Thursday, Aug. 28, 2014

Page 1

L&A: Is the selfie a form of artistic expression? (Page 6)

Sports: Sooners start season Saturday with Bulldogs (Page 4)

ESCAPE: Don’t miss the first Gameday Issue this weekend.

The University of Oklahoma’s independent student voice since 1916

W W W.O U DA I LY.C O M

2 013 PA C E M A K E R F I N A L I S T

T H U R S D A Y , A U G U S T 2 8 , 2 0 14

NAME CHANGE

OU Advocates are for everyone The OU Sexual Assault Response Team now bears an inclusive title DANIELLE WIERENGA News Reporter @Weirdenga

The OU Sexual Assault Response Team has changed its name to OU Advocates to reflect its wider base of services. The name change occurred after the Sexual Assault Response Team expanded its services to address many issues students face, such as relationship violence and stalking, as well as sexual assault, said Kathy Moxley, Women’s Outreach Center director. Moxley said the new name, OU Advocates, will more accurately reflect the range of services the program offers and addresses who the program helps. “We serve more than just women,” Moxley said. “We also serve men and people who are gender-queer.” The program’s advocates are a diverse group of men and women who come from different areas of campus, Moxley

said. Like its predecessor, OU Advocates offers students in crisis resources, such as talking with counselors or advocates in person or through email. The group also has a 24/7 confidential hotline at 405-615-0013. OU Advocates will also sustain the Sexual Assault Response Team’s “Step In, Speak Out” campaign, which encourages OU students to aid victims of sexual harassment and assault and victims of relationship violence. Throughout the summer, OU Advocates and the Women’s Outreach Center will hold One Sooner training for students. One Sooner aims to teach and engage students to end sexual misconduct on campus, Moxley said. The next One Sooner training will be from 5 to 7 p.m. Sept. 23. Students can register for the training at the Student Life website. Danielle Wierenga dmiwierenga@gmail.com

CLUB SPORT

TONY RAGLE/THE DAILY

The Women’s Outreach Center table is set on the South Oval to offer resources to all students.

Diversity abounds both on and off the grass

PROFILE

JOHN WALKER SPORTS REPORTER As the sun begins to set after hours of beating on the field at the crossroads of Jenkins Avenue and Timberdell Road, field hockey president and player Jessica Lamers suits up in heavily-padded gear and begins to position underneath the netted goal. Moments later, a shot is fired toward the lower left corner of the net. Without hesitation, Lamers extends her right leg and denies the ball. “Excellent job, Jessica!” field hockey coach Kathleen Fitzgerald said. In addition to her on-field duties, Lamers is also in charge of spreading light on a fairly new club sport to the Norman campus. The field hockey program is a club sports organization that began in the fall of 2011 by the aid of OU graduate Maria Mancebo. She took the initiative of meeting the requirements of organizing a club sport: recruiting players, scheduling games and finding transportation. As a result, a core of officers and players began to align and grow as the club expanded. The field hockey team is rich in its diversity. The club is available to join for both men and women and experience is not a requirement. Johnson assists newcomers during practice to help grasp the basic fundamentals of the sport.

JACQUELINE EBY/THE DAILY

Ph.D student Jessica Lamers prepares to guard her goal against her teammate during field hockey practice on Aug. 26 at the field hockey SEE FIELD HOCKEY PAGE 4 practice field.

PARTY

WORKSHOP

The three f’s: Foam, free and fun

Honors College to offer free course

The annual event returns for even more sudsy joy EMILY SHARP News Reporter @esharp13

The Oklahoma Memorial Union’s parking garage is going to be filled with something other than cars this Friday: foam. OU’s annual foam party is free to any student with a Sooner ID card and is from 8 to 11 p.m. on Friday on top of the Union’s parking garage. This year ’s party cost WEATHER Sunny today with a high of 96, low of 73. Follow @AndrewGortonWX on Twitter for weather updates.

$4,868, which paid for booking the foam machine, renting the foam machine o p e rat o r ’s h o t e l ro o m, booking a DJ, hiring a company for staging and lighting for the event and buying tarps, according to requested documents. Last year the event cost $5,239.92 for the same services, but last year’s budget also included supplies, reservations and catering, according to requested documents. This is the 12th year the Union Programming Board has held the foam party, which attracted 1,800 students last year, UPB

“It’s overwhelming in a good way. It’s not just dancing around to music, but having another sense thrown in with the foam.” AMELIA GINAC, UNION PROGRAMMING BOARD DIRECTOR

president Parisa Pilehvar said. UPB will provide free foam party tank tops to the first 100 students who arrive at the party. The music will be provided through Nexus

music and Adrian Buendia will be the DJ, UPB program director Amelia Ginac said. Any UPB members’ goal is to make the foam party accessible, Pilehvar said. Her favorite part of the foam party is seeing how many people come, she said. “It’s our first big event of the year and many peoples’ first college experience,” Pilehvar said. “We do all we can to make sure it’s safe and everyone is having the time of their lives.” The foam party is different from just any dance party, Ginac said.

INDEX

@OUDaily

News......................2 Classifieds................6 Life&Ar ts..................6 Opinion.....................3 Spor ts........................4

OUDaily

EMILY SHARP News Reporte @esharp13

Honors College students can sharpen their presentation and interview skills during a free, no-credit course this fall. The course, which will run Sep. 3 to Nov. 19, has two 50-minute sections for students to choose from: one meeting at 9:30 a.m. and one meeting at 10:30 a.m. Wednesdays, according to an email sent from the college. Honors College professor Amanda Minks and musical theater senior Kyra Wharton will teach the workshops using exercises and techniques that Wharton has learned in theater classes.

SEE FOAM PAGE 2

CONTACT US

theoklahomadaily

Sharpen presentation and interview skills with a course starting September

SEE HONORS PAGE 2

VOL. 100, NO. 9 © 2014 OU Publications Board FREE — Additional copies 25¢


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