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Tag: University of Michigan

  • Ex-Michigan football coach Sherrone Moore jailed hours after firing, authorities say


    Former University of Michigan football coach Sherrone Moore was booked into jail on Wednesday in a town outside Ann Arbor, according to authorities, hours after he was fired from his position

    Moore was booked into the Washtenaw County Jail, both the jail and the Washtenaw County Sheriff’s Office confirmed to CBS News Detroit on Wednesday night. 

    In a separate news release, Pittsfield Township police did not name Moore, but said officers had responded to a location in the 3000 block of Ann Arbor Saline Road just after 4 p.m. local time for an alleged assault.

    The incident did not appear to be random in nature, police said.

    “The suspect was lodged at the Washtenaw County Jail pending review of charges by the Washtenaw County Prosecutor. At this time, the investigation is ongoing,” police said in the release. “Given the nature of the allegations, the need to maintain the integrity of the investigation, and its current status at this time, we are prohibited from releasing additional details.”

    The university announced earlier Wednesday that Moore was fired after a university investigation found “credible evidence” that he had been engaged in an “inappropriate relationship with a staff member.”

    In a statement, Michigan athletic director Warde Manuel said Moore had been “terminated with cause, effective immediately.” 

    “This conduct constitutes a clear violation of University policy, and U-M maintains zero tolerance for such behavior,” Manuel said. 

    Moore served as head coach for the past two seasons, leading the No. 18 Wolverines to a combined 16-8 record and a victory in the ReliaQuest Bowl last year.   

    The university has appointed Biff Poggi as the interim coach. Poggi previously served as associate coach from 2021 to 2022 before going on to serve as head coach at Charlotte until November 2024. He returned to the Michigan staff in 2025.

    Michigan is now gearing up for the Citrus Bowl against No. 13 Texas on New Year’s Eve. 

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  • Michigan and Ohio State take rivalry to new heights with zero-waste game day experiences

    One of the oldest and most notorious rivalries in college football is between the University of Michigan and Ohio State. On Saturday afternoon, the Wolverines will take on the Buckeyes in Ann Arbor for their annual matchup. Behind the scenes, staffers at each school will compete for a totally different title.

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  • University of Michigan Traffic System Cuts Oakland County Stops by 30%, Eyes National Growth

    A traffic signal system built by University of Michigan researchers has slashed needless stops at intersections by up to 30% in Oakland County. Now it’s pushing toward wider use across Southeast Michigan. The tech relies on GPS data from as few as 5% of vehicles to tweak signal timing based on what’s happening on roads right now.

    Birmingham, Mich. got the system first in 2022. That test run produced a 20% to 30% drop in wasted stops at traffic lights.

    Thirteen signals got upgrades along Eight Mile Road in Farmington Hills and Twelve Mile Road in Royal Oak. Twenty-seven more intersections throughout the county are getting fitted with the tech.

    “One corridor saw up to a 30% reduction in delay, and the other corridor was around 20%,” said Zachary Jerome, postdoctoral research fellow at the Transportation Research Institute, according to The Michigan Daily.

    The Road Commission for Oakland County teamed up with the research crew to roll out the program. The county oversees more than 1,400 traffic lights and has the most clogged roads in Michigan because population swelled—nearly doubling since 1960.

    Old-school traffic signals run on fixed-time systems with pre-set patterns that need manual updates every few years. Sure, vehicle detectors and cameras give steady data, but they cost way more to put in and maintain.

    “Oakland County has more than 1,400 signalized intersections that they manage; to install cameras at all 1,400 of those intersections is not feasible,” Jerome said to The Michigan Daily. “We can use this data that’s being collected continually to know — on a much faster timeframe — what’s happening at each intersection.”

    The project taps anonymized GPS data from roadside assistance vehicles, navigation services and ride-hailing companies to model traffic patterns across the whole county. Xingmin Wang, an engineering postdoctoral research fellow who worked on predicting traffic delays, said the research group leads GPS-based approaches to signal timing, according to The Michigan Daily.

    “We are really the pioneers of this direction,” Xingmin Wang stated. “We are one of the first research teams working on this topic, and also the first Ph.D.s working on this topic.”

    Craig Bryson, senior manager of communications and public information at RCOC, said trimming stops could lower crashes from drivers blowing through red lights during rush hour.

    The U.S. Department of Transportation funded stage one with a $1.45 million grant for development and rollout at 40 intersections. The research team is applying for a Stage Two Grant to enable broader implementation through the startup Connected Traffic Intelligence, as per The Michigan Daily.

    “If we could get access to that data at low or no cost, that would make this a no-brainer to expand it county-wide and literally statewide, nationwide, worldwide,” Bryson said per The Michigan Daily.

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  • UCLA Wins Big Ten Title but Falls Early in NCAA Tournament

    UCLA beat Michigan to win the Big Ten Tournament giving them a spot in the NCAA postseason Tournament, however they lost in the first round in penalty kick’s to GCU.

    The UCLA men’s soccer team won its first-ever Big Ten Tournament last Sunday when they beat Michigan in the final. Michigan came into the tournament as the 3 seed, while UCLA was seeded 4. They had also previously lost to Michigan 3-0 in the regular season, as well as the Big Ten Semifinal last season in a penalty’s. Additionally, Michigan had not lost a game since facing Maryland on October 10.

    However, the Bruins were on a hot streak of their own as they had won the final 5 games of their season, outscoring opponents 21-5. They did not let this discourage them and came out strong. Just 13 minutes into the match, graduate student Konstantinos Geogallides scored the first goal, a diving header. At the 38th minute mark, UCLA scored again, this time off a header from redshirt sophomore Sergi Solan’s Ormo. The forward didn’t stop there, though, and used the momentum to score a second goal just a few minutes into the second half.

    Solans Ormo completed his hat trick in the 60th minute, pouncing on a pass from the Michigan goalkeeper. Not even a minute later, Georgallides followed with his second goal of the night, putting the Bruins up 5-0. The rest of the game was a battle, but the score stayed the same, and the Bruins came out on top as the Big Ten Tournament Champions. 

    Solans Ormo’s hat trick gave him his third of the season, which makes him the only player in the school’s history to total 3 hat-tricks in a season. The accomplishment also set a record for the only hat-trick scored in the Big Ten Final since its inception in 1991, which earned him Player of the Tournament honors. He was also named to the Big Ten All-Tournament Team alongside teammates Andrer Marticorena and Shakir Nixon. 

    UCLA winning the Big Ten tournament automatically secured them a bid in the NCAA tournament that started this week. The Bruins’ victory makes this the 5th consecutive time they will be making a postseason appearance in the 7 years under head coach Ryan Jordan. It marks their 50th tournament appearance, and they will be joined by 4 other Big Ten teams in the tournament, including Indiana, Michigan, Maryland and Washington. 

    Their first game of the tournament took place on Thursday against Grand Canyon University (GCU). UCLA lost 3-1 in penalty kicks after a scoreless match and overtime, with Georgallides being the only Bruin to make his PK. The result knocked the Bruins out of the NCAA tournament in the first round, a devastating loss after the success of the previous week. GCU is now set to face No. 9 the University of San Diego, and the College Cup is set to take place in Cary, North Carolina, on December 12th and 15th.

    Taylor Ford

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  • Cannabis Helps The Young And Old Sleep

    From Gen Z to Boomers, cannabis helps the young and old sleep better — here’s what science says.

    New research from University of Michigan (U-M) is adding nuance — and a dose of caution — to an increasingly popular trend: using marijuana to help you sleep. But what is interesting is cannabis helps the young and old sleep.  Yes, whether you’re a 20-something struggling with late-night screen time or a 60-plus professional battling early-morning wake-ups, they are turning toward the green plant to help with a sound snooze.

