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2020 N. Perkins Rd., Lakeview Pointe Shopping Center (Next to Best Buy) Basel in Black Basel in Leopard Basel in toffee ocolly.com january 27, 2016 THE O’COLLY PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY ZACH FURMAN/O’COLLY still remembered. We made a promise 15 years ago, and the OSU family has never forgotten. special issue

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Page 1: Wednesday, Jan. 27, 2016

2020 N. Perkins Rd., Lakeview Pointe Shopping Center(Next to Best Buy)

Basel in Black

Basel in Leopard

Basel in toffee

o c o l l y . c o mja n ua ry 2 7, 2 0 1 6

T H E O ’ C O L L Y

PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY ZACH FURMAN/O’COLLY

still remembered. We made a promise 15 years ago, and the OSU family has never forgotten.

special issue

Page 2: Wednesday, Jan. 27, 2016

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 27, 2016 OCOLLY.COM PAGE 2

WILLIAM CLARK GREEN • SAM RIGGS • CODY JOHNSON & THE ROCKIN' CJB • JASON BOLAND & THE STRAGGLERS

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Fifteen years ago, the world lost 10 great people. My father, Will Hancock, was one of them. I was two months old at the time; I know him not through recollection but by the stories told by those who are keenly intent on keeping his memory alive. It may seem strange to say you miss someone you never knew, but because of other people’s accounts of my dad, I feel like I do know him: He was kind, warm, witty, bright and funny. He loved sports, music and his family. I would not feel the same connection I do to him if it weren’t for the Oklahoma State community and the people of Stillwater, who are so determined to keep his legacy going.

Every year around this time, we celebrate the Ten’s lives and their impact on the rest of us, but my family celebrates something else: the people who got us through the hardest thing we’ve ever faced. Support came from all around the state and the na-

tion when we lost my dad. In the rough days following the crash, we couldn’t have gotten through the pain without the support of those we knew and

strangers alike.In my family’s darkest hour,

the OSU community swooped in, promising us they’d be here for us in any way we

needed. They promised us that my father and everyone else we lost would never be forgotten. Fifteen years later, the oath still stands: We Will

Remember. For that, I can never say thank you enough.

f o l l o w o ’ c o l ly :@ o c o l ly

‘I can never say thank you enough’s p e c i a l i s s u e r e m e m b e r t h e t e n

BY A n d r e a H a n c o c kf o r t h e O ’ C o l ly

courtesy of Karen HancockWill Hancock holds his daughter, Andrea, when she was an infant. Will was one of the 10 victims of the plane crash of an Oklahoma State University basketball team plane in 2001 near Strasburg, Colorado, and was the OSU athletic media relations coordinator at that time.

Page 3: Wednesday, Jan. 27, 2016

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 27, 2016 OCOLLY.COM PAGE 3

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The ribbons keep coming back.They come when we want to be united. They come when we want to be strong. They

come when we want to hold onto thoughts and feelings and people that seemed so close not too long ago.

But it’s more than remembering.It’s not a fleeting thought, something that slips through our minds for a brief moment or

minute before fading away until we are reminded.It is ever-present.We do not simply Remember the Ten. Kendall Durfey, Bjorn Fahlstrom, Nate Fleming,

Will Hancock, Daniel Lawson, Brian Luinstra, Denver Mills, Pat Noyes, Bill Teegins and Jared Weiberg will never be forgotten.

With this special issue marking the 15th anniversary of that winter’s day in 2001, when the Oklahoma State family lost 10 members, our goal isn’t to rehash pain and sadness.

Instead, this issue is to point out the impact of the Ten, their impact on those who knew them as Dad, Son, Brother and Friend, and those who knew them as Cowboys. It is to remember their legacy and how each of them continue to touch our lives.

It is so we never forget.

EDITORIAL: The Ten will never be forgotten

F r o m t h e O ’ C o l ly E d i t o r i a l B oa r d@Ocolly

Remember the Ten Timeline Jan. 27

8:00 a.m. The southwest lobby, known as the Memorial Lobby, will open in Gallagher-Iba Arena for visitors to pay respects.

6:37 p.m OSU Library Carillon bells will toll 10 times in honor of the victims.

7:45 p.m Moment of silence in GIA before the game

8:00 p.m. Oklahoma State vs. Baylor tipoff

Halftime OSU Counseling Services will receive the proceeds from last year’s Remember the Ten Run.

Page 4: Wednesday, Jan. 27, 2016

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 27, 2016 OCOLLY.COM PAGE 4

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s p e c i a l i s s u e r e m e m b e r t h e t e n

the ten

Kendall DurfeyTelevision/Radio Engineer

Bjorn FahlstromCorporate Aviation Pilot

Nate FlemingScholar/Athlete

Brian LuinstraAthletic Trainer

Will HancockMedia Relations Coordinator

Denver MillsCPA by Profession, Pilot by Passion

Bill TeeginsVoice of the OSU Cowboys

Jared WeibergStudent Assistant

Pat NoyesDirector of Basketball Operations

O’COLLY FILE PHOTOS

daniel lawsonScholar/Athlete

Page 5: Wednesday, Jan. 27, 2016

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 27, 2016 OCOLLY.COM PAGE 5

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s p e c i a l i s s u e r e m e m b e r t h e t e n

He got it.For 15 years, Oklahoma State

fans have yearned to hear that con-firmation resonate across the radio waves one more time.

It was a simple call, a certifica-tion of another Cowboy 3-pointer finding its way home. The delivery

was anything but simple, full of exuberance and life. The three words energized a fan base, but if you praised the man behind the microphone, Bill Teegins would humbly evade the adoration and instead ask about your day.

That’s the kind of man he was.Although it was a time-consum-

ing job, he would have done it until the end of time. Teegins believed that until the day he died on a plane crash with nine other people.

“It was the game right before the Cowboys went on that fateful trip to Colorado,” said Larry Reece, OSU’s public address announcer. “I remember Bill joking around and saying, ‘I may just give up this TV gig and just come work for the Cowboy radio network with you.’ I said, ‘Well, You’re going to take a

heck of a pay cut.’“And he points at his chair and

he said, ‘Larry, let me tell you this, calling Cowboy games is absolute-ly my favorite thing to do. Don’t ever let me screw this up. I want to be doing this for a long time.’”

Day-in, day-out for 11 years, Teegins balanced his duties as Channel 9’s sports director in Oklahoma City and “The Voice of the Cowboys” for OSU basketball and football games. Teegins spent hours researching for work, yet he always had time to hear about someone else’s day or ask them a sports trivia question.

His personality and self-depre-cating sense of humor was what made him popular. On different occasions, he would play himself down or make fun of himself

to keep things at an even keel. Teegins’ wife, Janis, said Bill never let the fame get to his head.

“A lot of sportscasters had big egos but Bill did not,” she said. “In fact, sometimes I teased him and said he needed one, but what you saw is what you got. What you saw on TV is how he was at home. He was very approachable. If someone saw us at a restaurant, he would strike up a conversation with them. He truly enjoyed being a broad-caster.”

Many described Teegins as a true professional in his reporting. Whether he was covering OSU and OU or being seen in Tulsa or Oklahoma City, Teegins was loved. By transcending bias, a sports-caster from Minnesota was able to become everyone’s friend. Teegins

could talk to Eddie Sutton one day and Bob Stoops the next and be revered in both conversations.

“I’ve heard Eddie Sutton say many times that Bill Teegins was like a brother to him,” Reece said. “It’s something when you can really respect the person or people that cover your team, and I know Eddie Sutton really respected Bill Teegins.”

