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Olowahu- $25(available in all colors)

Original sandal- $49.99(available in all colors)

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o c o l l y . c o ma p r i l 1 3 , 2 0 1 6

T H E O ’ C O L L Y

KURT STEISS/O’COLLY

unspokenjames franco comes to campus as sga considers reining in speakers board.

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13, 2016 OCOLLY.COM PAGE 2

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When the Student Government Association Speakers Board was looking for a celebrity speaker to bring to campus, James Franco fit the bill.

The actor, writer and filmmaker “has a different background than anyone else (Speakers Board) brought before,” “a passion for learning,” and is someone students can relate to, said Speakers Board chair Kyle Lake.

Franco will appear at Gallagher-Iba Arena at 7 p.m. Wednesday. Admission is $10 for the public and free for students, staff and faculty with an Oklahoma State University ID.

Although Speakers Board has brought big names such as Franco to Stillwater, some SGA senior senators are concerned with the lack of SGA and student oversight the board receives.

The board gets 25 cents per credit hour as part of the student development fee, Lake said. The funds are a part of student tuition, and the board’s budget fluctuates depending on student enrollment

and any rollover funds from the previous year.

This semester, the board col-lected $144,026.42 in student fees, wrote John Mark Day, director of leadership and campus life, in an

email.Franco is the semester’s third

speaker, and his visit carries the heftiest price tag.

The board originally agreed to pay Leigh Anne Tuohy $35,000

to visit campus in January, but her visit was postponed because of inclement weather. The price went down slightly after she was rescheduled to speak in February,

story continues on page 3

c o v e r s t o r y s p e a k e r s b oa r d

K a s s i e M c C l u n g

I n v e s t i gat i v e R e p o rt e r

OSU gets Franco, but Speakers Board taking heatspeakers from Feb. 2014-April 2016

February 2016 March 2016

February 2014April 2014february 2015April 2015

april 2015april 2016

Leigh Anne Tuohy: $35,000*

James Franco :$90,000

Dr. Bennet Omalu:$35,000

Steve Wozniak:$25,000**

Bob Goff: $15,000

Common:$60,000

Peyton Manning:$105,000

Bill Nye:$40,000

*price went down slightly after she was rescheduled to speak in February, Kyle Lake said.

**SGA Speakers Board paid $10,000, other $15,000 came from other sources. GRA

PHIC

BY

SIER

RA W

INRO

W

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Lake said. Tuohy is best known as the adoptive mother of NFL offensive lineman Michael Oher, subject of “The Blind Side.”

Speakers Board also hosted renowned pathologist Dr. Ben-net Omalu for $35,000 in March. Omalu’s story was featured in “Concussion,” and was portrayed by Will Smith.

When Franco comes to campus Wednesday, Speakers Board will have paid $90,000 with student fees.

The agreed to two-and-a-half-hour schedule calls for Franco to meet with OSU President Burns Hargis for 30 minutes, participate in a 55-minute moderated Q&A session, spend 20 minutes pos-ing for photos with VIPs and 45 minutes in a meet-and-greet with the Speakers Board.

Because of the board’s large budget, students should have more say on the speakers chosen, said Andrew Steadley, Committee on Student Organizations chair.

“I think there needs to be a poll to ask students that says, ‘Hey, here’s who we’re looking at now. Which one would you like?’” Steadley said.

SGA bylaws require Speakers Board to schedule at least three speakers each academic year, one of which must be a diversity speaker during the spring semester that the SGA Multicultural Affairs

Committee helps select.Speakers Board scheduled

Omalu to speak in March, but Mul-ticultural Affairs Committee was not consulted, said Mauree Turner, Multicultural Affairs chair.

When Speakers Board meets with Multicultural Affairs Commit-tee, it helps ensure the board will

select someone who the multi-cultural community can relate to, Turner said.

“I enjoyed the speaker, and it’s always nice to see someone come in that looks like you and is doing well in the world,” Turner said. “But at the same time, just because this is a minority you’re bringing in doesn’t mean they will directly

relate to what (the minority com-munity) has been through.

“Because learning his back-ground story, I know his back-ground didn’t necessarily speak to a lot of the people in the minority community here.”

Lake acknowledged that Speak-ers Board didn’t meet with Turner

and said he was not aware of bylaws that require Speakers Board to meet with Multicultural Affairs Committee.

“That’s kind of my fault for not fully knowing what’s in our by-laws,” Lake said. “We can definite-ly do a better job at reaching out.

“But at the same time, I think we always run into the problem of,

just in general, people will suggest a speaker and they’ll either be way out of budget or that speaker will only appeal to a very small demo-graphic.”

In addition to student input, sen-ate should also be more informed on what speakers are being consid-ered, Steadley said. Senate doesn’t have a say in which speakers are being considered, he said.

“I feel like there needs to be more oversight, and Speakers Board needs to come to talk to senate,” he said. “They also need to follow their bylaws.”

