the oklahoma daily

8
OU’s promotional commercial has been broadcasting statistics about the university for years, but one of those statistics is misleading. OU claims that according to the Policy Center on The First Year of College, it is ranked in the top 10 for freshman experience, but the policy center says otherwise. Page 3. What exactly is so wrong with Bluetooth® headsets? According to The Daily’s Kyle Kidd, pretty much everything. Page 5. The Sooners got off to another quick start Saturday , and cruised to a 66-28 vic- tory over Texas A&M. Page 8. THE UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMAS I NDEPENDENT STUDENT VOICE MONDAY , NOV . 10, 2008 © 2008 OU Publications Board FREE — Additional Copies 25¢ VOL. 93, NO. 56 • Chances of increase uncertain in light of economic crisis MEREDITH SIMONS Editor-In-Chief OU President David L. Boren and eight other col- lege presidents said Friday they will freeze tuition and fees for the next school year if the legislature appropriates $80.4 million in new funding for higher education. The proposal came after years of low or nonexis- tent levels of new higher education funding, which university presidents say has forced them to raise tuition and fees year after year. Last year, the legislature didn’t appropriate any new funds to higher education. Tuition and fees at OU went up by 9.9 percent the following semester. Boren said he and Regents Chancellor Glen Johnson began working on the plan at the end of the last legislative session. Their goal was to deter- mine how much the entire state higher education system needed to cover an increase in operating costs and other necessary expenses without raising tuition or fees. Their request for $80.4 million in new funding is part of an overall appropriation request of $1.13 bil- lion, an 8.35 percent increase over 2009’s budget. State officials said the chances of the request being fulfilled by the legislature are uncertain. It comes in the midst of a national recession that could impact state revenues in the future. Although the nation’s economic crisis hasn’t hit the Sooner state as hard as it has other places, energy prices are falling, and some are worried that higher-than-expected revenue collections of the first quarter may give way to declining revenues as the year progresses. The state will not receive its first revenue esti- mate until December, according to Paul Sund, spokesman for Gov. Brad Henry. “Gov. Henry is certainly supportive of any effort to head off a tuition hike,” Sund wrote in an e-mail. “Until we receive a concrete revenue forecast, it is difficult to say whether or not the regents’ proposal is feasible.” Regents spokesman Ben Hardcastle said the regents think their proposal “is an appropriate request.” “We will work with the governor and the legis- lature on this,” he said. “And we believe we’ll get a fair hearing.” College presidents request funds to avoid tuition hike A&E 5 Campus News 3 Campus Notes 7 Classifieds 6 Crossword 6 Horoscope 6 Opinion 4 Police Reports 7 Sports 8 Sudoku 6 SPORTS ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT WHAT’S INSIDE TODAY TUESDAY LOW 41° LOW 48° HIGH 61° HIGH 63° Source: Oklahoma Weather Lab WEATHER FORECAST TODAY’S INDEX 80% 50% FUNERAL SERVICES TODAY FOR SOPHOMORE Funeral services will be held today in Tulsa for an OU student who died Thursday in Norman. A memorial for chemistry sopho- more Jayson Carlile Williamson will be at 2 p.m. at the First United Methodist Church at 115 S. Boulder Ave. The cause of death was not im- mediately available. Williamson graduated high school from Holland Hall School in Tulsa where he was a member of the first Holland Hall crew team. He was also an Eagle Scout, according to Williamson’s obituary. In lieu of flowers, please send memorial donations to F & M Bank in care of Marilyn Morris, P.O. Box 4500, Tulsa, OK 74159. To view Williamson’s obituary and post memories of his life, visit www.ultimatetributes.com. — WILL HOLLAND/THE DAILY JAYSON WILLIAMSON Life on campus... By Meredith Moriak with phos by Michelle Gray Wednday aſternoon I washed a few shirts in a sink in Copeland Hall. Although it wasn’t a fun experience, the soap smelled good. Monday and Tuday night I slept in my 2000 Ford Escort in the Tradi tions Square East parking l. The backseat is small, but I was warm and felt safe. EDITOR’S NOTE: For four days and four nights, journalism sopho- more Meredith Moriak conducted an experiment to see if it is possible to survive on campus without a home and with little money. The following is her personal account of the events and emotions during the week. I found mysel f aimlsly wandering around the campus and pacing around the Oklahoma Memorial Union looking for a place to sleep. Eventually, I settled on a brown leather couch in Beaird Lounge for my bed that night. During my four day, four night stint as a homeless college student, I was extremely humbled. I missed my microwave, fuzzy velvet monkey and a warm shower. I missed my home base. But I was a survivor. Now I know that if being homeless was ever a real- ity for me, I could shower at the Huston Huffman Center, live out of my trunk and spend money frugally. During my time as a homeless person, I spent $7.85 on food. I scoured out all of the free food options on campus every day. One thing is for sure, pizza is the popular handout. If I was really homeless, I know the case would be different. My friends wouldn’t give me free food and drinks or call me every morning to make sure I was alive. Now the next time I see someone on Campus Corner asking for spare change, I will be more inclined to give him more than a couple of bucks. I know what it’s like to miss your bed. Monday 1 a.m. Fruit Punch Powerade purchased by a friend 1:04 a.m. I miss my rainbow quilt and big stuffed velvet monkey. Sleeping on a couch in the Union’s Beaird Lounge isn’t the same. Nobody likes to sleep in jeans or with their shoes on. I’m less scared of getting attacked than I am of getting yelled at by someone in OU Student Affairs. I don’t want someone to find out about my story and put a halt to it. As I get ready to sleep, I notice there is an OU security guard sitting at a table about 50 yards from me. I hope he continues to stay 50 yards from me and doesn’t tell me I have to leave. 2 to 6:40 a.m. Slept on couch in the Union’s Beaird Lounge 7:30 to 9:30 a.m. Slept on couch outside the Bizzell Memorial Library’s Great Reading Room 9:45 a.m. My first night without a home went well. I made a couch in Beaird Lounge my own and rested for about four hours. The worst part of the experience was around 5:30 a.m. when the janitor decided to take out the trash and rolled through with his trash can on wheels that thumped across the tile-floored lounge. I immediately woke up when my alarm went off at 6:45 a.m., collected my things and headed for my car. I parked outside the Union last night, but at 7 a.m. my car would become free terrain for parking tickets. Nobody wants that! As I drove to the CAMPUS Continues on page 2 “Until we receive a concrete revenue forecast, it is difficult to say whether or not the regents’ proposal is feasible.” Paul Sund, spokesman for Gov. Brad Henry

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Monday, November 10, 2008

TRANSCRIPT

OU’s promotional commercial has been

broadcasting statistics about the university for

years, but one of those statistics is misleading.

OU claims that according to the Policy Center

on The First Year of College, it is ranked in the

top 10 for freshman experience, but the policy

center says otherwise. Page 3.

What exactly is so wrong with Bluetooth® headsets? According to The Daily’s Kyle Kidd,

pretty much everything. Page 5.

The Sooners got off to another quick start Saturday, and cruised to a 66-28 vic-

tory over Texas A&M. Page 8.

THE UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA’S INDEPENDENT STUDENT VOICE

MONDAY, NOV. 10, 2008© 2008 OU Publications Board

FREE — Additional Copies 25¢

VOL. 93, NO. 56

• Chances of increase uncertain in light of economic crisis

MEREDITH SIMONS

Editor-In-Chief

OU President David L. Boren and eight other col-lege presidents said Friday they will freeze tuition and fees for the next school year if the legislature appropriates $80.4 million in new funding for higher education.

The proposal came after years of low or nonexis-tent levels of new higher education funding, which university presidents say has forced them to raise tuition and fees year after year.

Last year, the legislature didn’t appropriate any new funds to higher education. Tuition and fees at OU went up by 9.9 percent the following semester.

Boren said he and Regents Chancellor Glen Johnson began working on the plan at the end of

the last legislative session. Their goal was to deter-mine how much the entire state higher education system needed to cover an increase in operating costs and other necessary expenses without raising tuition or fees.

Their request for $80.4 million in new funding is part of an overall appropriation request of $1.13 bil-lion, an 8.35 percent increase over 2009’s budget.

State officials said the chances of the request being fulfilled by the legislature are uncertain.

It comes in the midst of a national recession that could impact state revenues in the future.

Although the nation’s economic crisis hasn’t hit the Sooner state as hard as it has other places, energy prices are falling, and some are worried that higher-than-expected revenue collections of the first quarter may give way to declining revenues as the year progresses.

The state will not receive its first revenue esti-mate until December, according to Paul Sund, spokesman for Gov. Brad Henry.

