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Tomorrow’s Weather ANYTIME THE UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA’S INDEPENDENT STUDENT VOICE com OU Daily OUDAILY.COM » 57°/85° THURSDAY MAY 7, 2009 WANT BREAKING NEWS ALERTS FROM THE DAILY? SIGN UP ONLINE AND GET BREAKING NEWS IN YOUR E-MAIL BEFORE EVERYONE ELSE. A bill to recognize English as the official language moves on to a statewide vote after passing in the legislature. PAGE 6 news Do you have a Twitter account? Check out which celebrity tweets you sould be getting. PAGE 7 20% © 2009 OU PUBLICATIONS BOARD VOL. 94, NO. 149 FREE — ADDITIONAL COPIES 25¢ Studies suggest that TV characters fill social void CLARK FOY The Oklahoma Daily A collection of studies released by two universities suggests people coping with loneliness might find themselves watching more televi- sion to fulfill their social needs. Psychologists at the University at Buffalo and Miami University in Ohio published their findings in the Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, indicating that televi- sion can provide people with the impression that their social needs are being met with the illusion- ary relationships made with their favorite TV characters and/or per- sonalities. Lisa Frey, director of the OU Counseling Psychology Clinic, said while she is unsure how common this form of coping is, there are students who cling to TV and other technologies in times of depres- sion. “More times we have people come in that say they are using those things to avoid social inter- action or to get their mind off of it,” Frey said, “or because they have had some bad experiences so maybe they aren’t confident in their ability to have social interac- tion or to socialize.” The first survey of 701 under- graduate students had students arrange 31 activities by how likely they would use each activity to cope with loneliness. Watching a favorite program ranked second behind listening to music. The second study surveyed 102 undergraduate students by having the subjects write essays over sev- eral television programs. Subjects who found their social needs met wrote longer in their descriptions of their favorite programs than they did in their descriptions of other programs. One hundred and sixteen under- graduates participated in study three, which showed having a favorite program on a person’s mind reduced negative moods, low self-esteem and feelings of rejec- tion. Lonely people may turn to TV for social fulfillment Highly competitive program offers grants for research WILL HOLLAND The Oklahoma Daily Earlier this month, three recent OU graduates and a current OU student were named recipients of Fulbright Grants for Study and Research Abroad. OU graduates Jordan Lohmeyer, Stephen Terry and Sarah Steece, and Lauren McGough, zoology and interna- tional and area studies senior, received the grants to work or teach abroad after applying for the OU Fulbright program in September, said Karl Rambo, program adviser and assistant professor in the an- thropology department. In 1946, Congress created the Fulbright Grant program to “enable the govern- ment of the United States to increase mu- tual understanding between the people of the United States and the people of other countries,” according to the pro- gram’s Web site. College seniors and recent college graduates around the nation propose project ideas they could work on in for- eign countries to apply for the grants. Rambo said the program has expanded to over 100 countries, and in fall 2007, there were 6,700 applicants nationwide. Of those applicants, about 1,500 received grants to work or teach in another coun- try, he said. In fall 2008, seven OU students ap- plied and four were named as recipients, Rambo said. Another OU applicant was put in an alternate group in case those who received the grants decline to ac- cept them. Rambo said it’s impressive that four OU students were chosen this year. “We did really well compared to typi- cally what happens,” he said. He said once students apply, they do a local interview in their region before their applications are sent to a national center for evaluation. At that point, about two thirds of the applications are weeded out. The remaining applications are then sent abroad, where they are evaluated again. Six of the OU applicants made it past the national review level, Rambo said. Because of the competitive nature of the application process, the program attracts quality students, he said. “Only really the best students typically end up applying,” he said. The locations the OU grant recipients proposed include Germany, Mongolia and New Zealand. Lohmeyer and Steece both proposed OU claims four Fulbright Grant winners JAMES CORNWELL/THE DAILY Oklahoma City Marathon winners and OU graduate students Jordan Kinley, former Oklahoma Daily reporter, and Catherine Odell have found success after their careers as OU runners. Kinley’s time of 2:27.19 was more than 10 minutes faster than the next runner’s time, and Odell’s 3:10.16 was more than five minutes faster than the second female finisher’s time at the OKC Marathon. Check out the full story in SPORTS, Page 9. FINISHING SOONER PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY ELI HULL/THE DAILY A study recently revealed that college students who are lonely revert to music and television most to cope with their loneliness. The internet, video games and other forms of electronic media are also used as substitutes for social interaction. PEOPLE CONTINUES ON PAGE 2 FULBRIGHT CONTINUES ON PAGE 2 “The problem with using tech- nology to meet those [social] needs is we don’t get anything back. You may have the illu- sion you’re getting something back but you really aren’t. You aren’t getting to know some- body better or developing a friendship with somebody else.” — LISA FREY, DIRECTOR OF THE OU COUNSELING PSYCHOLOGY CLINIC

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Page 1: The Oklahoma Daily

Tomorrow’sWeather

Anytime the University of oklAhomA’s independent stUdent voice comOUDaily

oudaily.com »

57°/85°

THURSDAY mAy 7, 2009

Want breaking neWs alerts from The Daily? sign up online and get breaking neWs in your e-mail before everyone else.

A bill to recognize English as the official language moves on to a statewide vote after passing in the legislature.pAge 6

newsDo you have a

Twitter account? Check out which celebrity tweets

you sould be getting.pAge 7

20%

© 2009 OU PUblicatiOns bOard vOl. 94, nO. 149FrEE — additiOnal cOPiEs 25¢

Studies suggest that TV characters fill social void

clArk foyThe Oklahoma Daily

A collection of studies released by two universities suggests people coping with loneliness might find themselves watching more televi-sion to fulfill their social needs.

Psychologists at the University at Buffalo and Miami University in Ohio published their findings in the Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, indicating that televi-sion can provide people with the impression that their social needs are being met with the illusion-ary relationships made with their favorite TV characters and/or per-sonalities.

Lisa Frey, director of the OU Counseling Psychology Clinic, said while she is unsure how common this form of coping is, there are

students who cling to TV and other technologies in times of depres-sion.

“More times we have people come in that say they are using those things to avoid social inter-action or to get their mind off of it,” Frey said, “or because they have had some bad experiences so maybe they aren’t confident in their ability to have social interac-tion or to socialize.”

The first survey of 701 under-graduate students had students arrange 31 activities by how likely they would use each activity to cope with loneliness. Watching a favorite program ranked second behind listening to music.

The second study surveyed 102 undergraduate students by having the subjects write essays over sev-eral television programs. Subjects who found their social needs met wrote longer in their descriptions of their favorite programs than they did in their descriptions of

other programs.One hundred and sixteen under-

graduates participated in study three, which showed having a favorite program on a person’s mind reduced negative moods, low self-esteem and feelings of rejec-tion.

Lonely people may turn to TV for social fulfillment

Highly competitive program offers grants for researchWill hollAndThe Oklahoma Daily

Earlier this month, three recent OU graduates and a current OU student were named recipients of Fulbright Grants for Study and Research Abroad.

O U g ra d u a t e s Jo rd a n L o h m e y e r, Stephen Terry and Sarah Steece, and Lauren McGough, zoology and interna-tional and area studies senior, received the grants to work or teach abroad after

applying for the OU Fulbright program in September, said Karl Rambo, program adviser and assistant professor in the an-thropology department.

In 1946, Congress created the Fulbright Grant program to “enable the govern-ment of the United States to increase mu-tual understanding between the people of the United States and the people of other countries,” according to the pro-gram’s Web site.

College seniors and recent college graduates around the nation propose project ideas they could work on in for-eign countries to apply for the grants. Rambo said the program has expanded

to over 100 countries, and in fall 2007, there were 6,700 applicants nationwide. Of those applicants, about 1,500 received grants to work or teach in another coun-try, he said.

In fall 2008, seven OU students ap-plied and four were named as recipients, Rambo said. Another OU applicant was put in an alternate group in case those who received the grants decline to ac-cept them.

Rambo said it’s impressive that four OU students were chosen this year.

“We did really well compared to typi-cally what happens,” he said.

He said once students apply, they do

a local interview in their region before their applications are sent to a national center for evaluation. At that point, about two thirds of the applications are weeded out. The remaining applications are then sent abroad, where they are evaluated again.

Six of the OU applicants made it past the national review level, Rambo said. Because of the competitive nature of the application process, the program attracts quality students, he said.

“Only really the best students typically end up applying,” he said.

The locations the OU grant recipients proposed include Germany, Mongolia and New Zealand.

Lohmeyer and Steece both proposed

OU claims four Fulbright Grant winners

JamEs cOrnwEll/thE daily

Oklahoma City Marathon winners and OU graduate students Jordan Kinley, former Oklahoma Daily reporter, and Catherine Odell have found success after their careers as OU runners. Kinley’s time of 2:27.19 was more than 10 minutes faster than the next runner’s time, and Odell’s 3:10.16 was more than five minutes faster than the second female finisher’s time at the OKC Marathon. Check out the full story in SpORTS, page 9.

finishing sooner

PhOtO illUstratiOn by Eli hUll/thE daily

A study recently revealed that college students who are lonely revert to music and television most to cope with their loneliness. The internet, video games and other forms of electronic media are also used as substitutes for social interaction. people CONTINUeS ON pAge 2

FulBright CONTINUeS ON pAge 2

“the problem with using tech-nology to meet those [social] needs is we don’t get anything back. you may have the illu-sion you’re getting something back but you really aren’t. you aren’t getting to know some-body better or developing a friendship with somebody else.”