    RELATED: Gen Z Is Ditching Relationship Labels While Millennials

    According to the U-M’s psychiatry department, initial results suggest that cannabis may help people fall asleep faster and improve sleep quality in the early part of the night. But the benefit doesn’t necessarily carry through the whole night. The research points to more awakenings and fragmented sleep in the latter part of the night for some users. Yes, cannabis appears to help some people sleep, at least initially, but the story is far from straightforward. The U-M team emphasize the evidence is still in its infancy; usage has raced ahead of science.

    Photo by Kindel Media from Pexels

    For Gen Z or Millennials juggling business and baby-boom-aged parents, sleep is often elusive. Older adults, meanwhile, may contend with chronic pain, insomnia or medication-side-effects. That’s why the notion of a plant-based sleep aid is appealing across the age spectrum.
    The U-M research suggests those with chronic pain, anxiety or certain sleep disorders may experience more noticeable benefit. But for otherwise healthy sleepers, the upside may be limited, and in some cases, temporary.

    But like most sleep aids, what works at first may wear off. Routine cannabis use for sleep may lead to diminished benefit over time, and insomnia can return — sometimes when use is stopped abruptly.
    The mode of use matters too: inhaling cannabis may bring faster onset of sleepiness, while edibles act more slowly but last longer.

    Generational take-away: what each age group should know:

    • Younger adults (20s-40s): If you’re using cannabis to deal with irregular sleep patterns, late-night tech use or social jet-lag, it may help you get to sleep — but it’s not guaranteed to fix sleep quality or cycles long term.
    • Middle-aged adults (40s-60s): Those dealing with stress, pain or changing sleep rhythms might see a benefit — but must watch for dependence and tolerance.
    • Older adults (65+): If sleep disruptions stem from pain, sleep-apnoea or medications, cannabis might help but should be used under medical supervision. Long-term effects and interactions (e.g., with heart- or blood-pressure meds) are less well studied.
      Across all ages: better sleep hygiene (consistent bedtimes, reduced screen time, calming routines) remains foundational.

    RELATED: Cannabis Is Way Better And Safer Than A Honey Pack

    The U-M researchers urge caution: consult your doctor before using cannabis as a sleep aid. The sleep-inducing effect may not last, side-effects are still being mapped, and the optimal dosage/administration method is unclear. medicine.umich.edu
    For those who use cannabis for sleep, experts suggest treating it as a bridge, helping you establish better sleep patterns, rather than a permanent substitute for good habits.
    As one U-M sleep psychologist put it: “The research is still in its infancy, the availability of marijuana has really out-paced the science.”

    whether you’re young or old, cannabis can help you sleep. But it’s no silver bullet. The short-term benefits may exist, but they are often offset by fragmented sleep later at night, possible next-day fatigue, and diminished return over time. In real terms: if you lean on it nightly, you may trade off one sleep problem for another.

    The best approach? Use it cautiously, pair it with solid sleep hygiene, and keep an eye on how your sleep — and overall daily alertness — really responds.

    Amy Hansen

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  • Detroiters’ optimism about city tied to likelihood of voting in mayoral election, U-M survey finds – Detroit Metro Times

    Detroiters who believe the city is moving in the right direction are far more likely to vote in next week’s mayoral election than those who say it’s on the wrong track, according to a new University of Michigan survey.

    The Detroit Metro Area Communities Study (DMACS), conducted from Aug. 6 to Oct. 1, found that 70% of Detroiters with a positive view of the city’s direction said they’ll “definitely” vote on Nov. 4, compared to 41% of those who believe the city is on the wrong track and 52% of those unsure about its direction.

    Overall, 56% of residents said Detroit is headed in the right direction, while 13% said it’s on the wrong track and 31% were unsure. Optimism is highest in Downtown, Midtown, and Southwest Detroit and lowest on the east side.

    Older, higher-income, and more educated residents were far more likely to say the city is improving. Nearly 80% of Detroiters with household incomes above $100,000 said the city is on the right track, compared to just 35% of those earning under $10,000. Men and white residents were also more optimistic than women and Black or Latino residents.

    “The survey offers powerful insights into some of the hopes and concerns shaping this historic election,” Yucheng Fan, data manager at DMACS and co-author of the report, said Tuesday. “We’re seeing variation in who feels motivated to vote.”

    The election marks the first time in more than a decade that Detroiters will choose a new mayor. Mayor Mike Duggan served three terms and is running for governor as an independent. Detroit City Council President Mary Sheffield is running for mayor against Rev. Solomon Kinloch Jr. and has a 64.9%-14.1% lead, according to a WDIV/Detroit News poll.

    According to the survey, 61% of residents said they “definitely will vote” this year, while 25% said they “probably will,” and 14% said they probably or definitely will not. Those numbers closely mirror last year’s presidential election intentions, when roughly six in 10 Detroiters said they planned to vote.

    Age was one of the strongest predictors of voter participation. More than 80% of residents 65 and older said they will definitely vote, compared with just 39% of Detroiters under 35. 

    Education and income also play a major role. About 80% of college graduates and 78% of residents earning at least $100,000 said they’re certain to vote, compared with 48% of Detroiters whose education ended at high school and 37% of those with incomes under $10,000.

    There were no significant gender differences in voter enthusiasm, but Latino Detroiters were far less likely to say they’ll definitely vote (27%) compared to 65% of Black residents and 64% of white residents.

    When asked about their top priorities for the next mayor, residents pointed overwhelmingly to education, public safety, affordable housing, and jobs.

    • 81% said improving K-12 schools is a high priority;
    • 80% cited crime and safety;
    • 77% named affordable housing;
    • 75% pointed to access to high-quality jobs.

    Infrastructure, business investment, and public transportation also were key issues, with more than 60% of residents calling them high priorities.

    Black residents were more likely than white residents to identify schools, crime, and housing as top concerns, and women rated safety and affordability higher than men. Optimism about the city’s direction also varied by geography: 65% of residents in District 5 (downtown and Midtown) and 61% in District 6 (Southwest Detroit) said the city is on the right track, compared with less than half of east side residents in Districts 3 and 4.

    Jeffrey Morenoff, a University of Michigan sociology and public policy professor who co-leads DMACS, said the findings highlight both progress and persistent divides across the city.

    “We see notable differences by age, race, and city council district, which underscore the importance of capturing the diversity of Detroiters’ views,” Morenoff said.

    The full report, “Detroit Decides: Views on the City, Priorities for the Next Mayor, and Intentions to Vote,” is available at detroitsurvey.umich.edu.


    Steve Neavling

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  • Zach Bryan, John Mayer, and more play the biggest concert in the U.S. at Ann Arbor’s Big House – Detroit Metro Times

    On Saturday, Ann Arbor’s Michigan Stadium held its first-ever concert — and set a record. With more than 112,000 tickets sold, the show was the largest in the U.S. Organizers tapped popular Oklahoma-raised singer-songwriter Zach Bryan to headline the bill, along with help from John Mayer, Ryan Bingham and The Texas Gentlemen, and Joshua Slone. During his set, Bryan brought out Michigan’s country music duo The War and Treaty to perform their 2023 collaboration “Hey Driver,” and the evening was capped with a dazzling fireworks display. We’re looking forward to more concerts at the Big House.

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    Zach Bryan. Credit: Joe Maroon
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  • What’s going on in metro Detroit this week (Sept. 24-30) – Detroit Metro Times

    Select events happening in the Detroit area. Be sure to check venue websites before all events for the latest information. See our online calendar for more ideas for things to do, or add your event: metrotimes.com/AddEvent.

    Glenlore Trails. Credit: Courtesy photo

    Glenlore Trails: The Witching Hour

    Ever since opening in 2020 as a safe and fun activity for families during the pandemic, this high-tech illuminated forest trail has continued to enchant and delight with rotating, seasonal themes. On Thursday, it switches over into a Halloween theme with interactive games, spellbinding lights and sounds, music, food trucks, and more. What has been dubbed “The Witching Hour” runs through Sunday, Nov. 2 before switching over to a wintry holiday theme.
    Open evenings Thursday-Sunday, Glenlore Trails, 3860 Newtown Rd., Commerce Twp.; glenloretrails.com. Tickets are $15-$25.

