LIFE & ARTS • PAGE 5
SPORTS • PAGE 8
Museum seeks more students The Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History is focusing on getting more students to visit, museum spokeswoman says.
Sooners sink Jayhawks The OU women’s basketball team beat Kansas, 75-57, to notch its fifth Big 12 Conference victory this season.
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Monday, January 24, 2011
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OU addresses mental health Campaign designed to reduce stigma against seeking help, improve access to mental health services LANEY ELLISOR The Oklahoma Daily
OU Counseling and Testing Services will implement a new mental health ally program known as “Talking Helps” this spring. The program “will focus on introducing the
common ... mental health problems experienced by our campus community, teach skills for talking with individuals in distress and teach participants how to refer distressed individuals to professional services,” said Scott Miller, Counseling and Testing Services associate director. “The larger goal will be to reduce the stigma
How to get involved Students interested in volunteering in Talking Helps should contact OU Counseling and Testing Services at 405-325-4611. No program start date has been set yet.
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CAC wraps up Winter Welcome Week Council canceled some events due to weather, but plans to reschedule movie showing
O’CONNELL’S | MEMORABILIA GOES TO HIGHEST BIDDERS
KATHLEEN EVANS The Oklahoma Daily
NEIL MCGLOHON/THE DAILY
Louis Dakil, owner of Dakil Auctioneers, auctions off items Saturday afternoon in the recently closed O’Connell’s located near Lindsey Streeet and Jenkins Avenue. All items in the pub were set for auction, including tables, chairs, memorabilia, and even the bar.
Auction marks end of campus staple 150 items from O’Connell’s sold in Saturday auction before final closing CARMEN FORMAN The Oklahoma Daily
E
verything was up for grabs Saturday afternoon at O’Connell’s Irish Pub & Grille on Lindsey Street during an auction to sell the memorabilia inside. More than 150 items from tables and chairs to the restaurant’s doors were sold at the
auction, which was overseen by Dakil Auctioneers Inc. Items sold at the auction went for a range of prices that sometimes came as a surprise to O’Connell’s owner Jeff Stewart. “The things I thought would go for a lot went for a little and the things I thought would go for a little went for a lot,” Stewart said. Former Norman resident Bird Ford came from New Mexico with her husband to attend the auction. They purchased one of bar’s
booths, which she said was special because she and her husband went on one of their first dates at O’Connell’s in the late 1960s. Ford expressed her sadness at the closing of O’Connell’s and called it her favorite bar. “We’re sad to see it go,” Ford said. Some items from the bar were more hotly contested than others, including a mounted elk head, which eventually sold for $625. Math junior Riley Harpole
purchased all of the items in both bathrooms, excluding the sink in the men’s bathroom, for $20. Harpole said he was unsure what he was going to do with the items he purchased. “I have no idea how to get it out, it’s all stuck to the walls,” Harpole said. Many of the bidders at the auction were O’Connell’s regulars looking for a memory they
SEE AUCTION PAGE 2
Despite the closure of campus in the middle of Campus Activities Council’s planned festivities, Winter Welcome Week officials said they were still happy with the week’s events and attendance. Wi nt e r We l c o m e We e k began Tuesday with free hot chocolate and donuts and continued until Friday night with a free midnight breakfast. CAC is in the process of trying to reschedule a film screening of “The Rock and Roll Dreams of Duncan Christopher” that was canceled Thursday due to snow and ice, event chairwoman Christy French said. “We want to try to reschedule, but because other CAC events take place we are not sure yet,” French said. “We haven’t talked to our advisers yet.” The premiere may be pushed to another date, and event attendees should look to Facebook for information about a new date, said Chelsea Caw o o d , C A C Fi l m S e r i e s chairwoman and senior economics major. Winter Welcome Week started slow with a coffeehouse event featuring free coffee and cookies but it picked up speed as the week continued, French said. “On [Tuesday] you could t e l l t hat p e o p l e w e re l i k e, ‘Oh, what’s going?’ but once t h e y s a w f l i e r s a n d p o s ters, the [Wednesday] attendance picked up,” French said. “People were really eager and excited to see what was going on all week.” Wednesday’s event, bingo at the Jim Thorpe Multicultural Center, had about 40 students attending, French said. Friday’s midnight breakfast, presented with a screening of “Jackass 3” by the Union Programming Board, was successful, and students were
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BRIEF
BRIEF
Summit offers lessons in leadership
Architecture professor to coordinate study-abroad trip to China
More than 250 students came together Saturday in the Oklahoma Memorial Union to improve their leadership skills at the Leader Summit. Students attended events at the summit designed to motivate and inform them about skills students can use before and after graduation. The Leadership Development & Volunteerism office and a committee of other OU faculty planned the summit, which included a drum circle session, motivational keynote speakers and group panels. Kaleigh Kaczmarek, a student assistant in the office, said OU students come to the Leader Summit because of the opportunities it provides them. “We make great connections and learn such valuable insight with how to be a successful student, how to be a successful member of the community and even how to be successful after college,” Kaczmarek said. The summit’s keynote speakers were author Nancy Barry, who wrote “When Reality Hits: What Employers Want Recent Graduates to Know,” and motivational speaker Marlon Smith, who runs Success By Choice Inc.
The reservation for students interested in studying abroad in China focusing on two China Trip opportunities is due Jan. 31 for the first trip. To reserve a spot in the class required for the trip, students must submit $300 and a copy of their passport or driver’s license. Students who go on the trip will visit five Chinese cities and study the country’s history, culture and economy. The itinerary includes trips to Beijing, Shanghai and Nanjing, and the tours last for either 10 days during spring break or the first 12
— Alex Ewald/The Daily
A LOOK AT WHAT’S ON The Daily’s Janna Gentry recounts her experience sharing her small-town life with two friends from Germany
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days of summer break. Undergraduate and graduate students must enroll in an upperlevel lecture class about China to go on the trip, coordinated and taught by OU architecture professor Guoqiang Shen. “This course gives students here the opportunity to travel … and gives them the chance to understand the past, the present and possibly the future in what’s going on [in China],” Shen said. After being part of the faculty for the monthlong Journey to China, Shen started the China Trip program for students interested in
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studying Chinese architecture. “Just like when you come to Oklahoma … and look at the cities, the shops and the parks, all of those things are architecture,” Shen said. Through word of mouth over the years, other majors began enrolling in the class, and Shen said he now has around 20 spaces available for each trip. Those who want to sign up through e-mail can send their name, e-mail and phone number to ChinaTrip@ou.edu. — Alex Ewald/The Daily
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