THE CAMPUS
February 22, 2017 – Volume 110 Issue 45
Students stuck outside buildings during campus lockdown Miguel Rios EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
The lockdown last week was issued to keep students safe inside school buildings, but some were stuck outside waiting for it to end. A drive-by shooting near campus caused officials to issue the lockdown Feb. 15 when a witness reported that the suspect drove onto campus. Kaleb Ogle, business senior, received the Blue Alert while driving to class. When he arrived at Meinders School of Business, one of his friends was waiting outside by his car, already locked out of the building. “We sat by our trucks for a bit and watched students walk up to the doors then walk away,” Ogle said. “We ended up sitting on the bench by the globe outside Meinders to wait it out, not realizing it would be a 40-minute ordeal.” While they waited, two other students joined them on the bench, he said. “Finally a cop came up to us and said ‘y’all oughta just go back to your vehicles,’ so we walked back to our cars,” Ogle said. “I decided to leave and, 30 seconds later, got the message saying it was all clear, so I went back and ended up going into my class.” Students stuck outside during a lockdown should find somewhere to lock themselves in or get into their cars, said Bradd Brown, chief of police. “It’s really hard to predict everybody’s situation,” he said. “What we want to do is provide the most information we can by Blue Alert to give people the knowledge of what’s going on so they can make decisions for themselves.” Campus police assisted some students who were stuck outside. “We actually helped a few students get into a building,” Brown said. “Our officers were present, of course, and they unlocked the doors to get them inside.” Campus police are always looking for ways to improve, so they met with Lee Brown, the university’s risk manager, to review feedback
and discuss the situation, Bradd Brown said. Lee Brown said campus police did a phenomenal job with the lockdown and providing information, but identified some areas to improve on. “We received reports of some faculty not having full understanding of their role and responsibility as it relates to a lockdown or a shelter in place,” he said. “We also want to educate students on what to do if they’re outside during an event like this.” Students should take a certain level of responsibility in emergency situations and do what’s best for them in the moment, Lee Brown said. He said that, if stuck outside, students should seek shelter elsewhere like a dorm or go to their cars and drive away. He also said every campus computer should have a desktop alert system that takes over the screen and announces a Blue Alert. If faculty or staff are not receiving those, they need to contact Campus Tech as soon as possible. Officials at the meeting also discussed ways to distinguish between a shelter-in-place situation and a lockdown. Shelter-in-place alerts are issued when students need to be away from an outside hazard, typically weather-related. A lockdown is issued when there’s a hostile or dangerous intruder on campus and doors need to be locked. Campus police sent an email Monday detailing emergency procedures and how to act in each situation. “We need to engage a little bit more and train a little bit harder. We need to put safety a little bit more on the forefront of people’s minds,” Lee Brown said. “We don’t want to create an environment of constant worry, fear and always looking over your shoulder, but we also want people to maintain a certain level of vigilance.” Overall, Bradd Brown said he thought the lockdown was handled smoothly. “For the most part, it went pretty well,” he said. “People were able to get inside and get locked down.”
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Talk Back “What was your lockdown experience?”
“We were up in FA 403. We get this message, and we thought it was a joke. We’re like ‘LOL, lockdown.’ Kristen Cerelli is in the room next door, and the doors don’t lock in that room because FA is janky as crap. She brings her whole class in, and we sit on the floor. Kristin was very scared, and Judy was so seriously gonna kill herself for all of us. But they kept us informed, so A+.”
“We were in the police office. We went in there, one of our friends was paying a ticket, and as soon as we walked through the door they were just like, ‘So we’re on lockdown, come in, shut the door, you can just stay with us.’ It was a little concerning. We didn’t really know what was going on, but I felt like we were pretty safe.”
Shendra Stevens acting freshman
Jennifer Wilson nursing senior
Continued on Page 2
Student continues working on universitywide recycling program Zoe Travers NEWS EDITOR
The Repurposing Club’s proposal for recycling bins on campus failed, resulting in further discussion of on-campus recycling. Student senators approved the bill Feb. 3, but Nic Rhodes, Student Government Association president, vetoed it, saying the Senate needed more time to discuss the bill due to concerns about practicality. Senators met Feb. 8 and unanimously decided to sustain the veto. The original bill asked for about $760 to fund the placement of 200 recycling bins in United Methodist Hall. The program’s goal was to urge students to place recycling bins outside their doors on assigned days of the week, according to the proposal. After Rhodes’s veto, several students spoke out in support of the bill. Arrash Allahyar, cell and molecular biology senior,
sent an email Feb. 8 to all members of the Honors Program urging them to support the bill. Despite several students’ emails to senators, the Senate agreed to sustain Rhodes’s veto. “I think it became clear to the senators that there are alternative routes to recycling,” Rhodes said. Rhodes said he has discussed alternatives, such as a smaller pilot program and the approval of housing and facilities workers. “We’ll need to utilize all of the school’s programs so we can make it the best program it can be,” Rhodes said. “I really appreciate the Senate for looking at the facts and making a decision based on that information.” Monica Hiller, elementary education junior and speaker of the Senate, said she originally supported the bill because she saw support from students, but she reconsidered after speaking with Rhodes. “What really got me think-
I think this will eventually come to fruition one way or another. Whoever’s budget it comes out of, it doesn’t matter. It’s going to happen because it needs to and there’s enough people who care about it.