    Rhiannon Giddens. Credit: Nonesuch Records

    Rhiannon Giddens

    Last year, folk musician Rhiannon Giddens was named the inaugural artist-in-residence for the University of Michigan’s Arts Initiative. A banjo player from North Carolina, Giddens has made a career of highlighting the often-overlooked contributions of Black Americans to U.S. musical traditions, particularly in the country and folk genres, and is working on a book, When the World’s on Fire: How a Powerless Underclass Made the Powerful Music that Made America. “I would love to take readers on a trip through American music, guiding them through the discoveries that I have made that bring so many interesting layers to the American story,” Giddens told U-M. “And ultimately what these stories lead to, is that when you start peeling back the wrapper — despite what the people in charge or the people in power want to tell us — is that we are not actually separate. We are always coming together.” This Penny Stamps Speaker Series appearance is an intimate opportunity to learn from Giddens, who has won Grammy awards, a MacArthur ​“Genius” grant, and a Pulitzer prize.
    Starts at 5 p.m. on Thursday, Sept. 25; Michigan Theater, 
603 E. Liberty St., Ann Arbor; stamps.umich.edu. No cover.

    Zach Bryan. Credit: Trevor Pavlik

    Zach Bryan

    Zach Bryan’s big show at the Big House is set to break a record for the largest in the U.S. With more than 112,000 tickets sold for Michigan Stadium’s first-ever concert, the Oklahoma-raised singer-songwriter is on track to surpass country star George Strait, who played to some 110,905 at a 2024 Texas show. A prolific songwriter, Bryan, 29, became one of the biggest names in music shortly after he started uploading videos to YouTube in 2017 while still enlisted in the U.S. Navy. His most recent studio album, last year’s The Great American Bar Scene, is his most polished yet, offering up 19 country-inflected vignettes. John Mayer, Ryan Bingham and The Texas Gentlemen, and Joshua Slone round out the bill in Ann Arbor.
    Doors at 4 p.m., event starts at 6 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 27; Michigan Stadium, 1201 South Main St., Ann Arbor; axs.com. Tickets start at $75.

    Roxi D’Lite. Credit: Courtesy photo

    Foxy Roxi’s Disco Roulette

    For her next act, local burlesque star Roxi D’Lite is trying something a little different. Together with her husband Charlie Champagne and produced by their Whoopee Club, this event will transform Greektown’s new Tip-Top Showbar into a 1970-style game show complete with audience participation, a spinning wheel of fortune, fabulous prizes, and lots of disco bangers spun by DJ Tony Foster and sung by Jerome Bell-Bastien from Detroit singing duo the Disco Daddies; there will also be drag by local queens Bentley James and Mimi Southwest. A dance party will follow the show, which D’Lite says she would like to make a regularly recurring and fun night out.Starts at 8 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 27; Tip-Top Showbar, 440 E. Lafayette St., Detroit; events.humanitix.com/discoroulettevol1. Tickets are $30.

    Holly Trevan (Match-e-be-nash-she-wish Band of Pottawatomi), “Zibé,” 2024. Credit: Courtesy photo

    Contemporary Anishinaabe Art: A Continuation

    The Detroit Institute of Arts is gearing up for Contemporary Anishinaabe Art: A Continuation, its first major Native American art exhibition in over 30 years and one of the Midwest’s largest showcases of contemporary Indigenous art. Featuring around 90 pieces by more than 60 Anishinaabe artists from the Great Lakes region, the exhibition spans painting, sculpture, photography, beadwork, film, and more. Created in collaboration with Anishinaabe advisors, including members of the Ojibwe, Ottawa, and Potawatomi tribes, the show will be presented in both English and Anishnaabemowin. The exhibition runs through April 5.

    Opens 10 a.m.-5 p.m. on Sunday, Sept. 28; Detroit Institute of Arts, 5200 Woodward Ave., Detroit; dia.org. No cover for residents of the tri-county area.


    Lee DeVito

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  • Boomer And Gen Z Consume Marijuana For Similar Reasons

    Boomer And Gen Z Consume Marijuana For Similar Reasons

    Cannabis has become popular for every adult age group- but the surprise is Gen Z and Boomers are using it for similar reasons.

    Cannabis is fully legal to over 50% of the population and all groups are embracing its use. Proven healthier than alcohol, it has become much more common in all sets. Even Florida looks like it is going to vote for recreational cannabis. Long stigmatized as a way to get high, be lazy and lay about on the couch, it turns out it is become part of every day life…and part of a health regime. An example of how it is being used, Boomer and Gen Z consume marijuana for similar reasons.

    RELATED: The Most Popular Marijuana Flavors

    It is become so accepted, AARP did a study about use among Boomers. AARP is the largest  print magazine with 38 million readers…and their bulletin has 33 million.  A huge validator for the demographic. It also shows they are more open to more mainstream cannabis. This falls in line by the positions of the American Medical Association and the American College of Physicians.

    Photo by Kindel Media from Pexels

    The AARP study revealed 21 percent ages 50-plus used some form of cannabis — be it food, drink, flower or another type— at least once in the last year, a report from the University of Michigan’s National Poll on Healthy Aging found. That’s up from 1 in 8 (12 percent) in 2021. In 2015 and 2016, roughly 3 percent of adults 65 and older used cannabis, according to research published in JAMA Internal Medicine.

    Roughly 68% of poll respondents who used cannabis products did so for help with sleep, the researchers found. Many also cited pain relief (63 percent), mental health, anxiety,  and mood (53 percent) and relaxation (81 percent) as reasons for using cannabis.

    What is interesting is Gen Z, the youngest adult generation, Gen Z, is an also a big fan of marijuana. They helped fuel the California Sober trend where you reduce or stop drinking and use weed instead.  One reason Gen Z has embraced weed is it helps with anxiety and mood.  They also use it for relaxation, way more so than other generation who tend to lean into alcohol.

    RELATED: This Natural Cannabinoid Makes You Feel Happy

    What is interesting is some Boomers and Gen X are consume marijuana in a more traditional way by smoking. Gen X and Boomers new to consuming tend to vape and use gummies.  The later two are more “on the go” and discreet and doesn’t have the smell. It is interesting the marijuana is bonding together two generations.

    Amy Hansen

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  • Tlaib slams Nessel for targeting pro-Palestinian students at U-M: ‘A dangerous precedent’

    Tlaib slams Nessel for targeting pro-Palestinian students at U-M: ‘A dangerous precedent’

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    U.S. Rep. Rashida Tlaib delivered a speech in Dearborn in February, urging Democrats to vote “uncommitted” in the presidential primary election to protest President Joe Biden’s support of Israel.

    U.S. Rep. Rashida Tlaib sharply criticized Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel for filing charges against pro-Palestinian protesters at the University of Michigan on Thursday, saying her harsh actions could ruin the lives of bright, young students and set a dangerous precedent for peaceful protests.

    Tlaib, who was born in Detroit to Palestinian immigrants and is the only Palestinian American member of Congress, condemned the charges as an unjust and heavy-handed response to peaceful civil disobedience.

    “This is a move that’s going to set a precedent, and it’s unfortunate that a Democrat made that move,” Tlaib said in an exclusive interview with Metro Times on Friday. “You would expect that from a Republican, but not a Democrat, and it’s really unfortunate.”

    A student protest encampment, which was established in April, grew to include about 60 tents and was intended to draw attention to Israel’s ongoing slaughter of Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank. The attacks started after Oct. 7, when Hamas in Gaza killed more than 1,000 people in Israel and took more than 250 hostages. Israel’s U.S.-backed retaliation has killed more than 40,000 people, many of them women and children.

