registration activists maintain that many universities could do more to make the information accessible. "The fact that when we call most students, they say, 'Really?' leads us to believe they're not doing a good enough job," said Ali Fischer, president of the U.S. Students Association. The National Campus Voter Registration Project, coordinated by the NAICU and the American Association of State Colleges and Universities issued recommendations for how schools

could comply with the law. wording of the legislation allows Those included attaching voter schools to do as much or as little as registration forms to course they choose. registrations or including them "All they're required to do is inside course catalogs and other make voter registration materials mailings. Other suggestions were to available to students," said Jon include the cards with university Isaacs, program director for Youth paychecks or send them through e- Vote 2000. "They can put them out mail or to campus mailboxes. on the counter and say they're The two college groups also (complying with the law). It's not recommended that schools make in any way, shape or form an presentations at adequate law." student orientation If universities did "This is a pla ce where sessions and more to ensure an encourage professors estimated 15.1 you could, every year, or teaching million eligible guarantee millions of assistants to explain students registered to and collect forms vote, it could enable young people get from their students. others to focus on Officials at education about registered and stay Baylor University in issues, he said. registered." Waco, Texas, used "This is a place mass e-mails, where you could, campus signs and every year, guarantee —Jon Isaacs millions of young the university's program director for Web site to inform people get registered Youth Vote 2000 and remind and stay registered," students. At he said. "We could Defiance College in Defiance, really focus on getting them Ohio, freshman service day started information, getting them engaged with voter registration. Students with candidates and getting them trained by the local county election , out to vote." board then went door-to-door in Susan Chilcott of the American teams to help register other local Association of State Colleges and residents. Universities maintained that But some activists said that the institutions are making good-faith

efforts, and that the wording of the legislation allows schools to make those efforts in the best way for their campuses. "They can have the ability to be as creative as possible in terms of getting them to students," said Chilcott, director of communications for the association. Under the law, schools must alert students about where they can obtain voter registration forms for that state. But one of the other challenges for universities is that many out-of-state students remain registered in their home states. Still, many schools are providing information about where students can go to learn about procedures for other states, according to Bo Newsome, the national coordinator for the National Campus Voter

Registration Project. "They expect us to do the best we can, especially since it's a new thing," he said. University officials say they expect that the efforts will help them do a better job of assisting students. "People are embracing it," said Hurley of NYU, which was provided with forms to distribute. "I can't imagine it's not going to help at least a little bit." —Compiled by Staff Writer Sarah Davis with information from wire reports

Source-ProoLcom P O,Box 32187, Oklahoma. City, OK 73123 "Improving your writing—Enhancing your image."

boes peoples not no the affect porly wrote text have on there image or grade? HOSTS

UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA HEALTH SCIENCE CENTER PANEL DISCUSSION

University of Central Oklahoma Education Building, room 101 Friday, October 13, 2000 Time: 6:00 p.m.-8:00 p.m.

• DR. STEVE HULL COLLEGE OF MEDICINE • DR. RAE MATSUMOTO COLLEGE OF PHARMACY • DR. SUSAN TUCKER ALLIED HEALTH BIOMEDICAL SCIENCE PUBLIC HEALTH

ALL UCO STUDENTS WELCOME TO ATTEND AS SPACE PERMITS. FOR INFORMATION, CALL CHERYL MURDOCK 974-3601

Although your writing is probably not as bad as the above example, it is always wise to have someone look over your formally written text before submitting it for others to see. Let our professional editors check your paper and find those embarrassing errors that you and your word processor sometimes overlook. OCTOBER CONTEST Source-proof.com will award $100 to the person who submits the best paper for editing in the month of October 2000! Please see the website for details.

We can help protect your image and your grade! 1


PAGE

12

THEVISTA

OCTOBER

10, 2000

Beyond belief: W&M professor admits to `nonexistant' affair BY BILLY O'KEEFE

Wire Reporter

O

h, what Bill Clinton wouldn't give- to be Sam Kashner. According to the former College of William and Mary creative writing professor, he, like Clinton, had a glorious workplace affair with a young woman. Also like Clinton, his affair has been made public, in this case through a prose confession in the October issue of GQ Magazine. Here's the enviable part: No one believes the guy cheated. Not even his wife. And especially not the William and Mary community, which is less than thrilled with Kashner's representation of the college. In "The Professor of Desire," Kashner writes of his descent into "a moral mosh pit" of beautiful, hungry young students hailing from carnivorous backgrounds and in search of a man they can trust—and eventually conquer. "It doesn't take much for them to fall in love with you," writes Kashner. "As a professor of creative

writing, you tend to get the him. It was all that mattered. dreamers, the romantics, the In true "American Beauty" style, weirdos. Spend twenty minutes Kashner bought a NordicTrack, lost talking about young Keats, show his love handles, and devised that drawing methods of hiding of the young his bald spot from poet on his students. "One would hope that deathbed in What followed Kashner would have had Rome, and was a seven-month it's shooting affair with a college the respect not to fish in a student that barrel. culminated with misrepresent the entire Kashner sex in her dorm campus in a national goes into room—followed by explicit detail the revelation that publication ... Anyone about the she was a married behavior and woman. The coming to the college expecting mindset—or student's husband, lack of—of Kashner's world will be sorely after finding out his students, about the affair, disappointed." even offering hanged himself in a supposedly shower on campus, verbatim leaving a suicide copies of note that blamed written Kashner for his —editorial in The Flat Hat, assignments death. College of William and Mary's that students After that student newspaper used to detail incident, Kashner their epic adventures in, and writes, he had become a "pariah" on eventual boredom with, sex. campus. But Terry Meyers, Eventually, he writes, the stories chairman of the English department of his students' sex lives consumed at William and Mary, contests that