Although he was named Okla-homa Sportscaster of the Year eight times, Teegins was concerned more with helping out colleagues like OSU’s current color commentator John Holcomb. When Holcomb applied to Channel 9 in 1995, Teegins was the first to call.

The call was to tell Holcomb the station had decided to go with

loved ones remember the man behind the call

J o r d a n B i s h o p

@ J o r d a n b i s h o p 3 5

Sports Reporter

STORY CONTINUES ON PAGE 6

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WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 27, 2016 OCOLLY.COM PAGE 6

s p e c i a l i s s u e r e m e m b e r t h e t e n

the station had decided to go with another applicant, but Teegins told him to “hang in there.” A couple of months later, the two met at a Dallas Cowboys’ train-ing camp in Austin where Teegins changed Holcomb’s life forever.

“He and I and John Walls, the sports director in Tulsa at the time, went out to dinner,” Holcomb said. “While we were at dinner, Bill was talking to John Walls, and he pointed at me saying, ‘Here’s the guy you need to hire the next time you have an opening.’”

A couple of months later, Hol-comb was hired on at Channel 6, where Teegins would be happy to know that Holcomb is sports direc-tor today.

Teegins not only helped out col-leagues such as Holcomb, but also aspiring broadcasters like Doug Gottlieb, OSU point guard in the late ‘90s and current CBS analyst. Gottlieb was thinking about sports-casting after graduation in 2000 but, as with all recent graduates, he heard different opinions on what he should do. Teegins and others pulled him toward broadcasting, while coach Eddie Sutton recom-mended coaching.

“Bill, I remember, pulled me aside and said, ‘You should really do this (broadcasting). You’d be really good at this, and I can help you in any way,’” Gottlieb said. “… He was vital. So many other people in any profession, a young guy who makes a name for him-self, they sometimes get defensive. That wasn’t Bill Teegins.”

Whether it was his family of Janis and his daughter, Amanda, or his broadcasting family, Teegins took care of them. He was the energetic spark at home and on the airwaves, which is why on that January night, everyone who knew him felt they lost something that could never be replaced.

Reece had gotten home from a trip to Tahlequah when he heard that one of the planes went miss-

ing. He drove to the Stillwater airport and frantically tried to find out what happened.

“I called his phone and Pat Noyes’, and they would go straight to voicemail,” Reece said. “You just had an eerie feeling that you weren’t going to see your friends again.”

Janis, a flight attendant at the time, was at an airport in Boston when Amanda called her, inform-ing her about the plane crash and asking Janis about Teegins’ state. Janis called Channel 9, only to hear Teegins’ friend and colleague Kelly Ogle confirm the worst.

Teegins was 48.When the Cowboys returned to

the court after the tragedy, their first game back was against Mis-souri. Different sportscasters from around the Big 12 collaborated to fill in for their fallen colleague. People like Bob Barry Sr. and Kansas’ Bob Davis got behind the mic, but it didn’t feel the same.

“Just seeing that empty seat down there,” Janis said. “I know people were sitting in for him, but that was a tough one and a tough couple of years. He was a hard one to lose.”

People who were at that game will remember the intensity of the crowd and raw emotion that flooded the newly dedicated Gallagher-Iba Arena for years.

“I will always remember there had been this debate in renovating Gallagher-Iba,” Holcomb said. “Whether it would ever be as loud as old Gallagher where the sound just used to bounce off the ceiling.

“There was a spot in that game I will never forget. Terrance Crawford got a steal near mid-court. He took it down, dunked and got fouled, and I swear to you I thought the roof was coming off. It was the moment that everyone who was in the stands was waiting for a moment to erupt.”

It would have been a moment Teegins would have definitely gotten excited about, though, there was no “He Got It!” after a Mo

Baker 3-pointer or “Oh, brother” to be heard after a Cowboy foul.

The energy behind the Cowboy Radio Network and Channel 9 was gone.

A thousand miles away, a sportscaster for Western Kentucky named Dave Hunziker was still dealing with the news. Hunziker had heard Teegins’ work before and knew of him through his friend, ESPN’s John Anderson. Although Hunziker had never met Teegins, he knew the sports broadcasting community had lost a great one.

“We’re all flying around, traveling, running about getting to games,” Hunziker said. “You just felt such empathy for these people even if you didn’t know them. We’re all one big family in college athletics, and when you look at it, you just feel a sense of tragedy.”

When Hunziker was named OSU’s new play-by-play voice in the fall of 2001, he didn’t know what kind of reception to expect. Hunziker found out he didn’t need to be worried as the OSU family embraced him, and he grew into a fan favorite.

Although his chair had been filled, Teegins’ memory has lived on throughout the past 15 years. One notable moment was during OSU’s Final Four run in 2004. Re-ece had asked Cowboy Radio pro-ducer Joe Riddle to use Teegins’ call from the 1995 Final Four if the Cowboys were to make it again.

Riddle pulled up the clip and after John Lucas III hit a 3-pointer against St. Joes to send OSU to the Final Four, fans were treated to “The Cowboys are goin’ to the Final Four” one more time.

“That was a really cool gesture,” Hunziker said. “It was the right thing to do.”

Janis and Amanda came up with ways for Teegins to live on as well with the Bill Teegins Scholarship, awarded each year to sportscasters with Oklahoma roots. Janis also wrote a book about Teegins’ life, aptly titled “He Got It!: My Life

with Bill Teegins.” It helps not only to keep his memory around for younger broadcasters, but also for Amanda’s daughter, Tatum, she said.

“She has three grandparents, and there’s that one missing spark,” Janis said.

She isn’t able to make it to many Cowboy basketball games anymore, Janis said. Amanda and her husband, Paul Stoke, have season tickets and go to most of the games.

It isn’t the same for Janis, who used to sit up in the stands so she

could be allowed to cheer in-stead of sitting in press row with Teegins.

Janis will be there Wednesday, though for the 15th year without the love of her life, the humblest sportscaster around, the man be-hind “He Got It!”

“Truthfully, for some reason football games don’t bother me,” Janis said. “But I used to wave to him down there being in Gallagh-er-Iba, so it still bothers me.”

F o l l o wj o r da n : @ j o r da n b i s h o p 3 5

Story continued from page 5

courtesy of Janis TietginsBill Teegins was known as the “The Voice of the Cowboys.” Teegins was on the plane that crashed in Strasburg, Colorado, on Jan. 27, 2001.

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WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 27, 2016 OCOLLY.COM PAGE 7

s p e c i a l i s s u e r e m e m b e r t h e t e n

Oklahoma State guard Daniel Lawson passed the ball to teammate Andre Wil-liams.

Williams hit a jump shot to give Lawson his first assist of the game. The shot came with 2:31 remaining and trimmed a 23-point Colorado lead down to 21. As far as its total impact on the game, it was miniscule.

The game, played Jan. 27, 2001, in Boulder, Colorado, was not a matchup many were excited for; 5,262 people showed up to watch two unranked teams play.

The Cowboys were 4-1 in conference play. The Buf-faloes did not expect to win. They definitely didn’t expect to dominate. But that’s ex-actly what happened as they won 81-71.

Not even a minute after his assist, Lawson grabbed a re-bound. It was the last statis-tic of significance he would get on a basketball court. He totaled five minutes in the game.

When the game was over, the two teams were feeling different emotions. Colorado

was elated to get the win, while OSU was disgusted with the way it played.

Hours later, both teams would be feeling the same thing.

