THE CAMPUS
April 28, 2021 – Volume 114 Issue 10
Year in Review: We made it! ‘Believe in the sun, when the sun do not shine’
PAGES 2-3 Photo Essay
Mackenzie Shaw Student Publications
A picture’s worth a thousand words! Check out a photo essay
OCU dedicates art in honor of Clara Luper
reviewing the school year.
PAGE 4 Life
Destyni Lietzke
STAFF WRITER
Stephen Jackson Student Publications
An art alumnus has completed a canvas painting of civil rights activist Clara Luper. Leondre Lattimore, art alumnus, painted a portrait canvas in honor of Clara Luper, which will be displayed in a multicultural room on campus. Clara Luper was a civil rights activist, teacher and active community member in the Oklahoma City area. At a local convenience store, Luper
Submitted
Students and alums reflect on crazy memories from their time at OCU.
PAGE 5 News
Leondre Lattimore, art alumnus (left) , and Marilyn Hildreth, Clara Luper’s daughter (right), pose with Lattimore’s portrait of Clara Luper.
conducted and hosted one of the first sit-in protests of the 1960s. Luper and her students walked into Katz drugstore and ordered Coca Cola, making a statement against segregation by sitting down together and remaining silent. Later in life, Luper hosted her own radio show, where she discussed and talked about her fight for civil
rights and her love for the Oklahoma City area, including Oklahoma City University. Clara Luper died June 8, 2011. Because of Luper’s deep love for Oklahoma City and OCU, Oklahoma City University decided to name a scholarship in her honor. This scholarship is awarded to individuals who display strong ethics and leadership in
OCU hosts retiree recognition event Des Barrett
ASSOCIATE EDITOR
Stephen Jackson Student Publications
Faculty and students list the defining moments of the 2020-21 academic year.
PAGE 6 Opinion
The editors thank the campus community for keeping each other safe this year.
PAGE 7 Arts & Entertainment
Mackenzie Shaw Student Publications
The School of Music hopes to reduce COVID-19 restrictions next Fall.
PAGE 8 Sports
Submitted
Sports to wrap up their season with a large number of awards, despite seasonal setbacks.
M MEDIAOCU.com
Thirteen staff and faculty members are retiring from OCU this year. Human Resources is hosting the 2021 Starskys in order to honor and recognize staff and faculty contributions to OCU before they retire and leave the campus community. The event will take place in-person with an audience of up to 50 registered participants and virtually for those who do not attend. The university will be recognizing retirees and faculty and staff members who have worked at OCU for landmark terms. Dr. George Sims, interim provost, will be leaving OCU at the end of this year. He said he felt the program review work he has implemented in his position is important. Sims said he has gotten to know a few of the retirees during his time at OCU. “These are folks who have given their best effort over 20, 25, 30 years to building up OCU. But mostly, they’ve invested their best professional effort in probably three generations of students,” Sims said. Sims said the value these individuals have contributed to the campus community cannot be counted. Meghan Settle, design and production senior, said she took many classes with Judith Palladino, who is retiring after 29 years. Settle said Palladino taught children’s theatre and creative arts courses, and she was Settle’s favorite professor at OCU.
“She’s really kind. She’s also super supportive, and she makes you think about things a different way. So, when you present work to her in class, she’ll build you up and give you good feedback, but she’ll also be like, ‘OK, what if you did it this way,’” Settle said. “Like when we presented creative drama activities, she always loved to be the devil’s advocate.” Settle said Palladino told her students many entertaining stories and was very attentive to her individual students in her smaller classes. Settle said she got to work with Palladino when she designed the lighting for Palladino’s production of “On to Victory.” Mahmood Shandiz, professor of management science, has been at the university for 35 years. He said he was first introduced
to OCU when he arrived to America from Tehran, Iran, in 1978 as an international student. He was studying for a Ph.D. at Oklahoma State University but arrived late and got housing near OCU. He said he used the Dulaney-Browne Library for his fall semester. “Because of my background in statistics and researching social science and sociology, I was actually hired as a researcher, and after a year or two, in 1987 (when I came here I believe it was June of 1986), so in 1987 they asked me to teach full-time in the business school, and the story goes on,” Shandiz said. He said after his time as associate dean of the School of Business, he became vice president for international admissions, and then became a faculty member again in 2015. He said he might continue teaching if
the members of Meinders want him to, but he plans to travel, move to California due to its friendlier weather and larger Iranian population and read many books. He said he is retiring because he wants to create space for newcomers and new ideas in the School of Business, and because of his age. “I think that 35 years is enough, is enough,” he said. “You can’t work forever.” He said he is happy for the work he was able to do, working with the other faculty members of the School of Business and analyzing data for them because it created a feeling of comradery and congeniality, and he could keep himself academically qualified. To read the whole story, visit MediaOCU.com.
the academic world, as well as in the local community. In remembrance of Clara Luper and her life, Oklahoma City University sponsored the creation of an art piece of Luper. Luper continued on 5
Who is Dr. Evans?
Sou�ce: okcu.edu
President addresses students’ concerns Paul Dower
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
Several campus community members have expressed their thoughts and concerns about Dr. Kenneth Evans’s nomination as president-elect of OCU. Last month, Student Publications conducted a survey of the campus community asking community members about their thoughts on Evans being selected as the new university president. According to the survey, 38 out of 54 campus community members did not approve of the presidential search committee’s choice. When asked to explain, several community members shared their worries about Evans’s potential ties to the oil and gas industry and an investigation into his administration at his previous university. Several students have expressed their desire to make OCU a much greener campus. During each of the student-accessible presidential candidate forums, at least one student asked the candidates about shifting OCU to renewable energies and creating an Office of Sustainability to help oversee these changes. Evans continued on 5
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Student Publications
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Read about OCU’s new partnership with Diversity Family Health Clinic to provide free HIV screenings to students. Read about the recent theft of a part from a student’s car. Student Publications is hiring staff writers! Contact Philip Todd, Student Publications/ Media OCU advisor, at patodd@okcu.edu for more information.