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Page 1: Wednesday, Nov. 4, 2015

3 Fringe Boot - Tan, Black, Gray & Brown 5 Fringe Boot - Black, Tan, Gray & Brown 2 Layer Fringe Boot - Black, Tan, Gray & Brown2020 N. Perkins Rd., Lakeview Pointe Shopping Center

(Next to Best Buy)

Best Selection Guaranteed!

o c o l l y . c o mN ov e m b e r 4 , 2 0 1 5

T H E O ’ C O L L Y

‘live and love in the moment’

COLLIN MCCARTHY/O’COLLY

Community leaders unite Stillwater community in remembering the victims of the homecoming parade crash.

Page 2: Wednesday, Nov. 4, 2015

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2015 OCOLLY.COM PAGE 2

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Memorial unites university, Stillwater

The OSU Pipe Band, a group of bagpipe players, plays “Amazing Grace” before Stillwater Mayor Gina Noble spoke Tuesday night. Photos of each victim appeared on the screens around Gallagher-Iba Arena while the song was played.

A man and woman hold hands at the memorial. The memorial honored everyone affected by the homecoming parade crash.

Counselors were stationed around Gallagher-Iba Arena during the memorial for those who needed their services Tuesday night.

PHOTOS BY COLLIN MCARTHY

Page 3: Wednesday, Nov. 4, 2015

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2015 OCOLLY.COM PAGE 3*Prescription Or Credit Card Purchase Required 

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BORN IN 1979AND WE STILL BELIEVE IN

TEXTS, DRUGS AND GAUZE IN ROLLS!!! Fall Festival34th Annual

Arts, Crafts and Gift ShowStillwater, Oklahoma

November 6th, 7th and 8thPayne County Expo Center

3.5 miles East of Stillwater, Okla.Highway 51

Free AdmissionsOver 150 Booths

Friday, Nov. 6th, 10:00a.m.-6:00p.m.Saturday, Nov. 7th, 9:00a.m-6:00p.m.Sunday, Nov. 8th, 9:00a.m.-5:00p.m.

The cheers and ap-plause that normally invite loyal Oklahoma State fans into Gallagher-Iba Arena were replaced by the melancholy sounds of the OSU orchestra Tuesday night.

OSU students, faculty and members of the Still-water community attended a memorial for those who lost their lives at the homecoming parade on Oct. 24.

The City of Stillwater and OSU hosted the event in memory of the four victims who died: Nash Lucas, Nikita Prabhakar Nakal, Bonnie Stone and Marvin Stone.

Matt Mills, campus min-ister for Stillwater Church of Christ and president of the Interfaith Council at

OSU, welcomed the audi-ence to the memorial and gave a speech honoring the lives lost and thanked the first responders. Mills lead the audience in the Lord’s Prayer.

Afterward, there was a moment of silence for the victims.

“It’s been 10 days since we first heard ‘Stillwater Strong,’ and through our pain and grief we have become Stillwater Strong,” said Gina Noble, mayor of Stillwater. “The past 10 days remind us to live and love in the moment. There are no guarantees that life will be the same tomor-row.”

Noble and OSU Presi-dent Burn Hargis thanked each first response group and honored the family members of the victims.

Hargis gave an update on the conditions of the hospitalized survivors as well as a brief but mov-ing speech. Todd Lamb, Lt. Gov. of Oklahoma and OSU alumnus, spoke of the Cowboy spirit and how the OSU and Stillwater community will persevere through the tragedy.

The epitome of the

Cowboy spirit, the OSU alma mater, ended the memorial service.

Diana Ting, a nutritional sciences sophomore, said she thought the ceremony was beautiful.

“It wasn’t upsetting and did a great job of honoring the victims and all of those that responded so quickly to those that needed help,” Ting said. “There was an overwhelming sense of unity in the arena, and it really did feel like all of us were healing from that morning together. It’s times like these that remind us we truly are never alone.”

After the memorial, Corey Kent White, former “The Voice” contestant and OSU senior, along with two other performers, hosted a benefit concert at Gallagher-Iba.

