Sunday, October 28, 2012

OU Hosting Engineering Open House


The University of Oklahoma Engineer’s Club is hosting an open house event for prospective high school students Friday, November 2, 2012.

The event, which has happened each year since 1912, is aimed to provide a tour of OU’s engineering facilities, information about the College of Engineering and potential future jobs, as well as offering some competitions for the prospective students.

The open house is the oldest and most successful event on the OU campus and offers academic testing and engineering design competitions fueled to provide students with a look at what their future could hold.

Rachael Ogilvie, a senior Petroleum Engineering major, attended the event in 2008 before choosing to attend OU.

“It’s crazy looking back and remembering my experience [in 2008] and then being a part of it as a student,” Ogilvie said. “It was a great experience and I’m just glad I chose OU because it has really opened the door [to my future].”

Ogilvie is a member of the Society of Women Engineers at OU and has led a successful journey thus far. She was a completions engineering intern for Shell last summer, and is returning next summer for another internship. Last summer saw her working with onshore projects, but next summer she will be working on offshore projects.

“I’m incredibly lucky and blessed to have had that opportunity [last summer],” Ogilvie said. “It still has not set in that I get another [opportunity] that’s even better.”

Ogilvie says that through hard work, dedication and the good reputation of OU she has been able to get these opportunities and she is thankful for her journey.

A journey that all started four years ago. At the OU Engineering open house.

Friday, October 26, 2012

A Local Democrat Works After Retirement

The Cleveland County Democratic Party is a busy place as elections near. (1:25)


A local democrat fights an uphill battle every day. Chadwick Cox, Vice-Chair and Treasurer of the Cleveland County Democratic Party, has worked hard to fight for a cause that leaves him battling against the more popular Republicans of Oklahoma. 

Cox was formerly a professor of microbiology and the University of Oklahoma Health Science Center in Oklahoma City, but after retiring he did what many people do not. He continued to work, perhaps even harder than he did before retirement, he said.

Cox has been a Democrat for about 45 years. The Democratic Party takes up most of his time these days, but he said he is also an active member Oklahoma Native Plant Society and the Thunderbird Sailing Club.

His mission is to spread the Democratic message to the community because he truly believes that it is best for not only Oklahoma, but the country as well. Each day Cox finds himself trying to spread the Democratic message in a largely Republican state when it comes to the results. The registered voters in Oklahoma are in favor of Democrats by two-to-one, but the results show otherwise.

 "I just dislike most Republicans because they seem to be just out for themselves, and I think that we're a country that should share," Cox said.

The governor, both U.S. senators, four of five House representatives, the entire executive branch of the Oklahoma State Government, 32 of the 48 state senators, and 66 of the 97 state house representatives are Republicans.

"There's been a real mark shift to conservatism over a fairly good period of time. [President Lyndon B.] Johnson said that he was going to force integration and that pretty much destroyed democrats as far as the Southern conservative people,” Cox said.

“That is a cycle that is going on right now and I'm hoping that it is peaking out and they are going to realize they aren't benefiting from Republicans running this country, [or] this state," Cox said. 

With the domination, Cox admitted that it is a challenge to win over votes at any level. However, to combat the Republican domination, "they got me down here working," Cox said with a smile. "That is true of a lot of people even though we [democrats] are so far behind."

He also mentioned that it is tough on their particular office because they are so close to the OU campus, which poses all kinds of problems for their impact. Students often do not care too much about politics, many are out of state students and do not know the voting process for Oklahoma and many just do not know the entirety of the messages, Cox said.

In an effort to get students more involved with the Cleveland County Democratic Party, Cox said he tried to have their office moved closer to campus so they could interact with students more. After all, the office has to be moved soon anyway, but his idea was not successful.

"Even though we do have students come in, I think we could be doing a better job with students and getting them more involved," Cox said.

Cox's view that OU students could use more information is shared by a campus-wide initiative called OU Votes. This shared opinion was proven well-based by OU students.

David Starr, an OU junior, said he has never voted and because he is an out-of-state student he does not know much about the voting process.

Joey Purull, a sophomore microbiology major, echoed the similar views to Starr. Purull has never voted, does not know about the voting process in Oklahoma and does not pay attention much to efforts to get students registered to vote.

"I've seen a couple of the emails [from OU Votes], but they kind of just went to trash," Purull said.

