SPORTS • PAGE B1
LIFE & ARTS • PAGE A5
Taming the Huskies
Movies for lovers, haters
Jelena Cerina (shown left) and the Sooners will have a chance to topple No. 2 Connecticut tonight on the road.
The Notebook (shown right) is one of the six films recommended for those who love — and hate — Valentine’s Day.
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Monday, February 14, 2011
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Bill could allow guns on college campuses OU not likely to follow state of Texas which may enact law starting Sept. 1 HILLARY MCLAIN The Oklahoma Daily
Colleges in Texas may soon allow guns on campus if proposed legislation is passed by the House of Representatives. The bill, which was authored b y R e p re s e n t a t i v e D av i d S i m p s o n (R-Longview), would allow concealed carry license holders to carry firearms on college
campuses, which is presently illegal. OU’s chapter of the Young Democrats and President Boren’s office disapprove of the idea. Chris Shilling, OU spokesman, said allowing guns to be carried on college campuses would present a threat to students, faculty and staff. “To allow people to have guns who have not trained with our police units could create chaos in a crisis situation,” Shilling said in an e-mail. “Police would not be able to sort out dangerous gunmen from others on campus with guns.”
ONLINE AT OUDAILY.COM » Link: View the original bill online The Young Democrats executive council has taken the same stance as President Boren. “[President Boren] has previously spoken out against having guns on the University of Oklahoma campus when they are not in the hands of law enforcement professionals. We agree with him completely,” Ashley Edwards, president of the Young Democrats
said. Allowing guns on campus might also hinder OU’s ability to promote the school as a safe place, according to Shilling. “In addition to compromising the safety of our campuses, allowing guns on campus could also damage our ability to recruit students and faculty who are likely to view our campuses as unsafe environments,” Shilling said in an e-mail. OU College Republicans President SEE BILL PAGE 2
BLOOD DRIVE
Donors respond to need for blood in state
PAGEANT | SOPHOMORE WINS MISS AFRICAN QUEEN
Winter storms cause more than 50 blood drives to be canceled, supplies dwindle KATHLEEN EVANS The Oklahoma Daily
PHOTOS BY MARCIN RUTKOWSKI/THE DAILY
Top: Psychology sophomore Monet Olorunnisomo paints on a canvas during Friday’s Miss African Queen pageant in the Oklahoma Memorial Union’s Molly Shi Boren Ballroom. Right: Early childhood education junior Karla Ude (left) and University College freshman ‘Jemiyo Akande (right) watch as psychology sophomore Monet Olorunnisomo is named Miss African Queen 2011.
SCHOLARSHIP
Women’s studies program offers scholarships for full-time single mothers Applications due March 1 for up to $4,000 in financial aid assistance SARAH MARTIN The Oklahoma Daily
Single-mother students taking classes full time have the opportunity to apply for financial aid available through a university program. The Women’s and Gender Studies Program is offering two scholarships: • The Betty Baum and Norman Hirschfield Award offers three $4,000 awards through an endowment. The scholarship was created in 1999. • The Empowerment of Spirit Award, which was created in 2009, gives what it can based on yearly funding. Applications for both scholarships are due March 1. Applicants must be a single mother raising children, a full-time student at any of the Norman campuses, have completed two full semesters within the last five years and have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. The recipients are chosen by the Women’s and Gender Studies Faculty, said Brenda Houser, program spokeswoman.
A LOOK AT WHAT’S ON Visit the OU Daily fashion blog to read about what Chelsea Cawood thinks are the best looks for curvy women
Jamie Brown, microbiology senior, received Brown plans to go to medical school after the Betty Baum and Norman graduation. Hirschfield award last year. One of the 2010-11 Brown, the mother of a 2-yearEmpowerment of Spirit Awards old, said it was nice to see scholwent to letters senior Sara arships established for single Linman, a mother of two. Linman • Be a single mother mothers. said she returned to school in raising children Brown’s daughter, Addison, 2006, taking night classes and was born in the June after her has been a full-time student at • Be a full-time student freshman year. She was enrolled OU since 2008. in class the next fall, without takLinman graduated from high • Have completed two ing any semesters off, she said. school in 1995 and took unisemesters in the past five Brown said she also receives versity classes but left school to years tuition waivers and grants, but get married. After her divorce, takes out some loans to pay her Linman decided to go back to • Have a 3.0 GPA bills. The scholarship allowed school and pursue her dream to her to take out fewer loans, she be an attorney. said. “I have such an immense “I was grateful not just for the amount of gratitude to be able to money but to know that there is a support sys- have the opportunity to go back to school and tem out there for single moms who are trying to get an education, it’s kind of like a do-over,” go to school and make their kids a better life,” Linman said. Brown said. Linman has two sons, ages 10 and 7. In addition to going to school, Brown “My kids and I do our homework together, has worked as a teaching assistant for they have seen me struggle through classes that Undergraduate Human Physiology Labs and are really, really hard for me to take,” Linman this semester she works as a note taker in the said. “It’s really good for them to go through athletic department. that experience with me.”
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After a 10-day shortage, the state now has an adequate blood supply thanks to donors, an Oklahoma Blood Institute spokeswoman said. The blood emergency began Feb. 3, after winter storms canceled more than 50 blood drives across the state and prevented donors from visiting local centers, OBI spokeswoman Leslie Gamble said. The emergency meant the institute had less than a one-day supply that is typically used, Gamble said. “It’s not too dramatic,” she said. “All hospitals across the state all had good inventories of blood on site. If we looked at what we had and projected how long it would last without more donations, we would have only made it one day.” One of the canceled blood drives was the OU-OSU Bedlam Blood drive, which was scheduled for Jan. 31 to Feb. 4, however, the OU campus was closed. Typically, about 700 people donate blood in one day, Gamble said. “Across the state we have a large number of blood drives each day,” Gamble said. “There is a big impact from one or two days of being shut down.” After declaring the emergency, Oklahoma Blood Institute e-mailed donors and extended business hours to encourage participation from the community. Institute leaders were grateful with those who made donating blood a priority, CEO John Armitage said. Although the institute has received enough blood to end its emergency, organizers still encourage participation in blood drives and visits to community donation centers. “Even though this emergency has passed, the need for blood hasn’t,” Armitage said. “This emergency illustrated just how important regular blood donation is to the health of Oklahomans.” To donate, visit Norman Regional Hospital, 901 N. Porter Ave. from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. today.
TODAY’S WEATHER
64°| 45° Tomorrow: Partly cloudy with a high of 73 degrees