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Thursday October 18, 2012 www.ocolly.com 25 cents By SAMANTHA VICENT Managing Editor e Stillwater Po- lice Department and the Oklahoma Medi- cal Examiner’s office are investigating the death of an OSU stu- dent. OSU Director of Communications Gary Shutt said David William Brumfield, 22, died Monday afternoon. He was an animal science junior from Plano, Texas, and a member of Sigma Chi fraternity. Brum- field’s family was notified following the incident, Shutt said. A Sigma Chi member said he died after being in a coma at an Oklahoma City hospital. Stillwater police Capt. Randy Dick- erson said a roommate found Brumfield unresponsive in his apartment bedroom just after midnight Sunday. OSU Fraternity and Sorority As- sociation manager Ival Gregory said Brumfield did not live in the Sigma Chi chapter house. Shutt gave a statement about the in- cident Wednesday afternoon. “Oklahoma State University is deeply saddened by the loss of one of our students,” he said. “We extend our thoughts and sympathies to the family and friends of David Brumfield.” Student’s death under police investigation SGA announces election dates KIARA WALTON/O’COLLEGIAN Mike Merit, Stephen Rogers and Kelli Grashel lead the SGA Senate meeting Wednesday evening. By SAMANTHA VICENT Managing Editor On Wednesday night, the OSU Student Government Association Senate announced fall election dates for students wishing to represent OSU’s eight colleges. Fall elections for OSU college sena- tors will take place Nov. 13 and 14, Senate Vice-Chairman Mike Merit said. An information session will be held Oct. 29 at 7:30 p.m., and cam- paigning will officially begin Oct. 30, he said. Applications for Senate are avail- able on SGA’s website, osusga.okstate. edu. ey are due Oct. 26, Merit said. Also at Wednesday’s meeting, Campus Life adviser Kent Sampson said Cowboys for Life, a student or- ganization, will sponsor the “Justice for All” display exhibit from Oct. 24-26, which will be located between Library Lawn and the International Mall. e group deals with genocide and abor- tion, Sampson said. “ey have graphic pictorials, so we tell them to have a buffer zone so people who don’t want to see the pic- tures don’t have to,” he said. “ey will not be located by the Student Union.” Sampson also discussed the death of David Brumfield, a Sigma Chi fra- ternity member and animal science junior. “Unfortunately a young man from one of our fraternities died over the weekend,” he said. “His death had nothing to do with the fraternity, and it was not on university property…It’s really a tough tragedy for the family.” After Sampson’s report, Sen. Mat- thew Young opened discussion for two bills, which would grant registered sta- tus to the OSU Food Association and the National Science Teachers Asso- ciation. Both were approved unani- mously after information about each from their respective representatives. Also, SGA Senators approved bills providing co-sponsorships for eta Tau, a co-ed engineering fraternity ($700), the American Society of Bio- logical Engineers ($1,000) and the Entrepreneurship Club ($1,000). e OSU Agronomy Club applied for a co-sponsorship of $280, but group representative Garrett Jones petitioned the Senate for an additional $720 to cover registration fees for a confer- ence in Cincinnati, Ohio. e bill was tabled in order to increase the funding amount. Senator and Budget Committee Chairman DJ Worth said the SGA co-sponsorship fund has $10,480.91 left to provide to student organizations this semester. See SGA Page 3 LAUREN SMITH/O’COLLEGIAN Freshman Macey Ramsey helps paint Hester Street on Wednesday. Hundreds of people gathered to paint encouraging messages to support the football team during The Spirit Walk on Saturday. The event helped Greek organizations, clubs and Res Life earn spirit points for spirit points. BRUMFIELD OSU Homecoming helps businesses boom HESTER STREET PAINTING See BRUMFIELD Page 3 TODAY’S HOMECOMING EVENT Pop Corn at Library Lawn Fountain By JORDAN HARMON General Assignment Reporter Some people debate whether the time and money spent on Homecom- ing is actually going toward some- thing that benefits the Stillwater com- munity, but local businesses say it is. Cristy Morrison, executive direc- tor of the Stillwater Convention and Visitors Bureau, said a study found that game days brought about $4 mil- lion extra in direct visitor spending to Stillwater for each Homecoming game since 2003. “It’s going to be more than that now,” Morrison said. “Homecoming usually generates more than a regular gameday, but it won’t be as much more this year because it’s an 11 a.m. game.” Morrison said people who would normally stay in town Friday and Sat- urday nights are leaving Saturday be- cause of the early game time. “Normally, we would be booked, so it’s shocking that there are hotels with availability this weekend,” Morrison said. Gloria Short, director of sales at the Holiday Inn and Suites, said the Holi- day Inn has been booked for Home- coming weekend for almost a year. “We’ve been booked for 50 weeks,” Short said. “We can only book 50 weeks in advance, and the minute the OSU football schedule comes out, we’re almost full within 24 hours.” Short said the influx of people dur- ing Homecoming benefits all types of businesses in Stillwater. “It’s wonderful for Stillwater,” Short said. “Businesses do very well on gameday. Everyone wants to see the greatest homecoming in the nation.” Adam Sisco, assistant manager at Louie’s Grill and Bar, said Louie’s is expecting double the sales as normal on Homecoming weekend. “We spent more than twice as much on produce this weekend as we usually do, and we have about six more employees each day this weekend than we normally would,” Sisco said. Sisco said Homecoming has no negative impacts on the restaurant. “is is why we’re here,” Sisco said. “We lost our air conditioning this summer. We had to redo some floors this summer, and this is how we pay for it: with extra revenue from the gamedays.” Tim Holland, general manager at Eskimo Joe’s, said he is expecting al- most twice as many people as normal on Friday because of Walkaround. “Absolutely this weekend has a positive affect on the business,” Hol- land said. “Our company has, for many years, recognized the economic impact of the Homecoming event.” Holland said the 11 a.m. game time has also affected Homecoming preparations at Eskimo Joe’s. He said he is not expecting as many people on Saturday as he would if the game was at night. Amy Jo Frazier, Stillwater business improvement district coordinator, said Homecoming significantly impacts local businesses. “It’s great for the economy,” Frazier said. “I’m all about having as many people as possible in Stillwater, as an employee of the city of Stillwater, as a citizen and also as a previous em- ployee of the athletic department. It’s a little crowded, but it’s only for a few days, and I think it’s so exciting and well worth it.” [email protected]
Transcript
Page 1: Hester street painting Student’s death under investigationbloximages.newyork1.vip.townnews.com/ocolly.com/...Fenimore’s resume is argu-ably better than any other OSU player. OSU’s

