The University of Oklahoma
(abbreviated OU) is a coeducational public research university located in Norman,
Oklahoma
.
Founded in 1890, it existed in
Oklahoma Territory near
Indian Territory for 17 years before the
two became the state of Oklahoma.
As of 2007, the university has 29,931
students enrolled, most located at its main campus in Norman
.
Employing nearly 3,000 faculty members, the school offers 152
baccalaureate programs, 160
master's programs, 75
doctorate programs, and 20 majors at the first
professional level.
David Boren, a
former
U.S. Senator and
Oklahoma Governor, has served as
President of the University of Oklahoma since 1994.
In 2007,
The Princeton
Review named the University of Oklahoma one of its "Best
Value" colleges. The school is ranked first per capita among public
universities in enrollment of
National Merit Scholars and among the
top five in the graduation of
Rhodes
Scholars. PC Magazine and the Princeton Review rated it one of
the "20 Most Wired Colleges" in both 2006 and 2008, while the
Carnegie
Foundation classifies it as a
research university with "high research
activity."
Located on its Norman campus are two
prominent museums, the Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art, specializing
in French Impressionism and Native American
artwork, and the Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural
History
, specializing in the natural history of
Oklahoma.
The school, well-known for its athletic programs, has won 7
NCAA
Division I National Football
Championships. Its baseball team has won 2
NCAA national
championships and the women's softball team won the national
championship in 2000. The
gymnastics teams
have won four national championships since 2002 and its
football program has the best winning
percentage of any
Division I-FBS team
since the introduction of the
AP Poll in
1936, playing in four
BCS
national championship games since the inception of the
BCS system in 1998.
History
In 1889,
Governor of
Oklahoma Territory George
Washington Steele urged the
Oklahoma Territorial legislature to
"create
public
school systems and universities of higher education".
In
December 1890, the Legislature established three universities: the
state university in Norman, the agricultural and mechanical college
in Stillwater
(later renamed Oklahoma State
University
) and a normal school
in Edmond
(later
renamed University of
Central Oklahoma). Oklahoma's admission into the union
in 1907 led to the renaming of the Norman Territorial University as
the University of Oklahoma. Norman residents donated of land for
the university south of the Norman railroad depot. The university's
first president ordered the planting of numerous trees before the
construction of the first campus building because he "could not
visualize a treeless university seat." Landscaping remains
important to the university.
The university's first president,
David
Ross Boyd, arrived in Norman in August 1892 and the first
students enrolled that year. The School of Pharmacy was founded in
1893 because of high demand for pharmacists in the territory. Three
years later, the university awarded its first degree to a
pharmaceutical chemist. The "Rock Building" in downtown Norman held
the initial classes until the university's first building opened on
September 6, 1893.

Donald W.
Reynolds Center for the Performing Arts, formerly Holmberg
Hall, exemplifies the school's architectural style.
On January 6, 1903, the university's only building burned down and
destroyed many records of the early university. Construction began
immediately on a new building as several other towns hoped to
capitalize by convincing the university to move. President Boyd and
the faculty were not dismayed by the loss. Mathematics professor
Frederick Elder said, "What do you need to keep classes going? Two
yards of blackboard and a box of chalk." As a response to the fire,
English professor
Vernon Louis
Parrington created a plan for the future development of the
campus. Most of the plan was never implemented, but Parrington's
suggestion for the campus core formed the basis for the North Oval.
The North and South Ovals are now distinctive features of the
campus.
Another distinctive feature of campus is the style of architecture.
The campus buildings are designed in a unique style, Cherokee
Gothic. The style has many features of the Gothic era but has also
mixed the designs of local Native American tribes from Oklahoma.
This term was coined by the renowned American architect Frank Lloyd
Wright when he visited the campus. The University has built over a
dozen buildings in the Cherokee Gothic style.
|
| School Presidents |
| David Ross Boyd,
1892-1908 |
| A.
Grant Evans,
1908-1912 |
| Stratton D.
Brooks,
1912-1923 |
| James S.
Buchanan,
1923-1925 |
| William Bennett
Bizzell, 1925-1941 |
| Joseph A.
Brandt,
1941-1943 |
| George Lynn Cross,
1943-1968 |
| John Herbert
Hollomon, 1968-1970 |
| Paul F. Sharp, 1971-1977 |
| William S. Banowsky,
1978-1984 |
| Frank E. Horton
1985-1988 |
| Richard L.
