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Get familiar with Tea Leaf Green, headliners of Norman Music Festival’s Jagermeister tage.
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IT’S NOT EASY BEING GREEN
MICHELLE GRAY/THE DAILY
Joe Garlett, Norman resident, recycles his cardboard at the Norman Recycling Center located behind Hobby Lobby on Main street. Garlett said he always recycles his cardboard at the center, and uses a recycling bin at home.
Recyclable materials at OU go through an intricate process before actually being recycled LAUREN STALFORD
The Oklahoma Daily
Students might throw their empty Coke bottles into recycling bins across campus without a second thought, but OU’s recyclables actually goes through a long process in order to help the environment. Each morning housekeeping teams and physical plant custodial workers empty the recycling containers on campus into
designated pick-up areas, said Amanda Hearn, physical plant spokesperson, in an e-mail. The materials are then transported to OU’s recycling compound. Once it reaches the compound, each container is hand sorted and materials are organized into their appropriate bins like newspapers, aluminum cans and cardboard. The sorting process is part of what makes OU’s recycling program successful, said Deborah Dalton, director of OU’s interdisciplinary perspectives on the environment program. Once material is sorted, it is shredded and then stacked. Every eight days the
Henry signs Sooner’s bill New law will require flags on state property to fly at half-staff during soldiers’ funerals MEREDITH SIMONS
The Oklahoma Daily
companies GreenStar and Georgia Pacific pick up the materials. These companies use recycled materials to make consumer goods like T-shirts, carpets and containers, Hearn said. “Recycling is not just a matter of putting cans in one spot and paper in one spot; there has to be a market for that material,” Dalton said. But recycling goes beyond throwing a plastic bottle into a different bin than paper. People who claim they recycle cannot just recycle material; they must also buy recycled material, Dalton said. It’s easy to tell who is using recycled material and who isn’t, and many products are
OU faculty gives back to university in online auction Proceeds to benefit student scholarships JAMIE BIRDWELL
Gov. Brad Henry signed a bill into law Monday that will honor Oklahoma soldiers who die in Iraq and Afghanistan. The bill, which will require certain flags to be flown at halfstaff during soldiers’ funerals, originated at the hands of an OU student who found himself typing a spur-of-the-moment e-mail to his state senator from Baghdad after he learned that three fellow Oklahomans had died in Iraq. Todd Anderson, science education senior, is an Army intelligence analyst who spent most of 2008 in Baghdad. In early September, he arrived at work and found his computer screen flashing with the message that three soldiers had been killed in the southern part of the country. There was a rumor, confirmed later that day, that the soliders were fellow members of the BILL CONTINUES ON PAGE 2
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labeled if they use recycled material, said Daniel Terlip, president of OUr Earth. “Over the past couple of years, OU’s recycling program has made vast improvements,” Terlip said. OU is doing a good job publicizing the recycling program, and students are more aware of their ability to recycle on campus, Terlip said. Over the past year OU has increased its recycled material by 28 percent, giving the refuse and recycling department 805 tons of material to recycle, Hearn said. Hearn said the physical plant will adapt its resources as needed to keep up with increased amount of recycling.
The Oklahoma Daily
OU faculty and staff raised $16,481 for student scholarships in an online auction last week as part of a faculty and staff fundraiser. Some of the items on auction included a lunch with OU football head coach Bob Stoops or women’s basketball head coach Sherri Cole, autographed basketballs, free meals in couch cafeteria for a year and a T-shirt quilt signed by OU President David Boren and every OU sports team
coach, said fundraiser volunteer Beth Gatewood. The items for the auction were all donated by OU faculty, staff and retirees, which allowed all of the proceeds to go toward scholarships, Gatewood said. “I had a lot of fun getting some of the items [for the auction],” Gatewood said. “You would be surprised how generous people are.”The auction ran from March 30 to April 3 and had 1,517 bids, reaching as much as $2,050 for the top bid, according to the auction’s Web site. The OU Campus Campaign is an annual event that solicits faculty, staff and retirees to give back to the
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“Giving back provides a better work environment for ourselves and support for our students.” RABECCA TRAMEL, CAMPAIGN COORDINATOR university, campaign coordinator Rebecca Tramel said. The campaign consists of the auction, private donations and a T-shirt sale, she said. All of the money from the online auction goes to a special fund that feeds into the Sooner Heritage Scholarship, Tramel said. AUCTION CONTINUES ON PAGE 2
VOL. 94, NO. 127