“Gov. Henry is certainly supportive of any effort to head off a tuition hike,” Sund wrote in an e-mail. “Until we receive a concrete revenue forecast, it is difficult to say whether or not the regents’ proposal

is feasible.”Regents spokesman Ben Hardcastle said the

regents think their proposal “is an appropriate request.”

“We will work with the governor and the legis-lature on this,” he said. “And we believe we’ll get a fair hearing.”

College presidents request funds to avoid tuition hike

A&E 5Campus News 3Campus Notes 7Classifi eds 6Crossword 6

Horoscope 6Opinion 4Police Reports 7Sports 8Sudoku 6

SPORTS

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

WHAT’S INSIDE

TODAY

TUESDAY

LOW 41°

LOW 48°

HIGH 61°

HIGH 63°Source: Oklahoma Weather Lab

WEATHER FORECAST

TODAY’S INDEX

80%

50%

FUNERAL SERVICES TODAY FOR SOPHOMORE

Funeral services will be held today

in Tulsa for an OU student who died

Thursday in Norman.

A memorial for chemistry sopho-

more Jayson Carlile Williamson will be

at 2 p.m. at the First United Methodist

Church at 115 S. Boulder Ave.

The cause of death was not im-

mediately available.

Williamson graduated high school

from Holland Hall School in Tulsa

where he was a member of the fi rst

Holland Hall crew team. He was also an Eagle Scout, according

to Williamson’s obituary.

In lieu of fl owers, please send memorial donations to F & M

Bank in care of Marilyn Morris, P.O. Box 4500, Tulsa, OK 74159.

To view Williamson’s obituary and post memories of his life,

visit www.ultimatetributes.com.

— WILL HOLLAND/THE DAILY

JAYSON WILLIAMSON

Life on campus...By Meredith Moriak with phot os by Michelle Gray

Wednes day aft ernoon I washed a few shirts in a sink in Copeland Hall. Although it wasn’t a fun experience, the soap smelled good.

Monday and Tues day night I slept in my 2000

Ford Escort in the Traditions Square East parking

lot . The backseat is small, but I was warm and felt

safe.

EDITOR’S NOTE: For four days and four nights, journalism sopho-more Meredith Moriak conducted an experiment to see if it is possible to survive on campus without a home and with little money. The following is her personal account of the events and emotions during the week.

I found myself aimles sly

wandering around the campus and pacing around

the Oklahoma Memorial Union looking for a place

to sleep. Eventually, I settled on a brown leather

couch in Beaird Lounge for my bed that night.

During my four day, four night stint as a homeless college student, I was extremely humbled.

I missed my microwave, fuzzy velvet monkey and a warm shower.I missed my home base. But I was a survivor. Now I know that if being homeless was ever a real-

ity for me, I could shower at the Huston Huffman Center, live out of my trunk and spend money frugally.

During my time as a homeless person, I spent $7.85 on food. I scoured out all of the free food options on campus every day. One thing is for sure, pizza is the popular handout.

If I was really homeless, I know the case would be different. My friends wouldn’t give me free food and drinks or call me every morning to make sure I was alive.

Now the next time I see someone on Campus Corner asking for spare change, I will be more inclined to give him more than a couple of bucks. I know what it’s like to miss your bed.

Monday

1 a.m. Fruit Punch Powerade purchased by a friend

1:04 a.m. I miss my rainbow quilt and big stuffed velvet monkey. Sleeping on a couch in the Union’s Beaird Lounge isn’t the same. Nobody likes to sleep in jeans or with their shoes on. I’m less scared of getting attacked than I am of getting yelled at by someone in OU Student Affairs. I don’t want someone to find out about my story and put a halt to it. As I get ready to sleep, I notice there is an OU security guard sitting at a table about 50 yards from me. I hope he continues to stay 50 yards from me and doesn’t tell me I have to leave.

2 to 6:40 a.m. Slept on couch in the Union’s Beaird Lounge

7:30 to 9:30 a.m. Slept on couch outside the Bizzell Memorial Library’s Great Reading Room

9:45 a.m. My first night without a home went well. I made a couch in Beaird Lounge my own and rested for about four hours. The worst part of the experience was around 5:30 a.m. when the janitor decided to take out the trash and rolled through with his trash can on wheels that thumped across the tile-floored lounge. I immediately woke up when my alarm went off at 6:45 a.m., collected my things and headed for my car. I parked outside the Union last night, but at 7 a.m. my car would become free terrain for parking tickets. Nobody wants that! As I drove to the

CAMPUS Continues on page 2

“Until we receive a concrete revenue forecast, it is difficult to say whether or not the regents’ proposal is feasible.”

Paul Sund, spokesman for Gov. Brad Henry

NewsMonday, Nov. 10, 20082

Continued from page 1

Campus

• Grant opens door for pottery research, testing

Nijim Dabbour

Assistant Night Editor

An OU researcher has won a $50,000 grant to test a new tech-nique that may unlock secrets of how some ancient societies around the world lived.

The technique uses automat-ed software to analyze high-resolution photos of pottery shards to yield data in min-utes while current techniques require hours of tedious work from highly trained specialists.

Anthropologist Patrick Livingood, the researcher who designed the process, said sci-entists study ancient pottery because it is usually the most abundant artifact prehistoric people leave behind.

“Before people made pot-tery, stone tools were usually the most abundant artifact we have,” he said. “Later on, when people start making pottery, the pottery preserves really well. ... We are able to use it to say a great deal about people.”

Livingood said the system will allow archaeologists to more cheaply and efficiently study certain aspects of ancient life in more detail than cur-rent technology allows. With tens of millions of pieces of ancient ceramic pottery around the world, Livingood’s tech-nique could allow scientists to re-examine cataloged artifacts from previous archaeological

discoveries.“Essentially this will just

lower the cost of something archaeologists have been doing for a long time,” he said. “You’ve got this huge pile of pottery [and with] the tech-niques that archaeologists use, there’s not much more that we can say about them, and so what this does is let us look at another dimension of ancient behavior.”

Specifically, he said, archae-ologists may be able to learn about details as varying as trib-al lineage, trade relations or ritual practices.

But the technique is still unproven, so Livingood applied for the grant from a division of the National Park Service to fund a year-long test run on artifacts from a site in northern Arkansas that was inhabited about 1,200 years ago by the ancestors of the Quapaw Tribe.

His proposal beat out 60 oth-ers for one of only a handful of awards. The money will go toward purchasing equipment and paying researchers.

Livingood’s team will study a site known as the Moon Site, which holds as many as 25,000 pieces of pottery. Livingood said he plans to conduct his testing with a small group of student researchers.

To check the quality of the results, random samples from the collection will be tested using the traditional method.

“There’s a potential that applying this to the Moon Site could say something very inter-esting,” he said. “There’s simply things that you can’t answer in any other way.”

Researcher discovers new technique for artifact analysis

Lloyd Noble Center to park my car and ride the bus back for free, I thought about how tired I was. I didn’t get much sleep the night before from the anxiety and excitement of this adventure. Plus, I woke up with a crick in my neck.

1 p.m. Cup of Potato Soup and four crackers

4:45 p.m. Three slices of pizza and a Diet Coke at a club meeting

8:10 p.m. Showered at Huston Huffman Center

11:13 p.m. I am so hungry.

Tuesday12:01 a.m. I am beginning to be emotion-

ally drained. I am tired, lonely and don’t like not knowing where I am going to sleep tonight.

I’m sitting in the Union with my boyfriend Luke, and I don’t like knowing that he is going home tonight, and I will either be sleeping in my car or in the Union again. I miss my roommates a lot. It’s kind of like losing your best friend. The only people I see are the people I work with because I stop by the newsroom every day. I decided to sleep in my car, a 2000 Ford Escort, tonight. I am so tired right now, but I can’t go to bed because I have to finish a homework assign-ment. Also, I am afraid to shut my eyes. It’s scary here at night. I don’t want to go to bed because it’s scary.

1:30 to 6:30 a.m. Slept in my car in the Traditions East parking lot

8:40 a.m. Free Election Day doughnut on the South Oval

9:15 a.m. Three pieces of candy from my nutrition professor

11:30 a.m. Half of a leftover sandwich from Monday and a piece of candy

2:15 p.m. Chik-Fil-A waffle fries and free, three-piece chicken strips

3 to 5:15 p.m. Napped on a friend’s couch

5:48 p.m. I am in a much better state now than I was last night. I woke up this morning in my car at 6:40 a.m. when my alarm rang. The backseat of my escort is not ideal for sleeping, but surprisingly, I wasn’t sore after sleeping for five hours.

