The Oklahoma Daily (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 90, No. 57, Ed. 1 Friday, November 4, 2005 Page: 3 of 12
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: University of Oklahoma Student Newspapers and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Carl Albert Congressional Research and Studies Center.
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www.oudoily.com 3A
The Oklahoma Daily CAMPUS hidoy, Nov. 4,2005
325-3666
Students receive
Art for the Heart
surprises during
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FACTS
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Photo ilhMrahor by Mug Sun/ M
behalf of Apple as student
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A GUIDE TO AREA CHURCHES AND RELIGIOUS ORGANIZATIONS
Peace Happens
Live band. Free drinks. No cover.
One Heart at a Time
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Students use a variety of
artistic forms to relieve stress
and feel like kids again.
Snvur Schedule
Sunday 8 410:30 AM
Sunday School 9:30 AM
Wednesday: / PM
use of student representative programs on OU’s
campus.
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PHILLIP KJHNSON
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'We to/ked about how bad we
wanted to relieve stress, so we're
like, We're going to Wal-Mart to
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LINDSAY VAN METER
University College freshman
MEREDITH SIMONS
DAILY STAFF WRITER
Marketing campaigns can hit
close to home through peer-to-
peer communication.
DAWNDEE HUDSON
DAILY STAFF WRITER
Collegiate Fellowship..
Sunday Worahip.........
4 4* AM
11 AM
I PM
;PM
ANDREW NASH
DAILY STAFF WRITER
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Live und Juur I" th* 'dcWfon of <Tliri«l
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Nonna OK
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1501 24th Avenue ME
Moemen, OK 73071-329-3939
www .wtdwoodchue h otg
Surprise Assignments
• Danele Elliott, AFROTC code! and
meteorology senior, was assigned to Dovis-
Monfhon MB in Tucson, Ariz.
• Eric Elliott, AFROTC cadet and meteorol-
ogy senior, was assigned to Elmendorf AEB
m Anchorage, Alaska.
• Haley Hamon, AFROTC cadet and meteo-
rology senior, was assigned to Semboch
AEB in Germany
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SUNDAY SERVICES
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Church Service
Sunday School
Wednesday Meeting
10:00 am
10 00 am
7:00 pm.
Reading Room, 733 Asp
10:00-2:00 Mon-Fri
321-4298
Y2M: Youth Media and Marketing Networks.
Y2M offers marketing services to its clients the OU campus,
such as student representative programs for
college campuses.
St. Thomas More University Parish
and .......... ( .al..... SI.IJCI t eiik i
to Elmendorf Air Force Base in
Anchorage, Alaska.
Eric Elliott said the assignment is
an important event in his life.
“It'syourfirst assignment," Elliott
said. "It’s something you wait for.
It’s a hig deal because that’s where
you will spend the first three years
of your career.’’
Elliott willgraduateinDecember
and receive orders about when and
whom to report to as graduation
grows nigh. He said his wife will
move with him to Alaska, as she
will graduate in December as well.
Eric Elliott said he was surprised
to receive his assignment at the
lecture.
"We’d heard [Stickford] wanted
to meet us and shake our hands,"
Elliott said. “I’m glad I got my
first choice. I like national parks
and I like to hike. There are fish
in Anchorage. It’s a city with the
access to more stuff."
Haley Homan's assignment,
was to Sembach Air Force Base in
Germany.
Brig. Gen. Stickford's visit came
as part of the National Severe
Storms Laboratory’s Colloquium
Series.
Danele Elliott's brother-in-
law, Eric Elliott, was assigned
and bright minds in die Air Force,”
Stickford said. "I believe it in my
heart that we are changing the
shape of the world. ”
Danele Elliott was assigned to
Davis-Monthan Air Force Base in
Tucson, Ariz.
She said the announcement was
a complete surprise.
“We'd heard rumors that the
assignments would be coming
in soon," Elliott said. "We did not
know that the guest general would
give them out."
Elliott was pleased with the
selection because it will give her a
, chance to see her husband, Ethan
.Elliott, who is currently serving in
Iraq on the weekends.
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college campuses in the past three years, said
Cliff Neuman. Apple higher education account
executive.
Student representatives allow the consum-
ers to receive answers to their questions from
someone they can relate to, he said.
"We just believe that peer to-peer communi-
cation is more efficient," Neuman said.
Matthew Coats, microbiology junior, and
Jarrod Higgins, journalism junior, work on
general’s lecture
J Three ROTC students
received assignments
from a brigadier general.
• i
The Pink Pony Coloring Club has a new mas-
cot. On Wednesday night, Glitterpuff, a three-
foot stuffed pony with pink hair, pink mane and
pink saddle made her debut in Walker Center ’s
Eight West social lounge. Glitterpuff is the new-
est addition to an unofficial art therapy club
that has been meeting since Oct. 11.
The week after many girls living on the hall
were overwhelmed with tests and papers, the
girls decided some stress relief was in order.
"We talked about how bad we wanted to
relieve stress," Lindsay Van Meter. University
College freshman, said. “So we’re like, We’re
going to Wal-Mart to treat ourselves and buy
coloring books and pretend like we’re little
kids again. We’ve been doing it ever since and
we love it."
The Pink Ponies are part of a growing
movement that encourages art as a form of
self-expression and relaxation. Art therapy
classes have steadily increased in popularity,
said Kristina Ice, art therapy instructor at OU.
There are currently about 150 students in
three art therapy classes.