…The OSU players and

coaches fulfilled their various media obligations. Former assistant coach Sean Sutton estimated that the Cowboys spent 30 minutes

in the locker room afterward. Then they left.

From the Coors Events Center, they went to Jeffer-son County Airport, south of Boulder. They got into their predetermined groups and boarded their planes.

Lawson, fellow OSU bas-ketball player Nate Fleming, broadcaster Bill Teegins, OSU athletic media relations coordinator Will Hancock,

student assistant Jared Wei-berg, director of basketball operations Pat Noyes, athlet-ic trainer Brian Luinstra and broadcast engineer Kendall Durfey got on a plane known as November 81 Papa Foxtrot (N81PF).

Denver Mills and Bjorn Fahlstrom were the pilots.

Mills called to request clearance to leave for Still-water. The request was

granted, and they left. …Sutton remembers when he

first heard the news.He had just arrived home

and kissed his children. After being away, he was happy to be home where he could relax until the next Cowboys game.

But then his dad, coach Ed-die Sutton, called.

Cowboys, Buffaloes will always Remember the Ten

C h a n d l e r V e s s e l s

@ C h a n d l e r V e s s e l s

Sports Reporter

STORY CONTINUES ON PAGE 8

Courtesy of Suzanne Burks

A memorial was created at the crash site of the fatal flight of one of the men’s basketball planes on Jan. 27, 2001, near Strasburg, Colorado. Each person honored has a note in memory of them with a photo. A marble momento engraved with Bullet and the Spirit Rider sits at center.

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WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 27, 2016 OCOLLY.COM PAGE 8

s p e c i a l i s s u e r e m e m b e r t h e t e n

“I don’t know how to tell you this,” he said.

Then he relayed the heart-breaking news. At 5:37 p.m. Mountain Standard Time, N81PF had crashed into some pastureland in Strasburg, Colorado, owned by Darrell Haerther.

All 10 people on the plane were “subjected to impact forces that exceeded the level of human tolerance,” accord-ing to an accident report by the National Transportation Safety Board.

The last contact with Mills happened at 5:26 p.m., when he confirmed that the flight was on the correct path.

Attempts to communicate with Mills later were met with silence.

“Nobody knows what happened to eight-one Papa Foxtrot, so I’m going to leave United 1270, Air Canada 586 and United 1184 all going to be 80 headings to stay well north of there until I find out

what’s going on,” said some-one from the Denver air traffic control center, according to transcripts.

The crash was determined to have been caused by “spa-tial disorientation” on Mills’ part, to which a shortage in the electrical system may have contributed.

Meanwhile, back in Stillwa-ter, having just received the news, the Suttons, along with the other assistant coaches and Harry Birdwell, were faced with telling the families of the 10 men.

It was an immensely hard thing to do.

“I remember trying to rack my brain who was on that particular plane,” Sean said. “As the names started coming I just fell to the floor.”

Everyone was still in shock that this happened, including the players from Colorado.

Justin Harbert, a freshman guard at CU during that sea-son, was at the movies when a friend he was with received a text message saying an

OSU plane had crashed. He couldn’t believe it.

“We just saw these guys,” Harbert said. “We just played them. I just shook his hand an hour ago, and I’m sitting in the movies and now their plane is crashed.”

For Blair Wilson, another freshman at CU that year, the question was why. Not just why did this happen, but “Why did they leave?” he said.

“Why didn’t they just stay another night?”

Wilson was a local kid who lived about 15 miles from CU’s campus and often went home on the weekends. But that weekend, he didn’t even try.

Snow was falling heavily, he said, and made it to where many of the CU students did not want to leave their dorm rooms.

Although it was snowing, the weather did not have an impact on the crash, according to the report.

To Harbert, Wilson and the rest of their teammates, what hours before was a thrilling upset victory now seemed hollow. The airport that OSU flew out of was the same one that CU used for its road games.

The next time the Buffaloes flew, they were all afraid. Har-bert even had to take Drama-mine to calm his nerves.

“Reality hits home that maybe these little prop planes that we all hated flying on aren’t safe,” Wilson said.

For the rest of the season, Colorado flew commercial, and upgraded to bigger planes the next season, Wilson said.

They also wore orange and black ribbons on their jerseys to honor the lives lost on the crash.

…Haerther donated part of his

property to OSU in August 2001 to build a memorial. There is a pathway that leads from the memorial to the actual site.

At the memorial site, there is an inscription that says: “WE WILL REMEMBER: This memorial is dedicated to the memory of the Ten loved ones and friends of Oklahoma State University who perished in an airplane crash at approx-imately 5:37 p.m. on January 27, 2001, 1032 feet west of this location.”

The Cowboy family has done everything in its power to ensure that people will Remember the Ten.

“Those guys will always be remembered,” Sean said. “They’ll always be a spe-cial part of Oklahoma State basketball. They will never be

forgotten. I think Oklahoma State’s done a great job. They make a point every year to make a big deal about the an-niversary of when it happened and for what those 10 great men stood for. That’s what it means to me.”

The team went on to make the NCAA Tournament, an achievement it aspired to reach in honor of the victims.

The Cowboys played for the first time after the crash on Feb. 5, 2001, against the Mis-souri Tigers. They won 69-66.

Two days later, they were slated to play the Nebraska Cornhuskers in Lincoln, Ne-braska.

Eddie told the Cowboys that they could fly if they wanted, but taking a bus was also an option. It would have been understandable if they weren’t ready to fly again, given the circumstances.

But they flew.

f o l l o w C h a n d l e r @ C h a n d l e r V e s s e l s

STORY CONTINUED FROM PAGE 7

We just saw these guys. We just played them. I just shook his hand an hour ago, and I’m sitting in the movies and now their plane is crashed. ”

Justin harbertformer colorado basketball player

Those guys will always be remembered. They’ll always be a special part of Oklahoma State basketball. They will never be forgotten. I think Oklahoma State’s done a great job. They make a point every year to make a big deal about the anniversary of when it happened and for what those 10 great men stood for.”

sean suttonformer assistant coach

Page 9: Wednesday, Jan. 27, 2016

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 27, 2016 OCOLLY.COM PAGE 9

s p e c i a l i s s u e r e m e m b e r t h e t e n

It’s a phrase set in stone, passed by thousands of people for every event in Gallagher-Iba Arena: We will remember.

It’s carved into a memorial that forever honors the 10 members of the OSU bas-ketball family who died in a plane crash in 2001.

The plaque is displayed in the Memorial Lobby in Gal-lagher-Iba Arena, which also shows the names and faces of the men who died, alongside a statue of the kneeling Spirit Rider.

Western artist Harold T. Holden designed the memo-rial and said he channeled his own grief after he was approached for the project.

“The idea of the kneeling cowboy came when I heard that I lost my first grand-son, and I fell to my knees,” Holden said. “That’s how I imagine the parents did when they lost their kids in the ac-cident.”

Holden had 50 miniature

replicas made of the kneeling Spirit Rider and gave one to each of the victims’ families. He gave one of the statues to family of Pat Noyes, the director of basketball opera-tions at the time of the crash.

“He was OSU basketball,” said Molly Vernon, Noyes’ sister. “He lived and breathed it. There wasn’t anything he wouldn’t have done for them.”

OSU dedicated the memo-rial in a ceremony in Febru-

ary 2002 in GIA. Larry Reece, senior associate athletic director of develop-ment, said doing the an-nouncements at the game following the crash was the most emotional night in the arena’s history.