Kashner never needed a trip to the campus doghouse—until, perhaps, now. Meyers says that when he spoke with Kashner, Kashner denied ever having sex with a William and Mary student, or with any student for that matter. Kashner then told the Chronicle of Higher Education that Meyers misunderstood their conversation, but Meyers says that Kashner's denial was explicit and clear—and, perhaps more important, largely unnecessary in the first place. "This is a small town, it's a small college, and it's a pretty gossipy town," says Meyers. "And I think that if Sam was really having an affair, I probably would've heard about it a lot sooner than now." That goes double, he says, for the husband's suicide, reports of which never surfaced on campus, as well as the reaction of Kashner's wife, fellow William and Mary professor Nancy Schoenberger. "People are asking, 'How's Nancy? How's she taking this?"` Meyers says. "And the response usually is, 'She's not bothered, because she knows it's not true."'

The William and Mary community isn't quite so forgiving. An editorial in the Flat Hat, the school's student newspaper, blasted Kashner and said that he has "dragged the college's name through the mud." "One would hope that Kashner would have had the respect not to misrepresent the entire campus in a national publication," read the editorial. "It is an unfortunate, yet irreparable, situation that the College's name is tainted by this distortion. Anyone coming to the College expecting Kashner's world will be sorely disappointed." Meyers hopes that a resolution will soon come to pass and that Kashner, who left the college this year to write full time, will admit to his sins— or, in this case, a lack thereof. "It's hard to convey what kind of person Sam is," says Meyers. "He's delightful, witty, wry, subtle. He's a fiction writer, and a good one at that. He lives in a world of fantasy. "The long and short of it: Sam Kashner has written a work of fiction." •

Compass Collegiate Ministries Council Road Baptist Church 2900 N. Council Road 789.3175 Worship Service @ 9:15 am Bible Fellowship @ 10:45 am in Room 200

Matt Wolff—College Minister crbccompass@hotmail.com

Mid-Fall Classes Begin Oct. 17 Fast-Track Classes Begin Nov. 11

Charlie Hall Worship Leader

Check it out on the Web at www.okc.cc.ok.us 7777 S. May Ave. \ 682-7580

State-Wide College Retreat October 20-21 Falls Creek Cost: $30

Sici-up with:

Includes 4 seals

WWW.falleC.Org

Compass Collegiate Ministries or rIxt OW we) AC

Caedmon's Call


OCTOBER 10, 2000

THEVISTA

PAGE 13

r -11n4111

0(5 d7 tp .iii.i AOratee9 C: 1 e --, Itt IPI"Alr" v 41114

V/

rat \ -41iitoS ArivicteA#

Need a student loan? Need a free checking account? Stop by our FULL SERVICE BRANCH or any of our three campus ATMs. Watch for our Internet Banking Services opening soon. THE

BANK odfietforc( Ofidora "Locally owned and operated since 1901"

341-6650 Member FDIC


PAGE 14

THEVISTA

OCTOBER 10, 2000

`Black Threat Barbie' stirs controversy, removed from exhibit

I

he latest art exhibition on display in the Texas Union gallery will close today, but one piece was removed more than a week ago due to its perceived racially offensive message. The piece in question, entitled Black Threat Barbie, depicted a black mannequin holding a gun in one hand and a syringe in the other, placed inside a 6-foot pink box, which resembled an oversized Barbie doll package. The piece was

part of a Fine Arts Committee exhibit entitled "Have You Seen Me?" Nathan Heiges, a member of the Texas Union Council's Fine Arts Committee and curator of the exhibit, made the decision to pull the piece after members of the University of Texas at Austin student body complained that the image was racially offensive. "I regret having to pull it, but I also regret the hard feelings it

caused," he said. "We certainly had no intention of upsetting people." The artist, Roy Stanfield, a studio art junior, said the point of Black Threat Barbie was to point ou: and criticize the image of minorities that society holds. By emphasizing and exaggerating these perceived traits, he said he hoped to show the absurdity of these beliefs. "The Barbie doll is ridiculous and the Black Threat Barbie doll is even more so," Stanfield said. "This

RETIREMENT INSURANCE MUTUAL FUNDS TRUST SERVICES TUITION FINANCING

Deferring taxes with TIAA-CREF can be so rewarding, you'll wonder why you didn't do it sooner.

"Note: Under federal tax law, withdrawals prior to age 591/2 may be subject to restrictions, and to a 10% additional tax.

Ensuring the future for those who shape it.5M

Wouldn't you like to

s ee yours Test? * "Quick Recovery" Cataract Surgery * LASIK Laser Vision Correction * Complete Family Eye Care We accept Vision Service Plan insurance.

Call 348-2020 today!

IT'S EASY TO SAVE MORE THROUGH THE POWER OF TAX DEFERRAL

See your best. See Humm

t

1

$67,514 R Tax-deferred savings after taxes

EDMOND OKLA. City Spring Creek Suites Mercy-McAuley Plaza 1300 E. 15th Suite 180 1205 McAuley Blvd. #401 348-2020 www.hummeleye.com 755-6111

a After-tax savings

pour some

$41,232

tg 4r4P= S 0 I inej

$31,933

on that fire in your belly.