— lisa FrEy, dirEctOr OF thE OU cOUnsEling PsychOlOgy clinic

Page 2: The Oklahoma Daily

2 Thursday, May 7, 2009

The Daily has a long-standing commitment to serve readers by provid-ing accurate coverage and analysis. Errors are cor-rected as they are identi-fied. Readers should bring errors to the attention of the editorial board for fur-ther investigation.

correction

In Tuesday’s edition, The Daily erroneously reported the date of Mexico’s inde-pendence. The Mexican independence day i s September 16.

our commitment to accuracy

campus briefs

faculty senate measure could make classes more difficult to cancel the Faculty senate will vote monday on a proposed addition to the Faculty handbook that would allow cancelled classes to continue in an alternate for-mat.classes would continue online or profes-sors could schedule make-up classes.the proposition was discussed at a Faculty senate meeting last month with hardly any opposition.the only comment came from Kim milton, physics and astronomy professor.

“isn’t it common sense?” she said.the meeting will be held at 3:30 p.m. in Jacobson Faculty hall.— Jacqueline Clews/The Daily

study abroad director sWitching positionsthe study abroad program will be losing its long-time director next semester.millie audas, director of Education abroad and international student services, will leave her post this summer for a new position working with President david boren as the special assistant to the President for international Partnerships.

University spokesman Jay doyle said audas will continue to work with interna-tional students.“she wil l focus on reviewing and strengthening OU’s reciprocal exchange agreements and international OU alumni association groups, continue working with international student groups on campus and continue working with host families for international students,” doyle said.doyle said audas, who has served at OU for 30 years, has committed to one more year working with President boren.— griffin Shaffer/The Daily

huffman center helps students fight stress during finals Weekthe huston huffman center is aiming to keep students’ stress levels down during finals week and will make its group fit-ness classes free to students next week to help reduce stress.amy davenport, director of the huston huffman center, said free chair mas-sages will also be available to students during finals week. she said students interested in one should contact the center to schedule an appointment.— Kelly Marose/The Daily

ideas to teach in Germany, Terry proposed a proj-ect to compare the communication and monetary policies of the Reserve Bank of New Zealand and the Federal Reserve in the U.S., and McGough proposed a project to document traditional hunt-ing methods in western Mongolia.

Terry, who received a master’s degree in math-ematics from OU in 2007, said in an e-mail he was happy he received the grant, but he plans to decline the grant in favor of enrolling in the eco-nomics Ph.D. program at Stanford University in the fall.

And Steece, who graduated in December with a German and European studies degree, said she was also considering declining the Fulbright Grant to take a assistant teaching position from a different U.S. Fulbright program.

Even thought she might not accept the grant, Steece said she was very happy when she heard

she had received it.“I was extremely excited when I heard that I had

been selected,” she said in an e-mail. “The process of applying is very long and can be quite tedious, so to know that all of the work and months of wait-ing has paid off is very rewarding.”

Steece said she decided to apply after she stud-ied abroad in Austria as an undergraduate student at OU.

“I think the Fulbright program allows students a once in a lifetime opportunity. Much like the study abroad programs at OU, the chance to spend an extended amount of time in a different country is an invaluable experience for anyone seeking to develop their own education,” she said.

Rambo agreed the opportunity is excellent for students because the grant usually pays for 10 months abroad, which includes insurance, travel and a living allowance.

He also said he likes the program because it focuses on giving students international experience.

“I was happy with the results this year, just for the students, and at a larger level for the program,” he said.

FulbrightContinues from page 1

PeopleContinues from page 1

The final study had 222 undergraduates write an essay in 10 minutes about their favorite program. After completing the essay, the participants expressed less feelings of loneliness or social alienation than they had in control experi-ments.

Frey said television is not the only thing that stu-dents sometimes use as substitutes for a social life. Other technologies, like the Internet, video games or a mix of the three, seem to take the same role as television does in the stud-ies.

“The problem with using technology to meet those [social] needs is we don’t get anything back,” Frey said. “You may have the illu-sion you’re getting some-thing back but you really aren’t. You aren’t getting to know somebody better or developing a friendship with somebody else.”

“i was extremely excited when i heard that i had been selected,” she said in an e-mail. “the process of applying is very long and can be quite tedious, so to know that all of the work and months of waiting has paid off is very reward-ing.”

sarah stEEcE, FUlbright grant winnEr

police reports

names are compiled from the norman Police department and OUPd. the reports serve as a record of arrests and citations, not convictions. those listed are innocent until proven guilty.

soliciting Without a permitJacob adler austin, 19, lone Oak drive, mondaydaniel darrell harvey, 27, lone Oak drive, monday

municipal Warrantcody James camp, 19, north Flood avenue, tuesday

John walter cary, 21, 2657 classen blvd., mondayJeffery ray magee, 18, north Flood avenue, tuesday

other WarrantJoseph contreras, 20, 2420 classen blvd., tuesday

possession of a controlled dangerous substanceJoseph craig davney, 22, 4333 willowisp drive, tuesday, also manufacturing and possession of a

controlled dangerous substance with intent to sellbrian K. Ketcher, 23, 4333 willowisp drive, tuesday, also manufacturing and possession of a con-trolled dangerous substance with intent to sell

petty larcenyKelly mitchell Evans, 21, 2300 w. main st., tuesday

interference With official processclint aaron mayes, 22, 203 s. Jones ave., monday, also possession of drug paraphernalia

Come play “ Take $10k to the Bank” today!

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Page 3: The Oklahoma Daily

Professor found success

screenwriting in Europe

before teaching at OU

RICKY MARANONThe Oklahoma Daily

Before Angelina Jolie, “Ocean’s Eleven” and even “Thelma & Louise” were a part of Brad Pitt’s life, there was an OU professor.

Sitting in his third floor office in Old Science Hall, surrounded by classic movie posters and pictures of Hollywood elites, is film and video studies professor Andrew Horton. His career didn’t lead him to the motion picture capitol of the world, but to lesser-known sights for his projects.

“I’ve never been a part of Hollywood,” he said. “I’ve mainly been under contract to do films in Greece, New Zealand and Norway.”

Horton is a screenwriter and author of 21 books on travel and film and video studies.

THE PATH TO PITTHorton’s path to writing films

began during the Vietnam war.“I was opposed to the Vietnam

war, and a fr iend said that I should go over to Greece and teach English,” he said. “The army let me go over and teach English, s a y i n g , ‘ B y t e a c h i n g t h e m English, I was stopping them from becoming communists.’”

He said while he was in Greece, he gained a passion for writing, and began writing screenplays. After a few successful films, he caught the attention of Yugoslav film producer Angelo Aranjelovic for the screenplay he co-wrote, “Dark Side of the Sun.”

While casting the film with Marion Doughtery, who worked on movies like “The Sting” and “Batman,” Horton was asked to make a choice on who would play the lead.

“She gave me the choice of two new actors that have had some small parts on television,”

Horton said. “I had to choose between River Phoenix and Brad Pitt. I thought it was a joke at first because the names sound so funny.”

Horton and his colleagues picked Pitt.

T h e f i l m w a s re l e a s e d i n Yugoslavia in 1989, but before it could be released in other countries, the master print was lost in the Bosnian War and the film’s debut was delayed for eight years.

In 1997, the film was released on home video, but not in movie theaters.

Horton says starring in “Dark Side of the Sun” impacted Pitt

in more ways than just his acting career.

“It’s because of starting off in an international film is why he is involved in international efforts,” he said. “He’s actually seen what other countries are like early on in his career and it’s had an im-pact on him.”

Horton said many people ask him for advice for succeeding in Hollywood.

“ B e a p l u m b e r,” h e s a i d . “Everyone needs their pipes f i x e d , e v e n f a m o u s p e o p l e, and that’s how you make your connections.”

TIME FOR TEACHINGIn 1990, Horton taught English

at Loyola University in New Orleans, and came to OU in 1999 as the first film and video studies professor.

“I came to OU a year late,” he said.

He and his family travelled around the world for a year, which he writes about in his book “Life Without A ZIP Code.”

Ever y summer he goes to Greece, where his career started, and takes a group of students to study film and mythology.

But Horton is not just a fre-quent visitor to Greece.

“My former students bought my wife and I a house on a small Greek island in the Aegean Sea,” he said.

Horton said he also would like to start a summer film institute in Greece for film students.

Professor’s journey leads to Greece and back

PHOTO PROVIDED

During the filming of “Dark Side of the Sun”, film and video studies professor Andrew Horton (left) stands with Brad Pitt (right) and director Bozidar Nikolic (middle) in 1989. “Dark Side of the Sun” was primarily shot in Yugoslavia during the summer of 1988, but was not released until 1997 because footage was lost during the Yugoslavian civil war.

Thursday, May 7, 2009 3

“He’s actually seen what other countries are like early on in his career and it’s had an impact on him.”

