The Oklahoma Daily

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PHOTO ESSAY • PAGE 11

SPORTS • PAGE 6

Oklahomans parade in honor

OU off to perfect Big 12 start

In observance of Martin Luther King Jr. Day, hundreds of attendees watched and participated in a memorial parade in downtown Oklahoma City.

Danielle Robinson (shown right) and the women’s basketball team are off to a 3-0 start in Big 12 play. The Daily previews the conference outlook.

The University of Oklahoma’s independent student voice since 1916

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

www.OUDaily.com

Free — additional copies 25¢

Old O’Connell’s to celebrate closing Events include athletics appreciation day, live auction, specially priced menu CARMEN FORMAN The Oklahoma Daily

Last call for a 42-year-old Norman landmark is 2 a.m. Saturday morning. The Lindsey Street location of O’Connell’s Irish Pub & Grille is closing down because OU will use the land. O’Connell’s started

closing celebrations at the pub at the start of the new year, and the celebrations will culminate Friday at O’Connell’s. Norman resident Janelle Borden came to O’Connell’s often when the pub first opened in 1968. “It is a big shame to lose this tradition, you always see friends here,” Borden said. Following an auction of the bar’s memorabilia at 4 p.m. Saturday, O’Connell’s owner Jeff Stewart will present the pub’s

keys to the university during halftime of the Sooner men’s basketball game. Stewart said O’Connell’s has raised a lot of money during the years for campus organizations, and its last week in business will be no different. O’Connell’s is holding an OU faculty and staff appreciation day today in which some of the bar’s proceeds will go

Weeklong events » Today — OU staff appreciation day » Wednesday — OU Police appreciation day » Thursday — OU athletics appreciation day » Friday — Former employee appreciation day » Saturday — Live auction of O’Connell’s memorabilia will begin at 4 p.m.

SEE CLOSING PAGE 2

OU ATHLETIC DEPARTMENT SHOWS STOOPS THE MONEY

TEXTBOOKS

Online book rentals popular Online renting has saved students millions of dollars, company says TREVOR SHOFNER The Oklahoma Daily

Financial breakdown SUE OGROCKI/AP

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Football coach Bob Stoops signals while standing on the sideline during the OU-Oklahoma State football game Nov. 27 in Stillwater. Stoops is the third-highest paid coach in college football.

unknown value of additional benefits

$100,000 OU Health Sciences Center

$82,500 finishing in BCS top 10

$110,000 playing in the Fiesta Bowl

Stoops cashes in on Sooner success Football coach’s earnings rivals competitors nationally, within the Big 12 Conference

$800,000 staying through Jan. 1

Highest paid NCAA coaches

NICHOLAS HARRISON The Oklahoma Daily

W

$700,000 annual stay benefit

$600,000 appearances and speaking

$2,125,000 personal services

$250,000 base salary

TOTAL = $4,767,500 — Source: Bob Stoops’ employment contract

ith the Sooners’ win in the 2011 Fiesta Bowl, OU head football coach Bob Stoops earned over $4.5 million this year – making him the third highest paid football coach in the NCAA. According to his contract, Stoops earned $110,000 in performance bonuses for participating in the 2011 Fiesta Bowl and another $82,500 for finishing in the top 10 of the final BCS rankings, along with an automatic $200,000 raise on Jan. 1. His total compensation package for the year was $4,767,500. Information regarding the revenue generated by the OU football program has not been released this year, but the US Department of Education reported the OU football program generated $58,295,888 in revenue in 2009. Stoops’ contract is simply representative of his contribution to OU, said Kenny Mossman, senior associate athletics director of communications. “While the university, and President Boren specifically, has been on record lamenting the salary structure of collegiate athletics, we understand the marketplace economics and strive to be competitive in all areas of university compensation to ensure the university attracts the best and brightest in all areas,” Mossman said. Stoops was compensated in accordance with his peer group; his programs have consistently placed in the top five during the past decade and his compensation reflects that level of performance, Mossman said. Stoops was the first head football coach to break the $3

SEE RENT PAGE 2

1

TECHNOLOGY

OU.edu average for visually impaired

Nick Saban $5,997,349

2 Mack Brown

Report ranked 183 schools based on ability of websites to run text-to-speech program

$5,161,500

3

TREVOR SHOFNER The Oklahoma Daily

A recent report by an employee at the University of Illinois ranking the “Best and Worst College Websites for Blind Students” placed OU 89th of the 183 institutions surveyed. The survey gave scores to institutional websites in six

Bob Stoops $4,767,500 SEE STOOPS PAGE 3

STOOPS S E A S ONB Y S E A S ON

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

7-5

13-0

11-2

12-2

12-2

12-1

8-4

11-3

11-3

12-2

8-5

12-2

A LOOK AT WHAT’S ON Visit The Daily’s fashion blog to read about the most memorable trends on the red carpet at Sunday’s Golden Globes

THE OKLAHOMA DAILY

WHAT’S INSIDE

VOL. 96, NO. 80 © 2011 OU Publications Board

Campus ................. 2 Classifieds ............. 9 Life & Arts .............. 10 Opinion ................. 4 Sports ................... 5

www.OUDaily.com www.facebook.com/OUDaily www.twitter.com/OUDaily

The ability to rent textbooks is spreading, and students are saving money as a result. In the fall 2010 semester, the University Bookstore implemented Rent-A-Text, an online bookrental program. Follet Corp., the nationwide educational materials company, whose eFollet website manages OU’s textbook purchases and rentals, said 97 percent of 15,000 customers surveyed reported they would use the rental service again, said Elio Distaola, Follet campus relations director. “If you only really need a textbook for one semester, you don’t want to have to pay full price and then be stuck with it,” said Matt Mueller, University College freshman. The company rented about 1.6 million units nationwide during its first term, Distaola said. Distaola said the idea of a more accessible and widespread book

SEE BLIND PAGE 2

TODAY’S WEATHER

46°| 23° Tomorrow: Partly cloudy, high of 58 degrees


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