6:30 p.m. Free pizza and cookies in the newsroom and diet coke left over from Monday’s meeting

11:15 p.m. I keep forgetting I am home-less. I’ve been in the newsroom all night with coworkers covering the election, and I just keep forgetting.

Wednesday12:30 to 7:45 a.m. Slept in my car in the

Traditions East parking lot

8:22 a.m. I slept in my car again last night and parked it next to my friend Craig’s truck in the back of the lot to avoid people seeing me. I definitely don’t want anyone to know I’m homeless.

8:15 to 10:00 a.m. Slept on the couch outside of the library’s Great Reading Room

12:30 p.m. Baked Barbecue Lays from Monday’s lunch and a leftover slice of pizza

1:16 p.m. For lunch today, I went to a stu-dent ministry that I was told has free lunches on Wednesdays. But when I approached the building and looked in the doors, I didn’t see anyone and there weren’t any signs about free meals. I decided not to go in. It was a pride issue. I didn’t want to walk into the building and ask for handouts. Part of me was afraid to do so because I didn’t want to be turned away.

3:00 p.m. Being homeless is dirty. While the shower facilities at the Huff are clean, I don’t like having people look at me. I know I have to get in and out as soon as possible. I don’t think a gym locker room is the place to do my hair and makeup, which is why I never do it.

4:45 p.m. Showered at Huston Huffman Center

6:15 p.m. Three pieces of leftover pizza and four pieces of candy from nutrition class

6:25 p.m. It’s less than 24 hours until I have a home again, and I am very excited. One of the many things that separates me from the homeless community is I have friends and a boyfriend who support me and would help me if I am in a rough situation. I know they would all offer me their couch for a few days or weeks, if I needed it.

10:30 p.m. Locked in the newsroom for the night

11:37 p.m. I am hiding underneath the editor-in-chief’s desk! About 15 minutes ago, the doors to the newsroom busted open and the janitor came in.

It doesn’t sound scary. Yeah, not that scary unless you’re a 19-year-old girl sleep-ing in the newsroom by herself.

My editor said it was OK for me to sleep in her office because it was storming, and I was afraid to sleep in my car. I thought the newsroom would be the safest place. I was wrong. Her office doesn’t lock from the inside. I am praying this man doesn’t come in to empty the trash.

When I heard the janitor walk out of the newsroom, I army-crawled with my com-

puter behind the editor-in-chief’s desk and took out the trash can that is typically under there. I strategically placed the trash can that is normally under her desk next to it, hoping he wouldn’t come behind the desk and discover me. So here I am, behind her desk, in the dark, typing on my computer. Yes, I realize homeless people probably don’t have computers. And they probably aren’t terrified of janitors and don’t sleep at work. Regardless, this is a funny situation. Now I am tense and won’t be able to sleep until I hear him turn off the TV, see the lights go off and hear the alarm beep for 30 seconds. I am a big girl. I’ll have to keep reminding myself that.

Thursday12:04 a.m.I WANT TO GO HOME!

12:20 a.m. My heart is racing. Racing, racing, racing.

1:01 a.m. The janitor is still here.

1:30 a.m. Left newsroom and headed to the Union

3:00 to 6:45 a.m. Slept on a couch in the Union’s Beaird Lounge

7:30 to 8:45 a.m. Slept on a couch out-side of the library’s Great Reading Room

8:07 a.m. I made it through the night alive. I got a little nervous being alone last night and wanted to sneak out of the news-room, but I was afraid of setting off the alarm. I finally went to sleep at about 3 in the morning. Unfortunately, the janitor in the Union’s Beaird Lounge cleans from 5 to 6:30 a.m. so I didn’t get much sleep between him changing the trash bag liners and vacuuming the floor. Sleeping in your car is the best way to sleep at night. Sleeping on campus is only fun if you’re taking a 45-minute nap between classes.

5:45 p.m. Coming home was so exciting! I came into my apartment and ran to my bed-room and flopped on the bed. After about 10 minutes, I decided I was tired of being dirty and took a shower. I felt so indulged that I sang in the shower.

OUR COMMITMENT TO ACCURACY

The Daily has a long-standing commitment to serve readers by providing accurate coverage and analysis. Errors are corrected as they are identified. Readers should bring errors to the attention of the editorial board for further investigation.

ERROR sUbMIssIONs

e-mail: [email protected]: 325-3666

Photo provided

Archaeologists mount a thin slice of a shard of ancient pottery to a glass slide (top). An OU researcher developed a technique to digitally analyze and map the consistency of the clay (bottom), a task that normally hours for a person.

getusc.com©2008 U.S. Cellular.

Enter to win a sweet ��" LG plasma HDTV at believeinyourcell.com.It’s just one exciting part of the Believe in Your Cell Tour, visiting cities like yours all over the U.S.Check out believeinyourcell.com and don’t forget to enter to win!

MONDAY

• Student Success Series Seminars, Carnegie Bldg. 200 , 3 p.m. to 4 p.m. • Stephanie Leon Shames & Jonathan Shames- Duo Piano Sharp Concert Hall , 8 p.m. ($8 - $5)

TUESDAY• Free portraits, Union, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.• Tuesday Noon Concert, Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art, Noon to 12:30 p.m. (Free)• OU Women’s Basketball vs. Oklahoma Christian, Lloyd Noble Center , 7 p.m. WEDNESDAY• Christians on Campus Bible Study Union - Heritage Room, 12:30 p.m. to 1:15 p.m. (Free)• Student Success Series Seminars, Carnegie Bldg. 200, 3 p.m. to 4 p.m. • OU Volleyball vs. Kansas, Howard McCasland Field House, 7 p.m.

THURSDAY• Fred Films, Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art, 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. (Free)• Circle K International JAM for Service, OMU Ballroom, 7 p.m. to noon (Free)• Sutton Faculty Concert Series- OU Percussion, Sharp Concert Hall , 8 p.m. ($5 - $8)

FRIDAY• Dr. Gottfried Wagner on Richard Wagner, Meacham Auditorium at the Oklahoma Memorial Union, 1 p.m. (Free)• OU Hockey @ UCO @ UCO, 7:30 p.m. • OU Men’s Basketball vs. American, Lloyd Noble Center, 7 p.m.

Plan now for your final

writing project!

Find hours, locations,

resources &

appointments online:

ou.edu/writingcenter

Plan now for your final writing project!

Find hours, locations, resources & appointments online:

ou.edu/writingcenter

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Ellis Goodwin, managing [email protected]: 325-3666fax: 325-6051For more, go to oudaily.com. Monday, Nov. 10, 2008 3

TIFFANY HAENDEL

Daily Staff Writer

About 3,000 prospective students from as far away as California and Ohio flooded OU campus for the university’s fall recruitment event on Saturday.

During the Sooner Saturday event, students toured the cam-pus, dined at Couch Cafeteria, visited the residence halls and met with departments from financial aid to the College of Arts and Sciences.

“We want for prospective students to be able to speak to current students about their OU experience,” said Chan Klingensmith, assistant director of Prospective Student Services, who helped organize the event.

Many students manned registration booths and directed visi-tors across campus, while others hosted tours. Students who live in the dorms volunteered to show their room to the prospective Sooners.

University College freshman Callie Yarbrough said she vol-unteered because she remembered coming to Sooner Saturday while in high school and how it impacted her decision to attend OU.

“I learned on Sooner Saturday that OU was the right fit for me, and I wanted to give that same feeling back to the future class of 2013,” Yarbrough said.

Yarbrough volunteered to set up for the event, answer visitors’ questions and assist in a workshop for prospective out-of-state students.

Prospective student Julie Butkus from Dallas said her favorite part of the day was touring the residence halls. But she said she and her family wished the introduction by President David L.

Boren was shorter so they could have seen more of the campus. “There were some events that we weren’t able to get to because

we ran out of time,” said Angela Butkus, Julie Butkus’ mother. Overall, Yarbrough said the event was a success.“Every student I met was so excited to be at the university,”

Yarbrough said. “One even told me that she immediately felt the sense of community, and I was so thrilled that she was already aware of the best part of OU.”

Students show off campus on Sooner Saturday

• Change comes 11 months after The Daily exposed discrepancy

WILL HOLLAND

Daily Staff Writer

OU is shooting a new commercial that officials say will not use a factu-ally inaccurate statistic.

OU’s commercial, which has aired for four years, claims that “OU is ranked in the top 10 for freshman year experience,” but according to the center that conducted the study that ranking does not exist.

The Daily first published a story about the discrepancy on January 16. University College Dean Doug Gaffin said the university had committed to changing the statement, but the com-mercial continued to run unchanged for 11 months.