Ken Williams chemistry senior
ing was that there wasn’t a lot of research prior to the bill being written,” Hiller said. She said she would be willing to fund a pilot program requesting 75 bins instead of 200. Hiller also said she would like to see data proving that students will use the bins and that the program will work in compliance with Oklahoma City’s recycling process. “I am in favor of recycling on campus,” Hiller said. “I think something needs to be done. I also think that what was presented is not the best start.” Hiller said she received several emails urging her to con-
sider approval. “I was very pleased to see students and faculty emailing me in support of the bill,” Hiller said. “I loved seeing SGA involved.” Ken Williams, chemistry senior, formed the Repurposing Club and introduced the bill. Williams said he will work with SGA to present a resolution to the administration proposing that money be placed in the facilities budget to fund the project. Williams spoke with Michael Burns, director of housing and residence life, about making the recycling bins part of housing
fees. The bins would come with the room just as the furniture does, and students would be responsible for them and fined if they remove them. Williams said recycling would be beneficial to the students and would improve the university’s image of ecological awareness. “This really just needs to happen,” Williams said. “It’s pathetic that it hasn’t happened yet.” He said he hopes students will support the Repurposing Club while they work to have the bill approved. Williams said he would especially appreciate the support of underclassmen who can continue the program. Members of the Honors Program and TriBeta, the biology fraternity, came forward in support of the Repurposing Club’s plans. “I think this will eventually come to fruition in one way or another,” Williams said. “Whoever’s budget it comes out of, it doesn’t matter. It’s going
to happen because it needs to and there’s enough people who care about it.” Williams said his plans for the Repurposing Club include composting food from the caf that would otherwise be thrown out. “College is the perfect environment to set people up to do a little bit of something to help the huge global issue that’s really going to be on the forefront of our generation’s minds throughout our lives,” he said. Williams said he hopes student-led action will lead to similar programs in the future. Students can join the Repurposing Club by joining their Facebook group, OCU Repurposing Club. For more information, email Williams at kowilliams@my.okcu.edu.
Religious solicitors on campus disturb, pressure students Sage Tokach ASSOCIATE EDITOR
Some students have expressed discomfort when people visit campus to promote their religions. The most frequently seen group consists of elderly men from Gideon International, an evangelical Christian organization, who station themselves on sidewalks around the quad to pass out free miniature Bibles. Letting the group onto campus is a bad idea, said Melaina Riley, religion junior. “I think here at OCU, especially in the religion world, we work really hard to make sure we are welcoming and accepting and accommodating of everybody,” Riley said. “Religion has such a negative connotation for a lot of people, and, by having people who don’t necessarily agree with our theology here from off campus, we run the risk of undoing all the work we’ve put in.” Off-campus entities must go through an approval process and follow a set of soliciting rules to be let onto campus. Any religion-related solicitations must seek approval through the office of Religious Life, according to Page 20 of the student handbook. Elizabeth Horton-Ware, director of religious life, said she sets
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up a meeting with anyone who emails or calls about wanting to promote their religion at OCU. “Student groups from here get precedent over outside groups, but, either way, we will discuss the group’s background and intentions before permitting them to solicit,” Horton-Ware said. “I’m new this year, so I haven’t spoken with the Gideon group, but I met with one group of Christians who wanted to come onto campus. They had no specific church affiliation, and we had no background with them, so I declined their request.” Officials historically have permitted them to hand out Bibles under the condition that they do not approach or pressure students, said Rita Himes, church relations administrative assistant. Meagan Chew, acting senior, said she doesn’t mind if the group offers her a Bible, but she doesn’t think the group respects the views of other religions. “Last semester I was asked four different times on the way to my 8 a.m. class if I wanted a New Testament, and they kept shoving the books in my face, even when I said ‘no thank you’ several times,” Chew said. “I can get them off my back by telling them that I’m Jewish, but I feel completely judged afterward, as they usually give me a really dirty look. I respect that they are on campus and that they can have different views from me. Why can’t they respect my religious views in return?”
Dr. Charles Neff, vice president for university-church relations, sent an email Feb. 9 to the campus community in response to a report of proselytization-promotion of a religion or belief for the purpose of conversion-where people from an off-campus group aggressively attempted to get students off campus to baptize them. “The university promotes religious dialogue and faith sharing, but never for the purpose of proselytizing and never in an aggressive or demeaning manner,” Neff wrote in the email. Neff encouraged students to alert campus police at 405-2085001 if they encounter someone behaving in a similar way. Not all students oppose the outside promotion of religion. Abigail Padgett, nursing senior, said she values the visitors’ missions but wishes there was more of a personal connection. “I feel the personal, intentional relationships built on any foundation, especially that of faith, could be a more effective outreach method,” Padgett said. “I think God uses their presence for good, regardless, but I see our college campus needing more personal and relational-centered mission work.”
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