the oklahoma daily

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Kylee and Preslee Wells were recently separated at the OU Medical Center Children’s Hospital. Read an update of their status on page 2. A former OU President died Thursday . Read his obituary on page 2. An OU student film club is in the process of making their own version of a Parisian film, with an OU twist. Page 3. This week’s Dinner + Movie isn’t for the lactose intolerant. Check it out on page 8. The baseball team opens its season this weekend with four games against W. Illinois. For the details, check out sports. Page 5. • Meditation, martial arts gave Burns structure LEIGHANNE MANWARREN The Oklahoma Daily S ociology professor Tom Burns has studied more than 10 different forms of martial arts, earning two black belts and using lessons he learned through them to lead a balanced life. With a box of tea in hand, Burns offers some to his visitors, centers himself and takes deep, relaxing breaths between thoughts. “Whenever I started martial arts, I quickly was introduced to other types and mediation,” Burns said. “I believe the same thing of what the [philosopher Edmund] Husserl said, in that most people are after many of the same things that people who practice mediation the world over have experienced: peace.” A professor at OU since 2001, Burns said his interest in his courses has evolved out of the different philosophies behind martial arts and mediation. Focusing from a young age Burns said he was a hyperactive child, so his parents enrolled him in a martial arts class to help him release energy. “As I child, I got in a little trouble here and there and my parents did not know the difference between karate and the other marital arts so I ended up learning the Korean Tang Su Do,” Burns said. Burns enjoyed it so much he decided to expand to other martial arts and, along the way, discovered meditation. While he was learning other martial arts, his mas- ter Keyoung Kim told him to start by sitting or standing still and centering. Ever since, Burns has believed that martial arts and mediation go together. “At first, it was excru- ciating, not physically but emotionally,” he said. “Over time, though, I realized that peace comes within a per- son instead of without.” Burns now has two black belts in Hapkido and Tae Kwon Do, a red belt in Sambo Jui Jitsu and is a senior student in Tai Chi. During his free time, he practices Aikido and Tai Chi with Nick Lowry at Windsong Dojo in Oklahoma City. “[Burns] was very avid in learning new martial arts and is very friendly, positive and helpful in class,” Lowry said. “I know he is very busy, but I can tell he wanted to train more than he has time for.” Martial arts influences sociology In graduate school Burns began Tai Chi Chuan, a peaceful art form that focuses as much on health and spirituality as it does physicality. Burns said his interest in martial arts gave him an appreciation and interest for world religions, especially Eastern reli- gions. “I appreciate other world religions and I think that is because [Confucianism], Buddhism and Daoism heavily influence martial arts,” he said. “I found it really interesting how the philosophies of the East and West complement each other.” When Burns is not teaching, practicing martial arts or meditating, he can be found writing haikus. His current project is based on Homer’s “Oedipus.” Professor finds relaxation through martial arts FRIDAY , FEB . 20, 2009 © 2009 OU Publications Board FREE — Additional Copies 25¢ VOL. 94, NO. 100 THE UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMAS I NDEPENDENT STUDENT VOICE PROFESSOR Continues on page 2 Campus Notes 3 Classifieds 6 Crossword 6 Horoscope 7 L&A 7, 8 News 3 Opinion 4 Police Reports 3 Sports 5 Sudoku 6 SPORTS LIFE & ARTS CAMPUS NEWS TODAY SATURDAY LOW 36° LOW 35° HIGH 68° HIGH 49° Source: Oklahoma Weather Lab WEATHER FORECAST TODAY’S INDEX 20% John Akingbola/The Daily In this April 2, 2008, file photo, UOSA Vice President Vince Winston and President Amanda Holloway share a hug together after the news of their election victory. • OU parking, maintenance getting close look CLARK FOY The Oklahoma Daily UOSA President Amanda Holloway and Vice President Vince Winston haven’t strayed far from the focus of their cam- paign promises since they took office near- ly a year ago. Parking, one of their largest promises, was among the pair’s top priorities. “Parking was the first thing we focused on,” Holloway, advertising and market- ing senior, said. “There was absolutely no accountability in the Parking Appeals Board – some people didn’t even know that they had been appointed.” Since the discovery of the disorganized board, the pair has reorganized the Parking Appeals Board by appointing an all-new board and clearing over 300 parking appeal requests, she said. “Amanda and Vince have coordinated a lot with Parking Services,” said Chris Glenn, OU Parking and Transportation Department public relations director. “The Appeals Board has never been better. They have been great and very receptive.” After tackling the parking dilemma, the team pushed through their plat- form by addressing building mainte- nance issues. Holloway said she and Winston, pub- lic affairs administration and African and African-American studies senior, inspect- ed several of the older buildings on the South Oval like Dale, Kaufman and Nielsen Halls. They took an inventory of broken desks, chairs and other objects and sent the reports to the OU Physical Plant where the reports are currently being looked over. The Undergraduate Student Congress came to Holloway and Winston and expressed interest in dead week reform, one of Holloway and Winston’s platform issues, Holloway said. “It was some- thing that we started last year,” said Kurt Davidson, chair- man of the Under- graduate Student Congress. “It is basi- cally said and done; we’re just waiting on a response from the Faculty Senate meeting in March.” The dead week reform would allow more time for students to study before finals. Holloway and Winston also addressed the amount of funding offered to inter- UOSA executives tackle key election issues James Cornwell/ The Daily Emily Pain, sociology graduate student, and Thomas Burns, sociology professor, demonstrate Thai Chi Monday on the South Oval. Burns has trained and studied 11 different forms of martial arts. • Veterans make up 12 percent of uninsured Americans ANNELISE RUSSELL The Oklahoma Daily State Sen. Andrew Rice, D-Oklahoma City, is sponsoring a bill aimed at covering uninsured veterans to ensure they receive sufficient physical and mental care. Senate Bill 59 would extend a pre-existing state-sponsored insur- ance plan for veterans unable to receive health coverage through Veterans Affairs. According to Rice, there are as many as 26,000 uninsured Oklahoma veterans. Coverage would be through government- subsidized private insurance, according to a press release from Rice’s office. The legislation would reduce premiums so veterans would only be paying up to $51 per month for individual coverage. “The state will cover a larger chunk and the federal government would cover a larger chunk, and that way they would have health insurance to be able to go get counseling,” Rice said. Harvard Science published a report in 2007 that said about 12 percent of Americans without health care are veterans, and that number has been growing since 2000. A recent Pentagon report showed about 24 military suicides in January, more than combat injuries in Afghanistan and Iraq combined. “If [veterans] have health insur- ance, they will be able to go get counseling if they are having men- tal health issues, and it will help prevent suicide,” Rice said. Veteran’s health does not just pertain to older men who served 30 years ago, but it also includes the more recent veterans studying on college campuses. To qualify, a veteran must be between 19 and 64 with an income no more than 25 percent above the federal pov- erty level, according to Rice. Each Big 12 conference uni- versity offers student services for veterans. OU currently has nine Army ROTC combat veteran students on campus, said Capt. Patrick Olson, OU Army ROTC spokesman. Some said the current system has worked well for them. Information concerning health services and counseling was avail- able upon return from active duty, OU ROTC veteran Patrick Soho said. “We have a post-deployment briefing and counseling, not nec- essarily because somebody has Rice proposes additional aid for veterans Amy Frost /The Daily C.J. Blue THE UNIVERSI I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I 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 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 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 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 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 T T T T T T T TY Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y OF OKLAHOMA A A A A AS I NDEPENDENT STUDENT VOICE VETERANS Continues on page 2 UOSA Continues on page 2 HOLLOWAY, WINSTON’S PLATFORM • Increase funding for student organizations • Push for maintenance of campus buildings • Establish more funding for international students • Decrease workload during dead week • Revamp university parking policy The Daily profiles unique members of the Sooner community.

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Friday, February 20, 2009.

TRANSCRIPT

Kylee and Preslee Wells were recently

separated at the OU Medical Center Children’s

Hospital. Read an update of their status on

page 2.

A former OU President died Thursday. Read

his obituary on page 2.