The statistic also appears in OU President David L. Boren’s welcome to prospective students on OU’s pro-spective students Web site.

The statistic is based on a 2002 pro-posal that OU submitted to the Policy Center on the First Year of College, said Betsy Barefoot, the organization’s co-director and senior scholar.

OU was one of 130 institutions that nominated itself for participation in the project, and OU was named as a semifinalist in Institutions of Excellence in the First College Year, Barefoot said.

Though OU was ranked as a semifi-nalist in the project, it was not one of the 13 schools selected as finalists for the first year of college experience.

“We do not do rankings,” John N. Gardner, executive director of the organization.

However, OU claims in its current

commercial and on its Web site that it is ranked in the top 10 in first year experience based on this study. But, Barefoot said the policy center does not conduct rankings.

“This process relied on self-nomi-nation of institutions and was never designed to be an objective ranking that would evaluate all U.S. colleges and universities and make valid com-parative judgment,” Barefoot said in a letter.

Barefoot said to conduct a com-prehensive ranking, the policy center would have to evaluate every univer-sity nation-wide.

“Similar to someone who enters a national competition for writing, if they were one of ten semifinalists they would claim that they ranked in the top 10 of those that applied. Even though that competition did not include every writer in the country you would still be proud that you were one of the semifinalists,” said Jay Doyle, press secretary and special assistant to OU President David L. Boren. “This is how OU feels about the Policy Center’s study.”

Last week OU students began work on a new commercial that will not fea-ture the supposed ranking, but Doyle said the decision to create a new com-mercial was not because of factual inconsistencies, rather Boren wanted the new commercial to focus on dif-ferent topics.

“Our new institutional spot had absolutely nothing to do with the way the fact on the freshman year experi-ence was referenced in the previous spot,” Doyle said in an e-mail. “We decided to redo the spot this year because we believe that showing the same spot for more than two years makes it become stale to viewers.”

Doyle said he and Boren discussed what topics they wanted the new com-mercial to focus on, and decided to use less numbers and focus on things like OU’s National Merit Scholar pro-gram.

OU set to replace inaccurate TV spot after years on air

• OU health challenge gives participants points for progress

KEVIN HAHN

Multi-Media Editor

Last Monday I started OU Health and Recreational Service’s 40-day Challenge. The event is a 40-day plan to help a person increase their overall fitness level and move towards a healthier lifestyle.

I know what you may be thinking, if it started last week why are we hearing about it now? To be honest, I was waiting to see if I could actually make the first week. I am no specimen of physical fit-ness. I would definitely feel comfortable

referring to myself as “out of shape.”

However, this is the main reason I decided to do the challenge.

In the past, I have tried to commit to a healthy diet and exercise and never done very well.

After the first week I can tell this program is intended for people like myself, who have a problem with motiva-tion. As I looked over the plan I found myself wondering, “Is this it?”

The plan is very easy to understand and implement. I simply acquire points from eating more fruits and vegetables, drinking a certain amount of water, or exercising for 30 minutes at a time.

The maximum amount of points I can turn in per day is 8. So on days that I do not eat healthy foods, I simply need to focus on one of the other points available. The

same goes for if I miss a workout, I can make up the point with diet.

Different daily challenges, worth one point, keep things interesting and remind you that total health includes more than just the body. Some of the challenges include parking at the furthest parking lot and walking to campus, or taking the stairs instead of using an elevator. Some of the challenges also focus on mental aspects, including introducing yourself to someone new or calling someone you haven’t talked to in a while.

This week I have chosen to add moun-tain biking and volleyball for my physical activity. These are both activities that I enjoy greatly and have lamented not get-ting to do them more often. I figure picking something fun will make it easier to do than trying to force myself onto a treadmill seven days a week. While I don’t expect to see much weight change in the next 40 days, I expect to feel better, fitter and more energetic.

The Daily’s Kevin Hahn takes on 40-day fitness challenge

KEVIN HAHN

Merrill Jones/The Daily

Diversity Enrichment Program volunteers Amanda Davila, advertising

junior (center), and Nick Robinson, marketing junior (right), help

a prospective student navigate campus Saturday, in the Oklahoma

Memorial Union.

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Campus NewsCampus News

OU should be more respon-sible when it airs public mes-sages.

The Daily printed an arti-cle in January falsifying OU’s claim that it was ranked in the top 10 colleges for freshman experi-ence in a project sponsored by the Policy Center on the First Year of College. (See page 3 for details.)

OU was one of 130 institutions that submit-ted proposals to the project.

OU’s proposal qualified it as a semifinalist in its cat-egory, but it was not one of the 13 finalists. None of the colleges, even the finalists, were ranked.

After the January article, OU did remove its “top 10” claim from prominent place-ment on the Prospective Students page of its Web site, www.ou.edu.

However, the claim is still

included on the site within OU President David L. Boren’s “President’s Welcome” letter, which is seperately linked

on both the front page and on the Prospective Students page.

In the letter linked from the front page, the claim is one of two prominent features high-lighted with larg-er font.

The false claim also has been continu-ously aired in OU’s promo-tional television commer-cial, which airs during tele-vised athletic events. That commercial was shot four years ago.

We are disappointed that a misleading claim has been continuously flaunted by the university, even after the claim was debunked.

While we think OU cer-tainly provides an enjoyable experience for freshmen, it

should not have to promote that with exaggerations.

It would have been easy to remove the claim from Boren’s online letter, and it would not have been too dif-ficult to edit it from the com-mercial.

Since both are viewed by a large audience — which included prospective fresh-men — OU should be honest.

When OU airs its new com-mercial during the football game against Texas Tech Nov. 22, we hope it is more accurate.

OU has many bragging points that can be promoted honestly, and we hope the commercial represents our university well.

We also hope the false claim is removed from OU’s Web site, even from the inside pages of it.

We want quality students to be attracted to this univer-sity, but we do not want the university to lie to them — over and over again.

As the opinion editor of The Daily, I have been called an idiot and incompetent more times this semester than ever before in my life.

I have had angry calls. I have read angry e-mails. I have sat by people in class who have read the content on page four and rolled their eyes or said a few four-letter words. Or both.

A n d , despite what I may say at the end of certain days, I wouldn’t have it any other way.

My goal when I took this posi-tion was to make this page a forum for intelligent discussion by running a wide-ranging vari-ety of opinions on a variety of topics.

I’m encouraged when I get letters to the editor and when I see that columns and editori-als posted on www.oudaily.com have 14 comments listed under-neath them.

Readers will not agree with the viewpoints in every column on this page. I do not even agree with the views presented in every column.

The point of the opinion page is to present valid opinions — not unbiased articles.

Those are listed in the rest of the newspaper. Columns and articles must not be confused.

Every column and editorial on this page is biased. That is

the point.When you disagree or even

agree with a column or an Our View, please, please, please write a letter to the editor or comment online.

Upon hiring my columnists and cartoonists, I told them they would be open targets for criti-cism. I told myself I’d have to develop a thick skin more than anyone else.

Our whole staff is prepared for you to respond, positively and negatively, to what we pro-duce.

Even on days when I leave work thinking the world hates me, I’m glad people are reading and responding. I’m glad what they read got them thinking even a little bit.

I’m glad I live in a country that allows a free press. I’m glad we have the right to write things that may not be popular but that represent what we believe.

I’m glad you have the right to tell us we’re wrong. And I’m glad you have the right to call me an idiot.

That said, please respond to what we print.

Letters to the editor can be brought in person to our news-room in 160 Copeland Hall. They must be signed. They also can be e-mailed to [email protected]. E-mailed letters must have a phone number listed for the writer.

All letters must contain the writer’s year and major.

I can’t wait to hear from you.

Hailey Branson is a journal-ism junior and the opinion editor of The Daily.

Think back to high school. Graduation came after 12th grade, at

age 17 or 18. After that began four or five years at a university. After graduating from college, you’ll most likely go off to graduate school or enter the workforce.

But what if you could have graduated high school after 10th grade?

You would have had to take a set of comprehensive exams, and, upon passing them, would have had the option of finishing the last two years of high school or graduating early.

The catch: If you grad-uated early, your only two options would have been attending a techni-cal school or community college.

If you attended tech school, you could get a pretty good-paying trade job.

If you attended community college, you could build on your associate’s degree by moving on to a four-year college. You’d probably need to study only two addi-tional years to get your bachelor’s.

Sound like a good idea? New Hampshire thinks so. And it is correct.

