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OCOLLY.COM february 24, 2016 THE O’COLLY CAN THEY MAKE IT? COURTESY OF LEXIE DAVIDSON osu students hope to conquer europe one red bull at a time.
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Page 1: Wednesday, Feb. 24, 2016

O C O L L Y . C O Mf e b r ua ry 24, 2 0 1 6

T H E O ’ C O L L Y CAN THEY MAKE IT?

COURTESY OF LEXIE DAVIDSON

osu students hope to conquer europe one red bull at a time.

Page 2: Wednesday, Feb. 24, 2016

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c o v e r s t o r y R e d b u l l c h a l l e n g e

Three Oklahoma State Univer-sity students hope Red Bull will fulfill its slogan and give them wings.

Lexie Davidson, Rylie Carter and Maggie Rahhal are a team in the Red Bull “Can You Make It?” challenge. They are competing against college students from 50

countries to fly to Europe for free April 12-19, but there’s a catch. The winning teams will use only Red Bull cans as currency to sur-vive and travel.

To compete in the challenge, the team submitted a written applica-tion detailing why it deserves to go to Europe and a video representing the team’s identity.

Team name: The Oklahomies.“I think we all just have a mutual

passion for traveling and being spontaneous,” said Carter, a strate-gic communications junior. “We’ve all traveled internationally before on our own time, and then once we heard about this competition, it just sounded like all three of our personalities.

“Nothing sounded cooler than spending a week together in

Europe ... and having to scavenge around with Red Bull cans and try to survive.”

Carter and Rahhal have been friends since kindergarten, and they met Davidson when the three pledged Kappa Alpha Theta soror-ity their freshman year.

The Oklahomies must first get enough online votes to be in the top 18 of 162 teams in the United States south region to pass the first round.

Red Bull will inform the top 18 teams from the south region Thursday and select four to be part of the 165 teams to go to Europe. Red Bull will publicly announce selections March 7.

People can vote online via Face-book on the Red Bull “Can You Make It?” challenge website.

Ross Morales, a friend and

OSU’s Red Bull student brand manager, said Red Bull hosted the challenge two years ago with success.

“It’s funny, I’ve talked to people and they say, ‘Wow, is that really possible to get across Europe with

cans of Red Bull?’” Morales said. “It is, and it’s fun. It did really well two years ago, so we brought it back.”

Three other teams from Oklaho-ma are competing in the challenge,

STORY CONTINUES ON PAGE 3

S a v a n n a h E v a n o f f

Entertainment Editor

OSU students compete for chance to cross Europe one Red Bull can at a time

youtube screenshotRylie Carter (left), Maggie Rahhal (center) and Lexie Davidson run to the camera with an Oklahoma state flag in their video for Red Bull’s contest.

Page 3: Wednesday, Feb. 24, 2016

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 2016 OCOLLY.COM PAGE 3

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but The Oklahomies have consistently remained ahead in the state, Davidson said.

“I honestly thought at the begin-ning of this process, ‘Man, we’d be doing really good if we got 500 votes on this,’” Davidson said.

As of late Tuesday night, The Oklahomies have more than 2,200 votes on their video.

“I feel like we’re constantly in a group chat, the three of us, like, ‘Oh my gosh this video has this many votes,’ ‘we just dropped this place,’ or ‘oh my gosh, we’re gain-ing votes,’” Carter said.

The Oklahomies’ one-minute video features the team waving the Oklahoma state flag and gallivant-ing around Stillwater and the OSU campus. The Edmon Low Library bell rings loudly in the background toward the end of the video.

“The bell actually just hap-

pened,” Rahhal said. “We were filming in front of it, and we didn’t even think about it. And then it went off.”

Morales often told the women to be themselves on camera, said Davidson, a strategic communica-tions junior.

“So that was us all natural, run-ning, doing piggyback rides, just having fun and laughing,” David-son said. “We really wanted it to represent who we are and not just be this acting that a lot of videos do that we saw, and I think (Morales) did a really good job capturing that.”

Rahhal, a math and Spanish junior, said it’s unfortunate some of the other videos in the challenge feature locations with beauti-ful scenery such as the Florida beaches.

“We’ve got Boomer Lake over here,” Carter said. “Will that do?”

The team submitted the video Feb. 14 and promoted it on social media, Davidson said.

Mission: to gain votes.“It was funny at first because

we knew the ultimate goal of this video was so cool and so worth it,” Carter said. “But then once the video was made and it was time to submit it, we were like, ‘Wait, are we actually about to blast our faces all over social media?’ ... because that’s not our personalities.”

The team has reached out to other Theta chapters to gain sup-port, Carter said.

“That part alone has been cool enough of an experience to see people actually supporting us in this crazy, random idea,” Carter said.

Davidson said going to Eu-rope would be the adventure of a lifetime.