ThursdayOctober 18, 2012

www.ocolly.com25 cents

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knock you outBucky’s Tip: Hands Off the MerchControl your debt by sticking to a budget. Avoid credit cards and impulse buys. Get the tools to create your budget at

BucktheNorm.com/empowerment

By Samantha Vicent

Managing Editor

The Stillwater Po-lice Department and the Oklahoma Medi-cal Examiner’s office are investigating the death of an OSU stu-dent.

OSU Director of Communicat ions Gary Shutt said

David William Brumfield, 22, died Monday afternoon. He was an animal science junior from Plano, Texas, and a member of Sigma Chi fraternity. Brum-field’s family was notified following the incident, Shutt said.

A Sigma Chi member said he died after being in a coma at an Oklahoma City hospital.

Stillwater police Capt. Randy Dick-erson said a roommate found Brumfield unresponsive in his apartment bedroom just after midnight Sunday.

OSU Fraternity and Sorority As-sociation manager Ival Gregory said Brumfield did not live in the Sigma Chi chapter house.

Shutt gave a statement about the in-cident Wednesday afternoon.

“Oklahoma State University is deeply saddened by the loss of one of our students,” he said. “We extend our thoughts and sympathies to the family and friends of David Brumfield.”

Student’s death under police investigation

SGA announces election dates

Kiara walton/o’Collegianmike merit, Stephen Rogers and Kelli Grashel lead the SGa Senate meeting Wednesday evening.

By Samantha Vicent

Managing Editor

On Wednesday night, the OSU Student Government Association Senate announced fall election dates for students wishing to represent OSU’s eight colleges.