The state has announced a new system in which 10th graders statewide will take a set of challenging exams. Those who pass will supposedly be prepared to attend any of New Hampshire’s community colleges or tech schools. The tests can be taken as many times as necessary to pass.

This certainly sounds radical, consid-ering how rooted and widespread the “12 grades” model has become in this country. Several other countries, how-ever, implement models similar to the one adopted by New Hampshire.

It bears mentioning that students from those other countries generally outper-form U.S. students across the board.

More and more states and educators’ groups are signing onto the idea.

The impetus behind this is the fact that the U.S. is lagging behind other nations in the education of its workforce.

Reform is sorely needed, particularly since more and more jobs are sent to other countries to be done by better-educated workers.

In the past, most of the outsourced jobs were manual in nature. But lately, white-collar jobs, which require higher levels of education, have also been sent abroad.

Most of the countries that receive those workers educate their students within systems that inspired New Hampshire’s new plan.

The plan is sound because it doesn’t really change the end result of the current education system.

Students still have the freedom to pur-sue whatever type and level of education they’d like. The tests in the system will not force students into a particular educa-tional track depending on scores.

No, those graduating early will not be able to immediately enter a university, but

they will be free to do so after attending community college.

And having a two-year degree can only benefit those students in later higher education.

Officials also envision the tests as indi-cators of weakness as well as readiness to graduate. Students who demonstrate weakness will receive extra help before they’ll be allowed to graduate.

Eventually, the plan will call for stan-dardized curricula at all levels of educa-tion.

This will minimize yearly reviewing of same material and will make sure all stu-dents are being taught to meet the same standards.

The plan also saves money. As reported by Time magazine, more

than half of high school graduates who pursue higher education attend commu-nity colleges.

The New Hampshire plan allows stu-dents to attend those same colleges two years earlier. If implemented nationwide, the plan would save $60 billion annually.

That money, which would have been spent on those students for two more years of high school, can then be spent in other sectors of education.

Critics of the plan say that allow-ing students to end high school earlier would result in lower-income students not attending college in favor of entering trade schools and would enter the workforce earlier.

This is true, but the current system does nothing more than the proposed plan to encourage lower-income students to attend college.

Instead, it forces students to stay in high school longer before being able to train for jobs. All funding aid pro-grams like FAFSA will still be avail-able for those wishing to go to universities.

Those who don’t and instead attend trade schools and community colleges anyway will have the option of start-ing their future education and work plans two years earlier.

This plan is getting more and more supporters, with other states looking

to implement similar programs. Nationwide educational policy groups

are signing off on the plan because it makes sense.

Much of the rest of the world already does it, and their students consistent-ly perform better academically than American students.

Foreign students are future foreign workers and will fill exported American jobs not because they are willing to work for less money or benefits, but because they are better educated and more quali-fied for those jobs.

Unless serious reforms like the New Hampshire plan are implement-ed, American students – tomorrow’s American workers – will fall further and further behind.

Munim Deen is a microbiology senior. His column usually appears every other Tuesday.

Hailey Branson, opinion [email protected]

phone: 325-7630, fax: 325-6051For more, go to oudaily.com.OpinionOpinion

OUR VIEW is an editorial selected and debated by the editorial board and written after a majority opinion is formed and approved by the editor. Our View is Th e Daily’s offi cial opinion.

STAFF CARTOON

MUNIMDEEN

OUR VIEW Mai-Thao Nguyen — biochemistry and studio art junior

T H E I N D E P E N D E N T S T U D E N T V O I C E O F T H E U N I V E R S I T Y O F O K L A H O M A

Meredith Simons Editor-in-Chief

Ellis Goodwin Managing Editor

Nanette Light Assistant Managing Editor

Amanda Turner Night Editor

Nijim Dabbour Assistant Night EditorHailey Branson Opinion EditorAmy Frost Photo Editor

Dane Beavers Senior Online EditorKevin Hahn Multimedia EditorCorey DeMoss Sports EditorAdam Kohut A&E EditorJudy Gibbs Robinson Editorial AdviserR.T. Conwell 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] 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 1 p.m. Sundays in 160 Copeland Hall. Columnists’ and cartoonists’ opinions are not necessarily the opinions of The Daily Editorial Board.T

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t:160 Copeland Hall860 Van Vleet Oval Norman, Okla.73019-0270 phone:(405) 325-3666e-mail:[email protected]

NEWSROOM DIRECTORY

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HAILEYBRANSON

Monday, Nov. 10, 20084

Claim should have been removed

Education reform sorely needed

years earlier. If implemented nationwide,he plan would save $60 billion annually.

That money, which would have been spent on those students for two moreyears of high school, can then bespent in other sectors of education.

Critics of the plan say that allow-ng students to end high school

earlier would result in lower-incomestudents not attending college in favor of entering trade schools and would enter the workforce earlier.

This is true, but the current system does nothing more than he proposed plan o encourage lower-ncome students to

attend college. Instead, it forces

students to stay n high schoolonger before

being ableooooooooooooooooooo train

fofofofofofofoooor jobs.AlllAlAAllAlAAAlAlll funding aid pro-grams likeFAFSA willstill be avail-able for thosewishing to goo universities.

Those who don’tand instead attendrade schools and

community collegesanyway will havehe option of start-ng their future

education andwork plans twoyears earlier.

This plan isgetting moreand moresupporters,with otherstates looking

Want more opinion?Visit www.oudaily.com to read and post your own reader comments on columns, cartoons,

Our Views and letters to the editor.

STAFF COLUMN

Being called an idiot can be OK

STAFF COLUMN

photos.com

I get it. I really do. I’m sure that having two free hands and a candid conversation at the same time is one of the most fulfilling

actions you can partake in these days (trailing behind owning a Ninja motorcycle and leasing a Bowflex).

And if someone asked me, “Kyle, you’re going to need to go to Albertson’s and pick me up a list of items, would you rather have two hands or one hand to complete this task?” I think the answer is obvious.

Even so, sometimes prac-ticality isn’t worth the aes-thetic price. If you wear a bluetooth headset, you’re most likely dressed in a suit. You overdid your cologne — again — but “Armani Attitude” has been your

scent for years, it’s expected of you. Your shirt is electric blue (top three buttons unbuttoned), shiny shoes, hair slicked back, cleanly shaven, and Gordon Brackley from accounting (back at central office) just gave you a new copper bracelet to improve your golf game. The com-pany scramble is next Sunday.

So you naturally jump in your mid-priced convertible and wonder how many women are going to give you “the look” on your way to meet Tommy-G for lunch at Chili’s. The sun’s not out? Well ... yeah, I can still wear my Oakleys. I’m sure something will shine in my eyes.

Congratulations on looking like Blade would if he had to work at Globotech for some extra cash (considering our current economic situa-tion). I feel an Oscar for best picture AND best actor in a leading role.

Anyway, so you’re cruising down the street, headset on, one hand on the steering wheel, slightly leaned back. Switch to gear four baby. Feel the power. Oncoming cars only get head nods, absolutely no finger raises from the steering wheel, way too much acknowledgement. You’ve got Bon Jovi’s “It’s My Life” playing in the background, but you switch over to a U2 playlist to change up the mood for a bit — Chili’s is getting closer.

Buzz, buzz, you feel at your side (cell phone is hooked on belt), incoming call, no big deal. Click. Bluetooth connection established.

“Darryl, my man! Talk to me.“You’re kidding me bro? Amy? From HR? Now that’s

what I’m talking about, big guy, hell yeah!“She called you the next morning? Pshh, what an

idiot!“Ha ha that’s why we call you ‘the closer’ bro, always

finishing the job.“Yeah I wrapped up the Clancey account last

Thursday, it was cake. What’s that? Yeah I know I’m still the man, bro ... drinks at Club Inferno at eight?

“Peace.”Bluetooth connection disconnect.Drop it down into first, red light coming up. “Cougar

alert, cougar alert,” you think to yourself, while you nonchalantly — but creepily, slowly — glance to your left at the 35-year-old blonde sitting in her Tahoe, who not once breaks her forward stare to acknowledge you. Show the shades, flash the watch, check out the headset, it’s bluetooth. She remains staring forward. Skank. All of the sudden the extra 20K for the Porsche doesn’t seem like such a bad idea.

Pshh. No worries. The Mustang’s a limited edition. Life is good. Life is good.

Chili’s time. You’re getting the grilled chicken sand-wich and you’re sitting at the bar, Stacey’s working right now. Start it out with the Awesome Blossom and a dirty martini. After all, Tommy-G is buying.

My message to everyone is that one day it might seem appetizing to buy one of these little rascals at some point in our life. Try your best to resist. And when 30 rolls around, at least limit bluetooth usage to the office. Hold your phone up to your ear when in public, unless of course, being an asshole is on your bucket list.

