THE CAMPUS page 2
Opinion
Sou�ce: okcu.edu
Letter to the Editor
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page 3
President Martha Burger wrote a letter to the editor about recent incidents at OCU regarding diversity and inclusion.
September 25, 2019 – Volume 113 Issue 5
News
page 4 Lifestyles
Say cheese
Who wants breakfast?
Students have started a new photography and modeling club on campus. They
Students living in Draper and Banning residence halls were surprised with
hope to set up a studio for headshots and professional photoshoots.
free breakfast by their housing director.
Senate passes resolution to suspend Kappa Sigma, Alpha Phi Paul Dower
COPY EDITOR
Editors’ Note: This story contains an uncensored racial slur. A resolution calling for Kappa Sigma and Alpha Phi to disband has been passed by the senate. Resolution 001 was passed in the Sept. 19 senate meeting in a 17-5 vote by the senators. The resolution was created in response to a team name created by a few members from Kappa Sigma and a member from Alpha Phi called “Porch Monkeys,” which is a racial slur for a lazy slave dating back to the pre-Civil War era. The team was created for Alpha Phi’s philanthropy soccer tournament called Alpha Phifa. Sireene Khader, Alpha Phi president, said during the senate meeting that the name was announced once and was changed immediately, and the team played under a different team name. The multicultural coalition, a group consisting of the Black Student Association, Hispanic Student Association and Native American Society, brought the incident to the attention of Sen. (humanities) Leondre Lattimore and Sen. (Greek) Hope Melton who later drafted the resolution. Both houses involved are under investigation by their respective national headquarters. The resolution was passed on to Trae Trousdale, Student Government Association president, to either pass or veto it. Trousdale said his decision to pass or veto must be made by tomorrow. “Until then, there are many, many meetings that will need to be happening, there are many consultations that will be happening and there is a lot of advice and opinions that I will be gathering,” Trousdale said. “Because of the gravity of this situation, I will be taking this of its utmost importance and taking it extremely seriously.” Trousdale said he would meet with different people and groups across campus, including President Martha Burger, Levi Harrel, dean of students, Student Conduct officials, and the student presidents of all the involved organizations. Trousdale said he would direct the resolution to various channels on and off campus if he passes it. “If it is signed, my initial thinking is it will be given to President Burger. It will be given to the dean of students and vice president of student affairs. It will be given to the presidents of both orga-
Getting to see students in action and getting to see them expressing how they feel about certain situations... I think that’s pretty impactful. Abigail Banks vice president SGA
nizations, Alpha Phi and Kappa Sigma, as well as given to both of their national headquarters with a letter from me if it is passed from me,” he said. Matthew Moelling, president of Kappa Sigma, said a lot of people at the senate meeting were unaware or misinformed of the situation. “As we saw through the deliberation here and the questioning, most people, largely, were uninformed of the incident in general and had no knowledge of the intricacies associated with that. I think there was a lot of misinformation on campus and it got construed with something different,” Moelling said. Moelling said he and Kappa Sigma want to be involved in helping the situation. “Whether it comes to pass or is vetoed by President Trousdale, our resolve and action will be the same, and we are looking to create a better solution and be a part of that solution and not be distant from the situation. We want to be active participants,” he said. “And making this campus and the organizations within a safer environment for our underrepresented groups.” Officials said the senate meeting was one of the most attended senate meetings in recent OCU history, with over 100 students from several of the multicultural and Greek Life organizations. “This senate meeting was unlike anything I’ve ever seen,” Trousdale said. “I thought it was a very good time for us to come together as a community and hear both sides of the story.” Abigail Banks, SGA vice president, said presiding over the senate meeting was tough. “I felt like I had a lot of pressure to do well and to make sure
that things didn’t go wrong,” she said. “But overall, getting to see students in action and getting to see them expressing how they feel about certain situations, and ultimately seeing them come together about a decision, I think that’s pretty impactful.” Kaycee Kernell, president of NAS, said it was a joy to see something go in favor of students of color. “We face so much scrutiny on campus, and it’s just hard to speak up for ourselves.” Kernell said. “The one time we all get together, we have power in numbers, and we actually have been heard.” Brianna Miles, president of HSA, said she was optimistic for the future. “I’m optimistic now to know that our senate is listening and that we have this ability to come together and speak on both sides of the aisle,” she said. Jay Williams, religion senior and member of BSA, said students should not hold the entirety of the Greek houses responsible for individual acts. “I think we are largely misunderstanding what happened. I view this as a few members of a fraternity that decided to do this horrible act, versus a whole fraternity whose values don’t at all align with those kind of comments or remarks that were made,” Williams said. Destini Carrington, president of BSA, said the resolution will encourage more students of color to speak out on similar issues. “I think this will empower our students of color to know that they have a right to be on this campus and there is a place for them,” Carrington said. Trousdale said he hopes the resolution will dictate how SGA deals with similar issues in the future. “I think that this resolution is largely symbolic, but I think the weight of its symbolism is phenomenal. This resolution, and any that come forward out of this situation, show that there is an extra layer of accountability for who we are as students from others surrounding us,” Trousdale said. “I think that this resolution shows that OCU students are watching, that it shows that we are policing our own community, and that while we are all individual, sovereign student organizations, there is something to be said for the culture that we are all contributing to that represents all OCU Stars.”
