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REGENTS APPROVE 2 NEW COLLEGE HEADS Board of Regents meeting topics also include addition of Arabic degree, conflict of interest policy, football air travel bid CHARLES WARD Daily Staff Writer
Two OU colleges will have new heads after action taken Thursday at the meeting of the Board of Regents. Joe Harroz, a former OU general counsel, will head up the College of Law, while David Ray will shed the interim tag from his title as Dean of the Joe C. and Carole Kerr McClendon Honors College. Harroz served for 12 years as OU’s general counsel, and left in 2008 to be president of Graymark Healthcare, Inc. in Oklahoma City.
He received a bachelor’s degree in economics from OU before earning a law degree from Georgetown, a release accompanying his announcement states. He said two things mattered to him when deciding to accept the position: the kind of legacy he wanted to leave and how frequently an opportunity like this would be available. “The last time this was available was 14 years ago,” he said. “For me, I thought about it, and to me the answer was, you can have a chance to be involved with students and I can do something I am passionate about, which is the law.” He also has been an adjunct professor at the College of Law for the last 10 years, teaching employment and sports law, he said. Harroz said he plans to teach at least one class a year at the college and remain a director of Graymark.
Harroz was selected after a national search and was approved by an “overwhelming vote” of the law faculty, Boren said. Ray has been a political science professor at OU since 1992. He took over as interim dean of the Honors College on July 1. “If there’s any person on this campus that has the heart of a teacher, that puts students first, that values the teaching enterprise and all it means to our students, it’s David Ray,” Boren said. Ray has won six teaching awards while at OU, according to a release that accompanied his selection. Ray will begin as dean Thursday, while Harroz takes over from Andy Coats on July 1. Also, OU will offer a bachelor’s degree in Arabic, if the new degree approved by the OU regents also is approved by the Oklahoma State REGENTS CONTINUES ON PAGE 2
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Maureen Brady dances with Matt Johnson, health and exercise science senior, Wednesday at the Senior Prom at Rambling Oaks Assisted Living. The prom was sponsored by REACH ministries, an OU student organization.
Students take seniors to prom A university organization sponsors Senior Prom at assisted living center CASSI TONEY Daily Staff Writer
Residents at a local assisted living center attended prom Thursday night with the help of more than a dozen OU students. Rambling Oaks Assisted Living welcomed REACH Ministries, an OU student organization, for its second annual Senior Prom. The night included music from the 1950s and 1960s, a photo booth and crowning of Prom King and Queen. “Watching all the young people dance is a great thing,” said Jean Pevehouse, Rambling Oaks resident. Pevehouse said this is the first event like this she has seen in two years at Rambling Oaks. “It’s a good turn out for this group,” Pevehouse said. Resident Barbara Manning said the best part was visiting with the young people from OU. She said she also enjoyed the punch and the dancing. “It was a tremendous change from our usual routine,” Manning said. “The dancing made me want to turn the clock back. It’s great dancing music. It makes it hard to sit down.” Kathryn Collins, public relations
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junior, volunteered at the event for the second time. “It was so much fun to see the senior citizens have fun, dance and let loose,” Collins said. She said her favorite part was announcing the Senior Citizen Prom King and Queen. Melissa Hays, film and video studies senior, said she did not get to attend the prom last year. “I went to bingo last year, loved all the people and just wanted to come back,” Hays said. In addition to the dancing and picture, Hays said she loved getting to know the residents and letting them talk and tell their stories and relive their younger years. Taylor Doe, human relations junior, founded REACH Ministries, which hosted the event.He said while it was a success, more residents attended last year. “[Last year], we had several ladies crying because it was the first time to dance in 25 years,” Doe said. Doe said the group also organized “Bingo in the Bahamas” for the Rambling Oaks Assisted Living Center. “They get really competitive with it,” Doe said. “It’s crazy.” The residents praised the students whose efforts provided them a memorable night. “I’m looking forward to our next senior prom,” Manning said.
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Taylor Doe, human relations junior, dances with Ann Ward at Rambling Oaks’ senior citizen prom. The dance took place Thursday.
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Official urges students fill out census Participation important for allocating federal money CASEY WILSON Daily Staff Writer
The 2010 Census has been mailed out and returning the form will determine more than just the state’s population, according to a census official. The census has two main purposes : To det e r m i n e O k l a h o m a’s political representation in congress and help determine how more than $400 billion in federal monies are allotted to the states annually, said Sidna Madden, local census office manager. The correct population amount also will affect the provision of social services and federal aid in Oklahoma, Madden said. By d e t e r m i n i n g t h e state’s population, the correct amount of federal aid can be allotted when a state of emergency is declared in Oklahoma, she said. The census will take a snapshot of Oklahoma’s population at a certain point in time, Madden said. “And we consider April 1 to be that point,” she said. Michael Leech, zoology sophomore, said he lives in student housing, and has not gotten the census in the mail. Leech said he probably doesn’t need to fill out the census. H o w e v e r, M a d d e n said college students will need to fill out the census wherever they happen to be. Madden gave the exa m p l e o f a s t u d e nt at OU who is actually from Texas. That student’s family in Texas will get the census form, she said. “It says if a student is away at college, do not count them,” she said. The amount of censuses returned as of now is about as expected, she said. The census office has seen 10 percent of Oklahoma County and 37 percent of Logan County respond to the census, she said. “I can see these numbers daily, and it’s kind of on track as to what we thought it would be since t h e s e f o r m s hav e ju s t gone out,” she said. The information the census provides will be available March 2011, she said. Colin Kirk, aerospace engineering senior, said he has received the census in the mail. Kirk, who is married and lives with his wife, said he plans to fill out the census, and has no problems with answering the questions.
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