SPORTS • PAGE B4
LIFE & ARTS • PAGE B1
Daily recaps Sooner season
Party planning made easy
Sports Editor James Corley compares his preseason predictions for the OU football team to the regular-season results
The Daily’s Caitlin Turner (shown right) offers her advice on planning a nontraditional, low-budget holiday party
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FOR A FULL SPORTS PREVIEW OF THE FIESTA BOWL, SEE PAGE B6
UOSA officers reflect on fall UOSA president, vice president fulfill some campaign promises; leave others for spring term CHASE COOK The Oklahoma Daily
MERRILL JONES/THE DAILY
Students cheer during the OU-Texas football game Oct. 2 in Dallas. Some OU students will travel to Glendale, Ariz, for the Sooners’ bowl game Jan. 1.
Students eye Fiesta vacation Sooner fans plan trip to Arizona to watch OU play Connecticut in BCS bowl Jan. 1
into a more extravagant vacation. University College freshman Katy Clarke is flying from Dallas to Phoenix on Dec. 28 with her mom, dad, sisters and two friends from OU. The group will meet three more friends from her residence hall when they arrive at a hotel in Phoenix, she said. “We’re staying at the hotel right next to the stadium and we’re going to the Fiesta Bowl New Year’s block party,” Clarke said. Clarke has attended every football game this season, home or away, including the Big 12 Championship game in Arlington, Texas. “I planned on going to whatever bowl OU played in. After we won the Big 12 Championship and got home, my dad bought the tickets for the Fiesta Bowl,” Clarke said. Clarke estimated the cost of her trip would be around $1,000. Kevin Easley, international business and finance sophomore, also plans to begin his trip by leaving Dec. 28 from Tulsa to Phoenix with his dad. Though he is making the trip with his dad, Easley said they will hang out with two other members of his fraternity, Sigma Chi. Easley said he only intended on traveling to a bowl if OU was playing in the Tostitos Fiesta Bowl.
JOSEPH TRUESDELL The Oklahoma Daily
About 1,030 miles separate OU from the University of Phoenix Stadium in Glendale, Ariz., where the Sooners will play in the 40th annual Tostitos Fiesta Bowl. Students will travel in many ways to watch the Sooners attempt to defeat the University of Connecticut Huskies on Jan. 1. A group of five girls, all members of Alpha Omicron Pi sorority, plan to begin their trek from Norman to Phoenix at 7 a.m. Dec. 30. “My big [Clarke Erickson] lives 30 minutes away from the Fiesta Bowl … she invited a bunch of us to come out there and stay with her if we decided to go to the game,” said Laura Gustafson, sociology and criminology junior. “We all decided it was a pretty good deal … Plus I’m obsessed with Sooner football.” The girls chose to take advantage of the free housing and split the cost of gas, leaving them to only pay for tickets, which cost $140 through the OU Ticket Office, Gustafson said. Other Sooner fans have decided to turn the trip
What to do while in Glendale Students heading to the Fiesta Bowl should know University of Phoenix Stadium is adjacent to the Westgate City Center. “Westgate City Center is one of the largest and most exciting mixed-use, urban developments in North America,” said Lorraine Pino, Glendale Convention and Visitor’s Bureau manager. Pino said Westgate City Center will provide great options for students traveling to the game and many businesses will be open New Year’s Eve and Day for gameday travelers. For a list of restaurants, bars, shopping and hotels near the stadium, visit OUDaily.com.
As the UOSA president and vice president look back at the fall semester with pride, they look forward with confidence. Franz Zenteno, UOSA president and international studies graduate student, and Cory Lloyd, UOSA vice president and advertising senior, are halfway through their elected term. They haven’t been able to get all of their campaign promises completed, but Zenteno said they are elected for a full year, not just the fall semester. “We are doing our best to get them done before the end of the academic year,” Zenteno said. Lloyd said this year’s cabinet had a lot of freshman, and their new fervor helped them push toward the Zenteno and Lloyd’s goals. “It’s been a great experience,” Lloyd said. “We still have time to get things done.” UOSA staff adviser Brynn Daves said she has enjoyed working with Zenteno and Lloyd. “Franz and Cory have done very well this fall...” Daves said in an email. “It is great to see their constant support of students and the OU community.” Before graduating in May, Lloyd and Zenteno plan to fulfill their campaign goals. Unaccomplished goals and new initiatives will be passed on to the next administration, Zenteno said. “At the end of the day, we are writing a chapter for our story,” Zenteno said. “I think it will have a happy ending.” UOSA will hold elections in March and the new president and vice president will be sworn into office in April. SEE UOSA PAGE 2
Religious tension keeps student from family at holidays International student cannot return home during winter break due to violence between Muslims, Christians in Iraq NATASHA GOODELL Contributing Writer
A church bombing halfway around the world altered Mariam Edwar’s holiday plans. Edwar, a first-year international student from Baghdad, said she never felt a difference between Muslims and Christians in her country, but since being in the United States, recent events in Iraq have changed these feelings. “After the attacks on the churches and the bombing of the church in Baghdad, Christians are pretty much targets in Iraq to al-Qaeda,” said Edwar, a Christian. “For me, I felt terrible after the attacks, because those people hadn’t done anything and they killed them, just because they’re Christian.” Our Lady of Salvation Church in Baghdad was attacked Oct. 31, and the bombing left 58 people dead and many more wounded. “Because of the situation for Christians right now,
or anyone who has been in the United States, my parents aren’t letting me go back because they’re afraid I might get hurt,” Edwar said. As Americans leave Iraq, everyone expects instability and as there is instability, Christians will be the first ones to be effected, said Joshua Landis, OU’s Center of Middle East Studies director. “The attacking of the church was a big blow to the Christian community because they were the targets,” Landis said. Charles Kimball, religious studies program director, spent a great deal of his life in the Middle East and said there has been a lot of violence in Iraq since 2003, especially between the Shiite and Sunni people. “What is triggering it now is not exactly clear,” Kimball said. “There are definitely still people in Iraq who want to see the peace disrupted and would do anything for it, even attacking churches. So the Christian community is in a very precarious position.” The Christians, who lived in the Middle East long
A LOOK AT WHAT’S NEW AT Visit OUDaily.com throughout winter break for updates on the football team’s Jan. 1 Fiesta Bowl matchup
JALL COWASJI/ THE DAILY
University College freshman, Mariam Edwar, will be staying with her sister over SEE IRAQ PAGE 2 Christmas break in the US. She is an international student from Baghdad.
THE OKLAHOMA DAILY VOL. 96, NO. 79 © 2010 OU Publications Board www.facebook.com/OUDaily www.twitter.com/OUDaily
INDEX
THIS WEEK’S WEATHER
Campus .............. A2 Life & Arts ........... B1 Opinion .............. A6 Puzzles .......... A5 Sports ................ B4
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Temperature to hit high Wednesday Visit the Oklahoma Weather Lab at owl.ou.edu