An OU student fi lm club is in the process of

making their own version of a Parisian fi lm,

with an OU twist. Page 3.

This week’s Dinner + Movie isn’t for the

lactose intolerant. Check it out on page 8.

The baseball team opens its season this

weekend with four games against W. Illinois.

For the details, check out sports. Page 5.

• Meditation, martial arts gave Burns structure

LEIGHANNE MANWARREN

The Oklahoma Daily

Sociology professor Tom Burns has studied more than 10 different forms of martial arts, earning two black

belts and using lessons he learned through them to lead a balanced life.

With a box of tea in hand, Burns offers some to his visitors, centers himself and takes deep, relaxing breaths between thoughts.

“Whenever I started martial arts, I quickly was introduced to other types and mediation,” Burns said. “I believe the same thing of what the [philosopher Edmund] Husserl said, in that most people are after many of the same things that people who practice mediation the world over have experienced: peace.”

A professor at OU since 2001, Burns said his interest in his courses has evolved out of the different philosophies behind martial arts and mediation.

Focusing from a young ageBurns said he was a hyperactive child,

so his parents enrolled him in a martial arts class to help him release energy.

“As I child, I got in a little trouble here and there and my parents did not know the difference between karate and the other marital arts so I ended up learning the Korean Tang Su Do,” Burns said.

Burns enjoyed it so much he decided to expand to other martial arts and, along the way, discovered meditation.

While he was learning other martial arts, his mas-

ter Keyoung Kim told him to start by sitting or standing still and centering. Ever since, Burns has believed that martial arts and mediation go together.

“At first, it was excru-ciating, not physically but emotionally,” he said. “Over time, though, I realized that peace comes within a per-son instead of without.”

Burns now has two black belts in Hapkido and Tae Kwon Do, a red belt in Sambo Jui Jitsu and is a senior student in Tai Chi.

During his free time, he practices Aikido and Tai Chi with Nick Lowry at Windsong Dojo in Oklahoma City.

“[Burns] was very avid in learning new martial arts and is very friendly, positive and helpful in class,” Lowry said. “I know he is very busy, but I can tell he wanted to train more than he has time for.”

Martial arts influences sociologyIn graduate school Burns began Tai Chi

Chuan, a peaceful art form that focuses as much on health and spirituality as it does physicality.

Burns said his interest in martial arts

gave him an appreciation and interest for world religions, especially Eastern reli-gions.

“I appreciate other world religions and I think that is because [Confucianism], Buddhism and Daoism heavily influence martial arts,” he said. “I found it really interesting how the philosophies of the East and West complement each other.”

When Burns is not teaching, practicing martial arts or meditating, he can be found writing haikus. His current project is based on Homer’s “Oedipus.”

Professor finds relaxation through martial arts

FRIDAY, FEB. 20, 2009© 2009 OU Publications Board

FREE — Additional Copies 25¢

VOL. 94, NO. 100

THE UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA’S INDEPENDENT STUDENT VOICE

PROFESSOR Continues on page 2Campus Notes 3Classifi eds 6Crossword 6Horoscope 7L&A 7, 8

News 3Opinion 4Police Reports 3Sports 5Sudoku 6

SPORTS

LIFE & ARTS

CAMPUS NEWS

TODAY

SATURDAY

LOW 36°

LOW 35°

HIGH 68°

HIGH 49°Source: Oklahoma Weather Lab

WEATHER FORECAST

TODAY’S INDEX

20%

John Akingbola/The Daily

In this April 2, 2008, file photo, UOSA Vice President Vince Winston and President Amanda

Holloway share a hug together after the news of their election victory.

• OU parking, maintenance getting close look

CLARK FOY

The Oklahoma Daily

UOSA President Amanda Holloway and Vice President Vince Winston haven’t strayed far from the focus of their cam-paign promises since they took office near-ly a year ago.

Parking, one of their largest promises, was among the pair’s top priorities.

“Parking was the first thing we focused on,” Holloway, advertising and market-ing senior, said. “There was absolutely no accountability in the Parking Appeals Board – some people didn’t even know that they had been appointed.”

Since the discovery of the disorganized board, the pair has reorganized the Parking Appeals Board by appointing an all-new board and clearing over 300 parking appeal

requests, she said.“Amanda and Vince have coordinated

a lot with Parking Services,” said Chris Glenn, OU Parking and Transportation Department public relations director. “The Appeals Board has never been better. They have been great and very receptive.”

After tackling the parking dilemma, the team pushed through their plat-form by addressing building mainte-nance issues.

Holloway said she and Winston, pub-lic affairs administration and African and African-American studies senior, inspect-ed several of the older buildings on the South Oval like Dale, Kaufman and Nielsen Halls. They took an inventory of broken desks, chairs and other objects and sent the reports to the OU Physical Plant where the

reports are currently being looked over.The Undergraduate Student Congress

came to Holloway and Winston and expressed interest in dead week reform, one of Holloway and Winston’s platform issues, Holloway said.

“It was some-thing that we started last year,” said Kurt Davidson, chair-man of the Under-graduate Student Congress. “It is basi-cally said and done; we’re just waiting on a response from the

Faculty Senate meeting in March.” The dead week reform would allow

more time for students to study before finals.

Holloway and Winston also addressed the amount of funding offered to inter-

UOSA executives tackle key election issues

James Cornwell/ The Daily

Emily Pain, sociology graduate student, and Thomas Burns, sociology professor, demonstrate Thai Chi Monday on the South Oval. Burns has trained

and studied 11 different forms of martial arts.

• Veterans make up 12 percent of uninsured Americans

ANNELISE RUSSELL

The Oklahoma Daily

State Sen. Andrew Rice, D-Oklahoma City, is sponsoring a bill aimed at covering uninsured veterans to ensure they receive

sufficient physical and mental care.

Senate Bill 59 would extend a pre-existing state-sponsored insur-ance plan for veterans unable to receive health coverage through Veterans Affairs.

According to Rice, there are as many as 26,000 uninsured Oklahoma veterans. Coverage would be through government-subsidized private insurance, according to a press release from Rice’s office.

The legislation would reduce premiums so veterans would only be paying up to $51 per month for

individual coverage.“The state will cover a larger

chunk and the federal government would cover a larger chunk, and that way they would have health insurance to be able to go get counseling,” Rice said.

Harvard Science published a report in 2007 that said about 12 percent of Americans without health care are veterans, and that number has been growing since 2000.

A recent Pentagon report showed about 24 military suicides in January, more than combat injuries in Afghanistan and Iraq

combined.“If [veterans] have health insur-

ance, they will be able to go get counseling if they are having men-tal health issues, and it will help prevent suicide,” Rice said.

Veteran’s health does not just pertain to older men who served 30 years ago, but it also includes the more recent veterans studying on college campuses. To qualify, a veteran must be between 19 and 64 with an income no more than 25 percent above the federal pov-erty level, according to Rice.

Each Big 12 conference uni-versity offers student services for

veterans. OU currently has nine Army ROTC combat veteran students on campus, said Capt. Patrick Olson, OU Army ROTC spokesman.

Some said the current system has worked well for them.

Information concerning health services and counseling was avail-able upon return from active duty, OU ROTC veteran Patrick Soho said.

“We have a post-deployment briefing and counseling, not nec-essarily because somebody has

Rice proposes additional aid for veterans

Amy Frost /The Daily

C.J. Blue

THE UNIVERSIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIITTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY OF OKLAHOMAAAAAA’S INDEPENDENT STUDENT VOICE

VETERANS Continues on page 2

UOSA Continues on page 2

HOLLOWAY, WINSTON’S PLATFORM

• Increase funding for student organizations

• Push for maintenance of campus buildings

• Establish more funding for international

students

• Decrease workload during dead week

• Revamp university parking policy

The Daily profi les unique members of the Sooner

community.

ODDEVEN

EVEN ODD

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

• One of OU’s most influential presidents dies at age 91

Paul F. Sharp, the president who success-fully guided OU through six-and-a-half of its most turbulent years, died Thursday at his home in Norman following a long illness. He was 91.

OU President David Boren expressed his regret and that of the OU community at Sharp’s passing.