“We tried to get everyone fired up for the ball game,” he said. “I remember saying, ‘Tonight remembering our fallen 10, we’ll prove once again that this is the rowdiest arena in the country.’ And

from that moment on, our fans lifted that team up.”

Fifteen years later, mem-bers of the OSU men’s basketball team, including forward Leyton Hammonds, know the legacy.

“Every day, you walk by, especially because it’s right by our academic center,” Hammonds said. “I tend to take a look and say a quick prayer. It was a tragedy, hon-estly. There’s really nothing else I can say about it. Every

time I walk by, I just think about the loved ones and the basketball memories and the people that were on the plane that died. I tend to just take a little moment of silence every time I walk by.”

There is another memo-rial in Colorado where the plane crashed, which Reece has visited. There are still volunteers from the town that maintain the area, he said.

“Just being there where you know your friends lost their lives, it was tough, but you wanted to be there for the families,” Reece said. “You wanted to be there to remember your friends. But that little town pretty much adopted Oklahoma State, and they have been amazing. When you pull off the main highway to go to the memo-rial and you go into the con-venience store in the middle of Colorado, you walk in there is a huge OSU flag up.”

Having two memorials is the best way to honor those who have died, Reece said.

“From the very beginning, Oklahoma State came togeth-er and said, ‘We are going to promise these families that we’re never, never going to forget these 10 men,’” Reece said. “And that’s one thing I’m proud of. I think we have kept that promise.”

Memorial Lobby a symbol of grief, love, remembrance

C h r i s t i e T a p p

@ o c o l ly

Staff Reporter

F o l l o w o c o l ly : @ o c o l ly

o’colly File photoThe Spirit Rider memorial, designed by Harold T. Holden, sits in the south Gallagher-Iba Arena lobby. He made 50 small replicas of the Spirit Rider memorial statue, and he gave one to each of the victims’ families.

news I The artist who created the kneeling Spirit Rider statue channeled his own hardships for the project.

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WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 27, 2016 PAGE 10

KENDALL DURFEY

BJORN FAHLSTROM

NATE FLEMING

WILL HANCOCK

DANIEL LAWSON

BRIAN LUINSTRA

DENVER MILLS

PAT NOYES

BILL TEEGINS

JARED WEIBERGo c o l l y . c o m

T H E O ’ C O L L Y

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Wednesday night will be about more than basketball.

On the 15th anniversary of the 2001 plane crash that killed 10 people connected to the Oklahoma State men’s basketball team, the Cowboys will face Baylor at 8 p.m. in Gallagher-Iba Arena.

Although the game is key for OSU (10-9 overall, 2-5 Big 12) as it tries to avoid falling to .500, basketball won’t be at the forefront Wednesday, coach Travis Ford said.

“Sometimes, we think we’re living and dying with win-ning and losing,” Ford said. “It can put things in perspective extremely quick, as well as many other things that people go through on a daily basis that you hear about that make you realize, yeah, it’s not going to make me work any less harder than I worked, but I may not need to lose sleep over a loss.”

The Cowboys remember the Ten at one home game a year. They faced the Bears (15-4, 5-2) for last season’s Remem-ber the Ten game, as well.

Before the contest, Ford, who was in his first year as coach

at Eastern Kentucky in 2001, took the players to the Remem-ber the Ten Memorial, south of Eddie Sutton Court. The memorial, featuring a kneeling cowboy and images of each member of the Ten, sits outside the doors to the Joe & Connie Mitchell Academic Enhance-ment Center. Some players walk by it almost every day.

Guard Jeff Newberry won’t forget the feelings that came with that short walk, he said.

“It just helps you just sit and realize what those people meant to the university, and it pumps you up for that game and to lay it all on the line for them, also,” Newberry said. “Kind of brought tears to some guys’ eyes because I guess they knew some of the families and brought some feelings to me that made me just want to go out and play hard for those families because it was just a tragic incident.”

The Cowboys will visit the memorial again Wednesday, when former OSU coach Ed-die Sutton, former players and alumni will also make the trip to Memorial Lobby.

For the current players, it will be a time to reflect but also a time to be thankful.

“It’s mostly kind of shaking because you get to think about those families and the loved ones that they lost,” forward Leyton Hammonds said. “It’s kind of like we dedicate the game to them. How hard we’re going to play, I feel like we’re going to dedicate it to them.”

Ford emphasizes the tragedy

with the players, making sure they’re aware of the Ten and their impact on OSU basket-ball.

Although Wednesday rep-resents one game to honor the Ten, the Cowboys remember year-round.

“We always honor them one game, but they’re always hon-ored every day as much as we can, as far as they’re always on your mind,” Ford said. “I can’t tell you how much I find my-self thinking about it at times. We want to make sure that our

players are very well aware of what these former players and coworkers and teammates, who they were and honor them as much as we can.”

N a t h a n R u i z

@ N at h a n S R u i z

Senior Sports Reporter

s p e c i a l i s s u e r e m e m b e r t h e t e n

Cowboys set for Remember the Ten game against Baylor

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

o’colly File photoOklahoma State guard Jeff Newberry takes a jump shot at the Baylor game last season. Newberry will help lead the Cowboys in their annual Remember the Ten game against Baylor at 8 p.m. Wednesday.

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s p e c i a l i s s u e r e m e m b e r t h e t e n

She is always right in the thick of it.

Sometimes, she’s in the emergency room providing a sense of calm that would be otherwise nonexistent to anxious families in wait-ing. Other times, she’s in the confines of her office exuding quiet strength while slowly helping people rebuild their lives after a severe loss.

Suzanne Burks, Oklahoma State University Director of Counseling Services, has been at the heart of three ma-jor OSU tragedies, including the Jan. 27, 2001, plane crash that killed 10 people.

“I don’t think you can expe-rience an event like that with-out it having some impact on you,” Burks said. “I certainly don’t think I had any idea of the impact it would have on me. Basically, I spent the next year — at least year — deal-ing with that.”

The night of the plane crash, Burks was in the OSU basketball office with OSU coach Eddie Sutton, OSU assistant coaches and players, victims’ families, and other counselors. All phone calls

were screened. Sutton took the call if it was loved ones of the 10 men who died on the plane, Burks said.

The day after the late night in the basketball office, Burks said, she began the counsel-ing process that shaped her life in many ways. It started with visiting the nearby fami-lies of those killed.

“We were unannounced; we just showed up,” Burks said.

“Basically, we just told them who we were. We were from OSU and that we just wanted to help in any way. They were all very, very open to having us come in. I think a lot of times when something like that happens ... the families are so in shock that they don’t know the next thing to do.”

Sometimes people in grief forget how to do simple, day-to-day things such as pick up

a prescription, Burks said. After the plane crash, Burks helped with such practical tasks, provided information on accessing counseling and offered her cellphone number, so those grieving could reach her at any time.

“If you have that ability to sit with that kind of pain, and that’s what it is, it’s just pain, it really doesn’t even mat-ter what you say as long as

you’re helpful,” Burks said. “They’re so appreciative of you being there. Nobody said, ‘Who are you, and we don’t want to see OSU.’”

James Halligan, the OSU President during the 2001 plane crash, said, he spent a lot of time with Burks af-ter the tragedy. He refers to Burks as “Suz” or “Suzie.”

“Every time we see each

OSU director of counseling builds hope from tragedy

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

@ s a v a n n a h e v a n o f f

Entertainment Editor

STORY CONTINUES ON PAGE 14

kurt steiss/o’collyA plaque sits among other OSU items on Suzanne Burks’ shelf that reads “We Will Remember” on top and “In Appreciation For Your Goodness And Courage During OSU’s Hour Of Need.” Burks aided the basketball coaches and counseled the loved ones of the plane crash victims .

