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University Of Missouri Football Players BOYCOTT FOOTBALL Over Black Activist’s Hunger Strike

Posted By Eric Owens On 4:39 AM 11/08/2015 In | No Comments

Over 30 black football players for the University of Missouri football team have pledged to stop playing football and to avoid all team activities until Tim Wolfe, the president of the University of Missouri system, resigns.

On Saturday night, social media swirled with a photo of 32 black Mizzou players — many of them locked in arms — along with this statement: “The athletes of color on the University of Missouri football team truly believe ‘injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.’ We will no longer participate in any football related activities until President Tim Wolfe resigns or is removed due to his negligence toward marginalized students’ experiences. WE ARE UNITED!!!!!”

Here is the photo as tweeted by a Mizzou group called the Legion of Black Collegians:

The focus of the calls for Wolfe to resign is a hunger strike by Jonathan Butler, a University of Missouri graduate student.

Butler — who appears in the photo with the 32 players — wants to force Wolfe’s resignation because of a handful of recent incidents which have occurred on the Columbia, Mo. campus.

In a letter to school officials posted on his Facebook page, Butler indicated that he began his hunger strike because someone in a pickup truck allegedly shouted a racist insult at a black student government member, because state law prevents Planned Parenthood from performing on-campus abortions and because someone drew a swastika with human feces in a dormitory bathroom.

Some observers have suggested that the bathroom swastika may be a hoax. Why, law professor blogger Ann Althouse has asked, for example, would any dedicated racial supremacist create a swastika out of human feces?

Butler admits in the letter that none of the incidents he cites are Wolfe’s fault. Nevertheless, Butler has concluded, “as a collection of incidents at the university, they are his responsibility to address.”

This summer, prior to Butler’s decision to go on a hunger strike because of racism allegations, the graduate student’s substantially different agenda focused on a change in University of Missouri policy which ended subsidized health insurance for graduate students. To Butler’s chagrin, school officials also stopped offering certain grad student tuition waivers and tore down some graduate student housing.

The Columbia Daily Tribune shows a robust-looking Butler acting as a self-appointed “chant leader” during a “day of action” on Aug. 26. He carried a large bullhorn.

School officials have said the Affordable Care Act — Obamacare — forced them to stop subsidizing grad student health insurance.

Butler’s hunger strike has now reached a week in length. He swears he won’t eat anything (including multivitamins) until Wolfe, the MU system president, resigns.

Wolfe met with Butler and a group of student leaders on Friday. In a statement, the top MU bureaucrat described Butler as an influential voice in the social justice movement. Wolfe also said he is worried about Butler’s condition.

Groups of protesters have marched across the University of Missouri campus for the last 6 days in response to Butler’s ongoing hunger strike. The protesters are calling themselves Concerned Student 1950. (The name relates to the year the first black student matriculated at Mizzou.)

“Racism lives at the University of Missouri,” a protester shouted during a typical day of protest, reports the Missourian.

“Two black, female students — including myself — were called the n-word by four white males while being recorded outside of the rec center,” another protester yelled while standing on a chair in a crowded dining hall.

Here is Wolfe on Friday night attempting to address concerns about “systematic oppression” from some viscerally angry protesters — presumably students at Mizzou, the state’s flagship university.

Several University of Missouri football players have tweeted support for Butler’s hunger strike and for the protest movement including starting running back Russell Hansbrough, cornerback John Gibson III and injured running back Trevon Walters.

Backup linebacker Grant Jones, the son of MU running backs coach Brian Jones, said the 32 players in the image have deep support from the entire team.

Missouri’s players were available to pose for a protest photo this weekend because they lost 31-13 at home on Thursday night by Mississippi State.

University of Missouri football team spokesman Chad Moller has issued a statement about the prospective refusal of the football team to play football.

“The department of athletics is aware of the declarations made tonight by many of our student-athletes,” Moller said, according to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. “We all must come together with leaders from across our campus to tackle these challenging issues and we support our student-athletes right to do so.”

The Tigers are having a rough year. Thursday’s loss pushed the team’s record to 4-5 (1-5 in the SEC).

Mizzou’s remaining games are against Brigham Young, Tennessee and Arkansas. The BYU game is on Saturday in Kansas City.