OSU graduate James Price wrote and performed the song “There is a Light,” and OSU student Roy Cruz showcased “Stillwater Strong.” The Stillwater Strong Fund, which was established by the Stillwater Medical Center Foundation, took donations for the victims.

C a t h e r i n e A p p l i n g

@ c at e a p p l i n g 2 0 1 5

Staff Reporter

Leaders unite community at memorial

[email protected] Kent White, an OSU student and former NBC’s “The Voice” contes-tant, sings during a benefit concert after the memorial Tuesday night.

OSU President Burns Hargis bows his head at the benefit concert. Burns, along with other Stillwater and OSU leaders, spoke during the memorial.

Page 4: Wednesday, Nov. 4, 2015

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2015 OCOLLY.COM PAGE 4

Great Food! Live Music!Entertainment for the whole family!

Check out Downtownstw.com for more info!

Join Downtown Stillwater and OSU Athletics for

OSU Football Friday Night Pre-Game Parties at Fridays Food Trucks & Tunes before OSU home

games at 7th & Main.

• 11/6 - Welcome TCU• 11/20 - Welcome Baylor

FRIDAY NIGHTPRE-GAME PARTIES

WEAR ORANGE

Oklahoma State coach Mike Gundy an-nounced Monday that receiver Jhajuan Seales will return to action against TCU on Satur-day.

Seales was sus-pended for the Texas Tech game after being arrested early Oct. 24 on suspicion of oper-ating a motor vehicle while having a blood or breath alcohol content of at or more than .08 and transporting an open container of an intoxicating beverage.

“(He) made a poor decision,” Gundy said.

Seales has 12 catches this season for 164 yards and a touchdown.

He also received a one-game suspension last season after being arrested on a public intoxication complaint after falling asleep in a Whataburger drive-thru.

No GameDay, no problemWith No. 5 TCU

coming to town to set up a matchup between two unbeaten teams Saturday, many OSU fans were hoping for a visit from ESPN’s Col-lege GameDay. Instead of filming the morn-ing show in Stillwater, ESPN will be headed to Tuscaloosa, Alabama, for the Crimson Tide-LSU game. Although fans are disappointed with the decision, OSU players aren’t feeling left out.

“To be honest, I could care less,” defensive end Emmanuel Ogbah said. “I don’t really care if GameDay comes. We’re just happy to play a great game that we’re about to play Saturday.”

Talented guestTCU will bring the

second-best offense in the country to Stillwa-ter thanks to its quar-terback and Heisman Trophy hopeful Trevone Boykin. Boykin has thrown for 2,927 yards and 28 touchdowns this season. His 388.4 pass-ing yards a game leads the Big 12, and he also leads the conference in total offense.

“If there’s a more dy-namic player out there in college football, I haven’t seen it,” Gundy said. “… Our guys will have a plan, and we’ll

play extremely hard and chase the ball. I think that’s just as important as anything in trying to slow their offense down.”

No place like homeOSU’s game against

TCU will be the Cow-boys’ first of three highly anticipated home games during Novem-ber. All three teams visiting Boone Pickens Stadium this month are ranked in the top 15 and have a combined 23-1 record, with Okla-homa being the only team with a loss. No. 3 Baylor is also unde-feated and will travel to Stillwater on Nov. 21.

“Our fans have done an awesome job bring-ing noise and excite-ment to our stadium,” quarterback Mason Rudolph said. “(No-vember’s) gonna be something we look for-ward to. Each week, it’s gonna be fun to play.”

D e k o t a G r e g o r y

@ d e k o ta g r e g o r y

Sports Reporter

Notebook: Seales to return Saturday after DUI

[email protected]

UP NEXT

Who: TCU Where: Boone Pickens StadiumWhen: Saturday, 2:30 PMBroadcast: ESPN, Cowboy Radio Network

vs.

Collin McCarthy/O’COLLYCowboy receiver Jhajuan Seales will play Saturday against TCU after receiving a one-game suspension for his DUI arrest. “(He) made a terrible decision,” Mike Gundy said.

Page 5: Wednesday, Nov. 4, 2015

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2015 OCOLLY.COM PAGE 5

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With the regular season in the rearview mirror, Oklahoma State faces a formidable task as it heads into the conference tournament.