    The students called for a ceasefire truce and also demanded the university divest from corporations linked to Israel. Despite multiple meetings between student liaisons and the university, the encampment remained in place, leading to police action on May 21.

    Most of those charged are alumni and students who refused to vacate the encampment after police ordered them to leave.

    Two people were charged with trespassing, a misdemeanor punishable by up to 30 days in jail, for refusing to leave the encampment after repeated orders to vacate. An additional seven were charged with trespassing and resisting or obstructing a police officer, a felony punishable by up to two years in prison. These charges are reserved for those who allegedly made physical contact with officers or obstructed arrests, Nessel said.

    In addition, two people, including a U-M alumnus, have been charged for separate incidents during a counter-protest on April 25. One is charged with disturbing the peace and attempted ethnic intimidation, while the other faces charges of malicious destruction of personal property for allegedly breaking and discarding protestors’ flags.

    Tlaib recalled her visit to the encampment and described the atmosphere as peaceful and welcoming.

    “It was very inclusive. It was diverse, very loving,” Tlaib, a Detroit Democrat, says. “When I visited, I remember they were talking about the Armenian genocide, and what we learned from that — it was very powerful. I wish [University of Michigan] President [Santa] Ono could see his students as people that just want to save lives, no matter their faith or ethnicity.”

    click to enlarge Pro-Palestinian encampment at the University of Michigan. - Doug Coombe

    Doug Coombe

    Pro-Palestinian encampment at the University of Michigan.

    Tlaib also criticized Nessel, who is the first Jewish person elected Attorney General of Michigan, for what she believes is a biased approach to the protest.

    “We’ve had the right to dissent, the right to protest,” Tlaib says. “We’ve done it for climate, the immigrant rights movement, for Black lives, and even around issues of injustice among water shutoffs. But it seems that the attorney general decided if the issue was Palestine, she was going to treat it differently, and that alone speaks volumes about possible biases within the agency she runs.”

    In a statement announcing the charges, Nessel said the protesters should be held accountable.

    “Conviction in your ideals is not an excuse for violations of the law,” Nessel said. “A campus should not be lawless; what is a crime anywhere else in the city remains a crime on university property.”

    The charges are likely to have a devastating impact on the lives of the young protesters, Tlaib says.

    “It’s devastating because I just hope people don’t forget these are young folks,” she says. “Many of them remind me of my own self who wanted to free our world from oppression. I just know that her action is going to ruin their lives. That’s all I can think of. They’re so young, and they have such a tremendous future.”

    Tlaib accused Nessel of caving to demands to prosecute from university authorities, including Ono and members of the Board of Regents, pointing out that Washtenaw County prosecutors could have filed charges but didn’t. In May, Washtenaw County Prosecutor Eli Savit brought charges against four people for allegedly resisting, obstructing, and assaulting police during a protest at the U-M Ruthven Administration Building on Nov. 17. But no other charges have been filed on the county level since then.

    “I think people at the University of Michigan put pressure on her to do this, and she fell for it,” Tlaib says. “I think President Ono and Board of Regent members were very much heavy-handed in this. It had to come from somewhere.”

    The congresswoman lamented the long-term impact of the university’s actions.

    “In 10 years, the University of Michigan itself is going to teach about this movement and say how wonderful it was, or how it moved our country toward a direction that it needed to, following international law and human rights laws and our own U.S. laws,” Tlaib says. “Yet people are going to write about how the University of Michigan decided to prosecute, criminalize, and vilify their students when they just did everything that they were taught to do.”

    Tlaib’s remarks highlight the ongoing tension between university administration, law enforcement, and student activists, as well as the broader implications for free speech and the right to protest in the United States.

    “Shame on President Ono and the University of Michigan leadership for enabling this,” Tlaib said. “True leadership, especially in positions of public service, is bringing communities together and having a dialogue. Instead, they’re using their political positions to divide the student population and really make everyone feel unsafe on campus and feel unseen and unheard.”

    Steve Neavling

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  • AG Nessel charges 11 over pro-Palestinian demonstrations at University of Michigan

    AG Nessel charges 11 over pro-Palestinian demonstrations at University of Michigan

    click to enlarge

    Doug Coombe

    A collective of student groups that calls itself the Tahrir Coalition organized a protest encampment on the University of Michigan Diag with the aim of convincing officials to divest $6 billion from companies tied to Israel.

    Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel announced Thursday that she is filing criminal charges against nine people involved in a pro-Palestinian protest encampment at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.

    Most of those charged are alumni and students who refused to vacate the encampment on May 21 after police ordered them to leave.

    In addition, two people, including a U-M alumnus, have been charged for separate incidents during a counter-protest on April 25. One is charged with disturbing the peace and attempted ethnic intimidation, while the other faces charges of malicious destruction of personal property for allegedly breaking and discarding protestors’ flags.

    Two people have been charged with trespassing, a misdemeanor punishable by up to 30 days in jail, for refusing to leave the encampment after repeated lawful orders.

    An additional seven people face charges of trespassing and resisting or obstructing a police officer, a felony punishable by up to two years in prison. These charges are reserved for those who allegedly made physical contact with officers or obstructed arrests.

    The charges follow an extensive examination of evidence that included body-worn camera footage, police reports, communications between university officials and local authorities, and various university policies and bylaws. The Solicitor General Division also evaluated all charges for potential First Amendment violations.

    Following the review, the Attorney General’s Office declined to prosecute protesters involved in two specific incidents: the Honors Convocation on March 25 at Hill Auditorium and the protest outside the University of Michigan Museum of Art on April 22. However, the investigation into incidents at the homes of U-M Regents remains ongoing.

    The charges announced Thursday stem from protest activities on the Diag, a central park area on the U-M campus, where demonstrators established an encampment in April. The encampment, which grew to approximately 60 tents, raised significant safety concerns, including fire hazards and blocked egress paths, according to the U-M fire marshal. Despite multiple meetings between university officials and student liaisons, the encampment remained in place, prompting the university to request police assistance to clear the area.

    At 5:38 a.m. on May 21, police issued a dispersal order, giving demonstrators 10 minutes to vacate the area. When the order was ignored, police moved in, encountering resistance from several demonstrators who placed and threw objects to block the officers’ path, according to Nessel. During the operation, some demonstrators physically obstructed the police.

    But protesters countered that police used excessive force. Officers dressed in riot gear used batons and pepper spray to drive protesters back from the encampment before tossing tents, supplies, and students’ belongings into trash containers.

    A similar clash occurred at an encampment at Wayne State University in Detroit on May 30.

    “There were dozens of demonstrators in this encampment that morning who promptly obeyed the officers on the scene and dispersed,” Nessel said. “For those who did not, trespassing is a 30-day misdemeanor. In this case, we charged only those who made an effort to impede the officers clearing the encampment. Resisting or Obstructing is a much more serious offense, and for the seven demonstrators we have charged with that felony, we allege that every one of them physically placed their hands or bodies against police who were conducting their duty to clear the hazardous encampment, or physically obstructed an arrest.”

    Nessel emphasized that while the right to free speech and assembly is protected under the First Amendment, illegal activities will not be tolerated.

    “Conviction in your ideals is not an excuse for violations of the law,” Nessel said. “A campus should not be lawless; what is a crime anywhere else in the city remains a crime on university property.”

    Charges were filed Wednesday in 15th District Court in Washtenaw County, though none of the defendants have yet been arraigned, as of Thursday morning.

    Steve Neavling

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  • Palestinian American activist sues Michigan Democrats over ‘voting discrepancies’ for seat on U-M Board of Regents

    Palestinian American activist sues Michigan Democrats over ‘voting discrepancies’ for seat on U-M Board of Regents

    Huwaida Arraf, a Palestinian American activist, filed a lawsuit against the Michigan Democratic Party on Thursday, alleging she may have been cheated in her quest for the Democratic nomination for a seat on the University of Michigan Board of Regents.

