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It’s time to see how much attention you’ve been paying to the news in the past week or so. From The Oklahoman’s news copy editors and designers, here’s a quiz.

1. Hugo residents are looking forward to the day they can sell this to Texas:
a) Water from the brimming Hugo Lake.
b) Scratch-off lottery tickets at sites just across the state line.
c) Abandoned circus equipment because there’s a sucker born ever minute.

2. How will 13 states allow overseas troops to vote in the presidential election this year?
a) By e-mail.
b) By telegraph.
c) Using an affidavit brought to the election board by a family member.

3. Researchers recently announced plans for a 1.5-square-mile plot of switchgrass in the Oklahoma Panhandle and smaller plots elsewhere. One acre of non-irrigated switchgrass could yield:
a) 60 bushels of cattle feed.
b) 600,000 gallons of biofuel.
c) 6 million feet of rope.

4. Why are experts saying social networking sites like Facebook and MySpace can pose a privacy risk?
a) Their options to make your profiles “private” don’t really work.
b) Hackers are multiplying with more generations growing up in the virtual world.
c) Downloaded applications built by third parties can see your contact information.

5. After coming under mortar fire during a USO tour stop in Afghanistan, Toby Keith did what?
a) Retired to a shelter to sign autographs and later picked up the concert where it was interrupted.
b) Wrote a song about the “Biggest, Baddest Combat Zone.”
c) Whipped out a handgun and fired back.

6. Dr. Kevin Moore, a scientist at Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation, has done research that may lead to something unexpected:
a) A patch to release cardiac medicine.
b) An enzyme-based birth control for men.
c) An electronic weight loss capsule you swallow and it vacuums up the calories.

7. With a postal increase rapidly nearing, Americans are buying:
a) 30 million “forever stamps” a day.
b) Less gasoline and putting things in the mail instead.
c) More pre-paid FedEx pouches.

8. The Wrigley family is cashing out of the chewing gum business, selling out to:
a) Philip Morris, which is looking for the next big nervous habit.
b) Mars Inc., maker of M&Ms and Snickers.
c) Pfizer Inc., one of the world’s largest pharmaceutical companies, which is looking for a new delivery system for its anti-cholesterol medicines.

9. Oklahoma State running back Thurman Thomas and one-time University of Oklahoma quarterback Troy Aikman will be among three people with Oklahoma ties inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in December. Who is the third?
a) Former OU coach Gary Gibbs.
b) Former OSU coach Pat Jones.
c) Former Tulsa coach John Cooper.

10. The federal government has launched a blog at www.fastlane.dot.gov for:
a) Helping taxpayers get refunds more quickly.
b) Listing traffic congestion and alternative routes in the nation’s 100 largest urban areas.
c) Breaking news from the U.S. Department of Transportation.

11. The University of Oklahoma is warning students of:
a) A looming increase in tuition of almost 10 percent.
b) How global warming will affect degree programs – less work in petroleum engineering, more in green careers.
c) A shortage of football tickets for the 2008-09 season.

12. Oklahoma City police are looking to hire a downtown ambassador, whose $9-an-hour duties would include:
a) Meeting with conventioneers and others to explain the city’s curfew rules.
b) Passing out pamphlets in Bricktown listing nearby restaurants and sights.
c) Traffic control and crime reporting.

13. Country singer Trisha Yearwood has just published a:
a) Songbook with hits sung by husband Garth Brooks.
b) Cookbook with her mother and sister.
c) Children’s book about a dreamer who becomes a star.

14. The average cost of Oklahoma families’ health insurance increased 50 percent from 2001 to 2005. In the same period, the median income rose:
a) 5 percent.
b) 50 percent.
c) 500 percent.

15. The U.S. House honored Ponca Chief Standing Bear as:
a) A vigilant supporter of democracy.
b) An early businessman with a vision of prosperity for his tribe.
c) One of America’s original civil rights heroes.

16. Swiss chemist Albert Hoffmann died in Geneva at age 102. He was known for:
a) Formulating the first Swiss high-cocoa concentration dark chocolate.
b) Collecting masterworks, including the largest collection of paintings by Edvard Munch.
c) Inventing LSD while studying medicinal uses for a grain fungus.

17. It’s a leavener in baked goods, but what else can you do with baking soda?
a) Mix it with water to make play dough.
b) Plant it in moist soil to grow a garden of colaberry bushes.
c) Scrub your toilets, soften fabrics and prevent clogged drains.

18. College football Bowl Championship officials rejected a proposal to hold a one-plus game to decide the national champion because:
a) The current system is working so well.
b) No one could agree on where to hold it.
c) The television contracts have already been signed for the next 12 seasons.

19. In the seven years since the 2000 census, Oklahoma’s Hispanic population has increased about:
a) 4 percent.
b) 44 percent
c) 444 percent.

20. Maj. Andy Jordan, a Green Beret who has deployed twice to Iraq spoke at a convention in Oklahoma City. He credits his experience in this organization with helping him succeed in the military:
a) His church.
b) FFA
c) Public schools in Oklahoma.