— KYLE KIDD IS AN ACCOUNTING JUNIOR.

Adam Kohut, A&E [email protected]: 325-5189, fax: 325-6051For more, go to oudaily.com. 5Monday, Nov. 10, 2008

Arts Entertainment&

KYLEKIDD

Yeah, it’s a bluetooth

DUSTY SOMERS

Daily Staff Writer

EDMOND – The problem: a lack of clean water across a continent plagued by poverty and disease. The solution: art.

The Wishing Well Project is a non-profit orga-nization headquartered at Oklahoma Christian University. The group’s mission is to raise money to build clean water wells for African communities – a goal furthered by an art show and benefit concert Friday night on OCU’s campus.

Singer/songwriter Derek Webb, his wife Sandra McCracken and folk fan favorite Waterdeep per-formed as audience members browsed the walls of student-created African-themed art.

Nashville-based musician Webb said it’s easy to take clean water for granted when it’s all around you.

Webb, who describes himself as a singer/song-writer/agitator, has attached himself to various social change projects over the years, but said the clean water mission is an especially effective one because of its narrow focus.

“I walked past probably 10 water fountains on my way in here,” Webb said. “People just don’t under-stand when you take clean water out of a commu-nity what it does to that community. It is completely basic, and that’s why it’s so important.”

For the typical African mother, getting water is a full-time chore, and with much of the available water mingling with animal feces and insect larvae,

finding clean water is nearly impossible, Webb said.“In many cases [she] has to commute 10 or 15

miles each way to get to the nearest water, and often that water is poison in the bodies of people whose immune systems are broken,” Webb said.

Webb’s job as an artist puts him in a unique posi-tion to bring awareness to issues of social injustice, he said.

“Most people are just trying to get by day to day and week to week and make money to take care of their families,” Webb said. “That’s why it’s the responsibility – maybe not of all artists, but of some artists – to kind of give people a starting point. We’ll distill [issues] for them and that maybe gets the con-versation started.”

As the night progressed, there were several calls for donations, but art – the music, paintings and photography – was never forced from centerstage. As Groves said, the night wasn’t about money, but about changing hearts.

Esther Harvey, a freelance photographer who traveled with Groves and his team to Rwanda, said her art is like a voice of expression. Earlier in the night, there was a person looking at her pictures, tears streaming down their face, she said.

“I can’t take a photograph that causes someone to cry,” Harvey said. “It’s something beyond [me] – it’s art.”

Whatever a person’s gift – be it art or otherwise – it’s that person’s responsibility to use it, Webb said.

“The best use of those gifts is in caring for our neighbors and connecting to something bigger and beyond ourselves,” he said.

Photo provided

This guy wears a bluetooth headset. We’re not saying you shouldn’t,

just that this guy does. Think about it.

Music and art raise clean water concerns

Photo provided

University of Central Oklahoma student Stephanie Boone views student artwork displayed at Friday night at

Oklahoma Christian University. The art was part of a charity event to help raise funds and awareness for the Wishing

Well Project, a student organization that aids in Africa’s water crisis.

YOU ARE INVITED!

7 p.m.Friday, November 14Pitman Recital Hall

Public Master Class

Former Star of the Metropolitan Opera, praised by critics as having “the greatest voice of the 20th Century”

Marilyn Horne

Student Media is a part of OU’s division of Student Aff airs. The University of Oklahoma is an equal opportunity institution.For accommodations on the basis of disability, call 325-2521.

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Lost & FoundL

LOST & FOUNDLost small gold necklace. Pendant 3/4” across. Etched outline of Oklahoma. Date on back. Lost Saturday, Nov 1 near OU Field House or Sta-dium. Reward! Call 405-329-4150.

For Sale

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Employment

HELP WANTEDBartending! Up to $250/day. No exp nec. Train-ing provided. 1-800-965-6520, x133.

Financial institution in Norman, OK is seek-ing to fi ll two positions of ELECTRONIC LOSS PREVENTION ANALYST. Incumbent will be responsible to analyze reports and systems for suspicious activity in order to minimize expo-sure and fi nancial loss to the bank. Incumbent must be a team player with a positive attitude, excellent personal relations and communication skills. Must have working knowledge in the use of general offi ce equipment (PC, fax) and offi ce ap-plications (spreadsheets). Requires HS diploma or equivalent, 3-5 years previous banking expe-rience preferred. PT hours: Mon, Tues, Thurs 8 PM-12 AM, Wed, Fri 6 PM - 12 AM. EOE/AA. Interested applicants should apply online at www.arvest.com

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Make up to $75 per online survey www.cashto-spend.com.

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HOUSES UNFURNISHEDOne bedroom brick house on Parsons st. Close to OU, wood fl oors, C/H&A, stove, refrigerator, garage, smoke free, no pets, $460/mo. Call Bob, Mister Robert furniture 321-1818.

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Now leasing for MAY 2009, 3 bdrm brick houses, 2-4 blocks from OU, Call Bob at Mister Robert’s furniture 321-1818.

Nice, large 3-4 bd, 826 Jona Kay, 3/2/2/2 living, fp, 2000sf, $950/mo; 2326 Lindenwood, 4/2.5/2/3 living, 2400sf, $995/mo. 360-2873 or 306-1970.

Westside Norman, 2 bd, 2.5 bath, 1 car garage, $750/mo, fl ex lease length. Gary, 405-590-2256.

Employment

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Save a Life.Call the Hotline at

325-5000to report hazing,

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The University of Oklahoma is an Equal Opportunity Institution.

Previous Answers

2 8 6 34 9 7 18 6 9 5 76 2 85 3 1 4

4 9 78 3 5 2 15 1 3 67 9 2 4

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

Previous Solution

Diffi culty Schedule:Monday - Very EasyTuesday - EasyWednesday - EasyThursday - MediumFriday - Hard

9 8 5 2 1 4 6 3 76 2 3 9 8 7 5 1 47 4 1 5 3 6 2 9 82 6 9 7 5 8 1 4 35 3 8 4 6 1 9 7 24 1 7 3 9 2 8 5 61 5 6 8 7 3 4 2 93 9 2 6 4 5 7 8 18 7 4 1 2 9 3 6 5

Universal Crossword

“NICE THINGS” by Alice Walker

ACROSS 1 Hostilities

ender 5 Money on

hand 9 Coffee

fineness setting

14 “For pity’s sake”

15 Vocal range 16 Barrel race

locale 17 Roman

Catholic tribunal

18 Design problem

19 Lace end 20 Generous

thing 23 Canaanite’s

ancestor, biblically

24 Sci-fi gun 25 Authorize 26 “My

thoughts exactly!”

28 Marian, for one

30 Blubber 33 Brave

legend 35 Split hairs 36 Stuffing

herb 37 Elegant

thing 40 Where you

may find yourself on thin ice

41 Wood-stock’s Guthrie

42 Holography tool

43 What some pitches are

44 Native Canadian

45 Oscar winner Sorvino

46 Sofa problem

47 “Tamerlane” poet

48 Tie up the phone

51 Polite thing 56 Dull 57 Work to get,

as some-one’s trust

58 Collier’s way in

59 Fill with optimism

60 Did an impression of

61 Heckled 62 Oscar

winner Burstyn

63 Wine shop section

64 Many moons

DOWN 1 Dry out 2 See ya in

Hawaii 3 Dual-hulled

boats 4 Basil was

one 5 Loose tunic 6 Ease, as

anxieties 7 Wild guess 8 Plaintive cry 9 Assigned

scores 10 Noted

wordsmith 11 Out of work 12 Difficulty, so

to speak 13 Morse bit 21 Pierre and

Marie’s daughter

22 High-nosed ones

27 Lampoon 28 “Pretty

Baby” director

29 Where to see Puppis and Carina

30 Dachshund, slangily

31 Brutish boss

32 Oktoberfest order

33 City near New Delhi

34 Rainless 35 Unadulter-

ated 36 Luminary 38 Henry Wells’

partner 39 More

cunning

44 New Jersey home of Walt Whitman

45 Diamond elevations

46 Strike forcefully

47 Studied carefully (with “over”)

49 “All kidding ___ …”

50 Bunches of bits?

51 Do some telemarketing

52 Iridescent gemstone

53 A stone’s throw away

54 Bull’s rouser 55 1939 movie

setting 56 Churchill’s

sign

PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER

Edited by Timothy E. Parker November 10, 2008

© 2008 Universal Press Syndicatewww.upuzzles.com

Winter Specials

Employment

HELP WANTED

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HOUSES UNFURNISHED

Sell yourSell yourstuff.stuff.