$13,052 $11,609

So why wait? Let us help you build a comfortable retirement today with tax-deferred INVEST AS LITTLE AS $25 a month SRAs. We think you will find it through an automatic rewarding in the years to come. payroll plan'

—Compiled by Staff Writer Mena Ganesan with information from College Press reports

31 years of experience combined with advanced technology & personal attention confirm our committment to your lifetime of good vision.

$102,068

And your contributions to SRAs grow undiminished by taxes until you withdraw the funds.* Add to that TIAA-CREF's solid history of investment performance, bolstered by our commitment to keeping expenses low, and you have more money working for you.

piece]," he said. Stanfield said while he understands the council's decision, he doesn't agree with the exhibit's removal. "I totally understand where they're coming from," he said. "I'm just not sure whether or not it was a good idea to make this." ♦

HUMMEL

One of the fastest ways to build a retirement nest egg is through tax-deferred Supplemental Retirement Annuities (SRAs) from TIAA-CREF. With funds automatically deducted from your paycheck, you can easily build income to supplement your pension and Social Security.

was meant to say 'Hey, look at what I was taught to believe. It's just as ridiculous as believing little girls should be like this.'" Heiges, who said a statement of the art's purpose should have been included with the piece, added that it was pulled because of the initial reaction of viewers. "Because people had such a strong emotional reaction, there wasn't even an opportunity for them to realize [the meaning of the

10 YEARS 20 YEARS 30 YEARS In this hypothetical example, setting aside $100 a month in a tax-deferred investment with an 8% return in a 28% tax bracket shows better growth than the same net amount put into a savings account. Total returns and principal value of investments will fluctuate, and yield may vary. The chart above is presented for illustrative purposes only and does not reflect actual performance, or predict future results, of any TIAA-CREF account, or reflect expenses.

1.800.842.2776 www.tiaa-cref.org

For more complete information on our securities products, please call 1.800.842.2733, ext. 5509, to request prospectuses. Read them carefully before you invest. 1. You may be able to invest up to the IRS maximum of S10,500 per year. To receive a personalized calculation of your maximum contribution call TIAA-CREF at 1 '083 8/12-7.776. • TIAA•CREF individual and Institutional Service!; : Inc. distributes the CREF and TIM Real Estate variable annuities. • Teachers Personal Investors Services, Inc. distributes the Personal Annuities variable annuity component, mutual funds and tuition savings agreements. • TIM and TIAA-CREF Life Insurance Co., New York, NY, issue insurance and annuities. • TIAA-CREF Trust Company, FSB provides trust services. • Investment products are not FDIC insured, may lose value and are not bank guaranteed. © 2000 TIAA-CREF 08/03

With Army ROTC, you'll get to fuel your desire to be the best In the process, you'll learn how to think on your feet, stay cool under pressure, really take charge, Register for an Army ROTC course today. It's time to stoke that fire.

ARMY ROTC

Unlike any. other college course you can take

For info about UCO ROTC call 974-5167 or email: army rotc@ucok.edu


OCTOBER 10, 2000

PAGE 15

THEVISTA

Camp marks the spot for "X-Sport" enthusiasts BY MELIA BOWIE

Wire Reporter oute 45 meanders through Centre County, a state forest and small towns, and alongside farms complete with Amish buggies. A rural paradise. But 30 miles east of State College, Pa., a different kind of heaven springs from these hills. A paradise of massive wooden ramps, winding dirt trails, pool-size concrete bowls and foam pits, it is the promised land for skateboarders, inline skaters and BMX bikers. You've arrived at Woodward Camp, the nation's premier training ground for bladers, bikers and boarders. It's a summertime mecca for teenagers and twentysomethings, some of whom already have professional sponsorship, advertising contracts and X Games fame. "They are insane but they are having fun," said UCO freshman Ron Siefkas. "You can find skaters all over the world, ask them and they know

R

what Woodward is," said pro inline skater Andre Englehart, 19, of Lansdale, Pa. "They simply live life to the extreme and they do what makes them happy," said UCO freshman Jay Kilcrease. Since 1970, Woodward has been the hot spot for gymnastics, attracting Olympic-caliber athletes and coaches, as well as novices, to train and teach at its state-of-theart, 425-acre site. But in 1982, Woodward also began welcoming athletes whose movements were less tumble, more rough-and-tumble. Now, 750 campers from ages 7 to 17 arrive each week from Memorial Day to Labor Day, with any number of visiting pros there, too. "Ten or 15 years ago, you were a renegade, you were a derelict if you were engaged in this kind of activity," said Steve Haas, director of operations at Woodward. "Now, it's cool." With the sports' increasing popularity, Woodward, too, has become famous, appearing in several Adidas commercials and

PHOTO PROVIDED

Woodward Camp, located in Centre County, PA, is a summer camp specializing in extreme games such as skateboarding and rollerblading.

