Event Notices
ACLU Calls for Angie Debo Nominations
8.22.11
Author and Activist Angie Debo
The ACLU of Oklahoma is currently accepting nominations for the Angie Debo Civil Liberties Award. The award will be presented at this year’s Bill of Rights Celebration on November 12th. The Angie Debo Award was established in 1977 to recognize those who have provided exceptional defense to the Bill of Rights throughout the year or throughout their lives. Nominations for these awards must be received by the affiliate office no later than September 16th. They may be mailed to the ACLU of Oklahoma at 3000 Paseo Drive, Oklahoma City, OK 73103 or emailed to Tamya Cox.
Nomination letters should be no longer than three pages and should include the following: 1) name, current address, and telephone numbers (business and home) of the nominee, 2) a description of the nominee’s worthiness, 3) a statement that the nominee has given consent to the nomination, 4) biographical information about the nominee attached as an enclosure, 5) letters of endorsement from others as optional enclosures and 6) the name, address, and telephone numbers (home and business) of the person making the nomination.
Don’t Hide Your Pride! Free t-shirts to first 40 volunteers!
6.9.11
Join the ACLU to march in this year’s Pride Parade. The first 40 people who volunteer to march with the ACLU will receive a free ACLU of Oklahoma Pride T-shirt. The parade will be held on Sunday, June 26th. Those wishing to march should arrive no later than 5 pm. The parade begins at 6 pm starting at Memorial Park. For more information, or to volunteer, please e-mail Allie Shinn!
Tamya Cox will address Oklahoma County Democrats at luncheon
Tamya Cox, Legislative Counsel, demonstrates how to follow a bill in the Oklahoma Legislature.
Tamya Cox, Deputy Director and Legislative Council, will be the guest speaker at the Friday Noon Speaker Luncheon of the Oklahoma County Democratic Party on Friday, June 3. The luncheon series is held at the Boulevard Cafeteria, 525 NW 11th Street.
She will speak about how to successfully defeat the placement of an anti-affirmative action state question on the 2012 presidential ballot.
Ms. Cox is a graduate of the Oklahoma City University School of Law; she also holds a Bachelor of Arts Degree in Broadcast Journalism with an emphasis in public relations from Oklahoma State University. Ms. Cox’s service with the ACLU of Oklahoma began in 2005 as Litigation Coordinator.
The ACLU of Oklahoma City University to Host Lindsay Earls as Speaker
3.8.10
Lindsay Earls
The ACLU of Oklahoma City University is honored to have Lindsay Earls as a speaker on April 15, at 5:30pm in the Homsey Moot Courtroom of Sarkey’s Law Center. Earls was a high school student in Tecumseh, Oklahoma, in 1999. The school had developed a policy in 1998 that required all students in grades 7-12 to submit to a urine test before joining any extracurricular activities. Earls was on the academic team and show choir, and although she took the drug test and passed, she filed a lawsuit claiming the policy violated the Fourth Amendment’s prohibition against unreasonable search and seizure.
Her position was denied by the district court, but supported by the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals. Her case reached the United States Supreme Court in 2002, where Earls was ruled against in a 5-4 decision, upholding the “special needs exception” referred to in Vernonia School District v. Acton. She was represented throughout the process by ACLU attorney Graham Boyd.
After leaving Tecumseh, Earls went on to graduate from Dartmouth and is currently a first-year law student at the University of Tulsa. The speaking engagement will begin with a short video about the case, then proceed to comments from Earls More >