[email protected]@ou.edu

Monday, Nov. 10, 2008 7

CAMPUS NOTESThe Daily draws all entries for Campus Notes from OUDaily.com’s compre-hensive, campus-wide calendar. To get your event noticed, visit OUDaily.com and fill out our user-friendly form under the calendar link.

TODAY

UPBA seminar on test taking strategies will be at 3 p.m. in Carnegie Building, room 200.

SCHOOL OF MUSICAs part of the Sutton Faculty Artist Series, Stephanie and Jonathan Shames will have a duo piano perfor-mance at 8 p.m. in the Sharp Concert Hall.

TUESDAY

STUDENT MEDIAFree graduation portraits for graduating seniors and graduate students from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. in the Oklahoma Memorial Union.

SCHOOL OF MUSICA concert by Jeongwon Ham Piano Studio will be at noon in the Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art.

CHRISTIANS ON CAMPUSA bible study will be at noon in the Union’s Frontier Room.

POLICE REPORTSNames are compiled from the Norman Police Department or the OU Department of Public Safety. The report serves as a public record of arrests or citations, not convictions. The people here are pre-sumed innocent unless proven guilty.

PUBLIC INTOXICATIONBruce Edward Carter, 21, 1700 block Windsor Way, ThursdayTony Lynn Valle, 49, 3400 block W. Tecumseh Road, Thursday, also posses-sion of controlled dangerous substancesJoshua Daniel Henning, 200 block E. Main Street, SaturdayGalen Dean Hicks, 39, 200 block E. Main Street, SaturdayRyan Goffrey Kilgore, 31, 900 block N. Flood Avenue, SaturdayRahul Shukla, 25, 2500 block Jenkins Avenue, Saturday

POSSESSION OF MARIJUANAPhillip Mark Culp, 49, 7600 block E. State Highway 9, ThursdayWilliam Burton Tonahcot, 44, 2400 block Classen Boulevard, WednesdayJoshua Starr Crossley, 19, 2900 block Oak Tree Avenue, Thursday, also posses-sion of drug paraphernalia Jordan David Joseph Dean, 19, 2900 block Oak Tree Avenue, Thursday, also possession of drug paraphernalia Stephanie D. Peery, 21, E. Lindsey Street, Tuesday

AGGRAVATED DRIVING UNDER THE INFLUENCE/ACTUAL PHYSICAL CONTROLMeagan Elizabeth Hayes, 20, 1700 block Windsor Way, Thursday Clark Buck Gardner, 37, 1200 block Denison Avenue, Saturday

MUNICIPAL WARRANTStephanie Ann Mcelhaney, 29, 200 block W. Gray Street, ThursdayRyan Lee Murrell, 34, 2500 block W. Main Street, WednesdayJason Berry Smith, 29, 1100 block Brandywine Lane, Thursday, also county warrantJeremy Coyle, 23, Lindsey Street, FridayMitchell Wade Hammons, 42, 100 block Ed Noble Parkway, FridayWilburn Johnell Edwards, 25, 1200 block Oakhurst, Saturday, also county warrant

PETTY LARCENYRonald Harold Smallwood, 18, 3400 block W. Main Street, ThursdayKyle Franklin Moore, 33, 300 block N. Interstate Drive E., FridayFelicia Jacqueline Pless, 32, 300 block N. Interstate Drive E., Friday

EMBEZZLEMENT BY CLERK OR SERVANTJennifer Mai Nguyen, 21, 600 block 12th Avenue N.E., Thursday

RECEIVE/POSSESS/CONCEAL STOLEN PROPERTYChristopher Julian Webber, 35, 1300 block Sunset Drive, Thursday, also bur-glary-second degree and warrant

WARRANTChristopher Lee Williams, 34, 700 block Classen Boulevard, ThursdayBrandon James Kelly, 21, 1300 block Jenkins Avenue, Thursday

POSSESSION OF ALCOHOLSteven Barrow Cobb, 19, 2600 block Classen Boulevard, FridayDaniel Grady Miles, 19, 1100 block Elm Avenue, Saturday, also unlawful use of driver’s license

COUNTY WARRANTFrancisco Isai Garcia, 23, 2200 block E. Lindsey Street, Friday, also possession of marijuana Frankie Dean Bennett, 52, 1200 block Columbia Court Street, Saturday

DRIVING UNDER THE INFLUENCEKristen Marie Jones, 23, 700 block E. Lindsey Street, FridayJames Kenicki Takahata, 22, W. Lindsey Street, Friday

ASSAULT AND BATTERYJohnny Kyle McFarland, 19, 400 block 12th Avenue S.E., ThursdayMarcus Anton Williams, 33, 400 block 12th Avenue S.E., FridayKeith R. Allen, 52, Apache Street, Friday

DOG AT LARGEApril Dawn Sanders, 28, 600 block Ash Lane, Thursday

POSSESSION OF CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE WITHOUT TAX STAMPDavid Miguel Soto, 22, W. Rockcreek Road, Friday, also trafficking controlled dangerous substances

TRESPASSINGSteven C. Hardy, 58, Apache Street, Friday

DRIVING WITH LICENSE CANCELLED/SUSPENDED/REVOKEDTravis Cantrell McKee, 36, Havenbrook Circle, Friday, also driving under the influence-liquor or drugs/actual physical control of the vehicle

OBSTRUCTING AN OFFICERLevi Markus Raper, 21, 36th Avenue N.W., Friday, also driving under the influence-liquor or drugs/actual physical control of the vehicle

DISTURBING THE PEACEMichaela J. Warren, 41, 1600 block Cara Jo Drive, Saturday

UPBA seminar on final exams will be at 4 p.m. in Carnegie Building, room 200.

WOMEN’S BASKETBALLThe team will play an exhibition game against Oklahoma Christian University at 7 p.m. at the Lloyd Noble Center.

WORLD NEWS BRIEFBomb attacks kill 8, wound dozens in Iraq BAGHDAD — Bombs killed at least eight people

Sunday across Iraq and wounded dozens of others, of-

fi cials said. Syria’s president blamed the U.S. military

presence for Iraq’s instability and called on U.S. troops

to leave.

In the northern city of Mosul, a roadside bomb

ripped through an Iraqi army patrol soon after

sundown, killing three soldiers and wounding four

others, police said.

U.S. and Iraqi troops have been fi ghting for

months to clear al-Qaida in Iraq and about a dozen

other Sunni insurgent groups from Mosul, Iraq’s third

largest city.

To the south, a bomb attached to a bike wrapped

in a trash bag exploded outside a cafe in Khalis, 50

miles north of Baghdad, killing at least two people

and wounding 13, including the city mayor, police

said.

Accident on Russian nuclear sub suffocates 20 MOSCOW — The fi re safety system on a brand-new

Russian nuclear submarine accidentally turned on as

the sub was being tested in the Sea of Japan, spewing

a gas that suff ocated 20 people and sent 21 others to

the hospital, offi cials said Sunday.

The Russian Navy said the submarine itself was

not damaged in Saturday’s accident and returned to

its base on Russia’s Pacifi c coast under its own power

Sunday. The accident also did not pose any radiation

danger, the navy said.

Yet it was Russia’s worst naval accident since

torpedo explosions sank another nuclear-powered

submarine, the Kursk, in the Barents Sea in 2000,

killing all 118 seamen aboard.

Overcrowding may have been a signifi cant factor

on Saturday.

The submarine being tested had 208 people

aboard, including 81 seamen, according to Russian

navy spokesman Capt. Igor Dygalo. Yet Russian news

agencies said a sub of this type normally carries only

a crew of 73.

China announces $586 billion stimulus plan BEIJING — China announced a $586 billion stimulus

package Sunday in its biggest move to stop the global

fi nancial crisis from hitting the world’s fourth-largest

economy.

A statement on the government’s Web site said

China’s Cabinet had approved a plan to invest the

amount in infrastructure and social welfare by the

end of 2010.

Some of the money will come from the private

sector. The statement did not say how much of the

spending is on new projects and how much is for ven-

tures already in the pipeline that will be speeded up.

China’s export-driven economy is starting to feel

the impact of the economic slowdown in the United

States and Europe, and the government has already

cut key interest rates three times in less than two

months in a bid to spur economic expansion.

Doctors fight cholera oubreak in eastern Congo KIBATI, Congo — Doctors struggled Sunday to

contain an outbreak of cholera in a sprawling refugee

camp near Congo’s eastern provincial capital of Goma,

as renewed fi ghting ignited fears that patients could

scatter and launch an epidemic.