ANDREW HORTON, FILM AND VIDEO STUDIES PROFESSOR

Page 4: The Oklahoma Daily

Ray Martin, opinion [email protected] • phone: 325-7630 • fax: 325-6051

COMMENTS OF THE DAY »In response to Wednesday’s Our View about the need to stop encouraging athletes to take the easiest possible road to a degree.

YOU CAN COMMENT ATOUDAILY.COM

Despite most degrees being completely worthless and irrelevant to actual work in the field, the actual piece of paper is the most important part. Unless you intend to go into specialized practices after graduation. It is only impor-tant that you have the piece of paper. Any hiring manager worth their salt will know that

the person behind the paper is most important, and if they are smart, they can be taught nearly any job.

- JACKSONPOLLOCK

4 Thursday, May 7, 2009

Meredith Simons Editor-in-ChiefNijim Dabbour Managing EditorJamie Hughes Assistant Managing EditorMack Burke Night EditorRay Martin Opinion EditorZach Butler Photo Editor

Dane Beavers Senior Online EditorWhitney Bryen Multimedia EditorSteven Jones Sports EditorLuke Atkinson Life & Arts EditorJudy Gibbs Robinson Editorial AdviserR.T. Conwell Advertising Manager

The Oklahoma Daily is a public forum and OU’s independent student voice.The opinion page is produced by a staff of columnists and cartoonists who are independent of The Daily’s news staff. Letters to the editor are welcomed. Letters should concentrate on issues, not personalities, and should be fewer than 250 words, typed and signed. Letters may 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. Submit letters to [email protected] or in person Sunday through Thursday in 160 Copeland Hall.

Guest columns are encouraged. They can be submitted to the opinion editor via e-mail at [email protected]. Comments left on OUDaily.com may be reprinted on the opinion page.’Our View’ is the opinion of majority of the members of The Oklahoma Daily’s editorial board.Editorial Board members are The Daily’s editorial staff. The board meets Sunday through Thursday in 160 Copeland Hall. Columnists’ and cartoonists’ work is representative of their own opinions, not those of the members of The Daily’s Editorial Board.160 Copeland Hall, 860 Van Vleet Oval

Norman, OK 73019-0270 phone:405-325-3666

e-mail:[email protected]

contact us

We are a society of superficial supporters. We like to be en-vironmental advocates, Christians and humanitarians.

We like being defined by these overarching terms, but we don’t like applying them in our lives.

It is popular and easy to define yourself in any of these categories.

However, it seems that our daily actions on these issues might define us as anything but supporters.

We see examples of this superficial sup-port everywhere from campus to Congress. We see it when people’s actions are incon-sistent with their ideals.

We see it in the environmentalist who shops at Wal-Mart, the Christian who votes for the death penalty and the humanitarian who’s never even been to a local charity.

People act hypocritically by making these choices that directly oppose their beliefs.

Consider the environmentalist who minimizes driving, however, this same person buys products manufactured thousands of miles away, made with materials that were transported thousands of additional miles.

These products require massive cargo ships to transfer products around the world. According to the International Maritime Organization, cargo ships pollute the air far worse than automobiles.

The 15 largest ships in the world emit approximately the same amount of pollution as 760 million automobiles.

If your goal is to pollute the planet, buying international goods is better than driving a Hummer.

The focus of environmental advocates seems to be on dif-ferent issues. Issues not tied to our lifestyles.

This focus lets people keep thinking of themselves as envi-ronmentalists while they continue making environmentally damaging choices. Convenient.

In Congress, we regularly see Christian politicians advo-cate the death penalty.

This punishment leaves no avenue for rehabilitating the individual, thus no possibility of forgiveness.

This mentality is fundamentally antithetical to the Christian ethics of charity and forgiveness, teaching people to turn the other cheek and stand up for our beliefs peacefully, to forgive our neighbor’s trespasses, not smite them down for their sins.

Also, consider the humanitarians across campus that wish to alleviate world poverty; Africa and Palestine seem to be the most popular places to save right now.

We see so much international support and charity, but few will give their time to Food and Shelter for Friends or another local charity that helps the local poor.

I understand saving exotic children is sexy and good for the world, but there is poverty here, too.

There are hungry children here, too.If you want to save those distant children, why not dedicate

some time to helping someone who’s closer?It’s more convenient – no crossing oceans or endanger-

ing your life, it’s close, it’s easy and there is definitely a need. Perhaps we don’t do it because it’s pragmatic.

It’s not sexy to do things here, and besides, we might actual-ly change our lives without having to pay exorbitant amounts of money for the experience.

We espouse great ideals, but we need to work on living up to them.

Max Avery is a political science senior.

Two weeks ago, Gov. Brad Henry vetoed a bill that would have banned embryonic stem cell research. The Oklahoma Legislature has since failed to override the veto. However, the fight is not over, the battle over the sacredness of the seeds of human life continues. Each side purports that they are the most pro-life, the most compassionate and the most humane. It is essential to understand that right now the ban is not on adult stem cells, which has been researched extensively and has progressed quite far with far less controversy. Surely, I do not need to belabor that point; I am opposing embryonic stem cell research here.

Supporters of embryonic stem cell re-search claim that since the cells are pluripo-tent, meaning they can specialize into any type of body cells, their versatility will make it possible to repair and regenerate diseased and damaged tissues.

Thus, you hear the possibility of curing paralysis, Alzheimer’s disease, diabetes

and various cancers, among other diseases. Even though current research has not pro-duced any results, there is no denying the possibility.

That is not the problem, rather, the prob-lem is that these cells come from a five-day-old embryo. An egg, one among many taken from a woman, and a sperm taken from a man, has been joined and human life was begotten.

Everything needed to develop and be human is in that first human zygote and blas-tocyst. I believe that life begins at conception and science does not disprove this.

Trying to define it at any other point be-comes a slippery slope. How can it not be a live human in the womb and then suddenly become one outside of it? Is it any less human because a scientist has artificially recreated conception in a laboratory? This is why many find embryonic stem cell research problem-atic; it destroys the embryo once the cells are removed. It destroys a human being.

Supporters of the research also argue that leftover embryos from in vitro fertiliza-tion used by fertility clinics should be used because the embryos would be discarded and wasted anyway. I find this problematic

in two ways: it presumes in vitro is a morally licit procedure, and it presumes humans are only as good as their usefulness to society.

In vitro fertilization is problematic primar-ily because it creates life outside the natural marriage act; it separates the loving act of a husband and wife from their future children with a laboratory and a scientist.

While many infertile couples may long to have children, they are not a right or a prod-uct to be had on demand.

Also, the procedures create extra embry-os for the sake of having one survive. Thus, these hundreds and thousands of embryos are left unwanted and frozen.

Though they should never have been cre-ated in the first place, they are quite human, so they should be thawed and let to die in peace or perhaps adopted.

If these embryos are only as good as their usefulness in research, then what about the mentally ill and the severely handicapped, some of whom can never make a living, or work a job or be useful in any measure of so-ciety? Should they be experimented on and let to die? Do we experiment on capitally condemned prisoners, knowing that they are about to die?

We should not treat the origins of human existence so cavalierly, regardless of when one believes life begins. Bald eagle eggs are protected, because they hold a young eagle. Should not human life be more protected and sacred than any eagle or other endan-gered species? Only if you believe humans are a blight on the planet. But then if humans are a blight on the planet, why fight so hard for research you think will potentially cure their diseases?

There is potential and results in adult stem cells, as I have noted above, and they should continue to be studied as they have been. Science must have moral bounds, or it will become insensitive to the human soul as it tries to save the human body and exploit it at the same time.

It is a grave contradiction to kill life in the name of saving it. Closing the door on em-bryonic stem cell research is not so much an undue limit on science, but rather a call to creativity in achieving the same results using means that do not exploit human embryos, women or any person.

Sarah Rosencrans, zoology and biomedical science junior

STAFF COLUMN

STAFF COLUMNOUR VIEW

STAFF CARTOON

MAXAVERY

SARAHROSENCRANS

Embryonic stem cell fight is far from over

We aren’t living upto our own ideals

Ian Jehn - civil engineering junior

LANGUAGE VOTE IMPORTANTOklahoma voters next year will have

the chance to take a stance on whether English should be the state’s official language. College students should seize the opportunity to make their voices heard.

Wednesday, the state House passed a measure to put a question on the 2010 ballot asking voters whether they believe English should be Oklahoma’s official language.

Making English the official language would require all state business to be conducted in English. It would also prohibit individuals from suing the state for failing to provide services in other languages.

The bill contains measures to protect the use of American Indian languages on reservations or for educational pur-poses.

Supporters of the proposal say it will cut costs because the state will no longer be required to print forms and provide services in other languages, but opponents say the bill will send an anti-immigrant message.

This represents an opportunity for students to not only express their Constitutional rights, but investigate an issue and take a well-reasoned stance on it.

Before you head to the polls next November, ask yourself these questions

about the measure: If you support it, can you articulate the reasons for your support? What about the possibility that it could make Oklahoma seem hostile toward non-English speakers?

If you’re against it, could you explain your reasoning to a proponent of the measure? What about the fact that it could improve the state’s efficiency and save money?

This is the sort of statewide issue that is too important to be decided by unfounded assumptions or initial impressions.