Van Horn,
1989-1994 |
| David Boren,
1994-present |
In 1907, Oklahoma entered statehood, fostering changes in the
political atmosphere of the state. Up until this point, Oklahoma's
Republican
tendencies changed with the election of Oklahoma's first
governor, the
Democratic Charles N. Haskell. Since the inception of the
university, different groups on campus were divided by religion.
Early in the university's existence, many professors were
Presbyterian, as was Boyd. Under pressure, Boyd
eventually hired several
Baptists and
Southern
Methodists. The Presbyterians and
Baptists got along but the Southern Methodists conflicted with the
administration. Two notable Methodists, Rev. Nathaniel Lee
Linebaugh and Professor Ernest Taylor Bynum, were critics of Boyd
and activists in Haskell's election campaign. When Haskell took
office, he fired many of the Republicans at the university,
including President Boyd.
The campus expanded over the next several decades. By 1926, the
university encompassed . Development of South Oval allowed for the
southern expansion of the campus. The University built a new
library on the oval's north end in 1929. Then President Bizzell was
able to get the Oklahoma legislature to approve $500,000 for the
new library up from their original offer of $200,000.
Like many universities, OU had a drop in enrollment during
World War II. Enrollment in 1945 dropped to
3,769, from its Pre-World War II high of 6,935 in 1939.
Many infrastructure changes have occurred at the university. The
southern portion of south campus in the vicinity of Constitution
Avenue, still known to long-time Norman residents as 'South Base',
was originally built as an annex to Naval Air Station Norman. It
contained mostly single-story frame buildings used for classrooms
and military housing. By the late 1980s, most were severely
deteriorated and were demolished in the 1990s to make room for
redevelopment. The Jimmie Austin University of Oklahoma Golf Course
was built as a U.S. Navy recreational facility.
The north campus and airfield were built in the early 1940s as
Naval Air Station Norman. The station served mainly an advanced
flight training mission and could handle all but the largest
bombers. A large earthen mound east of
Interstate 35 and north of Robinson
Street, colloquially known as 'Mount Williams', was used as a
gunnery (the mound has since been removed to make way for a
commercial development). In the post-World War II
demobilization, the university received the
installation. Naval aviator's wings displayed at the entrance to
the terminal commemorates this airfield's Naval past.
After the war, enrollment surged. By 1965, enrollment had risen
over 450% to 17,268, causing housing shortages. In the mid 1960s,
the administration completed construction of three new 12-story
dormitories located immediately south of the South Oval. In
addition to these three towers, an apartment complex was completed
that housed married students, including men returning to college
under the
GI Bill. These apartments are now
Kraettli Apartments.
In 1943
George Lynn Cross took
over as president of the University, two years after the U.S.
entered World War II. He served until 1968, 25 years later,
becoming the longest-serving president in history of the
university. Five presidents served in the next 25 years. In 1994,
the university hired a president who has stayed longer.
The university had policies of racial discrimination and
segregation which were challenged and overturned in court cases.
The
Bizzell Memorial
Library has been designated a U.S.
National Historic Landmark in
commemoration of the cases of David McLaurin, a black man who was
denied admission to graduate school in 1948. It was then state law
that no school should serve both white and black students, but
there were few or no separate graduate programs available for
blacks. A court case effectively forced the Board of Regents to
vote to admit McLaurin, but he was directed to study in a separated
area within the law library and to be allowed to lunch only in a
segregated area as well. The National Association for Advancement
of Colored People brought the case to the U.S. Supreme court in
McLaurin
vs. Oklahoma State Board of Regents. In 1950, the court
overturned the university's policy for segregation at the graduate
school level. The case was an important precedent for the more
famous and sweeping 1954 case of
Brown v. Board of Education which
disallowed "separate but equal" policy at all school levels.
Since
David Boren became Oklahoma's
president in 1994, the University of Oklahoma system has had an
increase in new developments throughout including: the purchase of
for OU-Tulsa, the new Gaylord Hall, Price Hall, the ExxonMobil
Lawrence G.
Rawl Engineering Practice Facility (under
construction), Devon Energy Hall (under construction), the Wagner
Student Academic Services Center, the Research and Medical Clinic,
the expansions of the Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art, and the
National Weather
Center
.
Recognition
Academic profile
The university consists of fifteen
colleges,
including 152
majors such as
meteorology, geology, petroleum engineering,
architecture, law, medicine,
Native American
studies,
history of science, and
dance programs.
While the two main campuses are located in
Norman and Oklahoma
City
, affiliated programs in Tulsa
expand
access for students in eastern Oklahoma. Some of the
programs in Tulsa include: medicine, pharmacy, nursing, public
health, allied health and liberal arts studies.