How did you do on the quiz? Here are the correct answers:
1-A; 2-A; 3-B; 4-C; 5-A; 6-B; 7-A; 8-B; 9-C; 10-C; 11-A; 12-C; 13-B; 14-A; 15-C; 16-C; 17-C; 18-A; 19-B; 20-B.

Sometimes it’s easy to miss an event, so here’s a look back at the past week or so to help bring you up to date:

  • One person was killed when a single-engine plane nose-dived into the Will Rogers Turnpike, shaking buildings in Miami, OK. Family members identified the pilot as Clair Tromsness, 74.
  • More than 1,900 runners participated in the Oklahoma City Memorial Marathon. The men’s and women’s division winners, Nathan Adams and Jennifer Graef, were both new to running marathons.
  • Abused and neglected children are taken from parents in Oklahoma County at a rate more than double that of Tulsa County. The average number of foster care children per month in Oklahoma County was 2,261, compared with 843 in Tulsa County.
  • Country music star Toby Keith had to take a break in a shelter when mortar fire interrupted a concert at a military base in Kandahar, Afghanistan.
  • The federal government started depositing tax rebate checks into thousands of bank accounts as the economic stimulus program got under way. You can check when yours might arrive on irs.gov and click on Economic Stimulus Payments Start.
  • Oklahoma State University will play Texas Tech in the Dallas area, starting with the 2009 football season.
  • Local businessman Ed Evans has bought Oak Tree Golf Club, with the intention of raising the state’s profile among professional tournaments.
  • Ponca Chief Standing Bear was honored by the U.S. House as “one of America’s earliest civil rights heroes.”
  • Oklahoma registered the largest increase in the nation for health insurance costs from 2001 to 2005. The average amount Oklahoma families are paying for health insurance rose 50 percent. Median family incomes increased just 5 percent over the same period.
  • The Hornets’ Byron Scott was named NBA coach of the year.
  • University of Oklahoma President David Boren has warned students to expect a 9.9 percent increase in tuition and fees next year. He said the forecast was based on the Legislature’s not raising the appropriation for higher education.
  • Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama says his relationship with his pastor, the Rev. Jeremiah Wright, is beyond repair.
  • The state’s Hispanic population has increased 44.7 percent in the past seven years, the Census Bureau estimates. Of Oklahoma’s 3.6 million residents, more than 261,000 — about 7.2 percent — were of Hispanic descent. Hispanics are 15.1 percent of the total U.S. population.
  • The Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation dedicated its $30 million Forensic Science Center in Edmond. The hightech crime lab is expected to employ 70 people and be the state’s most sophisticated crime analysis center for the next 20 years.
  • Bowl Championship Series officials, meeting in Hollywood, Fla., rejected a proposal that would have added a plus-one game to decide college football’s national champion, ruling out any playoff system until at least 2014.
  • Forbes.com says Oklahoma City may be “recession-proof” because of soaring commodity prices that have caused a boom in the energy and agricultural sectors and its strong housing market.
  • A new medical and dental clinic at Tinker Air Force Base and $120 millon in construction at Fort Sill are in a defense bill approved by the Senate Armed Services Committee. Funding has not been approved yet, as it would come in an appropriations bill.
  • Oklahoma standouts Troy Aikman and Thurman Thomas, and former Tulsa coach John Cooper were selected for the 2008 class in the College Football Hall of Fame.
  • Buoyed by the rising dollar and falling oil prices, the Dow Jones Industrial Average broke 13,000 for the first time since Jan. 3.
  • 1. Two Boston sporting events annually mark Patriots’ Day, a remembrance of the skirmishes at Lexington and Concord that began the American Revolution. One is the Boston Marathon. The other is:
    a) The World Championship Hot Dog Eating Contestbilled as the most disgusting 10 minutes in sports.
    b) A morning baseball game in Fenway Park. This year, the Red Sox beat the Texas Rangers 8-3.
    c) The Lexington Derby, a mile and a quarter race for 3-year-old thoroughbreds.

    2. About 400 people from Oklahoma Christian University have been training for what event?
    a) The Beijing 2008 Summer Olympic Games.
    b) The Oklahoma City Memorial Marathon.
    c) The all-you-can-eat buffet at the church picnic this spring.

    3. Where did Pope Benedict XVI conduct Mass on the last day of his U.S. visit in New York?
    a) St. Patrick Cathedral.
    b) Yankee Stadium.
    c) Central Park, near the statue of Alice in Wonderland.

    4. Danica Patrick won a race recently in Japan. Patrick is:
    a) A triathlete with Oklahoma ties.
    b) The first woman to win an Indy-car event.
    c) An Olympic swimmer with her eyes on the Beijing games.

    5. Former District Court Judge Donald Thompson will soon complete his sentence for indecent exposure. What county did he serve?
    a) Creek County.
    b) Oklahoma County.
    c) Tulsa County.