You have until November 2010 to decide what you believe about this topic and why. Use that time well.

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

IT EXPERIENCE EXCELLENTThere are a lot of complaints about the student services

here on campus - I’ve made some of them myself. Some of them are justified. I, personally, haven’t always been to-tally fair in my expectations; I’ve often wanted more than I could reasonably expect from the people who work here. For that, I am sorry, but I am pleased to say that my recent experience with the OU IT Store exceeded even my own, sometimes exacting, standards.

Good customer service is hard enough to come by as is, but I’ve worked in the tech industry, and I can tell you that good service is far more vital when you’re deal-ing with products that your customers don’t always fully

understand. When I recently had a problem with a transaction taken

through the IT Store (a problem that arose, as it turns out, through nobody’s fault - just one of those things), Annette, the manager, and David Goodspeed were right on it.

They resolved my issue promptly and with an eye to-ward making sure I was not only satisfied, but fully in-formed of the steps that were being taken to make it right. My experience with them was a model of excellent service. I will be doing as much of my tech purchasing as possible through the IT Store in the future. I can’t recommend them highly enough.

- Landon W. Schurtz, department of philosophy

Page 5: The Oklahoma Daily

Thursday, May 7, 2009 5

Lack of information from

Mexican authorities

makes it diffi cult for U.S

offi cials to trace guns

E. EDUARDO CASTILLOAssociated Press

MEXICO CITY — Deep inside a heavily guarded military ware-house, the evidence of Mexico’s war on drug cartels is stacked two stories high: tens of thousands of seized weapons, from handguns and rifles to AK-47s, some with gun sights carved into the shape of a rooster or a horse’s head.

The vault nestled in a Mexican military base is the government’s largest stash of weapons — some 88,537 of them — seized from brutal drug gangs. The Associated Press was recently given rare and exclusive access to the secure facility.

The sheer size of the cache at-tests to the seemingly hopeless task of ever sorting and tracing the guns, possibly to trafficking rings that deliver weapons to Mexico. And security designed to keep the guns from getting back on the streets is so tight that even investigators have trouble getting the access they need.

The warehouse — on a main drag in northeastern Mexico City near the horse racing track

— is surrounded by five rings of security. There are two military guards at the door and five more are in the lobby. Inside, another 10 soldiers sort, clean and catalog weapons. Some are dismantled and destroyed, a few assigned to the Mexican military.

The guns are stacked to the two-story ceiling in a warehouse the size of a small Wal-Mart. The

rifles lie on 22 metal racks; the pistols hang from metal poles by their triggers.

The cavernous warehouse is impeccably clean, the only smell coming from the coffee the soldiers prepared for their rare visitors. The clash of metal and sounds of the soldiers at work echo off the walls.

The security, bolstered by

closed-circuit cameras and motion detectors, makes the warehouse practically impen-etrable, said Gen. Antonio Erasto Monsivais, who oversees the armory.

In all, the military has 305,424 confiscated weapons locked in vaults, just a fraction of those used by criminals in Mexico, where an of fensive by dr ug

cartels against the military has killed more than 10,750 people since December 2006. But each weapon is a clue to how the car-tels are getting arms, and possi-bly to the traffickers that brought them here.

The U.S. has acknowledged that many of the rifles, handguns and ammunition used by the car-tels come from its side of the bor-der. Mexican gun laws are strict, especially compared to those in most U.S. border states.

The Mexican government has handed over information to U.S. authorities to trace 12,073 weap-ons seized in 2008 crimes — par-ticularly on guns from large sei-zures or notorious crimes.

But the Bureau of Alcohol, T o b a c c o , F i r e a r m s a n d Explosives, which handles the U.S. investigations, is at the mercy of local Mexican police for the amount and quality of the information.

“Many of these rural munici-palities that may come into a gun seizure ... may not even know anything about tracing guns,” ATF spokesman Thomas Mangan said.

A police officer in Mexico sub-mits a description, serial num-ber and distinctive markings of the gun. The weapons are then turned over to the military for storage in one of a dozen armor-ies such as the one in Mexico City.

MEXICO’S WEAPONS CACHE STYMIES TRACING

Pageant delivers Islamic message, judges

contestants on level of respect for parents

DONNA ABU-NASRAssociated Press

RIYADH, Saudi Arabia — Sukaina al-Zayer is an unlikely beau-ty queen hopeful. She covers her face and body in black robes and an Islamic veil, so no one can tell what she looks like. She also admits she’s a little on the plump side.

But at Saudi Arabia’s only beauty pageant, the judges don’t care about a perfect figure or face. What they’re looking for in the quest for “Miss Beautiful Morals” is the contestant who shows the most devotion and respect for her parents.

“The idea of the pageant is to measure the contestants’ commitment to Islamic morals... It’s an alternative to the calls for decadence in the other beauty contests that only take into account a woman’s body and looks,” said pageant founder Khadra al-Mubarak.

“The winner won’t necessarily be pretty,” she added. “We care about the beauty of the soul and the morals.”

So after the pageant opens Saturday, the nearly 200 con-testants will spend the next 10 weeks attending classes and being quizzed on themes including “Discovering your inner strength,” ‘’The making of leaders” and “Mom, paradise is at your feet” — a saying attributed to Islam’s Prophet Muhammad to underline that respect for parents is among the faith’s most important tenets.

Pageant hopefuls will also spend a day at a country house with their mothers, where they will be observed by female judges and graded on how they interact with their mothers, al-Mubarak said. Since the pageant is not televised and no men are involved, contestants can take off the veils and black figure-hiding abayas they always wear in public.

The Miss Beautiful Morals pageant is the latest example of conservative Muslims co-opting Western-style formats to spread their message in the face of the onslaught of foreign in-fluences flooding the region through the Internet and satellite television.

A newly created Islamic music channel owned by an Egyptian businessman aired an “American Idol”-style contest for religious-themed singers this month. And several Muslim preachers have become talk-show celebrities by adopting an informal, almost Oprah-like television style, in contrast to the solemn clerics who traditionally appear in the media.

Now in its second year, the number of pageant contestants has nearly tripled from the 75 women who participated in 2008. The pageant is open to women between 15 and 25. The win-ner and two runners up will be announced in July, with the queen taking home $2,600 and other prizes. The runners up get $1,300 each.

Last year’s winner, Zahra al-Shurafa, said the contest gives an incentive to young women and teens to show more consid-eration toward their parents.

“I tell this year’s contestants that winning is not important,” said al-Shurafa, a 21-year-old English major. “What is impor-tant is obeying your parents.”

There are few beauty pageants in the largely conservative Arab world. The most dazzling is in Lebanon, the region’s most liberal country, where contestants appear on TV in one-piece swimsuits and glamorous evening gowns and answer ques-tions that test their confidence and general knowledge.

There are no such displays in ultra-strict Saudi Arabia, where until Miss Beautiful Morals was inaugurated last year, the only pageants were for goats, sheep, camels and other animals, aimed at encouraging livestock breeding.

This year’s event kicks off Saturday in the mainly Shiite Muslim town of Safwa, and mostly draws local Shiite contes-tants. But it’s open to anyone — and this year, 15 Sunni Muslims are participating, al-Mubarak said. “This is a beautiful thing,” she added.

Here she comes: Saudi’s Miss Beautiful Morals

Hazing?Not on our campus.

Report incidents at:

325-5000All calls are anonymous.

The University of Oklahoma is an Equal Opportunity Institution.

Defiance R Duplicity PG1312:35 4:05 7:00 9:40 12:40 4:10 7:05 9:35

Taken PG13 Paul Blart Mall Cop PG12:55 2:55 4:55 7:30 9:30 12:50 2:50 4:50 7:25 9:25

Last House on the Left R 7:10 9:15 He's Just Not That Into You PG13 12:30 4:00

Confessions of a Shopaholic PG 12:45 2:45 4:45 Gran Torino R 7:15 9:45

$1.00 All Shows after 6pm Before 6pm

All Shows

ROBINSON CROSSING 6I-35 & Robinson Crossing 447-1005

For a limited time only!

On behalf of the Joe C. and Carole Kerr McClendon Honors College, Dean Robert Con Davis-Undiano, Associate Dean Randy Lewis, and Melanie Wright, Director of Honors Curriculum, wish to acknowledge the accomplishments of the following students who won or were named fi nalists for nationally competitive scholarships in 2008-2009. We congratulate them on their outstanding achievements.

Erica BrownGoldwater Scholar

Matthew GressTruman Scholar

Elizabeth (Elise) KnowltonGoldwater Honorable Mention

Jordan LohmeyerFulbright Scholar

Lauren McGoughFulbright Scholar

Aminta OssomRotary Scholar

Marshall Scholar Finalist

Daniel ReckTruman Scholar Finalist

Sarah Steece Fulbright Scholar

Stephen TerryFulbright Scholar

Rhodes Scholar Finalist

Katie Morgan WoodwardLuce Scholar Finalist

EDUARDO VERDUGO/AP PHOTO

In this April 24 photo, seized hand guns sit in racks in a seized weapons warehouse at the Secretary of the Defense headquarters in Mexico City. In all, the military has 305,424 confiscated weapons locked in vaults, just a fraction of those used by criminals in Mexico, where an offensive by drug cartels against the military has killed more than 10,750 people since December 2006.

