The Oklahoma Daily

Page 1

LIFE & ARTS • PAGE 8

Sooners participate in high-speed filmmaking Students had 24 hours Friday and Saturday to create a short film. Read about one team’s effort to beat the clock.

The University of Oklahoma’s independent student voice since 1916

Monday, October 11, 2010

www.OUDaily.com

Free — additional copies 25¢

Campus celebrates Coming Out Day Students raise awareness of LGBT issues with open mic night, candlelight vigil

Transgender and Friends club wants students to recognize the power that words and actions have on the gay community, said Duke Lambert, president of OU’s GLBTF. “These are people,” Lambert said. “You may not see them all that often, and you might say passing words like ‘fag,’ and you think it’s not doing anything. But people are battered by that every single day, and they lose faith in themselves, faith in the community.”

DANNY HATCH The Oklahoma Daily

Today’s National Coming Out Day is filled with hope and sorrow, following the recent suicides of several gay teens. The Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual,

GLBTF, as well as many other LGBT student groups, want to use Coming Out Day as a way to welcome students who aren’t comfortable with themselves or with coming out. The LGBT resource fair will be held from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. on the South Oval. GLBTF’s open mic night will be held 9 p.m. at Second Wind Coffee Shop on Campus Corner. “There will be performers, but

it’s also for people who want to come out and want to tell a coming out story but never got the chance to,” Lambert said. “We can all be there and have a really open environment.” GLBTF will also host a suicide prevention discussion at 7 p.m. Wednesday in Devon Energy Hall, Room 270. After the discussion, SEE GLBTF PAGE 2

FESTIVAL | THE UPSIDE OF AUSTIN, TEXAS

Student Congress to hear opinions, ideas at town hall meetings The UOSA Undergraduate Student Congress will host a series of town hall meetings this week to hear student issues and inform students about UOSA procedures and responsibilities. The week will consist of three town hall meetings, as well as mark a change of location for the regular Congress meetings to Couch Restaurants, which all students are welcome to attend. The public relations team encourages as many Congress representatives to attend as possible, said Forrest Bennett, public relations committee co-chairman. The committee encourages students to come with complaints, issues and ideas, said Katherine Borgerding, committee co-chairwoman. However, the idea of the week is not to be a complaint meeting, Bennett said. Rather, Congress is looking to get in touch with its constituents to learn what it can do for them. The town hall week also is designed to inform students about getting involved in Congress. Applications to run for Congress are due by 5 p.m. Thursday. Elections are in November.

Town hall schedule: » Monday – 8 p.m. in the Oklahoma Memorial Union’s Heritage Room » Tuesday – 7 p.m. Congress meeting in Davenport’s of Couch Restaurants » Wednesday – 7 p.m. in Dale Hall 128 » Thursday – 7 p.m. in Walker Tower’s lobby — Kathleen Evans/The Daily

Homecoming week gets new additions, keeps old traditions MATT CARNEY/THE DAILY

Wayne Coyne, singer of The Flaming Lips, traverses the audience in a man-sized bubble during his performance Sunday evening at the Austin City Limits music festival in Austin, Texas. The three-day event featured 130 bands Friday through Sunday. For complete coverage, see page 7.

Honors College Informal group discusses research programs front-page news stories expand positions Student group meets to keep up with, talk over current events

Students have opportunity to participate in comprehensive research projects

If you go

EMILY HOPKINS The Oklahoma Daily

WHEN: 4 p.m. Sundays

JIYEUN HEO

Editor’s note: Evan DeFilippis, John Best and Jerod Coker are columnists for The Daily

The Oklahoma Daily

More students can apply for opportunities in the Honors College research program this year than ever before. In the past, the Honors Research Assistant Program only offered 13-15 positions. This year, it expanded to 20 available positions, said Melanie Wright, director of Honors curriculum. “Research is important for most of our students because most of our students continue on their study at the graduate school,” Wright said. “Having that research experience is really important and it is also helpful when they apply for scholarships.” HRAP is a research program provided to Honors College students to work with professors as research assistants on particular projects that correlate to their field, according to the Honors College website. “Part of our [the Honors College’s] mission is to give the students an opportunity to participate in university-driven research and to be part of the process themselves,” Honors College associate dean Richard Hamerla said. Kelvin Droegemeier, vice president of research, said the university decided to provide additional funding so more students could take advantage of the sources the university offers. E l i z a b e t h Ru c k e r, i n t e r n a t i o n a l s t u d i e s a n d SEE EVENTS PAGE 2

