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Oklahoma Student Who Led Racist Chant to Meet With Black Leaders

OKLAHOMA CITY — A former University of Oklahoma student who led a racist chant apologized personally to the leader of Oklahoma’s Legislative Black Caucus and plans to meet with more civic leaders before speaking publicly about the incident for the first time, a state senator said Wednesday.

Sen. Anastasia Pittman, an Oklahoma City Democrat, said the student, Levi Pettit, called her personally to apologize after he and another fraternity member were caught on video earlier this month leading a chant that referenced lynching and used a racial slur to say Black students would never be admitted to the university’s Sigma Alpha Epsilon chapter.

Pittman said she has arranged for Pettit to meet with Black students, elected officials, local pastors and civil rights leaders in Oklahoma.

“I wanted him to be educated on some of the struggles they’ve endured,” Pittman said. “I think that will enlighten him and give him a new perspective on a culture that he is completely unaware of.”

Among those scheduled to attend the private meeting is Marilyn Luper-Hildreth, the daughter of the late civil rights leader Clara Luper, an Oklahoma City schoolteacher who led sit-ins at segregated Oklahoma City drugstore counters in the late 1950s.

After the meeting, Pittman said Pettit also will speak at an afternoon press conference at a Baptist church on the city’s predominantly Black northeast side.

Pettit’s parents, who live in the Dallas area, issued an apology on his behalf two weeks ago after the video’s release caused an uproar on the university’s campus in Norman, which is located about 20 miles south of Oklahoma City. A second student from the Dallas area, Parker Rice, also issued a statement apologizing for his role in the chant.

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