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Tag: Wayne State University

  • ADL demanded Wayne State emails on Palestine and Zionism, including WDET journalists – Detroit Metro Times

    The Anti-Defamation League, a Jewish civil rights and pro-Israel lobbying organization, quietly filed a sweeping Freedom of Information Act request with Wayne State University seeking emails from thousands of faculty, staff, and administrators that referenced Palestine, Zionism, or the student group Students for Justice in Palestine.

    The request, obtained by Metro Times through FOIA, generated nearly 7,500 emails involving more than 14,000 accounts, including management and journalists at WDET, the public radio station owned and operated in part by Wayne State. 

    But the ADL never picked up the records.

    Critics say the request was designed to intimidate and surveil pro-Palestinian voices on campus.

    “This is a disgusting attempt to stifle free speech,” one pro-Palestinian professor, who asked not to be named for fear of retaliation, tells Metro Times. “I’m absolutely appalled. The ADL will stop at nothing to rid campuses of pro-Palestinians.”

    The February 2024 FOIA sought emails, instant messages, and other electronic communications dating back to January 2023 that referenced Students for Justice in Palestine, the phrase “From the River to the Sea,” or words such as “Zionist,” “Zionism,” “Palestine,” “Intifada,” or “antisemitism.”

    Wayne State’s response indicated that the ADL’s search would include the office of the president, the provost, government and community affairs, marketing and communications, and Development and Alumni Affairs.

    University officials said the FOIA produced roughly 7,500 emails, but the records required a review to determine if they contained any exempt information. Wayne State charged the ADL $6,052 for the search and required a 50% deposit. The ADL never paid, and the records were never disclosed.

    The FOIA request was filed by ADL Chief Legal Officer Steven C. Sheinberg, who did not respond to messages for comment. The ADL also didn’t respond. 

    The ADL, founded in 1913 to combat antisemitism, has in recent years faced growing criticism from civil rights and free-speech advocates for labeling pro-Palestinian activism as antisemitic.

    The ADL has called Students for Justice in Palestine one of America’s “Top 10 Anti-Israel Groups” and in March 2025 issued a “Campus Antisemitism Report Card” that critics said conflated legitimate protest with hate speech. The report gave failing grades to several universities where large pro-Palestinian demonstrations were held.

    At Brown University in February 2024, dozens of students walked out of a talk by ADL CEO Jonathan Greenblatt, accusing him of misrepresenting criticism of Israel as antisemitism. And the ADL has previously called for federal investigations into campus activism that it claimed supported Hamas. 

    Advocates for pro-Palestinians say those tactics have led to university crackdowns on dissent nationwide.

    Wayne State has come under heavy scrutiny for its handling of pro-Palestinian activism. In May 2024, the university oversaw the brutal dismantling of a peaceful pro-Palestinian encampment on campus. The administration has repeatedly refused to meet with supporters of Gaza and has broken up subsequent peaceful protests.

    In June, a group of pro-Palestinian students, graduates, and a parent filed a federal lawsuit accusing the university of violating protesters’ constitutional rights.

    The revelation that the ADL sought thousands of internal emails about Palestine and related topics and included WDET journalists is prompting new concerns about its chilling effect on speech.

    “This wasn’t about protecting Jewish students,” says another professor, who was included in the FOIA request and asked not to be identified. “It was about silencing criticism of Israel.”

    Wayne State officials did not comment on the FOIA request, and Metro Times couldn’t reach WDET for comment. 


    Steve Neavling

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  • Breakfast spot Effin Egg readies to open in Detroit’s Midtown

    Breakfast spot Effin Egg readies to open in Detroit’s Midtown

    A new fast-casual breakfast sandwich restaurant with a colorful name is set to open in Midtown.

    The cheekily named Effin Egg is moving into the former Treat Dreams ice cream shop at 4160 Cass Ave., Detroit.

    The brand was established in Florida in 2019 and has around 10 stores across the U.S. This is its first Michigan location.

    The Detroit location’s owner Lucretia Willams, who worked as an executive in the auto industry and says she was looking to start a local business when the opportunity fell into her lap, as she describes it.

    “I contacted the owner and just said, ‘Hey, I’m effin’ interested in Effin Eggs,’” she tells Metro Times.

    Most of the restaurant’s menu revolves around eggs, with a variety of breakfast sandwiches and breakfast burritos available.

    “It’s a twist on comfort food, in a way,” Willams says. “It’s very tasty, very delicious, as all food should be. We’re more interested in giving people high-quality, made-to-order breakfasts that taste just as good as any fine-dining, if you will, breakfast.”

    Williams anticipates her customers will be largely made up of college students from nearby Wayne State University. She’ll be offering a coffee drink called the “Effin Warrior,” named after WSU’s mascot.

