FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 25, 2009
THE UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA’S INDEPENDENT PEN NDENT STUDENT STUDENT VOICE
Who will take the field next weekend? Landry Jones or Sam Bradford? PAGE 6
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Read about our drink of the week, gin bucket, in today’s Life & Arts section. PAGE 8
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Saturday’s Weather
84°/57° owl.ou.edu CAMPUS BRIEFS BOB STOOPS DONATES TO COLLEGE OF BUSINESS To establish a business faculty fellow program, Bob and Carol Stoops donated a $150,000 gift to the Michael F. Price College of Business. The gift will support junior faculty through the Bob Stoops Business Faculty Fellow Program and will assist untenured assistant professors with research in the areas of accounting, finance, management, management information systems and marketing and supply chain management. “It is gratifying for Carol and me to help out in this way now,” Bob Stoops said in a press release. “We hope that this program will ultimately benefit OU students.” Awards in the Bob Stoops Business Faculty Fellow Program will be made to junior faculty who have shown research promise and potential. Bob Stoops is a 1983 marketing graduate from the University of Iowa and in his 11th season as OU head football coach.
UOSA RECALLS MEMBERS OF STUDENT CONGRESS Move part of effort to reform student legislation RICKY MARANON The Oklahoma Daily
O k l a h o m a St u d e n t s f o r a Democratic Society’s petitions to recall 21 members of Student Congress was approved by UOSA General Counsel Thursday. The group filed 21 petitions, one for each member of Congress they wanted to recall. The members being recalled should be chosen by a vote of the students rather than automatically taking a position
in Congress because they ran uncontested in last spring’s UOSA election, said Matt Bruenig, group spokesman. “Students will have the opportunity to choose in the recall election whether their current representative should retain office or whether they should be removed from office,” said Michael Davis, UOSA General Counsel member. The date for the recall election has not been determined, Davis said. “In a recall election there is not an opponent, there is only the question of whether someone should keep their position,” Davis said.
Davis said if a member of Congress is recalled, Student Congress may either appoint a replacement or hold a special election. Bruenig said a special election should take place to fill the seat of any member removed from office. “SDS believes that appointing people to fill vacant seats after the recall is not a solution,” Bruenig said. “It will only perpetuate the non-representative nature of the organization that we are seeking to reform.” He said if there are any vacancies produced by the recall election and a special election is called, the
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[in Senegal] or use the computers at my school,” Ly said. She said she goes to campus computer labs anywhere from three to six times a day to do homework, do research or check her e-mail. “One disadvantage is that I feel really comfortable doing my homework in a small space in my room instead of the large computer lab,” Ly said.
Katherine Rose had never thought she would enjoy being without a cell phone. But when Rose, political science junior, worked at a camp last summer in Wagoner — where there was little cell phone reception and she could only use her phone rarely — she realized she enjoyed the independence from her phone. “That freedom of not [having to] answer people instantly felt really great,” Rose said. Rose often feels tied to her phone, she said. “I’m doing homework, and I get a text, and I’m required to respond almost instantly because people get offended,” she said. “It’s like always having to be tethered.” Rose recently considered getting rid of her cell phone and replacing it with a landline, but she opted to keep the cell phone after considering the challenges that not having one could present. Not having a cell phone would have been difficult when it came to planning, Rose said. She would have had to make plans further in advance and would have not been able to make as many last-minute plans often prompted by the convenience of cell phones. Chelsey Henderson, University College freshman, has been without a cell phone for the last week. She lost her phone somewhere on campus last weekend and will not be able to get a new one for weeks, she said. “My social life has just dropped completely,” Henderson said. “I’m stuck doing everything alone because I can’t meet up with anybody.” She said she did not realize how dependent she was on her cell phone until she lost it. “I always think to myself, ‘What did [previous generations] do without phones?’” Henderson said. “I’m miserable because I’m a freshman, and I’m just getting started.” Nonetheless, Rose said she has not completely eliminated the idea of throwing out her cell phone. She said she likes the idea of living at a slower pace and not feeling accountable to everyone all the time. “It’s like a new societal expectation, kind of,” she said. “It’s a new way to offend someone.”
-Natasha Goodell/The Daily
-Caitlin Harrison/The Daily
HEALTH CARE FORUM TO BE HELD AT CHURCH A health care forum will be held Sunday from 4 to 5:30 p.m. at the First Presbyterian Church of Norman, 555 S. University Blvd. The forum will contain speeches from five panelists, including Charles Kimball, director of Religious Studies at the University of Oklahoma; Brian Karnes, Executive Director of Health for Friends in Norman; Dr. Chris Sieck, a Norman family physician; Craig Jones, president of the Oklahoma Hospital Association; and Rev. Bob Rice, pastor of First Presbyterian Church. The event is free and open to the public.
