Tuesday, Feb. 11, 2014

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Opinion: Don’t give your clicks to a Christian rapper’s response to “Same Love.” (Page 3) The University of Oklahoma’s independent student voice since 1916

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MONEY

Executive budget may cost OU Proposal will require OU to institute university-wide reallocations ALEX NIBLETT, Assistant Campus Editor, @alex_niblett

Oklahoma Gov. Mary Fallin’s 2014 executive budget proposal, if approved, may result in a 5 percent reallocation at OU’s Norman campus. While Fallin’s budget proposal claims one of its goals is to increase the number of degrees and certifications earned in Oklahoma by 1,700 per year for 12 years, resulting in a 67 percent increase by 2023, OU President David Boren said the university could be negatively impacted by higher education costs if this budget is approved. “While we are, according to The Washington Post, among the most affordable public universities in the country, there is no way that we can absorb another $12 to $13 million in cuts

to OU’s Norman campus without being under pressure to increase tuition and fees,” Boren said in an email. “The other alternative is to reduce programs, faculty and staff.” Boren said he believes OU students do not want fewer courses, but under this proposed budget, higher education will take a budget cut of nearly $50 million. Boren sent a mass email to OU’s Norman-campus vice presidents, deans, directors and department chairs, forewarning them that OU may be required to institute university-wide reallocations if the budget is approved. Aside from Oklahoma’s higher education budget cut affecting the current $8,915.50 per-year flat-rate tuition cost, the budget cut will decrease chances of faculty and staff receiving across-the-board pay increases, something Boren said hasn’t happened for some time. If this cut stands, it will affect everyone in our university’s community, Boren said. In his email, he asked everyone to take all necessary actions

to reduce spending, conserve resources and fill vacant positions wisely, since their budgeted resources will be reduced. “Over the past six years, OU has absorbed over $90 million in direct cuts or uncompensated fixed costs, like utilities and healthcare,” Boren said in an email. “We cannot continue to receive cuts like these without damaging the quality of the university.” Boren will meet with legislative members and state leaders to urge them to change the proposed budget and to provide more resources for higher education. “This is the largest cut to any single agency’s budget,” Boren said in an email. “It would mean that higher education will have $106 million less than it had to spend in fiscal year 2008 if the budget is not changed.” Alex Niblett, alexandra.g.niblett@ou.edu

RELIGION

Group dedicates room to 24-hour prayer sessions 24.7 Prayer Movement helps campus ministries, students through prayer KELLY ROGERS, Campus Reporter, @KellyRogersOU

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BENNETT HALL/THE DAILY

English writing senior Ethan Fleischer reads from a prayer booklet in the United Ministry Center’s prayer room. Students have signed up to go to the room and pray 24 hours a day throughout February. Fleischer plans to pray an hour every day, he said.

tring lights and brown paper cover the walls of a room where OU students have been praying 24 hours a day since the first day of February. Advertising sophomore Alex Steele has continued a movement that began last year, started by two of her friends and fellow OU students, Matt Barton and Reagan McDonald. The goal of the 24.7 Prayer Movement is to assist campus ministries and churches to help students find their own church and ministries through prayer, Steel said. “We’re just enabling a room to be dedicated to that,” Steele said. In the room with beanbag chairs and Bibles, students can find markers to write on the papered walls. “It’s been awesome to see the walls just filled with things, even in the first couple of days,” Steele said. “And now it’s almost been a week, and there are tons of prayer requests, SEE RELIGION PAGE 2

BLOOD

MEDICINE

Petition gains steam with 12,000 signatures

Sooners offer aid to Africans

Grad student starts organization to promote women’s, GLBT rights

Students promote health in Ghana AMBER FRIEND Campus Reporter @amberthefriend

ADAM BURNETT Campus Reporter

Since fall 2012, an OU graduate student’s petition to allow gay and bisexual men to donate blood has received more than 12,000 signatures. Michael Hernandez started the petition in 2012. As of Feb. 10 at 5:40 p.m. 12,105 people had signed the petition. Hernandez’s goal is to garner 1 million signatures, he said. Under current FDA guidelines, men who have had sex with another man once since 1977 cannot donate blood, which limits the pool of available donors. Since November 2012, when Hernandez lobbied for signatures on OU’s campus, about 5,555 more people have signed. To help his cause, Hernandez founded the organization All R Equal, a nonprofit organization that promotes women’s and gay rights. Hernandez will gather signatures at the GLBT pride parades in Miami this year. Since he created the petition, the

Over the winter break, OU Global Brigades traveled to Ghana for a 10-day mission to spread medical help and public health information. Medically-minded Sooners went door-to-door with the program checking possible symptoms and shadowing doctors, said Melanie Purdy, trip attendee and University College freshman. OU students helped give patients a public health talk, discussing reproductive

SEE BLOOD PAGE 2

L&A: The Vagina Monologues opened at OU last night. Find out if it’s worth seeing this evening. (Online)

SEE MEDICINE PAGE 2

PHOTO PROVIDED

Andreana Prichard, assistant professor of honors and history gives a lecture on HIV to secondary school students in Kisumu, Africa.

Sports: Pete Hughes is helping Sooner baseball reach back to its roots. (Page 4)

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