the oklahoma daily

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Certain sites will not fully function as records are transferred MEREDITH MORIAK The Oklahoma Daily Today and for the next 10 days, students will have limited access to many OU student-fo- cused Web sites like Enroll, Degree Navigator and Student Services. However, beginning Sept. 28, students will have around-the-clock access to the sites from a new portal called oZONE. “This is the largest technology project ever done at the University,” said Eddie Huebsch, technical project lead and OU IT director of projects. The conversion of more than two million student records from a 40-year-old mainframe system to the oZONE portal will begin today and continue through Sept. 28. Desire to Learn and Exchange e-mail will not be affected by the conversion, said Nick Key, oZONE spokesman. On Sept. 28, the portal will go live and com- bine existing student services Web sites, like Learn, Enroll and Exchange, in one place, Key said. OU formed an oZONE team in June 2005 and began looking for solutions to remove information from the university mainframe sys- tem that was launched in 1968, Huebsch said. Members of the oZONE team said the new site will look different to students. “Change is going to be hard for students and hard for the staff,” said Melanee Hamilton, direc- tor of web communications. “It will be a tough change but so much better in the long run.” Team members predict oZONE will be most effective for incoming students who are learn- ing to access their financial aid, e-mail and other student services before arriving in Norman. “There [was] no clear path [with the old sys- tem] ... with this, they will have everything right in one place and it will streamline their experi- ence,” Key said. OU’s enrollment procedures, financial aid and bursar needs did not allow a con- version outside the regular semesters, Key said. During the conver- sion period, student records will be frozen and reflect static in- formation from Sept. 18, Key said. “Change isn’t al- ways easy, but it’s very foundational and re- ally a positive thing overall,” Key said. For more information about oZONE, log on to www.ou.edu/ozoneinfo. ANYTIME AT THE UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA’S INDEPENDENT STUDENT VOICE com OU Daily OUDAILY.COM » FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 18, 2009 BECOME A FAN OF THE OKLAHOMA DAILY /OUDAILY.COM ON FACEBOOK FOR UPDATES, VIDEOS AND MORE OF ALL YOUR DAILY FAVORITES. OU and Tulsa face each other this weekend. Check out the preview inside. PAGE 6 Read about the University Theatre production “Is He Dead?” in the Life & Arts section. PAGE 11 Read about an OU student who broke a world record this summer. PAGE 3 news CAMPUS BRIEFS FAN FEST CANCELLED FOR OU-TULSA GAME THE HUFF CLOSED FOR HOME FOOTBALL GAME LECTURES TO BE GIVEN OVER DARWIN’S THEORY Saturday’s Weather owl.ou.edu 80°/65° 30% PAGE 3 E OKL AHO O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O OM M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A 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R R U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U UP P P P P P P P P P P P P P P P P P P P P P P P P P P P P P P P PD D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D DA A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A AT T T T T T T T T T T T T T T T T T T T T T T T T T T T T T T T T T T T T T T T T T E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S , VIDEO S side. Students to encounter oZONE conversion difficulties OU’s Huston Huffman Center will be closed all day Saturday because of the OU-Tulsa football game. Huston Huffman will close at 10 p.m. tonight and reopen at 2 p.m. Sunday, said Chris Thompson, a front desk worker at the Huston Huffman Center. -Charles Ward/The Daily Saturday’s Fan Fest activities prior to the Oklahoma-Tulsa game have been cancelled due to wet grounds, said OU and Sooner Sports Properties officials in a press release. “The grounds were soft for last week’s game and we’ve had more rain since that time,” said Eric Barnhart, general manager of SSP. “We don’t want to subject the fans to muddy grounds and we also don’t want to do any damage to the track and field facility.” Kickoff is set for 2:30 p.m. -Jono Greco/The Daily Elliott Sober, research professor at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, will deliver three public talks on the general topic “Philosophical Reflections on Darwin’s Theory” dur- ing the 11th Biennial David Ross Boyd Lectures at OU this month. Lecture titles and dates are “Darwin and Intelligent Design,” Sept. 21, “Did Darwin Write the Origin Backwards?” Sept. 23, and “Darwin and Group Selection,” Sept. 25. All lectures are scheduled for 5 p.m. in room 128 of Dale Hall, 433 W. Lindsey St. For more information about the lectures, please contact Reinaldo Elugardo at 325-6324 or relugardo@ ou.edu. -Daily staff reports Higher education plan simplifies FAFSA and could save billions RICKY MARANON The Oklahoma Daily The U.S. House of Representatives passed a bill Thursday that would, if it becomes law, remove private lenders from the student loans business. The Student Aid and Fiscal Responsibility Act (H.R. 3221) is the adoption of President Obama’s higher education plan and passed 253 to 171. “No student in America should have to mortgage their future to get a good education,” stated the bill’s author, Rep. George Miller, D-Calif., in a press release. “This legislation pro- vides students and families with the single larg- est investment in federal student aid ever and makes landmark investments to improve edu- cation for students of all ages – and all without costing taxpayers a dime.” Miller stated the bill would allow students to borrow through a direct loan program set up by the federal government rather than through lenders who participate in the federally-guaran- teed student loan program. According to the Congressional Budget Office, the change in the way the government would administer student loans, if the bill is passed in the U.S. Senate and signed by President Obama, would generate $87 billion in savings to the fed- eral government over the next 10 years. But there are other provisions to the bill aside from the change in student loans. According to the press release from Miller’s office, the bill simplifies the FAFSA and provides loan forgiveness for members of the military who are called to active duty in the middle of the academic year. It would also invest $40 billion U.S. HOUSE PASSES STUDENT LOAN BILL PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY MERRILL JONES OU golf course stays green with grey water Practice saves on water, frees up funds RICKY MARANON The Oklahoma Daily The Jimmie Austin OU Golf Course uses grey water to keep its greens free from brown patches. Grey water, or recycled water, is equivalent to water that someone has been used to bathe in or wash dishes in, not sewage, according to the 1998 Water and Environment Journal, published by the Charter Institute of Water and Environment Management. “We at [the] Jimmie Austin OU Golf Club are proud that we have the capability to use recycled or grey water to water our golf course,” Eddie Roach, assistant superinten- dent of the golf course said. “The use of grey water for irri- gation purposes is becoming more of an everyday trend, especially on golf courses, since water restrictions on golf courses are becoming more of an issue.” Roach said the water is collected in a 500,000-gallon tank located directly south of the course’s clubhouse. Jason Faires, Jimmie Austin superintendent, said the water is pumped to the golf club from the waste water treatment plant locat- ed about a mile south of the golf course. “Our golf course is greener in the sense that we have the capability to water our course with water that is being recy- cled rather than from water that is bought directly from the city like many other golf courses throughout the na- tion have to do,” Roach said. However, Faires said there were some problems with grey water use. “The biggest misconcep- tion about using reclaimed water is that it is free water,” Faires said. “The water may not cost as much as ground water or city water, but using it has adverse effects on soil structure and turf.” Faires said more aerifica- tion and gypsum applica- tions are needed just to make turf grow as it would if it were watered with fresh water, which means higher than normal labor and fertility Sen. Andrew Rice to lead party from 2011-12 CAITLIN HARRISON The Oklahoma Daily Sen. Andrew Rice. D-Oklahoma City, was chosen today as Democratic leader-elect by the Oklahoma state Senate Democratic caucus. “I’m honored to have the chance to do it. It’s a very diverse caucus,” Rice said. “The margins are very close [be- tween] the senators … a lot of votes come very closely.” Rice will serve as leader for the 2011- 12 legislative session. Current leader Sen. Charlie Laster, D-Shawnee, will serve as leader for next year’s legisla- tive session and step down at the end of next year. He has served as demo- cratic floor leader since January 2007. “I have been honored to serve as leader of the Democratic caucus and share my Democratic colleagues’ desire to work with Sen. Rice as we fight aggressively to regain the ma- jority in the Oklahoma state Senate,” Sen. Laster stated in a Capitol press release. Rice said he hopes to gain Republican support that will help push Democratic legislation, as well as foster the Democratic party as a whole. “I think our party is moving in a dif- ferent direction,” Sen. Rice said. “The leaders designated in the House for the Democrats are both younger and we’re both from the Oklahoma City area where you see growth for our party.” Rice said the party’s leaders have typically come from the state’s rural areas, so he hopes his urban back- ground will serve as a positive change. He said the party’s leaders are divided evenly between rural and urban areas, and that the party’s focus on rural pol- icies won’t change. Rice was elected to District 46 in 2006 with nearly 70 percent of the vote, and also ran unsuccessfully for the U.S. Senate last year. “I congratulate Sen. Rice on being chosen by his colleagues to serve in this important capacity, and I’m ex- cited to work alongside a democrat with his ability to energize our young- er voters,” state Rep. Scott Inman, D-Oklahoma City, stated in a press release. “I know we are both com- mitted to being a strong voice for all Oklahomans, and I’m confident we will work together to bring a fresh message to move our party and our state forward in the coming years.” Democratic leader-elect chosen by caucus MICHELLE GRAY/THE DAILY Andrew Rice, current Oklahoma State Senator for district 46, speaks as part of his campaign for a spot in the U.S. Senate, Wednesday afternoon in the Sooner Room in the Oklahoma Memorial Union. Rice's fellow state senator, John Sparks (district 16), and Wallace Collins (right), a candidate for state representative of district 45, stood behind him during the speech Rice delivered last fall campaign for the U.S Senate. WATER CONTINUES ON PAGE 2 BILL CONTINUES ON PAGE 2 During the conversion of more than two million student records, some sites will function normally, some will work as read-only and others will be completely unavailable. Sites to function normally: -exchange.ou.edu -learn.ou.edu Sites to function as read-only: -enroll.ou.edu -studentservices.ou.edu -Degree Navigator Sites completely unavailable: -Admission application -Financial aid, no disbursement avail- able -Bursar, no refunds from bursar accounts -pay.ou.edu SOURCE: Nick Key, oZONE spokesman OZONE CONVERSIONS

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Certain sites will not fully function

as records are transferred

MEREDITH MORIAKThe Oklahoma Daily

Today and for the next 10 days, students will have limited access to many OU student-fo-cused Web sites like Enroll, Degree Navigator and Student Services.

However, beginning Sept. 28, students will have around-the-clock access to the sites from a new portal called oZONE.

“This is the largest technology project ever done at the University,” said Eddie Huebsch, technical project lead and OU IT director of projects.

The conversion of more than two million student records from a 40-year-old mainframe system to the oZONE portal will begin today and continue through Sept. 28.

Desire to Learn and Exchange e-mail will not be affected by the conversion, said Nick Key, oZONE spokesman.

On Sept. 28, the portal will go live and com-bine existing student services Web sites, like Learn, Enroll and Exchange, in one place, Key said.

OU formed an oZONE team in June 2005 and began looking for solutions to remove information from the university mainframe sys-tem that was launched in 1968, Huebsch said.

Members of the oZONE team said the new site will look different to students.

“Change is going to be hard for students and hard for the staff,” said Melanee Hamilton, direc-tor of web communications. “It will be a tough change but so much better in the long run.”