Follow Eric on Twitter. Like Eric on Facebook. Send education-related story tips to erico@dailycaller.com.

Article printed from The Daily Caller: http://dailycaller.com

URL to article: http://dailycaller.com/2015/11/08/university-of-missouri-football-players-boycott-football-over-black-activists-hunger-strike/

Offline PzLdr

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Re: How the Missouri football team just took down its university president
« Reply #1 on: November 08, 2015, 01:13:13 pm »
If they're on scholarship, cancel them. Mickey D is always looking for a few good men.
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Offline mountaineer

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Re: How the Missouri football team just took down its university president
« Reply #2 on: November 08, 2015, 01:13:47 pm »
Sounds like grounds to revoke their athletic scholarships.
Quote
Black Mizzou players say they'll strike until president Tim Wolfe resigns
ESPN

A group of black players on Missouri says it will stop participating in football activities until university system president Tim Wolfe resigns.

The announcement came via Twitter on Saturday night in a post by Missouri's Legion of Black Collegians. It comes after several recent racial incidents on Missouri's campus, and with Wolfe under fire for how he's handled them.

The tweet included a photograph of 32 black men, including starting running back Russell Hansbrough.

"The athletes of color on the University of Missouri football team truly believe 'Injustice Anywhere is a threat to Justice Everywhere,'" the tweet read. "We will no longer participate in any football related activities until President Tim Wolfe resigns or is removed due to his negligence toward marginalized students' experiences. WE ARE UNITED!!!!!"


Missouri issued a statement later Saturday.

"The department of athletics is aware of the declarations made tonight by many of our student-athletes," it said. "We all must come together with leaders from across our campus to tackle these challenging issues and we support our student-athletes right to do so."

The Tigers' losing streak reached four games with a 31-13 loss to Mississippi State on Thursday night. Missouri next plays BYU on Saturday in Kansas City, Missouri.

Racial tension has been brewing at Missouri's campus in Columbia since September, when Payton Head, the Missouri Students Association president and an African-American, said he was racially abused while walking. Students protested when it took nearly a week for the university chancellor to address the incident.

Then in October, a student yelled the N-word at members of the Legion of Black Collegians in a campus plaza while they were rehearsing for a play. And later that month, someone smeared a swastika with their own feces on a bathroom wall in a new residence hall.

The university downplayed the incident, and more backlash toward administrators ensued -- with Wolfe enduring the most. Wolfe met with Butler and student groups on Friday to discuss the university's handling of racial harassment cases.

Jonathan Butler, a Missouri grad student, began a hunger strike against Wolfe on Monday, saying Wolfe has failed to respond to student concerns. A change.org petition to remove Wolfe from office has over 2,000 supporters.

Now, the Tigers football team is involved.

According to the Columbia Daily Tribune, 42 of the 64 players on Missouri's current depth chart are African-American. Several took to social media on Saturday night to address the protest, with one, cornerback John Gibson, saying: "(The decision) has nothing to do with our coaches. Our coaches are 100% behind us. Including the white ones."

Missouri's campus in Columbia sits about two hours west of Ferguson, the St. Louis suburb where tensions erupted following the shooting death of 18-year-old Michael Brown. Brown, who was black, was unarmed when he was shot by a white police officer during a confrontation in a street in August 2014. His death sparked ongoing protests and helped spawn the national "Black Lives Matter'' movement rebuking police treatment of minorities.
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Re: How the Missouri football team just took down its university president
« Reply #3 on: November 08, 2015, 01:27:47 pm »
They should immediately cancel the football season and expel every player participating in the boycott.   This is what ADULTS would do.

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Offline Lando Lincoln

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Re: How the Missouri football team just took down its university president
« Reply #4 on: November 08, 2015, 01:51:24 pm »
They should immediately cancel the football season and expel every player participating in the boycott.   This is what ADULTS would do.

