THE CAMPUS
‘We are family’ homecoming 2021
MONDAY HIGH-NOON FEVER
November 3, 2021 – Volume 115, Issue 10
OCU Student A��airs
Mackenzie Shaw
Student Publications
OCU Student Affairs kicked off the 2021 Homecoming festivities with a disco-themed Spirit Day music fest and photo challenge Monday during lunchtime at the Student Center, where they played classic dance tunes from the ‘70s, gave away T-shirts, and invited everyone to show off their best retro fits. Above, Richi Slade, senior dance pedagogy major, left, and Mackenzie Farrell, senior dance performance major, strike a pose by the AXΩ poster.
CAMPUS NEWS
Tornado warning sparks concerns Ava Karas
NEWS EDITOR
There was a tornado warning for OCU students on Wednesday, Oct. 13. The National Weather Service issued a tornado warning at 5:07 a.m., and subsequently, sirens were activated. Students were notified to seek shelter via Blue Alert at 5:27 a.m. According to Levi Harrel, dean of students, the best practice for students is to be weather aware. “First and foremost, we encourage students to be weather aware, tune into local news sources online, on television, or via streaming services, get information that way,” Harrel said. Harrel said students should seek shelter when advised by local authorities or by university officials. “We have several tornado shelters in residence halls, as well as academic buildings such as Goldstar, and the basement of the Chapel,” Harrel said. Several students expressed concern about OCU’s tornado protocol, as well as the delayed response to the severe weather. According to junior psychology major Hannah Prentice, Blue Alert did not inform students to take shelter until after the tornado warning had passed campus. “The Emergency Alert from the National Weather Service issued a tornado warning at
M MEDIAOCU.com
5:07 am,” Prentice said. “At that time, the news was saying that the severe weather was headed right toward OCU and the pocket of weather they were concerned about was going to form a tornado would be coming right onto campus. By 5:20 am, the storm had moved so fast, the news was saying that OCU was safe and our campus was mainly in danger of flooding.” According to Prentice, OCU’s Blue Alert system was not activated until well after the initial tornado warning. “If anything, had this been a severe and life-threatening tornado, our campus would have already been in grave danger, with no word or comment from the university by the time it was gone,” Prentice said. “In my opinion and from experience from 20 years of tornado seasons, with a real emergency, in order to potentially save students and keep us safe using the Blue Alert system, something would have needed to be out by 5:10 am at the latest.” Junior music theatre major Ella Dolynchuk said that, as a student living in Cokesbury Court, there was no clear direction as to where to shelter during the tornado. “For kids who didn’t grow up in tornado zones, this kind of experience can be scary,” Dolynchuk said. “I hope President Evans can meet with university officials to come up with a better system for the future, for when this happens again.”
Homecoming Royals
Peyton Davis, Miss OCU’s Outstanding Teen 2022, left, and Ava Cruchon, Miss OCU 2022, right, were crowned in the annual pageant Oct. 23 at Kirkpatrick Auditorium.
PAGE 2: Opinion
Domestic Violence Awareness Month is over. The pain is not.
PAGE 2: Correction / Clarification
A photo caption on Page 1 of the October 6 issue mistakenly identified its event and date. The photo portrayed the Constitution Day Roundtable on Sept. 7.
PAGE 3: Arts
OCU School of Music revisits a classic Andrew Lloyd Webber musical.
PAGE 4: Sports
OCU Esports plays host to OKC Public Schools tournament.
Miss Oklahoma City University Scholarship P�ogram
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