forming a partnership with Disney that "for those kids who don't play football or baseball or basketball, that shows camp activities online. "I don't know of a place that's this is an individualized sport." Ability and creativity are the more respected and more revered in the action-sports genre," said Ron only limits to what a person can accomplish here, said Englehart and Semiao, a vice president at ESPN. Given the stereotype of boarders pro skater Mike Bennett. With and bladers as vandals who destroy their own sponsors and private property, curbs and park advertisement contracts, this is benches, Semiao said Woodward their fourth summer at Woodward, "provides the athletes a place to though no longer as campers. "I used to play baseball for six or train and a place to be themselves." Haas said people were realizing seven years, and I hated being on a

team," said Englehart. "I hated being dependent on other people. Now, it's on me." The pros are definitely a plus, campers said. "Last week, I got torn up on a long jump," said 17-year-old biker Rick Bernard "I ate it. But the pros gave me props (for) getting up and going at it again." Before campers can even hit the ramps, they must undergo a threetask skills evaluation in either biking or skating that ranks and places them in age-appropriate training groups. Woodward's trainers and infirmary nurses have seen casualties ranging from cuts and bruises to ankle sprains and broken collarbones. Staffers said some campers had arrived injured but still hoped to skate their first day. "It's a pretty unique and wild situation," said Gary Ream, Woodward Camp Inc. president and partner with camp founder Ed Isabelle. "Gymnastics is how we got started here . . . but inline, skate and bike way outweigh it now. It's amazing." •

Need Bucks For Books? DONAT E PL A SMA

EARN UP TO $250.00 A MONTH BY DONATING POTENTIALLY LIFESAVING PLASMA! Visit our friendly, modern center and find out more about the oppertunity to earn cash while helping others. As a part of a Company research program, an experimental test will be performed on your plasmawhich could potentially benefit plasma product recipients in the years to come! Your research participation is entirely voluntary; however, it is required if you want to donate plasma.

Bring in this ad fordo extra 5.00

Aventis Bring in this ad for an extra 5.00

Must be 18-59 years of age, possess a valid ID and proof of local address & Social Security number.


PAGE 16 w.mmtwilstanstIMEMIIINIMON.V

OCTOBER 10, 2000

THEVISTA

XXXXXXX._

Intl World Cup Soccer plc.

September 29

ICE RIEFS

FOR PUBLIC SlifiTY September 25

•A victim reported that she lost her keys while in the University Center.

September 26 •A female student reported that she received a threatening phone call on her voice mail. •A victim reported that she lost her passport. The passort was found two days later and returned.

PHOTO BY TSUYOSH1 SHIRAISHI

September 27

randysmms.corn n ge M aiI I NI— Music & Movies

3 Edmond Locations 33rd & Boulevard 2nd & Santa Fe Ave. 917 E. Danforth

•A female victim reported being verbally harassed by a male subject while she was eating lunch in the Central Cafeteria.

September 28 •A female student reported that her cordless phone was taken from a room in West Hall.

• A victim reporte t at is sac pac was taken from a room in the Music Building while he was outside in marching band practice. •DPS Officers assisted the Edmond Police Department and the Edmond Fire Department on a complaint of fireworks being shot off from the Kappa Sigma Fraternity House. The Edmond Police issued a citation. •Two students were found in the weight room at the Hamilton Field House after closing. It was determined that the students had a UCO key. The key was confiscated and the students were escorted from the area. •DPS Officers and the EFD responded to a fire alarm at The Commons 1000 building. A pull-box was found to have been pulled. No fire was located and no one was found in the area.

September 30 •No reported incidents.

October 1 •No reported incidents.

Ike Stud

Just North Of UCO 917 E. Danforth 340-0602

8 0 73 Bell111.

0

Danforth

MAI* Movies

' a

WE RENT & SELL

UCO ,Vanflancl STaaium

VIDEO

itiouec: On Fri g Nome: ;974 73/7

Rementh tit Ho doetorg or o gee patiortg daring fire degignated IMO breakg.


OCTOBER 10, 2000

plofJ wah.o4r Tif t„rt{4

• UCO Soccer Club practice will be held at 5:30 p.m. at the field by the fire station. For more information, call Jarrod Gamer at 974-6418.

• Gay Alliance for Tolerance and Equality will host their weekly meeting 6 p.m. in the University Center, Room 201. For more information, call 974-5534.

• Fellowship of Christian Athletes will hold a meeting beginning with leadership at 8:30 p.m. in Hamilton Field House. For more information, call Mark Herrin at 974-2148 or April Gomez at 478-5052.

• Bliss will hold a Buddhist lecture at 8 p.m. with special guest UCO Feng Shui instructor Charles Younger. For more information, call Tomo Koizumi at 974-429.

• Akido Club will have practice at 7:30 p.m. in Hamilton Field House Wrestling Room. For more information, call Brandon at 348-5982.

• Students In Free Enterprise will host special guest speaker investment representative Edward Jones at 1 p.m. in the Business Building, Room 207. For more information, call Lacy Lodes at 974-6306.

• The UCO Toastmasters will hold a meeting at 6 p.m. at the Troy Smith Lecture Hall, Room 113. For more information, call William Loo at 844-2441

• The Japan Student Association hosts a free Japanese language class at 2 p.m. and a general meeting at 3 p.m. • The UCO Catholic Student Center will hold' in the Liberal Arts Building, Room 217. For more Catechetical/Apologetical studies at 8:15 p.m. at 321 E. information, call Yoko Suzuki at 844-9554. Clegem Ave. For more information, call 341-6300. • Fashion Troupe will have a meeting at 12:15 p.m. in the Human Environmental Science Building living room.