Team members predict oZONE will be most effective for incoming students who are learn-ing to access their financial aid, e-mail and other student services before arriving in Norman.

“There [was] no clear path [with the old sys-tem] ... with this, they will have everything right in one place and it will streamline their experi-ence,” Key said.

OU’s enrollment procedures, financial aid and bursar needs did not allow a con-version outside the regular semesters, Key said.

During the conver-sion period, student records will be frozen and reflect static in-formation from Sept. 18, Key said.

“Change isn’t al-ways easy, but it’s very foundational and re-ally a positive thing overall,” Key said.

For more information about oZONE, log on to www.ou.edu/ozoneinfo.

ANYTIME ATTHE UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA’S INDEPENDENT STUDENT VOICE comOUDaily

OUDAILY.COM »

FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 18, 2009

BECOME A FAN OF THE OKLAHOMA DAILY/OUDAILY.COM ON FACEBOOK FOR UPDATES, VIDEOS AND MORE OF ALL YOUR DAILY FAVORITES.

OU and Tulsa face each other this weekend. Check out the preview inside.PAGE 6

Read about the University Theatre production “Is He Dead?” in the Life

& Arts section.PAGE 11

Read about an OU student who broke a world record this summer.PAGE 3

news

CAMPUS BRIEFS

FAN FEST CANCELLED FOR OU-TULSA GAME

THE HUFF CLOSED FOR HOME FOOTBALL GAME

LECTURES TO BE GIVEN OVER DARWIN’S THEORY

Saturday’sWeather

owl.ou.edu80°/65°

30%

PAGE 3

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side.

Students to encounter oZONE conversion difficulties

OU’s Huston Huffman Center will be closed all day Saturday because of the OU-Tulsa football game. Huston Huffman will close at 10 p.m. tonight and reopen at 2 p.m. Sunday, said Chris Thompson, a front desk worker at the Huston Huffman Center.

-Charles Ward/The Daily

Saturday’s Fan Fest activities prior to the Oklahoma-Tulsa game have been cancelled due to wet grounds, said OU and Sooner Sports Properties offi cials in a press release.

“The grounds were soft for last week’s game and we’ve had more rain since that time,” said Eric Barnhart, general manager of SSP. “We don’t want to subject the fans to muddy grounds and we also don’t want to do any damage to the track and fi eld facility.”

Kickoff is set for 2:30 p.m.

-Jono Greco/The Daily

Elliott Sober, research professor at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, will deliver three public talks on the general topic “Philosophical Refl ections on Darwin’s Theory” dur-ing the 11th Biennial David Ross Boyd Lectures at OU this month.

Lecture titles and dates are “Darwin and Intelligent Design,” Sept. 21, “Did Darwin Write the Origin Backwards?” Sept. 23, and “Darwin and Group Selection,” Sept. 25. All lectures are scheduled for 5 p.m. in room 128 of Dale Hall, 433 W. Lindsey St.

For more information about the lectures, please contact Reinaldo Elugardo at 325-6324 or [email protected].

-Daily staff reports

Higher education plan simplifi es

FAFSA and could save billions

RICKY MARANONThe Oklahoma Daily

The U.S. House of Representatives passed a bill Thursday that would, if it becomes law, remove private lenders from the student loans business.

The Student Aid and Fiscal Responsibility Act (H.R. 3221) is the adoption of President Obama’s higher education plan and passed 253 to 171.

“No student in America should have to

mortgage their future to get a good education,” stated the bill’s author, Rep. George Miller, D-Calif., in a press release. “This legislation pro-vides students and families with the single larg-est investment in federal student aid ever and makes landmark investments to improve edu-cation for students of all ages – and all without costing taxpayers a dime.”

Miller stated the bill would allow students to borrow through a direct loan program set up by the federal government rather than through lenders who participate in the federally-guaran-teed student loan program.

According to the Congressional Budget Office,

the change in the way the government would administer student loans, if the bill is passed in the U.S. Senate and signed by President Obama, would generate $87 billion in savings to the fed-eral government over the next 10 years.

But there are other provisions to the bill aside from the change in student loans.

According to the press release from Miller’s office, the bill simplifies the FAFSA and provides loan forgiveness for members of the military who are called to active duty in the middle of the academic year. It would also invest $40 billion

U.S. HOUSE PASSES STUDENT LOAN BILL

PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY MERRILL JONES

OU golf course stays green with grey waterPractice saves on water, frees up funds

RICKY MARANONThe Oklahoma Daily

The Jimmie Austin OU Golf Course uses grey water to keep its greens free from brown patches.

Grey water, or recycled water, is equivalent to water that someone has been used to bathe in or wash dishes in, not sewage, according to the 1998 Water and Environment Journal, published by the Charter Institute of Water and Environment Management.

“We at [the] Jimmie Austin OU Golf Club are proud that we have the capability to use recycled or grey water to water our golf course,” Eddie Roach, assistant superinten-dent of the golf course said. “The use of grey water for irri-gation purposes is becoming more of an everyday trend, especially on golf courses, since water restrictions on golf courses are becoming more of an issue.”

Roach said the water is collected in a 500,000-gallon tank located directly south of

the course’s clubhouse.Jason Faires, Jimmie

Austin superintendent, said the water is pumped to the golf club from the waste water treatment plant locat-ed about a mile south of the golf course.

“Our golf course is greener in the sense that we have the capability to water our course with water that is being recy-cled rather than from water that is bought directly from the city like many other golf courses throughout the na-tion have to do,” Roach said.

However, Faires said there were some problems with grey water use.

“The biggest misconcep-tion about using reclaimed water is that it is free water,” Faires said. “The water may not cost as much as ground water or city water, but using it has adverse effects on soil structure and turf.”

Faires said more aerifica-tion and gypsum applica-tions are needed just to make turf grow as it would if it were watered with fresh water, which means higher than normal labor and fertility

Sen. Andrew Rice to lead

party from 2011-12

CAITLIN HARRISONThe Oklahoma Daily

Sen. Andrew Rice. D-Oklahoma City, was chosen today as Democratic leader-elect by the Oklahoma state Senate Democratic caucus.

“I’m honored to have the chance to do it. It’s a very diverse caucus,” Rice said. “The margins are very close [be-tween] the senators … a lot of votes come very closely.”

Rice will serve as leader for the 2011-12 legislative session. Current leader Sen. Charlie Laster, D-Shawnee, will serve as leader for next year’s legisla-tive session and step down at the end of next year. He has served as demo-cratic floor leader since January 2007.

“I have been honored to serve as leader of the Democratic caucus and share my Democratic colleagues’ desire to work with Sen. Rice as we fight aggressively to regain the ma-jority in the Oklahoma state Senate,” Sen. Laster stated in a Capitol press release.

R i c e s a i d h e h o p e s t o g a i n Republican support that will help push Democratic legislation, as well as foster the Democratic party as a whole.

“I think our party is moving in a dif-ferent direction,” Sen. Rice said. “The leaders designated in the House for the Democrats are both younger and

we’re both from the Oklahoma City area where you see growth for our party.”

Rice said the party’s leaders have typically come from the state’s rural areas, so he hopes his urban back-ground will serve as a positive change. He said the party’s leaders are divided evenly between rural and urban areas, and that the party’s focus on rural pol-icies won’t change.

Rice was elected to District 46 in 2006 with nearly 70 percent of the vote, and also ran unsuccessfully for

the U.S. Senate last year.“I congratulate Sen. Rice on being

chosen by his colleagues to serve in this important capacity, and I’m ex-cited to work alongside a democrat with his ability to energize our young-er voters,” state Rep. Scott Inman, D-Oklahoma City, stated in a press release. “I know we are both com-mitted to being a strong voice for all Oklahomans, and I’m confident we will work together to bring a fresh message to move our party and our state forward in the coming years.”

Democratic leader-elect chosen by caucus

MICHELLE GRAY/THE DAILY

Andrew Rice, current Oklahoma State Senator for district 46, speaks as part of his campaign for a spot in the U.S. Senate, Wednesday afternoon in the Sooner Room in the Oklahoma Memorial Union. Rice's fellow state senator, John Sparks (district 16), and Wallace Collins (right), a candidate for state representative of district 45, stood behind him during the speech Rice delivered last fall campaign for the U.S Senate.

WATER CONTINUES ON PAGE 2

BILL CONTINUES ON PAGE 2

During the conversion of more than two million student records, some sites will function normally, some will work as read-only and others will be completely unavailable.

Sites to function normally:-exchange.ou.edu-learn.ou.edu

Sites to function as read-only:-enroll.ou.edu

-studentservices.ou.edu-Degree Navigator

Sites completely unavailable:-Admission application-Financial aid, no disbursement avail-able-Bursar, no refunds from bursar accounts-pay.ou.edu

SOURCE: Nick Key, oZONE spokesman

OZONE CONVERSIONS

costs.Faires said Jimmie Austin switched over to

grey water when the course was redesigned in 1995.

Students said it is a good idea to use grey water on the course.

“I really don’t see the harm in them using recycled water,” Iosiah Varghese, sociology

and criminology senior, said.Varghese said he has heard other golf

courses using other means to water their courses and thought it was good that Jimmie Austin was being different.

“As long as people aren’t drinking the water, I don’t see any harm in it,” Alice Lee, management information studies graduate student, said.

Faires and Roach said grey water is not for drinking or cooking and is specifically used for just watering the course.

Meredith Moriak, managing [email protected] • phone: 325-3666 • fax: 325-6051

2 Friday, September 18, 2009

to increase the maximum annual Pell Grant scholarship to $5,500 in 2010 and eventually raise the amount to $6,900 by 2019, provide $3 billion to bolster college access and keep interest rates on need-based and subsidized loans variable begin-ning in 2012.

O k l a h o m a Congressional del-e g a t i o n m e m b e r s R e p s. Ma r y Fa l l i n , R-Oklahoma City, and Tom Cole, R-Moore, voted against the bill calling it another gov-ernment takeover of a private enterprise.

“A b o l i s h i n g t h e Federal Family Education Loan student loan program in order to institute a government-run lending program that pulls dollars from the already overdrawn U.S. Treasury is a mis-take,” Rep. Cole, who represents Norman, stated in an e-mail. “This is just another fun-damentally flawed government takeover.”

Cole stated the legislation that was passed

is similar to the health care bill in that he stated the student loan industry would be destroyed from a “public option.”

“It will cost taxpayers billions, elimi-nate private jobs and make students and colleges more dependent on the federal government.”

Rep. Fallin stated in a press release that the bill creates more bureaucracy for citi-

zens and turns the U.S. Department of Education into a large bank.

“The government al-ready owns our mort-gages, car dealerships and banking institutions,” Fallin stated. “Now they want to control the stu-dent loan market as well, managing over $1 trillion in capital over the next ten years and eliminat-

ing college financing choices for students. If this bill becomes law, students will be stuck standing in line in another massive bureau-cratic system, just like the Internal Revenue Service or Post Office.”

Fallin stated the bill would take 6.7 million students and 4,400 institutions of higher edu-cation into one large federal program.