“Paul Sharp made a lasting impact on OU and higher education across the coun-try... I really appreciated his wise counsel and advice during my service as governor and especially after I came back to the University of Oklahoma,” Boren said. “He will be greatly missed by the entire OU family.”

Born Jan. 19, 1918, in Kirksville, Mo., Paul Frederick Sharp was the son of two medi-cal doctors. Sharp grew up in Crookston, Minn., and first came to Oklahoma to study at Phillips University in Enid. There he met Rose Anderson on the debate team. They began their 69-year marriage in 1939 after he earned his bachelor’s degree.

His graduate study at the University of Minnesota was interrupted by his World War II service in the U.S. Navy as liaison officer to the Royal Australian Navy.

He earned his Ph.D. at Minnesota, where he was an instructor of history. He was an associate professor at Iowa State University and a professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Sharp was presi-dent of Hiram College, chancellor of the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, and president of Drake University before coming to OU.

When Sharp became OU’s ninth presi-dent in August 1971, he found a cam-pus populated by civil rights protesters, disgruntled faculty and hostile students. Serious funding, management and political issues threatened the university’s stability, and a crisis of confidence lingered from the controversial term of his predecessor, J.

Herbert Hollomon.An experienced university administrator

with strong academic credentials, Sharp attacked all these problems by mending fences with the public, state officials and even his own Board of Regents. He pushed hard to get increased legislative funding for higher education and was the first OU presi-dent to make private fundraising an ongo-ing major function of his administration.

He transformed the OU Medical Center in Oklahoma City into the OU Health Sciences Center to more accurately reflect its edu-cational mission through the College of Medicine and six other health profession colleges.

In 1978, a minor stroke brought his presi-dency to an end.

After designation as president emeri-tus and a regents-granted semester off, he returned to the classroom as Regents Professor of history from 1978 to 1988, when he added the emeritus title to his professorship. He continued his active association with the university even in retirement, and also served several years as a distinguished professor of history at the University of Science and Arts of Oklahoma in Chickasha.

In his service activities, he did not forget his home state and the Norman community. Nearly three decades of Oklahomans, who did not know him as OU’s president, identi-fied him with the boards of the Sarkeys Foundation, the University of Oklahoma Foundation, the Oklahoma Foundation for Excellence, the Associates of the OU Western History Collections, Oklahoma Symphony Orchestra, Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation, Oklahoma Heritage Foundation, Cleveland County YMCA and the Cleveland County Red Cross, among others.

His academic awards are almost too numerous to list. He received eight hon-orary doctorates, the distinguished Achievement Award from Phillips University, the Outstanding Achievement Award from the University of Minnesota and the Distinguished Service Citation from OU, OU’s highest honor at the time. His work as a historian, where he specialized in Canadian-American history, was widely

respected, his book Whoop-up Country earning the Silver Spur Award from the Western Writers of America as 1955’s best non-fiction on the American West.

He was inducted into the Oklahoma Education Hall of Fame and named one of Oklahoma’s Living Treasures in 2003 by the Oklahoma Health Center. The Paul F. Sharp Concert Hall in OU’s Catlett Music Center is named in his honor.

His survivors include his wife; his sis-ter, Thelma Miller, of Colorado Springs; three children, William Frederick Sharp, of Homer, N.Y., Kathryn Ann Dunlap, of Oklahoma City and Paul Trevor Sharp, of Greensboro, N.C.; seven grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren.

A private family graveside service is scheduled for Saturday. A memorial service will be held Sunday at 4 p.m. at the First Christian Church, 220 S. Webster in Norman. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the Reach Out and Read Program through the University of Oklahoma Foundation, Inc., 100 Timberdell Road, Norman, OK 73019.

— THE OU FOUNDATION

OU bids fond farewell to Paul SharpNewsFriday, Feb. 20, 20092

Continued from page 1

UOSA

Continued from page 1

Professor

Continued from page 1

Veterans

Photo Provided

Former OU President Paul F. Sharp

NEWS BRIEFSOne separated twin in serious condition

Twins Kylee and Preslee Wells remain at The Children’s

Hospital at OU Medical Center as they recover from their

recent separation surgery.

Born conjoined, Kylee and Preslee underwent surgery

Jan. 19 to separate the bridge that connected their livers,

said Allen Poston, director of public relations for The

Children’s Hospital at OU Medical Center and former Daily

staff member. The twins had very little internal connection,

he said.

Kylee is in serious condition and Preslee is in fair condition

three weeks after the separation surgery, Poston said. Kylee

is on a ventilator and nitric oxide to ease her pulmonary

hypertension, but doctors are easing off its usage, he said.

The date the twins can go home is still unknown. The goal

is for Preslee and Kylee to go home with as little medical

equipment as possible, Poston said. The girls might need

protective shirts, though, because neither of them has a

sternum due to the way they were connected, he said.

“We’ll have to fabricate a sternum,” Poston said. “Skin and

fat is the only thing protecting their hearts right now.”

The twins are starting to spend more time awake, drink

from bottles and grab onto things, just as normal babies do,

he said.

Stevie Stewart, the twins’ mother, has started a blog to

share what she and her family are experiencing.

To read the twins’ mother’s full blog, log onto

http://www.oumedicine.com/body.cfm?iD=3258

Bill proposed to prevent sex offenders from operating ice cream trucks

The state Senate Appropriations Committee approved a

bill that would prohibit convicted sex off enders from operat-

ing ice cream trucks.

The bill will require all ice cream truck vendors to obtain

an operating permit through the State Department of Health

and would enforce a $500 fi ne for operating an ice cream

truck without the appropriate display of the permit. Sex of-

fenders who refuse to abide by this law could face up to two

and a half years in prison.

Oklahoma has not had a problem with sex off enders dis-

guising themselves in ice cream trucks but the bill’s author

Sen. Jay Paul Gumm, D-Durant, said high-profi le cases in

other states have prompted the legislation.

New dean awaits regents’ approvalRich Taylor, an Enid native and a 1972 OU alumnus who

has served as interim dean of the Weitzenhoff er Family

College of Fine Arts since June 2008 is expected to make the

position permanent.

President Boren made the announcement Thursday and

said the appointment is awaiting approval from the OU

Board of Regents.

“It is an honor for me to recommend to the Board of

Regents the appointment of Rich Taylor as permanent dean,”

Boren said.

Taylor’s experience in fi ne arts includes 27 years in execu-

tive leadership posts with The Walt Disney Co.

—STAFF REPORTS

Photo Courtesy of Children’s Hospital at OU Medical Center

Preslee Faith Wells (pictured), and her twin, Kylee Hope Wells,

are recovering at the Children’s Hospital at OU Medical Center,

after being separated on Jan. 19.

He said he wanted to write on the subject because he wanted to depict a Western subject in an Eastern form.

Burns’ appreciation of the phi-losophy of martial arts influenced his decision to go into sociology.

“[The philosophy of medita-tion] is to stay balanced and cen-tered; it is true about ourselves to the smallest of cells and it is also true of our social systems,” Burns said. “If we are not balanced or centered, our bodies become sick; so do our social systems.”

Pre-class meditationBurns tries to meditate daily,

sometimes sneaking in quick ses-sions between classes.

“Every time before class, during my 10-second walk, I do a little Quan Khi Do to get myself centered and focus my energy, allowing me to focus on the energy of the stu-dents and reflect it back to them,” he said.

Some students think Burns brings a different kind of energy to the learning environment.

“[Burns] is a great professor. Most of the time, when he walks into class, he is excited about the day and what he’s going to lecture about,” said Ashley Thompson, civil engineering junior.

Some students even hope the experience won’t end.

“I specifically asked if I could [be his graduate teaching assistant] because I wanted to take the class again,” said Emily Pain, sociology graduate student. “He has a very unique teaching style. He always comes in excited about the lectures and tells a lot of first-hand stories because he has been to so many different places.”

Burns said he always keeps his door open for students.

“[Burns] always wants to chat

over tea and loves to talk about sociological theory,” Pain said. “He is kind of philosophical in a way.”