Fall elections for OSU college sena-tors will take place Nov. 13 and 14, Senate Vice-Chairman Mike Merit said. An information session will be held Oct. 29 at 7:30 p.m., and cam-paigning will officially begin Oct. 30, he said.

Applications for Senate are avail-able on SGA’s website, osusga.okstate.edu. They are due Oct. 26, Merit said.

Also at Wednesday’s meeting, Campus Life adviser Kent Sampson said Cowboys for Life, a student or-ganization, will sponsor the “Justice for All” display exhibit from Oct. 24-26,

which will be located between Library Lawn and the International Mall. The group deals with genocide and abor-tion, Sampson said.

“They have graphic pictorials, so we tell them to have a buffer zone so people who don’t want to see the pic-tures don’t have to,” he said. “They will not be located by the Student Union.”

Sampson also discussed the death of David Brumfield, a Sigma Chi fra-ternity member and animal science junior.

“Unfortunately a young man from one of our fraternities died over the weekend,” he said. “His death had nothing to do with the fraternity, and it was not on university property…It’s really a tough tragedy for the family.”

After Sampson’s report, Sen. Mat-thew Young opened discussion for two bills, which would grant registered sta-tus to the OSU Food Association and the National Science Teachers Asso-

ciation. Both were approved unani-mously after information about each from their respective representatives.

Also, SGA Senators approved bills providing co-sponsorships for Theta Tau, a co-ed engineering fraternity ($700), the American Society of Bio-logical Engineers ($1,000) and the Entrepreneurship Club ($1,000). The OSU Agronomy Club applied for a co-sponsorship of $280, but group representative Garrett Jones petitioned the Senate for an additional $720 to cover registration fees for a confer-ence in Cincinnati, Ohio. The bill was tabled in order to increase the funding amount.

Senator and Budget Committee Chairman DJ Worth said the SGA co-sponsorship fund has $10,480.91 left to provide to student organizations this semester.

See SGA Page 3

lauRen Smith/O’cOlleGianFreshman macey Ramsey helps paint hester Street on Wednesday. hundreds of people gathered to paint encouraging messages to support the football team during the Spirit Walk on Saturday. the event helped Greek organizations, clubs and Res life earn spirit points for spirit points.

Brumfield

OSU Homecoming helps businesses boom

Hester street painting

See Brumfield Page 3

TODAY’S HOMECOMING EVENTPop Corn at library lawn fountain

By JORdan haRmOn

General Assignment Reporter

Some people debate whether the time and money spent on Homecom-ing is actually going toward some-thing that benefits the Stillwater com-munity, but local businesses say it is.

Cristy Morrison, executive direc-tor of the Stillwater Convention and Visitors Bureau, said a study found that game days brought about $4 mil-lion extra in direct visitor spending to Stillwater for each Homecoming game since 2003.

“It’s going to be more than that now,” Morrison said. “Homecoming usually generates more than a regular gameday, but it won’t be as much more this year because it’s an 11 a.m. game.”

Morrison said people who would normally stay in town Friday and Sat-urday nights are leaving Saturday be-cause of the early game time.

“Normally, we would be booked, so it’s shocking that there are hotels with availability this weekend,” Morrison said.

Gloria Short, director of sales at the Holiday Inn and Suites, said the Holi-day Inn has been booked for Home-coming weekend for almost a year.

“We’ve been booked for 50 weeks,” Short said. “We can only book 50 weeks in advance, and the minute the OSU football schedule comes out, we’re almost full within 24 hours.”

Short said the influx of people dur-ing Homecoming benefits all types of businesses in Stillwater.

“It’s wonderful for Stillwater,” Short said. “Businesses do very well on gameday. Everyone wants to see the greatest homecoming in the nation.”

Adam Sisco, assistant manager at

Louie’s Grill and Bar, said Louie’s is expecting double the sales as normal on Homecoming weekend.

“We spent more than twice as much on produce this weekend as we usually do, and we have about six more employees each day this weekend than we normally would,” Sisco said.

Sisco said Homecoming has no negative impacts on the restaurant.

“This is why we’re here,” Sisco said. “We lost our air conditioning this summer. We had to redo some floors this summer, and this is how we pay for it: with extra revenue from the gamedays.”