The U.S. House of Representatives passed the Student Aid and Financial Responsibility Act Thursday. If the act becomes law, the bill’s author, Rep. George Miller, D-Calif., claims the bill will make several changes to the way student loans are obtained and funded, including:

• Students would not obtain federally-guaranteed loans from private lenders. Instead, students would borrow directly from the federal government.• The FAFSA will be easier to fi ll out.• Pell Grant amounts would increase to a maximum of $5,500 per year in 2010, and to $6,900 per year by 2019.• According to the CBO, the bill would save $87 billion during the next 10 years.

Sources: Congressional Budget Offi ce, press release from Rep. George Miller’s offi ce

WaterContinued from page 1

BillContinued from page 1

PROPOSED CHANGES TO STUDENT LOAN LEGISLATION

“No student in America should have to mortgage their future to get a good education. This legislation provides students and families with the single largest investment in federal student aid ever.”

-REP. GEORGE MILLER, D-CALIFORNIA

Reason #7

Movie Line:(405) 703-3777WarrenTheatres.com

Just South of 4th Street on I-35

in Moore

Luxurious seats!

Friday, September 18, 2009 3

The following is a list of

arrests and citations, not

convictions. The information

listed is compiled from the

Norman Police Department

and the OU Police Department.

Those listed are presumed

innocent until proven guilty.

PUBLIC INTOXICATIONDonna Jean Bogle, 44, 170

12th Ave. S.E., Wednesday, also

driving under the infl uence

and possession of a controlled

dangerous substance

Michael Wayne Monckton, 35,

201 W. Daws St., Tuesday

Jason Tyrel Willis, 25, 170 12th

Ave. S.E., Wednesday, also

driving under the infl uence

and possession of a controlled

dangerous substance

POSSESSION OF A WEAPONDaniel William Cleveland, 21,

736 S. Lahoma Ave., Wednesday

POSSESSION OF MARIJUANAHeather Rochelle Daniel, 21,

311 Skylark Court, Wednesday

HARBOURING A VICIOUS DOGLucinda Ann Oropeza, 37,

800 Lexington St., Friday,

also dog at large

Luis Gerardo Palza, 21,

822 Owl St., Wednesday

MUNICIPAL DRIVING UNDER THE INFLUENCEMatthew Alton Mackey, 25,

300 W. Boyd St., Wednesday

The Daily draws all entries for

Campus Notes from OUDaily.com’s

comprehensive, campus-wide calen-

dar. To get your event noticed, visit

OUDaily.com and fi ll out our user-

friendly form under the calendar link.

TODAYOU SOCCEROU will play Lamar at 7 p.m.

at the OU soccer complex.

COLLEGE OF FINE ARTSThe College of Fine Arts will pres-

ent “Is He Dead?” at 8 p.m. in

the Max Weitzenhoffer Theatre.

SATURDAYOU VOLLEYBALLOU will play Missouri at 11:30 a.m.

at the McCasland Field House.

OU FOOTBALLOU will play Tulsa at 2:30 p.m. at

the Oklahoma Memorial Stadium.

COLLEGE OF FINE ARTSThe College of Fine Arts will pres-

ent “Is He Dead?” at 8 p.m. in

the Max Weitzenhoffer Theatre.

SUNDAYOU SOCCEROU will play USC at 1 p.m. at

the OU soccer complex.

COLLEGE OF FINE ARTSThe College of Fine Arts will pres-

ent “Is He Dead?” at 3 p.m. in

the Max Weitzenhoffer Theatre.

CAMPUS NOTES

SAFEride a smart alternative to reducepossible risks on the road

KAITLYN BIVINThe Oklahoma Daily

In July 2008, criminology senior Jacob Long’s life changed forever when his close friend, Brandon Barrett, was killed by a drunk driver after attending a concert.

In an effort to remember Barrett and help keep fellow students safe, Long joined the university SAFEride program this fall and an-swers student phone calls for the program.

“I’ve been on pretty much every end of the drunk driving spectrum,” Long said. “I’ve had friends drive drunk and kill innocent people, and I’ve had friends killed by drunk drivers.”

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 36 people in the U.S. die each day and approxi-mately 700 more are injured in motor vehicle crashes that involve an alcohol-impaired driver.

SAFEride is a university-wide program that gives students a safe, alternative and nonjudgmental ride home Thursday

through Saturday night, said Brynn Daves, assistant to the vice president of student affairs, in an e-mail.

The program was created in 2004 and offers free rides to students with a valid student ID from 10 p.m. to 3 a.m. any-where in Norman city limits, according to the SAFEride Web site.

Long said he decided to join SAFEride not only because the position presented itself, but because of his drive to help students stay safe and prevent further tragedies.

“[SAFEride] has given me the opportunity to help students stay safer,” Long said. “Just by being able to give them a safe ride home without the risk of driv-ing with friends who are drunk or if they have been drinking themselves.”

Long said his experiences with drunk driv-ing fatalities changed his perspective and gave him the drive to work for SAFEride. He said he is now attempting to get the message out about

SAFEride to students.“I’ve been telling people to call SAFEride more to get them

off the road and hopefully save someone’s life,” Long said.The fruit of his labor is recognized with every call.“As long as people are willing to call that’s all the reward I

need,” Long said.

Fellow SAFEride employee and multidisciplinary studies sophomore Austin Conwell said Long is excellent at his posi-tion as a member of the program.

“[SAFEride] is a great program to be involved in if you want to help people,” Long said.

Student finds motivation, dedication to keep drivers safe

Home game tailgating boosts Norman economy, game excitementFans enjoy hours leading up to football games to help economy

NICOLE HILLThe Oklahoma Daily

One of Kathy Brown’s favorite things about setting up camp in front of Copeland Hall on Saturdays is creating the menu. Last week it was Idaho potatoes and roasted chicken.

In the past there were frog legs for the Texas Christian Horned Frogs and bear burg-ers for the Baylor Bears.

Different opponent, different dish, but for every OU home game, the same story: Brown, her husband and four other couples

pitch their tent, fire up the grill and set up the HoleyBoard game.

Brown, from Tulsa, is just one of hundreds who take over campus on game days for the same weekend routine: tailgating. Brown and her group, some of whom have been tailgating at OU games since the ‘70s, set up their site at 11 a.m. Saturday for a 6 p.m. game. A sign of dedication for sure, but these fans bring more than school spirit; they actually boost the local economy as well.

Every home game weekend generates $8.8 million for the Norman economy, said Stephen Koranda, executive director for the

Norman Convention and Visitors Bureau. “The tourism economy is much more than

hotels and restaurants,” Koranda said.Close to $53 million is generated through-

out a regular football season, which typically includes six home football games, through an influx of weekend visitors, both “day-trippers” and tail-gaters, he said.

“Traffic and sales are definitely up [on game

days],” said Amanda Clark, owner of Blush, a boutique on Campus Corner.

Clark said she tries to get all of her em-ployees to work on home game Saturdays because of the extra volume of business. OU

Parents’ Weekend and Homecoming are par-ticularly big business weekends, she said.

With rain, a loss the previous week and a little-known opponent, the Idaho State game brought less business than usual, Clark said.

Clark said she doesn’t expect that to be the case the rest of the season, though.

A prolonged loss of business would be dramatic, Koranda said. To illustrate this point, Koranda used the example of a wait-ress. Without the surge of traffic into Norman, she makes less money. That is less she will spend on groceries, clothes and books and less revenue for the city’s economy.

“Our slogan is, ‘You go to tailgate and you hope a football game breaks out,’” Brown said.

TEEKO YANG/THE DAILY

Jacob Long, criminology senior, answers phones for SAFEwalk Tuesday afternoon. The SAFEwalk and SAFEride programs have been implemented to increase campus and student security.

SAFER STREETSSAFEride is free to all students with a valid OU ID from 10 p.m. to 3 a.m. Thursday through Saturday. Call 325-RIDE.

“Our slogan is, ‘You go to tailgate and you hope a football game breaks out.’”–KATHY BROWN

POLICE REPORTS

Intolerance is an unfortunate reality of to-day’s society. One needs only to turn on one’s favorite news channel for five minutes to fig-ure that out.

It’s easy to become disillu-sioned when newspapers, blogs, TV channels, etc. constantly bombard us with proof of hu-manity’s capacity for hatred. It’s also perhaps most lamentable that much of this hatred seems to be carried out in the name of God and religion.

This is not to say, however, that those who are religiously inclined are predisposed to intolerance or bigotry.

Growing up, I was always taught that reli-gion was a favor bestowed upon the world, bringing promises of peace and justice. True to my Sunday school teacher’s words, I have come to understand that those perpetuating prejudice through religion are, more often than not, a small minority simply misrepre-senting their respective religions.

Why then do we seem to notice this small minority more than we notice the rest? Well, as the saying goes, it’s because the hollow

drum makes the loudest sound. Like it or not, the repetitive beating of

these hollow drums affects each and every one of us. Their malignant rhythms can and

do shape our perception of the world around us.

Some might even be driven to believe that intolerance is the natural order, an inescapable reality. Fortunately, there are also those who are driven to prove them wrong.

My focus is on the latter.This past Monday, Sept. 14, mem-

bers of Hillel and the Muslim Student Association broke bread together at an Iftar dinner.

Hillel, a Jewish student organization, invited the Muslim Student Association and the OU community at large to the Hillel House right before sunset, the time when Muslims break the daily fast during the Islamic month of Ramadan, which ends Saturday.

The day after Ramadan, Sunday, Muslims will celebrate the festival of Eid, two days after the Jewish holiday of Rosh Hashanah.

In addition to dinner conversation and holiday wishes, speakers from both the Jewish and Muslim communities of Norman

reflected upon the purpose of fasting in both religious traditions at what turned out to be a hugely successful interfaith dialogue.

I had the opportunity to speak to several of the attendees of Monday’s event; almost all of them claimed they learned something new and expressed their anticipation of similar events in the near future.

One Hillel member recalled that she par-ticularly enjoyed the friendly and relaxed at-mosphere of the evening. In addition to her praise, she also stated her concern about a protest being held today in front of the Hillel House by members of Westboro Baptist Church from Topeka, Kansas.

For those of you who may be unfamil-iar, Westboro has become infamous for its use of frank hate speech in its literature and protests.

Although Hillel has stated that they will not stage a counter-protest, this hasn’t stopped students and student organizations from voicing their support of Hillel and their rebuke of Westboro’s hateful sentiments, which, as one student put it, are in stark con-trast with mainstream Christianity.

Me m b e r s o f t h e Mu s l i m S t u d e n t Association have been some of the most

vocal in their denunciation of Westboro and their support of Hillel, further illustrating the cooperative relationship between the two.

I wholeheartedly commend both organi-zations for being farsighted enough to invest their time and effort into reaching out to each other. It is my hope that these types of activi-ties continue into the future and evolve to en-gage other groups as well, both religious and otherwise.

In fact, I challenge these student organiza-tions to serve as a reminder that constructive interaction between people of diverse back-grounds is not only possible, but desirable.

Intolerance is a global issue with no easy solution. Resolution requires that each of us takes time to analyze our attitude and behav-ior toward one another and to actively work against the forces of bigotry.