A LOOK AT WHAT’S NEW AT Visit the sports section to see the results of The Daily’s week 6 College Football Pick ‘Em challenge

Amidst the usual chatter and subtle jazz music at Second Wind Coffee Shop on a weekend afternoon are rumblings of a more global nature. At 4 p.m. each Sunday, a small group of OU students get together to sip lattes and discuss last week’s front page stories and editorials in the New York Times. “It’s extremely informal, and it’s advertised by the Honors College just like any other reading group, but this is open to all students,” journalism senior Jerod Coker said. “I started it because I think it’s really important for students and citizens to have a good understanding of democracy.” This week’s assembly of six, informally led by Coker, started off the discussion with Chinese prisoner and former literature professor Liu Xiaobo’s Nobel Peace Prize win. John Best reached into his backpack, pulled out a thick stack of papers and set it on the coffee table. “This is more or less the kind of stuff that puts you in jail for 11 years in China,”

THE OKLAHOMA DAILY VOL. 96, NO. 37 © 2010 OU Publications Board www.facebook.com/OUDaily www.twitter.com/OUDaily

WHERE: Second Wind Coffee Shop, 564 Buchanan Ave. the biochemistry and Asian studies senior said, referring to Charter ’08, a prodemocracy manifesto that calls for an end to authoritarian rule in China. The debate soon flowed from the legitimacy of Xiaobo’s win to the original intent of Alfred Nobel’s Peace Prize, which Coker said “is a more blanket term for people who attack social issues.” Chemical engineering junior Peter Everest added, “I wonder if it will come to a point when Republicans and Democrats will join together to scapegoat China?” “Absolutely,” political science and economics senior Evan DeFilippis chimed in. “We scapegoat other countries to avoid putting focus on our own economic and domestic turmoil.” As some group members continued to discuss the current subject, others

SEE RESEARCH PAGE 2

INDEX Campus .............. 2 Classifieds .......... 6 Life & Arts ........... 7 Opinion .............. 3 Sports ................ 4

Today marks the first day of homecoming week, and Campus Activities Council has added two events. Homecoming Holdup is a philanthropy event paired with CAC Dance Marathon to support Children’s Miracle Network, a charity that raises funds for more than 170 children’s hospitals. Each homecoming group will send a representative to parody being “held up” from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. Wednesday on the South Oval with the goal of having their organization raise money to “bail them out.” “This is an event that we decided to hold in hopes that it would involve more of the campus in our philanthropy, and most importantly, educate people about the mission of Children’s Miracle Network,” said Courtlyn Shoate, CAC homecoming chairman. The second new event, Night at the Huff, replaces the football tournament with three co-ed competitions: volleyball, basketball and dodgeball at 7 p.m. Thursday. Both the sidewalk chalking competition, taking place Wednesday on the South Oval, and the South Oval board competition will allow students to create a scene that depicts their organization’s theme. “With this years’ theme of Sooner Magic, we hope that the boards will not only be aesthetically pleasing to students and alumni, but also be of educational value on our schools great history,” Shoate said. The Pep Rally is at 7:30 p.m. Friday at the McCasland Field House. Students can vote for CAC Homecoming King and Queen all day Monday and Tuesday at elections. ou.edu. The student-elected King and Queen will be announced and crowned along with the winners of the week’s competitions at halftime of the game Saturday. — Jessica Wilder/The Daily

TODAY’S WEATHER 78°| 53° Tuesday: Partly cloudy, high of 79 degrees Visit the Oklahoma Weather Lab at owl.ou.edu


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
The Oklahoma Daily by OU Daily - Issuu