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s p e c i a l i s s u e r e m e m b e r t h e t e n

other, we just embrace,” Halligan said. “We don’t have to say anything. No words are required. We can just look at each other. Our eyes meet, and we decide to embrace.”

Burks was instrumental in arranging the memorial and helping people cope with grief, ensuring people had what they needed such as water to drink, teddy bears for children and outlets to express their feelings, Halligan said.

“Tragedy brings out the best in people, and there was no one better than Suzie Burks during this time,” Halligan said.

The fence Burks uses a fence metaphor

to explain the understanding of grief. On one side of the fence are people who have experi-enced grief and understand how it feels, and on the other side are people who have not.

Burks is on the grief side. Her mother died of unknown causes at a church luncheon when she was 11.

“You wonder why that hap-pens,” Burks said. “Why does an 11-year-old’s mother just die? Why does that happen?

Looking back, I think partly to help me do what I did after that plane crash.”

Karen Hancock, OSU wom-en’s soccer assistant coach, said after she lost her husband, Will Hancock, in the plane crash, Burks saved her life.

“At a time in my life when I didn’t know up from down ... and how I was supposed to proceed going forward in life, or if I could even do that, she really just helped me at every turn,” Hancock said. “I can’t tell you how many times that I would call her up during day or night, and she just dropped everything and was there for me. She was just really some-one who was always there at a time when I really needed someone with some back-ground and experience in grief counseling.”

When you first lose some-one, Burks said, there is a hole in your heart in the shape of that person.

“It’s just huge and you can feel it, and you hurt; your heart hurts,” Burks said. “But as time passes, that hole never goes away but it gets smaller. It’s still there, but it gets smaller.”

Listening to people grieve is

a challenge and a blessing, said Cindy Washington, an OSU counselor, who also helped after the plane crash.

“People only grieve the loss of a love story, when this love story ends,” Washington said. “It’s so powerful to hear these love stories. It’s a gift and a curse because it’s painful, but it’s amazing how connected human beings are and how much we love each other.”

The ChangesThe athletic department

hosts dinners every year for the families of the men who died in the plane crash, Burks said. Over time, Burks said, she has seen a change in these dinners.

The first few dinners were pretty somber. Now that grand-children have been born, some who have been named after the

victims, Burks senses happi-ness.

“Now I see them getting together and they’re smil-ing and they’re laughing and they’re hugging,” Burks said. “Do they miss their loved ones? Yeah, they do. And the anniversary’s a hard time, but it’s also a happy time. Because they’ve come so far.”

Burks has also come a long way after the Jan. 27, 2001, plane crash in Colorado; the OSU women’s basketball team plane crash that killed four Nov. 17, 2011, and most re-cently, the homecoming parade crash Oct. 24.

“It made me certainly a more perceptive person and … more willing to ask that hard ques-tion,” Burks said. “I’ve learned that it doesn’t matter what you say as long as you express that

you care and that you’re sorry. Everything else can come from that.”

Burks said she is close with Hancock and her family.

“Sometimes I believe I’ve gained much more out of that relationship than she has,” Burks said. “I’ve been brought in to the whole family and it’s wonderful. But I’d trade it all if I could take that crash away.”

After the homecoming parade crash, she immediately heard from friends she’s made through these tragedies, Burks said.

“The first thing they did was call and say, ‘Are you OK? Are you in the middle of this?’” Burks said. “I mean, they knew.”

kurt steiss/o’collyA Strasburg Fire Rescue hat sits on a shelf in Suzanne Burks’ office in Counseling Services area in the Student Union. Strasburg, Colorado, was the site of the plane crash that killed 10 OSU basketball members.

f o l l o w s a v a n n a h :@ s a v a n n a h e v a n o f f

I’ve learned that it doesn’t matter what you say as long as you express that you care and that you’re sorry. Everything else can come from that.”

suzanne burksDirector of university counseling

STORY CONTINUEd from PAGE 13

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They were helpers.They held varying titles:

father and husband. Brother and son. Friend and teammate. Their jobs included play-by-play announcer, sports information director and director of basket-ball operations.

But they shared a purpose: helping others.

Kendall Durfey was always there to give a supportive smile or thumbs up. Bjorn Fahlstrom was at the pilot’s side whenever he was needed. Nate Fleming and Daniel Lawson motivated their teammates with every practice. Will Hancock was almost assuredly in the play-ers’ corner. Brian Luinstra did everything he could to get play-ers healthy. Denver Mills flew the “fun” plane, and Pat Noyes hosted the team for card night. Bill Teegins got it, in more ways than one. Jared Weiberg was available to join a player at the gym at any moment.

As former Oklahoma State guard Doug Gottlieb advanced through college basketball, he learned that everyone he met was there to help him.

The Ten embody that. When 10 men connected to the OSU basketball team died in a plane crash in Strasburg, Colorado,

on Jan. 27, 2001, Gottlieb lost a support system that couldn’t easily be replaced.

“They were all helpers,” Got-tlieb said. “The greatest thing you can do in basketball is help your teammates make a basket. That’s what sports is about. That’s what it teaches you is doing things for other people and you all look good because of it. That’s what all of those guys were. Those are the kind of guys that all they ever do is help you look good, play good, feel good about your experience in college.

“That’s what really is the heartache to the whole thing.”

Gottlieb, now an analyst with CBS Sports, graduated from OSU the year before the crash.

The Cowboys, thanks to Desmond Mason’s 18 points per game and Gottlieb’s Big 12-leading 8.62 assists per game, reached the Elite Eight in the 2000 NCAA Tournament.

It was a great era in Cowboy basketball, a season placed neatly between two Final Four appearances in 1995 and 2004.

It was when basketball — not football — dominated Stillwa-ter.

“You get bummed out when you lose a football game,” Gottlieb said. “When we got knocked out in the NCAA Tour-nament, it was just devastation.”

That’s seemingly what the Cowboys experienced March 26, 2000, when they lost to Billy Donovan’s Florida Gators, ending Gottlieb’s college career and that of six other seniors.

But devastation was an exag-geration, at least on that day. It didn’t fit. It was an empty word, its meaning realized 10 months later.

‘As good as they come’The plaque is easily seen but

hidden away.A left turn after the south

Heritage Hall entrance leads to Gallagher-Iba Arena’s media workroom.

Resting on the wall is a board reading “Will Hancock Memo-rial Scholarship.”

It details Hancock’s infectious smile, his passion for sports and the goodness of his heart.

The Ten, in a way, live on.Through a variety of dona-

tions and sponsorship efforts, scholarships totaling more than $300,000 have been given to students at OSU, Oklahoma, Texas, Kansas, Wichita State and others in honor of the Ten.

The scholarships allow the legacy of the Ten to continue. Carolyn Huffman established endowed scholarships for stu-dent athletic trainers at OSU, KU and WSU in honor of Lu-instra, her late husband and the Cowboys’ former trainer.

“It was a way that he could be remembered every year,” Huff-man said. “It was a way that his dedication to the sport could continue. I just thought it was a nice way that his memory could be kept alive.”

The Will Hancock Memorial Scholarship is given annually to a graduate assistant in the athletic communications depart-ment and named after Hancock, the Cowboys’ former sports information director.

Sean Maguire, who gradu-ated from OSU with a degree in sports media and advertising in 2010, was a three-time recipi-ent of the scholarship. Maguire works as assistant director of athletic communications for OSU Athletics, helping connect

media with athletes, much in the way Hancock did.