    Arraf claims the party’s process of selecting two nominees for the board on Aug. 24 was marred by voting irregularities, discrepancies, and a lack of transparency.

    “We cannot be confident in the results that have been announced,” Arraf said at a news conference Thursday. “It’s an affront to the electoral integrity, which we should take seriously.”

    According to the official results, Arraf was defeated by incumbent Democrat Denise Ilitch and former regent Dr. Shauna Ryder Diggs, who left the board in 2020. Diggs garnered more than 2,800 votes, while Ilitch received over 2,400 votes, according to the official tally. Arraf, founder of the International Solidarity Movement and an international civil rights lawyer who represented students in civil rights cases demanding the university’s divestment from Israel, received more than 2,300 votes.

    At the convention, there were 1,248 voters present, Arraf said, but more than 1,420 voters were identified in the final tally. She also believes Democrats were allowed to vote after the 4:39 p.m. deadline to cast a ballot.

    According to the party’s rules, the votes were proportionally weighted by county using a formula based on Democratic turnout in the most recent even-year election. This weighting system is intended to ensure that the final results accurately reflect the preferences of Democratic voters across the state’s counties. The system leads to drastic differences in the value of each person’s votes.

    In the popular vote, before the ballots were weighted, Arraf said she defeated Diggs by about 120 votes and Illitch by about 210 votes.

    Arraf said her problem isn’t with the weighted system, but with how the votes were counted.

    According to her account, Arraf said there was missing data, and to address the issue, the party counted raw data in a tabulation area, where she and her staff were forbidden to enter. Meanwhile, other candidates, their families, and current regents were allowed in the tabulation area.

    When the votes were announced, Arraf had lost. She said she repeatedly asked party leaders for the raw data, but they declined to turn it over.

    The data she did receive showed discrepancies, she said.

    “That is greatly distburning because you have a situation where the leadership of the Michigan Democratic Party was put on notice that there were problems with the validity of the data they have given us, not even the raw data, and they should want to clarify this so we can be confident of the results, and I received no response to that,” Arraf said.

    Arraf’s lawsuit was filed in the Ingham County Circuit Court.

    Arraf said the process was demoralizing and comes at a time when Michigan Democrats should be inclusive and welcoming. She noted that she was accompanied by hundreds of new participants who supported her.

    “If you don’t feel like your voice and participation will count, then there is no incentive to get involved,” Arraf said. “And that is not what we want, especially in the time that we are now, leading up to the November election, knowing how much of a threat a potential [Donald] Trump presidency can be, and that is why we are further dismayed at how the Michigan Democratic Party has seemingly not cared about the fact that they have disenfranchised and disillusioned the hundreds of new members that came to participate in the convention,” Arraf said.

    The Michigan Democratic Party did not respond to requests for comment.

    Steve Neavling

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  • Tips For Consuming Marijuana At Football Games

    Tips For Consuming Marijuana At Football Games

    Football season is upon us and people are heading to games…although it is legal, you might want to follow this tip to consume

    Between professional and amateur football, over 50 million will attend in person and possible even tailgate. The crowds jam in to passionately watch their favorite teams. Michigan Stadium, known as “The Big House” by University of Michigan students, alumni, and fans seats over 107K. The energy is amazing. But there is a new attendee in Michigan and other states, legal marijuana. Long a bastion of beer, bourbon and more….legal cannabis is now available. But it can be a bit tricky. Here are some tips for consuming marijuana at football games.

    RELATED: Celebrate With These Simple Classic Cocktails

    As states roll out fully recreational marijuana and over 50% of the population have access to legal products, people see it as part of their buzz mix.  Gen Z and others are drifting from alcohol and are looking at weed. California sober has become a thing, but you want ot thoughtful before you pull out a big blunt. In Ohio, is is a misdemeanor to consume in public, and while accepted, the plant’s odor can annoy those around you – and bring attention to your use.

    Photo by skeeze via Pixabay

    Tailgating is a time honored game tradition. While most stop off a bar/restaurant to grab a bite or a pre-drink, others go for full classic. Classic tailgate parties in the parking lot are big deals, especially at some colleges. Full on bbqs, full bars and catered meals can be seen and smelled. But if you want to consume, you might want to be a little discreet and consider a THC or hemp beverage.

    Most games have some underage attendees, so smell can be annoying to some parents. The guy drunk on beer can be forgiven publicly more often than the stoned guy who has a skunk smell. Consider using a vape, gummy or oil for the day.  Vapes can provide a quick hit which takes effect within 5-10 minutes and you can manage the buzz during all 4 quarters. Oils also hit quickly, but are a little bit more difficult to manage the high, but experienced consumers know how to ride the wave.

    RELATED: Player Says 9 Out Of 10 NFL Athletes Use Marijuana

    Gummies are very common with roughly. 49% of people who consume trying one.  While Wana Brands has a fast acting gummy, but take from 30-60 minutes to hit, so you can manage your high as you arrive and throughout the game. All of these options should be allowed through security without a problem.

    Hopefully you can chill out and enjoy a big win for your favorite team next time you attend.

    Anthony Washington

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  • Michigan Medicine unions fight for better pay, staffing

    Michigan Medicine unions fight for better pay, staffing

    click to enlarge

    Anthony Kaled

    Workers held a picket outside University Hospital to protest worsening conditions.

    Two labor unions are fighting for their first collective bargaining agreements with the University of Michigan’s Michigan Medicine.

    Workers held an informational picket outside University Hospital last week, to protest what they say is U of M’s ongoing refusal to agree to what they call fair contracts that would address issues of understaffing and low pay.

    United Michigan Medicine Allied Professionals, and Service Employees International Union, represent about seven thousand workers in the state.

    Kate Robbins is a physical therapist and the treasurer of United Michigan Medicine Allied Professionals local.

    “When COVID hit, a lot of people retired from medicine,” said Robbins. “And so, we are asked to do more with less, and it’s starting to really burn out all of the employees in the hospital.”

    University of Michigan Health responded in a statement saying, in part, they “look forward to continuing collaborative discussions with union members and employee groups working in a shared goal to provide the best care possible for their patients.”

    click to enlarge Workers held a picket outside University Hospital to protest worsening conditions. - United Michigan Medicine Allied Professionals

    United Michigan Medicine Allied Professionals

    Workers held a picket outside University Hospital to protest worsening conditions.

    Over the past 18 months, the two unions have emerged to represent diverse Michigan Medicine workers — including rehab, behavioral health, respiratory therapists, and more.

    Robbins stressed that despite many members living just above the poverty line, their struggle is not only for fair wages and better staffing, but also for the well-being of the community.

    “Our purpose is to take care of people,” said Robbins. “And if we can’t take care of people and we can’t take care of ourselves, then it does a disservice to everybody who’s involved in medicine and involved in the U of M community.”

    Robbins said she’s hopeful that hospital management will respond to the informational picket by accelerating the pace of negotiations and finding more common ground.

    Their aim is to have the contract dispute resolved by early this fall.

    Chrystal Blair, Michigan News Connection

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  • Michigan Supreme Court orders new trial for mother in 2006 shaken baby case

    Michigan Supreme Court orders new trial for mother in 2006 shaken baby case

    A Wayne County woman who spent nearly 20 years in prison for allegedly shaking her child to death has been granted a new trial after the doctor who performed the original autopsy changed his opinion on the cause of death.

    Chazlee Lemons was sentenced to life in prison in 2006 after a judge found her guilty of first-degree murder in the death of her 11-week-old child Nakita Lemon.

    In a 5-2 decision, the Michigan Supreme Court determined it’s probable that a “jury would have a reasonable doubt” about Lemon’s guilt.

    At the original trial, Dr. Bader Cassin, who performed the autopsy, classified the death as shaken baby syndrome, saying the child’s brain was swollen, and she had retinal hemorrhages.