Final destination: Paris. “Once we get to Europe, we’ll be

dropped off in one of five destina-tions,” Davidson said. “From there, everyone has to get to Paris; that’s the end location. You literally have to travel across country borders to get to Paris in seven days.”

Red Bull will invite members of the first team that arrives in Paris to be Contiki Travel Ambassadors for the summer, where they will travel across Europe visiting attractions.

Red Bull employees will take away team members’ phones and money and give them a GoPro camera and stockpile of 24 Red Bull cans in return once they are in Europe. There will be checkpoints where the teams can get more Red Bull cans, Carter said.

“I think we will run into some rough patches,” Rahhal said. “You have to be really vulnerable and accept help and know that you’re

not going to be able to do it by yourself. It’s going to be hard to be like, ‘I don’t have a place to stay. I don’t have food. I don’t have money. Someone provide me with those things.’”

Madeline Milby, an elementary education junior and friend of the three women, said she definitely doesn’t think she could do it.

“The three of them are really creative and just love adventure,” Milby said. “So it’s the perfect thing for them.”

The team will find out March 7 if it will get its wings.

“I think we’ll just be so excited to be there with each other that whatever’s making us mad we’ll be like, ‘Hey, we’re in Europe,’” Carter said.

STORY CONTINUEd from page 2

F O l l o w s ava n n a h :@SavannahEvanoff

Page 4: Wednesday, Feb. 24, 2016

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 2016 OCOLLY.COM PAGE 4

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s p o r t s B e d l a m bas k e t ba l l

Jeffrey Carroll couldn’t sleep.Hours before, he barely missed a

buzzer-beating 3-pointer in Okla-

homa State’s 74-72 loss to then-No. 2 Oklahoma on Jan. 13. That night, he said, he lied in bed, unable to fall asleep.

“It was just knowing that if I had fixed maybe one little, minor thing, it could’ve went in,” Carroll said. “Could’ve changed our season, probably.”

OSU coach Travis Ford has also said he has lost sleep this season.

Before the Cowboys’ rematch with Oklahoma (21-5 overall, 9-5 Big 12) at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Norman, Ford said this year has been his hardest as a coach. With OSU near the bottom of the Big 12, it’s more than the team’s record irking him at night.

“I’ve had years that were chal-lenges and things like that,” Ford said. “But it’s also a lot tougher when things are out of your control, as far as injuries and things.”

The Cowboys (12-15, 3-11) are without their two best players, with guards Phil Forte (torn left ulnar collateral ligament) and Jawun Evans (dislocated right shoulder) done for the season. Three-fifths of their new starting lineup is playing “near 60 percent,” Ford said Satur-day after OSU’s loss to Texas Tech.

Guard Tyree Griffin twisted his right ankle against Kansas on Feb. 15. Forward Leyton Hammonds spends his off-court time with a boot on his right foot. Forward Mitchell Solomon is playing with essentially one arm, Ford said, because of a bandaged left hand.

As OSU’s health worsens, its schedule strengthens. The Cow-boys’ final four regular-season games are against ranked oppo-nents, including the No. 3 Sooners.

“We still have to just play to-gether and rally around each other,”

Carroll said. “… We’ll never quit. That’s not us at all. We’re still go-ing out there every night to play as hard as we can.”

OSU has lost six straight Bedlam games. In last month’s contest in Gallagher-Iba Arena, Evans scored 42 points, almost carrying the Cowboys to the upset.

However, with no Evans, Griffin hobbled at the point and a trip to the Lloyd Noble Center looming, the challenge is far greater for

OSU.“We’ve got to overachieve,” Ford

said. “We’ve got to dig deep inside and find more, find that ridiculous effort, that unbelievable perfor-mance that’ll give us a chance at this point ‘cause that’s what it’s gonna take.

“Maybe that performance that we all look for is deep inside of us.”

N a t h a nR u i z

Senior Sports Reporter

Battered Cowboys brace for rematch with Sooners

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

cowboy basketballWho: Oklahoma

When: 8 p.m. Wednesday

Where: Lloyd Noble Center in NormanBroadcast: TV: ESPNU Radio: Cowboy Radio Network

devin wilber/o’colly File photoOklahoma State guard Jeffrey Carroll puts his hands on his head after his missed buzzer-beater at the Bedlam basketball game Jan. 13.

Page 5: Wednesday, Feb. 24, 2016

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 2016 OCOLLY.COM PAGE 5

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The Atherton Hotel is in the final stages of its $20 million reno-vation, and the project’s architect said April 1 is the target day for its completion.

“We’re getting close,” Nigel Jones said. “We’re in the final stretch. … But it’s such a big proj-ect, especially when dealing with all those hotel rooms.”