    6. Max Ary, a former executive director of the Kirkpatrick Science and Air Space Museum at the Omniplex (now named the Science Museum of Oklahoma), was headed for what will be to him a new frontier. He was going:
    a) Into orbit with the international space station program.
    b) To Moscow to become a NASA lobbyist.
    c) To prison for interstate transportation of stolen property in connection with sales of some artifacts from the Kansas museum where he was previously employed.

    7. Presidential candidate Barack Obama asked, “Do you smell what Barack is cooking?” in a message taped for what television show?
    a) NBC’s “Meet the Press.”
    b) Food Network’s “30 Minute Meals.”
    c) World Wrestling Entertainment’s “Monday Night Raw.”

    8. Bobbi Parker is charged with hiding Randolph Dial in her car and driving the inmate out of the Oklahoma State Reformatory. When was the escape?
    a) 1994.
    b) 2004.
    c) 1999.

    9. OU researchers have found the gene RBM3 produces a protein that helps cells:
    a) Become fat-storers, leading to a thickening around the mitochondria.
    b) Rejuvenate themselves and slow aging.
    c) Turn into quick-dividing cancer cells.

    10. Under pressure to meet combat needs, the Army and Marine Corps have accepted significantly more recruits with what ordinary disqualifiers?
    a) Ability to eat cauliflower without ketchup.
    b) Flat feet and other physical limitations.
    c) Felony convictions.

    11. According to a new government report, in what state did 26.4 percent of drivers admit driving drunk during the past year:
    a) Oklahoma.
    b) Wisconsin.
    c) Florida.

    12. Oklahoma City officials are recruiting neighborhood association volunteers to help eliminate:
    a) Mosquitoes and the ponds where they breed.
    b) Pet waste in public areas using city-issued baggies.
    c) Illegal signs, which some call litter on a stick.

    13. New Yorker Danny Almonte, who caused a buzz as a Little Leaguer seven years ago when it was discovered he was 14, not 12, and ineligible, is now:
    a) Working as a New York firefighter.
    b) Making a mint as a motivational speaker, claiming you’re as young as you feel.
    c) Playing college baseball in Altus.

    14. “Hamburger America” author George Motz says he’s impressed with Oklahoma’s hamburger pride and:
    a) The number of good burger joints that call Oklahoma home.
    b) The special mustard, Oklahoma yellow.
    c) Our appetite for burgers and fries.

    15. Braves starter John Smoltz may have lost the game, but he became the 16th member of this exclusive club:
    a) 1,000 walks.
    b) 2,000 batters hit.
    c) 3,000 strikeouts.

    Answers: 1-B; 2-B; 3-B; 4-B; 5-A; 6-C; 7-C; 8-A; 9-C; 10-C; 11-B; 12-C; 13-C; 14-A; 15-C

    Sometimes it’s easy to miss an event, so here’s a look back at the past week or so to help bring you up to date:

  • OU Cancer Center researchers have found the gene RBM3 produces a protein that helps cells become quick-dividing cancer cells. The protein also can cause cancer cells to die. Dr. Shrikant Anant hopes to develop new ways to treat a variety of cancers by silencing the protein.
  • Pope Benedict XVI conducted Mass in Yankee Stadium in New York on the last day of his U.S. visit. The pontiff told the U.S. faithful to use their freedoms wisely — and cited the need to oppose abortion.
  • Danica Patrick became the first woman to win an Indy-car race in an event in Japan.
  • About 400 people from Oklahoma Christian University have been training for the Oklahoma City Memorial Marathon as part of an overall push for health and fitness. With the signing of some runners from Rhode Island this year, the Oklahoma City Memorial Marathon has officially drawn participants from all 50 states. Thanks to radio frequency identification technology, marathon results will be available online and via cell phone alerts during the race.
  • Bobbi Parker, a deputy prison warden’s wife, entered a Greer County courtroom to face a felony charge alleging she helped convicted killer Randolph Dial escape from the Oklahoma State Reformatory in 1994.
  • Oklahoma’s unemployment rate dropped to 3.2 percent in March from 3.5 percent in February.
  • In the last big presidential primary, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton won the Pennsylvania primary, although Sen. Barack Obama was still the front-runner in the overall contest.
  • Oklahoma’s governor endorsed Obama, giving him one more superdelegate.
  • Winnie Wiles, a 95-year-old Bartlesville woman, confronted a stranger trying to enter her home at 3 a.m., stabbing him repeatedly and keeping him at bay until police arrived.
  • A Powerball ticket sold at a Circle K Store on W Edmond Road in November is worth $400,000, but the ticket will expire May 19 unless the buyer comes forward.
  • A $7.2 billion standstill budget is awaiting the governor’s signature. It contains no pay raises for teachers or state employees who were supposed to get a final year of raises to bring them up to the regional average.
  • It’s time to see how much attention you’ve been paying to the news in the past week or so. From The Oklahoman’s news copy editors and designers, here’s a quiz.

    1. Oklahoma City is having some trouble finishing the huge sculpture that includes 45 bronze statues commemorating the Land Run of 1889 because:
    a) The bronze statues are too heroic-sized to fit on the site.
    b) Rising materials costs have eaten into the budget for the remaining pieces.
    c) The front wheels keep falling off the super-sized wagons, so they can’t be rolled into place.