PAGE 17

THEVISTA

Thu Kr6{4( • The Toastmasters Club will have a meeting at 12:30 p.m. in the University Center, Room 322. For more information, call 844-2441.

week 6- t • Kinesiology and Health Studies will have a club meeting with guest speaker Jim Story of the Adam's Course at 7 p.m. at the Broncho Corral. For more information, call Justin Walters at 413-8623. • UCO Volleyball hosts Southeastern Oklahoma 7 p.m. at the Hamilton Field House. • The UCO Catholic Student Center will hold Holy Mass at 7 p.m at the Newman Center, 321 E. Clegem Ave. • Phi Alpha Theta will host guest speakers Joe Todd and Dr. Jim Baker at 7:30 p.m. in the Liberal Arts Building, Room 211. For more information, call Dr. Jeff Plaks at 974-5753. • BACCHUS will hold a meeting at 5:30 p.m. in the University Commons clubhouse. For more information, call Melissa at 613-2374.

• The Bahai Association will host an open house dinner at 6:30 p.m. at the Edmond Bahai Center. For more information, call Diba Amarsingh at 557-5420. • UCO Volleyball hosts Texas A&M Commerce at 7 p.m. at the Hamilton Field House.

••'',MISM":"'":':'• • .

tr 1150 1 6

s at rdar • The Bahai Association will host "Christianity and the Bahai Faith" at 7:30 p.m. at the Edmond Bahai Center located just west of Old North. For more information, call Diba Amarsingh at 557-5420.

S od4r • UCO Catholic Student Center will host Sunday supper at 7 p.m. at 321 E. Clegern Ave. • The Bahai Association hosts Sunday Devotions at 9:30 a.m. at the Edmond Bahai Center. For more information, call Diba Amarsingh at 557-5420.

Ach-dar • BLISS will host a Kuan-In ceremony and vegetarian dinner from 6 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. at the IBPS (Fo Guan Shan) Center, 901 Queen's Cir. in Edmond. For more information, call Tomo at 974-4429. • The Student Dietetics Association will host World Food Day 2000 from 1 la.m. to 2 p.m. in the Communications Building, Room 103N.


PAGE 18

yvHoRoti HOROSCOPES BY DAVE THE GREAT, STAFF MYSTIC This morning, while I was defending my breakfast from my cat, I saw a commercial for a new toy in Lucky Charms® cereal that uses dice in a little bubble to answer questions. This toy would be of immense value to me in my fortune-telling duties. The first loyal reader to give me a Lucky Charms® dicepopper thing' will get a wonderful prize, such as the hand of Allison, our Editor In Chief, in holy matrimony (don't tell her yet, it is a surprise), 1 month of good horoscopes or five 8X10 glossy blackmail photos of Emily, the evil managing editor. Just drop one in the mail to Dave The Great, C/O The Vista, 100 N. University St. Edmond, OK 73034.

ARIES : ( MARCH 21 - APRIL 19 ) This week will bring you wonder, joy and happiness. Your good mood will compel you to reach new heights.

TAURUS : ( APRIL 20 - MAY 20 ) You will spend the week talking stoned Aries off ledges after they O.D. on Zanex® and try to 'reach new heights' by climbing Old North's clock tower.

You will get a boost of energy this week due to some of that fancy ginseng yuppie energy tea they sell at health stores. The boost will not come from the herbs in the tea. It will come from spilling the tea on your computer keys while typing.

The stars in the Leo constellation actually burned out thousands of years ago, making your horoscopes completely worthless.

LEO : ( JULY 23 - AUG 22 ) My crystal ball is back in the shop this week since installing MAC software on it, so I bought a deck of Tarot cards. Since I do not know how to read Tarot cards to tell the future, I used them to play poker. I lost twelve bucks and my wristwatch, so I hope you have a really bad week.

VIRGO : ( AUG 23 - SEPT 22 ) You are not fooling anyone.

LIBRA ( SEPT 23 - OCT 23 ) The stars in Scorpio are rising, indicating this to be a great week to enter into big committments, like marriage or buying a goldfish.

SCORPIO : (OCT 24 - NOV 21) World events will come to your attention this week, as the sociopolitical views of international terrorist organizations are explained at great length to you by a gun-wielding maniac.

THEVISTA

OCTOBER 10, 2000

Crossword ACROSS 1 Ex-QB Starr 5 Binge 10 Willikersl 14 Over again 15 Ballet movements 16 Toast topper 17 Reserved 19 Tibetan monk 20 Hospital employees 21 Attach 22 Housewives 26 Tudor dynasty founder 28 Wonderland girl 29 Brit. electees 32 Gradually appear on the screen 35 Ink spot 36 Years and years 37 Resp. disease 38 Big hurricane of 1969 40 Ring decision, briefly 41 Building addition 42 Fall garden? 43 Shun 45 "Norma " 46 North Dakota city 48 Yours and mine 49 Casino swindlers 52 Wheat or oats 55 Accomplish 58 Rendered fat 59 Regulating mechanism 62 Great Lake 63 In reserve 64 Shell propellers 65 Approach 66 Ancient Europeans 67 " Darn Cat" DOWN 1 Data-transfer unit 2 Part of A.D. 3 Change one's datebook 4 Car color combo 5 Steeple top

1

2

3

'1

5

14

6

7

8

9

15

17

18

12

13

29

30

31

56

57

19 21

22

23

27

24

33

37

38

41

42

45

46

34

35

36

39

40 43 47

49 53

25

28

32

52

11

16

20

26

10

50

54

44 48

51

55

58

59

62

63

65

66

60

61

67

© 2000 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All rights reserved.