Absolutely agree.  Those in the picture need to be suspended immediately.  The rest need to be informed, one missed practice, one missed meeting, or anything deemed to have been contrived to damage the school or product on the field and the program gets shut down for the season.  Period. 
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Re: How the Missouri football team just took down its university president
« Reply #5 on: November 08, 2015, 10:58:10 pm »
They should immediately cancel the football season and expel every player participating in the boycott.   This is what ADULTS would do.
Why punish those who aren't in the boycott? It's not the whole team. Let the rest of the team play the rest of the season if they wish. It's a golden opportunity for them.
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Offline mountaineer

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Re: How the Missouri football team just took down its university president
« Reply #6 on: November 09, 2015, 02:06:44 pm »
Pressure builds for U-Missouri president to quit over racial tensions
NBC News via AOL (video at link)
Nov. 9, 2015
Quote
The University of Missouri's governing board scheduled an emergency meeting amid mounting calls for  beleaguered President Tim Wolfe to quit over his handling of racial issues on campus.

The top state lawmaker overseeing the college added his voice to the movement to oust Wolfe, which got a boost over the weekend when a group of black Missouri football players said they won't play until the president resigns or is removed.

Wolfe, though, gave no indication that he would step aside — even as the university's football team canceled practice Sunday and the team's coach expressed his support for the protesters.

"It is clear to all of us that change is needed, and we appreciate the thoughtfulness and passion which have gone into the sharing of concerns," Wolfe said in a statement. The university is working on a "systemwide diversity and inclusion strategy" that is due to be rolled out in April, he said.

Wolfe has apologized for his reaction to members of the group Concerned Student 1950 — named for the year the university accepted its first black student — who tried to approach him during the school's October homecoming parade to address "Mizzou's history of racial violence and exclusivity."

Wolfe's car drove away, which Wolfe acknowledged made it seem "like I did not care."

 However Steve Cookson — the Republican chairman of the state House Higher Education Committee — said Sunday the protests were just the latest in a string of incidents that made it clear that Wolfe "can no longer effectively lead."

"All of these problems stem from the University of Missouri system slipping behind over the last few years in everything from faculty productivity, to fiscal health of several of the colleges, to national rankings," culminating in Wolfe's "callous reaction to racial sensitivity issues," Cookson said in a statement on the Missouri political site The Missouri Times calling for Wolfe to step down.

Later in the day, the university system's Board of Curators called a special meeting for Monday morning on campus in Columbia, Missouri.

John Fougere, a spokesman for the statewide college system, said the board would be meeting in closed executive session — which under state law means it would be discussing confidential matters involving contracts, personnel matters or records protected by privacy regulations.

Chancellor R. Loftin Bowen, meanwhile, traveled to campus Sunday to talk with protesters.

Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon said in a statement Sunday that the "concerns must be addressed" because "our colleges and universities must be havens of trust and understanding."

And Democratic Sen. Claire McCaskill, who graduated from the university, agreed Sunday that the school's administration needs to act.

"At this point I think it is essential that the University of Missouri Board of Curators send a clear message to the students at Mizzou that there is an unqualified commitment to address racism on campus," she said in a statement. ...

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Re: How the Missouri football team just took down its university president
« Reply #7 on: November 09, 2015, 04:53:27 pm »
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-fix/wp/2015/11/09/missouri-football-players-and-the-untapped-political-power-of-the-college-student-athlete/

By Philip Bump November 9 at 11:07 AM

For the past week, a graduate student at the University of Missouri has been on a hunger strike, hoping to force the school system's president to resign his position over a perceived failure to address racist incidents on campus. The student, Jonathan Butler, objects to president Tim Wolfe's lack of response to "racist, sexist, homophobic, etc., incidents that have dynamically disrupted the learning experience" at Missouri, as he wrote in a letter.

It's a dramatic step — and one that Butler pledged to maintain until "either Tim Wolfe is removed from office or my internal organs fail and my life is lost." But the issues at the core of his protest didn't gain widespread national attention until a few dozen other students weighed in: the University of Missouri football team, which announced that it would not play until Wolfe left his position. On Friday, there were a few hundred tweets about the University of Missouri. On Sunday, there were nearly 16,000.

Update: Wolfe announced his resignation Monday morning, two days after the football team's announcement.

There are a few reasons that the football team's protest garnered more attention — and was probably more likely to yield results. Given that this is fundamentally a political protest, it probably won't come as a surprise that those reasons overlap heavily with methods of leveraging political power.