Tim Holland, general manager at Eskimo Joe’s, said he is expecting al-most twice as many people as normal on Friday because of Walkaround.

“Absolutely this weekend has a positive affect on the business,” Hol-land said. “Our company has, for many years, recognized the economic impact of the Homecoming event.”

Holland said the 11 a.m. game time has also affected Homecoming preparations at Eskimo Joe’s. He said he is not expecting as many people on Saturday as he would if the game was at night.

Amy Jo Frazier, Stillwater business improvement district coordinator, said Homecoming significantly impacts local businesses.

“It’s great for the economy,” Frazier said. “I’m all about having as many people as possible in Stillwater, as an employee of the city of Stillwater, as a citizen and also as a previous em-ployee of the athletic department. It’s a little crowded, but it’s only for a few days, and I think it’s so exciting and well worth it.”

[email protected]

Page 2: Hester street painting Student’s death under investigationbloximages.newyork1.vip.townnews.com/ocolly.com/...Fenimore’s resume is argu-ably better than any other OSU player. OSU’s

By James Poling

Senior Sports Reporter

Robert “Bob” Fenimore is not necessarily a name who resonates with the casual Okla-homa State fan because the era he played in, but his amazing talent to do everything on the field brought the program na-tional prominence for the first time.

He played for OSU before it was even the Cowboys (Okla-homa A&M Aggies). The na-tion was more concerned about military action in Japan and Germany than him leading his team to an 8-1 record during his sophomore season.

Yet the Blonde Bomber was the one to set the first stan-dards for future Cowboys in the record book.

What could he not do? He ran the ball, leading the nation in rushing during the 1945 season. He could pass the ball, eighth in the nation in 1944 and thus allowing him to be the national leader of total yards off offense from 1944-

45.He was also the punter,

averaging 39 yards a punt in 1945. Fenimore could also play some defense, intercepting 18 passes, a school record he still holds.

As for team achievements, Fenimore’s resume is argu-ably better than any other OSU player. OSU’s 1944 team finished with a 34-0 victory against TCU in the Cotton Bowl (the bowl later inducted Fenimore into its hall of fame). Fenimore then led the Cow-boys to a perfect 9-0 season in 1945, capped with a 33-13 vic-tory against St. Mary’s (Calif.) in the Sugar Bowl and a No. 5 final ranking in the AP poll.

Fenimore finished third in the 1945 Heisman voting. A knee injury hampered his se-nior season in 1946 and pro career, but the Chicago Bears drafted him with the first overall pick in the 1947 NFL Draft, the only OSU player with this distinction.

The Blonde Bomber was the first football All-American in OSU history. He was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1972.

After retiring after the 1947 season, Fenimore lived in Still-water for more than 50 years before he passed away on July 28, 2010 at 84.

[email protected]

Wooden Nickel and OSU...Keeping the Tradition Alive!

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OSU Homecoming 2012

The Life, The Legend, The Legacy

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Choose from:GEOG 1113: Intro to Cultural Geography (S,I) 3 cr. hr. 9:00-1:15 Call# 14121, Sec. 920HIST 1103: Survey of American History 3 cr. hr. 9:00-1:15 Call# 14837 Sec. 920HIST 342: Modern Japan 3 cr. hr. 9:00-1:15 Call# 20183 Sec. 920HIST 3543: Israel & Palestine Modern Times(H,I) 3 cr. hr. 1:00-5:15Call #20370, Sec. 920PHIL 3920: Phil, Genocide & Holocaust, 3 cr. hr. 1:00-5:15Call #19864, Sec. 920SOC 4653/5950: Gender & The Middle East (IS), 3 cr. hr., sec. 920 1:00-5:15Call #19902/19997

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Big 12 Standings

1: Kansas St. 6-0 (3-0)2: TCU 5-1 (2-1)3: Texas Tech 5-1 (2-1)4: West Virginia 5-1 (2-1)5: Oklahoma 4-1 (2-1)6: Oklahoma St. 3-2 (1-1)7: Iowa State 4-2 (1-2)8: Texas 4-2 (1-2)9: Baylor 3-2 (0-2)10: Kansas 1-5 (0-3)

