True, but I also agree with
@voppp to some extent that the contract isn't fully explained. And the degree of commitment an OOS applicant makes by signing the contract is pretty huge (9+years of committment or a ton of $$$?) so as an OOS applicant you'd want to know what you're getting yourself into before binding yourself legally.
For those who are saying, apply in case of rejections elsewhere, well... if you're accepted into OUHCOM but not at all thrilled about everything said on the contract and ultimately decide not to go, why pay the secondary $$ and waste your time on their essays?