6 Blood Solutions component IVH1 SHIO0 H V 3N 7 Tease SH VO GINOO 3 I H3 8 Moray El3 71 o 8© ©0 O CIEIV1 9 Wind dir. 10 Plays a round? 3A3 I HOV N I VH9 11 Norwegian saint SdHVHSC1HVO 12 Final starter? s H n o ION I IN 3 VH 13 Fraudulent event MDHOS A N3CID 113 18 E-mail dot o >I 1 311 IlA1VO . n7 d follower, often NO3 1018 NI 30V 21 Sharp ridges W 3 AO I 1V N3M0 23 Those lacking pigmentation SH3>i VIN3 IN 0 H 24 Slay XIJV SHOlOOCI 25 French school VlAIV1 3 1 El V I GosNn 26 Propose 03 10 Sa I ld M3NV 27 Half a city in HS00 33HdS 1HV9 Washington 29 Oldest man 30 Game for 49A 47 Dead turf 56 Actress Miles 31 Winter falls 49 Apple beverage 57 In the past, in 33 "The Cometh" 50 Field measures the past 34 Lowest point 51 Greek letter 59 Gear tooth 39 Repair 52 Small valley 60 Yoko 44 Captain's 53 Uncommon 61 Something to backup 54 Operatic song pick?

SAGITARIUS : ( NOV 22 - DEC 21 ) For most people, opportunity knocks. For you, opportunity will just send a generic postcard.

CAPRICORN : (DEC 22 - JAN 19) Your actions will bring laughter this week, when you forget to wear pants to class.

WINTER Steamboat col SKI January 2-13, 2001 3/4/3/6 or 7 sights

1•800•SUNCHASE boat.skitriptisa.com

AQUARIUS : ( JAN 20 - FEB 18 ) Ignorance is bliss, and you will be very happy this week.

PISCES : ( FEB 19 - MARCH 20 ) The stars tell me they refuse to give you any more horoscopes until you clean your room and get rid of that strange pizza-and-underwear stench. Comments, complaints, death threats and subpoenas can be sent to our staff mystic at baveGotBored@collegeclub.com , or you can IM him at baveGotBored on AOL/IM.

Buy 2 meals and take $2 off your total bill or buy 1 meal and take $1 off.

$2 OFF ANY 2

MEALS

Not valid with any other offer. Offer expires 11-30-00

19th & Broadway 348-15551

GAME HEADQUARTERS Your headquarters for gaming fun!

Wargames, Role-playing games, Bart/games, Card games: (Magic, Star Wars, Poliemon, etc.), Tournaments, And much more! w. Danforth [Danforth/Kelly) M-F 11-7, Sat 11-9, Sun 1-6 .


OCTOBER 10, 2000

THEVISTA

CLASSIFIED DEADLINES DEADLINES: All classifieds MUST be submitted by noon Tuesday for the Thursday publication, and noon Friday for the Tuesday publication. Prices: Classified ads cost $3 for the first 25 words and $.12/word thereafter. PAYMENT IS DUE WHEN AD IS PLACED. Classified Display ads have

same deadlines and prices as regular display ads. Call 974-5549 or 974-5918 for additional info.

NOTICES ENGLISH LANGUAGE CTR

1015-C Waterwood Parkway

ESL for International Students

TOEFL Preparation Ask about our tuition discounts

(3343) or email: theedge@telepath.com PROFESSIONAL wedding

photographer with 10 years experience. Color and photojournalistic black & white. Free consultation. Call 341-9032. GREAT BABYSITTER/nanny, 19-yr-old female, experienced. Open schedule: days, nights and weekends. Call 6019876. HOUSECLEANING at affordable rates,

Mon-Sat, personalized services. Call 601-9876. FORTUNE TELLER

MADAME ROSE 405-340-6296 TRANSLATIONS from Spanish to

info@elcok.com www.elcok.com

English and vice versa. Interpreter services with legal experience. All types of documents. Please call and leave message, 947-4977.

ENGLISH CLASSES

EMPLOYMENT

348-7602

at the

Edmond Language Institute

GREAT JOB, part time, for college

We teach English as a Second Language and are conveniently located on the UCO Campus at Thatcher Hall.

students. Apply in person at Smitty's Wine & Spirits, 12021 N MacArthur, OKC.

*9 LEVELS Intensive Training *NEW SESSION every 4 wks *PRIVATE TUTORING available *PREPARATION for TOEFL

***PART TIME***

PHONE: 405-341-2125

PARTY III

Service & Sales Flexible hours, salary negotiable. Positions offered by established building service company. Potential for aboveaverage earnings. 1-800-227-7974.

Are you tired of Republicans and Democrats? Do you want liberty and PART TIME sales. Call Pat at 842freedom? Check out www.lp.org -5024. For information on local events, call Clark Duffe at 348-0293. $1500 WEEKLY potential mailing our circulars. No experience required. Free SERVICES info packet. Call 202-452-5901. DENTAL PLAN $11.95 per month

DRIVERS WANTED-Must know streets

single; $19.95 family. No deductibles, no claim forms. Includes Vision, RX and chiropractic plans. Affordable health and life plans also. Call Michelle at 340-4998.

of Edmond. Must be intelligent and clean cut. Restaurant experience helpful. Contact Ted, Dine Out In, 3413463.