Gaylord Hall, home of the Gaylord
College of Journalism and Mass Communication, finished construction
in 2004.
Students come from all 50
U.S. states and
over 100 countries. 32% of the 2006 freshmen were in the top 10% of
their high school class. Ethnic
minority
groups represent over 25% of newly-enrolled undergraduates and
27% of all students.. In addition, the university has an enrollment
of over 700
National Merit Scholars,
making it first per capita among public universities.
Oklahoma is ranked in the top 10 for "Best Value Public Colleges"
by the Princeton Review.
In a survey of the top 500 academic
institutions in the world by the Shanghai Jiao
Tong University
in 2006, Oklahoma ranked 301st. They were tied with
99 other schools, including Big 12 schools such as Texas Tech
University
and Kansas State University
. University of Colorado
was the highest Big 12 school, being ranked number
34. However, due to stricter enrollment policies in recent
years, average scores for incoming students are on the rise. The
average
ACT score for a first-time
student in 2006 was a 25.6 while in 1999, it was 24.5.
In addition to 152 majors to choose from, the University of
Oklahoma also has a nationally recognized
Honors College. Every student from any major
can apply to the college; if accepted the student is eligible to
take honors classes and graduate
cum
laude. In order to graduate with honors, the student must
complete 18 credit hours of honors classes. Transfer students are
able to transfer up to nine credit hours of honor classes from a
different university.
Campuses

Map of the University of Oklahoma
campus.
Norman campus
As of the Fall of 2007, the Norman campus had 19,852
undergraduate students and 6,367
postgraduate students. Following the
Sooner's 2000 football national championship season, the university
experienced an increase in college applicants and admissions. The
falls of 1999 and 2000 both saw a 1.3% increase in the number of
students over the respective previous years while the fall of 2001
saw an increase of 4.8% over 2000.

Price Hall, an addition to the Michael
F.
Price College of Business, finished construction in
2005.
The largest school,
The
College of Arts & Sciences,enrolls 37% of the OU-Norman
students.
The next largest school, The Price
College of Business
enrolls 14%. Other large colleges on the Norman campus
include the College of
Engineering with 11% and the College of
Education and the Gaylord College of Journalism and Mass
Communication
, each with approximately 6% of the student
body. Smaller schools include the Colleges of
Architecture
and
Atmospheric and Geographic Sciences,
Earth and
Energy, the
Weitzenhoffer Family
College of Fine Arts, and the
College of Law. New
students do not have to declare a
major (a concentrated course of study)
immediately and are not required to declare a major until their
Junior year. If they are undecided in their major, they are
considered a part of the
University
College, comprising approximately 11% of the student body. Many
Pre-Health majors choose this option until they are able to apply
for the medical program of their choice.
The Norman campus is divided into three sections: north campus,
main campus, and south campus.
All three campuses are connected by a bus
service funded by student fees which allows students to park at
Lloyd Noble
Center
and provides 5-10 minute service to the main and
south campuses. Other regular Norman bus routes provide
service to north campus as well as the main campus. The main and
south campus are contiguous while the north campus is located about
two miles north of the main campus.
Main campus
The main campus is bordered by Boyd Street on the north, Timberdell
Road on the south, Chautauqua Avenue on the west, and Jenkins
Avenue on the east. The Norman campus is centered around two large
"ovals." The Parrington Oval (or North Oval as it is more commonly
called) is anchored on the south by Evans Hall, the main
administrative building. This building highlights the "
Cherokee Gothic"
style of architecture locally derived from the Collegiate Gothic
style, the style that dominates and defines the older buildings on
the OU campus.
The North Oval is bordered on the east by
the Oklahoma Memorial Union
.

Memorial Stadium houses University of
Oklahoma football games, as well as the campus bookstore.
On the east side of the northernmost part of campus sits Sarkeys
Energy Center while to the west is the Fred Jones, Jr. School of
Art and Museum, home to the Weitzenhoffer Collection of
Impressionist art and the Catlett Music
Center. The Van Vleet Oval (or South Oval) is anchored on the north
by the
Bizzell Memorial
Library and flanked by academic buildings. When class is in
session, the South Oval is often inundated with students going to
and from class. Elm Avenue bounds the western edge of the academic
portion of OU, with a few exceptions. Lying between Elm Avenue and
Chautauqua Avenue are mostly
fraternity and sorority
houses.