Page 6: The Oklahoma Daily

State would be 31st to offi cialize English

TIM TALLEYAssociated Press

OKLAHOMA CITY — The Oklahoma House gave final pas-sage Wednesday to legislation that asks voters if they want English to be the state’s official language, ending weeks of dialogue over the divisive issue that opponents said is aimed at Hispanic immigrants.

Without debate, House members passed the Senate-passed measure 89-8. It now goes to a statewide ballot where voters will decide the issue in 2010.

A recent poll conducted by SoonerPoll.com for the Tulsa World found that 86 percent of Oklahomans support mak-ing English the official language of state government. Thirty other states have already adopted official English laws, as have more than 50 nations around the globe.

Meanwhile, U.S. Sen. Jim Inhofe on Wednesday

introduced the National Language Act of 2009, legislation similar to Oklahoma’s proposal that would make English the national language of the U.S. government.

It says no one is entitled to receive federal documents and services in languages other than English unless required by law.

“By establishing that there is no entitlement to receive documents or services in languages other than English, we set the precedent that English is common to us all in the pub-lic forum of government,” said Inhofe, R-Okla.

The author of Oklahoma’s official English bill, Rep. Randy Terrill, R-Moore, said it recognizes English as Oklahoma’s common and unifying language and declares that all official actions of the state must be conducted in English. It also bars individuals from suing the state to have services provided in languages other than English.

“As our common language, English and the ‘melting pot’ process it makes possible has made the United States the most successful multiethnic nation in history,” said Terrill,

author of the 2007 measure that targeted illegal immigrants, House Bill 1804.

“Our government should encourage immigrants to assim-ilate so they can pursue the American dream, and this leg-islation encourages that process,” said Rep. George Faught, R-Muskogee, co-author of the bill. “We need to encourage legal immigrants to join mainstream American society and not live in linguistic isolation.”

Under the legislation, private individuals and businesses will still be allowed to use whatever language they choose. Only official government business would be affected.

The bill also contains provisions to protect the “use, study, development, or encouragement” of any American Indian language, including the languages of Oklahoma’s 39 feder-ally recognized tribes.

But tribal leaders have been among the measure’s most outspoken opponents as the bill and similar measures have been considered by Oklahoma lawmakers.—AP

Oklahoma voters to decide English as offi cial language

Students credit hurricane for

strengthening character, bond

KEVIN MCGILLAssociated Press

NEW ORLEANS — In the months after Hurricane Katrina swamped the University of New Orleans campus in August 2005, the basketball team practiced at a school six hours away in Texas and played almost its entire season on the road, winning just three games.

Some team members quit, but for those who stuck it out, “it made us closer,” said Jada Frazier, who was a freshman from Albany, Ga.

“I strongly believe that sometimes you have to go through some hardships and changes in order to become a stronger per-son,” she said. “And I don’t think I could have gone anywhere else and become the person that I am today.”

Frazier is a member of the Class of Katrina — the graduating college seniors who were brand-new freshmen when the hurricane plunged New Orleans into anarchy and ruin four years ago.

While many of their classmates left and never came back, they returned, whether out of loyalty to their school or affection for the city. And for some of them, it was a life-changing experience.

Tulane University student Denali Lander, an English major from Boulder, Colo., helped

start a nonprofit relief effort called the NOLA Fund. Originally a source of aid for families displaced by the storm, it evolved into a pro-gram providing students at a New Orleans public school with technology training and free laptops.

“I’ve always been a civic-minded person, I like to think. But certainly the hurricane kind of put that at the forefront of my inter-est,” Lander said.

Many of New Orleans’ freshmen had barely unpacked and decorated their dorm rooms when the city was ordered evacuated because the levees broke. Administrators returned weeks later to find major damage at Dillard University, Xavier University, the University of New Orleans and Southern University at New Orleans. Tulane and Loyola universities fared better.

Other colleges around the country took in New Orleans’ students for a semester before classes finally resumed in the city in January 2006 — in trailers at some of the flooded campuses or, in the case of Dillard, at a hotel. It was a dreary, depressing experience.

An international business and Spanish major, Ashlee Yates of Memphis, Tenn., re-called a Dillard gym piled ceiling-high with the belongings of students who wouldn’t be coming back for them. Her dorm room had flooded, and she had lost everything.

“The morale became really, really low after the hurricane,” Yates said. “A lot of students that came in with me aren’t here anymore.”

Jazmine Boutte, a student at Dillard, didn’t just lose what she had on campus; her family

in New Orleans lost their home to flooding. It was, she said, a shock to her then-materialis-tic soul when she wound up in Houston with no extra clothes, dependent on the kindness of strangers.

“I’ve really changed from how I was. I would never want Wal-Mart clothes and things like that, and that’s what I had to re-sort to right after we evacuated,” Boutte said. “I just never thought I would have to have people giving me things when I used to be the one giving all the time.”

When she returned to New Orleans, Boutte helped paint and clean damaged

property, tutored schoolchildren and participated in the building of a Habitat for Humanity house. She also took part in a 2006 rally to encourage displaced residents to vote — the kind of civic-minded activity she said she never would have participated in before.

“I was kind of materialistic before Katrina. I’ve really learned not to take anything for granted,” she said. “My whole views on having this and having that have really changed.”

— AP

‘Class of Katrina’ graduating, 4 years after storm

BILL HABER/AP PHOTO

Denali Lander, a Boulder, Colo., native and Tulane University senior, talks to students Monday in a New Orleans charter school in New Orleans. Lander is taking part in a nonprofit program she directs that provides computers and computer training to students.

6 Thursday, May 7, 2009

Saturday, May 9

Student Success Series: Health/Nutrition | 3:30 p.m. in Wagner Hall, Room 245. Presented by University College.

Astronomy Lecture Series: Black Holes | 7-8 p.m. at the Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History. Lecture presented by Dr. Karen Leighly, OU Physics. The International Year of Astronomy lecture series is sponsored by The University of Oklahoma’s Homer L. Dodge Department of Physics and Astronomy, Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History, Norman Public Schools, OKC Astronomy Club Odyssey Astronomy Club and Ten Acre Observatory.

University Theatre Presents: A Midsummer Night’s Dream | 8 p.m. in the Rupel Jones Theatre. Guest Director Joel Ferrell adapts Shakespeare’s fantasy to New York City, in an edgy, exotic fantasy romp. It’s a modern twist of magical mishaps, strange dreams and the foolish path of romance (Rated PG-13). For tickets call the OU Fine Arts Box Offi ce at (405) 325-4101. Gathering Fragments: Edward S. Curtis in Oklahoma | In summer 1926, toward the end of a long and distinguished career, photographer Edward S. Curtis and an assistant traveled to Oklahoma to conduct fi eldwork for Curtis’ multivolume masterwork, The North American Indian. Curtis included more than 100 images of Oklahoma tribes in a subsequent volume and portfolio published in 1930. These fragmentary and often romantic images are the focus of this exhibition. Exhibit will be on display at the Fred Jones Jr. Museum of art through May 17, 2009.

One Hundred Summers: A Kiowa Calendar Record | A special exhibition featuring the art of renowned Kiowa artist Silver Horn on display now through August 23, 2009 at the Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History. This exhibit is made possible by the Kirkpatrick Foundation and the Merkel Family Foundation.

THIS WEEKEND AT YOUR UNIVERSITY

Friday., May 8

T hursday, May 7

OU Track: Sooner Twilight | all day at the track and fi eld complex. Visit http://soonersports.com for ticket information.

University Theatre Presents: A Midsummer Night’s Dream | 8 p.m. in the Rupel Jones Theatre. Guest Director Joel Ferrell adapts Shakespeare’s fantasy to New York City, in an edgy, exotic fantasy romp. It’s a modern twist of magical mishaps, strange dreams and the foolish path of romance (Rated PG-13). For tickets call the OU Fine Arts Box Offi ce at (405) 325-4101.

This University in compliance with all applicable federal and state laws and regulations does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, sex, age, religion, disability, political beliefs, or status as a veteran in any of its policies, practices or procedures. This includes but is not limited to admissions, employment, fi nancial aid and

educational services. For accommodations on the basis of disability, please contact the sponsoring department of any program or event.

Sunday, May 10Free Museum Admission for Moms | 1-5 p.m. at the Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History.

University Theatre Presents: A Midsummer Night’s Dream | 3 p.m. in the Rupel Jones Theatre. Guest Director Joel Ferrell adapts Shakespeare’s fantasy to New York City, in an edgy, exotic fantasy romp. It’s a modern twist of magical mishaps, strange dreams and the foolish path of romance (Rated PG-13). For tickets call the OU Fine Arts Box Offi ce at (405) 325-4101.

University Theatre Presents: A Midsummer Night’s Dream | 8 p.m. in the Rupel Jones Theatre. Guest Director Joel Ferrell adapts Shakespeare’s fantasy to New York City, in an edgy, exotic fantasy romp. It’s a modern twist of magical mishaps, strange dreams and the foolish path of romance (Rated PG-13). For tickets call the OU Fine Arts Box Offi ce at (405) 325-4101.