First, the team is the public face of the student body. Any number of people who live in the state but don't have relatives in the University of Missouri system likely know student-athletes by name. Butler did a good job of making his concerns known, but having students already known and respected by the community make a similar argument lowers the bar for sympathy to the cause.

Second, the team leveraged pressure on an immediate timeline. Next Saturday, the Missouri Tigers are scheduled to play the Brigham Young Cougars. As Saturday neared, the school was under increasing pressure to resolve the dispute as public attention to the conflict continued to grow. Butler's threat was more dire, of course, but its duration was unclear.

Third, the team's protest threatened immediate economic damage to the university. This is perhaps the biggest issue at play. A contract between Missouri and BYU obtained by the Kansas City Star reveals that cancellation on the part of the Tigers would result in a $1 million fine to be paid to BYU within 30 days of the cancellation.

What's particularly interesting is that the $1 million fine is a flat sum set because "actual damages — including those relating to public relations, radio and television broadcasts, lost profits, and other consequential damages — would be difficult or impossible to calculate," in the words of the agreement. Which is almost certainly true.

According to data compiled by USA Today, Missouri's athletic program generated $83.7 million in revenue last year, on $80.2 million in cost — a net of $3.5 million in profit. That's a lot of money — but it's actually fairly low for a public university. Of the 225 Division I schools that have an obligation to release that data, Missouri ranks 32nd in revenue. The top five schools are Oregon, Texas, Michigan, Alabama and Ohio State — which saw a combined $172.3 million in profit on $813 million in revenue.

That's the fourth point: There's huge long-term economic power in college football programs. The Tigers aren't having a great season, at 4-5 after four straight losses. They're still in contention for one of college football's countless bowl games, assuming they close the season strong. If they did make a bowl, the school would get some amount of money as a bonus. Last year, schools that played in even the least-known games got six-figure payouts.

There are any number of other economic pipelines that are put at risk. The University of Michigan — a much bigger program than Missouri's — signed a deal with Nike worth $11 million a year for 15 years. That's just to allow Nike to outfit their teams in games. Missouri gets $2.2 million — plus bonuses if those Nike uniforms make it to the Bowl Championship Series (which they will not) featuring the very top teams in the country.

Those television agreements that are mentioned in the BYU contract are another thing altogether. Missouri is in the SEC Conference, which means they earn $15.6 million per year just to be seen on the SEC Network on cable. By the 2018 season, the Mercury News's Jon Wilner estimated in March, the school will get $35.6 million in overall television revenue — and that's a conservative estimate.

How much the school would lose if the team boycotted even one game is hard to say. But swinging back to politics, it's easy to see where the leverage lies. The hunger striker, Butler, risked embarrassing the university badly by letting a student be hospitalized (or worse) over its policies. The football team was already embarrassing the university, but threatened economic damage as well. The operating budget for the school in 2014-2015 anticipates $1.19 billion in revenue and $1.16 billion in costs. The $84 million generated by all of the schools' sports programs is 7 percent of that revenue total — and it's safe to say that football is a lot of that $84 million.

For years, the debate over college athletics has centered on whether or not athletes should be paid. The fight at the University of Missouri reveals that the football team even at a less-lucrative school can exert significant political power. Which should make the administrations at those more-lucrative schools awfully nervous.
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Offline Fishrrman

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Re: How the Missouri football team just took down its university president
« Reply #8 on: November 09, 2015, 04:56:06 pm »
Jes' one more white coward...

Offline GourmetDan

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Re: How the Missouri football team just took down its university president
« Reply #9 on: November 09, 2015, 05:03:19 pm »
Jes' one more white coward...

I'm sure it wasn't his decision but that he was told by the Board to step down.

It's always about money and the football program brings in a lot of money...


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Offline flowers

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Re: How the Missouri football team just took down its university president
« Reply #10 on: November 09, 2015, 05:12:36 pm »
 **nononono*  Why are the majority of this country allowing this to happen??? 


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Re: How the Missouri football team just took down its university president
« Reply #11 on: November 09, 2015, 05:14:43 pm »
Oh...we are going to see more of this!  Until someone stands up to it, this will be repeated. The left always uses their tried and true methods book until something doesn't work any more.