“I didn’t know him person-ally, but I kind of feel like I did just from talking to so many good friends of his and seeing how much they still miss him today,” Maguire said. “From what I’ve heard, he was re-ally good at his job, too. I’ve heard that from people at other schools that worked with him. I’ve heard he was about as good as they come.

“I know it’s a pretty huge honor to be awarded something with his name on it.”

The scholarships can’t return loved ones lost, but they lighten the heartache of an OSU fan base that for 15 years has begged for another “Nate” chant

for Fleming or another “He got it” call from Teegins.

They inspire the next set of helpers.

“It’s a nice remembrance to his legacy,” said Janis, Teegins’ widow. “I think a lot of the kids who benefit from the scholar-ship always write me a nice note thanking our family, and I think, a lot of times, they study up on who he was. I think it’s a good way of keeping his memory alive. He was good at his job and his career. It gives them someone to look up to.”

Constant remindersMills’ plane was the place to

be. It was the fun plane.Sure, it was a slower than the

N a t h a n R u i z

@ N at h a n S R u i z

Senior Sports Reporter

s p e c i a l i s s u e r e m e m b e r t h e t e n

15 years later, Ten’s legacy remains strong

o’colly File photoOklahoma State guard Doug Gottlieb drives to the basket against Auburn in 1999. Gottlieb played under Eddie Sutton.

STORY CONTINUES ON PAGE 16

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

other two planes OSU trav-eled in, but after a loss, the Beechcraft Super King Air was the perfect place to hide from frustrated coaches after a loss. They were rarely on board, and by the time it landed in Stillwa-ter, the coaches had already left the airport.

“Denver Mills’ plane was the plane I always used to ride on,” Gottlieb said. “Whether it was because I was perpetually in the doghouse or because there usually wasn’t coaches on that plane ‘cause it was slower.

“To a college student, like, who cares? We get back 15 minutes later. It doesn’t really matter that much to us. It was fun.”

It took until August for Got-tlieb to get back to Stillwater after the crash because of his professional commitments to teams overseas and the Lakers.

He hadn’t been gone long, but his memory of the place he fell in love with had faded, his visions distorted as he became older, but the students seem-ingly got younger.

When Gottlieb came back, that held true for every spot on campus but the basketball office.

“When you haven’t been on a college campus, you come back and you think, ‘Oh my God, everybody looks like they’re 15,’” Gottlieb said. “I remem-ber walking into the basketball office, talking to the coaches, and everybody looked 10 years older.”

Tragedy weighs on you, whether you’re the coach who waited at the airport for 10 men who never came home or the student who cheered them on from the stands of a newly renovated arena.

OSU coach Eddie Sutton was forced to call 10 families to tell them that their son, husband or father was on the plane.

It weighed heavily on him. Gottlieb and Sutton speak every couple of weeks. The Ten came up in a recent conversation.

“Man, that was a hard time,” Sutton said. “That was a hard, hard time. Those were good, good men.”

Sutton, who was unavail-able for comment, didn’t seek therapy immediately. Gottlieb said the pressure of the remain-ing season, which saw Sutton’s Cowboys lose in the first round of the NCAA Tournament for the first time, kept the coach from helping himself.

“I think it was a major mis-take to not immediately seek therapy and have everybody talk to somebody because it’s still a big wound for so many people,” Gottlieb said. “You have to be tough, you have to be strong, mentally focused, all these other things. “I do think it was, in hindsight, a mistake, that nobody pushed through and that they had to show leadership and they had to be steady, strong, in-stead of being vulnerable, which is what everybody really was.”

Stillwater knows better than anywhere else that tragedy, the feeling of vulnerability, never gets any easier.

Another plane crash took four lives Nov. 16, 2011. Four more died at Hall of Fame and Main on Oct. 24.

The pain is deep, but it is part of Stillwater’s fabric, a thread each Cowboy shares.

“Those are three parts of the university that make the uni-versity special,” Gottlieb said. “Oklahoma State homecom-ing is an incredible, incredible weekend, and it happens at the

parade? Like, are you kidding? What’s more special than Okla-homa State basketball and Eddie Sutton? And we have a plane crash? I mean, Kurt Budke turns the women’s program around, and I’d always thought to my-self, ‘No way anyone I know is ever involved in a plane crash again. What is the statistical possibilities? None.’ And yet, sure enough, it happened again.

“I think part of it is the trag-edies have all come from things that are very near and dear to people’s hearts. In order to re-ally stay in Stillwater, you have to want to be there, and once you want to be there, you’re all-in on the experience. I think it’s befallen things that are very special about the place.”

A run to never forgetOne cowboy kneels, but the

others run.Every April, OSU students,

alumni, Stillwater residents and others take part in the Remem-ber the Ten Run.

That group includes the OSU men’s and women’s basketball teams.

“When you know what you’re doing it for, it’s not like a work-out,” Cowboys forward Leyton Hammonds said. “You do it for the loved ones, honestly, and the people who lost their lives, so I just want to give it my all because they’re not here with us anymore, so I just feel like I’m dedicating it for them.”

The run annually awards scholarships to 10 students pur-suing their master’s or doctorate in a counseling- or psychology-related specialty. The scholar-ships, given each of the past five years, are worth $500 a semes-ter. It also raises money for University Counseling Services.

But the run is about more

than the money, said Karen Hancock, Hancock’s widow and an assistant coach for the Cowgirl soccer team.

“It’s more of a time of cel-ebration and reflection, and it’s just easier to be more at peace with things, I think,” Karen said. “I love that it fundraises for the counseling services program. That’s another area on campus that there’s not a whole lot of money or attention thrown that way. It’s a very important service, so I think it’s wonder-ful.”

Gottlieb and his family have participated in the run four times.

Each run shows him more the impact each of the Ten had.

“It’s not just 10 people that

died in a crash,” Gottlieb said. “It’s that they were 10 individu-ally very special people for very different reasons. I would like, if possible, for them all to be remembered, even if only for one thing, to be remembered individually because that’s how we remember them.

“Now, if you’re a student, you’re 20 years old. You were 5 at the time. It’s just a statue. It’s just a tragedy. It’s just sad. But if I told you … they were all gone at once, especially when you hear how tremendous they were as helpers in the commu-nity, I think you have a little bit stronger connection to it.”

s p e c i a l i s s u e r e m e m b e r t h e t e n

Devin Wilber/o’collyA plaque hangs in Gallagher-Iba Arena for a scholarship named in honor of Will Hancock, a victim of the plane crash Jan. 27, 2001.