Again, this is no easy task. I don’t be-lieve, though, that it’s unattainable in the future, and when the day finally comes, the University of Oklahoma should be proud to have been part of the process.

Nabeel Khan is a political science junior.

“They can’t decide on anything.” “ T h e y ’ r e l a z y a n d

unproductive.” “They’re only good at this/that.” We all do it. We base expectations

on it. We reduce the complexities of the world down to it. The power o f p e r c e p t i o n and stereotype is strong, especially when the group is radically different than our own.

S o m e t i m e s those stereotypes can be helpful

and truthful. Other times they can be dangerously inaccurate, setting up unnecessary boundaries be-tween groups.

Everybody loves categorization. We love structure and order in our nations, cities, homes and lives. We classify everything according to kind, type, appearance, texture, flavor, etc.

But like most everything else, I and those around me can go too far in these distinctions.

International students, likewise, perceive Western culture (particu-larly U.S. culture) through a set of classifying eyes. I know this because I teach internationals English, and their assessment of American

culture is often refreshingly honest (albeit sometimes misguided).

One morning, one of the students in my class brought up the topic of stereotypes. With the climate of my classroom being that many differ-ing cultures and backgrounds are represented, I cautiously asked him to explain what he meant.

A brief but fascinating discussion followed when I asked the students the perceptions of the U.S. and its people in their countries.

Their responses reflected both some funny misunderstandings and also refreshingly accurate analysis.

These incorrect assumptions about American culture in general are often humorous.

While it is generally true that people in the U.S. are more over-weight than in many other cultures (put forth in consistent statistics and a fast-food culture), some stu-dents are surprised to meet active and healthy Americans.

The expectation that all people in this country are wealthy may be generally true in an international economic sense, but many times this façade is broken when the stu-dents begin to understand the mas-sive toll that high-interest credit card debt, brought on by years of unchecked and unthinking spend-ing, brings for many Americans.

The boats they see in many drive-ways and the new BMWs patrolling the streets are often on loan rather than a sign of affluence.

Another fascinating expectation that many of my students bring to the U.S. is that American culture is primarily Christian. They may have no idea what Christianity means now or historically, but they often assume that most Americans be-lieve it.

A recent Barna Group survey seems to support this idea, in that 88 percent of those surveyed be-lieved their religious beliefs to be “very important in [their] life”; however, the same poll said that 71 percent of that same group say they are “more likely to develop my religious beliefs on my own, rather than...accept...[a] set of beliefs that a particular church teaches.”

Regarding the perceptions of the students in my class, their expec-tations are probably due in part to their own backgrounds, as many come from cultures and nations in which only one belief system and worldview is legal. As such, their only frame of reference religiously is in the form of a monoculture.

This assumption about the U.S. is often externally affirmed in the form of other surveys and polls conducted in which high percent-ages claim religious affiliation. But

the reality is that, even though the most commonly-held “religion” is some form of Christianity, the terms “orthodoxy” and “Christian world-view” are given no seat at the table of the postmodern, neo-Darwinian “educated” in the U.S. today.

Many internationals are rather surprised to find this to be true, al-though ironically they often glean their views from Hollywood mov-ies (which aren’t often mistaken for being particularly concerned with external spiritual authority).

There are very specific areas, however, in which many interna-tional students in my classes ac-curately perceive U.S. culture. The most common one seems to be that Americans are concerned only with themselves rather than thinking of others.

This could stem from students who come from community-driven cultures, but I often think very simi-lar thoughts about the relational distance and absence we as the people of the U.S. have with one an-other and those outside our sphere. Even the recent Peace Corps/so-cial justice mission which many Americans seem to be on is often just for the sake of traveling and seeing the world rather than actual concern.

As with any group, it is easier to make assumptions and conclusions

regarding them without actually taking the time to listen and read and think.

It’s much easier for me to smear someone in the blogosphere and “smash” their ideas without actu-ally taking the time to learn their best argument or having a discus-sion with someone who thinks dif-ferently than I do.

It’s a lot simpler for me to read and watch media about a specific international group and assume I understand their perspective with-out having lived, thought or seen the truth of the circumstances.

Stereotypes are interesting and potentially educational to talk about in the right setting, and many of the students in my class already understood that some of their per-ceptions of the U.S. weren’t neces-sarily factual.

As such, I have found myself thinking that I, for one, need to see the line of prejudice better and more frequently when discussing a group.

Then I (and we, eh?) might be able to have more appropriate, concerned and honest discussions about what life and reality mean.

Jon Malone is an English education graduate student.

OUR VIEW

STAFF COLUMN

STAFF COLUMN

Will Holland, opinion [email protected] • phone: 325-7630 • fax: 325-6051

4 Friday, September 18, 2009

JON MALONE

NABEELKHAN

Jamie Hughes Editor-in-ChiefMeredith Moriak Managing EditorCharles Ward Assistant Managing EditorRicky Ly Night EditorWill Holland Opinion EditorMichelle Gray, Merrill Jones Photo Editors

LeighAnne Manwarren Senior Online EditorJacqueline Clews Multimedia EditorAnnelise Russell Sports EditorCassie Rhea Little Life & Arts EditorJudy Gibbs Robinson Editorial AdviserThad Baker Advertising Manager

The Oklahoma Daily is a public forum and OU’s independent student voice.Letters should concentrate on issues, not personalities, and should be fewer than 250 words, typed, double spaced and signed by the author(s). Letters will be cut to fit. Students must list their major and classification. OU staff and faculty must list their title. All letters must include a daytime phone number. Authors submitting letters in person must present photo identification. Submit letters Sunday through Thursday, in 160 Copeland Hall. Letters can also be submitted via e-mail to [email protected].

Guest columns are accepted at editor’s discretion.’Our View’ is the voice of The Oklahoma Daily. Editorial Board members are The Daily’s editorial staff. The board meets Sunday through Thursday at 4:30 p.m. in 160 Copeland Hall. Columnists’ and cartoonists’ opinions are not necessarily the opinions of The Daily Editorial Board.

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

phone:405-325-3666

e-mail:[email protected] US

T O D

COMMENT OF THE DAY »In response to Thursday’s news story, “Demonstration planned by Westboro Baptist Church”

YOU CAN COMMENT ATOUDAILY.COM

“Sounds like Hillel is doing the right thing.

‘We are not giving this group, who’s looking for press, any additional reason for press,’

Ayalon said.

I was considering coming to counter-protest, but I’ll do my part by staying out of it if that’s what Hillel wants.”

-OUSooners

LETTER TO THE EDITOR

To the editor,

I found Christopher Gibbons’ tirade against meat in Thursday’s edition of The Daily quite amusing until I realized he was completely serious.

I think most people would agree that eating a turkey sandwich for lunch and having tacos for dinner is not a “disgusting addiction” as he called it.

Christopher claims the demand for meat will soon become unsustainable because I will eat 25 percent more meat (50 pounds) in 2015 than I did last year. So what?

Meat is not a necessity like oil or water, and I’m pretty sure we will never run out of cows, pigs and chickens. It’s like saying 5,000 Skittles a day for everyone in America is unsus-tainable.

The columnist’s conclusion states that, “we need to get back to our roots, and … under-stand that meat was, and still is, a luxury.”

Get back to our roots? Hunter civilizations are presumed to have lived (and lived off meat) as far back as 2 million years ago, and meat is a central part of several of our national holi-days.

I agree with the opinion that some people eat way too much meat, but to imply that by having a meat-based protein with most meals is a “disgusting addiction,” is absolutely ridicu-lous.

And to further imply that be eating meat I am aiding in the destruction of the environ-ment because cows fart, is also ridiculous.

My suggestion is that if you are worried about corn-fed beef and cow fl atulence, then take a note from the Chick-Fil-A cow and “Eat Mor Chikin.”

Kyle BertholfOU Alumnus

Stereotypes, perceptions not always accurate

Campus groups lead through cooperation

Student loan legislation good for taxpayers, students

The House of Representatives voted Thursday to pass a bill that prescribes sev-eral changes to the country’s higher edu-cation system, including making the gov-ernment the sole student loan provider. See page 1 for details.

The bill, which is on its way to the Senate, is aimed at making college more acces-sible for students, and may save taxpayers as much as $87 billion by putting an end to loan subsidies. But some Republicans worry that if passed, the bill would actually cost taxpayers money.

Despite the GOP’s reservations, we are glad this bill is one step closer to becom-ing a law because it cuts out the lender, which is an unnecessary piece of the loan system.

Now, the government is the lender, and if this does save taxpayers money as the

bipartisan Congressional Budget Office estimates, it will be a great way to conserve during an economic recession.

And this is especially true if, as an AP story on OUDaily.com reports, “College students probably wouldn’t notice much difference in their loans, which they would get through their schools.”

We hope loans will remain as available to students as they currently are, because the system may soon be completely in the hands of the government, which makes us a little weary. Perhaps there should be a private option in case someone really wants to have additional choices.

For now, however, we must take the government at its word.

And if it holds up its end of the bargain, and the new alterations save taxpayers money, we can’t oppose the bill.

OKLAHOMA CITY — A new downtown Oklahoma City convention center and 70-acre park make up more than half of a $777-million MAPS 3 sales-tax proposal city leaders un-veiled Thursday.

The eight Metropolitan Area Projects (MAPs), which also include a downtown streetcar system, bicycle and walking trails, and improvements along the Oklahoma River, will be placed on the Dec. 8 ballot for Oklahoma City voters.

“This proposal dreams big, and it continues the momen-tum and renaissance of the last 15 years,” Mayor Mick Cornett said. “I believe it will achieve the goals that have always de-fined MAPS projects — creating jobs and improving our quality of life.”

If approved by voters, the collection of a one-cent sales tax would begin April 1 and continue for nearly eight years.

It is the third major MAPS initiative, the first of which was approved by city voters in 1993 and raised $363 million to pay for the Ford Center arena, Bricktown Canal and ballpark, a downtown library and other projects.

A second MAPS for Kids approved in 2001 with a school bond issue generated $714 million for improvements at local schools.

The penny sales tax was continued in March 2008 when voters approved extending the tax for 15 months to pay for improvements to the Ford Center and construction of NBA practice facility for the Oklahoma City Thunder.

The centerpiece of the MAPS 3 proposal is a $280-mil-lion convention center that will include exhibit halls, meet-ing rooms, ballrooms and parking. The new center, which would be built alongside a proposed 70-acre, $130 million downtown park, would replace the Cox Business Services Convention Center that was renovated as part of the original MAPS.

Cornett said the current convention center is “inadequate” to compete with those in neighboring cities and states for the lucrative convention business.

But including such an expensive project that most voters likely would rarely use could spell doom for the MAPS 3 ini-tiative, said Stuart Jolly, executive director of the Oklahoma chapter for Americans for Prosperity, a group that advocates limited government and lower taxes.

“Do we really want and need a new convention center?” Jolly said. “The one we have now has never been filled to ca-pacity, it’s not continuously booked and it’s subsidized by the city to the tune of $2 million a year.

“I don’t think that’s the kind of project that should be lumped in with sidewalks and walking trails.”

Cornett and several council members acknowledged that selling the MAPS 3 project to voters over the next three months, especially given the current economic climate, will be a challenge.