Coming to a big time football program near you...I'm thinking something in the state of Michigan or maybe Floriduh.
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Offline alicewonders

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Re: How the Missouri football team just took down its university president
« Reply #12 on: November 09, 2015, 05:16:23 pm »
Have to say that colleges have brought this on themselves.  Coddling the perennially offended, now being hoisted on their own petard.



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Re: How the Missouri football team just took down its university president
« Reply #13 on: November 09, 2015, 05:21:32 pm »
http://www.foxnews.com/sports/2015/11/08/missouri-protest-list-demands-issued-to-university.html

Missouri protest: List of demands issued to university

excerpt:
I. We demand that the University of Missouri System President, Tim Wolfe, writes a handwritten apology to the Concerned Student 1-­9-­5-0 demonstrators and holds a press conference in the Mizzou Student Center reading the letter. In the letter and at the press conference, Tim Wolfe must acknowledge his white male privilege, recognize that systems of oppression exist, and provide a verbal commitment to fulfilling Concerned Student 1-9-5-­0 demands. We want Tim Wolfe to admit to his gross negligence, allowing his driver to hit one of the demonstrators, consenting to the physical violence of bystanders, and lastly refusing to intervene when Columbia Police Department used excessive force with demonstrators.

II. We demand the immediate removal of Tim Wolfe as UM system president. After his removal a new amendment to UM system policies must be established to have all future UM system president and Chancellor positions be selected by a collective of students, staff, and faculty of diverse backgrounds.

III. We demand that the University of Missouri meets the Legion of Black Collegians' demands that were presented in 1969 for the betterment of the black community.

IV. We demand that the University of Missouri creates and enforces comprehensive racial awareness and inclusion curriculum throughout all campus departments and units, mandatory for all students, faculty, staff, and administration. This curriculum must be vetted, maintained, and overseen by a board comprised of students, staff, and faculty of color.

V. We demand that by the academic year 2017-2018, the University of Missouri increases the percentage of black faculty and staff campus-wide to 10%.

VI. We demand that the University of Missouri composes a strategic 10 year plan by May 1, 2016 that will increase retention rates for marginalized students, sustain diversity curriculum and training, and promote a more safe and inclusive campus.

VII. We demand that the University of Missouri increases funding and resources for the University of Missouri Counseling Center for the purpose of hiring additional mental health professionals -- particularly those of color, boosting mental health outreach and programming across campus, increasing campus-­wide awareness and visibility of the counseling center, and reducing lengthy wait times for prospective clients.

VIII. We demand that the University of Missouri increases funding, resources, and personnel for the social justices centers on campus for the purpose of hiring additional professionals, particularly those of color, boosting outreach and programming across campus, and increasing campus-­wide awareness and visibility.
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Re: How the Missouri football team just took down its university president
« Reply #14 on: November 09, 2015, 05:23:00 pm »
http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/U/US_UNIVERSITY_OF_MISSOURI_TURMOIL?SITE=AP&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2015-11-09-11-24-09


Nov 9, 12:19 PM EST

University of Missouri president leaves over race complaints

By SUMMER BALLENTINE and ALAN SCHER ZAGIER
Associated Press

 COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) -- The president of the University of Missouri system resigned Monday with the football team and others on campus in open revolt over his handling of racial tensions at the school.

President Tim Wolfe said his resignation was effective immediately. He made the announcement at the start of what had been expected to be a lengthy closed-door meeting of the school's governing board.

The complaints came to a head a day earlier, when at least 30 black football players announced that they would not play until the president was gone. One student went on a weeklong hunger strike.

Wolfe took "full responsibility for the frustration" students had expressed and said their complaints were "clear" and "real."

"This is not the way change comes about," he said, alluding to recent protests, in a halting statement that was simultaneously apologetic, clumsy and defiant. "We stopped listening to each other."

He urged students, faculty and staff to use the resignation "to heal and start talking again to make the changes necessary."

A poor audio feed for the one board member who was attending the meeting via conference call left Wolfe standing awkwardly at the podium for nearly three minutes after only being able to read the first sentence of his statement.

For months, black student groups have complained of racial slurs and other slights on the overwhelmingly white flagship campus of the state's four-college system. Frustrations flared during a homecoming parade Oct. 10 when black protesters blocked Wolfe's car, and he did not get out and talk to them. They were removed by police.