On the
east side of the central part of campus lies Gaylord
Family - Oklahoma Memorial Stadium
, just north of Lindsey street on Jenkins
Avenue. Immediately adjacent to the stadium is the Barry
Switzer Center, a museum highlighting the historical success of
Oklahoma athletics, as well as a comprehensive training facility
for Oklahoma athletes. North of the stadium is the McCasland Field
House, the former home of Oklahoma Basketball and the current home
of Oklahoma's wrestling, volleyball and gymnastics programs. Across
Jenkins Avenue are the athletic dorms and statues honoring
Oklahoma's past four
Heisman Trophy
winners. Other statues on campus include several honoring the
Native
Americans who defined so much of Oklahoma's history and a new
memorial statue on the north side of Oklahoma Memorial Stadium
honoring OU students, faculty, and staff that have died while
serving in the
armed forces.
The portion of campus south of Lindsey Street consists of mainly
student housing, Cate and Cross centers being four-story
quadrangular centers and Walker Tower, Couch Tower and Adams Center
being twelve-story towers. Facing the towers on Asp Avenue is the
Huston Huffman Center, the student activity and fitness center. On
the north side of Timberdell road is the Murray Case Sells Swim
Complex which is open to students and features indoor and outdoor
pools.
Directly north of the main campus on Boyd Street is Campus Corner,
a popular commercial area. There are several restaurants, bars, and
small shops that cater to the student body and the Norman
population at large.
The Oklahoma administration prides itself on the aesthetic appeal
of the campus. All three campuses (Norman, Oklahoma City, and
Tulsa) have beautifully landscaped gardens. Trees were planted on
the OU campus before the first building was ever built. There are
also many statues and sculptures around campus, most of which
portray the strong influence of the
Native American
culture.
There are also four buildings on the main campus that are listed on
the
National
Register of Historic Places.
They are the Bizzell Library, the Beta Theta Pi fraternity house, Casa Blanca
(the old Alpha Chi Omega sorority
house), and Boyd House
- the residence of the University
president.
North campus
On the
far north side of Norman is the OU Research Park, which includes
University of Oklahoma Max Westheimer
Airport
(ICAO: KOUN), the
Radar Operations Center, the
old National Severe
Storms Laboratory facility, the OU OKDHS Training and Research
Center, the OU ITS Lab, and Merrick Computer and Technology
Center. This part of campus is frequented by students
studying aviation.
South campus
South of student housing is Timberdell Road, the approximate
southern boundary of the University. South of this road are
University-owned apartments and athletic complexes. Also on the
south side of Timberdell Road is the
College of Law
building which was expanded in 2002 by the addition of a larger law
library and courtroom.
There are additional athletic complexes in
this area, including L.
Dale Mitchell Baseball Park
, the OU Softball Field, and Lloyd Noble
Center
(the basketball arena).
Research Campus
While
this area has traditionally been free from academic buildings, with
the pressure of expansion being felt in the northern part of
campus, new academic buildings, such as the National
Weather Center
and Stephenson Research and Technology Center were
recently completed on the south end of campus. This area is
now termed
The University of Oklahoma’s Research Campus, which
"brings academic, public and private sector organizations together
in a mutually beneficial collaborative environment." In 2004,
global weather information provider
WeatherNews opened its U.S. Operations Center in
One Partners Place, located in the research campus one block away
from the new NWC building. The southern boundary of the research
campus is
State Highway
9.
Also located on the Research Campus is the
state-of-the-art weather radar called
OU-PRIME
for Polarimetric Radar for Innovations in
Meteorology and Engineering. This radar facility is operated
by OU's
Atmospheric
Radar Research Center.
| Health Sciences
Enrollment |
| College |
Fall 2005 |
Fall 2006 |
|
665 |
19% |
642 |
17% |
|
332 |
9% |
342 |
9% |
|
893 |
25% |
905 |
24% |
|
796 |
22% |
991 |
27% |
|
521 |
15% |
538 |
14% |
|
304 |
9% |
305 |
8% |
|
27 |
1% |
19 |
1% |
|
3,538 |
3,742 |
| Note:
These numbers include participating students in Tulsa
as well as at the
Health Sciences Campus. |
Health Sciences Center
The
OU Health
Sciences Center's main campus is in Oklahoma City and a
secondary campus is in Tulsa
.
About 3,500 students enroll in one of the seven colleges at the
Health Center. The distribution of students in each of these
colleges is more uniform than that of the main campus.