“I think the entire package is a tough sell because it’s a

significant investment by the citizens of Oklahoma City,” he said. “Just because this initiative contains the MAPS brand doesn’t mean it will get a rubber stamp from the voters.”

-AP

Okla. City offi cials urging sales tax for new downtown projects

OKLAHOMA CITY — U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan praised Oklahoma Thursday afternoon as a national leader in efforts to improve early childhood educa-tion, saying such efforts would prove their worth in future years.

During a whirlwind trip to the state, Duncan spent time at Oklahoma City Educare, a new education center for disad-vantaged preschool-age children located in a poor neighborhood on the city's south side. He joined Gov. Brad Henry and others on a tour of the facility, speaking to children as they played with blocks, Play-Doh and train tracks in one classroom. Duncan later took questions during a town hall-style meeting at the Oklahoma History Center.

Saying U.S. education is at a "turning point," Duncan said he and President Obama believe, "We have to educate our way to a bet-ter economy. That's the only way we're going to get there." Such education needs to start at the preschool level, Duncan said, so that a child's future teachers won't have to play "catch-up."

"If we can simply do it right ... [children] have a fighting chance to be successful," he said.

Educare, a collaboration between the pub-lic and private sectors, provides year-round learning programs for disadvantaged chil-dren from birth to age 5, with the goal being to prepare those children for kindergarten and future schooling. The first Educare program began in Chicago in 2000 and has since expanded to centers in Omaha, Neb.; Milwaukee, Tulsa, Denver and Miami, as well as Oklahoma City. A second Tulsa Educare facility is scheduled to open in early 2010.

The Oklahoma City facility, which has 200 students, opened in July and already has a waiting list. It has an annual budget of $3.5 million, with money coming from public and private sources. Duncan said such pub-lic-private partnerships are the only way to

improve early childhood education."This is a better way to do it and this is start-

ing to become a national model," he said.He said such improvements are key to

reducing high school dropout rates and ul-timately producing more college graduates, although it could take years before the effects of that early education can be quantified.

"This is not a short-term investment ... but I promise you those young children who have the benefit of that great [Educare] build-ing and caring adults will go on to be success-ful," Duncan said.

State Superintendent Sandy Garrett, who attended the announcement, said 72 percent of 4-year-olds in Oklahoma attend pre-K classes. The National Institute for Early Education Research noted in a report earlier this year that Oklahoma is one of only two states offering statewide voluntary pre-K access. Henry said Oklahoma's leadership in that area is "something we should be proud of."

Garrett said she supports the Educare concept and wishes it could be offered to more children.

"There are 200 children here. We want this for every child that's living in poverty," she said. "We're so pleased to have this model. We think the adults in this state realize that the earlier we can help children with the skills that prepare them for life, it's good for learning."

Among those who attended the an-nouncement were Oklahoma City Mayor Mick Cornett, Tulsa Mayor Kathy Taylor and philanthropist George Kaiser, the chairman of BOK Financial Corp.

"Ultimately, we intend to break the cycle of poverty that captures way too many Oklahomans," said Bob Ross, the president and CEO of the Inasmuch Foundation and chairman of Oklahoma City Educare.

-AP

U.S. education secretary visits Oklahoma

PHOTO PROVIDED

U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan, left, and Oklahoma Gov. Brad Henry, right, look on as pre-kindergarten students at an education center for disadvantaged children release a box of butter-flies in Oklahoma City Thursday, Sept. 17.

PROJECTS INCLUDED IN MAPS 3 PROPOSAL

A list of MAPS 3 projects proposed as part of a one-cent sales tax in Oklahoma City that will continue for seven years, nine months:

• New $280-million downtown convention center.• 70-acre, $130-million downtown park.• $130-million transit package that includes fi ve to six miles of downtown streetcar lines.• $60 mill ion in improvements to the Oklahoma State Fairgrounds.• $50 million for health and wellness aquatic centers for senior citizens.• $60 million for improvements to the Oklahoma River, including a public white water facility and permanent grandstands.• $40 million for 57 miles of bicycling and walking trails across the city.• $10 million for sidewalks across the city.

Friday, September 18, 2009 5

OU football hosts in-state opponent the Tulsa Golden Hurricane Saturday at Gaylord Family-Oklahoma Memorial Stadium.ERIC DAMAThe OKlahoma Daily

Quick Facts:• OU is 15-7-1 all-time against Tulsa and has won the last

four meetings between the teams, the last (a 62-21 OU vic-tory) in Sept. 2007.

• The Golden Hurricane led the nation in total offense in each of the last two seasons with 534.9 and 569.9 yards per game, respectively.

• OU has won 25 straight home games, the longest cur-rent streak in the nation, and a mark that equals the school record. With a win tomorrow, the Sooners would set a new school record.

Keys to the Game:

1) The Offense. For both teams. The Sooners showed major offensive improvement from the season opening loss to BYU in Saturday’s 64-0 nuking of Idaho State (the four failed attempts to reach the end zone from the goal line on the opening drive excluded, of course). Idaho State was a good confidence booster for Landry Jones, but the Golden Hurricane rank 34th nationally in total defense, providing Jones with a legitimate test. On the other hand, although David Johnson, the primary reason Tulsa led the nation in total offense the past two seasons, isn’t back at quarterback, seven starters from the offense are. Sophomore dual-threat quarterback G.J. Kinne (No. 6 in the nation in passer effi-ciency) leads a Tulsa offense that averages nearly 41 points per game. Whether Tulsa wins or loses will likely depend on Kinne’s performance.

2) Damaris Johnson. The sophomore wide receiver for Tulsa leads the nation in all-purpose yardage (240 yards per game) after two games. In the season opener, Johnson proved he could do it all as he totaled 252 all-purpose yards, tallying 31 rush yards, 60 receiving yards, 76 kick-off return yards and 85 punt return yards. If OU’s special teams unit has trouble containing Johnson, Tulsa could very easily be starting many of their offensive drives close to or in Sooner territory.

3) Wide Receiver. Ryan Broyles caught seven passes for 155 yards and three touchdowns last week. The next three leading receivers in that game? Chris Brown, DeMarco Murray and Jermie Calhoun—all running backs. The trio combined for six catches and 90 yards. To be fair, Adron Tennell didn’t play, but Brandon Caleb and Cameron Kenney did, and they only had one reception each. Idaho State is one thing, but if these guys pull the same Invisible Man Act against Tulsa, the score might be a lot closer than most peo-ple would like it to be.

OU will win if: Landry Jones can pick up where he left off last week, and the defense continues to play as well as it has been. Travis Lewis and Gerald McCoy have been spectacular thus far, and they will be the keys to stopping Tulsa’s offensive attack.

Tulsa will win if: G.J. Kinne and Damaris Johnson both have career days, and even that may not be enough. These two will have their work cut out for them to keep pace with OU’s offense. Even if they only get stopped defensively a few times, that would likely be the difference in the game’s outcome.

They said it:

• Bob Stoops on Tulsa’s offense: “They use all of their piec-es. They spread the ball around to everyone. They do a nice job of mixing it up, run and pass, moving the pocket. They do

a little bit of everything so they give you a lot to work on.”• Stoops on Sam Bradford’s leadership on the sidelines:

“He’s just a great team guy. I know he’s given Landry (Jones) a lot of support. His fire, his spirit is still there with the team. His presence around practice every day and in the locker room, you know he does all that he can and he’s awfully good at it.”

• Offensive coordinator Kevin Wilson on last Saturday’s game: “There were some strides made for sure, a lot of young guys had a chance to compete and play. We struggled on the goal line again, which is a concern and we need to do bet-ter on third downs. But we’re getting better and have a lot of work to do. We’re going in a positive direction but have some work we need to keep plugging at.”

• Junior CD Dominique Franks on if last Saturday’s game showed more of how OU is as a defense: “Yes it did. But at the same time, we’re just focusing on really just doing the stuff that we need to do. We don’t want to give up big plays and it’s just going to be us tackling in space, not giving up big plays and making them drive.”

Annelise Russell, sports [email protected] • phone: 325-7630 • fax: 325-6051

6 Friday, September 18, 2009

Sooners are at home this week-end to take on Lamar and USC.

« SOCCER

The Hurricane rolls into Norman Saturday

CHECK OUT OUDAILY.COM FOR HIGHLIGHTS FROM THIS WEEKEND’S GAME

MICHELLE GRAY/THE DAILY

Senior running back, Chris Brown (29), attempts to run the ball during the game against Idaho State University Saturday.

2009-10 men’s basketball student season ticket sale

September 22 & 23$140 *10 processing fee

Returning Student Sale- Sept. 22On sale for returning OU Students online September 22 at 7 am. Walk up sales will begin at 10 am if supplies last. All sales are fi rst-come, fi rst served and while supplies last.

New Students (Freshman and Transfer)- Sept. 23

New OU students (freshmen and transfers) sign up for tickets on September 23 at 8 am. A lottery (if necessary) will take place on September 24 if demand exceeds supply.

Men’s Basketball Rebate Offer

For more detailed info please visit:

Just by attending (or having someone else use your season ticket) you will have the opportunity to qualify for our rebate program. At the completion of the season, those student season ticket holders that went to 15 or more of the games (90%) will have a $140 credit put back on their bursar account and anyone who attended at least 13 of the games (80%) will receive a $50 credit.

FRIDAY FACE-OFF: New York Giants or Dallas CowboysThe Dallas Cowboys face their rival, New York Giants Sunday. Which NFL team has the better chance of fi nishing atop the NFC East?

New YorkThe NFC East is widely regarded as the

toughest division in football. Home to the Dallas Cowboys, Philadelphia Eagles, Washington Redskins and New York Giants, the NFC East is often closely contested, and the NFC Wild Card team often comes from

the division. I believe the New York

Giants are the favorite this season. That has as much to do with what the other teams lack as it does to do with the strengths of the Giants. Each of the other teams in the division has glaring weakness that the Giants can take advantage of.

The Redskins have their moments, but I don’t think they deserve a spot in this conversation as a threat for the division title. The Dallas Cowboys have a strong team this season. However, a shaky defense could cause problems, and neutral-izes whatever production they might get from what is a potent offense.

They have also proven to be undisci-plined under Head Coach Wade Phillips, leading the league in penalties last season. If the preseason was any indication, then that problem hasn’t been solved.

The Philadelphia Eagles shocked the league this season with the signing of former Atlanta Falcons quarterback Michael Vick. But that signing leads me to the weakness of the Eagles: a lack of quarterback stability.

Donovan McNabb is and will continue to be the assumed starter for the Eagles, so long as he is healthy. Problem is, McNabb is now questionable with a rib injury, and might not start for several weeks. Kevin Kolb is the backup, and the Eagles signed Jeff Garcia to back up Kolb. Meanwhile, Vick will be avail-able to play in week 3.

There are too many different scenarios to cover here, but here’s one: McNabb stays

out for the next few weeks, and Kolb doesn’t play well in his place. Vick gets the starting nod when he comes back, and he does play well. What happens when McNabb is back? It’s just too much uncertainty.