But implementing more over-sight on the board can be problem-atic, SGA President Kyle Hilbert said.

“We invite Franco to come speak, he agrees to come and then Speakers Board takes that to sen-ate,” Hilbert said. “Say hypotheti-cally senate rejected James Franco. The Speakers Board has to go to James Franco and say, ‘Hey, never mind we don’t want you to come anymore.’ There’s just a lot of ramifications to come with that.”

Going back on a contract would reflect poorly on OSU, SGA and students, and the board has to keep confidential what speakers are coming to campus until the event is near, Hilbert said. But the board’s large budget calls for oversight where possible, he said.

“It is important not only for there to be administrative oversight, but also students being able to get their

opinion on what speakers are com-ing to campus,” Hilbert said.

As the board contemplates which speakers to bring to OSU, members consider speakers’ rates, availabil-ity and whether they will appeal to the community, Lake said.

Students can suggest speakers by tweeting at the Speakers Board, emailing the board chairman or visiting the SGA offices in 211 Stu-dent Union, Lake said. Suggestions will be taken into consideration, but ultimately the board makes the decision on who would provide the best content for the community, he said.

Speakers Board is composed of a SGA executive as chair, a vice chair and 12 board members. The vice chair moves up to chair of the board the following year. Student representation is made up of 10 students. Board members are selected through an application and interview process, and then must be approved by the SGA senate. The chair and senate also appoint two faculty members.

In March, Budget Committee Chairman Jeremiah Taylor added an amendment to the bylaws that requires Speakers Board to subject nominees of the board to approval three weeks before board mem-bers are named.

In the past, nominees would not present themselves for approval until the last senate meeting,

story continued from page 2

c o v e r s t o r y S P E A K E R S B OA R D

I think there needs to be

a poll to ask students that

says, ‘Hey, here’s who we’re

looking at now. Which one

would you like?”andrew steadley

chairman of the committee on student organizations

story continues on page 5

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13, 2016 OCOLLY.COM PAGE 4

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s p o r t s go to ocolly.com to see coverage of Mason Rudolph’s first pitch

f o l l o w n a t h a n :@ n a t h a n s r u i z

Michael Mertz threw 105 pitches Tuesday night, but one will haunt him.

Oral Roberts left fielder Michael Hungate’s three-run home run was all the Golden Eagles needed to down Oklahoma State 4-0 at Allie P. Reynolds Stadium.

The fourth-inning blast was Hungate’s first of the season and came on a Mertz slider.

“It just backed up on me,” Mertz said. “Ended up being belt-high down the middle, and he put a good swing on it.”

The Golden Eagles (20-12) is-sued the Cowboys their sixth loss in seven games as OSU fell to 2-4 against ORU under coach Josh Holliday.

“We haven’t been able to put a complete game together, whether

it be pitch great, play defense and score enough runs or any combina-tion of winning baseball,” Holliday said. “That’s the goal.”

Mertz, a junior right-hander, quickly retired the first two bat-ters of the top of the fourth, but back-to-back singles set the stage for Hungate, who sent Mertz’s 1-1 pitch over the center-field fence.

Hungate’s home run was all that separated Mertz from an outstand-ing outing for OSU (19-13). He allowed three runs on four hits and three walks with a career-high 10 strikeouts.

“I thought Mike did a good job,” Holliday said. “Mike pitched a good game, gave us a really good outing and a really good opportu-nity to win.”

When ORU added a fourth run on a bases-loaded walk in the eighth, it created what seemed to

be an almost insurmountable deficit for an OSU offense that averaged 3.83 runs its past six games.

The Cowboys got their leadoff batter on in the second and third in-nings, stranding the runner at third both times.

OSU got the tying run up with two outs in the sixth, but Corey Hassel grounded back to pitcher Nathan Garzato end the inning.

The final out of the game was fitting. Jon Littell smoked Brady Womacks’ pitch back to him. It ricocheted off him to shortstop Trevin Sonnier, who threw to first to retire Littell.

The Cowboys lost their fourth straight. Holliday did not hesitate to say they are facing pressure.

“Sometimes, when you get in a tough stretch, you start trying too hard,” Holliday said. “I think that manifests itself for sure because

kids care and they want to win and no one wants to struggle and do bad, but to overtry also works against you.

“We’re not going to roll over. We put too much into this thing. There’s too much invested in these

kids. There’s too much love for our team and our group, so you can bend us a little bit, but you’re not going to break us.”

OSU baseball team loses fourth straight, falls 4-0 to ORUBY n at h a n r u i zsenior sports reporter

ben hueston/O’COLLYJosh Holliday puts his hand on his neck during the Cowboys’ game against Oral Roberts. The Golden Eagles defeated Oklahoma State 4-0.