STORY CONTINUEd from PAGE 15

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rejuvenation28 Tidy sum, to a

chairmaker?31 Clobbers32 Regrets33 Rain-__: gum

brand36 Financial pros37 Tries39 Many millennia40 Fall mo.41 Only person to

win both anAcademy Awardand a NobelPrize

42 Clock button43 Tidy sum, to a

soothsayer?46 Alleviate49 Baggage

carousel aid50 Color in une cave

à vin51 Angers52 Kin of org55 Japanese capital56 Tidy sum, to a

chess player?60 Ready, or ready

follower61 Theme park with

a geodesicsphere

62 Slacken63 Calypso cousin64 They may be

Dutch65 Potters’ pitchers

DOWN1 Big show2 Beg, borrow or

steal3 “My bed is calling

me”4 Kid5 Country music?6 Climbs aboard7 Distract the

security guardsfor, say

8 ActorSomerhalder of“The VampireDiaries”

9 LBJ successor10 Agrees11 Winning12 Art form with

buffa and seriastyles

13 Emancipates18 Meditative

practice23 Flavor intensifier25 Bugs a lot26 Smear27 Some Full Sail

brews28 Basics29 “Forget it”30 Country inflection33 Noble act, in

Nantes

34 Forsaken35 “My treat”37 Thick carpet38 Grimm story39 Ski resort near

Salt Lake City41 Kissed noisily42 Gallery event43 Day light44 They haven’t

been donebefore

45 Frankfurt’s river

46 Hardly aminiature gulf

47 Smooth andstylish

48 Blitzen’s boss51 “Young

Frankenstein” role53 Ill-humored54 World Series field

sextet57 Wall St. debut58 Sgt. or cpl.59 Fresh

Tuesday’s Puzzle SolvedBy Bruce Haight 1/27/16

©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC 1/27/16

Page 17: Wednesday, Jan. 27, 2016

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 27, 2016 OCOLLY.COM PAGE 18