Conference Stats

Passer rating

1: G. Smith, WVU 180.82: N. Florence, BU 176.63: J. Walsh, OKST 170.24: S. Doege, TTU 165.85: D. Ash, UT 159.9

Rushing Yards

1: J. Randle, OKST 614 yds2: J. Hubert, KSU 606 yds3: C. Klein, KSU 510 yds4: D. Williams, OU 508 yds5: A. Buie, WVU 504 yds

Receiving Yards

1: T. Williams, BU 830 yds2: S. Bailey, WVU 766 tds3: T. Austin, WVU 761 yds4: T. Reese, BU 499 yds5: B. Carter, TCU 425 yds

AgAinst: Oklahoma State vs.

Iowa StateWhen:

Saturday at 11 a.m.Where:

Boone Pickens Stadium

television: FX

rAdio: 93.7 FM

UP next COwBOy FOOtBall

vs.

Countdown to Homecoming: OSU’s best playersNo. 2: Bob Fenimore

Courtesy of the oklahoma state athletiC DepartmentBob Fenimore running the football during his time at oklahoma state. During Fenimore’s career, he ran, passed and punted at different points in time and led the 1945 OSU team to a perfect 9-0 season.

Terry Miller

ThurMan ThoMaS

JuSTin BlaCkMon

TBa (Friday)

5

3

4

1

Thursday, OcTOber 18, 2012 THE DAILY O’COLLEGIAN Page 2

The o’Colly’S liST

Page 3: Hester street painting Student’s death under investigationbloximages.newyork1.vip.townnews.com/ocolly.com/...Fenimore’s resume is argu-ably better than any other OSU player. OSU’s

By Nancy BlackTribune Media Services(MCT)Today’s Birthday (10/18/12). Gain new power around money and values this year, as you realize that you don’t need as much as you thought. Focus on expanding skills, passions and talents by soaking up educational experience through travel, communication and the arts. Level up significantly this year. Celebrate!To get the advantage, check the day’s rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.Aries (Mar. 21-April 19) -- Today is a 7 -- Check the big picture for the next few days, and take a leap into the next adventure. You don’t want to regret not having followed your heart. Resist the urge to splurge.Taurus (April 20-May 20) -- Today is a 5 -- Too many circumstanc-es threaten to get in the way, but you find inspiration and rise to the occasion. Balance idealism with realism. Costs may end up higher than expected.Gemini (May 21-June 20) -- Today is a 7 -- Play well with others, compromise, and win on many levels. Previous plans come to frui-tion. Intuition illuminates career matters. Check and double-check the data. Accept an unusual request.Cancer (June 21-July 22) -- Today is a 6 -- Focus on work to tie up loose ends. Your energy may be scattered, so direct it toward priori-ties. Plan an outing.Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Today is an 8 -- Romance, games and relaxation take priority. But continue to build your reserves and remain flexible. You have what you need. Dreams reveal a major change.Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- Today is an 8 -- You’re entering a two-day domestic phase. Put a plan on paper to save time. You’re getting impatient to start. Don’t try it alone. A friend can put you in touch with the perfect partner.Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) -- Today is a 7 -- Manage all that’s pos-sible, and then some, with some help from innovations. There’s no time to complain, and it wouldn’t do you any good anyway. Adapt with grace.Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) -- Today is a 6 -- Scratch out the things you can’t afford, or that you’re never going to complete. Romance is a definite possibility ... full speed ahead. Go for what you want most.Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) -- Today is an 8 -- You get a head start, thanks to your focus and determination. Use your power for good. Give up something you don’t need and surge forward.Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- Today is a 5 -- You’re under pressure with deadlines for the next few days. Big spending is not the correct answer. Let partners do the heavy lifting. Stay rested, and it flows.Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) -- Today is a 7 -- What you’ve learned comes in very handy during the temporary confusion. Listen care-fully to one who doesn’t say much. Friends really help over the next few days.Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) -- Today is a 7 -- Expect more from others and yourself. It’s not time to be slacking off ... every moment counts. Change the itinerary as needed. Do the job you’ve been thinking about.

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10/18/12

Level: 1 2 3 4

Do you actually like

homecoming??of theweek

“Yes. Well, I don’t not like it. I’m really looking forward to Friday and Saturday because I haven’t lived through it yet.”