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13, 2016 OCOLLY.COM PAGE 5

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Taylor said. “This gives senate the op-

portunity to actually ques-tion the possible members without feeling forced to approve,” he said.

Because of the tim-ing with Franco’s visit to campus, the board won’t be able to subject nominees for approval three weeks before they are named, Lake said.

“I know (senate) wants us to submit it like three weeks before the last senate meet-ing, but that would have been like two weeks ago,” Lake said. “And obviously we’re not going to select a new board when we still have an event to go.”

Speakers Board will pres-ent its board three weeks before it’s named moving

forward if future SGA and board leadership decide early approval is necessary, Lake said.

Although the board won’t present nominees when required by bylaws, it still will present them at the last senate meeting, Hilbert said. If the senate doesn’t approve the nominees, Speakers Board members won’t be established until the fall semester when senate can meet again, he said.

“But that does create a problem and that is some-thing moving forward that we want to fix, and that’s why we changed the rules,” Hilbert said. “So starting next year, Speakers Board will have to bring their slate of board members to sen-ate before the final senate

meeting. “That way, if the slate is

turned down, there’s time to amend that.”

Bringing speakers to campus is a long process the board works on year-round, Hilbert said.

“Whenever good speak-ers come in and everyone enjoys the speakers, they often don’t give the credit to Speakers Board for bring-ing them in even though they put a lot of work into it,” Hilbert said. “But sometimes, when a speaker comes and students may not enjoy the speaker for what-ever reason, the Speakers Board gets a lot of the heat for that.”

f o l l o w k a s s i e :@ k a s s i e m c c l u n g

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WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13, 2016 OCOLLY.COM PAGE 6

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Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis

FOR RELEASE APRIL 13, 2016

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WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13, 2016 OCOLLY.COM PAGE 8

Daily HoroscopeBy Nancy BlackTribune Content Agency

Today’s Birthday (04/13/16). The sky’s the limit this year, and preparation key. Make professional moves after 5/9, with travel and studies after 8/13. Begin a two-year partnership phase on 9/9. Discoveries in your work after 9/1 lead to a turning point in your thinking after 9/16. Prioritize love.To get the advantage, check the day’s rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.Aries (March 21-April 19) -- Today is a 6 -- Work from home for extra productivity. Improve structural supports. Organize, clean and clear space for what’s next. Choose what’s best for family. Pamper yourself with domestic comforts.Taurus (April 20-May 20) -- Today is a 7 -- Discuss emotional issues and passions. Work with someone who sees your blind spots. Make powerful requests. Ask for what you want and need for the change you envision.Gemini (May 21-June 20) -- Today is a 9 -- Hold out for the best deal. Negotiate favorable terms. Don’t pick a fight. Talk about financial matters without provoking a confrontation. You can finagle a win-win. Disagree respectfully.Cancer (June 21-July 22) -- Today is a 9 -- Focus on personal priorities. Get facts to back up a hunch. Determine what skills you lack for the dream you’re imagining, and list what it would take to get them. Take charge.Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Today is a 6 -- Enjoy backstage plan-ning and preparation. Dispel illusions with solid data. Separa-tion or delays could disrupt. Have a backup. Soothe sensitive feelings with tea and empathy. Rest and recharge.Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- Today is a 7 -- Changes at the top reveal new opportunities in a group project. Being faithful pays off. Find ways to simplify matters. Talk to family before accept-ing new responsibilities that could affect them.Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) -- Today is a 7 -- A professional chal-lenge has your focus. Don’t get stopped by the past. Use what you’ve learned. Step slowly and carefully. Don’t take things personally. Avoid emotional outbursts. Fact and fantasy clash. Go for clarity.Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) -- Today is an 8 -- Enjoy a class or group participation without exceeding your budget. Get help to realize a dream. Distractions and diversions tempt you away from your research. Stick to your plan. Travel without frills.Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) -- Today is a 6 -- Collaborate on shared finances. Your partner can get through where you can’t. Unravel a mess. Anticipate changes and temporary confusion with calm support. Practice frugality. Step back if sparks fly. You’re gaining, slowly.Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- Today is an 8 -- Collaboration goes further than solo efforts today. Let go of assumptions. Challenge the generally held opinion for new insight. Listen to what others have to offer. Make quiet inroads. Get terms in writing.Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) -- Today is a 9 -- Increased demand at work has you hopping. Don’t rely on memory alone ... sched-ule and track tasks. Make no snap decisions. Consider long-term consequences. Avoid risky business or over-extending.Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) -- Today is a 6 -- Stay out of someone else’s upset. Have patience with communication breakdowns. Take extra care around sharp objects. Lay low and wait for confusion to pass. Consider backup plans.

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h o r o s c o p e

SOLUTION TO TUESDAY’S PUZZLE

Complete the gridso each row, column and 3-by-3 box(in bold borders)contains everydigit, 1 to 9. For strategies onhow to solveSudoku, visitwww.sudoku.org.uk

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4/13/16

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