Ice said art therapy can benefit students by
helping them relax, allowing them to deal with
emotional issues and aiding in problem-solv-
ing-
“Students who are experiencing relation-
ship troubles or overwhelmed by class work
sometimes can get ideas from doing imager,,’
Ice said. “It helps them sort through their feel-
ings and get different insight.”
Ice said everyone from athletes to art
majors are attracted to Oil’s art therapy
classes, which involve an overview of the art
therapy field and lots of hands-on experience.
“Some use it to delve way deep into intense
feelings,” Ice said.
But others use art less for self-revelation
than simple relaxation.
"When it comes to coloring, it’s a very
controlled activity," Ice said. “You have a pre-
printed page and you just have to color inside
the lines. When there’s a lot of chaos going on,
it’s nice for students to feel in control of some-
thing, even something as small as coloring.’’
The Pink Pony Coloring Club believes in
the therapeutic qualities of coloring.
but it seems to always make me feel better"
While it's valuable for relaxation, art therapy
_____________________ has significance beyond helping stressed
and bold lines. Zimmerman and Peiterson like students chill out. At a Thursday art therapy
girlier, more intricate pictures.
Coloring has been a lifelong habit for
Meredith Elwell, supply chain management
junior.
Her coloring isn't as social as the Pink
Ponies but she finds it just as therapeutic.
“I color whenever I’m stressed out," she
said. "It's somewhat mindless but it still keeps emotional issues,
you preoccupied. 1 have no idea why it helps,
treat ourselves and buy coloring
books and pretend like we're little
kidsagain.'"
Unyftamey/Ihe
Zamab Omidy, psychology senior, Matthew Coots, microbiology junior and Justin
Wilczek, electrical and computer engineenng senior, discuss Apple technology Thursday.
When the group began, Annika Peiterson,
Pink Pony member and University College
freshman, turned her dry-erase board into a
billboard advertising, “Therapeutic Coloring
Sessions.” The sessions offer members a
chance to relax, vent or just be kids again.
Ice said the childish element of coloring is
one of its biggest appeals.
"There’s some regression involved," she
said. “It allows people to feel like they’re chil-
dren again."
They have even analyzed coloring’s techni-
cal aspects and have sophisticated taste in
coloring books.
"1 like to use the same color with different
levels of pressure," Van Meter said.
She prefers books that feature big pictures
U.S. college students spend over $200 billion
a year, according to the 2005 360 Youth/Harris
Interactive College Explorer study.
As part of a growing national trend, compa-
nies are hiring student representatives to bring
their marketing campaigns closer to the buying
power source.
"Most companies kind of want that face-to-
face interaction with students on campus, said
Lauren Simmons, client services coordinator for
Christian Church
Sunday Wanhip K40am.
( hurch School 9 W
Sunday Worship 1(1.45 a.m.
"A community |oined in a reverent,
thoughtful, loving quest for forth."
220 S Webster 329-2192
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Campus Devotional on Tuesdays
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Sunday Worship 10:30 AM 0c 5 KM
Wednesday Bible Study 7:30 PM
Hillel Jewish Student Center
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students chill out. At a I nursuay an tnerapy
class, students watched a video that described
how art therapy allows troubled people such
as prison inmates and the mentally ill express
themselves.
Ice has worked with victims of sexual abuse
and juvenile sexual offenders and uses art to
help her young clients work through intense
Danele Elliott, Eric Elliott and
Haley Homan, Air Force ROTC
cadets and meteorology seniors,
went to a lecture by Brigadier
General Thomas E. Stickford, direc-
tor of weather for the United States
Air Force, not expecting to receive
their post-graduation assignments.
At the end of Stickford’s lecture
on "Weather and the Warfighter:
How Environmental Intelligence
Helps us Win the Nation's Wars.”
Stickford called the three to the
front.
Stickford then told the students
where they would spend the first
three years after graduation and
gave the students an Air Force
weather coin.
“We love to have fresh faces
For poopli who thought they'd
never like church.
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Saturday Vigil Mass: 5 of p'
Sunday Mass: *
Confessions: Satuntov ’ 4 30p^
College Night: w.
■ of l/niftrsity Mhentn
8:30 a.m. Contemporary Worship
9:30 a.m. Free Breakfast
10 a.m. College and Adult Forum
11 a.m. Traditional Worship
Tyuw,; 6 p.m. Dinner and Bible Study
Thvkmws: 9 p.m. Game Night
W ■’ LnHfW. CHIKH * SfWtNT UMU
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www.uteK.ori |
Companies hire student reps to increase campus connections
. . . . V9M Ymith Media Networks. behalf of Apple as student representatives f/r
»
Coats and Higgins act as liaisons between !
campus groups such as students and faculty |
Many companies such as Apple Computer and Apple. As representatives, their job is to
actively promote their products through the promote and market the Apple brand through
use ofstudent representative programs on OU’s different mediums. ...
campus “We come up with our own [marketing] strat-
Apple has experienced incredible growth on egy for campus," Higgins said
- • J Because of a low budget, the most difficult
part of the job is coming up with marketing
techniques without spending a lot of money,
Higgins said.
The marketing techniques Coatsand Higgins
employ include demo table tops and a genius
bar. The genius bar allows students to come and 1-----
ask them questions about Apple technology at
7 p.m. every Thursday in the Couch Computer
Lab.
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Ganus, Sara. The Oklahoma Daily (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 90, No. 57, Ed. 1 Friday, November 4, 2005, newspaper, November 4, 2005; Norman, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1811805/m1/3/?q=Cadet+Nurse+Corps: accessed June 21, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Carl Albert Congressional Research and Studies Center.