JUNE 1ST RENTALSSTILLWATER PROPERTY

633 N. HUSBAND(405) 743-2126ONE BEDROOMS

OLD TOWNE VILLAGE1523 W. MCMURTRY RD

BRAND NEW STUDIO UNITSALL BILLS PAID-FENCED YARD40” TV & WASHER/DRYER INCL

GRANITE-4 MILES TO OSUVERY PRIVATE-COUNTRY SETTING

$595 PER MONTH-PETS NEGOTIABLE

CREEKSIDE CONDOS1405 W. MCMURTRY RD

BRAND NEW CONDO STYLE UNITSALL ELECTRIC-WATER/TRASH PAID

FENCED YARD-WASHER/DRYER INCLUDEDGRANITE-4 MILES TO OSU

VERY PRIVATE-COUNTRY SETTING$620 PER MONTH-PETS NEGOTIABLE

LOGWOOD APARTMENTS716 N. HUSBAND

CLOSE TO CAMPUS-ALL ELECTRICWALK IN CLOSETS-NO W/D

LARGE OPEN LAYOUTS$450 PER MONTH

KAY-DEE APARTMENTS1315 W. 3RD

VERY CLOSE TO CAMPUSWALK IN CLOSET-ALL ELECTRIC

NO W/D-PAID WATER$550 PER MONTH

240 S. LEWISVERY LARGE UNIT-WALK IN CLOSETS

WASHER/DRYER INCLUDED5 BLOCKS TO OSU CAMPUS

TOTAL ELECTRIC-PD WATER/LAWN$600 PER MONTH

811 S. HESTERSMALLER HOUSE-PETS OK

FENCED YARD-WINDOW AC UNITNEAR OSU CAMPUS

$550 PER MONTH

TWO BEDROOMSLAKEVIEW APARTMENTS

2209 N. MONROE CLOSE TO BOOMER LAKE

ALL ELECTRIC-LARGE LAYOUTWALK IN CLOSETS-NO W/D

$460 PER MONTH

LOGWOOD APARTMENTS716 N. HUSBAND

ALL ELECTRIC-CLOSE TO CAMPUSNO W/D-RECENT UPDATES

$470 PER MONTH

TYLER TEN APARTMENTS1110 W. TYLER

ALL ELEC-VERY CLOSE TO CAMPUSNO W/D-PETS NEGOTIABLE

$460 PER MONTH

FOX RUN APARTMENTS127 N. DUCK

TOTAL ELECTRIC-WOOD FLOORSONSITE LAUNDRY-PAID WATER

VERY CLOSE TO CAMPUS$500 PER MONTH

WEST MAPLE APARTMENTS124 W. MAPLE

ALL ELEC-COVERED PARKINGVERY CLOSE TO CAMPUS

NO W/D-LARGE LIVING AREA$520 PER MONTH

BRADFORD COURT APARTMENTS304 S. JEFFERSON

VERY CLOSE TO OSU/STRIPALL ELECTRIC-NEW PAINT/CARPET

SMALL BUT VERY EFFICIENT $580 PER MONTH

KAY-DEE APARTMENTS1315 W. 3RD

VERY CLOSE TO OSU/GREEK AREAALL ELECTRIC-NEW PAINT/CARPET

NO W/D-PETS NEGOTIABLE$620 PER MONTH

TERRACE TOWNHOMES818 N. HUSBAND

2-STORY LAYOUTS & FLATSCLOSE TO OSU-ALL ELECTRIC

PETS NEGOTIABLE-NO W/D2 BATH UNIT OPTIONAL

$580 PER MONTH

YELLOWROCK APARTMENTS308 N. HUSBAND

ALL ELECTRIC-VERY CLOSE TO OSUWALK IN CLOSETS-LARGE OPEN LAYOUT

NEW PAINT/CARPET-NO W/D$620 PER MONTH

NORTH MAIN DUPLEXES100 N. HARTMAN

1 MILE TO OSU-LAWN CARE INCLVERY NICE AND PRIVATE

PETS NEGOTIABLE-W/D HOOKUPS1-CAR GARAGE

$675 PER MONTH

824 W. 8TH1.5 BATHS-PETS OK

STAINED CONCRETE FLOORSSMALLER BEDROOMS-LAWN CARE INCLVERY CLOSE TO CAMPUS-TOWNHOUSE

$640 PER MONTH

VILLA COURT APARTMENTS1517 W. 4TH

VERY CLOSE TO CAMPUS/GREEK2 FULL BATHS-WASHER/DRYER INCL

$850 PER MONTH

410 S. LOWRY 1-CAR GARAGE-SMALLER HOME

HARDWOOD FLOORSPETS OK-W/D HOOKUPS

$600 PER MONTH

601 E. MAPLESMALLER HOME-REMODELED

NEW PAINT/CARPET-1 MILE TO OSUCENTRALLY LOCATED-1 CAR GARAGE

W/D HOOKUPS-NO DW$600 PER MONTH

425 N. JARDOT2 FULL BATHS-LARGE YARD

PETS OK-1 MILE TO OSUHARDWOOD FLOORS

$700 PER MONTH

917 E. 8THOLDER HOME-CENTRALLY LOCATED

PETS OK-1.5 MILE TO OSU$675 PER MONTH

1806 S. SHALAMAR1-CAR GARAGE WEST STILLWATER

NEWER PAINT/CARPETPETS OK-W/D HOOKUPS

$675 PER MONTH

240 S. LEWISUPSTAIRS DUPLEX UNIT

WASHER/DRYER INCLUDEDPAID WATER/LAWN CARE

LESS THAN 1 MILE TO CAMPUS$620 PER MONTH

THREE BEDROOMS1018 E. ELM

2-FULL BATHS/COVERED PARKING2 LIVING AREAS-FENCED YARD

CENTRALLY LOCATED-NEAR PARK1 MILE TO OSU-PETS OK

$1050 PER MONTH

106 S. KINGSTONS OF RENOVATIONS

HARDWOOD FLOORS-1 FULL BATHFENCED YARD-PETS NEGOTIABLEEXTREMELY CLOSE TO CAMPUS

$1200 PER MONTH

841 W. KNAPP1 MILE TO OSU CAMPUS

1 BATHROOM-W/D HOOKUPSHARDWOOD FLOORS

$875 PER MONTH

611 N. DUCKVERY CLOSE TO CAMPUS

1-CAR GARAGE-W/D HOOKUPSWOOD FLOORS-LARGE YARD

$825 PER MONTH

2309 N. LAKEVIEW COURT2.5 BATHROOMS-2 CAR GARAGE

FENCED YARD-PETS OK2 HEAT/AIR UNITS-HUGE LAYOUT

$1050 PER MONTH

1410 E. 3RD2-FULL BATHS 1CAR GARAGE

COMPLETELY RENOVATEDWOOD FLOORS-GRANITE

$975 PER MONTH

21 ELMWOOD1-CAR GARAGE LARGE FENCED YARDLESS THAN 1 MILE TO OSU-PETS OK

$850 PER MONTH

711 HARTWOODFENCED YARD-2 MILES TO OSUHARDWOOD FLOORS-PETS OK

$825 PER MONTH

1415 S. HUSBAND PLACE3 FULL BATHS-2 KITCHENS3-CAR COVERED PARKING

SMALL SHOP IN BACKFENCED YARD-PETS OK

TONS OF RECENT UPDATES-VERY NICE$1125 PER MONTH

1517 W. 4THVERY CLOSE TO CAMPUS/GREEK AREA

2.5 BATHS-COVERED PARKING2 STORY TOWNHOUSE-PAID WATER

VERY DESIREABLE LOCATION$1425 PER MONTH

FOUR BEDROOMS1103 N. LEWIS

3 FULL BATHS-2 FULL KITCHENS1 MILE TO OSU-COUNTRY SETTINGPAID WATER-WASHER/DRYER INCLLOTS OF SPACE-2 STORY HOUSE

$1500 PER MONTH

123 S. STALLARDHUGE YARD-PETS OK

CENTRALLY LOCATED-W/D INCLUDED1.5 MILES TO OSU-STORM SHELTER

NEW PAINT/CARPET$1400 PER MONTH

236 S. LEWIS3 FULL BATHS-1 MILE TO OSU

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

202 N. MANNING3 FULL BATHS-2 CAR GARAGE

GRANITE COUNTERS-W/D INCLUDEDPETS OK-STAINED CONCRETE FLRS

NEWER CUSTOM HOME$1640 PER MONTH

FIVE BEDROOMS6418 N. SEADOG

WOOD FLOORS-4 MILES TO OSU5 ACRES-OUTSIDE CITY LIMITS

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

6821 S. THE CEDARS2 ACRES-HUGE FENCED YARD

3 FULL BATHS-2 LVG ROOMS-2 KITCHENSTONS OF RECENT RENOVATIONS

5 MILES TO OSU CAMPUS-VERY NICE$2050 PER MONTH

116 N. MANNINGBRAND NEW CUSTOM HOME

1.5 MILES TO OSU-ALL ELECTRICLARGE FLOORPLAN-W/D INCLUDED

GRANITE COUNTERS-VERY NICESTAINED CONCRETE FLOORS

3 FULL BATHROOMS-CEILING FANS$2050 PER MONTH

SIX BEDROOMS704 N. MANNING

3 FULL BATHS-TVS INCLUDEDSTAINED CONCRETE-GRANITE

BRAND NEW HOUSE-ALL ELECTRIC1 MILE TO OSU-PETS OK

$2250 PER MONTH

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

9017 W. CEDAR CREST TRAILFULL CUSTOM HOME-5 ACRES

CUSTOM INGROUND POOL3 FULL BATHS-STAINED CONCRETE FLOORS

MUST SEE!! TOTAL ELECTRIC$2850 PER MONTH

Page 18: Wednesday, Jan. 27, 2016

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 27, 2016 OCOLLY.COM PAGE 19

Daily HoroscopeBy Nancy BlackTribune Content Agency

Today’s Birthday (01/27/16). Teamwork supercharges results this year. Strategize to grow shared accounts. Group efforts succeed. Spring eclipses flood your cash flow, altering your travel and study options. A two-year exploration and research phase begins this summer. Autumn eclipses bless your family with bounty. Save some. It’s all for family and community.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 -- Discover a structural problem. Meditate on it before taking action. Don’t try a new trick yet. You’re quick and accurate now. Handle responsibilities on time. New information instigates changes. Allow yourself time to absorb the emotional impact.Taurus (April 20-May 20) -- Today is an 8 -- Haste makes waste. Slow down to get there faster. Save time by avoiding a family argu-ment. Back up your team, even if you don’t agree on everything. Be patient with a resister. Make no assumptions.Gemini (May 21-June 20) -- Today is an 8 -- Make sure you know what’s required before signing on. List all the potential costs and problems. Elder generations have valuable experience. Don’t strain the budget. Get the whole gang to help. You’re surrounded by love.Cancer (June 21-July 22) -- Today is a 9 -- There’s an abundance of work available. Increase productivity with clever tweaks. Get help from others. Don’t offer to pick up everyone’s lunch tab ... resist busting the budget. Share business with your community. Resupply locally.Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Today is an 8 -- Keep your goals and promises (especially around money), or amend them to reflect the current situation. Stay in communication with your team. You’re making new friends. Make sure everyone understands the rules of the game. Determination works.Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- Today is a 9 -- Draw up plans. Friends help you avoid a mistake. Get an elder’s feedback. Do the home-work before committing resources to the project. Involve a skeptic, to check your blind spots. Neatness counts. Slow and easy does it.Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) -- Today is a 7 -- Avoid reckless spending or expensive promises. Use your good sense in a clash with author-ity. Share your view respectfully (or not). Old assumptions get challenged. Learn something from someone who thinks differently than you.Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) -- Today is a 9 -- Your team is hot. You’re up against a brick wall. A loved one spurs you on to leap over fences and boundaries. You can do more than you thought. Discover more options than you knew you had.Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) -- Today is a 9 -- Learn from experts and mentors. To really delve into a subject, teach it. Avoid get-rich quick schemes. Put in the effort for what you want. You can build it. Stick to your budget. Get outdoors.Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- Today is an 8 -- Far horizons beck-on. Go with a buddy or partner. Investigate new options. Gather your supplies. Shop carefully for quality and value. Plan your itiner-ary in detail and reserve in advance. Make it easy on yourself.Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) -- Today is a 9 -- Rest and recharge mind, body and spirit. Take time to untangle miscommunications before a bigger snarl develops. Dig into your project with renewed energy. Admit your limitations. New opportunities spark. Go for the big prize.Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) -- Today is a 9 -- Focus on a new career target. Advance your agenda by thinking fast under pressure. Gracefully navigate romantic scheduling changes. Do the work now, and play later. Show your team your appreciation. Pump up the energy with love.

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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.

1/27/16

Level: 1 2 3 4

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WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 27, 2016 OCOLLY.COM PAGE 20

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s p e c i a l i s s u e r e m e m b e r t h e t e n

When I hear Remember the Ten, I like to think of every one of them. I close my eyes and think of why each of them is special to me. I think of the impact all of those guys had on my life and on the program and how we were so unified.”

Doug Gottliebforme ffformer oklahoma state guard and CBS Sports analyst

It’s important that we continue to support and honor these people. Things certainly will never be the same from the Oklahoma State standpoint. More importantly than that, things will never be the same for those family members. Those people that were very, very close to it. We have to let them know that we still honor their loved ones and respect them. There’s only so much we can do. We want to do everything we can do to help them, and we’ve got to do everything we can to let them know we support them.”

Dave Hunziker, Oklahoma State broadcaster

It was just a regular, average, normal day that turned into anything but.”

Karen Hancockwidow of Will Hancock

I’m so thankful that we live in a commu-nity where they made sure that my dad and the other nine people that died, their legacy is carried on throughout every-thing, and as the years go by, we still make sure that we remember them.”

andrea Hancockdaughter of Will Hancock

The ten in the words of those who loved them