Congolese soldiers and rebels were seen less than

800 meters (yards) apart near Goma, where rebel

leader Laurent Nkunda declared a cease-fi re on Oct.

29 as his forces reached the edge of the city.

Rebels and soldiers clashed Thursday just north of

the Kibati refugee camp, seven miles (12 kilometers)

from Goma, and soldiers who retreated last week

were digging in Sunday at a new front line.

Some 50,000 refugees have crowded around

Kibati, some taken into log cabins by villagers, others

living in tents or hastily built beehive-shaped huts.

Thousands who sleep out in the open huddled under

plastic sheeting Sunday as curtains of rain pounded

down.— AP

Details

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This clinic is for individuals age 9 and above.

healthservices.ou.edu 620 Elm Avenue M-F, 8-6 (405) 325-4611 For accommodations on the basis of disability, please call (405) 325-4611. The University of Oklahoma is an equal opportunity institution.

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Health ServicesA department of Student Affairs

The Sooners’ last two games are against Texas Tech and Oklahoma State, but OU’s hardest part of the season is over.

They say good things come to those who wait. But the Sooners have done more than just wait. They’ve waited in style.

Since the loss to Texas, OU has scored just less than 58 points a game. The Sooners have forced 13 total turnovers, scored 55 points in the first half against Kansas State and 28 points in the first six minutes against Nebraska.

But none of that matters.What’s important is that during these past four

games — all of which had OU heavily favored — OU won. Easily.

It may sound simple, but teams continue to prove that winning games they’re supposed to can be difficult.

Look at last year’s squad. After crushing non-conference oppo-nents, OU went to Boulder and lost a game to hapless Colorado.

Luckily, the Sooners got another chance late in the season to control their own destiny, but then came the debacle in Lubbock.

This year, the Sooners have handled the teams they were sup-posed to. They were favored against Texas, but the Longhorns are good, and no one considered that loss a choke job by the Sooners.

So now, OU finds itself in control of its own destiny ... sort of.Despite those people who have tried repeatedly to say OU’s

chances at a Big 12 title and national championship went out the window long ago, OU now finds itself two big wins away from a likely trip to Kansas City.

OU waited while a lot of other teams didn’t. After the game against Ohio State, USC just had to wait its way to Miami, but then came Oregon State. Penn State had the same problem coming off a win against the Buckeyes, letting Iowa sneak up on them.

And most likely, the major upsets aren’t done. There are still sev-eral weeks left of football, and other powerhouses will go down.

But OU won’t be one of them. I’m not saying the next two games will be easy, because they won’t. But even if OU loses to both Tech and OSU, while everyone will be disappointed, at least the losses will come against formidable opponents.

Players on this OU team have said all year that this is a mature team, and they’ve proved it over the past four weeks. They avoided dropping a game they shouldn’t, and they’ve been rewarded by their current position.

And now comes the easy part: beating the No. 2 team in the country, and then beating a highly-ranked rival on the road. Sooner fans will be anxious, waiting for OU’s biggest game of the season.

But be patient Sooner fans, because good things do come to those who wait.

— STEVEN JONES IS A LANGUAGE ARTS EDUCATION JUNIOR.

Corey DeMoss, sports [email protected]

phone: 325-7630, fax: 325-6051For more, go to oudaily.com.SportsSports8 Monday, Nov. 10, 2008

STAFF COLUMN

The waiting is the hardest part

STEVENJONES

Men’s basketball continues dominanceSophomore forward Blake Griffin

led the Sooners to a 94-39 drubbing of Cameron Saturday at Lloyd Noble Center.

Griffin finished OU’s two exhibition games with 39 points and 22 rebounds, and the Sooners outscored their oppo-nents 184-82.

Volleyball shut out against MissouriThe volleyball team was unable to

sweep its season series against Missouri, losing in straight sets Sunday.

The Sooners have lost their last two matches, both of which came on the road. Their next match will be at 7 p.m. Wednesday against Kansas in Norman.For full coverage, see oudaily.com.

Sooners roll to easy victory• Balanced offensive attack leads to 66 points

JOEY HELMER

Daily Staff Writer

COLLEGE STATION, Texas — In front of the largest and most hostile road crowd the Sooners have faced this year, OU sprinted to a fast start on its way to a 66-28 rout over Texas A&M.

“It makes a big difference to come out and play so strong and so well early,” said head coach Bob Stoops. “And it does put your crowd on [hold] when things aren’t going real well, so fortunately we came out and played hard and fast right off the bat.”

OU jumped on the Aggies after starting deep in its own territory, driving 90 yards in less than 90 seconds on four plays.

On the second play from scrim-mage, sophomore running back DeMarco Murray dashed 70 yards to the A&M 16-yard line.

Sophomore quarterback Sam Bradford scrambled two plays later for a 15-yard touchdown run and a 7-0 lead.

“It felt great,” Bradford said. “I think any time you can go 90 yards to start off the game, it kind of puts the other team’s defense on its heels because they kind of sit back and say, ‘Whoa, they just went 90 in four plays and didn’t throw the ball,’ so I felt like that was a great way for us to start the game.”

OU continuned to strike quick-ly, recording two more first-quar-ter touchdowns to take a 21-0 lead at the end of the quarter.

“It was another one of those deals where we felt like every-thing we did was right,” Bradford said. “We just got in a rhythm, and everything was clicking.”

The Sooners then missed two field goals — one by redshirt freshman Jimmy Stevens and another by sophomore Matthew Moreland — that would have extended the lead.

“You’re disappointed [when the special teams doesn’t play well],” Stoops said. “You want to play perfectly, but we’ll keep work-ing those guys. We can’t practice them a whole lot harder than we do.”

Brown added his third score of the game in the third quar-ter when he broke through for a 28-yard touchdown run, putting OU up 52-14.

“It was pretty fun when those guys up front are blocking and making holes like that,” Brown said. “It makes it that much easier on you to get through the line and get into the end zone.”

But the Sooners’ season-long kickoff coverage woes continued, as Aggie freshman Cyrus Gray returned the ensuing kickoff 98 yards for a touchdown to shave the deficit to 52-21.

Near the end of the third quarter, sophomore cornerback Dominique Franks recovered a fumble for a 39-yard touchdown to finish the scoring for OU at 66, the most points A&M has ever given up at Kyle Field.

It was Franks’ second defensive touchdown in as many games.

“Dom’s an excellent athlete; he really is,” Stoops said. “It is some-thing that gave us an unusual for-mation. We handled it well, had a guy on the quarterback and the pitch just like you’re supposed to, and then [Johnson] made a bad pitch, and fortunately we got it.”

The Sooners recorded 653 yards of total offense — 325 pass-ing yards and 328 rushing — to

the Aggies’ 278, and OU won the turnover battle on the road for the third time this season, forcing four turnovers while committing none.

Bradford threw for 320 yards and four touchdowns, which went to four different receivers.

“Coming in here, it’s never easy [to win], and it hasn’t been. Just to put it all together and to play as soundly as we did, I’m just pleased.”

Amy Frost/The Daily

Sophomore DeMarco Murray (7) makes a catch in the first quarter Saturday.

Murray scored on the play, giving OU a 14-0 lead on the way to a 66-28 win.

Find us on the 3rd floor of OMU, across from the ballroom. Call us at 325.1974.Career Services is a department in OU’s division of Student Affairs. The University of Oklahoma is an Equal Opportunity Institution.

Job

Sear

ch S

trate

gies

The job search process can be exciting and rewarding. It can be a long, frustrating experience if you are not prepared and do not know what to expect. This workshop will introduce you to some of the techniques of an effective job search campaign and provide information to assist you with your job search.

Job Search Strategies for Engineering MajorsMonday, November 10, 11:30 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.Presidents Room, 2nd floor of OMU

Job Search Strategies for Arts & Sciences MajorsTuesday, November 11, 10:30 - 11:00 a.m.Presidents Room, 2nd floor of OMU

Job Search Strategies for Business MajorsWednesday, November 12, 1:30 - 2:00 p.m.Presidents Room, 2nd floor of OMU

Job Search Strategies for JMC MajorsThursday, November 13, 1:30 - 2:00 p.m.Presidents Room, 2nd floor of OMU

One-on-One with a Career AdviserMonday - Thursday, 1:30 - 4:00 p.m.Career Services, 3rd floor of OMUAn important step in your preparation for a job search is to develop a strategy, which is a process that needs careful planning, organizing, and execution.

Sooner yearbook is a publication of OU Student Media in the division of Student Affairs. The University of Oklahoma is an equal opportunity institution.

Final fall sessions begin soon

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