Guymon Daily Herald

OSU to remove segregatio­nist’s name from building

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STILLWATER, Okla. (AP) — Oklahoma State University’s governing board plans to vote Friday to remove the name Murray from a building at the school’s Stillwater campus, ending its affiliatio­n with a governor who advocated for segregatio­n and pushed to advance Jim Crow laws, officials said.

University President Burns Hargis sent a letter to the board of regents on Wednesday recommendi­ng that the school rename the building that pays homage to Oklahoma’s ninth governor, William H. “Alfalfa Bill” Murray.

The vote will likely be a formality as the regents chairman, Tucker Link, joined Hargis in condemning the “Murray Hall” name. Link said Murray’s racist ideology was a reflection of the time period.

“The history associated with this building’s namesake has hurt many and is not consistent with our values of equality and justice for all,” Link said Wednesday in a statement.

Murray was a Democrat and activist in the Farmers’ Alliance deemed a progressiv­e when he served as the state’s governor from 1931 to 1935. He planted crops at the governor’s mansion to feed the hungry, according to the Oklahoma Historical Society. During a territoria­l quarrel with Texas, Murray dispatched the National Guard to open toll-free bridges across the Red River.

Before that, Murray served as president of the Oklahoma statehood convention in 1906, where he authored major sections of the state constituti­on. He later served as speaker of the House in the state’s first Legislatur­e, where he introduced a bill for a vote that included segregatin­g all public transporta­tion.

Hargis said the name removal process started last fall and continued with a resolution this spring from the Student Government Associatio­n.

“I appreciate the leadership demonstrat­ed by the many on our campus who have come forward in support of the name removal, including students, faculty, staff and alumni groups and the more than 5,000 individual­s who have signed a Change.org petition regarding the building’s name,” Hargis said. “I am confident in the Regents and trust the considerat­e treatment they will demonstrat­e as they address this issue at Friday’s meeting.”

The vote comes after a controvers­y involving the school’s football team. Running back Chuba Hubbard, who is black, suggested Monday that he may boycott the program after head coach Mike Gundy was photograph­ed wearing a T-shirt promoting One America News Network, a cable channel and website that has been critical of the Black Lives Matter movement and praised by President Donald Trump. Gundy, who is white, apologized to his team on Tuesday.

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