    Cassin changed his opinion in 2017, saying Nakita, who had experienced breathing problems since birth, may have choked on baby formula. During an evidentiary hearing, Cassin said other experts have weighed in and “demonstrated that the forces in shaking are insufficient to produce such an injury.”

    Cassin concluded the manner of death was “indeterminate,” so it could have been natural or accidental.

    A pediatrician, Dr. John Galaznik, also testified that Nakita “had experienced a choking/aspiration event” and that the evidence did “not support an allegation of abusive shaking.”

    The Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office produced its own experts, who said shaken baby syndrome was the likely cause of death.

    In a statement to Metro Times on Wednesday, Prosecutor Kym Worthy said her office plans to retry the case.

    “This child went through unspeakable trauma,” Worthy said. “We are very disheartened by the Michigan Supreme Court majority’s opinion granting a new trial in Lemons. This is especially true in light of defendant’s admission to violently shaking the two-month old victim and the general consensus of the medical community accepting the diagnosis of Shaken Baby Syndrome/Abusive Head Trauma.”

    The Innocence Clinic at the University of Michigan Law School represented Lemons.

    Last week, Metro Times launched “The Closer,” a series of stories about wrongful convictions.

    Steve Neavling

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  • FDA deprives Michigan veterans of research on medical cannabis

    FDA deprives Michigan veterans of research on medical cannabis

    Michigan’s marijuana regulators doled out nearly $40 million in weed taxes since 2021 to fund studies about the potential medical benefits of marijuana on military veterans.

    But federal restrictions on cannabis have prevented a vast majority of those studies from advancing, depriving veterans of the opportunity to benefit from the research.

    In all of the studies involving marijuana containing THC, no veterans have received cannabis in a trial. THC is the active ingredient in marijuana that produces a high.

    But there is good news for research involving CBD, the non-psychoactive chemical compound in cannabis that does not produce a high. At the University of Michigan, which was awarded a $7.4 million grant from cannabis taxes in 2022, veterans have already begun participating in trials. The studies are evaluating marijuana’s role in pain management and other health issues facing veterans.

    “We’ve heard from a lot of veterans who want to see if this non-intoxicating component of cannabis that has little to no abuse potential is helpful for pain,” Dr. Kevin Boehnke, one of the lead researchers and assistant professor of anesthesiology at the University of Michigan, tells Metro Times. “We want to figure that out. It’s a pragmatic design that meets people where they are at and helps people figure out if this is safe and effective. We want to make sure that we’re keeping the people in the study safe. That’s our number one priority.”

    When Michigan voters approved a ballot measure in November 2018 to legalize recreational marijuana, the proposal included a mandate to use cannabis tax revenue to research the drug’s health benefits for veterans.

    The state’s Cannabis Regulatory Agency lived up to the promise and awarded grants to Wayne State University, the University of Michigan, and the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS) in 2021 and 2022 to research the potential health effects of medical marijuana on military veterans with mental health disorders.

    More than 460,000 veterans live in the state, and many of them have post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), anxiety, trouble sleeping, and depression.

    In one case, the Food and Drug Administration halted MAP’s clinical trial to examine the efficacy of marijuana in preventing suicide and treating veterans for PTSD. It was billed as the first clinical trial to examine the inhalation of high-THC cannabis.

    But the FDA said inhaling marijuana is too dangerous for participants, even though that’s how most people use cannabis.

    MAPS said it’s appealing the decision to the FDA’s Office of Neuroscience.

    In response, MAPS offered last year to “reduce the risks of the study” to satisfy the FDA by reducing the daily intake of marijuana during the trials and to bar participants who have a history of asthma or heart disease.

    “These protocol changes reflect a significant effort to address the reasonable concerns of the FDA, while maintaining the critical real-world elements of the proposal that make this data collection meaningful,” MAPS said in a report to the Michigan Cannabis Regulatory Agency in January.

    The FDA refused to back down, putting the $13 million tax-funded study at risk.

    Researchers also reported having trouble getting federal approval for obtaining marijuana. Researchers are prohibited from getting marijuana from dispensaries.

    The delays underscore the difficulties of researching marijuana’s potential health benefits, even though cannabis is legal and widely available in Michigan and numerous other states. As a result, veterans, who put their lives at risk to protect the country, are forced to wait indefinitely while researchers continue to navigate the federal government’s draconian approach to cannabis.

    Barton Morris, principal attorney of the Cannabis Legal Group in Royal Oak, says he’s not surprised by the FDA’s unwillingness to approve the studies. Marijuana is still classified as a Schedule I narcotic with no accepted medical use.

    “The FDA is not going to do anything with a Schedule 1 controlled substance,” Morris, who also is the chair of the Cannabis Law Section of the State Bar of Michigan, tells Metro Times. “There are strict rules in place.”
    But Morris is hopeful the federal government will soon reclassify marijuana, which he says will open the doors for more research.

    In May, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) moved to reclassify marijuana as a less dangerous drug. The proposal acknowledges the medical benefits of cannabis but stops short of legalizing it for recreational use. This change would shift marijuana from the “Schedule I” classification to the less restrictive “Schedule III.”

    “I’m confident the rescheduling is going to happen this fall,” Morris says. “The federal government is going to finally admit there are medical benefits to cannabis. One of the biggest benefits of rescheduling cannabis is it’s going to allow more research on the state and federal level.”

    At Wayne State University, which is conducting several different studies for veterans, the delays have prompted the school to temporarily reduce the salaries of researchers.

    Wayne State is the biggest recipient of the grants, receiving about $19.6 million “to coordinate and manage research into the efficacy of marijuana in treating the medical conditions” of veterans and preventing suicide.

    “We continue to operate under reduced salary support for research staff members,” Wayne State said in a report to the Michigan Cannabis Regulatory Agency.

    The FDA declined to comment on its actions, but said on its website that it supports “robust scientific research needed to develop new drugs from cannabis and is committed to encouraging the research and development of these new drugs” through its regulatory process.

    Steve Neavling

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  • National chain Toastique to open first Michigan location in Ann Arbor

    National chain Toastique to open first Michigan location in Ann Arbor

    East Coast toast and juice café Toastique is set to open its first Michigan location.

    Since its launch in Washington, D.C. in 2018, the chain known for its health-conscious menu of gourmet toast, smoothie bowls, and cold-pressed juices has grown to over 20 locations nationally, with just as many on the way.

    The newest location will be at 200 E. Washington St. in Ann Arbor, just steps away from University of Michigan’s campus. The first 100 guests at the grand opening on August 10 will receive $50 in Toastique dollars with a $10 minimum purchase. These rewards can be used on future visits through the Toastique loyalty program.

    Toastique’s menu includes items like Smoked Salmon Toast, Spicy Crab Toast, PB & B Bowl, Green Machine Smoothie, cold brew coffee, and iced collagen lattes.

    Franchisees Candace and Austin Kovar are bringing Toastique to Michigan after initially considering the franchise in 2019. It wasn’t the right time then, but seeing the brand grow so rapidly in just a few years revived the couple’s interest.

    “Running my own business has been a goal of mine for the longest time, and since having my daughter, I hope to pave a way and be a role model to her that strong-minded women can do anything they set their minds to,” Candace Kovar said in a press release. “I grew up in the restaurant industry, but when it came down to deciding what type of concept we wanted to run, Toastique was a clear fit for us.”

    She added, “The city of Ann Arbor is future-focused and Toastique is too,” Candace Kovar said. “We want to complement the communal atmosphere of Ann Arbor with a concept where locals can gather and enjoy a relaxing brunch or post-workout meal that’s filled with high-quality healthy produce and responsibly sourced ingredients. We can’t wait to join the Ann Arbor community on August 10th for a big grand opening celebration!”

    Following the grand opening, Toastique Ann Arbor will be open daily from 7 a.m.-5 p.m.

    More information can be found at toastique.com or on Facebook @toastiqueannarbor.

