Wednesday, March 11, 2015

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FOR A TIMELINE OF EVENTS INVOLVING THE RECENT SAE VIDEO AND RELATED CONTENT VISIT OUDAILY.COM

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2 015 C R O W N F I N A L I S T

W E D N E S DA Y, M A R C H 11, 2 015

Board fills prominent positions Board appoints provost, consulting OU meterologist ANDREW CLARK News Reporter

The OU Board of Regents appointed two people to major positions at the university during their regularly scheduled meeting Tuesday. The board named Kyle Ha r p e r a s S e n i o r V i c e President and Provost at O U. Ha r p e r ha s s e r ve d as interim senior vice

GARY ENGLAND

KYLE HARPER

president and provost since the former provost, Nancy Mergler, resigned in June. The board also approved Gar y England, longtime KWTV weatherman, as OU’s Consulting

Meteorologist-inResidence. “The New York Times” has called England “ T h e We a t h e r G o d o f Oklahoma City.” In his position at the university, England will kick off an online video series about severe weather to educate individuals, according to the press release. Andrew Clark, Andrew.T.Clark-1@ou.edu

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JJ/THE DAILY

OU President David Boren attends the Regents meeting Wednesday January 28.

YA JIN/THE DAILY

Students hold a fingerprint banner before National Pan-Hellenic Council demonstration Tuesday evening out side of the Huston Huffman Fitness Center. The participants then marched through campus to the former Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity house, located at 730 College Ave. The students marched in celebration of the house’s closure.

Sooners stop traffic to celebrate closed SAE house

Demonstrators marched from Huff to now-closed fraternity house

Bell-Ard, a senior at the demonstration. “Hopefully this leads to larger changes.” As the demonstrators marched down College Avenue, students came out of greek houses and watched from windows. Several members of Sigma Phi Epsilon came out of their fraternity house and joined the group in the march. “There are a lot of people outside of the OU bubble who need to hear what is happening here,” Bell-Ard said. “[We DAISY CREAGER News Reporter need] to create a form of healing and to use this as momentum for larger structural issues. This was a starting point for anti-blackness.” Members of National Pan-Hellenic Norman police officers blocked traffic on Council and other demonstrators “[We need] to create College Avenue with their cars, and students stopped traffic Tuesday night when a form of healing stood in the parking lot across the street of they marched from Houston Huffington and to use this as the former SAE house to watch. Center to the former Sigma Alpha Epsilon The students gathered in the house’s house, chanting, singing and holding a momentum for parking lot for about an hour, and sang, banner. larger structural chanted and spoke about changes that need The march was a celebration of the closed SAE house after the video surfaced issues. This was a to be made on campus and what members National Pan-Hellenic Council should do Sunday. starting point for of moving forward. The demonstration started at Huston Bell-Ard spoke about how racism requires anti-blackness.” Huffman Fitness Center, where demona cultural change. strators, more than 200 people, used paint MARQUIS BELL-ARD, “What we were saying was jarring,” Bellto put their thumbprints on a white banA SENIOR AT THE Ard said about the student speakers. “I think ner. They marched down the South Oval DEMONSTRATION that they felt the powerfulness but some of and to the former SAE house parking lot, these conversations won’t be easy.” located at 730 College Ave., chanting “not Rashid Campbell, African American studies senior, said on our campus” and singing “Lean On Me.” “We need to move beyond songs,” said Marquis students need work for campus and cultural changes.

WEATHER Sunny with a high of 73, low of 45. Updates: @AndrewGortonWX

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YA JIN/THE DAILY

Students yell “Not On Our Campus” during the National PanHellenic Council demonstration Tuesday evening outside of the Huston Huffman Fitness Center.

“I need y’all to say: I’m the change,” Campbell said. Campbell also said that though some of the things demonstrators were saying were harsh, such as how white people embrace black music and culture but don’t embrace black people, that was the point. “If you are not uncomfortable, you are not learning,” Campbell said. Public relations junior Emmi Coatney said the things she heard at the demonstration were moving and interesting. SEE MARCH PAGE 3

OU YAK OF THE DAY

OUDaily

@OUDaily

theoklahomadaily

“I have had ‘if you’re happy and you know it clap your hands’ stuck in my head the last three days. Dear god make it stop.”

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