RENTERS-Get $20,000 coverage for $17-$22 per month! Great auto rates for good students too. Call Michelle at 3404998 for free quote. FREE ANONYMOUS AIDS testing &

counseling, every Wednesday 7:309pm. No appt necessary. Wesley Foundation, 311 E Hurd, 341-5450. For testing info call 495-2732. DEFINE YOUR STYLE- Everyone enjoys trying the latest makeup shades, and with Mary Kay, it's even more f. Call Masha, Mary Kay Independent Beauty Consultant, 840-5087. FREE www.mymk.com/mandriyashina RESUME WRITING THE EMPLOYMENT EDGE

Are you beginning your job search and in need of a resume to help you stand out from all the rest, or are you not getting the response you anticipated from your current resume? Let us give you the employment edge. We are a local, Oklahoma City based, resume writing service that will use ten (10) years of experience to create a product that will successfully market your credentials and skills to potential employers. We offer individual writing services (such as the resume, cover letter, reference page, etc.) or a full employment portfolio package. We also offer mailing service, printed copies on resume paper, the final product on floppy disk for future updates, a resume critique service, fast turn around time and affordable rates. Ask about our special discounts for students. Call today for more information or a personal consultation! Phone (405)703-EDGE

HIGHLY ENTHUSIASTIC, energetic people needed for mkt/advertising dept, $6-$8/hr DOE, plus commission. Full time pay for part time work, low stress, casual dress environment. Excellent resume builder. Contact Greg at 3915400. PROFESSOR'S FAMILY needs aide for

boy with autism, evenings and weekends. Special Ed or Speech Path major preferred. Excellent English required. Professional training provided. 359-1696 or 922-4032. CHILDCARE NEEDED at Edmond church. Looking for nursery workers for Sun AM and Tue PM. For info, call Melinda at 319-9212. GOOD EARTH Health Foods needs PT

help 9-2 or 2-7. Apply at 1415 S Blvd, Edmond. NEED PERSON to work Sat 9-5 in office at a storage facility. Robin, 4785000. EDMOND GOLF COURSE

needs morning and weekend snack bar/beverage cart help, 340-4653. PINNACLE FITNESS

is seeking enthusiastic, responsible applicants for PT/FT positions for our front desk/juice bar. Interested applicants should apply 8-12 M-F. No calls please. WANTED-Part time pharmacy clerk at

Clinic Pharmacy. Apply at 120 S Bryant, Sycamore Square, Edmond.

PT PROGRAM assistant/data entry clerk wanted for The Exchange Club Parent Child Center, 437 NW 12th, OKC, OK 73103, 232-2500, EOE. EARN MONEY $$$ all shifts. Cashiers, sackers, stockers, meat, bakery/deli, produce, frozen and dairy jobs at Crest Foods of Edmond, 2200 SW 15th St, Edmond. EPWORTH VILLA, Oklahoma's premier retirement facility needs quality people to join our team. WAIT STAFF needed for the lunch shift 10:30 to 2. Immediate part time openings in our fine dining room. Make up to $8/hr, flexible scheduling, free uniforms. Apply at Epworth Villa's reception desk at 14901 N Penn, one mile north of Quail Springs Mall. Call our JOB LINE 749-3505 for more openings and information. PART TIME help needed at construction supply and equipment company. Need person to work weekdays during school year doing delivery and warehouse. Must be 18 with good driving record, able to lift minimum of 50 lbs. FLEXIBLE HRS, MF 8-5, $6.50-$7.50/hr. Contractors Supply Co, NE 30th & Santa Fe (near capitol), 525-7431. The Children's Place, INTEGRIS

Health's own childcare facility located at INTEGRIS Baptist Medical Center, has a Teacher opening in the kindergarten class. We're looking for highly motivated teachers, to work full time hours MonFri. (We can work with you on the hours!) This is a wonderful opportunity to work in a state of the art accredited childcare facility. Candidates working toward a degree in Early Childhood Education or Family Relations and Child Development, with a minimum of one year previous childcare experience, are preferred. Interested candidates please fax resume, with cover letter, to 951-9714 or apply at our Employment Center, 4900 N Portland Ave, Mon-Fri, 8:30am5pm. Phone 947-3510. CANDID COLOR

Photography is seeking outgoing people to work as part time photographers for evenings and weekends. Must have reliable transportation. No experience necessary. We provide all training and equipment. EOE For more info or to apply, call Andrew at 951-7300, ext 264, or email to andreww@candid.com or come by our offices at 4209 Royal Ave, OKC 73108. HELP W/HOUSEWORK all day every

Saturday. Transportation provided, 3413062. TELEPHONE reporters needed. Excellent opportunity for college students. Flexible hours. 20 hrs/wk, early evenings preferred. On the job training. God communication skills a must. For application or interview, call Pat simmers at 523-5137. American Mercury Insurance Co, OKC. EOE IMMEDIATE PT position at full time

tourism marketing association in OKC, 842-3232 for info. ST JOHNS EPISCOPAL School seeks after school daycare help 3-6pm daily. Also seeking substitute teachers. Great for education majors. 943-8583 ext 45. RECEPTIONIST, light cleaning for busy salon. Pick up application at Tropi-Tan in Bryant Square in Edmond or call Claudine at 348-7408 (leave message) or Kim at 348-4021. PART TIME, full time help wanted, warehouse, forklift, and in-town deliveries. Will train if needed. M-F flexible time and great work environment. Call Mike at 417-5046.