The University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center (OUHSC),
established in the early 20th century, is OU's presence in Oklahoma
City. OUHSC is one of only four academic health centers in the
nation with seven professional colleges.
The nineteen
buildings that make up the OUHSC campus occupies a fifteen block
area in Oklahoma City near the Oklahoma State Capitol
. Surrounding these buildings are an
additional twenty health-related buildings some of which are owned
by the University of Oklahoma. The Health Sciences Center is the
core of a wider complex known as the Oklahoma Health Center. With
approximately 600 students and 600 residents and fellows training
in specialties and subspecialties of medicine, the College of
Medicine is the largest component of the Health Sciences Center.
The major clinical facilities on campus are the OU Medical Center
hospital complex and they include The Children's Hospital, the OU
Physicians clinics, and the Oklahoma City VA Medical Center. Large
biomedical research facilities operated by the University are
joined on campus by a growing biomedical research park developed by
the Presbyterian Health Foundation and dedicated to biotechnology,
research, and new scientific ventures.
Oklahoma City and Tulsa

The University of Oklahoma campus in
Tulsa houses the new Research and Medical Clinic.
Established in 1972 as a branch of the main Health Sciences Center
campus, the College of Medicine–Tulsa has enabled the University to
use hospital training facilities in Tulsa to establish medical
residencies and provide for expanded
health
care capabilities in the state. Under this program, selected
third- and fourth-year students receive their clinical training in
hospitals in the Tulsa community. Between 1972 and 1999, OU's
presence in Tulsa had grown but scattered. In 1999, a site formerly
owned by
BP Amoco was sold to the
University for $24 million (even though the property was appraised
at $48 million). The site already featured a building with office,
labs, and classrooms. The university purchased this property with
the help of a $10 million gift from the Charles and Lynn
Schusterman Family Foundation. The existing building was renamed
the
Schusterman Center. In 2003, Tulsa voters approved the
Vision 2025 plan for capital
improvements to the Tulsa metro area. Included in this plan was $30
million for a new Research and Medical Clinic near the existing
Schusterman Center. Construction on the new building was completed
in June 2007.
Museums and libraries
The
university has two prominent museums, the Fred Jones Jr. Museum of
Art and the Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural
History
. The Museum of Art was founded in 1936 and
originally headed by Oscar Jacobson, the director of the School of
Art at the time. The museum opened with over 2,500 items on display
and was originally located on campus in Jacobson Hall.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Jones of Oklahoma
City
donated money for a permanent building in 1971 and
the building was named in honor of their son who died in a plane
crash during his senior year at the University of Oklahoma.
Since then, the museum has acquired many renowned works of Native
American art and, in 2000, received the Weitzenhoffer Collection of
French
Impressionism which includes
works by
Degas,
Gauguin,
Monet,
Pissarro,
Renoir,
Toulouse-Lautrec,
Van Gogh, and
Vuillard. Today, the museum has over
65,000 square feet (6,000 m²) filled with over 8,000
items from a wide array of
time periods
and
movements. In 2005, the
museum expanded with the opening of the new Lester Wing designed by
contemporary architect
Hugh Newell Jacobsen. The architectural style of the new addition
deviates from the Collegiate Gothic style of the university, but
Jacobsen felt this was necessary given the contemporary works of
art the wing would house.
The
Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural
History
, located south of the main campus and directly
southwest of the law building, specializes in the history of the
people and animals that have inhabited Oklahoma over the last 300
million years. Since its founding in 1899, the museum has
acquired over 5,000,000 objects. In 2000, a new building was opened
to house the ever expanding museum. The new building offered nearly
200,000 square feet (18,600 m²) of space to display
the many exhibits the museum has to offer.
The University of Oklahoma Library system is headquartered in
Bizzell Memorial Library
and is largest research library in Oklahoma, contains over 4.7
million volumes and is ranked 27th out of 113 research libraries in
North America in volumes held. It contains more than 1.6 million
photographs, subscriptions to over
31,000
periodicals, over 1.5 million
maps, government documents dating back to 1893,
and over 50
incunabula. It has nine
locations on campus. The primary library is Bizzell Memorial
Library, located in the middle of the main campus. Other notable
campus libraries include the Architecture Library, the Chemistry
and Mathematics Library, the Engineering Library, the Fine Arts
Library, the Physics and Astronomy Library, and the Geology
Library. The OU library system contains many unique collections
such as the History of Science Collections (which houses over
94,000 volumes related to the history of science, including
hand-noted works by
Galileo
Galilei), the Bizzell Bible Collection, and the Western History
Collection.