Unknown man attempts to enter Cokesbury Court apartment Luke Barrett
WEB EDITOR A student was recently harassed outside of her apartment on campus. Anna Pylman, senior, said a man knocked on her door on Sept. 16 and attempted to enter her dorm in the Cokesbury Court Apartments. “Someone started knocking on my door, trying to open it pretty forcefully, so I walked over and I looked through the peephole, and it was someone I didn’t know, so I was like, ‘why are you here?’ and he told me that he was my Uber driver, and then I told him that I didn’t call an Uber, and then he told me that my boyfriend called him for me,” Pylman said. “I don’t have a boyfriend, and I was really freaked out because it was someone I didn’t know, and so I told him forcefully to go away, because I didn’t have a boyfriend, and then he left. But yeah, I was nervous he was going to try to break the door down or something like that.” Pylman said she was unsure why it happened to her specifically. “I have pepper spray and an alarm, but that’s it,” she said. “But the police were very quick to respond. I think they took about five minutes to get there, and I called them right away, so they were really quick, and they said they’d put a report in.” Pylman said she spoke to Elizabeth Richardson, associate director of student housing and apartments, who said no other students had experienced something like this all year. Pylman said she had checked the apartments’ security during move-in. “When my mom was here a few weeks ago, we walked around and some of the gates in the back were broken,” Pylman said. She said Richardson told her one of the gates was recently repaired. Pylman said she was studying for an exam that day and had trouble focusing and thinking straight after the incident. “I don’t know if I can really relax in my dorm room anymore because I’m nervous someone’s going to knock on my door and harass me again,” she said. She said she has started being more cautious on campus and avoids walking alone. Pylman said two people had previously knocked on her door on
M MEDIAOCU.com
Aug. 29. She said two women knocked on her door asking to see the layout of her apartment and they seemed intoxicated. During the first incident Pylman called the police non-emergency number, and on Sept. 16 she called the police emergency number. Other residence halls on campus seem more secure than Cokesbury, Pylman said. She also said she thought there were less police patrols around Cokesbury this year than in previous years. Pylman said her mother called Richardson on Sept. 16, and Pylman talked to Richardson on Sept. 17. Pylman said since the incident happened during the day, the man must have come in through the front gate. She said Richardson told her that closing the gates during the day would be less secure, as the code for the apartments would need to be given out to more people. Casey Kreger, director of housing and residence life, said he heard about the incident through Richardson. Kreger said Cokesbury’s security currently includes the surrounding fence, gates requiring codes and the gates being closed outside of weekday university hours, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. There are also cameras that have 24/7 feeds in the Oklahoma City University Police Department. “On a daily basis, the gates are kept open due to our vendors. The last thing we want to do is hand out security codes to people that are not supposed to be here during off-hours, such as the mail service, UPS, FedEx, any of the contract companies that come out and do any of the repairs down there in any of the apartments, that are hired,” he said. These hours are also set for Cokesbury Club House’s full-time staff and OCUPD patrols in the area, Kreger said. Kreger said the gates at Cokesbury go down sometimes, but they can be fixed by maintenance as long as they are informed the gates are broken. Kreger said maintenance does rounds of the gates every weekday morning, and repairing the gates takes top priority. These rounds include checking each pedestrian and vehicle gate and ensuring the keypads are working. “What I was told was that, after further investigating the situation, it was an Uber driver who came to the property at 10:45 in the morning, so the front gates were open. The Uber driver had went to the wrong apartment from there, knocked on the door, announced that he was an Uber driver, announced that he was there to pick up, that the boyfriend had sent an Uber driver to pick her up, and
obviously the student in that apartment was like, 'This is not my apartment. You shouldn’t be here,' things like that. And then from there, there was no forced entry. Nothing like that happened. And then from there, the person left,” Kreger said. Kreger said he was informed by his staff that Pylman and her mother said the man was an Uber driver and there was no indication of entry or trying the doorknob. Kreger said all reports were turned into OCUPD, and they are investigating further. Pylman said the individual did try to open her door, he seemed aggressive and he did not seem like an actual Uber driver. Kreger said the police investigation will encompass verifying the individual’s identity. The cameras at Cokesbury are monitored 24/7, Kreger said. They have staff on-call 24/7 and the campus police can be reached 24/7, he said. Housing is always looking for opportunities to increase security, and they are always working with their partnership company Campus Living Villages to see what can be done, Kreger said. He said last year a new camera was added to the front gate at Cokesbury to identify cars that pull in. Kreger said students can improve their security by being aware of people who could follow them through gates and coded doors, locking their doors and ensuring their RA on-call phone numbers and the Police Department phone numbers are programmed into their phones. Students who notice any security concerns should inform maintenance or a housing office immediately. “Students have to feel safe to be able to learn on campus. And so, if they don’t feel safe, then we’re not doing our job here being able to equip students enough comfortability within their space to be able to learn,” he said. “They’re the ones that live here 24/7, and so the big thing is to let us know just in case we do miss something.” Kreger said if any students have similar situations, to call the campus police or housing, who will forward it to the police and ensure a report or investigation happens. The OCUPD emergency number is (405) 208-5911. The housing and residence life phone number is (405) 208-6363.
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