Kevin Waters, a Ph.D. student, attributes his decision to go back to school to a class he took from Burns years ago.

“[Burns] goes above and beyond and takes it upon himself to make a difference in his students’ lives,” Waters said. “I know other profes-sors strive to do that as well, but Tom makes it his goal to help stu-dents realize their capabilities.”

Lessons to learnAmong the many lessons Burns

has learned, he strives to live by one that advocates accepting oth-ers as a key to peace.

“I would have to say martial arts influenced the way I think, and that’s why I tend to be anti-war,” Burns said. “At least part of that pacifism can be contributed to the ultimate goal of martial arts. I believe that even when someone is threatening you, there is a part of them who wants to connect with you and be friends with you.”

While martial arts empowers individuals, the ultimate goal is for people to use that power only when necessary, and “non-force-fully,” Burns said.

During his time as a competi-tor, Burns always was amazed by the sportsmanship competitors showed each other, as they bowed and shook each other’s hands after intense sparring.

He said because of the Japanese philosophy “Chautza,” meaning hospitality, he tries to connect with people, like whenever he offers a cup of tea.

“I believe we should not objec-tify people and understand where they are coming from on their own terms,” Burns said.

issues, but mostly because they want to address the soldier about the issues he might face,” Soho said.

Finding services and knowing where to go has not been compli-cated for OU ROTC veteran Cory Panak, he said.

“I’ve worked with the VA in Tulsa and Muskogee, and I have never had a problem getting a hold of them and talking to somebody,” Panak said.

While some cadets may not have encountered any problems with military health services, Rice said he still thinks there is a need for additional care for all Oklahoma

veterans.“Preventing suicide and providing

health coverage is what we’re trying to do, but it is just one area that is providing stress on our veterans,” Rice said.

national students. The two have been working with the International Advisory Council and have accomplished many things to help international students.

The team began work-ing on international student issues by speaking to many different international student groups. After receiving a lot of feedback through interaction and surveys, Holloway and Winston acted on the students’ concerns.

The first thing they did was contact Career Services and

begin work on a virtual career fair for international students.

The virtual career fair is a unique online tool that allows international students to be contacted by recruiters who might not come to the OU campus to recruit, said Betty Scott, director of Career Services.

The link has been up for about a month and should be up for the rest of the spring, Scott said.

Holloway and Winston are also trying to make interna-tional students more aware

of health care plans available from Goddard and different ways to become involved with the Interfraternity Council and the Panhellenic Association.

The team is currently work-ing with UOSA and OU offi-cials to establish more fund-ing for student organizations. Funding has continually decreased over the previous years, Holloway said.

“At this point, I can say that the funding will not decrease again, despite the economy being the way it is,” Holloway said.

No final result has been reached, but she and Winston are confident they can acquire more funding for students organizations, she said.

Their campaign platform has been the pair’s main focus, but Holloway and Winston have taken on other projects like working with OU’s budget, investigating a new and more uniform advising program, acquiring $100,000 in scholar-ships for students looking to study abroad and the possibil-ity of establishing a bike rental run by the university.

COMMITMENT TO ACCURACYThe Daily has a long-standing com-

mitment to serve readers by providing

accurate coverage and analysis. Errors are

corrected as they are identifi ed. Readers

should bring errors to the attention of the

editorial board for further investigation.

364-2100 • 722 Asp Ave. CAMPUS CORNER

CHINESE RESTAURANT

Daily Lunch Buff etAll You Can Eat

$4.88 • 11:30 a.m. - 2 p.m. • Sunday-Friday

Nijim Dabbour, managing [email protected]: 325-3666fax: 325-6051For more, go to oudaily.com.

Campus NewsCampus News Friday, Feb. 20, 2009 3

• OU production to showcase collaborative work

KATE CUNNINGHAM AND TIFFANY LEADER

The Oklahoma Daily

The OU Student Film Production Club plans to create an OU version of “Paris, je t’aime,” the French series of short films about love.

“OU, I Love You” will focus on different types of love, including romantic, platonic and family love, said Katrina Boyd, film and video studies professor and SFPC faculty adviser. It will compromise sev-eral five to seven-min-ute videos to make a 90-minute film.

“You get to have each of the student groups make short films, which is very manageable,” Boyd said, “But then you end up having a fea-ture-length film which is united by a theme.”

Boyd said club coor-dinators will go through applications and match up directors, screenplays and crews.

Participants will be judged by different criteria based on their areas of expertise. For example, screenwriters must submit a screenplay specifically for “OU, I Love

You,” and directors must submit a sample of their work.

Kenny Madison, film and video studies sophomore, said he plans to submit his screenplay for the project. His screenplay is a comedy that focuses on a young man and woman who get into an argument that eventually leads to a fist fight, he said.

Madison said he hopes the finished product will have an effect on the com-munity.

“My favorite art is the kind that I can be entertained by or [thought] about,” Madison said. “At the very least, if some-

one can be entertained by what I do… then it’s a success.”

Students from all majors may participate in “OU, I Love You.”

Boyd said there is no budget for the project because participants are expected to either use their own equipment or borrow equipment from the film and video stud-ies department.

Jack Patchell, film and video studies senior and SFPC presi-dent, said he hopes the project will not only be enjoyable to audiences, but beneficial for the student filmmakers.

“These videos will be a training ground of

sorts to get [student filmmakers] experi-ence with handling equipment and such,” he said.

Patchell said he hopes this project will inspire filmmakers at OU and in Norman.

“I have long believed there can be a local film industry here,” Patchell said. “My goal is to stay around here and pro-mote the idea that you can be a local artist and do well.”

The date and location for the film’s debut is still tentative, said Virginia Duke, film and video studies sophomore and SFPC programming chair. She said they plan for an April 10 screening.

Combined efforts go into ‘OU, I Love You’

Submission deadline to take part in “OU, I Love You” is 5 p.m. Feb. 27. Stop by Ka-trina Boyd’s offi ce, 321 Old Science Hall.

Merrill Jones/The Daily

Andrew Hajek, film and video studies junior, works on a script Wednesday near The Pastoral Dreamer. Hajek’s script for “OU, I Love You,” highlights the

area near the statue, and he said he also plans on applying to direct for the competition.

POLICE REPORTSNames are compiled from the Norman Police Department and OUPD. The reports serve as a record of arrests, not convictions. Those listed are innocent until proven guilty.

DRIVING UNDER THE INFLUENCERandall Joe Barker, 44, 800 N. Berry Rd., Wednesday, also transporting open bottle

MUNICIPAL WARRANTRobert Lee Bell, 48, 922 E Lindsey St., Tuesday

COUNTY WARRANTBenjamin Zachariah Wibeto, 20, E

Alameda St. and 12th Ave. SE, Monday

HARMFUL DECEPTIONJames C. Brown, 32, 1161 Rambling Oaks Dr., MondayYulanda R. Owens, 32, 1161 Rambling Oaks Dr., Monday

INTERFERENCE WITH OFFICIAL PROCESSHoward Ricardo Dixon, 19, East Lindset Street, Tuesday

PUBLIC INTOXICATIONRobert William Fulton, 19, 1324 Atlanta Circle, TuesdayTricia June Plumlee, 38, 1324 Atlanta Circle, Tuesday

David Leon Hickok, 44, Melrose Drive, Wednesday, also municipal warrantGale Suzanne Rose, 41, 7100 E State Highway 9, Wednesday

DOMESTIC ABUSEDouglas Jason Jarrell, 36, 1324 Atlanta Circle, Tuesday

GRAND LARCENYBobby E. Olupona, 21, 3499 W Main St., TuesdayJennifer Gayle Jones, 26, 3499 W Main St., Wednesday

PETTY LARCENYCoy Melvin Ward, 37, 3499 W Main St., Monday

CAMPUS NOTES

TODAYWOMEN’S GYMNASTICSThe 11th-ranked women’s gymnastics squad is at Lloyd Noble Center, hosting Missouri, Brown and West Virginia in a quad meet at 7 p.m.

HUSTON HUFFMAN CENTERA regional badminton tournament will begin at 8:30 a.m. at the Huston Huffman Center.