    A variety of other espressos, lattes, and teas will also be available — what the chain calls “pot” drinks. (Continuing its theme of tongue-in-cheek language, the company’s website proclaims, “Potheads welcome.”) Williams says she also plans to cater to the young customer base by serving nonalcoholic mocktails “to appeal to their sense of almost grownish selves.”

    It’s not all kid’s stuff, though; Williams plans to open by 6:30 a.m. daily so workers at the nearby Detroit Medical Center can also come in for a bite to eat before their shifts.

    The restaurant will close at 3 p.m. except from Thursday through Saturday, when it will have a later shift from 7-11 p.m. Then, “we’re going to have breakfast all effin’ day,” Williams says.

    The restaurant can seat 33 inside and another 20 on an outside patio.

    “We’re trying to give [customers] the best of both worlds,” Williams says. “Everyone’s trying to do this thing, but fast-casual is in between where you do get to sit-down, you do get fresh cooked meals, but it’s not carrying the expense of having a large staff of servers and all that.”

    Williams says she’s hoping to open by WSU’s homecoming game on Oct. 26. The restaurant is now hiring; more information is available at effineggdetroit.com.

    Lee DeVito

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  • Prosecutor declines to charge Wayne State protesters arrested during pro-Palestine demonstration

    Prosecutor declines to charge Wayne State protesters arrested during pro-Palestine demonstration

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    Steve Neavling

    Wayne State University police arrested several pro-Palestinian activists on Thursday morning.

    Pro-Palestinian protesters who were arrested after setting up an encampment at Wayne State University will not face criminal charges, Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy announced Monday, saying the activists were exercising their First Amendment rights.

    “The right to peacefully protest and demonstrate is deeply woven into the American fabric,” Worthy said in a statement. “The WCPO has thoroughly studied and examined these cases and we have determined that they do not rise to the level of criminal behavior. We will also be asking that the tickets issued to some of the protesters be dismissed.”

    The students were arrested on May 30, the same morning that police tore down the pro-Palestinian encampment.

    Police requested charges against five people who were arrested during the protest, which was organized by the group Students for Justice on Palestine. Worthy said her office reviewed body-worn camera footage from seven officers and determined there was not enough evidence to support criminal charges.

    But that doesn’t mean the students are off the hook. On Sept. 12, Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel charged 11 people involved in a similar encampment at the University of Michigan after the Washtenaw County Prosecutor’s Office declined to file charges.

    The WSU protest escalated when university cops tore down an encampment and then confronted protesters who were on a public sidewalk.

    At 6:30 a.m., a 22-year-old student was singled out by officers for using a bullhorn as she marched with the crowd. According to the prosecutor’s review, an officer grabbed her from behind, holding onto her bag and jacket, before other officers assisted in taking her to the ground. The student was arrested and charged with trespassing, even though the protest was taking place in an area near the College of Engineering, where protesters had been advised they were allowed to demonstrate.

    While officers were arresting the student, a 53-year-old woman, identified as her mother, tried to intervene, exclaiming, “That’s my daughter!” She was also arrested and charged with trespassing.

    In a related incident, a 19-year-old student, who attempted to hold on to the 53-year-old woman, was arrested, and her hijab was dislodged during the arrest. She was also charged with trespassing.

    “There is insufficient evidence to prove that the three women committed the crime of trespass,” the prosecutor’s office said.

    In a separate incident at 8:15 a.m. on Merrick Street, WSU cops alleged that a 20-year-old woman was cursing at officers while filming them with her phone. It was further claimed that she struck an officer’s shield while gesturing with her arm, which led to her arrest for assault. However, the review of the footage showed that while she was gesturing, she did not make contact with the shield. Prosecutors concluded that no crime had occurred and declined to charge the woman.

    During her arrest, a 24-year-old male protester intervened, attempting to pull her away from police. He was pushed to the ground by officers, and when he stiffened his arms to resist handcuffing, he was arrested for resisting and obstructing an officer. However, the review found that his actions did not rise to the level of a criminal offense, as he was aiding a woman who had not committed a crime.

    Other protesters were issued tickets during the protest, but the prosecutor’s office announced that those citations will also be dismissed.

    In a statement, Worthy emphasized the importance of the right to peaceful protest, but reiterated that violence or non-peaceful behavior will not be tolerated.

    “I want to make it exceedingly clear that this office will not ever tolerate protesters that engage in behavior that is not peaceful or turns violent in any way,” Worthy said. “But that is not present in these cases.”

    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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  • Wayne State sign defaced with ‘blood of innocent Palestinians’

    Wayne State sign defaced with ‘blood of innocent Palestinians’

    A prominent sign that welcomes students to Wayne State University’s campus was splattered in red paint on Wednesday to symbolize “the blood of innocent Palestinians” after the school refused to divest from companies linked to Israel, a popular activist group said Thursday morning.