Late Night Snacks | 9:30 p.m. in Meacham Auditorium Lobby, Oklahoma Memorial Union. Get some FREE snacks courtesy of the Union Programming Board before the 10 p.m. showing of “Fan Boys.” Who Loves You, OU? Visit www.ou.edu/upb for more information and events.

Free Film: “Fan Boys” | 4, 7 10 p.m. & midnight in Meacham Auditorium, Oklahoma Memorial Union. Presented by the Union Programming Board and the Campus Activities Council Film Series.

Page 7: The Oklahoma Daily

On behalf of the Joe C. and Carole Kerr McClendon Honors College, Dean Robert Con Davis-Undiano, Associate Dean Randy Lewis and Melanie Wright, Director of Honors Curriculum, wish to thank the following for their help serving on national scholarship selection committees, practice interview panels, scholarship information meetings, and as chairs for Student Research and Performance Day during 2008-2009. We also thank the countless professors who assist our students with their Honors thesis and those who sponsor students in the Research Assistantship Program and the Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program. We appreciate your dedication to our students.

THANK YOU!

M. Cengiz Altan, Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering

Marcia Chatelain, Honors College

Frank Coulter, Norman Rotary Club

Anne K. Dunn, Botany/Microbiology

Julia Ehrhardt, Honors College

Max Forester, Mathematics

Dylan Herrick, Modern Languages, Literatures, and Linguistics

Mariëlle Hoefnagels, Botany/Microbiology

Lex Holmes, Economics

Trina Hope, Sociology

Penny Hopkins, Zoology

Robert Houser, Jr., Chemistry/Biochemistry

Chris Howard, Honors College

Brian Johnson, Honors College

Charles Kenney, Political Science

Rosemary Knapp, Zoology

Edith Marsh-Matthews, Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History

Amanda Minks, Honors College

Paul Minnis, Anthropology

Aparna Mitra, Economics

Carolyn Morgan, Honors College

Robert Nairn, Civil Engineering and Environmental Science

Samuel Osisanya, Petroleum and Geological Engineering

Karl Rambo, Anthropology

George Richter-Addo, Chemistry/Biochemistry

Stewart Ryan, Physics and Astronomy

Kim Saylor, Honors College

Jerry Straka, Meteorology

James N. Thompson, Jr., Zoology

Krishnaiya Thulasiraman, Computer Science

Eleanor Weinel, Architecture

Justin Wert, Political Science

7 Thursday, May 7, 2009

Luke Atkinson, L&A [email protected] • phone: 325-5189 • fax: 325-6051

SHAQ If Shaq is trying to prove Katt Williams’ characterization of

him as a dumb, bumbling goofball wrong, he isn’t showing it with his Twitter feed.

With frequent updates and photos of himself doing mun-dane things – Shaq at the gym, Shaq at work (he’s a cop now?), Shaq petting a puppy – he sets himself up to be endlessly en-tertaining in a David Letterman’s “Stupid Human Tricks” kind of way.

Frequently in all caps, Shaq’s uplifting words of advice range from, “Just got dat underwater ipod adaption device jammy so I can hear music unda water, I b aqua jammin, Waaaa Waaa Shaq-mu The quilla,” or, my personal favorite, an early morning post, “I’M UP EARLY TO TWIT WITH OPRAH.”

Priceless.

JOHN MAYER I’ve heard that pop musician John Mayer was funny. And

after following him for a while on Twitter, I tend to agree. He’s a pretty hilarious guy who loves to update on his Twitter in a self-deprecating, “Hey, I’m doing it ironically” kind of way.

His most recent tweet reads, “Last night we ended up in Reno to pay a visit to a man who said he owned C3PO. Why do I get myself in these predicaments?” Oh, John, you’re such a rebel! If only I could get myself into these situations with you!

Or how about the May 2nd post: “Man, if you leave Life ce-real and milk in a bowl for 90 seconds, you have a bowl of giant spongy mass. No more milk and 8 inch squares.” Ah, to ponder the mind of a genius. A really wealthy, bored genius.

YOULOOKGREAT The user who goes by the name YouLookGreat, is perhaps

my favorite person on Twitter to follow, if only for his bio-graphic information which reads, “Your daily passive aggres-sive affirmation.” This man speaks my language, and I feel like he speaks to me on many levels. For instance, take his May 1 tweet: “Things are never as bad as they could be, but they’re usually worse than you think.” Or, take his April 29th tweet: “Everybody knows you are doing the best you can: they’re just

not impressed.” YouLookGreat shows me that there are, in fact, people out

there who share the same disdain and lack of hope for human-ity, and furthermore, it’s OK to share it with the world. Thank you, YouLookGreat.

SHIA LABEOUF In case you were wondering where you could find all those

photos paparazzi take of Shia LaBeouf, look no further than his own Twitter page, where he shamelessly posts candid photos taken of himself in public.

“Spotted with his Mamma. Oh S***!” reads one post, with a link to a picture of himself posted to a celebrity Web site. This guy loves being famous, and encourages people to take part in his fame. Or perhaps his April 20 tweet to famed celebrity blog-ger Perez Hilton, asking simply “Would you?” implying both something grotesquely sexual and pompously disgusting.

Actors are interesting people. The more I’ve been follow-ing them on Twitter these days, the more glad I am that I’m not raking in millions of dollars and adored by everybody. Well, almost.

You can follow The Daily on Twitter by following OUDaily.

The micro-blogging site offers chance to follow Hollywood’s biggest names

Of all the time wasting, soul-sucking Web sites, Twitter has emerged from the social networking shadows to become one of the most popular, and ad-

dictive, of them all, promising if any-thing to make it to a creepy episode of VH1’s “Remember the 2000s?” in the very near future.

Twitter operates with the simple premise of “what are you doing?” in which users can post micro-blogs in the form of “tweets” in 140 charac-ters or less. And while excessively annoying, Twitter is getting increas-ingly celebrated by nearly every-body– CNN, my sister, even Shaq. Even I have one.

But one of the most interesting things to develop from Twitter isn’t the proliferation of information to the masses at an almost instantaneous speed.

No, the best thing about Twitter is the acceptance and large-scale usage by celebrities. If you think about it, it’s the perfect apparatus for a celebrity. In what other way can somebody egotistically post ex-actly what they’re doing at every waking minute of every day? It’s a megalomaniac’s wet dream. Also, you don’t even have to be a celebrity to act like you’re one on Twitter. Twitter is a medium through which anybody can think everyone else gives a crap about them. In a weird way, it’s self-affirming.

Nevertheless, after scouring the Internet for hours and hours, I have compiled a list of the four most en-tertaining people to follow on Twitter. If you need a pick-me-up, check out a few “tweets” from these ego-tistical narcissists whenever you get a chance.

Tyler Branson is an English senior.

IT’S ALL ABOUT WHO YOU TWEET

TYLERBRANSON PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY AMY FROST/THE DAILY

L&A BRIEF

REALITY TV’S JON SAYS HE DIDN’T CHEAT ON KATE

NEW YORK — Reality TV star Jon Gosselin has denied cheating on wife Kate. But he said he’s sorry for creating that impression.

“These allegations are false and just plain hurt-ful,” Gosselin said Wednesday, insisting: “I did not cheat on Kate.”

Gosselin was speaking out against tabloid reports that he’s had an affair with a Pennsylvania schoolteacher. Photos of Gosselin and the woman have surfaced in recent weeks.–AP

« SUMMER GAMING

Are you a gamer? Check out a preview of video games coming out this summer at OUDaily.com.

OUDAILY.COM

Page 8: The Oklahoma Daily

The Oklahoma Daily is responsible for one day’s incorrect advertising. If your ad appears incorrectly, or if you wish to cancel your ad call 325-2521, before the deadline for cancellation in the next issue. Errors not the fault of the advertiser will be adjusted. Refunds will not be issued for late cancellations.

The Oklahoma Dailywill not knowingly accept advertisements that discriminate on the basis of race, color, gender, religious preference, national origin or sexual orientation. Violations of this policy should be reported to The Oklahoma Daily Business Offi ce at 325-2521.

Help Wanted ads in The Oklahoma Daily are not to separate as to gender. Advertisers may not discriminate in employment ads based on race, color, religion or gender unless such qualifying factors are essential to a given position.

All ads are subject to acceptance by The Oklahoma Daily. Ad acceptance may be re-evaluated at any time.

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Businesses may be eligible to apply for credit in a limited, local billing area. Please inquire with Business Offi ce at 325-2521.

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Classifi ed Display,Classifi ed Card Ads orGame SponsorshipContact an Acct Executivefor details at 325-2521.

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DEADLINES

LOST & FOUND

Lost & Found AdsFREE! Call 325-2521, to place

your ad.

AUTO INSURANCE

AUTO INSURANCEQuotations Anytime

Foreign Students WelcomedJim Holmes Insurance, 321-4664

CHILD CARE** Child Care, DHS, Moore. Infants &Toddlers. 692-6243

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

STUDENTPAYOUTS.COMPaid survey takers needed in Norman100% FREE to join. Click on Surveys.

Attention College Graduates!If you are looking for a career in the

Criminal Justice Field, please call Avalon Correctional Services, Inc.

405-752-8802 or 800-919-9113Ask for Human Resources!

