Friday, March 19, 2021
Cashing in Second round of economic stimulus now available to OSU students
By Anna Pope Last week many Oklahoma State University students who are eligible for federal aid were notified of a $1,000 grant to help alleviate COVID-19 financial burdens.
For this round of collegiate stimulus, Pell grant recipients immediately qualify for the Coronavirus Response and Relief Supplemental Appropriations (CRRSA) Act grant and students without a Pell grant who wish to be considered can fill out an application.
While the grant is $1,000, the value can change based on available funding, according to the Office of Scholarships and Financial Aid. On Dec. 27 the CRRSA Act was made into law. Eligible students at Oklahoma State have access to a grant resulting from the act.
Emily Weed
Chad Blew, director of scholarships and financial aid, said funding is limited and because of this, not all students applying for the grant have a 100% chance of See Cashing on pg. 4A
Tulsa race massacre taught Randy Krehbiel an important life lesson
Sudeep Tumma
Maddison Farris The current mask mandate in Stillwater is set to expire on May 25. Some OSU students think that it should be extended, while others say it is time to leave it behind.
End of an era? OSU students to potentially see a maskless fall semester
Maddison Farris Protest, extend, repeat. When it comes to the mask mandate, it’s time to break the cycle. Mask mandates have been covering the smiles of Stillwater for over a year and many citizens, OSU students included, are ready to see them go. The current Stillwater mask
mandate is set to end on May 25, shortly after the end of the spring semester. Stillwater Mayor Will Joyce is hopeful for a strong finish to beating COVID-19 in Stillwater and a gradual return to normalcy as the school year continues. “If we stay where we are, my hope would be that we let it (the mask mandate) expire on the 25th of May,” Joyce said. Vaccination numbers continue to increase by the day, and current hospitalization and See Era on pg. 3A
When Randy Krehbiel published “Tulsa, 1921 Reporting a Massacre,” he didn’t receive the hate mail and criticism that most would expect. Instead, his intense reporting altered the way he viewed things. “I had to really stretch my reporting muscles to understand why these people believe what they believe,” Krehbiel said. “In other words, sometimes it’s not what people believe, it’s why they believe it. Because why people believe something informs what they believe. “Some people would come into these meetings or I talk to
first in a series them and they have these firm beliefs that, to me, are so outlandish. The first impulse is to kind of dismiss them thinking, ‘These people are crazy.’ Then you find out that this is their frame of reference. Maybe, to them, it’s not so crazy.” Krehbiel, a Tulsa World reporter for over 40 years, scoured through thousands of pages of documents to formulate his book, which details the events of the Tulsa race massacre. The event is widely considered one of the worst racially-
motivated events of American history, yet also one of the least known. But through so much unknown, Krehbiel started to see things through a different lens. “What I learned is really how important it is to listen to other people and where they’re coming from,” Krehbiel “As just kind of a basic white guy who grew up on a farm in western Oklahoma and went to OSU and wasn’t terribly im See Tulsa on pg. 5A