“Yes! I’ve been going to homecoming since I was a little girl! My dad is an alum here, so he always brought me for Walkaround and the game. I Still remember coming when I was four or five.

“I Love Homecom-ing! Even if you don’t go to the football game, you’ve still got Walkaround, the parade, all of the local business benefit from it, the whole town just comes to life”

Joy Strickland,freshman speech

pathology

caSSie dowdS, freshman secondary ed

dr. lori o’malley, Spears School of Business career

consultant

By VIctor KaMESar

Athletics Reporter

Thursday, ocTober 18, 2012 THE DAILY O’COLLEGIAN Page 3

By KcHrIS GrIFFIn

Multicultural Reporter

The African American Stu-dent Association will host its first Homecoming Gala on Thursday from 8-11 p.m. in the OSU Alumni Center.

The gala has free admission and will be open to all stu-dents. Desmond Harvey, coor-dinator of African American affairs, said the ball will have a dinner, alumni speaker and a dance to conclude the event.

“The students thought it would be a good idea to host something for Afro-AM during homecoming week,” Harvey said. “We are going to crown a homecoming king and queen, announce the new

executive board for the fresh-man action team and have a dance for the students. It’s go-ing to be a good look for the students and I am excited.”

Students can expect to have a good time and celebrate homecoming at the event. Harvey said the program is open to anyone who wants to attend.

“Anybody and everybody can come to the gala,” Harvey said. “Doors open at 8, there is free admission and everyone is welcome.”

Harvey said the gala will help the African American Student Association.

“I think that the gala will start a first class tradition for Afro Am,” Harvey said. “The ball will help Afro Am host a

nice formal event to celebrate homecoming and welcome back our Alumni back home.”

Harvey said the students put a lot of work into the event, and he was pleased with the effort.

“I thought the idea was great itself,” Harvey said. “The idea to host a formal event, which will showcase students in their best attire, was excel-lent. The students put a lot of work in to creating the event and all indications point to a successful event.”

Harvey said the gala should be a fun experience for all.

“I hope everyone will come out and enjoy the festivities,” Harvey said.

[email protected]

First gala to be held Thursday

In SGA President Flint Holbrook’s executive report, he announced SGA is spon-soring a bus trip to Waco, Texas on Dec. 1 for the OSU’s football game against Baylor.

The $80 fee would include a ticket and transportation, and those interested can reg-ister online at SGA’s website, Holbrook said.

SGA’s next meeting is Wednesday at 7 p.m. in Case Study One of the Student Union.

[email protected]

There were no obvious signs of foul play or indications of self-harm at the scene, Dick-erson said.

Police will not be able to definitively answer whether alcohol or drugs played a role in Brumfield’s death until the medical examiner and toxicol-

ogy reports are complete, he said.

OSU will provide buses for students who want to attend Brumfield’s funeral, Shutt said.

“Student Affairs is paying for the cost of one bus and Sigma Chi will pay for any ad-ditional buses,” he said. “Pro-viding the buses shows support to family and friends during a time of great sorrow...His

friends want to attend the ser-vice to show their respect, and a bus is safer than numerous cars driving to the service.”

Shutt said the university ex-pects two buses to travel to the funeral.

The service is tentatively set for 2:30 p.m. on Sunday in Plano.

[email protected]

Brumfield: Student’s funeral is 2:30 p.m. on Sunday in Plano, Texas.

From Page 1

SGA: SGA announced its election dates Wednesday.

From Page 1

Page 4: Hester street painting Student’s death under investigationbloximages.newyork1.vip.townnews.com/ocolly.com/...Fenimore’s resume is argu-ably better than any other OSU player. OSU’s

The Daily O’Collegian Thursday, October 18, 2012 Page 4

CLASSIFIEDSClassifieds

WWW.UBSKI.COM 1-800-SKI-WILD • 1-800-754-9453

breckenridge

Breckenridge • Vail • Beaver CreekKeystone • Arapahoe Basin

COLLEGE SKI & BOARD WEEK

20 Mountains. 5 Resorts. 1 Price.

plus t/s

FROMONLY

005 - Help Wanted -General

STUDENTPAYOUTS.COMPaid Survey Takers needed inStillwater. 100% FREE to join.Click on surveys.