Black members of the football team joined the outcry on Saturday night. By Sunday, a campus sit-in had grown in size, graduate student groups planned walkouts and politicians began to weigh in.

Until Monday, Wolfe did not indicate that he had any intention of stepping down. He agreed in a statement issued Sunday that "change is needed" and said the university was working to draw up a plan by April to promote diversity and tolerance.

The Tigers' next game is Saturday against Brigham Young University at Arrowhead Stadium, the home of the NFL's Kansas City Chiefs, and canceling it could cost the school more than $1 million.

"The athletes of color on the University of Missouri football team truly believe 'Injustice Anywhere is a threat to Justice Everywhere,'" the players said in a statement. "We will no longer participate in any football related activities until President Tim Wolfe resigns or is removed due to his negligence toward marginalized students' experience. WE ARE UNITED!!!!!"

Head football coach Gary Pinkel expressed solidarity on Twitter, posting a picture of the team and coaches locking arms. The tweet said: "The Mizzou Family stands as one. We are united. We are behind our players."

A statement issued by Pinkel and Missouri athletic director Mack Rhoades linked the return of the protesting football players to the end of a hunger strike by a black graduate student who began the effort Nov. 2 and has vowed to not eat until Wolfe is gone.

"Our focus right now is on the health of Jonathan Butler, the concerns of our student-athletes and working with our community to address this serious issue," the statement said.

After Wolfe's announcement, Butler said in a tweet that his strike was over.

The protests began after the student government president, who is black, said in September that people in a passing pickup truck shouted racial slurs at him. In early October, members of a black student organization said slurs were hurled at them by an apparently drunken white student.

Also, a swastika drawn in feces was found recently in a dormitory bathroom.

Many of the protests have been led by an organization called Concerned Student 1950, which gets its name from the year the university accepted its first black student. Its members besieged Wolfe's car at the parade, and they have been conducting a sit-in on a campus plaza since last Monday.

Two trucks flying Confederate flags drove past the site Sunday, a move many saw as an attempt at intimidation. At least 150 students gathered at the plaza Sunday night to pray, sing and read Bible verses, a larger crowd than on previous days. Many planned to camp there overnight, despite temperatures that had dropped into the upper 30s.

Also joining in the protest effort were two graduate student groups that called for walkouts Monday and Tuesday and the student government at the Columbia campus, the Missouri Students Association.

The association said in a letter Sunday to the system's governing body that there had been "an increase in tension and inequality with no systemic support" since last year's fatal shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, which is about 120 miles east of Columbia.

Brown, an unarmed black 18-year-old, was shot and killed by a white police officer during a struggle, and his death helped spawn the "Black Lives Matter" movement rebuking police treatment of minorities.

The association said Wolfe heads a university leadership that "has undeniably failed us and the students that we represent."

"He has not only enabled a culture of racism since the start of his tenure in 2012, but blatantly ignored and disrespected the concerns of students," the group wrote.

Concerned Student 1950 has demanded, among other things, that Wolfe "acknowledge his white male privilege," that he is immediately removed, and that the school adopt a mandatory racial-awareness program and hire more black faculty and staff.

One of the sit-in participants, Abigail Hollis, a black undergraduate, said the campus is "unhealthy and unsafe for us."

"The way white students are treated is in stark contrast to the way black students and other marginalized students are treated, and it's time to stop that," Hollis said. "It's 2015."

The school's undergraduate population is 79 percent white and 8 percent black. The state is about 83 percent white and nearly 12 percent black.

Wolfe, 56, is a former software executive and Missouri business school graduate whose father taught at the university. He was hired in 2011 as president, succeeding another former business executive who also lacked experience in academia.

---
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Offline mountaineer

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Re: How the Missouri football team just took down its university president
« Reply #15 on: November 09, 2015, 05:54:01 pm »
Now that they got what they want, I'm sure they'll stop complaining and making demands.   **nononono*
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Re: How the Missouri football team just took down its university president
« Reply #16 on: November 09, 2015, 06:25:41 pm »
 
I can't imagine why these hypocrites aren't demanding that the football team have the same racial profile as the school...   /s


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Offline musiclady

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Re: How the Missouri football team just took down its university president
« Reply #17 on: November 09, 2015, 06:33:10 pm »
Have to say that colleges have brought this on themselves.  Coddling the perennially offended, now being hoisted on their own petard.