The School of Library and Information Studies (SLIS), the only
American Library
Association-accredited program in Oklahoma, offers two graduate
degrees (Master of Library and Information Studies and Master of
Science in Knowledge Management) and one undergraduate degree
(Bachelor of Arts in Information Studies). The impact of OU and
SLIS on the history of libraries in Oklahoma is shown in the recent
list of 100 Oklahoma Library Legends as produced by the Oklahoma
Library Association. Two current faculty, one faculty emeriti, and
numerous others associated with either the OU libraries or SLIS
comprise nearly 10% of the list's members.
Student life
Residential life

The Walker, Honors and Adams dorm
buildings make up three of the school's residential halls.
Oklahoma requires, with few exceptions, that all freshmen live in
one of the four
residence halls. Three of
these building are towers (12 stories each): Adams Center, Walker
Center, and Couch Center; the other is
quad Cate Center. The Academic
Arts Community, more commonly referred to as Cate 5 or Honors, is
located directly above the honors college, David L. Boren Hall.
Although it is commonly believed that this dorm caters only to
honors students, a large proportion of non-honors students comprise
the community. The three towers are all located around each other
with the Couch Cafeteria completing the residence community. Couch
Cafeteria is composed of several different themed restaurants that
serves a wide variety of food each day. Located in between Adams
and Walker Centers is the Walker/Adams Mall, a field roughly the
size of a football field. This area includes a basketball court and
an open grass area that hosts musical events and other
student-related activities. As of Fall 2007, over 3,900 students
lived in one of these residence halls. Each residence hall has its
own RSA (Resident Student Association) office, as well as its own
computer lab and laundry facilities. By 2010, all residential
halls, with the exception of Cate, will be completely renovated and
upgraded. As of the Spring 2009 semester, the south-east wing of
Walker Center is under renovation.
The university owns several apartment complexes around the campus.
Some of these apartments were old and dilapidated, and the
university has taken the strides to resolve this issue. Two brand
new complexes owned by the university opened in recent years; OU
Traditions Square East in 2005 and OU Traditions Square West in
2006.
Due to a low
cost of living in
Oklahoma, many students find it financially viable to live off
campus in either apartments or houses. Over the last several years,
Norman has seen a boom in apartment development. Since 2002, four
new apartment or condominium complexes (not including the OU-owned
properties) have been built in addition to a booming housing market
that is resulting in Norman spreading further east.
Many students commute
from nearby Moore
and Oklahoma City
.
Student organizations, activities, and media

The Pride of Oklahoma Marching Band
performs during half-time at football games.
Oklahoma has over 350 student organizations. Focuses of these
organizations range from ethnic to political, religious to special
interests. Oklahoma Memorial Union (student union) houses many of
these organizations' offices.
The student union provides a place for students to relax, sleep,
study, watch
television, or socialize.
The Union Programming Board provides diverse activities and
programs in the union such as movies, bands, dances, give-aways, or
other activities.
Intramural
sports are a popular activity on campus with over 35 different
sports available. A large intramural field, where many outdoor
events take place, is located just one block east of the
dorms.
The
Pride of
Oklahoma, the university's
marching
band, celebrated its 100th anniversary in 2004 and consists of
311 student musicians and dancers from 19 states. Students wishing
to enter the band go through a rigorous audition process. The band
plays at every home football game. A smaller "pep-band," which
usually consists of 100 members, travels to every away football
game.
The
full band makes trips to the AT&T Red River Rivalry game against The
University of Texas
, Big 12
Championship Game, bowl games and
other games of importance. Members of the band are also
present for many student events. It was awarded the
Sudler Trophy in 1987. In 2007, The Pride of
Oklahoma marched in the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade, making it
one of only a few bands to have ever marched in the Rose and Macy's
Parades.

The University of Oklahoma Army ROTC
assembled in formation at its Fall 2007 Field Training
Exercise.
The
local chapter of
the Army ROTC provides officer training and education for
nearly 100 OU students. Officially founded in 1919, it is one of
the oldest such programs in the nation.
OU Army ROTC cadets are active in numerous campus and state
activities. They provide military
color guards for
Sooner football games and various
on-campus ceremonies and events. After completing the Army ROTC
program, OU students receive a
commission in either the
Regular Army,
Army Reserve, or
National Guard.
