The Oklahoma Daily

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LIFE & ARTS • PAGE 9

Job hunt leads Sooners down new roads From driving a school bus to modeling nude, some students get creative in their money-making endeavors.

The University of Oklahoma’s independent student voice since 1916

Friday, March 25, 2011

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Regents approve athletic-housing project Facilities will be ready to house OU’s growing student-athlete population by 2013 NICHOLAS HARRISON The Oklahoma Daily

PHOTO PROVIDED

A rendering of Sooner Housing Center, which will be completed in 2013.

Daily reviews Stiles video

The conceptual design of a 230,000 square foot, 362bed athletic-housing facility was approved by the OU Board of Regents on Thursday. The facility will be located on the corner of Jenkins Avenue and Lindsey Street, the former site of O’Connell’s Irish Pub & Grille, which was demolished Tuesday in preparation for the new construction. The total cost of the project is estimated at $75 million, according to the regents’ meeting agenda. The project will be funded through private donations,

athletics department capital accounts and bond proceeds. OU President David Boren said he was excited about the upcoming project. Athletic Director Joe Castiglione said he thought it might be one of the most important projects the athletics department has undertaken at the university. “It gives us the opportunity to get all of our student athletes under one roof,” Castiglione said. Currently, student-athletes are housed in three buildings — the all-male Jones and Bud Wilkinson houses, and the all-female Jefferson House. There also is a stand-alone cafeteria, Wagner Dining Hall. Some of

SEE FACILITY PAGE 2

SOONERS SET OUT FOR SWEET REMATCH

Pictures, video show Rep. Stiles telling students, faculty to leave Union JARED RADER The Oklahoma Daily

A video of an incident between students, faculty and a state representative March 3 in the Oklahoma Memorial Union has been shared with The Daily. The 12-second video, which was taken on a student’s cellphone, shows Rep. Aaron Stiles, R-Norman, walking back to the union’s Molly Shi Boren Ballroom after taking pictures of students and faculty outside of the Regents Room, where the students and faculty had just attended a lecture hosted by the Women’s and Gender Studies Program’s Center for Social Justice. As Stiles walks away, students can be heard saying they had the room reserved until 9 p.m. for the event they had attended, featuring Activist-in-Residence, Shelby Knox, a nationally recognized author, who gave a lecture titled “Why Women’s History Matters.” Stiles then turns to the group to tell them they have two minutes before they need to leave. Stiles was attending an event in the ballroom presented by the Eden Clinic, a Norman crisis pregnancy center. While the video is short, it does not show any sign of a protest or disruptive behavior on behalf of the students or faculty, as Stiles claimed in a press release published March 11 on the Oklahoma House website. Pictures taken on the cellphone show Stiles taking pictures of the group. The pictures do not show any sign of a protest. Stiles characterized the student group as a “pro-abortion” group that had planned a protest in response to the “pro-life” Eden Clinic, according to the release. He said protestors were shouting, “We love abortion! We love killing babies!” In the release Stiles also called for an inquiry into campus-protest policies. Sociology professor Susan Sharp had reserved the Regents Room for an event without posting a notice of the event on the Center for Social Justice’s Facebook page, the release also stated. However, a visit to the group’s Facebook page shows a notice posted for the event March 3 at SEE FOOTAGE PAGE 2

ASHLEY WEST/THE DAILY

Senior forward Carlee Roethlisberger, left, and senior guard Danielle Robinson, right, lead the OU women’s basketball team as the players walk toward their bus Thursday outside of Lloyd Noble Center. The Sooners will face Notre Dame on Saturday in a Sweet Sixteen rematch of last year. For more women’s basketball coverage, see page 5.

Student organizations raise mercury awareness The initiative hopes to increase EPA standards on air pollutants RACHAEL CERVENKA

ONLINE AT OUDAILY.COM » Link: More information about mercury poisoning

The Oklahoma Daily

The possible problems posed by mercu- that has been in a person’s body over a few ry to student health and the environment months, according to a press release issued have become the focus of two student by the Sierra Club. organizations. The Sierra Club organized this event The Sierra Club and the Alpha Kappa to promote the increase of stronger Alpha sorority helped stuEnvironmental Protection dents find out the amount Agency standards to limit of mercury in their bodies toxic air pollutants from What we are trying by taking samples of voluncoal power plants, which to do is bring teer’s hair from 11 a.m. to 2 would reduce mercury levawareness to the p.m. Thursday at a booth on els in the air and in human dangers of mercury.” bodies, Sierra Club field the South Oval. At noon they had received organizer Whitney Pearson — WHITNEY PEARSON, around 15 samples, Alpha said. SIERRA CLUB FIELD Kap p a A l p ha p re s i d e nt “What we are trying to do Jessica Walker said. ORGANIZER is bring awareness to the The hair will be sent to the dangers of mercury and University of Georgia Marine Extension what we can do to reduce the levels in the Service, and within four weeks the re- air and in our own bodies,” Pearson said. sults will be sent to the participants’ home The sorority is sponsoring the project to addresses. Mercury is excreted through hair, so a hair sample shows the amount of mercury SEE TOXINS PAGE 2

A LOOK AT WHAT’S ON Visit the news section to read about Forrest Bennett and Katherine Borgerding’s election barbecue with international students at Kraettli apartments

THE OKLAHOMA DAILY VOL. 96, NO. 118 © 2011 OU Publications Board www.OUDaily.com www.facebook.com/OUDaily www.twitter.com/OUDaily

ASHLEY WEST/THE DAILY

Junior health and exercise science and pre-nursing senior Jessica Walker, left, gets her hair sampled for traces of mercury by Anthony David Salon employees Thursday afternoon on the South Oval.

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