    2. Rep. Joe Dorman, D-Rush Springs, is championing legislation that would celebrate Oklahoma Rock musicians by:
    a) Giving Oklahoma a signature rock song.
    b) Creating an Oklahoma Rock Hall of Fame in Noble.
    c) Designating a rock version of “Oklahoma!” as the new state song.

    3. South African Trevor Immelman shot a three-over par 75 in the final round to:
    a) Come in second behind Tiger Woods who shot a three-under 69.
    b) Win the Masters in Augusta, Ga.
    c) Learn his lesson and take more practice time with his putter.

    4. According to a national survey, 67 percent of Oklahomans rated what health care experience a 9 or 10?
    a) Their overall experience with a hospital.
    b) The joy of visiting a dentist twice a year.
    c) Dealing with a doctor’s billing office.

    5. A class-action lawsuit alleges that poor cleanup of a zinc smelter has left some residents of an Oklahoma town with high levels of lead in their blood. What is the town?
    a) Wellston.
    b) Goodwell.
    c) Blackwell.

    6. Wal-Mart has set up a subsidiary called Wal-Mart Emerging Markets East, intended to scope out what major-market country for Wal-Mart expansion?
    a) Russia.
    b) China.
    c) Iraq.

    7. Cubans lined up for blocks to pay $120 – about half a year’s salary – for:
    a) 2008 World Series Baseball tickets.
    b) Photos with ex-President Fidel Castro.
    c) Activation of a cell phone. Calls are extra.

    8. Some in the airline industry believe the Delta-Northwest merger will mean:
    a) Better meals on trans-Atlantic flights.
    b) Piles of lost Delta luggage will miraculously be discovered in a Northwest storeroom.
    c) A United-Continental link could come quickly.

    9. Steve Trimble, 50, of Oklahoma City, won $3.8 million in the March 26 Hot Lotto game, but he only took home $1.7 million. With whom did he share the money?
    a) A group of friends who invested in the ticket.
    b) His business partner.
    c) The IRS.

    10. A high-tech conference call allowed Army Capt. Andy Riise to be virtually present for a significant event, even though he was in Iraq and his wife was in Lawton. They used videoconferencing so Riise could:
    a) Get married.
    b) See the birth of his second son.
    c) Play in the preliminary rounds of the World Series of Poker.

    11. Beachcombers in 76 countries from Bahrain to Bangladesh picked up 6 million pounds of debris during a day of trash collecting. The most common item was:
    a) Empty water bottles.
    b) Buried treasure.
    c) Cigarette butts.

    12. Pope Benedict XVI was serenaded at the White House during his first U.S. visit as pontiff with:
    a) “Happy Birthday.”
    b) “Kumba Ya.”
    c) “Onward Christian Soldiers.”

    13. Oklahoma State University has chosen Travis Ford from the University of Massachusetts to coach its men’s basketball team. Which of these is not part of his resume:
    a) He has written a book, “Big Blue Dreams,” about playing basketball at Kentucky.
    b) As a freshman, Ford played at Gallagher-Iba Arena, but never scored there.
    c) He has taken his team to the NCAA Sweet 16 for the last two years.

    14. Barbecue expert Rick Browne recommends avoiding the use of liquid charcoal starters when you’re firing up the grill. If you use charcoal briquettes, make sure they’re organic and start them with:
    a) Cotton dryer lint.
    b) Day-old bread, preferably from an artisanal loaf.
    c) Moss scraped from the north side of a tree.

    15. What kind of television show, produced by University of Oklahoma students, is now airing on Oklahoma City and Tulsa cable networks?
    a) A fashion show.
    b) A series on campus history.
    c) A news show.

    16. President Bush unveiled a plan that calls for a halt in the growth of this by 2025?
    a) Terrorism.
    b) Greenhouse gas emissions.
    c) Reality television programs.

    17. Advice offered to teenagers in search of summer employment includes:
    a) Practice your singing, because you’re more likely to get on “American Idol” than find work.
    b) Start looking early, network with friends and family and make sure your resume has no spelling errors.
    c) Hold out for exactly what you want, because you’ll be giving up a lot of fun.

    18. Aviation officials say the three New York-area airports had the lowest on-time arrival rates in the nation for 2007. They blamed these delays for:
    a) 75 percent of all flight delays cascading through the system.
    b) Soaring alcoholism rates among frequent fliers.
    c) The disappearance of D.B. Cooper.

    19. The 42nd annual Festival of the Arts will open Tuesday in downtown Oklahoma City. This means:
    a) An estimated 100,000 to 125,000 people will converge for a chance see the work of 144 artists.
    b) Leave the kids at home because it won’t be any fun for them.
    c) It’ll rain all week.

    20. The Legislature overrode a veto by Gov. Brad Henry for the first time since he took office in 2003. Senate Bill 1878 requires:
    a) Elected officials to pay their taxes on time.
    b) Oklahomans to participate in recycling programs when they are offered.
    c) That a woman be shown an ultrasound image before an abortion.