SATURDAYHUSTON HUFFMAN CENTERA regional badminton tournament will begin at 8:30 a.m. at the Huston Huffman Center.

KAPLANFree campuswide practice tests for the GMAT, GRE, LSAT, MCAT, DAT, OAT, PCAT and TOEFL will begin at 10 a.m.

OU WOMEN’S BASKETBALLOU vs. Baylor begins at 2 p.m. at the Lloyd Noble Center.

“At the very least, if someone can be entertained by what I do… then it’s a success.”

Kenny Madison, film and video studies

sophomore

A&

A&

AASSSS

OU COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES

FOCUS ON

A&S WEEK

FOCAS* WEEK PRESENTATION

“Constitution and the Emerging God”by Robert Thompson, assistant professor of philosophy, School of Theology and Christian Ministry, Point Loma University

4 p.m., Dale Hall Tower 607

TODAY

Visit our web site at www.ou.edu/cas

Kaleidoscope Evening and Silent AuctionAn night of festivities in honor of the 2009 Distinguished Alumni Award winners.

6 p.m., Molly Shi Boren Ballroom, OMU

For more information, call (405) 325-2347.

2009 Distinguished Alumni Award winners• Jack Catlin

• Janet S. Fender

• Chief Master Sergeant Rodney McKinley

• W. DeVier Pierson

2326

There’s a reason UOSA administrations don’t have the ability to accomplish much during a single term: They don’t have time.

Student administrations are notorious for starting projects and initiatives that end when their term is up. We think this prob-lem could be solved if the current elected officials would work with the next to ensure action is continued on the already-initiated plans on which they agree.

Amanda Holloway and Vince Winston’s administration indeed has started many of the initiatives it promised to start in its spring 2008 campaign (see Page 1 for more details.)

But starting isn’t quite good enough if reform is the goal, and if no transition efforts are made, UOSA

administrations will always be great at starting reform efforts but never finishing them. Whether at

the student level or the U.S. presidency, administrations shouldn’t take over with-out a considerable amount of cooperation from the preceding administration.

This is the obvious reason why newly elected presidents, as President Obama did prior to taking the presidential oath, hire transition teams to work with the current administration that is on its way out of office.

Holloway and her successor should select a transition team comprised of

underclassmen who are already involved in UOSA to take over current projects and ensure the new administration will do the same.

Ray Martin, 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.

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JONMALONE

OUR VIEW

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Ian Jehn - civil engineering 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

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Friday, Feb. 20, 20094

Red faces and angry glances. Shouting and bulging veins all around. Stares that would bore a hole in most any wall. Condescending attacks on individual people rather than concrete responses to opposing arguments. Conspiracy theorists’ cries against any who contradict them. Sounds more like oppression and stifling of discovery than an open-university campus. So much for the “free marketplace of ideas,” eh?

The events take place throughout campus, from lectures to roundtable discussions to a very con-troversial guest. The table is set for those who promote a specific worldview and a specific faith to make themselves known. The perceived “scien-tific” community rejoices, belittling and mocking any who oppose them.

However, within these high “academic” com-munities grow whispers of dissension. The math-ematicians crunch their numbers, churning out probabilities of origins. The biochemists continue to unlock and reveal an entire other mini-universe within the cell, with highly specified machinery and complexity beyond belief.

Even biologists note the gaping hole the fossil record shows – and yet we still cling to the man who many think made possible the “intellectually-fulfilled atheist?” We venerate and value Charles Darwin more highly than most any other scientist, ignoring the discoveries and theories of countless theists throughout history.

Only one view in scienceThe Darwin Day events and invitation of rabid

evolutionary anti-theist Richard Dawkins only serve to demonstrate the extent to which one view predominates in science. Ironically, this week marks the controversial defeat of an Oklahoma Senate bill that would legislate the validity of teach-ing both strengths and weaknesses of evolutionary theory. The bill was narrowly defeated in a commit-tee, but reflects an increasingly recognized opposi-tion to modern evolutionary theory.

The work of Ben Stein in his investigative docu-mentary, “Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed,” adds popularity and momentum, as well as evidence, for opposition to naturalistic evolution in the battle which rages among scientists. No professor with-out tenure — and some even with — is above the Darwinist police, no matter the value of their con-tributions or the quality of their research.

Blindly, but faithfully, following an uncertain the-ory just because it has been widely accepted makes us no better than those who asserted throughout the Middle Ages that the earth was the center of the universe. But therein lies the problem. Because the definition of the term “science” has been comman-deered and changed by the so-called intellectual establishment, it no longer is viable to question or doubt natural selection and random mutation as the only “true” explanation for origins.

When you redefine science as Darwinism, of course you’ll reject any evidence which comes in

opposition to it.Dawkins’ visit to OU on March 6 is approaching

with great fanfare, as the former Oxford biologist will herald the Darwin celebration events.

But what has made Dawkins popular is his foray into the philosophical realm in books such as “The God Delusion,” in which he purports the seeming impossibility of the supernatural realm. His public disdain for religious belief, particularly expressed in attacks on Christianity, has made Dawkins a polemic figure.

However, intellectual thought has not been with-out question for his philosophical motives. Noted philosopher and historian of science Michael Ruse, known for his respected work in the history and philosophy of science, will be another guest speak-er for the OU Darwin 2009 Project.

Ruse, who will give a public lecture on Thursday at the Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History, comments in his review of “The God Delusion” that “Dawkins is brazen in his ignorance of philosophy and the-ology [not to mention the history of science]… So long as his under-standing of Christianity remains at a sophomoric level, Dawkins does not deserve full attention.”

Angry language and condescen-sion will bring no clarity or reso-

lution to the problem. Bringing Dawkins in does nothing but increase the level of tension between naturalism advocates and those who purport other theories of origins.

Be open to oppositionSo what is to be done about this? First, I

would strongly suggest, even if you fully agree with Dawkins about evolutionary biology, that you acquire knowledge of the opposing arguments to evolutionary theory.

The first opportunity for such knowledge is tonight in the way of two academics from the Discovery Institute, a think tank in Seattle that publishes and funds intelligent design research. Researcher Dr. John West and lawyer Casey Luskin will present on the troubling topic raised by Ben Stein – academic freedom.

Second, Ruse will debate design theorist William Dembski on Feb. 27 in the Paul F. Sharp Concert Hall in the Catlett School of Music. Dembski con-troversially spoke at OU in the fall of 2007. Come hear rational conversation and discussion rather than personal attacks and scare tactics. Let’s talk about what science is and means, in a historical and a present sense. The soft-spoken naturalist and biologist Charles Darwin might have even calmly discussed it himself.

Jon Malone is an English education graduate student.

Open minds necessaryin Darwin discussions

Concealed carry woulddeter, protect on campus

OU President David Boren, members of The Daily’s editorial board, students and faculty have come out forcefully opposed to the idea of legaliz-ing concealed carry on campus. A large contingent supports the idea of concealed carry. However, the arguments in favor and against rely heavily on emotion rather than anything grounded in reality. I haven’t heard a convincing argument from the anti-concealed carry side yet, and the people trying to argue for concealed carry have fallen woefully short.

More qualified than the police?I can discharge a 10-round magazine of .45 cali-

ber hollow-point cartridges into a target 25 yards away and achieve a grouping eight inches in diam-eter. I am also an honorably discharged veteran of the U.S. Army with an expert pistol rating. I would consider this to be “proficiency” when it comes to using a handgun.

The anti-concealed carry lob-byists want citizens to depend entirely on the police for protec-tion, arguing their training makes them better at handling firearms. While the vast majority of law enforcement handgun training in the U.S. occurs at distances clos-er than 15 yards, and the major-ity of that training at a distance of seven yards or fewer, a 2008 RAND Corporation report states NYPD officers hit their actual tar-gets at a distance of seven yards on average 37 percent of the time. Their accuracy drops off considerably at increased distances.

I recognize there is a difference between target shooting and live fire, but most concealed carry advocates would rather have the choice to defend themselves than rely on a “trained” officer with 37 percent accuracy. One go-to argument by gun con-trol activists is that if we allow concealed carry on campus, then we are going to see a sharp increase in gun violence. This argument ignores reality and is grounded entirely in fear. People are afraid if a student receives a poor grade on an exam, he or she might react by shooting up the class.