The original purpose of the ren-ovation was to restore the popular

hotel from gradual wear-and-tear damages. But once it started, Jones said it became evident more work needed to be done.

“When you have to balance your toiletries on the toilet because there is nowhere to place your toiletries, it makes us ask the question if we could make the bathrooms a bit bigger,” Jones said.

As the university architect, Jones is providing oversight for OSU on the project.

The renovation started February 2014, and the hotel will allow for larger guest rooms and bathrooms inside the hotel.

With bigger rooms, the room count inside the hotel will drop to 69, compared to 81 before the renovation.

Accounting freshman Nissi Ngassa said he is aware of the

current renovation, as well as the other construction projects around OSU’s campus. He said he wished students had more input on projects.

“I know construction is an ongoing thing, and it has to be done,” Ngassa said. “Sometimes I just wish (students) would get more of an input when it comes to construction projects like this. A lot of times they have an affect on student’s abilities to access differ-ent spots on campus.”

The construction hasn’t ham-pered the Rancher’s Club’s busi-ness, the restaurant’s manager said. Business has been booming despite the renovation, Naveen Kodadhala said.

“As a matter of fact, this has been our busiest time since the restaurant has been open,” Ko-

dadhala said. “It is a time of great momentum, and every year we are doing more.”

The Rancher’s Club was added in 2005 with the purpose of match-ing the esteem of the upscale hotel.

This project is the hotel’s second major renovation since it opened in 1950. The first was in 2004, the same year the hotel was selected

for the Historic Hotels of America program.

“It was a very nice hotel, but it was beginning to look a bit tired,” Jones said. “As a popular hotel, it really gets a lot of wear and tear on it. It was in need of work desper-ately.”

M a t t V i l l a r e a l

Staff Reporter

Atherton Hotel renovations almost finishedn e w s At h e rt o n

F o l l o w M at t : @ m at t _ v i l l o 3

collin mccarthy/O’COLLYThe Atherton Hotel remains under construction during its $20 million renovation. The construction is planned to be completed by April 1.

Page 6: Wednesday, Feb. 24, 2016

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 2016 OCOLLY.COM PAGE 6

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An internship on a newspaper in a newsroom capacity may be substituted for one semes‑ter of service on The Daily O’Collegian. The internship must meet the requirements of the School of Media and Strategic Communications’ current internship course.

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Society Squares

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

FOR RELEASE FEBRUARY 24, 2016

ACROSS1 Lobsters’ sense

organs6 Celebs

10 Flight from thelaw

13 Poker declaration14 “__ my guard

down”15 Famille patriarch16 Form by

combiningelements

18 One-piecegarments,slangily

19 Rome-basedcarrier

20 Toll roadtimesaver

22 “Girls Just Wantto Have Fun”singer

24 Performer’ssupporters

28 Guacamole, e.g.29 Twisty letter30 Diva delivery31 Snoozed33 Fictional voyager40 Retired New York

senator Al D’__41 Rational42 DDE rival45 Esteemed

league member46 N, in Morse code49 Sparkle52 Currencies53 Irrationality58 Bravo preceder59 Host of the 2015

MLB All-StarGame

61 Not masc. orfem.

62 Prod63 Gold brick64 Fashion

monogram65 Jury member66 Fluff, as hair

DOWN1 Italian capital of

its own province2 Kind of nitrite3 Actress

Anderson4 Golf stroke that

can be practicedin a hallway

5 Cornell Universitycity

6 Brand that “getsthe red out”

7 Epic with a verybig horse

8 Refillable candy9 Metal playing

marbles10 Delaware Valley

tribe11 Comes into view12 Salutation

abbreviation15 Bite-size Chinese

appetizer17 Tarzan portrayer

Ron et al.21 Mothers of

Inventionmusician

23 Empty, as threats24 Fourth notes25 “Entourage”

agent Gold26 Diarist Anaïs27 Rum-soaked

cake31 “The Affair” airer,

briefly32 Morticia, to

Gomez34 Peaceful

relations35 Annual tennis

team event36 Texting farewell

37 Chap38 Lennon partner39 On Soc. Sec.42 The same

number43 Places where

élèves study44 Wicked ... and,

homophonically,like five longpuzzle answers

46 One of thereindeer

47 “The Bell of __”:Longfellow

48 “Don’t need towatch that movieagain”