The campus student radio station,
the
WIRE, broadcasts over the Internet. The campus TV station,
TV4OU, features student produced programming five nights a
week and is available on local cable (COX Ch. 4). "OU Nightly", the
live, student newscast, airs weeknights at 4:30 and 9:30. "The
Sports Package", a live sports program, airs live Monday nights at
5:00 and throughout the week. Oklahoma's Gaylord College of
Journalism and Mass Communication programs The Wire and TV4OU.
Oklahoma's Department of Continuing Education operates
KROU and
KGOU, a
public radio station broadcasting on 106.3 FM.
KGOU is affiliated with
NPR. The campus
newspaper,
The Oklahoma Daily, is
produced daily during the fall and spring semesters and weekly
during the summer semester.
The
Sooner Racing
Team is a student organization comprised primarily of
mechanical engineers that competes in an international collegiate
engineering competition known as
Formula
SAE. The team has recently been highly successful, finishing
with three consecutive top five finishes in the past two years. In
the last comprehensive ranking by FS World, published 07/19/2009,
the team is ranked 8 out of 431 universities.
Oklahoma has a strong social
fraternity and sorority presence.
Many fraternities and sororities are only a couple decades younger
than the university itself with the first fraternity chapter
established in 1905. Currently there are 40 national fraternities
and sororities on campus. Governing these 40 Greek chapters are
four governing bodies:
Interfraternity
Council,
Panhellenic
Association,
National
Pan-Hellenic Council, and the
Latino
Greek Council. In 2005, the average
GPA for
the Panhellenic Association was 3.30.
Student government
The main governing arm of the student body, the University of
Oklahoma Student Association (UOSA), comprises four branches: an
Executive Branch, a Legislative Branch, a Judicial Branch, and a
Programming Branch. The student government, as well as all
organizations, has offices located in the Conoco Student Leadership
Center located in the student union.
The Executive Branch provides student services on behalf of the
UOSA, executes UOSA law, and advocates for the position of the
student. The General Counsel, chief legal counsel for the UOSA,
provides legal advice, handles issues regarding academic
misconduct, and approves new student organization constitutions.
The Legislative Branch comprises the Undergraduate Student Congress
and the Graduate Student Senate. The Judicial Branch is headed by
the Superior Court and includes Student Traffic Court. The
Programming Branch comprises the Campus Activities Council (CAC).
The CAC oversees all of the campus-wide events. These events
include
Homecoming, Parent's Weekend, Big
Red Rally (a
pep rally before the start of
the football season), Howdy Week (a welcoming of new students to
campus in the fall), Winter Welcome Week (same as Howdy Week,
except before the spring semester), Speakers' Bureau (committee
responsible for bringing speakers to campus), as well as many
others. Originally, CAC was the programming arm of the UOSA under
the Executive Branch which UOSA began in 1971. In 2002, UOSA voted
to make the CAC its own branch. The CAC comprises over 300 students
who volunteer their time to ensuring these events go as
planned.
One of the main functions of the UOSA is allocation of student
activity funds. The Ways and Means (WAM) Committee, a subset of the
legislative branch, conducts extensive interviews with
representatives from student groups each year to disperse over half
a million dollars.
In addition to UOSA, Oklahoma is home to the Housing Center Student
Association (HCSA) which is composed of the leaders of student
government who are directly concerned with the on-campus housing at
OU. HCSA further comprises six Resident Student Associations (RSA)
which represent Oklahoma's six housing centers.
Notable people and alumni
With strong academic and successful athletics programs, the
University of Oklahoma has seen many of its former students go on
to local and national prominence. This includes many athletes that
have excelled at the collegiate and professional levels, including:
Lee Roy Selmon,
Roy Williams,
Tommie Harris,
Billy
Sims,
Wayman Tisdale,
Joe Washington,
Darrell Royal,
Steve Owens,
Adrian Peterson,
Matthew Lane,
Anthony
Kim,
Jake Hager,
Danny Hodge, and
Jonathan Horton. In addition, many state
politicians have graduated from Oklahoma, including current OU
President
David Boren,
David Walters,
J.C.
Watts,
Carl
Albert,
Frank Keating,
Dan Boren,
Tom Coburn,
and current Oklahoma Governor
Brad Henry.
Other notable
alumni include
shuttle astronaut Shannon
Lucid and
Apollo 13 astronaut
Fred Haise, Oklahoma Supreme Court Justice
Steven W. Taylor, the
mutual
fund manager
Michael F. Price,
2006
Miss America Jennifer Berry,
Stacey Dales former
WNBA
player and
ESPN commentator,
Denver Broncos owner
Pat Bowlen,, and actors
Van
Heflin,
Dennis Weaver, and
James Garner.