Currently there are 11 campuses in the U.S. that allow concealed carry. These include all nine public schools in the state of Utah, Colorado State University and Blue Ridge Community College in Virginia. Concealed carry has been legal on campus at Blue Ridge since 1995, at Colorado State since 2003 and in the state of Utah since 2006.

When was the last time you read a news story about a student in Utah or at Colorado State shoot-ing a professor for receiving a poor grade? The reality is none of the schools have experienced a single gun-related incident since legalizing con-cealed carry on campus.

When concealed carry was actively debated at the state level 25 years ago, opponents argued that

a populace with concealed carry would escalate everyday disagreements into bloody shootouts. The streets were supposed to run red with the blood of citizens. This hasn’t occurred, either.

Concealed carry changes the scenarioBoren recently stated the recent Childers inci-

dent might have been vastly different had students or faculty been armed with concealed carry hand-guns. He is right — the situation would be different. He assumes with concealed carry there might have been shots fired and people killed. That is always a possibility. What this ignores, however, is the deter-rence factor. If concealed carry was legal, it is also likely that Mr. Childers would not enter Kaufman Hall armed with the intention of committing a crime, knowing someone in the building might be armed. Not knowing for sure if your victim or someone in the vicinity is armed serves as a huge deterrence to crime. It is easier to kill when people don’t fight back.

That is the greatest thing about concealed carry — you don’t know who is carrying a sidearm! Police officers are readily identified by criminals because they wear uniforms and openly carry pis-tols. However, it is very hard to identify a person carrying a concealed carry weapon. The pictures shown in recent copies of The Daily are gross mis-representations of proper concealed carry meth-ods. Most concealed carry weapons are carried in shoulder holsters concealed by jackets, in purses or in a pants pocket.

Concealed carry advocates simply want the option to carry a sidearm on campus.

It is true that one can obtain a concealed carry permit by simply attending a class and taking a test, but real devotees to concealed carry train exten-sively at the gun range to the point that they are masters of their sidearms. It is not uncommon for a concealed carry permit holder to expend a couple thousand rounds of ammunition yearly in training.

Legalizing concealed carry on campus will give experienced gun owners the option of protecting themselves. The problem with the current law is that it is grounded in fantasy. If it is against the law for a student to carry a concealed weapon on cam-pus, only law-abiding students will leave their side-arm at home. Concealed carry laws do not make a population any less safe. In fact, there is strong evidence that concealed carry laws contribute to an safer overall environment.

The police arrived last week in a matter of min-utes, but there is truth in the axiom “when seconds count, the police are only minutes away.”

Thirty-two students were executed at Virginia Tech before the police arrived — and none of the students was armed. Nineteen of the 32 were old enough to carry a concealed weapon. I would speculate most, if not all, would still be alive today if concealed carry had been legal on their campus.

Joe Hunt is a history and economics senior.

In response to a Feb. 19 sports column about former OU quarterback Rhett Bomar

Hilarious. The whirlwind of college

football? Give me a break. He was of-

fered money to do work he didn’t do.

That’s a blatant disregard for all ethical

concerns regarding amateurism - the

point of playing college football. You

act like it’s some unfortunate side

eff ect from being an NCAA athlete.

- POSTED BY EN AT OUDAILY.COM

In response to Kyle Williams’ Feb. 19 column about the need for tradi-tional conservatism

This is a great column. It seems like

a lot of the conservatives who write

for and comment on The Daily are of

the far right Rush Limbaugh School of

Conservative Studies, and it’s refresh-

ing to read an article by a conservative

that’s well-written and reasonable.

- POSTED BY JJANOWIAK AT OUD-AILY.COM

Holloway should ensure smooth UOSA transition

Steven Jones, sports [email protected]: 325-7630, fax: 325-6051For more, go to oudaily.com. SportsSports 5Friday, Feb. 20, 2009

Women’s Basketball

No. 2 Sooners take on No. 5 Bears on Saturday• OU plays Baylor on ‘Pack the Place Pink’ night at home

ANNELISE RUSSELL

The Oklahoma Daily

The Big 12 women’s basketball tour-nament takes place in Oklahoma City this year, but this Saturday, fans in Norman get a sneak preview and a chance to see the two best teams in the Big 12.

Head coach Sherri Coale and the No. 2 Sooners are staying put this weekend to defend their undefeated conference record against the No. 5 Baylor Lady Bears.

The Sooners are fresh off a less-than-stellar performance at Texas Tech Wednesday, where OU took control of the game and the lead in the last eight minutes.

“We’ve survived a couple of subpar performances and been good enough to win whether it be for a four-minute run in the middle of a half or to close out a game,” Coale said.

For OU to take away a home vic-tory, senior forward Ashley Paris said the Sooners will need to come out with high intensity and maintain their aggression throughout the game.

“I think we need to learn from the Texas Tech game as far as coming out early and taking care of business and being ready to go,” Paris said.

Paris said Baylor is a tough team and the Sooners will have to bring a competi-tive edge to beat the Lady Bears.

Baylor is currently ranked No. 2 in the Big 12 behind the Sooners and its only conference losses were to OU and a nail-biter to Texas.

In their last game, the Sooners were unable to stop the Lady Raiders from get-ting to the rim and were unable to block many shots.

Sophomore guard Danielle Robinson

said that defense is the key to beating a quality team like the Lady Bears.

“I think it comes down to our defense really,” Robinson said. “We played pretty good defense in Waco, but we just didn’t convert on the offensive end; I just think we need to bring that offensive character back.”

This weekend’s match-up is the 3rd annual Pack the Place Pink Day and all 12,000 seats will be covered with a pink shirt. The Sooner team will also be sport-

ing the pink on their special jerseys.Saturday’s game is already sold out

and Coale said she couldn’t be happier with the great fan support.

“It makes me really proud of my fan base,” Coale said. “I think the Lloyd Noble Center has become a place where women’s basketball teams don’t like to come play.”

For big games like Baylor, even more important than the sold-out games is the increased student attendance.

“Specifically the last two or three home games we’ve had, I’ve been thrilled that section W-6 has had people in it, cause that’s our student section,” Coale said. “For the longest time we had the arena filled and we could see all the chairs, and for the last two or three games that sec-tion has been full.”

The Sooners are set to tip-off against the Lady Bears in front of a packed house at 2 p.m. on Saturday at Lloyd Noble Center.

Eli Hull/The Daily

Sophomore guard Danielle Robinson (13) drives past junior guard Alison Lacey (4) in a game against Iowa State on Feb. 11. The Sooners beat the Cyclones 58-49. The Sooners take on No. 5 Baylor at 2

p.m. on Saturday. OU beat the Bears 56-51 Jan. 28 in Waco.

TOP BIG 12 TEAMS1. OU, 23-2 (11-0)2. Baylor, 21-3 (9-2)3. Kansas State, 20-4 (7-4)

4. Texas A&M, 19-5 (7-4)

5. Iowa State, 19-6 (7-4)

6. Texas 19-6, (7-4)

7. Oklahoma State, 15-9 (4-7)

Sooners start season this afternoonBaseball

JONO GRECO

The Oklahoma Daily

In sports, looking at the past is not always the wisest decision. Baseball head coach Sunny Golloway nevertheless said the way the 2008 season ended will fuel a quick start for the 2009 season that begins at 3 p.m. today against the Western Illinois Leathernecks.

“It is very apparent with the way we fin-ished last year and the fact that we returned almost all of those players from that team that we’re extremely optimistic in getting started this year,” Golloway said.

The No. 16 Sooners are returning 21 play-ers and added 14 more to round out the 2009 opening day roster.

“We’ve added some, I think, instrumental parts and key elements that are really going to help our team this year,” Golloway said. “That experience of how we finished strong last year should really pay off for us.”

The big sticks in OU’s lineup include soph-omore outfielder Casey Johnson and junior first baseman Aaron Baker.