Need time & a quiet place to study for those summer classes? OU Spirit Camps need someone to work the graveyard shift in the dorms. Duties include making sure doors are locked, monitoring traffi c in & out of dorms and assistance with any emergencies that arise. Hours: 10pm to 7am. One meal per day provided. Call 325-3220 or email [email protected]

Looking for leasing agent at Bishop’s Landing Apts. Call 360-7744 for applica-tion. $7.50-8.00 / hr, fl exible hours. F/T during breaks.

Fantasy Sports Company seeks talented, aggressive people to promote products this summer. Earn generous commis-

sions while having fun! 423-667-5718 or [email protected]

SeekingSitters Moore/Norman is look-ing for professional babysitters. If you are looking for a fun, fl exible summer job please apply online at seekingsitters.com

Downtown OKC law fi rm seeks F/T para-legal with great communication/writingskills. Need a self-starter. Email/fax re-sume to [email protected], or call 232-1675

GET PAID TO PLAY OUTSIDE! Girl Scout Resident Camp near Tulsa has counselor positions open for young women ages 18 and up. May 27-Aug 2. Starting salary $170/wk + meals & lodging. Work Sun-Fri. For application, call 918-745-5213 or email [email protected]

Make up to $75 per online survey, student opinions needed www.cashtospend.com.

P/T offi ce assistant/receptionist for OKC advertising agency. Answering phones, fi ling, errands, etc. Email resume to [email protected] - $8/hr, 20 hrs per week.

MISAL OF INDIA BISTRONow accepting applications for waitstaff.

Apply in person at 580 Ed Noble Parkway,

across from Barnes & Noble, 579-5600.

$5,000- $45,000PAID EGG DONORS up to 9 donations,

+ Exps, non-smokers, Ages 19-29,SAT>1100/ACT>24/GPA>3.00

Contact: [email protected]

SUMMER LIFEGUARDS& SWIM INSTRUCTORS.

Aquatic staff and competitive swimmers.Apply at the Cleveland County Family

YMCA, 1350 Lexington Ave. EOE.

APTS. FURNISHED

Furnished 1 room apartment. Very quiet & private. Easy I35/HW 9 access. Bills paid. Avail 5/09. $375/mo, $250 deposit. 360-9983 or 639-7571

ExLarge 1 bedroom furnished garage apt. Bills paid. Easy I35/HW 9 access. Avail 8/09. $450/mo, $300 deposit. 360-9983 or 639-7571

$400, bills paid, effi ciency LOFT apart-ments, downtown over Mister Robert Fur-niture, 109 E Main, fi re sprinkler, no pets, smoke-free. Inquire store offi ce.

Room for rent $314/month.Most bills paid, fully furnished.

Call 321-8877

Furnished 1 bdrm studio, utilities pd, cor-ner of Flood & Boyd, bills paid. Perfect for serious grad student. 329-2310.

APTS. UNFURNISHEDSummer Special! 1 BLK FROM OU, very nice 4 room apt, 800 sf, wood fl oors, 1018 S College, Apt 8, $275/mo. Call 360-2873 or 306-1970.

FREE RENT or up to $300 off First Mo!Student and Military Discounts

Models open 8:30-5:30 M-F; 10-4 Sat1-2 bedroom apts/townhomes with

washer/dryer hookups in 2 bedrooms. Pets Welcome! Free Tanning! Immediate

Move-in! Two locations:

Apple Creek and Hillcrest EstatesCall us at 329-2438 or 360-2048 orlook us up online, apartmentguide.

com

Post Oak Apartments 1-2 bed apts avail-able! Newly renovated. Visit postoakliv-ing.com - 364-3039, 705 Ridgecrest Ct.

1 BLK FROM OU, very nice 4 room apt, 800 sf, wood fl oors, 1016 S College, Apt 1, $295/mo. Call 360-2873 or 306-1970.

P/L Now for Summer & Fall!*Free Membership at Steel Fitness!$99 Deposit! No Application Fee!

Models open 8a-8p Everyday!Elite Properties 360-6624

or www.elite2900.com

3 bd $820/mo. & 4 bd $870/mo. Less than 1 mile from OU, CART, w/d, pool, 24hr maintenance. www.oig.biz or call 364-5622

CONDOS FURNISHED4 Bed/4 Bath Condo for Rent Norman

- The Edge Less than 1 mile from Campus. Furnished Living Room,

Dining Room, Kitchen, W/D, Hi-speed internet. $350/Mo + utilities - pdawson.

[email protected]

CONDOS UNFURNISHED2 bd, 2 full bath, w/d, fi rst fl oor of The Edge, $850/mo, no pets. Call 414-4046.

HOUSES UNFURNISHED3-4 bed homes near campus. Reason-able. 329-4119

4bd/2ba house for rent in June! 1 mile to OU. Built in 2005. $1200/mo.

469-360-3397

Available 4/18

1700 Jackson Dr. 3/2/2 $950Available 6/1

1413 Peter Pan 3/1.5/2 $950140 Alameda Plaza 3/2/2 $1000

321 Waterfront 4/2/2 $1260Contact Wendy at KW, 473-6832

JUNE RENTAL850 S Flood - $475+bills. 212 S Flood

- $600+bills. Smoke-free, no pets, 1 year lease, security dep. 360-3850

Available Aug 1. 3 bd/2 ba $1500/month. 1609 S Pickard. 366-1700 or 818-4441

AVAILABLE IN AUGShort walk to OU, 4-6 blks west of OU, nice brick homes, wood fl oors, CH/A, w/d, disposal, good parking. 4 Bdrm $1,600 3 Bdrm $1,500

Bob, MISTER ROBERT FURNITUREMon-Sat, 321-1818

Summer Special! NICE 3-4 bd, 2.25 ba. 929 Branchwood, $700. 1621 Chaucer, $800. 2326 Lindenwood, $1000. Call 360-2873 or 306-1970

107 E Acres, 3 bd, 1 bth, fenced back yard, hardwood fl oors. $600/month.

714-726-1204

NICE 3-4 bd, 2.25 ba. 612 Ash, $750. 1621 Chaucer, $850. 826 Jona Kay, $975. 2326 Lindenwood, $995. Call 360-2873 or 306-1970

SHORT WALK TO OU1-5 blks west, nice brick homes, wood fl oors, CH/A, w/d, disposal, good parking. 4 Bdrm $1,800-$2,000 3 Bdrm $750-$1,500 2 Bdrm $600-$800 1 Bdrm $420-$460

Bob, MISTER ROBERT FURNITUREMon-Sat, 321-1818

805C Cardinal Creek Condo’s, 2 bdrm, 2 bth gated community, pool, weight room, on-site washer/dryer, close to campus, nice enviroment to study, overlooks OU golf course $585/mo. Call (580) 763-4278

TOWNHOUSES UNFURNISHED

Taylor Ridge Townhomes2 Bdrm, 2.5 Bath, Fully Renovated

Townhomes near OU!Pets Welcome! • Call for current rates

and Move-in Specials!!!Taylor Ridge Townhomes

(405) 310-6599

CONDOS

3 bd/2 ba condo approx 1200 sq feet. Close to campus, recently updated & has a fi replace. Appliances may stay. $62,000 - call Bill Prust 921-4877

Lost & FoundL

TransportationC

Services

Employment

Housing RentalsJ

Housing SalesJHousing RentalsJ

APTS. UNFURNISHED

Housing RentalsJ

HOUSES UNFURNISHED

Housing RentalsJ

HOUSES UNFURNISHED

Previous Answers

3 14 5 6

2 7 89 7 2 1

3 6 55 3 9 7

4 3 57 6 4

1 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

2 9 3 5 7 4 8 6 16 5 4 9 1 8 7 2 31 7 8 6 3 2 9 5 48 3 5 7 4 6 1 9 24 1 2 8 9 3 5 7 69 6 7 2 5 1 4 3 87 8 1 3 2 9 6 4 55 2 6 4 8 7 3 1 93 4 9 1 6 5 2 8 7

Universal Crossword

“WORLD’S FARE” by Albert Kingsley

ACROSS 1 Fishing hook

with a handle 5 Fleet of

fighting ships 11 Spot for a

soothing soak

14 Software buyer

15 Tom Canty, in a Mark Twain book

16 Kubrick’s computer

17 “G’day ___” 18 God in

Egyptian mythology

19 Had a little lamb?

20 Spicy side dish

22 RPM part 23 Old PC

display part 24 Likely to bend 26 Wagnerian

setting 31 Morse code

sound 32 Way into a

mine 33 Many

millennia 35 Bellyaches 39 The kissing

disease, for short

40 Biblical sister city

42 Sudden transition

43 Hip-flexing muscle

45 Turnpike rumbler

46 Puddle-jumper’s destination, perhaps

47 Airline out of Stockholm

49 Like handsaw blades

51 Law firm VIP 55 Wasn’t

steadfast 56 Ottoman

official 57 Salad

ingredients, sometimes

63 Start of a grid game

64 Bird-seed holder

65 Trendy “so-long”

66 Predating, in poetry

67 Full of fervor 68 Bride of

Lohengrin 69 Certain 35mm

camera 70 Email

message option

71 Fish for or ferret out

DOWN 1 Holders for

canines 2 Without

dawdling, in memos

3 Big cheese in Athens

4 A votre sante?

5 Peter, James et al.

6 Baby skin problem

7 “The Ghost and Mrs. ___”

8 Fourth in a series of 12

9 Cleared, as a windshield in winter

10 Elderberry wine additive, in a classic film

11 Something to get in

12 Ceremonial Mass plate

13 Like a watchdog

21 You might put some money in it

25 Cooling refreshments

26 Repeated passage, in music

27 Uproars 28 Start to

type? 29 Toilets at

Wimbledon 30 Crash locale

in “Alive” 34 “___ people!” 36 There’s none

for the weary 37 Prone to

sunburn 38 Drove like

the dickens 41 Looked like 44 Serenaded 48 Unperturbed 50 “Too Ra Loo

Ra Loo ___” 51 Cocktail hour

spreads 52 “___ can

dream, can’t she?”