"I've seen some emails from OU Votes and seen some stuff on campus, but I don't really pay too much attention to those, they don't really catch my eye,” Starr said.

When people think of Democrats, the face of the party today is President Barrack Obama. However, Cox, although he endorses Obama, feels that Obama does not fight hard enough at times.

"One [issue we wanted brought up] would be to have a single payer healthcare system, we wanted [Obama] to bring it up... He didn't even bring it up," Cox said.

As for "Obamacare", Cox believes it is "certainly a step in the right direction, but as far as going to be something that is going to reduce the healthcare costs I think that they might be able to do it on a different part of it than I care for," Cox said.

Cox said that Mitt Romney poses a threat to President Obama’s attempt to be reelected.

"Beating [Obama] in that first debate certainly didn't help [Obama's cause]," Cox said.

Yet, Cox feels that Romney offers no difference from past Republican presidents who have failed to improve the country.

"[Romney] has the same Republican plan in mind, it is to reduce the taxes, especially on the wealthy, and he somehow thinks that is going to bring jobs," Cox said. "It has never worked. We just went through this with [President George W.] Bush, and it didn't work."

OU Votes is set out to register students to vote so that they can have help our country improve. The problem is many students did not think either candidate could help.

Do students think Obama did a good job in his first term as president?

"I'd mark that by progress, and we really don't seem to have made any stretches towards the future in terms of the economy and war,” Starr said.

Will Romney present a positive change if elected president?

“[Romney and Obama] honestly just seem to be arguing on every point, and its more words against words,” Starr said. “No real plans, no real actions have been set, so nothing leads me to think that.”

“Nothing is ever going to get done when two parties cannot agree and are just constantly bashing,” Starr said.

OU Votes campus-wide initiative has the mission of “Registration. Education. Mobilization” and to encourage students to be engaged in the presidential election. However, the students I spoke to feel their vote just does not count.

“It’s tough to keep saying [my vote matters} and think your vote will count when there's no progress been made with past votes and past people who have [been president],” Starr said.

"Everyone just seems to run and what they give their message as is just what they think people want to hear, get their votes,” Purull said.

"Deep down I know [my vote] should, but honestly I feel like it doesn't really matter,” Starr said. “You just think there's never going to be a good outcome."

As for Cox, the students pose a problem that he wants to attack head-on because he feels change is necessary. The fight for Cox continues, but it is only getting tougher.

Cox continues his uphill battle because he would “like this country to have a government that represents the kind of beliefs I think that most democrats have"






The Cleveland County Democratic Party are facing challenges being located so close to the University of Oklahoma. Some OU students admittedly do not know enough and are not voting. (1:44)

Monday, October 8, 2012

OU's Vietnamese Student Association Celebrates Lunar Moon Festival

The Vietnamese Student Association celebrated the Lunar Moon Festival Tuesday, October 2, 2012 at the Oklahoma Memorial Student Union in an effort to spread the Vietnamese culture.

Hoang Nguyen Truong, secretary of the Vietnamese Student Association, said the Lunar Moon Festival, also known as Tet Trung Thu or the Mid-Autumn Festival, is a traditional celebration of family in Vietnamese culture.

 The Vietnamese Student Association hoped to share the culture of Vietnamese-Americans with the University of Oklahoma student body. The celebration included musical and dance performances, face painting, contests and many more activities.

 The Society of Vietnamese Students performed a traditional Vietnamese dance in colorful dresses while music was playing. The scene silenced the crowd, which was larger than anticipated, until the performance ended to applause.

OU students from the Society of Vietnamese Students performed a traditional dance during the Lunar Moon Festival. PHOTO: Chad Hudson
Nguyen Le, the activities coordinator for the Vietnamese Student Association, said that the event has grown since last years festival.

 “The turn out was more than expected,” Truong said. “I just want students to come to have a better understanding of the different Asian cultures… I wanted a variety of a group of people to come together to celebrate diversity.”

Le echoed Truong's statement by saying, "the main purpose [of the event] was to showcase our culture. It's important for people to learn about the different cultures because our university is so diverse."

The Lunar Moon Festival occurs on the fifteenth day of the eighth lunar month (September or October on our calendar). It has been around for an estimated 15,000-20,000 years and is often described as a combination of the American Halloween and Thanksgiving.