    How did you do on the quiz? Here are the correct answers:
    1-B; 2-A; 3-B; 4-A; 5-C; 6-A; 7-C; 8-C; 9-C; 10-B; 11-C; 12-A; 13-C; 14-A; 15-C; 16-B; 17-B; 18-A; 19-A; 20-C.

    Sometimes it’s easy to miss an event, so here’s a look back at the past week or so to help bring you up to date.

  • The nation’s largest companies face tax audits about half as often as 20 years ago, according to a Syracuse University study that cites a “historic collapse” in audits of corporations with $250 million or more in assets.
  • Darlene Campbell, the grandmother of a 12-year-old Paoli girl, Alyssa Nichole Campbell, who died of meningitis, also has died from the highly contagious disease. Health officials say there’s no public health threat.
  • The U.S. Supreme Court has declined to hear an appeal from Brenda Andrew, who was sentenced to death for killing her estranged husband, Rob Andrew, in 2001 in Oklahoma City. Brenda Andrew and James Pavatt were convicted of killing Andrew for his insurance money.
  • Most Oklahoma patients are satisfied with their hospital care, a survey by the federal government found. The U.S Department of Health and Human Services published the results of its first national satisfaction survey on its Hospital Compare Web site.
  • Former Seattle SuperSonics owner Howard Schultz plans to sue to get the team back from its Oklahoma City-based ownership group. The lawyer for Howard Schultz, Richard Yarmuth, said he will sue Clay Bennett’s Professional Basketball Club to prevent him from moving the NBA franchise to Oklahoma City. The team’s Oklahoma-based owners accused the city of Seattle of scheming with a potential purchaser to force them to sell.
  • Gov. Brad Henry signed Senate Bill 1819 offering the SuperSonics tax rebates for the next 15 years for the jobs the team would bring to the state.
  • A metalworker from Oklahoma City won $3.8 million to become the state’s first Hot Lotto millionaire. Steve Trimble, 50, quit his job and said he plans to relax, go on vacations and play a lot of golf.
  • Crude futures made their first foray past $115, propelled to a record by concerns about how much gasoline will be available during the peak summer months. Fuel inventories fell by a much larger than expected 5.5 million barrels.
  • Although he has been deployed to Iraq, Army Capt. Andy Riise was virtually present for the birth of his second son. He and his wife, Katie, used a call center run by the Freedom Calls Foundation to communicate during their son’s birth at Southwestern Medical Center in Lawton.
  • Pope Benedict XVI was met at Andrews Air Force Base by President Bush as the pontiff began his first U.S. visit. The two agreed in talks that terrorism is an unacceptable weapon for any religion, but steered clear of potential disagreements over the Iraq war. During the visit, Benedict met privately with people who had been abused by priests. He celebrated Mass for 45,000 in Washington, D.C., met with representatives of other religions and spoke to the United Nations.
  • The U.S Supreme Court upheld lethal injection as a method of execution, clearing for Oklahoma and other states to resume executions that have been on hold since September. The ruling in a Kentucky case held that the three-chemical method of execution created in Oklahoma more than 30 years ago does not violate constitutional protections against cruel and unusual punishment.
  • Oklahoma State University hired the University of Massachusetts’ Travis Ford as its men’s basketball coach to succeed Sean Sutton. Ford led UMass to the finals of this season’s National Invitation Tournament, where the team lost to Ohio State.
  • Custer County Sheriff Mike Burgess, 55, resigned after being charged with 35 felony counts involving an alleged sex-slave operation at the jail. The allegations include having sex with female inmates and threatening to have a drug court participant in his custody sent to prison if she didn’t comply with his demands.
  • The political corruption trial of McAlester businessman Francis Stipe ended in Muskogee when he pleaded guilty to all four counts of a federal indictment. Stipe, 77, maintained his innocence on two of the felony counts — mail fraud and paying a bribe — but conceded that prosecutors had presented enough evidence for a conviction on all of them. In addition to those counts, Stipe pleaded guilty to conspiracy and witness tampering. In return for Stipe’s plea, prosecutors assured a sentence that includes no prison time. Stipe’s guilty plea ended three days of deliberations by jurors.
  • State legislators voted to override Gov. Brad Henry’s veto of an anti-abortion bill. House members voted 81-15 to override. In the Senate, the vote was 37-11. Henry vetoed Senate Bill 1878, requiring women to get a description of ultrasound images of an unborn child before an abortion. The bill also was intended to protect health care providers’ rights not to participate in abortions.
  • It’s time to see how much attention you’ve been paying to the news in the past week or so. From The Oklahoman’s news copy editors and designers, here’s a quiz.

    1. Oklahoma native Tracy Letts won a Pulitzer for what play?
    a) “June: Tulsa County.”
    b) “July: Bryan County.”
    c) “August: Osage County.”