OSU (9-8-2, 2-4-2 Big 12) finished eighth out of nine teams in the Big 12 and will face No. 1 seed West Virginia (15-1-1, 6-0-1) at 11:30 a.m. Wednesday in Kansas City, Missouri.

Ranked second nation-ally, WVU heads into the game having not lost since dropping its second regular-season game against Virginia Tech on Aug. 23.

In the regular-season matchup between the Cowgirls and Mountain-eers, OSU played one

of its best games of the season, taking WVU to overtime in Stillwater before falling 2-1 on Oct. 23.

In OSU’s final regular-season match, it was physically outplayed in the second half against Oklahoma and will have to improve its physicality to keep its season alive.

“We matched them pretty well last time,” OSU coach Colin Carmi-chael said. “We’re going to have to play harder, defend better and be men-tally tougher. … Tougher

to break down and not make as many mistakes and just compete better.”

Having valuable expe-rience hanging with one of the nation’s top teams once before should give the Cowgirls confidence heading into Wednes-day’s match.

Although the regular season didn’t end up with as many wins as it

could have, especially in conference play, the postseason is a different animal.

The Cowgirls will simply need to be the best

version of themselves to redeem what can be best described as an up-and-down season.

C o n n o r N y b o

@ c o n n o r _ n y b o

Sports Reporter

Cowgirls face top-seeded West Virginia in Big 12 Tournament

[email protected]

UP NEXTOklahoma State (9-8-2, 2-4-2 Big 12) vs. West Virginia (15-1-1, 6-0-1)When: 11:30 a.m. WednesdayWhere: Swope Soccer Village, Kansas City, MissouriBroadcast: KGFY 105.5 FM

Devin Wilber/O’COLLYForward Courtney Dike, the Cowgirls’ leader in points, will look to guide OSU over No. 1 seed West Virginia.

Page 6: Wednesday, Nov. 4, 2015

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2015 OCOLLY.COM PAGE 6

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Page 7: Wednesday, Nov. 4, 2015

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2015 OCOLLY.COM PAGE 7

Horoscope

Daily HoroscopeBy Nancy BlackTribune Content AgencyToday’s Birthday (11/04/15). Win together this year. Your friends are the aces up your sleeve. Consistency profits. Passionate possibilities spark (after 3/9). Thoughtful planning pays (after 3/23). A group project shifts (after 9/1). One game folds and another begins (after 9/16). Play.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 9 -- Today and tomorrow get especially busy. Work requires your personal touch. Discover and resolve a structural problem. Pull what you need out of storage. The action is behind the scenes. Learn the value of what you have.Taurus (April 20-May 20) -- Today is a 9 -- Let friends arouse your curiosity. The next two days are reserved for fun. Encourage creativ-ity. Play around. Romance blossoms if lovingly tended. Practice your arts and magic. Follow the beat of the music and dance.Gemini (May 21-June 20) -- Today is a 7 -- Your home and family require more attention. Fix up your place today and tomorrow. Get creative with color, form and line. You can get what you need with-out straining the budget. Prepare for an upcoming social event.Cancer (June 21-July 22) -- Today is an 8 -- Things are getting clear over the next few days. You see a solution. Read, write and study. Issue press releases. Communicate with your networks. Re-supply locally. Meditate on what you want before speaking. Make long-range plans.Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Today is a 7 -- Take care of financial matters over the next few days. Tally up your balance sheet. Keep payments current, and issue reminders on accounts receivable. Patience pays off. Keep your agreements. Be determined, and not dissuaded.Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- Today is an 8 -- Your confidence and personal power expands today and tomorrow. With strength, you also gain options. Let your team know how they can help. Pay at-tention to a brilliant, yet bizarre, suggestion. Wait for a roadblock to clear.Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) -- Today is a 5 -- The next two days are nice for laying low. Upgrade your equipment and organize your space. Prepare for a new project by closing up old ones. Stick close to home. Listen to someone who thinks differently than you.Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) -- Today is an 8 -- Enjoy a two-day party phase. Social activities and team projects go well today and tomorrow. A risk could pay off big. Ask for help to gather resources and talents. Stifle rebellious tendencies. Build a strong foundation together.Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) -- Today is a 7 -- A professional chal-lenge requires your attention over the next few days. Opportunities could arise if you play your cards right. Fix something before it breaks. Postpone travel. Take on more responsibility. Teach what you’re learning.Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- Today is an 8 -- Educational adven-tures draw you out today and tomorrow. Discover new methods, tricks and ideas. Listen to a mentor or teacher. Go and see for your-self. Make long-term plans and dream big. Imagine ways to apply what you’re learning.Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) -- Today is a 9 -- Plan strategically over the next few days, especially regarding money. There’s no rush. Join forces with another for funding. Others seek your advice. Come up with a plan together. Gain more than expected. Enjoy a tranquil evening.Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) -- Today is an 8 -- Someone nice thinks you’re cute. Get your homework done before going out to play. Dis-cover romance where least expected today and tomorrow. Charm with your talents and passions. Your reputation precedes you. Dress to impress.

