May 3, 2021

Page 1

MONDAY, MAY 3, 2021

MNDAILY.COM

MSA

JUSTICE

Minneapolis reacts to Chauvin’s guilty verdict

MSA calls for UMPD Chief’s resignation MSA’s letter alleged Clark failed to ensure safety for students of color. By Ava Thompson athompson@mndaily.com The Minnesota Student Association is calling for the University Police Department Chief Matthew Clark to resign due to his alleged refusal to “reform” UMPD and communicate with student leaders in addressing issues of policing on campus. In a letter addressed to President Joan Gabel and Senior Vice President Myron Frans, MSA demands that Clark immediately resign and an interim chief who is “committed to diversity and inclusion, community control of policing [and the] demilitarization of UMPD” replace Clark during the hiring process. The letter also noted Clark’s lack of response to an incident of racial profiling of a Black student that occurred at Hanson Hall. “In his five and half years as Chief of Police at the University of Minnesota, Matt Clark has repeatedly and unequivocally disregarded student demands, failed to increase campus wellness and safety for students of color and has allowed the utilization of UMPD as a physical arm of the oppressive state to subjugate and silence community members both on and off campus,” the letter reads. This move comes after UMPD officers were found assisting Brooklyn Center police with crowd control tactics during protests that followed the police killing of Daunte Wright. President Gabel confirmed that UMPD is a part of the West Command Task Force, an alliance of police chiefs that allows officers from other departments to assist one another. Current and upcoming MSA leaders released a statement earlier this month demanding that the University cease its participation in the West Command Task Force after protesters were met with “excessive violence from police forces and the National Guard.” Police and state patrol officers were seen firing pepper balls, flashbangs and tear gas into the crowds during protests on April 12. Authors of the statement, Jack Flom and Rebecca Jacobson, said they were arrested in Brooklyn Center and detained See MSA Page 2

Photo by Parker Johnson

Thousands in the city gathered in response to the Chauvin verdict. By Minnesota Daily News Staff From outside the Hennepin County Government Center to George Floyd Square at 38th and Chicago, the crowds of people cheered after the verdict in the trial of Derek Chauvin was announced: Guilty, on all three counts. George Floyd’s girlfriend, Courtney Ross, addressed the crowd

gathered near the Hennepin County Government Center. “God is good. He proved that today,” Ross said. “Minneapolis needed it. I can’t thank you enough. Floyd can’t thank you enough. His spirit is here.” Nearby cars honked in support of the guilty verdicts. “The people united will never be defeated,” chanted the crowd outside of the government building. Twenty-five-year-old Adonis Rodriguez said there was a lot of energy around the Hennepin County Government Center following the verdict. “I really enjoy the fact that we’re

See JUSTICE Page 2

New task force will address abusive faculty The task force will consist of students, faculty and administrators. By Nathanael Ashton-Piper nashtonpiper@mndaily.com The University of Minnesota will form a new task force to address abusive faculty after the Council of Graduate Students (COGS) created a petition to address what it calls a long-standing problem in graduate higher education. The petition calls for the formation of a University body composed of graduate students, faculty, staff and administrators to address the “pedestrian, every day harassment that has characterized much of graduate education for decades, if not centuries.” Abusive faculty behavior can include expecting students to work

Morrill Hall as seen on Saturday, Oct. 12. (Parker Johnson / Minnesota Daily) unpaid hours, asking students for der federal civil rights law, instances personal favors, leaning on students of abusive faculty behavior can fall for emotional support, commenting outside of existing frameworks. on a student’s physical appearance The COGS speaker, president and threatening or exploiting a stu- and vice president submitted the dent’s position as an advisee. petition to University Executive Vice Unlike sex- and gender-based President and Provost Rachel Crodiscrimination, which triggers a son on April 14 with signatures from mandatory Title IX investigation un- over 290 graduate students.

The petition also includes the anonymous personal experiences of 13 University graduate students with instances of abusive faculty. “It is actually helpful to have a petition like this,” said Scott Lanyon, the vice provost and dean of graduate education at the University. “While we have been working on this in the Graduate School, addressing this issue really requires interaction from multiple offices and an institutional commitment to a solution. It helps to have students who say that this is a priority, and students will definitely be on that task force.” Power dynamics of graduate advising The student-adviser relationship for graduate students differs from that of undergraduate students. “[Advisers] are the gatekeeper,” said Mattea Allert, the speaker of See COGS Page 2

FALL SEMESTER

Less lethal projectiles used by police proven dangerous

Start of fall semester at the U will coincide with Rosh Hashana The two-day Jewish holiday lands on the start date of the fall semester, Sept. 7.

A UMN study showed projectiles can violate United Nations guidelines. Editor’s note: This story contains graphic descriptions of police brutality. University of Minnesota researchers found that police use of less-lethal projectiles against protesters following the murder of George Floyd caused lasting damage and left long-term injuries. Following the police killing of Daunte Wright, a 20-year-old

Photo by Liam Armstrong

GRADUATE STUDENTS

WEAPONS

By Ethan Fine efine@mndaily.com

all coming together,” Rodriguez said. “It shows that there is equality, there’s a chance for change. There’s a chance that we can all make history together.” Justin Ellis, who grew up in South Minneapolis, is working on a book about George Floyd and the injustices that Black families face. The guilty verdict was a release, Ellis said. “It felt like catharsis or something, you know. I started crying, I feel like everybody started crying and hugging and chanting. It was amazing,” Ellis said.

National Guard and law enforcement officers form a perimeter around the Minnesota State Capitol on May 31, 2020. (Andy Kosier / Minnesota Daily) Black man in Brooklyn Center, protesters have taken to the streets to express their discontent with law enforcement once again. As a means of crowd control and dispersion, law enforcement fired less-lethal projectiles such as rubber bullets, tear gas and tear gas canisters toward the crowd. The state of Minnesota defines less-lethal munitions as

“projectiles which are designed to stun, temporarily incapacitate, or cause temporary discomfort to a person.” The study’s findings, which the New England Journal of Medicine published in late February, indicate that police officers’ use of these weapons may have violated the United Nations’ guide See WEAPONS Page 2

By Ava Thompson athompson@mndaily.com The first day of the University of Minnesota fall semester, Sept. 7, will coincide with Rosh Hashana, a two-day celebration of the Jewish new year. Rosh Hashana, which typically begins in early September, will start on the evening of Sept. 6 and end on the evening of Sept. 8. It is considered one of Judaism’s holiest holidays as it commemorates the creation of the world and marks the beginning of the Days of Awe, a 10-day period of introspection and repentance that culminates in the Yom Kippur holiday. Individuals observing Rosh Hashana often gather together for a meal, a prayer reading from the Torah and a blowing

of the shofar, the horn of a ram, to announce the new year. Typically, the University has a required attendance policy where students may lose their spot in the course if they are not present on the first day of classes. However, to accommodate for Jewish students observing the holiday, the University is allowing students to send a note to a provided email address and a staff member will inform the instructor of the excused absence on their behalf, according to a statement from Rachel Croson, the University’s executive vice president and provost. “Due to the constraints around the calendar this fall — the requirement of starting classes after the Minnesota State Fair, the need to meet instructional day requirements for accreditation, the need to hold six days of final examinations — it was not possible to set an alternative calendar that would move the first day of classes outside See FALL SEMESTER Page 2 Volume 121 Issue 13


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