The Giants have a proven champion at quarterback, and it is crucial to have a lead-er that has been to the top before. They also have a head coach who has shown he can adapt to his team and lead them to victory.

This weekend’s game between the Cowboys and the Giants will reveal much about the state of the NFC East, but I am confident that the Giants will come out on top.Aaron Colen is a journalism senior.

DallasThe NFC East is the best division in

football today. The New York Giants, Dallas Cowboys, Philadelphia Eagles and Washington Redskins are all capa-ble of winning the division this year and there won’t be a tighter race in any other

division.However, the Cowboys

are the most l ikely to win the division of the bunch.

They have a roster of potential Pro-Bowlers w h i c h i n c l u d e s t h e best tight end – Jason Whitten- and outside linebacker – DeMarcus W a r e – i n t h e g a m e

today. Not to mention a three-headed monster at running back with Marion Barber, Felix Jones and Tashard Choice.

The entire offseason consisted of me-dia-doubting quarterback Tony Romo’s leadership skills or the ability to replace wide receiver Terrell Owens, who left for Buffalo.

The facts are simple: it’s a team game and Romo is talented enough to take the team deep into the playoffs if the rest of the team maintains health. As for Owens replacement, how are 86 yards and a touchdown in week one for new No. 1 receiver Roy E. Williams?

The Cowboys also have an easier schedule this season using 2008 regular season records, according to ESPN.com. It’ll be hard for the Giants to score in the air this year. They haven’t had a No. 1 receiver since Plaxico Burress was re-leased and I’m not convinced they have a receiver that will go over the 750 yards mark.

“They are a great football team, but I think everyone in the East is good this year,” Romo said. “I think that every

game is going to provide a challenge and I think this is another challenge this week. Obviously they have a lot of good players and talented guys over there who have accomplished a lot. It will be a good test for our football team.”

The Giants at Cowboys game Sunday has plenty of playoff implications. The Cowboys have an easier schedule and more depth at every position other than defensive end.

S e e m s l i k e a n e a s y p i c k f o r m e : Cowboys win the division.M.J. Casiano is broadcast and electronic media junior.

AARONCOLEN

MJCASIANO

OU SOCCER HOSTS TWO MATCHES OVER THE WEEKEND

Soccer returns to Norman to begin a two-game series for the weekend. The Sooners will face the Lamar Cardinals on Friday, Sept. 18 at 7 p.m. Lamar is 1-5 for the season, after winning it’s fi rst game against Texas Southern last Sunday. The Sooners fi nish up the series against the

USC Trojans on Sunday, Sept. 20 at 1 p.m. The Tro jans won the NCAA Nat iona l Championship in 2007, and are 3-4 on the season after beating Michigan 2-1 during last Sunday’s match.

–Tobi Neidy/The Daily

VOLLEYBALL AT HOME THIS WEEKEND TO TAKE ON MISSOURI

The OU volleyball team hosts its fi rst confer-ence home match at 11:30 a.m. Saturday against the Tigers of Missouri. The Sooners are fresh off their fi rst conference win Wednesday night in Manhattan, Kan. over Kansas State. The Sooners nabbed the win in four sets.

Wednesday night’s game was highlighted by a strong defensive outing, which the OU squad will rely on this weekend. The OU Daily will bring you a full recap next week over the Sooner’s weekend battle.

–Daily Staff

AP PHOTO

New York Giants wide receiver Mario Manningham (82) celebrates with Sinorice Moss (83) Sunday.

AP PHOTO

Dallas Cowboys quarterback Tony Romo throws a pass during the team’s football training practice July 29.

Friday, September 18, 2009 7

YOU ARE INVITED!DEDICATION TODAY

College of Allied Health, OU Health Sciences Center2:30 p.m.

1200 N. Stonewall Ave. Oklahoma City

The University of Oklahoma is an equal opportunity institution.For accommodations on the basis of disability, please call the Office of Special Events at (405) 325-3784.

8 Friday, September 18, 2009

Man faces more questioning in terror probeDENVER — A man identified by law en-

forcement as having a possible link to al-Qaida met with the FBI for a second day Thursday as part of a terrorism investigation in New York and Colorado.

Najibullah Zazi didn’t speak to reporters, but defense attorney Arthur Folsom said he did not expect his client to be arrested. If agents intended to jail Zazi, they probably would have done so already, he said.

An official familiar with the investigation told The Associated Press that Zazi had con-tact with a known al-Qaida associate, but would not provide details on the location or nature of the encounter. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the investi-gation is ongoing.

But the defense lawyer said Zazi has never met with al-Qaida operatives and isn’t in-volved in terrorism.

“He’s simply somebody who was in the wrong place at the wrong time,” Folsom said.

Agents questioned Zazi for hours on Wednesday and searched his apartment and the home of his aunt and uncle in the Denver suburb of Aurora.

The official said agents have been moni-toring Zazi and four others in Colorado as part of a terrorism investigation.

The case took a strange turn when Zazi rented a car and made a cross-country trip from Denver to New York, crossing into

Manhattan last week the day before the Sept. 11 anniversary. He was stopped in what was described as a routine stop at the Washington Bridge before he was allowed to go free.

A relative says Zazi chose to drive to New York because he wanted to see the American countryside. Zazi says he went to New York

to resolve some issues with a coffee cart in Manhattan that he owns, but officials sus-pected that something more sinister might have been in the works.

FBI agents and police officers armed with search warrants seeking bomb materials searched three apartments and questioned

residents in the neighborhood in Queens where he was staying.

A joint FBI-New York Police Department task force feared Zazi may be involved in a potential plot involving homemade hydro-gen peroxide-based explosives like those cited in an intelligence warning issued Monday, said two other law enforcement officials, who spoke on anonymity because they were not authorized to speak about the investigation.

The officials said Zazi had been put under surveillance because of the suspected al-Qaida links.

Folsom says Zazi, 24, was born in Afghanistan in 1985, moved to Pakistan at age 7 and emigrated to the United States in 1999. Zazi’s aunt had said earlier that he was born in Pakistan and grew up in Queens, N.Y.

Folsom said Zazi has returned to Pakistan four times in recent years: in 2004 because his grandfather was sick and dying, in 2006 to get married and in 2007 and 2008 to visit his wife.

Folsom said FBI agents were cordial and asked detailed questions during the Wednesday session.

He said Zazi is observing the traditional daylight fast for Ramadan, and that the FBI gave him food after sunset Wednesday.

–AP

COLUMBUS — Lawyers plan state and federal lawsuits and a re-quest to Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland to stop next week's second execution attempt of a man whose lethal injec-tion failed Tuesday.

Cleveland attorney Tim Sweeney said Thursday he expects to file a lawsuit Friday in an effort to halt the next attempt to put Romell Broom to death.

Sweeney ar-gues that a sec-ond try at an exe-cution is uncon-stitutional. At the

very least, he said, Strickland should delay Tuesday's execution.

Broom "sustained both physical and mental injuries," Sweeney said. "It's going to take time for all the psy-chic trauma to dissipate. Even if it never goes away, I think it's wrong to try to do it again so quickly in these circumstances."

Strickland stopped Broom's ex-ecution after executioners tried unsuccessfully for two hours to find a usable vein. Broom, who at one point wiped his face with a tis-sue and appeared to be weeping, told his attorneys he was pricked as many as 18 times.

Broom, 53, was sentenced to death for the rape and stab-bing death of a 14-year-old Tryna Middleton, a girl he kidnapped in Cleveland in 1984.

Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Bill Mason said it was ironic that Broom was complaining about the execu-tion given the nature of his crime.

"I am absolutely certain that it was Tryna Middleton that suffered from cruel and unusual punish-ment," Mason said.

Broom remains at the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility, where the prison system is monitoring how much he's drinking, said pris-ons spokeswoman Julie Walburn. Officials want to make sure Broom is not dehydrated before the ex-ecution, but they can't force him to drink more, she said.

Dehydration could make it more difficult to find veins; however,

Walburn said there's no evidence that caused Tuesday's problems.

Another execution attempt could include the same veins they tried ac-cessing Tuesday or other points on his arms, legs or feet, Walburn said.

Late Thursday, U.S. District Court Judge Gregory Frost agreed to give lawyers challenging Ohio's lethal injection system in an unrelated lawsuit more time to gather infor-mation related to the Broom case. Their original deadline for gathering information had passed.

Federal public defender David Stebbins, who's working on the earlier lawsuit, said he plans to in-terview Broom on Monday in the

Southern Ohio facility in Lucasville.The fact that Broom survived the

execution "creates a singular oppor-tunity to confirm that he, in fact, ex-perienced serious pain in violation of his constitutional rights, not just a 'substantial risk' of serious pain,"

Stebbins and attorney Allen Bohnert argued in a court filing.

The only case similar to the Broom execution happened in Louisiana in 1946, when a first attempt to execute convicted murderer Willie Francis did not work. Francis was returned to death row for nearly a year while the U.S. Supreme Court considered whether a second electrocution would be unconstitutional.

The court ultimately ruled against Francis 5-4, and he was put to death in 1947.

Broom has a much stronger case than Francis did while on death row, said Deborah Denno, a Fordham University law professor and death

penalty expert.In the case of Broom, however,

"There's absolutely no question that the execution process started," she said.

–AP

WASHINGTON — For the first time in two years, Americans actually got a little wealthier.

Household wealth grew by $2 trillion, or about 4 percent, this spring, ending the longest stretch of quarterly declines on records dating back to 1952, the Federal Reserve reported Thursday.

Net worth — the value of assets such as homes, checking accounts and investments minus debts like mortgages and credit cards — came to $53.1 trillion for the second quarter.

Some analysts say it could take as long as four years for households to recoup trillions in losses and get back to where they were before the downturn struck in December 2007.

"Households saw $14 trillion of wealth get blown away by the recession, and they recouped $2 trillion of that in the sec-ond quarter. That's good news," said Brian Bethune, econo-mist at IHS Global Insight. "But they still have another $12 trillion to go to get back to where they were."

Many analysts expect the economic recovery to be lethargic, limit-ing further gains in the stock and housing mar-kets. That's why Scott Hoyt, senior director of consumer economics at Moody's Economy.com, thinks household wealth won't rise back to pre-recession levels until 2012 or 2013.

"It is going to take a while for Americans to regain lost ground and become as comfortable as they were before all this started," Hoyt said.

Even if the economy continues to improve, analysts say the erosion of wealth will keep Americans thrifty for years. In fact, even as wealth grew, Americans trimmed their spending slightly in the spring.

The value of Americans' stock holdings rose almost 22 per-cent from the first quarter — the first increase in two years.

Higher home prices helped, too. The value of real-estate holdings rose 1.8 percent, the first gain since the end of 2006. Home prices are still about 30 percent below their 2006 peak.

Collectively, U.S. homeowners had just over 43 percent equity in their homes in the second quarter, up only slightly from a record low in the first quarter. Moody's Economy.com estimates nearly a quarter of all U.S. homeowners owe more on their mortgages then their homes are worth.

This week, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke said the worst re-cession since the 1930s is probably over. He warned that the pace of recovery probably won't be brisk enough to generate solid job growth and keep the unemployment rate — now at a 26-year high of 9.7 percent — from rising further.