006 - Help Wanted$BARTENDING$ $300/DAYPOTENTIAL NOEXPERIENCE NECESSARY.Training Available 1-800-965-6520 EXT103

INTERIM YOUTH DIRECTOR

The First Christian Church ofPerry, OK has a part-timeopening for a Christian to plan,develop, and implement youthprograms through college age.The position may becomepermanent. Compensation iscommensurate with timerequired, education, andexperience.

Contact the Church office 580-336-4576 [email protected] tomake application. Applicationswill be received until October31, 2012.

PART-TIME FEMALE AID forhealthy elderly couple. Duties:light housekeeping, preparemeals/clean-up,washing/drying clothing. 2-3/days a week. Monday-Friday9am-1pm. Must have driverslicense, references and passbackground check.$12.00/hour plus incentives.917-886-6013

SERVERS, EXPERIENCEDBARTENDERS and expopositions available. Apply inperson at Brooklyns, corner ofMain & 7th.

WORK CLOSE TO CAMPUS!St. Andrew's Episcopal Churchand the Canterbury Centerseek a Program Coordinator ofCollege and Parish Ministries.This is a part-time, temporaryposition for the remainder ofthe semester. Work 20-30hours per week mostly in theevenings.For full details, visit:http://saintaugustine.epiok.org/employment.html

017 - Houses For Rent

*************************FREE RENT UNTIL

JANUARY 2013Beautiful huge 3 and 4

bedroom, 2-bath duplexes available. 405-707-7277.www.cowboyproperty.com

5 & 6 bedroom housesClose to Campus

Amsco372-6462

8 CRESTWOOD CIRCLE, 3Bd/2 Ba, Fridge, D/W,Stove/Oven, W/D Hkup.$750/mo 405-372-9225www.campbellmgmt.com

HENNEBERRY PROPERTIES:BEAUTIFUL 3-bedroom, 2-bath house at 923 S. Western.Call today 405-743-4266.

017 - Houses For RentLOVELY, COMPLETELYREMODELED, 2-bedroom, 2-bath, utility room, deck, fencedyard. Available springsemester. 372-8862.

MOVE IN SPECIALS !!!

1324 E 4th3Bed-2Bath-1Car Garage

New Paint/CarpetAvailable Now $675

1921 W State Lane3Bed-2Bath-1Car Garage

Completely RenovatedHuge Fenced YardAvailable Now $750

127 N Duck-Fox Run Apartments

2Bed-1Bath Total ElectricCompletely Renovated

Close to CampusAvailable Now $425

808 N Monroe-Hillcrest Apartments2Bed-1Bath Paid Gas

Close to CampusAvailable Now $440

Creekside Condos Custom 1 Bedroom-

Brand NewCountry Setting-4 Miles

From OSUPaid Water/Internet/

GarbageFenced Yard-Pets OK

Available Jan 15th $575

Stillwater Property 633 N. Husband

Stillwater, OK 74075405-743-2126

018 - Apartments ForRent

$199 SpecialMove in September 1

1 & 2 bedroom, all bills paid. 372-8545

1 AND 2 Bedroom Apartments/Houses Close to Campus

AMSCO372-6462

CARLETON CROSSING:SPACIOUS 2 & 3 bedroomapartments. Pet friendly, somebills paid. Call 372-7395. Askabout move in specials.

HIGHPOINT APARTMENTS.SPACIOUS 2-bedroom,walking distance to BoomerLake. Pet friendly. Call 743-4266 to ask about move-inspecials.

MOVE IN SPECIAL$200 off first months rent.

1 & 2 bedroom, all bills paid. FORTY NORTH APARTMENTS

372-8545

NEED A PLACEFOR FOOTBALL?

Executive suitesCall 372-8545

North Country Commons ispreleasing for spring, 1 and2 bedroom. Call 377-1176 orstop by 3602 NorthWashington.www.northcountrycommons.com

WINDCREST: 2001 N.Boomer. 2-bedroom, 1-bath,$400/month, $200/deposit.405-624-0508, 405-612-0977.