Nailed it here, alice.

They are getting exactly what they deserve.

And there will be much more of it with this latest success of the infantile college children the left has so carefully nurtured.
Character still matters.  It always matters.

I wear a mask as an exercise in liberty and love for others.  To see it as an infringement of liberty is to entirely miss the point.  Be kind.

"Sometimes I think the Church would be better off if we would call a moratorium on activity for about six weeks and just wait on God to see what He is waiting to do for us. That's what they did before Pentecost."   - A. W. Tozer

Use the time God is giving us to seek His will and feel His presence.

Offline musiclady

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Re: How the Missouri football team just took down its university president
« Reply #18 on: November 09, 2015, 06:34:33 pm »
Oh...we are going to see more of this!  Until someone stands up to it, this will be repeated. The left always uses their tried and true methods book until something doesn't work any more.

Coming to a big time football program near you...I'm thinking something in the state of Michigan or maybe Floriduh.

Hopefully not Ohio!
Character still matters.  It always matters.

I wear a mask as an exercise in liberty and love for others.  To see it as an infringement of liberty is to entirely miss the point.  Be kind.

"Sometimes I think the Church would be better off if we would call a moratorium on activity for about six weeks and just wait on God to see what He is waiting to do for us. That's what they did before Pentecost."   - A. W. Tozer

Use the time God is giving us to seek His will and feel His presence.

Offline musiclady

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Re: How the Missouri football team just took down its university president
« Reply #19 on: November 09, 2015, 06:36:30 pm »
Why punish those who aren't in the boycott? It's not the whole team. Let the rest of the team play the rest of the season if they wish. It's a golden opportunity for them.

Would there be enough left to field an entire team?
Character still matters.  It always matters.

I wear a mask as an exercise in liberty and love for others.  To see it as an infringement of liberty is to entirely miss the point.  Be kind.

"Sometimes I think the Church would be better off if we would call a moratorium on activity for about six weeks and just wait on God to see what He is waiting to do for us. That's what they did before Pentecost."   - A. W. Tozer

Use the time God is giving us to seek His will and feel His presence.

Offline raml

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Re: How the Missouri football team just took down its university president
« Reply #20 on: November 09, 2015, 07:56:59 pm »
Things are so far out of line in this country I just give up. These bratty adults who are students in college need to concentrate on getting a good education and quit whining. The blacks of todays generation make me want to be the biggest racist on earth. They are taking down our nation and Obama is leading them.
« Last Edit: November 09, 2015, 07:57:23 pm by raml »

Offline xfreeper

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Re: How the Missouri football team just took down its university president
« Reply #21 on: November 09, 2015, 08:35:05 pm »
Now that they got what they want, I'm sure they'll stop complaining and making demands.   **nononono*

Yep. Now that they have a success to build on stand by for their new list of demands.

Offline mountaineer

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Re: How the Missouri football team just took down its university president
« Reply #22 on: November 09, 2015, 08:43:22 pm »
These morons need a big dose of Prof. Mike Adams' recent commentary about how college students do not have the right not to be offended.
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Offline Carling

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Re: How the Missouri football team just took down its university president
« Reply #23 on: November 09, 2015, 10:25:45 pm »
Would there be enough left to field an entire team?

More than enough.  32 boycotting, but there are 85 players on full scholarship, up to 105 on the roster depending on how many walk-on players paying their own schooling.

Yet, in a surprise to no one, the coddled special little flowers get their way.
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Offline sinkspur

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Re: How the Missouri football team just took down its university president
« Reply #24 on: November 09, 2015, 10:47:50 pm »
I agree with those who are laughing that the karma is coming back around to bite these lefties in the butt.

Somebody gets called a name and decides that the president of the college has to go. And, of course he does, cuz not playing that football game Saturday would cost Mizzou a cool million. 

A group of semi-literates take down a symbol of power.  So what happens now?  The semi-literates get to choose the next president, I'll bet.  And this graduate student goes to work for Al Sharpton.
Roy Moore's "spiritual warfare" is driving past a junior high without stopping.