    2. Healdton has owned its cable service since 2001. What has been the result?
    a) The service is losing money and town officials are looking for a buyer.
    b) All 1,200 households in the area subscribed to the successful service.
    c) About half the households are subscribing, and the service has broken even.

    3. Former Oklahoma basketball player Stacey Dales has retired from the WNBA to focus on sportscasting duties at ESPN. What team did she retire from?
    a) Houston Comets.
    b) Seattle Storm.
    c) Chicago Sky.

    4. What will former Oklahoma State basketball coach Sean Sutton receive as part of a settlement with the university?
    a) A bill for remaining years on his contract.
    b) $2.7 million.
    c) A letter of recommendation and free orange T-shirts for life.

    5. State Rep. Paul Wesselhoft recommended what name if the NBA’s Seattle SuperSonics move to Oklahoma City?
    a) The Plains Flyers.
    b) Oklahoma SuperDuperSonics.
    c) Oklahoma City Aviators.

    6. What cell phone company, which is adding service to the Oklahoma City metro area, claims that 60 percent of its customers make less than $30,000 per year?
    a) Millipede Mobile.
    b) Cricket Communications.
    c) Spider Services.

    7. U.S. Rep. Mary Fallin hosted a dinner for seniors from the fire-damaged Jones High School. Where was it held?
    a) The school’s new cafeteria, which was completed in only four months.
    b) Superintendent Mike Steele’s back yard.
    c) Toby Keith’s I Love This Bar and Grill in Bricktown.

    8. Why is Martin Vosseler of Switzerland walking across the United States?
    a) To encourage climate protection.
    b) To endorse a new sneaker.
    c) To pay off a soccer bet.

    9. Oklahoma City is considering spending $5.2 million in upgrades to attract what professional sport?
    a) Rodeo.
    b) Tennis.
    c) Alligator wrestling.

    10. Under Senate Bill 1878, health care providers would have the right to do what?
    a) Refuse to participate in abortions.
    b) Sell customer accounts to other providers.
    c) Seek government subsidies for covering pre-existing conditions.

    11. Where was the closing ceremony of the Olympics relay in San Francisco held?
    a) Chinatown.
    b) The Golden Gate Bridge.
    c) San Francisco International Airport.

    12. Why did residents in western Oklahoma welcome heavy rainfall?
    a) The area has spent weeks fighting wildfires.
    b) Wind-blown dirt needed to be washed off the roads.
    c) A manufacturer locating there wanted to test a new type of raincoat.

    13. What did Oklahoma City Mayor Mick Cornett say he advocates for the city as part of MAPS 3?
    a) A North Pole exhibit at the zoo featuring polar bears and penguins.
    b) A light rail system serving downtown and tourists.
    c) A subway linking downtown with the state Capitol, Edmond and Norman.

    14. Sooner Blake Griffin is not the first OU basketball player to consider jumping to the NBA and decide instead to stay in college. Who did so in 1984?
    a) Tommy Tubbs.
    b) Mookie Blaylock.
    c) Wayman Tisdale.

    15. Pilots for what airline were granted permits to picket crew bases of Northwest Airlines in a dispute over seniority if the two companies merge?
    a) TWA.
    b) Delta.
    c) Braniff.

    16. A doctor used what unexpected treatment successfully on hepatitis C patients?
    a) Formulated time-release capsules containing an ancient Chinese herb.
    b) A prescription drug commonly used to treat cholesterol.
    c) Cross-infected them with hepatitis A and B.

    17. Why is high school senior Tomas “Duffy” Duffek, who is Rock Creek’s pitcher of the year, ineligible to play baseball this season?
    a) Parents demanded that he be benched because he was just too good.
    b) Despite playing for Rock Creek last year, he is considered a transfer student, and is therefore ineligible.
    c) Once you’re named pitcher of the year, you have to sit out one season.

    18. The Rev. Anthony B. Taylor, a local Catholic priest, soon will leave for Arkansas. What will his new job be?
    a) Bishop of the Catholic Diocese of Little Rock.
    b) Proprietor of a bed and breakfast in Eureka Springs.
    c) A top executive for Wal-Mart in Bentonville.

    19. China reversed a decision to reopen Tibet to foreign tourists. Why?
    a) The torch relay needs a safe passage up Mount Everest.
    b) The region was hit by flooding and it’s no longer safe.
    c) Tibetans don’t speak any other language and the only translators are in Beijing.

    20. The former Lucent Technologies plant is being considered for what use?
    a) Making telephone switching equipment.
    b) Data processing.
    c) Production of railway freight cars.

    How did you do on the quiz? Here are the correct answers:
    1-C; 2-A; 3-C; 4-B; 5-C; 6-B; 7-C; 8-A; 9-B; 10-A; 11-C; 12-A; 13-B; 14-C; 15-B; 16-B; 17-B; 18-A; 19-A; 20-B.

    Sometimes it’s easy to miss an event, so here’s a look back at the past week or so to help bring you up to date.

