The Oklahoma Daily

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TUESDAY NOVEMBER 3, 2009

THE UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA’S INDEPENDENT STUDENT VOICE

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Find out how The Daily’s sports desk did on picking the winner of this weekend’s football games. PAGE 2B

Check inside to read about a speaker arguing in favor of global peace. PAGE 3A

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Read about the Second Annual Arts Alliance Chili Bowl. PAGE 6B

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Wednesday’s Weather

Debate of legislative issue continues in student government RICKY MARANON Daily Staff Writer

74°/45°

owl.ou.edu

CAMPUS BRIEFS OU CANCER INSTITUTE HOLDS CEREMONY FOR NEW HOME The OU Cancer Institute will have a ceremony today to mark the halfway point of the construction on its new building, according to a press release. The celebration will start at 3:30 p.m. at Stanton L. Young Biomedical Research Center on the OU Health Sciences Center campus. Speakers will include President David Boren. Following the speakers, there will be a tour of the site of the institute. The new OUCI building will house cancer research labs, clinics and support, all under one roof, according to the group’s Web site. By doing this, the OUCI hopes that cancer patients will be able to get complete care in one place. For more information, call Jerri Culpepper or Tara Malone at 3251701.

SPEAKER ADDRESSES ROLE OF VISUAL DESIGN IN INNOVATION The OU School of Art and Ar t History and the V isual Communications department will host “The Role of Visual Design in Innovation,” an artist lecture given by Denise Burton of Frog Design, at 11:30 a.m. Thursday in the Oklahoma Memorial Union’s Heritage room. Frog Design is a global innovation firm that works with the world’s leading companies, helping them to create and bring to market products, services and experiences. Burton has led and participated in award-winning mobile, web and application projects for both consumers and enterprises. Currently, Burton is one of Frog Design’s mobile experts. She has created future mobile vision concepts for global leading carriers and handset providers. She has also created, built and delivered cutting edge mobile user interfaces, which have won awards. She has written the Frog Design touch guidelines and oversees many of the mobile projects at Frog Design across a range of platforms, including Brew and Android. For more information contact Karen Hayes-Thumann at 3252691.

The UOSA Superior Court heard arguments from Oklahoma Students for a Democratic Society and the UOSA General Counsel Monday. The legal disputes were about who could recall a member of UOSA and the number of signatures that is required to add a referendum to a UOSA election ballot.

RECALL JURISDICTION The petitioner, Oklahoma Students for a Democratic Society, argued that Matt Bruenig’s signature to recall UOSA Student Congress Vice Chairman Matt Gress was valid despite Bruenig not being a member of Gress’ district. “I think if policy affects all students, they should be allowed to recall any member of Congress they want to,” petitioner Matt Bruenig said. At one point of the argument, the debate turned into whether people from Arizona should be able to recall a U.S. senator from California if they felt they were not representing them. “I think that should happen,” Bruenig said. “The policy that person is voting on doesn’t just affect people of California but everyone.” Bruenig argued that if a decision affects someone regardless of what district they came from, they should have the right to recall the

member. But UOSA General Counselor Michael Davis said Bruenig has plenty of representation and does not need to attempt to influence districts that may not vote in his favor. “Mr. Bruenig is already represented by five people in the humanities district,” Davis said. “To think that those five members are not good enough shocks me. The petitioner is saying that we don’t trust the individual districts to make the right decision.” Davis said the proposals offered by the petitioner would cause chaos and open warfare among districts. Justice Barrett Powers said the arguments the petitioner was making was abusive to the will of the voters. “How can you take power away from someone you never put in power in the first place?” Powers asked. Chief Justice Kyle Eastwood said the recall process being argued by the petitioner would take representation away from districts. “You have all this time where people can go back and forth recalling people and that does nothing but subvert the will of the people,” Eastwood said. “You could effectively eliminate an entire district just because you don’t like the way someone voted in another district.” Eastwood said his previous experience in UOSA Student Congress causes another problem

