Title: University of Oklahoma removes fraternity
 1University of Oklahoma removes fraternity 
 2Members of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity at the 
University of Oklahoma have until midnight 
Tuesday to pack their bags and get out of their 
house after a video showed them chanting a racial 
epithet on the way to a party. It was only a 
nine-second clip, but the fallout has been 
significant. The national chapter of SAE 
shuttered the house at OU, and school President 
David Boren said the university's affiliation 
with the fraternity is permanently done. At a 
news conference, Boren said the school was 
looking into punishing the people involved, 
especially those "who have taken a lead" in the 
chanting. "If we're ever going to snuff this out 
in the whole country, let alone on college 
campuses, we're going to have to have zero 
tolerance and we have to act right away," the 
former Oklahoma governor and U.S. senator 
said. "This is not a place that wants racists or 
bigots on our campus or will tolerate it, so I 
think you have to send a very strong signal." 
 3In Other News
- Three French sports stars were among 10 people 
 killed when two helicopters collided in Argentina
 on Monday evening. The helicopters were reported
 to be heading to a gorge in northwestern
 Argentina for the filming of a reality TV show
 "Dropped." The dead included famed sailor
 Florence Arthaud, who in 1990 broke the record
 for crossing the North Atlantic alone swimmer
 Camille Muffat, who won three medals at the 2012
 Olympics in London and boxer Alexis Vastine, who
 won a bronze medal at the 2008 Olympics in
 Beijing.
- Sam Simon, the nine-time Emmy Award-winning 
 comedy writer and producer who helped develop
 "The Simpsons," made millions after leaving the
 show in 1993 and then donated his riches to
 charity, has died, his foundation announced on
 Facebook. He was 59. Simon was diagnosed in
 February 2013 with terminal colon cancer. During
 his career, the influential Simon also served as
 the showrunner on the sitcom "Taxi" at the age of
 23 wrote for and produced the comedies "Cheers"
 and "The Drew Carey Show" and created a Fox
 series for the legendary stand-up comic George
 Carlin in the mid-1990s. A cartoonist and
 Stanford graduate, Simon developed "The Simpsons"
 with Matt Groening (who came up with the
 characters based on his family) and producer
 James L. Brooks. All three had worked on "The
 Tracey Ullman Show," where Bart Simpson and his
 family got their start as animated sketches shown
 before and after commercials. "The Simpsons,"
 debuted on Fox on December 17, 1989, and is now
 the longest-running primetime series in American
 history.