The Oklahoma Daily

Page 1

The University of Oklahoma’s independent student voice since 1916

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

www.OUDaily.com

Free — additional copies 25¢

For complete coverage of the rivalry, see page B1 The Daily’s sports desk debates if OU-Texas should stay at the Cotton Bowl or move to Jerry World. See B8

Getting buzzed?

Routes added for OU-Texas shuttles New plan should improve transportation experience for attendees at OU-Texas football games, DART officials say SPENCER POPP The Oklahoma Daily

BY THE NUMBERS

BY THE NUMBERS

OKLAHOMA

TEXAS

3.2 $349 180

4.0 $500

Percent alcohol content in beer from the store

Percent alcohol content in beer from the store

Maximum public intoxication fine in Norman

Maximum public intoxication fine in Texas

Days license is suspended following first DUI offense

Days license is suspended following first DUI offense

90

Sources: TABC, ABLE, Oklahoma & Texas DMV, Texas DMVs, City of Norman PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY NEIL MCGLOHON/THE DAILY

Beer, fines bigger in Texas Alcohol rules, penalities stricter than in Sooner state and enforcement likely to increase around stadium KATHLEEN EVANS The Oklahoma Daily

Before driving to Dallas for OU-Texas, students should be aware that Texas alcohol and alcohol laws are different than those of Oklahoma — and they will be enforced, according to law enforcement agents. The national legal limit for the blood alcohol concentration is .08 percent. Anything above that limit is considered intoxicated, and law enforcement can issue a ticket for driving under the influence, said Sgt. David Benavides of the Texas Alcohol and Beverage Commission. Although

Texas officials observe this, they also issue tickets for driving while intoxicated. Police will ticket people for driving while intoxicated with a blood alcohol content lower than .08 percent if a person’s physical or mental abilities are affected, Benavides said. “When you introduce any alcohol, it slows reaction time and is considered losing faculties,” he said. “It alters your reaction.” This is at the discretion of law enforcement officers, and the minimum penalty for driving while intoxicated is confinement for 72 hours, according to the commission’s SEE ALCOHOL PAGE A2

Ticket prices increase with the times Student prices have raised sharply over the decades, tempting some to sacrifice their ticket for cash

$100

CHASE COOK

$80

In 1929, $1 could buy you a pair of men’s coveralls, four gallons of milk or an OU-Texas student game ticket. After 105 years of the Red River Rivalry, ticket prices have adjusted according to inflation and popularity. OU-Texas tickets cost a cool $110 this season — that’s 61 percent of the student season ticket value, which was $180. The price didn’t keep the tickets from selling out. It took nine hours for 4,700 tickets to find their way into students’ hands. Oral Blankson, human relations senior, was offered $300 dollars for his OU-Texas tickets, and he is having trouble deciding on whether to go or not. “I feel like if you go to OU, you have to go to at least one Red River Rivalry,” Blankson said. “But the thing about it is, you can make so much money off these tickets.” Though the potential for profit is high, students are finding it difficult to part with their tickets. “I’m in section 130, which is on the second level,” Taknesha Hawthorne, nursing junior, said. “It makes me want to sell my tickets a little bit, but I was there last year, literally on the top row. Even though it was really hot, it was still really fun.”

$60

A LOOK AT WHAT’S NEW AT Daily videographers asked students if they’re going to Dallas this weekend or not. Check out the results at OUDaily.com

PRICE

The Oklahoma Daily

» 1929 — $1 » 1934 — $1.10 » 1941 — $1.10 » 1951 — $1.30 » 1960 — $1 » 1970 — $3.50 » 1982 — $12 » 1990 — $25 » 2001 — $55 » 2010 — $110

$40

19

29 19 34 19 41 19 51 19 60 19 70 19 82 19 90 20 01 20 10

$20

YEAR

STUDENT OU-TEXAS TICKET PRICES THROUGH THE YEARS

Whether students have tickets or not, going down to Dallas for OU-Texas is an experience anybody can partake in and have a good time, Blankson said.

VOL. 96, NO. 29 © 2010 OU Publications Board www.facebook.com/OUDaily www.twitter.com/OUDaily

SEE TRAIN PAGE A2

ROTC runs game ball to Texas Annual event raises awareness of Toys for Tots toy drive CHASE COOK The Oklahoma Daily

OU Naval ROTC kicks off the OU-Texas game ball’s journey to the Cotton Bowl with its 10th annual Toys for Tots sponsored the Red River Ru n a t 7 : 3 0 a . m . Wednesday inside Donate toys at the Armor y. Toys the Armory, 1000 for Tots sponsors Asp Ave., at 7:30 the run each year. a.m. Wednesday. The event begins with coach Bob Stoops placing the first toy in the sponsored Toys for Tots donation bin. The ROTC raises awareness for this program each year by wearing T-shirts during the

To help

SEE ROTC PAGE A2

— Justin Mai contributed to this report

THE OKLAHOMA DAILY

DART officials have rearranged routes and added more buses to minimize delays for fans using the metro service in an effort to move passengers more efficiently through the Dallas Area Rapid Transit system and improve capacity at this year’s Red River Rivalry. Fans going to OU-Texas now have the option of riding air-conditioned buses that will pick them up at one of four locations around Dallas to take a direct shuttle to the fairgrounds, DART spokesman Mark Ball said. These supplemental bus shuttles will leave from Victory Park in west Dallas, Bush Turnpike Station in Plano, Forest Lane Station in north Dallas and Pearl Station in downtown Dallas, according to a DART press release. “We think a lot of people will take advantage of that,” Ball said. Last year, approximately 3,000 people on board the Trinity Railway Express from Fort Worth and Irving overwhelmed the Green Line train, which is only able to hold 400 riders. This left the MORE INSIDE entire system overloaded before the first train even Driving to Dallas left, Ball said. for OU-Texas? Be But this year, DART sure to plan your officials hope 15 buses travels ahead. waiting to pick up people PAGE A3 arriving at Victory Station in downtown Dallas from Irving and Ft. Worth will ease the burden on the entire system. In addition to the bus service, DART routes have been altered so more trains will be able to flow through the fairgrounds before and after OU-Texas. “What we are doing this year that’s

INDEX Red River Rivalry ...... A2 Classifieds ......... A6 Dallas Guide .......... A4 Opinion ............. B3 Rivalry History........ B4

TODAY’S WEATHER 82°| 52° Wednesday: Sunny with a high of 84 degrees Visit the Oklahoma Weather Lab at owl.ou.edu


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