53 One making a pit stop

54 Florida Keys features

58 Nicollette on “Desperate Housewives”

59 “Smoke Gets in Your Eyes” composer

60 Anagram and synonym of “evil”

61 “… with the greatest of ___”

62 Thoroughly moisten

PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER

Edited by Timothy E. Parker May 07, 2009

© 2009 Universal Press Syndicatewww.upuzzles.com

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8 Thursday, May 7, 2009

Page 9: The Oklahoma Daily

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Congratulations to all of our Kappa Alpha Theta Seniors. You did it! Good luck with everything life brings!

Faith, Hope, and

Theta Love

Brittany Baldy

Callea Bogdon

Amanda Brogdon

Anne Brown

Erin Burton

Courtney Caldwell

Whitney Caldwell

Kate Callahan

Erin Chancellor

E.A. Chapman

Katie Colbert

Jamie Oden

Maggie Peterson

Alex Rayburn

Brett Reading

Spencer Reely

Natalie Reese

Meredith Roskamp

Anne Sickles

Sally Snyder

Madison Sparkman

Laura Swift

Ally Collier

Grace Flora

Hannah Fransen

Jaklyn Garret

Courtney Harp

Anne Hartman

Holly Harwell

Emily Hatch

Allison Hay

Paige Hoster

Casey Jarma

Jenny Kerrigan

Katie Landes

Kate Leary

Lauren Markham

Jessica McClanahan

Ashley McCubbin

Randi McLain

Haley Morgan

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Sarah Motiei

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Summer Summer Special!Special!Boomer BlastBoomer BlastPerfect for two!Perfect for two!

Campus CornerCampus Corner584 Buchanan584 Buchanan

Norman, OK 73069Norman, OK 73069364-FOOD (3663)364-FOOD (3663)

KELSEY WHITTENThe Oklahoma Daily

Oklahoma City Memorial Marathon winners Jordan Kinley and Catherine Odell have more in common than winning their first marathons on the same day.

Both are Oklahoma residents, OU master’s students and both were OU runners. And when they turned onto Classen Boulevard 21 miles into OKC’s April 26 marathon, neither first timer was sure they wanted to continue.

“It was probably the least fun 12 minutes of running I’ve had in recent memory,” Kinley said. “There was no part of it that was fun at all.”

Odell had similar thoughts, but battled through the strong head winds on the three mile stretch of the race thinking only of the finish line. Odell’s pace dropped from 6:45 per mile to 8 minute miles.

“I was getting discouraged mentally, which is where you get beat down in the marathon,” she said. “I just kept thinking it’s almost over. Four more miles [to go] of 26 isn’t that bad.”

Both made it through the tough, windy stretch and the entire 26.2-mile course faster than their competitors. Odell beat her clos-est competitor by five minutes with a time of 3:10.16. Kinley, finish-ing with a time of 2:27.19, was more than 10 minutes ahead of the second place finisher, but said he could have pushed even harder.

“I think I could have run faster,” he said. “I was fatigued at the end but not to the point of passing out.”

Kinley, who used a 40-day training plan, said some people were surprised with his win, but he came in knowing he could be near the top.

“I didn’t necessarily know I was going to win, but I thought I might have a shot,” he said.

Odell, who began training for the event with her fiance and friends in December, said she expected to do well and had a plan in place to ensure that she did.

“I wanted to win,” she said. “That was my goal. I had two team-mates from OU run with me. One ran 11 miles with me. The other did the last six. I had people with me the whole time. It was very systematic.”

Unlike some big marathons, the OKC Memorial doesn’t award prize money, so Kinley and Odell got only bragging rights. At least for now, distance running is something the two do for other rea-sons than prize money. Kinley works at OK Runner in Norman and said he enjoys the social aspect of the running world. His boss and many of his customers were at the race to support him. Odell, who teaches middle school in Oklahoma City, said she also uses run-ning to socialize and make the workouts easier.

“When you’re running with people that kind of makes it fun,” she said. “We would get together; go for runs, and it was almost like we were hanging out.”

With their first marathon out of the way, Kinley and Odell both say they hope to do more in the future. For now, Kinley is taking a two to three week break doing light workouts only and wants to

enter some shorter races.“I’ll go on the record and say I might go after the state 5k record

on the roads,” he said. “It’s much faster than I’ve run before, but I think it’s reasonable.”

Kinley plans to run either the U.S. Marathon Championships or the Chicago Marathon this fall and push for a time closer to 2:19, the Olympic trial standard.

Odell also says another marathon may be in her future, but for now she is running “whenever” and keeping up with one long run a week because even a day without running makes her miss it.

“Running is just something I do,” she said. “It’s not a burden real-ly, or something I feel like I have to do. It’s just what runners do.”

Steven Jones, sports [email protected] • phone: 325-7630 • fax: 325-6051

The middle of May has been a bittersweet time for me since I came to college.

As finals draw ever closer, and my stress level el-evates to dangerous heights, it becomes necessary

to find something to distract me from the yearly mediocrity that is better known as my grades.

That’s where sports come in. They are the “-sweet” to the

“bitter-“ feeling of knowing that once again my grade point aver-age will probably translate in to what would be a MLB leading ERA.

They help me forget that I will probably be in college longer than Greg Paulus.

I love this time of year when I can make the switch from a world where 60 per-cent means an extra summer school class for me to a world where 60 percent means the Cavaliers just beat the Hawks by 27 because LeBron James shot 12-20.

I don’t know how many times this week I’ve sat down to read a book, study for a test, or even write some idiotic column (that’s a joke) and frustrated myself to the verge of committing a violent crime, but then turned on the television .

I then lost myself for a little while in the NBA playoffs, bringing me back to sanity.

Even hockey has stepped up and grabbed enough of my attention to keep my mind from overloading with the pressures of Dead Week.

Sidney Crosby and Alex Ovechkin scoring three goals each in a Stanley Cup playoff game is the most exciting thing I’ve heard from the NHL in years.

Of course, I eventually have to turn the televi-sion off and get back to the grind that is the final two weeks of the school year. But I am very thank-ful that I have my favorite sports season of the year to balance me during my least favorite school season.

Now, if I could go back I would do things differently.

If I could go back in time, I would train tire-lessly to become a star athlete. That way, I could just go to school for one or two years as a Sociology major before going pro. Then I wouldn’t have this problem.

That isn’t possible for me, but I do say thank you to those who took that path.

Because without you, who would I watch on TV while I’m procrastinating?Aaron Colen is a journalism junior.

STAFF COLUMN

AARON COLEN

Memorial Marathon winners share history

Thursday, May 7, 2009 9

JAMES CORNWELL/THE DAILY

OU graduate students Jordan Kinley and Catherine Odell represent OU well by winning the Oklahoma City Marathon. The OKC Marathon was the first marathon run by both Kinley and Odell.

Sports: A Study Break

The Big 12 tournament starts this weekend. Check a pre-view in tomorrow’s paperOUDAILY.COM

« SOFTBALL

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Page 10: The Oklahoma Daily

ZOMBIES & SILENCE

Slipknot with Korn, The Used, All That Remains, Violence to Vegas and Dirtfedd will perform at 3:30 p.m. Friday at the Zoo Amphitheatre in Oklahoma City. Tickets are $40 - $90.

Oklahoma City band Welcome The Silence will perform at 7 p.m. Friday at Bricktown Live in Oklahoma City.

WEEKEND UPDATE » Looking for something to do this weekend? The Daily’s Life & Arts staff picked their favorite events this weekend.

FREE FLICKA free screening of “Fanboys” will begin at 4, 7 and 10 p.m. Friday and mid-night Saturday in Meacham Auditorium. The fi lm is presented by the Union Programming Board and the Campus Activities Council Film Series.

FAIRY POWER

Univers i ty Theatre p r e s e n t s “ A Midsummer Night’s Dream” by Will iam Shakespeare at 8 p.m. Thursday through Saturday at Rupel J. Jones Theatre. A mati-nee showing star ts at 3 p.m. on Sunday. Tickets are $17 with an OU ID. The show is rated PG-13.

MANNEQUIN MUSIC

Jack’s Mannequin with Matt Nathanson and Eric McCarley will perform at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday at Cain’s Ballroom in Tulsa. Tickets are $25.

10 Thursday, May 7, 2009

PHOTO BY ELI HULL/THE DAILY