  • Gov. Brad Henry signed legislation that includes $10 million in emergency funding for public schools. It ensures that schools will receive their full funding allocation for April, he said, but additional appropriations will be needed to cover the remaining two months of the fiscal year.
  • Marches and rallies were held across the country to remember the 40th anniversary of the death of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.
  • Asha and Chandra, Asian elephants at the Oklahoma City Zoo, will head for Tulsa in June to breed with a male named Sneezy. Upon their return, if all goes as expected, they will be introduced into their part of a new $16 million Asia exhibit.
  • Actor Charlton Heston died at his home in Beverly Hills.
  • A survey by the Police Executive Research Forum indicated that there is a culture of intimidation that discourages witnesses from cooperating with police, through hip-hop songs, graffiti and even T-shirts. As a result, departments have bolstered crime stopper programs.
  • After seeing how Jones High School students endured after their school burned, U.S. Rep. Mary Fallin hosted a dinner in honor of the senior class. “It’s not your average senior year of high school when you’ve got no high school to go to,” she said. “Let’s celebrate their senior year and give them a memory they won’t forget.”
  • The Communist Party boss of Tibet said the region was stable after anti-government riots last month but warned of possible sabotage against the Olympic torch relay.
  • Researchers using a new detection method determined medicine mix-ups, accidental overdoses and bad drug reactions harm roughly one in 15 hospitalized children.
  • Harli White, 12, suffered third-degree burns over half her body after a racing accident at the I-44 Speedway at SW 149 Street. She underwent surgery at a children’s burn center in Galveston, Texas.
  • Oklahoma State University will pay Sean Sutton $2.7 million as part of a settlement after it fired him as head coach.
  • More than 400 children, mostly girls, were swept into state custody by Texas authorities after a raid on a compound of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, a polygamist sect led by Warren Jeffs.
  • Bobbie Louiane Parker, who disappeared with escaping inmate Randolph Dial in 1994 only to be discovered a decade later working with him at a chicken farm in Texas, has been charged with assisting in the escape. Dial died last year.
  • Oklahoma native Tracy Letts, who grew up in Durant, won a 2008 Pulitzer Prize for drama for his play “August: Osage County.”
  • A baby born with two faces in northern India is being worshipped as the reincarnation of Durga, the Hindu goddess of valor, her father said.
  • University of Oklahoma basketball star Blake Griffin announced his intention to turn down a chance to be a multimillionaire to stay at OU another season.
  • Flooding, road closings and power outages were reported in Oklahoma after a hefty storm system pushed its way into the state.
  • The former Lucent Technologies plant in western Oklahoma City will find new use as a giant data center with the name OKCWorks.
  • House Democrats, frustrated that people were not allowed to speak during Republican-led committee meetings, staged a symbolic walkout. They returned after two minutes and later offered proposals for changing the rules.
  • Chinese authorities, worried about protests during the Mount Everest leg of the Olympic torch relay, have reversed a decision to reopen Tibet to foreign tourists.
  • The Federal Aviation Administration said flights will continue to be canceled as the agency conducts audits. “The idea is to check 10 percent of all the airworthiness directives of all the different types of aircraft by June,” said Roland Herwig, spokesman for FAA.
  • It’s time to see how much attention you’ve been paying to the news in the past week or so. From The Oklahoman’s news copy editors and designers, here’s a quiz.

    1. Adults have been meeting lately at Crooked Oak High School to participate in a five-team “semi-pro” league, playing what?
    a) Football.
    b) Baseball.
    c) Texas Hold ’em poker.

    2. Pro-Tibet protesters have been targeting:
    a) Chinese restaurants in Oklahoma.
    b) Sites where the Olympic torch is visiting.
    c) Holy sites of major religions.

    3. Former OU women’s basketball player Caton Hill is embarking on a new career in what field?
    a) Law.
    b) Medicine.
    c) Sportscasting.

    4. A Yukon car craftsman is creating replicas of what car?
    a) Herbie, the Volkswagen Beetle from the Dean Jones film, “The Love Bug.”
    b) A 1921 Oldsmobile truck from the TV series, “The Beverly Hillbillies.”
    c) Eleanor, the 1967 Mustang from the Nicolas Cage film, “Gone in 60 Seconds.”

    5. Scientists in England hope to find the reason behind what famous British icon?
    a) Stonehenge.
    b) Big Ben’s chimes.
    c) Driving on the left side of the road.

    6. What awaits 19-year-old John Tyler Hammons on May 13 in Muskogee?
    a) He will begin medical school training.
    b) He faces a runoff election for mayor.
    c) He will try out for Sooners football.

    7. Third-grade students in what state plotted to attack their teacher after she scolded a classmate?
    a) Utah.
    b) Wyoming.
    c) Georgia.

    8. In 2015, NASA’s Constellation program is to begin operations. What is it?
    a) A worldwide teleportation program.
    b) A rocket ship to Mars.
    c) A colony ship to carry hibernating settlers to a distant star.

    9. State Rep. Mike Shelton is keeping track of what type of deaths with an electronic counter on his desk?
    a) Smoking deaths.
    b) Iraq war casualties.
    c) Traffic accident deaths.