    Layla McMurtrie

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  • Labeling pro-Palestinian graffiti as ‘antisemitic’ at U-M regent’s office is disingenuous, activists say

    Labeling pro-Palestinian graffiti as ‘antisemitic’ at U-M regent’s office is disingenuous, activists say

    Jordan Acker, a Jewish member of the University of Michigan Board of Regents, quickly condemned the vandalism of his office early Monday as “antisemitism” because the graffiti messages criticized Israel’s attacks on Palestinians.

    Elected officials, along with CNN and other corporate media outlets, repeated the same claims.

    But is it antisemitic to criticize Israel?

    More than 36,000 Palestinians are estimated to have been killed by Israeli bombardments and ground operations in Gaza since Hamas attacked Israel on Oct. 7. On May 20, the chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court sought arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanhayu and his defense minister Yoav Gallant, alleging they committed war crimes.

    For reasons that aren’t difficult to understand, Palestinian sympathizers are tired of watching innocent civilians getting slaughtered by the thousands. At university campuses, students are doing what they can to oppose the brutality: They are calling on colleges to divest from companies connected to Israel.

    That’s exactly what led up to the vandalism at Acker’s law office in Southfield. At the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor last month, police in riot gear used batons and pepper spray to drive pro-Palestinian activists back from their protest encampment. Acker and other regents have refused the calls to divest and have openly supported Israel’s attacks on Gaza, prompting protesters, including some Jewish students, to protest outside the board members’ homes in May.

    Among the board members, Acker was the most outspoken opponent of the protest.

    When activists scrawled pro-Palestinian graffiti on Acker’s law office early Monday, he called it a “disgusting anti-semitic attack” on the social media platform X and in media interviews. Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson and state Sen. Jeremy Moss were among the elected officials who also called it antisemitic.

    But the graffiti contained no anti-Jewish messages. It read, “Free Palestine,” “Divest Now,” “UM Kills,” and “Fuck You Acker.” Red handprints were also left on the office’s doors.

    Law enforcement officials adopted similar rhetoric. Southfield police Chief Elvin Barren called the graffiti “a hate crime.” The FBI also joined the investigation.

    Dawud Walid, director of the Michigan chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR-MI), says supporters of Israel’s war are trying to silence dissent by labeling anti-genocide messages as antisemitism.

    “It’s a very disturbing trend that people who are calling for a ceasefire are being equated to antisemites and Hamas supporters,” Walid tells Metro Times. “This is a very troubling trend. It’s as if Americans can’t hold two ideas at once. We can say that Hamas committed an atrocity, and at the same time, say the Israeli government is committing crimes against humanity.”

    Walid points out that many opponents of Israel’s war are Jewish. In fact, one of the most vocal advocacy groups against the attacks in Gaza is the Jewish Voice for Peace, which supports the liberation of Palestinians. Leaders of the group recently called on the Hamtramck City Council to pass a resolution endorsing a movement that advocates for boycotts and divestment from Israel to pressure the government to stop its brutality.

    Walid also points to Israeli political scientist and author Ilan Pappe, who says he was detained and harassed by federal agents at Detroit Metro Airport last month for being a human rights advocate for Palestinians.

    “Another unfortunate aspect of this is that there are Jewish voices who are being silenced by this narrative,” Walid says. “That’s the irony of this. Their voices are being silenced. It’s bizarre.”

    On X, dozens of people challenged Ackers’s narrative that the graffiti was antisemitic.

    “Call it vandalism, call it criminal, but I don’t see how ‘Free Palestine’ is antisemitic,” @WolverLion wrote.

    Another X user chimed in, “What about this is antisemitic, exactly Jordan? We can’t keep throwing words around like this, they’ll lose their meaning.”

    “This is not antisemitism,” @alex_k99999 tweeted. “If you want to end petty vandalism, stop aiding genocide.”

    At a news conference on Monday, Acker repeated the antisemitism claims, saying he was targeted because he’s Jewish.

    “Make no mistake that targeting individual Jewish elected officials is antisemitism,” Acker told reporters.

    “This has nothing to do with Palestine or the war in Gaza or anything else,” Acker continued. “This is done as a message to scare Jews. I was not targeted here today because I am a regent. I am a target of this because I am Jewish.”

    To anyone who disagrees with him, Acker wrote on X, “it might be a good time to check yourself as to why.”

    Pro-Palestinians disagreed.

    “It’s vandalism and that’s wrong,” @yourauntifa responded. “Is supporting divestment antisemitic? You assume you were targeted because you’re Jewish. Might you have been targeted because you’re very vocal and visible and the culprits knew it would get this level of attention, which they crave?”

    Meanwhile at Wayne State University, pro-Palestinian activists, along with staff and faculty members, are holding a news conference and rally at the corner of Warren and Second to protest campus police’s handling of an encampment last week.

    Steve Neavling

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  • Police close U-M protest camp due to ‘safety risks’ — but used ‘excessive force’ on students to clear it

    Police close U-M protest camp due to ‘safety risks’ — but used ‘excessive force’ on students to clear it

    Close to 6 a.m. on Tuesday, officers from the University of Michigan’s Division of Public Safety and Security (DPSS) cleared a student encampment erected on the university diag last month in solidarity with Palestinians enduring Israeli military action.

    In a statement released by university President Santa J. Ono, the safety of “students, faculty, employees, university visitors, and protesters” is described as “a paramount concern.”

    Regent Sarah Hubbard echoes President Ono’s safety concerns.

    “It really became an issue of safety for those on the campus and in the encampment,” Regent Hubbard says.

    Officers dressed in riot gear used batons and pepper spray to drive protesters back from the encampment before tossing tents, supplies, and students’ belongings into trash containers.

    Cora, a member of the UM chapter of Jewish Voices for Peace who was present at the encampment Tuesday morning and asked that her last name not be used, estimates that about 50 other protesters were present when DPSS officers arrived.

    According to Cora, DPSS officers issued a 10-minute warning before beginning their raid of the encampment but failed to wait the full 10 minutes before instituting physical force.

    At that point, Cora says, protesters were “pushed back … continuously pepper sprayed, pushed to the ground, beaten, [and] shoved” by DPSS officers.

    “I wasn’t personally hit but I did see people pushed to the ground, shoved with batons, pushed onto other people, and generally met with excessive force [by DPSS officers],” Cora says.

    She says, “They were spraying people who had already been hit and were on the floor.”

    “Almost everyone was pepper sprayed,” Cora continues, herself included.

    According to Regent Hubbard, “The police asked them to leave … If they can’t move along, then there are consequences for that.”

    Cora says that as one contingent of officers continued to push back against the protesters, another contingent stayed to sweep the encampment.

    “As we were being [pepper sprayed] and being pushed to the ground, we were also watching them rip up our art, trash our tents, and throw them all into a couple of U-hauls that they had driven onto the diag,” Cora says.

    Asked if she believed the use of pepper spray was an appropriate response to protesters, Regent Hubbard says, “I think it’s important for law enforcement to use whatever tactics meet their needs at the time. I fully support our law enforcement and I think they showed great restraint this morning.”

    According to Cora, DPSS officers used so much pepper spray that “the entire air was just filled with it,” creating a “smog.”

    Even those who hadn’t been directly sprayed were “definitely still having a hard time breathing,” Cora says.

    Cora knew of at least two protesters who visited the Emergency Room as a result of their injuries and said they were eventually discharged.

    Deputy Chief of Police for DPSS Melissa Overton said in a prepared statement, “The encampment posed safety risks, both to participants and the community at large, and its presence was in violation of policies and regulations. Its removal was important to help maintain the safety and security of the U-M campus community.”

    Deputy Overton confirmed that four protesters were arrested and then turned over to the Washtenaw County Sheriff’s Office; they have since been released.

    According to Cora, those four protesters “were not provided any relief after being pepper sprayed,” and were held in a cell for approximately five hours “with that burning on their face.”