PAGE 19

CONSULTANT/Auditor internship at OK Tourism & Recreation for student working toward one of the following degrees: Public Admin, Business Mgmt, Business Communication, Acctg, Finance, MIS. Submit a resume to: OTRD-Internal Audit, P 0 Box 1098, OKC, OK 73101-1098, Att: E. Rothermel or fax to (405)522-0748 or email: erothermel@otrd.state.ok.us Resumes accepted through Oct 21. EOE SHAKEY'S Frozen Custard: New and exciting Frozen Custard Franchise opening in Edmond, OK. Now hiring all shifts, full and part time for end of the month start up. Starting rates $68.50/hr. Please call for application 3415861, ask for Patty or Gary. TUTORING: Part time instructors in after school program. Near completion of teaching degree may be considered, 3-5 days per week. Sylvan Learning Center, 842-7323. TEACHERS' AIDES: Assist with educational testing and learning center operations, 3 mornings per week. Sylvan Learning Center, 842-7323. ECKERD PHARMACY in Bryant Square is now hiring in the pharmacy for a part time drug clerk. Day and evening shifts available. Apply in person at 2nd & Bryant in Edmond. BOYS' AND GIRLS' Clubs of OK County need staff and volunteers for after school program. Call Will Joyner at 521-9292. PROMISE FELLOW position opening. Will be responsible for recruiting and scheduling volunteers for Boys' & Girls' Club programs. Scholarship available after one year of service, 521-9292. CORRECTION 501 RANCH Prime Steakhouse is now

hiring for server assistant and host/hostess positions. Must be available evenings and weekends. Apply at 3000 W Britton Rd or call 7553501 and ask for Reza or Earl.

FOR RENT

ROOMMATES FEMALE ROOMMATE

wanted! 5 minute walk from UCO. $225/mo, all bills paid. Must be mature and clean, 348-6429.

PERSONALS HAPPY, loving couple and adopted

daughter desire newborn to complete our family. Please call Brent and Laura at 1-800-278-2385 pin# 01.

TRAVEL WINTER BREAK/SPRING BREAK

Ski & Beach Trips on sale now! www.sunchase.com or call 1-800-SUNCHASE TODAY!

***ACT NOW! Guarantee the best

Spring Break prices! South Padre, Cancun, Jamaica, Bahamas, Acapulco, Florida & Mardi Gras. Reps needed... Travel free, earn $$$. Group discounts for 6+. 800-838-8203 www.LEISURETOURS.COM

Daytime • Evening • Weekends

Full & Part-time Call Today

Bible Study

1 & 2 BEDROOM APTS, Duplexes &

University Center Room 318

Townhomes, Kennedy Place Apts, 1010 N Kennedy, Edmond (Across from UCO), 341-7911. Welcome Students!

Every Tuesday 12:30 - 1:15 pm

NOW LEASING

1, 2 & 3 Bedroom Apts For Availability & Prices Call 341-2161 ONE BEDROOM apt, unfurnished. Appliances, gas & water paid. NO PETS! Located near UCO, 1217 N Roosevelt, $325/mo plus deposit, 3419651. APT FOR RENT close to UCO. Gas & water paid, 113 E Edwards. Call 3590073. NO PETS! $199 MOVE-IN SPECIAL

Move in by October 13 Call Now - Won't Last! Furnished & Unfurnished 341-7987 Sunset Ridge, Edmond ROOM FOR RENT, all inclusive, includes meals, pool, family atmosphere $350/mo, 844-9780.

FOR SALE 1990 PONTIAC Trans Sport minivan,

141K mi, clean interior, good tires, $3150, 922-4032. 1998 BUICK Century, 34K miles, V-6,

remote keyless entry, tilt, cruise, antitheft protection. Excellent condition, $10,500. Day 736-4464, evening 3483810.

For more information call 692-1067 or 210-3011 Sponsored by Christians On Campus

Special Contact Lens Exam $50 Wild Eyes $99 for one pair 2 pair Eyeglasses $109 Memori al Eye Clinic 478-3040

3012 E. Memorial

Edmond, OK 73013

MAIL BOXES ETC. 1050 E. 2ND


- PAGE 20

OCTOBER 10, 2000

THE VISTA

!,te,

UTDBAH N ALJTC:I E$PtH N

UTOBA IH N

AUTOBAHN jOI4N

1.11- L3 A.

UTOBAHN

" tql 0.4

1\1 AUTOBAHN

1 T . Ca B A H

fr:,„6,40P/Are

AUTOBAHN! AUTDEIAP,IN AUTDDAH

0-4 NI Li *T"` rA) FR A . . ,

410*****

UV @ELL T ADO TUDINT I PAUL

ISC LINT SPE IALIZING IN IMPORTS SUV's LOCATED DIRECTLY ACROSS FROM THE MAIN ENTRANCE OF UCO ON 2ND STREET

' • '

AVY,

F3

/47 .

IA AS

UTOBAHN

TDDAHPJ

T9B A PJ

H

..„

U T C3 S.? P. H

D B A PA

tj

„ ,x,z;$

-4

4

AU I" CIO A HI

LJTOE3 4. 1-1 N


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.