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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

© 2015 The Mepham Group. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency. All rights reserved.

11/4/15

Level: 1 2 3 4

Page 8: Wednesday, Nov. 4, 2015

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2015 OCOLLY.COM PAGE 8

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

FOR RELEASE NOVEMBER 4, 2015

ACROSS1 See-through

kitchen supply6 Mythical king of

the Huns10 Kitchen spray13 Flared dress14 Ancient Greek

theater15 Land in l’océan16 *Sneaky blow18 Some kitchen

appliances19 Did a slow burn20 Passengers in

flight, often22 Cyberspace

marketplace23 Snobbish24 Chopper27 Mount Hood’s

state29 Prominent

periods30 Keep the censor

busy31 The NBA’s Kevin

Love, e.g.34 Alternative to

dis?35 Easy mark ...

and a hint to thestarts of theanswers tostarred clues

37 Dressingingredient

38 High rails39 Bassoon cousins40 Vending

machine buy41 “Absolutely!”43 Kicked off the

flight45 Well-protected47 Sweater outlet?48 Island nation

near Sicily49 Get in the game54 Form 1040 calc.55 *Peanuts57 Nickelodeon

pooch58 Spine-tingling59 Hawaii or Alaska,

on many a map60 Number before

quattro61 Editor’s “Let it

stand”62 Hoopster

Archibald andrapper Dogg

DOWN1 Back talk2 Homecoming

guest3 Affluent, in

Andalusia4 Low socks5 (If) required6 Together,

musically7 Watch over8 Director Jean-__

Godard9 “Can’t wait to

eat!”10 *Place for

brooding11 Watchful12 Embarrassing,

as a situation14 Nashville

attraction17 Bring up21 Great Lakes’ __

Canals23 10-time All-Pro

linebackerJunior

24 Hand over25 Taken by mouth26 *“Walkin’ After

Midnight” singer27 Young hooter28 Rules, briefly

30 __ gin fizz32 Trusted

underling33 Prince who

inspired Dracula35 Loser only to a

straight flush36 Calais cleric40 “The Bartered

Bride” composer42 Away43 Former U.K.

carrier

44 Mischievous boy45 Snazzy-looking46 Ready and

willing47 Love-crazy Le

Pew49 “Absolutely!”50 Give out51 Scientific acad.52 Architectural

S-curve53 Fishing gear56 Riled (up)

Tuesday’s Puzzle SolvedBy Kurt Krauss 11/4/15

©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC 11/4/15

ONLINE BUSINESS COURSES Fall 2015

MGMT 5031.583 (Graduate credit)Leading Organizational ChangeCall number: 21477November 2 - November 30

BADM 2010.503Consumer Law I: Money and Credit Call number: 21206November 9 - November 23

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MGMT 4850.513 (D)Applied Leadership Studies: Topics in Diversity ManagementCall number: 21265November 9 - December 4

BADM 2010.513Consumer Law II: Smart Purchasing DecisionsCall number: 21207 November 16 - November 30

BADM 4010.513Professional Development IICall number: 21209November 16 - December 2

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BEGINS NOVEMBER

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