Retail sales jumped in August by the most in more than three years. But rising unemployment, the reduced wealth and still hard-to-get credit are expected to keep people cau-tious about spending in the months ahead.

–AP

US net worth grows for fi rst time since 2007

"It is going to take a while for Americans to regain lost ground and become as comfortable as they were before all this started."

–SCOTT HOYT, SENIOR DIRECTOR OF CONSUMER ECONOMICS

AP PHOTO

Attorney Arthur Folsom, wearing a tie, and his client Najibullah Zazi, behind him, are surrounded by members of the media as they arrive at the offices of the FBI in Denver where Zazi was being ques-tion for the second day Thursday. Zazi, identified by law enforcement as having a possible link to al-Qaida, was questioned by agents for hours on Wednesday and returned Thursday afternoon for further questioning. The FBI searched Zazi’s apartment and the home of his aunt and uncle, both in the east Denver suburb of Aurora.

Ohio lawyers try to hold off second execution attempt

ROMELL BROOM

AP PHOTO

This file photo shows Willie Francis holding a calendar with the date of May 9 circled. A first attempt to execute Willie Francis in 1946 by electrocution in Louisiana did not work. Francis was executed by electric chair in 1947, a year after the first attempt didn’t work, following a U.S. Supreme Court ruling that said a second try was constitutional. Experts say Ohio death row inmate Romell Broom has a much stronger legal case than Francis.

129 N.W. Ave.360-4422

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HIGHLIGHTING OR COLOR

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Reception for all OU Law Faculty and Students

Following Honored Speaker:

Kevin Lee from Campbell University.

Author of The Foundations of Catholic Legal

Theory: A Primer in Recovering Self Evident

Truths: Catholic Perspectives on

American Law

The Red Mass is an ancient English tradition that

asks for God’s blessings on those who administer

the law, and is celebrated at the beginning of the

Fall Courth Term.

Red MassSt. Thomas More University Parish

Corner of Jenkins and Stinson

Sunday, September 20 at 5 PM

Friday, September 18, 2009 9

Mass. House gives initial OK to succession billBOSTON — The Massachusetts House of

Representatives has given initial approval to a bill allowing Gov. Deval Patrick to name an interim appointment to the Senate seat left vacant when Edward Kennedy died last month.

The House voted 97-58 in favor of the bill Thursday evening. It needs a second vote before it moves to the Massachusetts Senate, where its outcome remains unclear.

The House remained in session Thursday and a second vote was possible.

House Speaker Robert DeLeo, a Democrat, said the change in law is needed to ensure Massachusetts continues to be represented by two senators until voters can choose a re-placement during a Jan. 19 special election.

“ I j u s t w a n t t o m a k e s u r e t h a t Massachusetts has a say ... that Massachusetts has their voice heard on health care, on the environment, on clean energy,” DeLeo said.

Patrick, a Democrat and ally of President Barack Obama, also supports the change.

Republicans, who number just 16 in the House, oppose the bill.

They point out that Democrats changed the succession law in 2004 to create a special election and block then-Gov. Mitt Romney, a Republican, from naming a temporary replacement if Sen. John Kerry had won his presidential bid.

To change the law now that there is a Democrat in the governor’s office smacks of hypocrisy, they said.

“When Senator Kennedy passed away we started (with) the law that was on the books and we shouldn’t be changing the law mid-stream,” said House Republican leader Rep. Bradley H. Jones Jr. “Everything else is ancil-lary and extraneous to that.”

Kennedy died of brain cancer on Aug. 25.Rep. Michael Moran, House chairman of

the Committee on Election Laws, said law-makers shouldn’t be handcuffed by past votes if they are not in the best interest.

“I ask you to focus on the needs of Massachusetts not in 2004, but in 2009,” the

Boston Democrat said.Other Democratic lawmakers conceded a

political motive in the vote, saying they want-ed to protect Kennedy’s legacy, including his signature issue of expanded health care.

“Some people say it’s political. Of course it’s political,” said Rep. Cory Atkins, a Concord Democrat and Kennedy supporter.

The bill initially would have required the appointee be from the same party as the per-son who created the vacancy, a Democrat in the case of Kennedy’s successor.

That requirement was stripped after crit-ics raised constitutional concerns and noted that more than half of voters in Massachusetts aren’t enrolled in any party and would be barred from consideration.

Kennedy, in a letter sent to lawmakers before his death, urged the change in law saying “it is vital for this Commonwealth to

have two voices speaking for the needs of its citizens.”

The debate is being followed closely in Washington, where Democrats hope to re-gain a 60-vote, filibuster-proof margin in the U.S. Senate ahead of any debate on President Obama’s health care overhaul.

Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry, Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid of Nevada and Massachusetts’ all-Democratic U.S. representatives also back the change, saying they need all the votes they can to support the health care change.

Obama presidential counselor David Axelrod has contacted Massachusetts of-ficials, according to White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs. The Massachusetts branch of Obama’s political arm, Organizing for America, has sent out e-mails advocating for the change.

DeLeo said lawmakers wanted to bar any appointee from also running as a candidate in the special election, but said they could not constitutionally include that provision in the bill.

DeLeo said House lawmakers instead hoped to pass a separate resolution stating that it is the intention of the House that an appointee not also be a candidate in the spe-cial election.

Patrick has said he would extract from the appointee a promise not to be a candidate in the special election.

The bil l could also surface in the Massachusetts Senate on Thursday. Senate President Therese Murray, a Democrat, has been tightlipped about the bill’s chances in that chamber.

Senate Republican leader Richard Tisei has said he’ll object to the Senate taking up the bill. Senate rules require unanimous con-sent to debate a bill not already on the calen-dar, and the succession bill wasn’t listed for Thursday’s session.

An objection would delay it until the Senate’s next formal session. There is none scheduled for Friday. Tisei could use other parliamentary moves to delay a vote for ad-ditional days.

Those said to be under consideration for an interim appointment include former Gov. Michael Dukakis, former Democratic National Committee Chairman Paul Kirk Jr.; former Massachusetts Senate President Robert Travaglini, former Kennedy staff chief Nick Littlefield, Harvard Law School Professor Charles Ogletree and former state Treasurer Shannon O’Brien.

Candidates seeking the Democratic nomination in the special election include Attorney General Martha Coakley, U.S. Rep. Michael Capuano and Boston Celtics co-owner Stephen Pagliuca. State Sen. Scott Brown and Canton Selectman Bob Burr are seeking the Republican nomination.

–AP

AP PHOTO

Sen. John Kerry, center, D-Mass., speaks alongside U.S. Rep. William Delahunt, right, D-Mass., during a public hearing before the Joint Committee on Election Laws at the Statehouse in Boston to press lawmakers to allow Gov. Deval Patrick to name an interim replacement to the Senate seat left vacant by the death of Sen. Edward Kennedy Sept. 9.

NEWS BRIEFS

DENVER — A Mexico resident has been sen-tenced to nearly fi ve years in prison after admitting a role in a massive operation that manufactured and sold counterfeit identity documents in seven U.S. cities.

U.S. Attorney David Gaouette said Thursday that 46-year-old Pedro Castorena-Ibarra's organization was one of the largest fraudulent ID rings in the country.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents

seized more than 3 million counterfeit documents worth more than $20 million during the investiga-tion.

They said it operated for about five years in Denver, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Atlanta, Chicago, Las Vegas and New York City.

Castorena-Ibarra of Guadalajara was sentenced last week to 57 months in prison. He pleaded guilty in February to conspiracy to commit money laundering.

ABERDEEN, S.D. — A federal judge has dismissed a lawsuit that sought to prevent a South Dakota school district from imposing a dress code.

U.S. District Judge Charles Kornmann took the action Thursday after learning that the Cheyenne River Sioux tribal council, which fi led the suit, had withdrawn its support.

He also said there was no proof that the lawsuit was legally served on the Cheyenne-Eagle Butte School District and its offi cials.

Some parents had complained they couldn't afford the required clothing — black, white or tan shirts, pants, skirts or shorts. Two parents who had joined the tribal government in fi ling the suit said they will likely fi le a new challenge.

School offi cials say the dress code already has helped reduce gang-related behavior problems.

–AP

JUDGE DISMISSES SCHOOL DRESS CODE LAWSUITMEXICO MAN SENTENCED FOR ROLE IN FAKE ID RING

Tie the KnotB R I D A L F A I R

Norman’s Wedding SpecialistsFREE ADMISSION

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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 325-2521, 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.

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10 Friday, September 18, 2009

Announcements

ENTERTAINMENTFEMALE SINGER NEEDED

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MISC. FOR SALETHE VINTAGE VIBE going out of busi-ness SALE - 1000’s of costumes & vin-tage items for sale - everything goes - call or text for appt. 405.833.3671

TICKETS FOR SALEPremium Seats at U2 Concert!!

402-301-6448

TransportationC

AUTO FOR SALEFor sale 2002 Honda CRV EX-4WD 133K miles $8000/obo (405) 550-7080

Employment

HELP WANTEDLeasing Agent needed, Norman apt com-plex. Flexible hrs, $8/hr. 364-3603

Cayman’s - Part-time stock room, gift wrappers and holiday staff needed. Apply in person.

P/T waitperson, delivery person & dish-washer needed. Orient Express 722 Asp. 364-2100.

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Experience working with children. $7.50 per hour. Work Period: 2:30pm - 6:00pm, Monday thru Friday, September thru May. Selected applicant must pass physical, drug screen and background investiga-tion. Application Deadline: Open Recruit-ment. Obtain application at: 201-C West Gray, Human Resources Dept., City of Norman (405) 366-5482, Web: www.NormanOK.gov EOE/AA

CAYMAN’S IN NORMAN - Full/PT sales position avail, to highly motivated self-starter w/great customer service skills. Apply in person, 2001 W Main St.

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TUTORS WANTED!!!Available positions in the OU Athletics De-partment!!! Junior, Senior, Graduate, and Post-graduate applicants only!!!ANTH/BOT/JMC/GEOG/HIST/H R/METR/PHIL/PSY/RELS/SOC/W S/ZOO/P SC!!! Hiring for Fall 2009. Call 325-8376 for more info!!!

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

OKC not-for-profi t seeks 7 outgoing, en-ergetic students to work 3 hrs prior to OU home games (Sept 19 thru Bedlam) in Campus Corner vicinity. Looking to pro-mote & expand a web community that en-courages healthy relationships. Easy $50, done by kickoff! Email resume to [email protected].