RICKY MARANON/THE DAILY

Matt Bruenig, the petitioner for Oklahoma Students for a Democratic Society, makes the opening statement during a hearing Monday night at Bell Courtroom of the OU College of Law. in Bruenig’s argument. “I know that to fill vacancies, even vacancies left by a recall election, are filled through appointments. I’ve sat as the chair of the Congressional Administration committee and appointed people myself,” Eastwood said. “So in the end, we are being even less democratic by allowing people to fill

the newly vacant seats without an election.” Justice Miles McFadden said the ability for a group to appoint their own members in the place of the new vacancy was concerning. “It seems very abusive to me that people can tamper with the will of DEBATE CONTINUES ON PAGE 2

GRADUATE STUDENTS PAIR BOOKS WITH SKIRTS AND SKATES

JEREMY DICKIE/THE DAILY

GUEST PROFESSOR LECTURES ON LINCOLN’S LIFE

Shae “Evie Bola” Matine, library science graduate student, and Jessica “Whoops C. Daisy” Underwood, architecture graduate student, practice Friday night for their Roller Derby tournament. Each girl gets to choose or is appointed a nickname by their teammates and is then registered on the national database.

Jean Harvey Baker, professor of history at Goucher College located near Baltimore, Md., will give insight into life in the White House during the Lincoln administration at a free presentation on the OU campus. The lecture, “Lincoln in the White House: An Intimate Portrait,” is part of the 100th year celebration of Lincoln’s birth, and will be at 7 p.m. Thursday in the Oklahoma Memorial Union’s Meacham Auditorium. Baker is the author of eight books, including a revisionist biography of Mary Todd Lincoln and several books on the Civil War and on suffragettes in the U.S. Funding for the series of lectures is made possible by the Friends of the College of Arts and Sciences, the Barbara B. and William G. Paul Enrichment Fund, the James H. and JoAnn H. Holden Enrichment Fund, Office of the President, Departments of Communications, History and Human Relations, The Carl Albert Center, African and African-American Studies and Women’s and Gender Studies Programs. For more information, contact Ben Keppel at 325-6058.

Roller derbying first resurfaced in early 2000s

-Daily staff reports

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KAITLYN BIVIN Daily Staff Writer

Some girls play with dolls, some cook and some sew, but for graduate students Jessica “Whoop C. Daisy” Underwood and Shae “Evie Bola” Matine, they knock people down as members of the Red Dirt Rebellion Rollergirls derby team.

Underwood, an architecture graduate student, said she became interested in roller derby a year ago after hearing about it from a friend. “I have a friend that plays derby in Tallahassee, and she e-mailed me some pictures of them, and they were on the cover of USA Today,” Underwood said. “I saw those pictures and thought, ‘Wow, she’s knocking people down. That looks like so much fun. If only

Oklahoma had that.’ I wrote it off because I assumed it didn’t exist [in Oklahoma].” Underwood said she researched the possibility of a league in the Oklahoma City area and found Red Dirt Rebellion. She thought it sounded interesting and tried out two weeks later. Her inexperience led to her derby name, Whoop C. Daisy. “I couldn’t skate when I started,

so I thought if I never learned to skate very well — if I fell — I could just say ‘whoopsie,’” Underwood said. “But, if I got good at it and knocked somebody down, I could play with it and say ‘whoopsie.’” Underwood said the name picks the player. “You have to see what fits your personality,” Underwood said. “People were trying to help me pick my name, and they were coming up SKATES CONTINUES ON PAGE 2

‘Mad Money’ gives mad advice RICKY MARANON Daily Staff Writer

Editor’s Note: The following is part two of a two-part series stemming from an interview with CNBC’s “Mad Money” host Jim Cramer before the Friday taping of his show at OU. CNBC’s “Mad Money” host Jim Cramer shares where his ‘booyah’ came from and the future of his show.

THE STORY OF THE ‘BOO-YAH’ When one thinks of Jim Cramer, the first words that come to mind are, “Boo-yah!” Those words, Cramer said, are tied to Kmart. Cramer first started yelling them four years ago. “I use to do a radio show, and I was recommending people sell stock in Kmart,” Cramer said. “And a guy who worked for Kmart told me to look at the stock again.” ADVICE CONTINUES ON PAGE 2

© 2009 OU PUBLICATIONS BOARD

MARCIN RUTKOWSKI/THE DAILY

Jim Cramer films his CNBC show “Mad Money” Friday in Donald W. Reynolds Performing Arts Center. VOL. 95, NO. 53


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