    10. Oklahoma ranks 47 among the states in a child well-being report. What were the three lower-ranked states?
    a) Texas, Alabama and Mississippi.
    b) New Mexico, Mississippi and Louisiana.
    c) Arkansas, Louisiana and Mississippi.

    11. According to a national report called the “Pig Book,” which Oklahoma earmark project costs the most?
    a) Fuel System Maintenance Hangar at Vance Air Force Base in Enid.
    b) Fort Gibson Lake operations and maintenance.
    c) McClellan-Kerr Arkansas River Navigation System.

    12. What supposed rare animal is being taken on tour by the staff of G.W. Exotic Animal Park?
    a) Red-jacketed woodpecker.
    b) Barbary lion.
    c) Bat boy.

    13. What did motorists say they might do if the price of gasoline reaches $4 a gallon?
    a) Commute to work using a hang glider, launching from the roof of their homes.
    b) Buy a horse and buggy, stop mowing and let the horse keep the lawn trimmed.
    c) Cut spending on other things, get a moped, change jobs.

    14. Thanks to the energy industry, Houston has been booming. Between February 2007 and the same month this year, how many energy jobs were added in Houston?
    a) 8,600, the same number NASA anticipates losing when the space shuttle is retired.
    b) 86,000, yet companies are having trouble finding enough workers, particularly engineers.
    c) 860,000, the total of workers employed by the energy industry in the first 50 years after oil was discovered.

    15. Oklahoma City plans to submit a bid to host what between 2012 and 2016?
    a) College World Series.
    b) Women’s Final Four.
    c) NCAA Final Four.

    How did you do on the quiz? Here are the correct answers:
    1-A; 2-B; 3-B; 4-C; 5-A; 6-B; 7-C; 8-B; 9-A; 10-B; 11-A; 12-B; 13-C; 14-B; 15-B.

    Sometimes it’s easy to miss an event, so here’s a look back at the past week or so to help bring you up to date.

  • Two years after the Liberty Baptist Church south of Duncan was destroyed in a wildfire, the congregation hosted an opening and homecoming service in a new sanctuary capable of seating 200 people. The lost 7,200-square-foot building was replaced with a 10,000-square-foot structure.
  • Criminal charges were dismissed against Lance Cpl. Stephen B. Tatum of Edmond. The Marine had been accused in the killing of 24 Iraqi civilians in 2005. Two officers remain charged in the incident.
  • The Bush administration has proposed a sweeping overhaul of the way the nation’s financial industry is regulated, giving major new powers to the Federal Reserve.
  • Aggressive planning is under way for possible construction of an exposition center at Oklahoma City’s State Fair Park. Cost would be between $30 million and $50 million.
  • More than 100 law enforcement agencies across the country have begun or are awaiting training to help the Homeland Security Department root out illegal immigrants.
  • An incident of road rage that ended up in a man’s death may be used to test Oklahoma’s Stand Your Ground Law, as defense attorneys seek immunity from prosecution for their client, Kenneth Ray Gumm, 67.
  • A couple in Colbert were hospitalized with mercury poisoning after attempting to salvage gold from electronic equipment. Officials quarantined the home, saying mercury levels there were extremely high and may have contaminated everything down to the wallboard.
  • Greece handed off the Olympic flame for its journey through 20 countries to Beijing as about two dozen protesters chanted, “Save Tibet,” and unfurled a banner reading, “Stop Genocide in Tibet.”
  • Marcie Isaacson took refuge with her 4-year-old twin sons in the laundry room of her home as a tornado ripped the roof off the structure at 2205 NW 182. Several other homes in the area also were damaged.
  • The American Heart Association changed its recommendations for CPR, saying a hands-only technique can work as well as the standard method used for years.
  • Archaeologists began digging at Stonehenge in an effort to find out when and why the mysterious monument was built.
  • Oklahoma State University fired Sean Sutton as basketball coach, and is now looking for a replacement.
  • Voters in the Jones School District approved a $12.4 million bond issue to pay for construction of a high school to replace the one that burned in late 2007.
  • The FBI reported a parachute found in southwestern Washington last month was not the one used by hijacker D.B. Cooper in 1971. His fate remains a mystery.
  • More than 1,500 people crowded into the first floor of the state Capitol in support of state Rep. Sally Kern after she called homosexuality the biggest threat facing this country. “This is not about me,” she said. “It’s about the church having the right to speak out about the redeeming love of Jesus Christ who died to set us all free from our sins.”
  • Oklahoma ranked 47th worst in the nation in a measurement of 10 child well-being indicators, right behind Texas and ahead of New Mexico, Mississippi and Louisiana.
  • John Tyler Hammons, 19, faces a runoff election for mayor in Muskogee, after getting the most votes in a group of six candidates. The runoff will be in May against 70-year-old Hershel McBride, a former mayor.
  • Former Rep. Mickey Edwards, a Republican and “Reagan conservative,” said the current administration has overstepped its bounds, ignored the checks and balances imposed by the Constitution and “basically, taken the position the president doesn’t have to obey the same laws that you and I do.”
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