Advertising, Business, Communication, Entrepreneurship, & Journalism majors wanted for expanding Travel Company in the area. To learn more call 918-332-6474

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IRON STARR BBQ opening soon! Now hiring all positions! Apply at starrbbq.com

Housing RentalsJ

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Universal Crossword

SICK DAY by Pannie Elder

ACROSS 1 Harness

attachment 5 Diploma

earner, briefly 9 Castro’s prop 14 Angle

between a branch and stem

15 Actor’s acquisition

16 Become a pair without an affair

17 1492 Atlantic crosser

18 Fiddler’s place?

19 Abrupt transitions

20 Famous Puddleby-on-the-Marsh resident

23 Prince of the Middle East (Var.)

24 “Once Upon a Mattress” legume

25 A mouse may move across one

27 ’60s coun-terculture hallucinogenic

28 “Platoon” location, briefly

31 Eisenhower and Nixon biographer

34 “Cast Away” casualty

36 Dulls, as pain 37 Sleepover

activity, perhaps

40 “Buns of ___” 42 Aerosol

targets 43 Chrysler

Building’s style

46 “Not a Pretty Girl” singer DiFranco

47 Abyssinian or Siamese

50 Hawaiian memento

51 “... for what ___ worth”

53 Andretti of auto racing

55 Some may watch soaps

60 Handy to have around

61 Challenging to corner

62 Soul singer Redding

63 Smug win-ners do it

64 Bit attachment

65 Nota ___ (note well)

66 Matisse or Rousseau

67 Portico in Greek architecture

68 Units of work or energy

DOWN 1 “Messiah”

composer 2 Universally

accepted statements

3 Chopped finely

4 Send a thrill through

5 Angry dog’s warning

6 Quarter acre 7 Knock for ___

(astonish) 8 Stop Spot’s

scratching 9 Welshman or

Irishwoman

10 “Can ___ you in on a little secret?”

11 Football field feature

12 Play the peacemaker

13 Notes above dos

21 Redenbacher of popcorn fame

22 “___ the Walrus” (The Beatles)

26 ___ Moines, Iowa

29 Unfeathered wing?

30 “It’s ___ Late” (Carole King classic)

32 Make filthy 33 Cheerleader’s

shouts 34 Like the Piper

of Hamelin 35 Word with

“faced” or “fisted”

37 Reason to gather

signatures 38 They say

“yes” to drugs 39 Atom with a

charge 40 Paul’s “Exo-

dus” co-star 41 Bridge for a

train 44 Org. with

operatives 45 Bewhiskered

creatures 47 Big

depression 48 Helping 49 Horseshoe

throws 52 Member of

the quire? 54 Brick made

of clay 56 Wing-shaped 57 Creature of

legend 58 Mishmash or

medley 59 Mimicking

bird of the starling family

60 “How repulsive!”

PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER

Edited by Timothy E. Parker September 18, 2009

© 2009 Universal Press Syndicatewww.upuzzles.com

Previous Answers

9 4 5 11 6 9

6 36 7 3

8 22 8 4

6 48 7 3

7 4 5 9Instructions: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.

Previous Solution

Monday- Very EasyTuesday-EasyWednesday- EasyThursday- MediumFriday - Hard

2 6 7 3 1 9 4 8 59 4 8 2 7 5 3 1 61 3 5 6 8 4 9 2 73 1 2 8 5 6 7 4 95 9 4 1 3 7 8 6 28 7 6 4 9 2 5 3 14 8 9 5 6 1 2 7 36 5 3 7 2 8 1 9 47 2 1 9 4 3 6 5 8

Friday, Sept. 18, 2009

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- Your presence will be required to take a personal hand in something that could prove to be earmarked for big success. Be sure to do everything asked of you; surrogates won’t count.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) -- A new period is coming where you could start to receive far greater rewards than you expected for favors performed for others. It’ll prove that nice people fi nish fi rst.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -- Put forth the necessary effort to take the required steps on things that are asked of you; they could lead to a place you’ve been hoping to go all along.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -- Unexpectedly, a number of things that have been important to you will suddenly become insignifi cant. They’re being replaced by some new goals that will lead to higher places.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- Today could mark the be-ginning of a favorable cycle for acquiring new knowledge of an academic but practical nature. What you learn will prove to be valuable in your life.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -- Although you are generally a loner, you could partner with someone to develop a complex project that requires two to tango. Look for a competent ally.

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) -- A partnership situation for a specifi c but worthwhile purpose is likely to start producing large mutual gains because of a new beginning at this time.

ARIES (March 21-April 19) -- Be prepared to roll up your sleeves and go to work because that long-awaited opportunity with regard to your career could arrive at your desk.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -- If you get a chance to join a new group, jump onboard. You’ll not only make new friends with those who share your interests; you’ll broaden your social sphere as well.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -- Although the charts indicate that most people are in a good cycle, you could be one of the bigger benefactors. Your chart suggests some remarkable occurrences.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) -- Some extremely hard but valuable lessons learned from many of your past experiences aren’t likely to be repeated. However, one is apt to provide big dividends.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Interesting developments are in the works that will offer some opportunities to advance your fi nancial position. Additionally, it will provide a completely new beginning.

HOROSCOPE By Bernice Bede Osol

Copyright 2008, Newspaper Enterprise Assn.

Friday, September 18, 2009 11

Cassie Rhea Little, L&A [email protected] • phone: 325-5189 • fax: 325-6051

DUSTY SOMERSThe Oklahoma Daily

It took more than 100 years for Mark Twain’s “Is He Dead?” to get its debut performance, and now, just six years after the long-lost play was discovered, OU’s University Theatre gets a crack at performing it, beginning tonight at the Weitzenhoffer Theatre.

Twain wrote the satire in 1897, but the political cli-mate of the day prevented it from being performed. It was then shelved until 2003, when it was discovered by Shelley Fisher Fishkin and tightened up by playwright David Ives.

The comedy is f i l led with farcical, slapstick and vaudevillian humor, suited to the era when it was writ-ten, said Clay Guiltner, di-rector of the show.

“It definitely has a vin-tage feel to it,” Guiltner

said. Still, the stock comic bits

and the universal storyline make it a natural fit to be performed today, he said.

Being the f irst show of a new school year, the cast and crew is required to begin rehearsals before the semester actually starts and is given less time to re-hearse. But doing the first show of a new year has more benefits than down-falls, Guiltner said.

“We’re so excited about the show, we don’t mind coming back early,” he said. “That energy just goes so far. We’re not burned out yet.”

That momentum carries over into the actual perfor-mances, and it doesn’t hurt that the season’s premiere is a comedy, Guiltner said.

“I think it’s a great way to start the season,” he said.

Wo r k i n g i n c o m e d y from an older time period requires more precision than some shows where ac-tors are allowed to develop their characters more or-ganically, Guiltner said. The generation gap ensures that learning is necessary.

“It is a little bit foreign at first,” he said. “This genera-tion doesn’t come in with an education on comedy in this style. We’ve had to be very specific with the phys-ical comedy. It’s almost been like a surgical kind of thing.”

“Is He Dead?” opens to-night in the Weitzenhoffer Theatre, 563 Elm Ave. , and runs through Sept. 27. Performances are Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays.

There are things that Scott Mescudi is and things that he is not. He is not a revo-lutionary lyricist, he’s not a musical genius, but most of

all, he is n o t p re -dictable. If his goal is to be dif-ferent, the 26-year-old, better known as Kid Cudi, is doing a good job. He’s weird in a good

way, in a refreshing-change-of-pace-and-sometimes-absolutely-ridiculous way, and seems to get it. His music is focused on intri-cate concepts and genuine thoughts, and Cudi’s con-fessional storytelling style is uniquely endearing. Pair this with infectious outer-space-driven hooks and a sound that is really unlike anything you’ve ever heard, and you have Kid Cudi’s music in a nutshell.

“Man on the Moon: The End of Day,” Cudi’s new album, is ambitious in the sense that it tries to transcend any real musical

“genre.” This is part of what makes Kid Cudi unlike most other musicians: he’s impos-sible to categorize and while his music is part hip-hop, part electronic, and part soft-rock, it is also part Kid Cudi, and it is sure to trans-port listeners to whatever orbit Kid Cudi is in. And who knows where he may be?

His 2008-released mix-tape “A Kid Named Cudi” features gems such as “Man on the Moon,” where Cudi claims, “They can’t compre-hend/Or even come close to understanding him” and “50 Ways to Make a Record,” an almost-folky sounding song that is more two-piece conversation than actual song, a song that puts Cudi’s musical depth on display for all to hear. The mixtape also provided the initially catchy but now entirely overplayed “Day’n’Nite,” and has made Cudi a victim of the popular music cycle. It’s safe to say that most of the public con-siders Kid Cudi to be “that guy who sings Day’n’Nite.”

That ’s okay though. The truth is that the rest of his music is nothing like “Day’n’Nite,” and “Man on the Moon: The End of Day” validates that claim. It’s the

kind of album that is almost outside of being reviewed, the kind of album that is impossible to describe. Listening to “Man on the Moon: The End of Day” is like taking a ride through outer space, and w ith each song you feel farther away from Earth, as Cudi is chalked full of vivid narra-tives describing his dreams and stories about being on the moon.

The album is a story di-vided into five “acts.” Kanye West and MGMT, among others, hop on the album only to be out-shined by Cudi, and on tracks such as “Soundtrack 2 My Life” and “Sky Might Fall,” the self-proclaimed “weirdo” that is Kid Cudi leaves listeners anxiously awaiting his next musical move.

It’s effortless, spaced-out, a little loopy at times, and unique. It’s like sitting on a space ship with Kid Cudi himself for story time. It’s a trip. But listening to Kid Cudi [a musician who actually is different in a musical world full of people just “trying” to be different] is an expe-rience unlike any other.

Zach Kanaa is an economics junior.

BLOODY MARYIngredients:1-½ ounces of vodka½ cup of tomato juice2 teaspoons of fresh lemon juiceWorcestershire to tasteTabasco sauce to taste1 celery stick to garnish1 lemon wedge to garnish

Directions:Combine the vodka, tomato juice, lemon juice, Worcestershire and Tabasco over one cup of ice in a cocktail shaker. Mix well, add salt and pepper to taste and strain the mixture over a cup of ice. Garnish with a celery stalk and lemon wedge.

TEEKO YANG/ THE DAILY

The College of Fine Arts presents “Is He Dead?”, a classic comedy by Mark Twain that sets place in Paris, France during the 1840s about a talented artist who can’t sell any of his paintings.

This classic drink traces its roots back to an expatriate named Fernand Petiot,

who bartended at Harry’s New York Bar in Paris in the 1920s. Petiot mixed tomato juice and vodka, and a patron suggested he name the drink ‘Bloody Mary’ after Queen Mary I of England, famous for her ruthless persecution of the Protestants. The drink gained popular-ity when Petiot moved

to New York and began bartending at the St. Regis Hotel. He experimented with his tomato and vodka concoction and began adding spices at the request of his clien-tele. These days, the Bloody Mary and all of its variations are known as the King of all breakfast cocktails. And as far as cocktails go, its almost healthy, kind of like a veg-etable smoothie plus vodka.

Whether or not you drink one to cure your overindulgence from the night before, or as a complement to your pancakes and eggs, this spicy drink is sure to please. Ashley Berntgen is a public relations senior.

ASHLEYBERNTGEN

DrinkoftheWEEK

ZACKKANAA

KID CUDI KEEPS MUSIC UNIQUE

» The Daily’s Ashley Berntgen chooses a unique Bloody Mary blend for this week’s drink of the week.

University cast presents ‘Is He Dead?’

« COMING MONDAY“I Hope They Serve Beer in Hell”

premiered in Norman last night.

See a Q&A with Tucker Max in

Monday’s Life & Arts section.

« C

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