Johnson was one of two freshmen to start the 2008 season on opening day and hit .346 with four home runs during his first collegiate season.

Baker led OU in home runs in 2008 and spent the summer in the Cape Cod League playing for Warhem Gatemen. He hit four home runs and drove in 25 runs, which was

top-10 in the league.“Last year, we really learned a lot from our

struggles and I think we’re prepared to make a run for it this year,” Baker said.

The 2008 offseason brought more than new recruits. The Sooners received a new practice facility – which includes an indoor batting area and a regulation size infield – and are in the process of building a new scoreboard that is expected to be completed on March 1.

The scoreboard will include a 36-foot wide and 21-foot tall LED video display, will have normal features of a regular baseball score-board and will show the speed of each pitch.

“We’re in [the indoor batting facility] all the time,” junior shortstop Bryant Hernandez said. “The infield has been able to help out our practices a lot and we’re getting a lot more done.”

Golloway said that the coaching staff has had to limit the players from overworking themselves in their newest “toy” during the offseason.

“[The players] have literally been in there working so hard that we were worried [about] a couple of our guys getting hurt and just fatiguing themselves,” Golloway said.

OU opens its 2009 season at L. Dale Mitchell Park in a four-game series Friday at 3 p.m. against the Leathernecks.

The series will continue Saturday at noon in a double-header and will conclude Sunday at 1 p.m.

Amy Frost/The Daily

Senior pitcher C.J. Blue winds up for a pitch during a

game last season.

With both basketball teams having big games this weekend, and both

gymnastics teams in Norman, there’s plenty more content at OUDaily.com.

Men’s basketball vs. Texas“Key matchup: Juan Pattillo vs. Damion James. Capel will likely use Pattillo’s

athleticism and ability to ... limit the talented junior.”

— ERIC DAMA/THE DAILY

Women’s gym hosting four-team tournament“OU’s season high of 197.175 from January remains the second highest in

the NCAA this season.”

— KELSEY WITTEN/THE DAILY

Friday Face-off: Which Big 12 bubble team will still be playing in the NCAA tournament in March?

“The Cornhuskers (16-8) have their share of losses, but they have three

important wins that ... could propel them into March Madness.”

— ANNELISE RUSSEL/THE DAILY

“K-State has big wins this season helping their cause; they beat Missouri the

fi rst time they played each other and beat Texas in Austin last month.”

— JAMES ROTH/THE DAILY

For the full stories, go to OUDaily.com.

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St. Mark’s Mother’s Day Out hiring P/T teachers. Early childhood experience preferred. Apply in person M-Th 8:30 am-2 pm. 3939 W. Tecumseh Rd. 366-8102.

Now hiring lifeguard, swim instructors, and AM pool managers. Apply at the Cleveland County Family YMCA, 1350 Lexington Ave. EOE.

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HeyDay Entertainment CenterDoubleDave’s Pizzaworks

Now Hiring Enthusiastic Employeeswww.heydayfamilyfun.com and download ap-plication. Bring in person to 3201 Market Place, Norman (I-35 and Indian Hills Rd)

University College is seeking current students to work with the Summer Enrollment Program for entering freshman. Positions are FT temporary, May 18-July 31, $8/hr with weekends and holi-days off. Apply online at uc.ou.edu, for questions contact Brian Nossaman at [email protected] or 325-3521.

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oudaily.com

This year, more than172,000 people will be diagnosed with lungcancer, and more than163,000 will die—making it America’sNUMBER ONEcancer killer.

But new treatmentsoffer hope.

Join Lung CancerAlliance in the fightagainst this disease.

lungcanceralliance.org

is nothing to celebrate.

NUMBERONE

Being

SOONERSDrink Responsibly.

Call the Hotline at

325-5000to report illegal or unsafe drinking.

All calls are anonymous.The University of Oklahoma is an

Equal Opportunity Institution.

Previous Answers

6 3 41 3

4 5 9 83 4 9

4 56 5 7

1 7 3 26 1

6 7 8Instructions: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

8 7 5 9 2 6 3 4 12 3 1 8 5 4 6 7 99 6 4 3 1 7 8 2 54 1 2 5 8 3 9 6 75 9 6 1 7 2 4 3 83 8 7 4 6 9 1 5 26 5 9 2 4 1 7 8 31 4 8 7 3 5 2 9 67 2 3 6 9 8 5 1 4

Universal Crossword

“COMING OUT ON TOP” by Jessica Welsh

ACROSS 1 Editorial

changes of heart

6 Majesty preceder

10 Glance over 14 “I’m With

Stupid” shirt feature

15 “Happy Motoring” company

16 Subordinate staffer

17 Came from behind

20 Prefix with “friendly”

21 Strange-sounding city?

22 Places for combats or contests

23 Lower electrical capability

25 Up and about

27 Skewed view 29 Craven or

Unseld 30 Stratosphere

streaker, once 33 Got ahead

(with 45-Across)

37 Poetry Muse 39 Carrot on a

stick, e.g. 40 Company

that merged with Kmart

42 Swash-buckler’s quality

43 They mingle at landfills

45 See 33-Across

47 Place above place

48 Two-of-a-kind vessel

50 Small acces-sory case

51 Wave feature 53 Ferdinand’s

first lady 57 Old

Testament book

60 River in central Switzerland

62 Linked-computers acronym

63 Seized control

66 Comics page drooler

67 Greek war god

68 Shooter, before shooting

69 Speaks on the record?

70 The motion of the ocean

71 Paper for a letter

DOWN 1 Full 2 When

shooting wraps up?

3 Proofreader’s find

4 Twenty hun-dredweights

5 Honeybun 6 Himalayan

humanoid 7 Milo of

“Barbarella” 8 Walk all over 9 Do tire

maintenance 10 It may get

rattled 11 Ceramist’s

oven 12 “Hey, what’s

the big ___?” 13 Private

dinner? 18 Doesn’t look

forward to 19 Originate 24 “Li’l ___” 26 Turn sharply 28 Round and

strip, e.g. 30 Spanish

room 31 Men-only, as

a party 32 Audiophile’s

concern 33 Lumines-

cence 34 Popular

German import

35 Part of many mineral supplements

36 “I’ve ___ it up to here!”

38 Tighten, as

laces 41 Genre of

Jonathan Swift

44 Vaughan of jazz

46 One is one 49 Warm up, as

leftovers 51 Refers to 52 Sealed, as a

package 54 Andean

ruminant 55 Some

Europeans 56 Tennis star

Agassi 57 “Young

Frankenstein” assistant

58 Scotch partner

59 “Take ___ from me” (“Here’s my advice”)

61 Church feature

64 Swiss canton 65 Go in haste

PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER

Edited by Timothy E. Parker February 20, 2009

© 2009 Universal Press Syndicatewww.upuzzles.com

Friday, Feb. 20, 2009Life & ArtsLuke Atkinson, L&A [email protected]: 325-5189, fax: 325-6051For more, go to oudaily.com. 7

NEED MORE?

L&ACHECK OUT

THE BLOGS AT OUDAILY.COM

CLAIRE DOUTHITT

The Oklahoma Daily

The historic Sooner Theatre celebrates its 80th anniversary this month, and unlike many of its counterparts continues to entertain Norman with its performances.

Sooner Theatre has brought a sense of community to Norman, as well as access to plays, musicals, concerts and many more cultural performances. Thanks to the pio-neering efforts of local citizens, the Sooner Theatre is better than ever.

In February 1929, Sooner Theatre was built as a movie theater under the supervision of architect Harold Gimeno. Costing over $200,000 to build, the the-ater boasted imported tile, a ladies’ lounge and other accom-modations. The first film played at Sooner Theater was “Alias Jimmy Valentine,” starring William Haines and Lionel Barrymore.

With advances in the film indus-try came the close of the Sooner Theatre as a cinema. Not able to compete with larger theaters and multiplexes, the theater closed its doors in 1975. For a short while, the fate of the theater seemed

doomed. After 46years as a movie theater, it was unlikely the Sooner Theatre would open again.

Fortunately, a group of Norman citizens recognized the Sooner Theater as a vital piece of Norman’s history. This devoted group fought to keep the theater open.