    Deputy Overton declined to comment on this claim; the Sheriff’s office has not responded to a request for comment.

    click to enlarge

    Doug Coombe

    Police crack down on U-M student protesters in early May.

    According to President Ono’s statement, the order to clear the encampment was made after a university fire marshal “determined that were a fire to occur, a catastrophic loss of life was likely.”

    Regent Hubbard also expressed concerns regarding fire safety and claimed that protesters had “brought in chicken wire to surround the encampment, and … a lot of plywood,” which posed a fire hazard.

    Spokespeople for the Tahrir Coalition, the coalition of student groups responsible for the encampment, say that to their knowledge the fire marshal “never came” to the encampment.

    “We did have multiple conversations around fire safety with university staff [and administrators],” those spokespeople claim, during which university staff did not express any concerns about fire safety.

    Regent Hubbard says, “we had members of the university leadership ask the protesters to leave and take down the encampment … numerous times over the last couple of weeks.”

    According to Regent Hubbard, before the encampment was cleared, protesters had been repeatedly told, “We have concerns about your safety. We have the fire marshal. We have this. We have that.”

    On May 15, members of the Tahrir Coalition staged demonstrations at several private residences belonging to university regents, including Regent Hubbard.

    According to Regent Hubbard, protesters showed up “just before 6 a.m., taped a three-page memo to my front door, and then proceeded to erect three tents on my lawn … trespassing across my property by leaving behind fake body bags, toys, and some other paraphernalia.”

    “Shortly thereafter, they started chanting and marching with a bullhorn and a drum, and disrupted my very quiet neighborhood,” Regent Hubbard says. “Some of my neighbors have young children that were very fearful about what was going on.”

    After officers from the Ann Arbor Police Department appeared on the scene, “the protesters left and left behind their property in my yard,” says Regent Hubbard.

    Regent Hubbard adds, “The Board of Regents has been very clear in saying that we will not be changing our investment policy in relation to this request from the coalition.”

    When asked if she had personally met with any members of the Tahrir Coalition to discuss the demand for divestment, Regent Hubbard said, “I’ve met with a variety of students on a lot of different issues over my time on the Board of Regents. I don’t know that I’ve met specifically with them about this.”

    When pressed, Regent Hubbard says, “I meet with students on a very regular basis about a wide variety of things. So some students have brought this up to me. Have I met with them specifically as a coalition effort? No, I have not. But I have met with them when they have come to Board of Regents’ meetings and provided a public comment.”

    Earlier in the conversation, Regent Hubbard denied that students associated with the Tahrir Coalition had availed themselves of the opportunity to provide public comment regarding university divestment.

    “We expressly invited them to attend our Board meeting and provide public comment last week. There are a few people that did provide public comment about the same theme of the protest, but nobody officially on behalf of the coalition signed up to provide public comment,” Regent Hubbard says.

    Asked whether a meeting between regents, protesters, and President Ono might have helped to defuse a tense situation that resulted in the use of physical force by campus police, Regent Hubbard responds, “They continue to ask for the same thing. So I think until we can move this discussion to the next step, I’m not sure how fruitful that kind of an engagement would be.”

    Regent Hubbard adds that she “can’t really define” what that next step might be.

    “It’s up to them. They’re the ones requesting things of us,” Regent Hubbard says of protesters.

    According to Cora, members of the Tahrir Coalition are “going to have to do a lot more thinking about what comes next on a broader scale.”

    Cora describes the DPSS’s raid of the encampment as “really scary and horrible.”

    Still, “It was really powerful and beautiful to see the way that people acted to support one another and hold the line for as long as we did,” Cora adds. “Even though we were all brutalized in really, really gross ways, we were successful in coming together, defending the camp, and using the power that we had to send a strong message about the need for the university to divest.”

    Natalia Holtzman

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  • Cops crack down on U-M anti-war protesters

    Cops crack down on U-M anti-war protesters

    On Friday, May 3, Michigan State Police responded to a tense but peaceful protest by University of Michigan students outside the U-M Museum of Art (UMMA) with pepper spray and physical force.

    Members of the U-M Board of Regents, who have refused to officially respond to student requests for a meeting to discuss university divestment from Israel since students set up an encampment on the U-M diag nearly two weeks ago, were believed to wait inside the museum building.

    Student protesters were joined outside the museum by community supporters, including families with young children.

    Multiple students, including Nat Leach, who plans to graduate next year, explained that the UMMA protest was an impromptu one.

    Students began to gather outside UMMA after they observed Regents Paul W. Brown, Sarah Hubbard, and Jordan B. Acker walking there. (UMMA is located within one- to two-minutes’ walking distance from the student encampment.)

    Protesters circled the museum’s entrances to demand a meeting with the regents.

    Nat Leach, a protester and member of the Tahrir Coalition, which is made up of more than 80 U-M-based student organizations, says, “We saw Regent Hubbard through the glass — she waved and smiled and giggled at us.”

    (In a video posted to the Instagram page of the U-M chapter of Students Allied for Freedom and Equality (SAFE), Regent Hubbard is clearly visible smiling and waving through the glass wall of UMMA as she films onlookers with her phone.)

    As Michigan State Police set up barricades, protesters beat on drums and chanted.

    The scene remained peaceful until at least 9 p.m., as more state police arrived via bicycle.

    Tensions escalated as the physical distance between police officers and protesters dwindled.

    “We were surrounding the glass part of the UMMA,” says Leach, who was at home when the protest started, and learned about it on social media.

    At that point, Leach says, police had shifted to using their bikes as an impromptu barricade and were “inching their bikes forward [as protesters] were inching back.”

    “Then one state police [officer] picks up his bike, starts slamming it forward [into the crowd],” Leach says.

    “I see two people next to me fall to the ground as I’m also being pushed into the people in front of me, where the wheel of the bike feels almost over my head,” Leach adds. “We were trying to just keep each other upright and not get pummeled onto the ground.”

    Leach says they tried to move backwards “to maintain my situational awareness.”

    When they regained their footing, they saw the same police officer reach out and grab a protester from the crowd — arbitrarily, Leach says — slam them against the glass wall of the building, and start to handcuff them.

    “Definitely no Miranda rights,” Leach says.

    Then Leach saw another officer “shaking his can of pepper spray like he’s about to spray. And I’m like, ‘He has pepper spray, back up,’ to the people next to me.”

    By the time Leach turned back around, the officer had begun spraying.

    @metrotimes #gaza #israel #palestine #ceasefire #annarbor #universityofmichigan ♬ original sound – Detroit Metro Times

    “Luckily, at that point, I had put my mask back on,” says Leach, who was standing far enough away that only a small amount of pepper spray landed on their skin. Others weren’t as lucky.

    “This one girl basically just came running to me and collapsed, sobbing, screaming, crying. It became a frantic mad dash to get water,” Leach says. Like others on the scene, Leach used water to rinse pepper spray from protesters’ eyes.

    Meanwhile, Leach says, “we know that the regents are inside, opting to do this instead of just speak with us.”

    As police increased their use of physical force, protesters began to disperse, chanting, “Stay close / stay tight / we’re gonna be alright,” and “Who keeps us safe? / We keep us safe.”

    According to Leach, many students “went from being pepper sprayed last night by their university to going to commencement [on Saturday].”

    Students interrupted U-M’s commencement ceremony with additional protests, chanting, “Israel bombs / U of M pays / How many kids did you kill today?” during U.S. Navy Secretary Carlos Del Toro’s speech and marching down the aisle of the stadium holding banners and Palestinian flags.

    Leach insists that despite escalating tensions at university campuses across the country, University of Michigan protesters didn’t expect police officers here to use brute force.

    “We hoped—” Leach starts before beginning their sentence again: “We want[ed] to remain optimistic that our own campus wouldn’t brutalize us.”

    Natalia Holtzman

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