LEADERSHIP PROGRAM OFFERS BOOK SESSIONS The University of Oklahoma Leadership De velopment and Volunteerism, a division of OU Student Affairs, is encouraging students to sign up for the Read & Lead Book Club. Students can sign up for either the first or second fall book club session. According to an e-mail alert from Becky Barker, Director of OU Leadership and Volunteerism, the Listen & Lead session will be Sept. 29 and 30, and the Read & Lead session will be Nov. 17 and 18. Students will have to pay a $5 deposit prior to the sessions. The Listen & Lead session includes discussion lunches from noon to 1 p.m. -Jono Greco/The Daily
MEMBERS CONTINUES ON PAGE 2
The Lost World
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-Charlotte Lunday/The Daily
group will select candidates to run for open seats. “The petitions were signed before the meeting Tuesday and no member of Congress was singled out for a personal attack,” Bruenig said. Davis states in the General Counsel’s report on the recall petitions that the signature was dropped because the second signature was a student who is not in Gress’ district. Student Congress said they respect the group’s right to petition for a recall election, but said it is
TEEKO YANG/THE DAILY
Catie Dabney, art junior, talks on the phone, listens to an iPod and uses her laptop simultaneously Monday in the Bizzell Memorial Library. Some students experience campus life without these luxuries.
COMPUTER For some students, grabbing a laptop to check e-mail and Facebook is not feasible because they do not own a computer. “I go every day to the computer lab,” said Lauren Freie, University College freshman, who does not have a computer. “I go once or twice a day depending on what homework I have.”
Freie said she goes to the computer lab before her classes and during much of the time she has in between. She said it is “very hard not having a computer” because she works and does not usually do her homework until late at night. Haby Ly, an international student from Senegal studying civil engineering, said she does not have a computer here or at home. “I would go to the Internet Café
FACEBOOK Andrew Nimeh, University College freshman, said he tells people to get off Facebook since it becomes an addiction.
“I’m not a fan of virtual conversations,” he said. “I’m more of a face-to-face guy.” Nimeh is not the only OU student to not have a Facebook account. Several OU students have avoided joining the popular social network because they value other forms of communication.
Facebook is “an easy way to talk with friends who don’t live around you,” said Chaz Black, journalism sophomore. But “it’s definitely time-consuming,” he said. Students have plenty of other ways to talk to friends, said Erin Stokes, University College freshman. Stokes said she pre-
fers to call or send text messages to her friends instead of using Facebook. “It doesn’t matter who I’m around,” she said, “they say something to me about getting one.” -Brittney Brown/The Daily
Venezuelan university professor speaks about Chavez opposition Foreign polarization can teach through U.S. political situation JARED RADER The Oklahoma Daily
Venezuelan opposition to Hugo Chavez and his government will have a chance to gain political ground in the country only if it defines what it wants to change in the government and recognizes the successes of the Chavista movement, a professor from a Venezuelan university told an audience of students and faculty Thursday in the Oklahoma Memorial Union’s Frontier Room. Steve Ellner, director of the Center for Administrative and Economic Research at the Universidad de Oriente in Venezuela, said the Chavez opposition has failed to
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remove Chavez from power because it has “no notion of what’s going to get scrapped and what’s going to be retained” if they were to take control of the government. He said this confusion is due to the opposition being related to the period of the 1990s before Chavez was in power. “Even those Venezuelans who dislike Chavez very much… don’t want to go back to the [1990s],” Ellner said. Ellner said the legitimac y of the Venezuelan government from 1958 to 1989 was based on a strong interventionist policy in the economic and social affairs of the country. Nationalized industries, especially the oil industry, were used to promote economic and regional development and lessen social inequality. In 1989, everything changed when Carlos Andrés Pérez, the president of Venezuela at
the time, privatized industries that had been state run or owned by the Venezuelan public, and transferred these large sectors of the economy to foreign markets. “Regardless of what we think of globalization, the fact of the matter is that the legitimacy of those governments for that extended period of time was based on the idea that the Venezuelan state was promoting national development,” Ellner said. When Chavez came to power in 1998, he renationalized these industries, bringing back the kind of government Venezuela had identified with for a 30-year period, Ellner said. Chavez also established social programs as a priority in his government, giving the poor the ability to be directly involved in government affairs, something Ellner said was a positive aspect of the system, but which had
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negative effects as well. “Poor people feel that they have, for the first time, been incorporated and have some say-so in the decision-making process [of the government],” Ellner said. “That’s really essential to understand Chavez’s political success.” Ellner said it was these successes of Chavez’s government that the opposition has failed to recognize, only focusing on the negative aspects, which has pro- HUGO moted unity among oppos- CHAVEZ ing political parties. “The opposition has done too much to promote unity among itself, among the different parties, so much so that they brush aside differences so that the opposition
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