018 - Apartments ForRent

OAK PARK VILLAGE:Spacious 1 & 2 bedroom floorplans. Pet friendly,water/sewer/gas paid. Call743-4266.

TWO-BEDROOM, TWO-BATH, WALK-IN closets,CH/A, laundry facility,water/gas/heat and trashpaid. $500.00 1523 W.University. 405-372-0939.

WESTBROOKAPARTMENTS IS nowleasing 2-bedrooms. Somebills paid. $570. Call 377-8479 or stop by 3700 W.19th.

www.westbrookplaceapartments.com

021 - Job OpportunitiesACCOUNTING CLERK 30-40HRS/WK PT-FT M-F,PAYABLES ANDRECEIVABLES, COMPUTERINPUT, ERRAND RUNNINGTITLE WORK AND FILING.GOOD DRIVING RECORDAND NEAT APPEARANCE. FTHAS BENEFITS APPLY INPERSON AT RON SHIRLEYBUICK-GMC 4700 W 6THSTILLWATER

029 - Pets

WOOF! WOOF! TRAINdon’t complain!

Dog Obedience/agilitywww.stillwaterkennelclub.org

405-747-7121

035 - Lost and Found

REWARDFOR RETURN of orangecheckbook. Call 744-2376.Leave name and number.037 - Horse Stables

Complete horse stablingfacilities: Indoor/Outdoorarena, round pen, pastureavailable also. 372-2291

VALLEY VIEW DRESSAGE STABLES

Board, Training, Lessonswww.hesseldressage.com

405-747-7121

039 - Mobile Home Space

MOBILE HOME LOT ForRent NW of Stillwater in theCountry. 7518 N. BlackCopper Rd. Any SizeHome/RV. Acreage forHorses Optional. Beautifulrolling hills. $150/month!Call Campbell PropertyManagement 405-372-9225www.campbellmgmt.com

VALLEY ACRESCOMMUNITY. 2800 W.Lakeview, Up to 18’x80’home, $150/mo 405-372-9225www.campbellmgmt.com

047 - MiscellaneousServices

A&D STORAGE533-STOR

5x10 -$25, 10x10 -$4010x15 -$45, 10x20 -$60

Covered & open RV & boatstorage.

Insulated units & Electronic security gate.

Open weekends-Evenings & weekendsby appointment only

West 6th & Redlands Rd.

Student Discountscall 405-377-1111

www.cowboystorage.com

051 - Office Rentals

Commercial Office Space750 Sq Ft $600 Month

Former Insurance OfficeSmall Bathroom

225 S. Perkins Rd

1500 Sq Ft $950 MonthFormer Nutrition Store

Bathroom/Serving Bar InMain Lobby

215 S. Perkins Rd

Stillwater Property405-743-2126

110 - Student Notices

2013 NATIONALSCHOLARSHIPCOMPETITION

OSU applications for the following prestigious awards

are now available in 334Student Union or scholardevelopment.

okstate.edu

Truman Scholarship(juniors with career plans in

public service)Deadline--10/26/12

Goldwater Scholarship(Sophomores or juniors

majoring in mathematics,engineering, or natural

sciences)Deadline--10/26/12

Udall Scholarship(Sophomores or juniors –any student with career interest in environmentalpublic policy, or NativeAmericans with career

interests in health care ortribal public policy)Deadline—11/2/12

Call 744-7313 or stop by 334 SU

if you have questions

200 - Society Squares

LIVING OFF CAMPUS?Become a

Representative for the OffCampus Student

Association.Petitions for election

available in room 211 SU.

??'s 405-744-7283 [email protected]

SHARE THEW.E.A.L.T.H. Peer Education Team

Earn 3 credit hours whilehelping other OSU

students and enhancingyour resume. It’s not toolate to JOIN TODAY! All

majors are welcome.FMI Call 744-3997

1 Day .......................................................40¢ per word/per day

2-4 Days...................................................35¢ per word/per day

5-9 Days...................................................30¢ per word/per day

10-14 Days...............................................25¢ per word/per day

15 or more Days.......................................20¢ per word/per day

Logos and graphics are available at an additional cost of $1 per day. Borders are also available

www.ocolly.com


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