Athletics
| Sports at Oklahoma |
| MEN'S |
| Baseball |
| Basketball |
| Cross County |
| Football |
| Golf |
| Gymnastics |
| Tennis |
| Track & Field |
| Wrestling |
|
| WOMEN'S |
| Basketball |
| Cross County |
| Golf |
| Gymnastics |
| Rowing |
| Soccer |
| Softball |
| Tennis |
| Track & Field |
| Volleyball |
|
|

University of Oklahoma Boomer, Sooners
Mascot
The school's sports teams are called the
Sooners,a nickname given to early settlers during
the
land run who snuck into the
offered territory and staked claims before they were officially
allowed to. They participate in the
NCAA's Division
I-Bowl Subdivision and in the South Division of the
Big 12 Conference. The school sponsors
nine sports for both men and women. The University has won 18 team
NCAA
National Championships and seven
national
championships in football (football championships are not
awarded by the NCAA). By far, OU's most famous and storied athletic
program is the football program, which has produced five Heisman
Trophy winners:
Billy Vessels in 1952,
Steve Owens in 1969,
Billy Sims in 1978,
Jason White in 2003, and
Sam Bradford in 2008. Many Pro Football
Hall of Famers, including Lee Roy Selmon,
Troy Aikman, and Ken Sitton also attended the
University of Oklahoma.
OU was also the only school to participate
in both the football and basketball national championships in the
same year (1988), until the 2006 season, when
Ohio
State
and the University of Florida
were both in each, with Florida winning both
games. Oklahoma also currently holds the record for the
longest winning streak in NCAA Division I history when they won 47
consecutive games between 1953 to 1957. In reference to the team's
success and popularity as a symbol of state pride,
George Lynn Cross, OU's president from
1943 to 1968, once told the Oklahoma State Senate, "I want a
university the football team can be proud of."

Several main athletic facilities are
grouped together at the Norman campus.
The men's gymnastics team has won several national championships
including championships in 2002, 2003, 2005, 2006 and 2008. In
addition, Oklahoma has produced five Nissen Emery Award winners,
more than any other school and the only school with back-to-back
honorees. The
softball team won a national
championship in 2000 and the baseball team a national championship
in 1994. On May 10, 2007 the University announced the addition of
women's rowing to the intercollegiate athletics program.
A rowing
facility will be built on the Oklahoma
River near downtown Oklahoma City
. This is the first sport added since women's
soccer was added in 1996.
The
University of Oklahoma has had a long and bitter rivalry with the
University
of Texas
known as the Red
River Shootout, Red River Rivalry, or Texas-OU, with Texas
having the better overall record at 58–40–5. This rivalry is
often thought of as a contest of state pride along with school
pride.
Oklahoma has a long-standing rivalry with
Oklahoma State University
. Known as the
Bedlam Series, it encompasses all the athletic
contests between the two universities with the winner receiving the
Bedlam Bell.
Another major historic rival is the University
of Nebraska
, which was part of the Big 8 Conference with Oklahoma and later
joined with Oklahoma and other schools in the formation of the
Big 12 Conference.The Sooners made
football history Dec. 6, 2008, when they scored sixty or
more points in five consecutive games. This achievement occurred
during their victory over "Mizzou" for the Big 12
Championship.
Renewable energy
In September 2008, it was announced that the University of
Oklahoma’s main campus will be entirely powered by wind by 2013 .
According to OU President David Boren, "It is our patriotic duty as
Americans to help our country achieve energy independence and to be
sound stewards of the environment." The school plans to purchase
its energy from the OU Spirit Wind Farm, which is scheduled for
construction near Woodward in late 2009. The new source of energy
is projected to cost the university an additional $5 million per
year.
See also
References
- As of 2006-11-15 per source.
-
http://www.ou.edu/discover/discover_home/virtual_tour/evans_hall.html
- Susan Cianci Salvatore (September 1, 2001) National Historic Landmark Nomination: Bizzell Library,
University of Oklahoma, National Park Service and Accompanying 4 photos, exterior and interior,
undated.
- For a complete list of campus improvements from 1994-2002,
refer here
- http://www.ou.edu/honors/curriculum.html
-
http://www.treehugger.com/files/2008/09/university-of-oklahoma-100-percent-wind-power-by-2013.php
-
http://chronicle.com/blogs/architecture/2428/u-of-oklahoma-to-be-wind-powered-by-2013
-
http://hubdev.ou.edu/news/2008/sep/10/ou-regents-consider-oge-partnership/
External links