50 Spiffy51 Fencing attack54 Celebrity chef

Burrell55 Lengthy story56 Nebraska natives57 Evening, in ads60 Anger

Tuesday’s Puzzle SolvedBy Kenneth J. Berniker 2/24/16

©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC 2/24/16

www.ocolly.com

Page 7: Wednesday, Feb. 24, 2016

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 2016 OCOLLY.COM PAGE 7

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NEW PAINT/CARPET-2 LIVING AREASLARGE LAYOUT-LARGE BEDROOMS

$1400 PER MONTH

4519 S. HUSBANDNICE DETACHED SHOP BUILDING

4 MILES TO OSU CAMPUSLARGE FENCED YARD-RURAL SETTING

$1640 PER MONTH

2136 W. SUNSET2 FULL BATHS-LARGE CORNER LOT

VERY CLOSE TO OSU CAMPUS-PETS OKLARGE LIVING AREA WITH FIREPLACE

ALL APPLIANCES INCLUDED-1CAR GARAGE$1580 PER MONTH

FIVE BEDROOMS

6418 N. SEADOGWOOD FLOORS-4 MILES TO OSU5 ACRES-OUTSIDE CITY LIMITS

ROOM TO ROAM!!!!!$2050 PER MONTH

1124 S. MCDONALD4-FULL BATHS-VERY LARGE LAYOUT

FENCED YARD-PETS WELCOMEBIG HOUSE-CORNER LOT

$2050 PER MONTH

SIX BEDROOMS

102 S. PAYNENEW CUSTOM HOME-3 FULL BATHS

TVS INCLUDED IN BEDROOMSGRANITE COUNTERS-1 MILE TO OSU

NEW PAINT/NEW CARPETWASHER/DRYER INCLUDED

$2250 PER MONTH

5919 N. COUNTY CLUBOUTSIDE CITY LIMITS ON 2 ACRES

2 FULL BATHS-2 LIVING AREAS2-CAR GARAGE-5 MILES TO OSU

$1740 PER MONTH

Page 8: Wednesday, Feb. 24, 2016

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 2016 OCOLLY.COM PAGE 8

Daily HoroscopeBy Nancy BlackTribune Content Agency

Today’s Birthday (02/24/16). Push for big career advances this year. Realize a personal dream (after 3/8), before family financial priorities shift (after 3/23). The next two years get lucrative, after Jupiter enters Libra (9/9). Partnership breakthroughs (after 9/1) inspire a personal turning point (after 9/16). Share 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 an 8 -- A partner’s opinion is important. Work together today and tomorrow. Get ready to make your choices. Bond over shared food and drink. Take a walk and talk about what could be possible.Taurus (April 20-May 20) -- Today is a 7 -- Begin a busy phase for the next two days. Focus on getting work done. You can’t do everything at once. Follow the rules. Financial sands are shifting. You can get whatever you need.Gemini (May 21-June 20) -- Today is a 7 -- Play with family and friends over the next two days. Practice your talents and arts. Opposites attract. Kindle romance by sparking up a fun invita-tion. You’re surrounded by love. Soak it up.Cancer (June 21-July 22) -- Today is a 7 -- You’re in for a busy few days at home. Authorize improvements and repairs. Deci-sions made now last, so consider carefully. Play with long-range plans. Focus on home and family. Complete a major task.Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Today is an 8 -- Dig deep into a favorite subject today and tomorrow. Sift through facts and data. The one with the compulsion for precision has the advantage. There’s more than enough material. Do the reading. Write your discov-eries.Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- Today is a 9 -- Big games offer big prizes. Watch for a new source of income and accept a generous offer. Abundance is available over the next few days. Initiate your new plan. Profitable opportunities arise.Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) -- Today is a 9 -- You’re especially hot to-day and tomorrow. Go for what you want. Make it happen. Con-ditions are shifting in your favor. Inspire, rather than demanding. Don’t step on anyone. Smile, and say “thank you.”Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) -- Today is a 6 -- Relax and let your thoughts ramble. Your imagination is fertile breeding ground over the next few days. Get inspired and make plans toward a new possibility. Discover new options and opportunities. Peace-ful introspection satisfies.Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) -- Today is a 7 -- Team projects go well over the next two days. Schedule meetings, and coordinate plans. Keep networks updated. You have more friends than you realized. Pass along what you’re learning. Get into a party phase.Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- Today is an 8 -- Career opportu-nities arise today and tomorrow. Dress well. Be respectful. Far horizons beckon. Friends are there for you. Investigate options. Consider a challenge. Win or lose, you end up with more than when you started.Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) -- Today is a 7 -- Begin a two-day period of study and research. Your wanderlust is getting worse. Things fall into place. Change occurs whether you like it or not. Plan for the road ahead. Gather resources.Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) -- Today is an 8 -- Rely on a capable partner. Handle financial matters and negotiations today and tomorrow. Wheeling and dealing may be required, and the stakes could be high. Advance your agenda together. Changes neces-sitate budget revisions. You’re learning.

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Oklahoma State University’s award-winning student newspaper has served Stillwater and the campus community since 1895. The O’Colly is a real newsroom that prepares students for a professional career in journalism.

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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

© 2016 The Mepham Group. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency. All rights reserved.

2/24/16

Level: 1 2 3 4


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