It was purchased by the City of Norman and leased back to the group as Sooner Theatre, Inc., at the rate of one dollar per year.

By 1982, Sooner Theatre had been restored and was reopened as a community performing arts center. It was registered nationally and state-wide as a historic site.

Today, Sooner Theatre is busy keeping up with the entertainment needs of the city of Norman. Lisa O’Donnell, theater house opera-tions manager, said there is some-thing for everyone inside the his-toric building.

“Sooner Theatre provides a vari-ety of professional quality enter-tainment for all ages, whether it be concerts, plays, musicals and much more. We even have a wed-ding being held here next month,” O’Donnell said.

Shane Pruitt, microbiology soph-omore, was involved in two pro-

ductions last year, “Little Orphan Annie” and “Scrooge,” a musi-cal based on the classic Charles Dickens novel, “A Christmas Carol.” Pruitt commends the high-caliber atmosphere and the talent of everyone involved.

“I meet all sorts of people that I wouldn’t normally meet, we are all just in our own world, and people from the community, whether they are doctors, lawyers, what have you, all come together to put on a great show,” Pruitt said.

Besides meeting new people, Pruitt adds, “It gave me a hobby.”

In the summer of 2003, Sooner Theatre opened a musical theater camp for kids, and after several summers of phenomenal growth, “The Studio of Sooner Theatre” began offering year-round classes. Children and young adults are now able to take classes in acting, dance, set design, production and more from a staff of trained actors and working professionals.

After six years, “The Studio” con-tinues to develop and O’Donnell said they offer classes for about 200 kids of all ages, ranging from preschool through high school.

Both the show troupe and

ensemble groups –classes in the performing arts – often perform at civic events and local schools. The musical theater camp is still offered in the summer, and at the close of the season the campers put on a production for the pub-lic.

O’Donnell, who has worked for the theater since September says that the upcoming Blue Note Records show is attracting a huge amount of attention.

“We are getting ticket orders form Kansas and Texas, as well as the Tulsa area,” O’Donnell said.

Upcoming performances include Blue Note Records 70th Anniversary Tour on March 18. This tribute to legendary Blue Note Records features the music of John Coltrane, Thelonious Monk and Miles Davis.

In May, Sooner Theatre will debut “Jekyll and Hyde,” a musi-cal based on the classic by Robert Louis Stevenson.

For more information on the Sooner Theatre, visit www.soon-ertheatre.com.

Sooner Theatre still going strong at 80101 E Main St.

Phone: 321-4387

Log on to:

www.soonertheatre.com

SOONER THEATRE

Merrill Jones/The Daily

The Sooner Theatre, which has been operating since 1929, is celebrating its 80th anniversary this year. The theater has recently under-gone renovations, converting it from a movie theater into a performing arts center.

Friday, Feb. 20, 2009

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) -- When you allow your feelings to control your thinking, your judgment can be impaired. There is a strong chance you will ignore those who warrant attention and cater to the undeserving.

ARIES (March 21-April 19) -- The only way you can achieve something important that has been out of reach is to become more assertive. It’ll take strong motivation on your part to boldly go where you need to go.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -- If you attempt to do something coy, regardless of how harmless you think it might be, it may be interpreted as deceitful. Keep all your dealings out in the open.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -- It’s not like you to be unduly sensitive over a minor issue, yet if you expect more from a loved one than he or she can deliver, you might get bent out of shape. Don’t overreact.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) -- Be careful that you don’t inadvertently take all the credit for something others had a hand in bringing about, even a small one. Leave lots of room on center stage for others to take some bows, too.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -- You could mistakenly delegate a critical assignment to someone who has questionable abilities just because the person says he or she can do it. This individual’s standards will produce the result, not yours.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- Trespassing down forbidden paths with regard to a romantic entanglement will cause not only a headache but a great deal of heartache for all parties involved.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) -- In order to placate another, you might agree to do something you know is wrong. It would be easier to say “no” in the fi rst place than it will be to get out of the trouble you cause.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -- Unless you are strongly motivated to accomplish something big, your industriousness could be at low ebb. Don’t undertake anything unless your heart is in it.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -- You can go either way when it comes to handling your fi nances. You could either get great mileage out of your dollars or spend them wildly. Watch out, because the latter may be true.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- If your heart isn’t in the job at hand, you might be lax about how you handle things, expecting others to fi ll in the gaps you leave behind. Sadly, they won’t, and you’ll have to do things all over again.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -- Every once in a while, you allow emotions to control your thinking, and this could be one of those times. If your feelings trump good judgment, you will make a very poor decision.

HOROSCOPE By Bernice Bede Osol

Copyright 2008, Newspaper Enterprise Assn.

3MonthsFreeRent.me

Accommodations on the basis of disability are available by contacting Sifat Kalam at 405.412.3557

Date: 21st February 2009Cultural Show:Meacham Auditorium,Oklahoma Memorial Union, 2nd FLOOR900 Asp Avenue, Norman, OK 73019Time: 6:30 PM

Dinner will be served after cultural show at: Old town hall, 102 W Eufaula St.Norman, OK 73069

Free entrance and free dinner for OU Students, Faculty and Staff

We are thankful to our OU sponsors: Printing Funded

Life & ArtsFriday, Feb. 20, 20098

BEERoftheWEEK

This week’s “Beer of the Week” isn’t necessarily one that you can

drink a flat-bed truck full of or one that you have to obtain a special curator’s license from the Smithsonian to experience. It will be a beer that’s more or less readily avail-able and won’t taste like an

evergreen tree as it goes down your throat.

So this week I got my hands on a very rare, vintage bottle of Pabst Blue Ribbon from the establishing

year of 1844. Just kidding. Anyway, this week if you’d like

to try something new in the avenue of overseas beer, I have something that’d be right down your alley.

The beer is Spaten Optimator. This beer isn’t necessarily the cheapest, but it isn’t the most expensive either. The strong fla-vor hits you like a supersonic fist to the mouth. It’s easily one of the most flavorful beers on the market and Spaten’s been brewing this stuff since 1327.

It’s been around that long for a reason.

Give it a try.

– BRAND RACKLEY IS A JOURNALISM SENIOR.

BRANDRACKLEY

Coldstone Creamery216 Johnny Bench Dr, OKC

If you’re looking for a quick sweet fi x, Coldstone Creamery has milkshakes that are quick and easy to eat. Not to mention scrump-tious.

For a long-lasting treat, go for the waffl e cones. You can get several kinds of wacky fl avors such as birthday cake, peppermint and bubblegum.

If you are adventurous, you may want to try something diff er-ent, like a banana split or sprinkled dip cone, or add some fl air like raspberry cheesecake, strawberries or several types of candy.

For those trying to watch their fi gure, they have non-fat frozen yogurt and fresh-fruit smoothies.

Prices on most items are under $10.

–COLIN HENSON IS A JOURNALISM SOPHOMORE.

“Milk” Focus Features

Gus Van Sant’s Best Picture nominee, “Milk”, stars Sean Penn as Harvey Milk, the fi rst openly gay man to be elected to offi ce in the United States.

The fi lm is based on true events and follows Milk attempting to get elected. It highlights his battle against Proposition 6, a bill that would have allowed employers to fi re any homosexual workers and their supporters.

Penn shines as Milk in a performance that merited an Oscar nomination for Best Actor. He is backed by strong performances from James Franco, Scott Smith and Josh Brolin.

The Oscar nominated fi lm certainly lives up to it’s billing, making you wish there were more movies like it that tell a story and send a clear, vibrant message to the audience.

“Milk” is playing at the OKC Museum of Art and Cinemark Tinseltown USA.

dinner + movie

Are you into political movies and delicious ice cream? Then you’re in luck with this week’s Dinner + Movie.

‘Milk’ and Ice Cream

Tradition aids flavor

(AND SHOW THEM THAT YOU MADE IT.)BE A PART OF OU HISTORY.

SCHEDULE YOUR FREE SENIOR PORTRAIT

Call (405) 325-3668Spring sessions begin Feb. 23

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

100TH

SOONERyearbook