SPORTS • PAGE 8
LIFE & ARTS • PAGE 7
Sooners set to kick off
Local band to rock Norman
Landry Jones (shown left) and OU football open the season Saturday against Utah State. The Daily previews what to watch for at the game.
The Non is a rock band on the rise. Read about Tom Bishop (shown right) band and its show tonight at the Opolis.
The University of Oklahoma’s independent student voice since 1916
Friday, September 3, 2010
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Stadium to start accepting meal points Change makes athletic events more economical to students, Housing and Food Services says SPENCER POPP The Oklahoma Daily
Students will now be able to use meal plan points and SoonerSense to purchase game day concessions at OU sporting events, starting with this Saturday’s football game against Utah State.
The change is aimed at making games more economical for students, said Lauren Royston, OU Housing and Food Services spokeswoman. “Meal plan points may exclusively be used for concession food and drink items, and we’re confident that OU students will enjoy the convenience,” Royston said in an e-mail. OU invested in terminals for the permanent concession stands around Oklahoma Memorial
Stadium, and hopes to eventually expand the service to additional permanent concession stands over time, Royston said. Freshmen who live on campus are required to purchase meal plans, which include various amounts of meal points. University College freshman Matt Sperle has been to OU football games in the past, and he said he is glad he can put his meal points to use. “It’s not coming out of my own
pocket,” Sperle said. Architecture junior Morgan Pinch said she would have taken advantage of the deal if she still had meal points. Pinch said using her points for a bottle of water on a hot game day or hot chocolate in the winter would have allowed her to spend extra meal points. Upperclassmen or commuter students may find additional information about purchasing meal plans online at food.ou.edu.
More information Some of the new menu options on game days this year include: » Chick-fil-A » Lo mein noodles » All-American chili dogs » Sooner Smokehouse selections *Source: Lauren Royston, OU Housing and Food spokeswoman
TRANSPORTATION
CAMPUS | STATUE UNVEILED
NEIL MCGLOHON/THE DAILY
A Yellow Cab of Norman taxi, a SafeRide member, is parked Thursday evening outside of Seven47. SafeRide services the entire Norman city limits.
Students must now carry IDs to use SafeRide Policy changed in response to number of people using the service SABRINA PROSSER The Oklahoma Daily
NEIL MCGLOHON/THE DAILY
A statue honoring 1958 petroleum engineering graduate Curtis Mewbourne is shown before the unveiling Wednesday. The statue’s dedication ceremony took place inside the first floor of Sarkeys Energy Center. The statue, depicting Mewbourne and his favorite dog, Rebel, is located in the Brian and Sandra O’Brien Plaza.
More information To use SafeRide, call 405-325RIDE from 10 p.m. to 3 a.m. Thursday through Saturday.
SafeRide will enforce a The service is confidential and stricter policy about who free to all active OU students. can ride in its cabs as more taxis will be out on the For more information, visit weekends to pick up OU studentaffairs.ou.edu. students in need of a ride home. *Source: saferide.ou.edu A new contract was formed with Yellow Cab of Norman and the Airport Express of Oklahoma City for the companies to assist in the growing number of students currently using SafeRide. The number of taxis out on the streets will grow from 10 to 20 vans and sedans. They will serve the city of Norman throughout the weekend. SafeRide is a free service for OU students to get from one place to another safely and was created four years ago. “The program is dedicated to assisting students in making smart, safe choices,” said Brynn Daves, assistant to the vice president of Student Affairs.
SEE RIDE PAGE 2
UOSA-sponsored tailgate to feature free food, music Student government hopes to bring more than 1,000 to pre-game activities KATHLEEN EVANS The Oklahoma Daily
UOSA will host the homegame tailgate once again this year, but hopes to make it bigger and better through more student participation. Former UOSA President Katie Fox started the tailgate last year as a way to bring students together and give freshmen a chance to take
Everyone at OU should have a tailgate. Everyone deserves a tailgate to go to before football games.” — RAINEY SEWELL, UOSA DIRECTOR OF THE INTERIOR part in the tailgating experience. The current UOSA administration has decided to repeat the tailgate this year at 3 p.m. Saturday on the corner of Lindsey Street and Asp Avenue, in front of the Joe C. and Carole Kerr McClendon Honors College. Last year’s tailgate had about
A LOOK AT WHAT’S NEW AT Take a look around the Campus Activities Council’s Wednesday evening open house in the multimedia section.
600 to 700 students, and UOSA hopes to see 1,000 some point this year, Director of the Interior Rainey Sewell said. “It will probably be around 500 students since it’s the first [game], NEIL MCGLOHON/THE DAILY
Students mingle at the UOSA tailgate tent Sept. 19, 2009, in Norman. UOSA SEE TAILGATE PAGE 2 plans to host the tailgate again this football season beginning Saturday.
THE OKLAHOMA DAILY VOL. 96, NO. 13 © 2010 OU Publications Board www.facebook.com/OUDaily www.twitter.com/OUDaily
INDEX Campus .............. 2 Classifieds .......... 6 Life & Arts ........... 5 Opinion .............. 4 Sports ................ 7
TODAY’S WEATHER 85°| 58° Saturday: Mostly sunny, high of 86 degrees Visit the Oklahoma Weather Lab at owl.ou.edu