    The “W” sign, which sits on the edge of campus off of Warren Avenue, was power-washed by the university on Thursday morning, a day after the university’s Board of Governors avoided pro-Palestinian activists by holding its first virtual meeting since the closures of the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Wayne State’s chapter of Students for Justice in Palestine (SJPWSU), an activist group that is calling on universities nationwide to divest from corporations that deal with Israel, posted a photo and video of the vandalized sign on Instagram and sent the university a message.

    “Whether you like it or not you will be held accountable – because the university is the PEOPLE’S university,” the group wrote Thursday morning. “BOG we see you, you have blood on your hands. The blood of Palestinians won’t wash off as easy as the W. From the belly of the beast – no justice, no peace.”

    “BOG” refers to the school’s Board of Governors.

    The group, which did not directly take credit for the graffiti, also admonished the university for resorting to physical force to remove peaceful pro-Palestinian activists from a Board of Governors meeting in April and using heavy-handed tactics to chase activists away from an encampment on campus on May 30.

    “Wayne State is stained with the blood of innocent Palestinians with their refusal to divest from genocide,” the group wrote. “The admin would rather brutalize students, community members, and faculty that are the lifeblood of the school. By having their lOF trained pigs rip off hijabs, attempting to fire faculty for speaking up, and moving its meetings online to silence us, Wayne State has made it clear it is no more than a glorified hedge fund.”

    Wayne State spokesman Matt Lockwood tells Metro Times that the university removed the graffiti “first thing this morning” and that campus police hope to track down the culprits.

    “WSUPD is reviewing surveillance video to try and identify who did it,” Lockwood says.

    Faculty, alumni, and faith leaders have criticized the university’s handling of the protests, saying Wayne State has a diverse student body and should be a beacon of free speech rights. Some faculty and staff have also called for the resignation of WSU President Kimberly Espy.

    During the encampment, university officials promised that the Board of Governors would listen to activists and consider their proposal to divest. Instead, the elected board dodged activists by moving its public meeting to virtual on Wednesday, once again drawing condemnation. The university also moved the public comment period from the beginning of the meeting to the end, making it impossible for students and others to address issues on the agenda, including the budget, before they were voted on.

    In early June, pro-Palestinian activists vandalized the Southfield law firm of Jordan Acker, a Jewish member of the University of Michigan Board of Regents.

    Acker condemned the graffiti as “antisemitic” because he was the only member of the Board of Regents to be targeted. The graffiti messages read “Free Palestine,” “Divest Now,” “UM Kills,” and “Fuck You Acker.” Red handprints were also left on the office’s doors.

    Steve Neavling

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  • Wayne State ducks pro-Palestinian activists with new virtual board meetings

    Wayne State ducks pro-Palestinian activists with new virtual board meetings

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    Steve Neavling

    A Muslim activist yelled at Wayne State University police on May 30: “40,000 dead, and you’re arresting us instead!”

    At Wayne State University, democracy is ducking behind a computer.

    The university’s elected Board of Governors is going virtual for its next public meeting for the first time since the COVID-19 pandemic. By doing so, the board is avoiding face-to-face encounters with student and faculty protesters who have been rallying in support of Palestinians.

    In addition, the board moved the public comment period from the beginning of the meeting to the end, making it impossible for students and others to address issues on the agenda before they are voted on.

    Exactly two months before the Wednesday, June 26, virtual session, campus police forcibly removed protesters from the last meeting, prompting more than 100 faculty and staff members to denounce the “racist assault” on students who were calling on the university to divest from companies linked to Israel.

    It’s also the first public board meeting since campus police resorted to violence after tearing down a protest encampment on May 30. Some faculty and staff members even called for the resignation of WSU President Kimberly Espy for her handling of the protests.

    Pro-Palestinian students and faculty members rebuked the board’s decision to go virtual, saying it’s clearly an attempt to silence dissent.

    “They moved it virtually as a defensive move so they would be able to get their word out without having any face-to-face interactions with the people they are elected to serve,” Ridaa Khan, a WSU student senator and pro-Palestinian activist, tells Metro Times. “Many of the students, staff, and faculty are upset and want this opportunity to address the board. A campus is supposed to promote free speech. This is setting a dangerous precedent. The genocide is continuing, and we are not being heard.”

    University leaders also appeared to renege on their promise to engage with students about the possibility of divestment. While trying to get students to abandon the encampment, WSU officials said the board would take up the issue at its next board meeting after hearing from students.

    That won’t happen now that public comment has been moved to the end of the meeting.

    “That messaging was part of an attempt to dismantle our encampment before they met any of our demands,” Khan, an undergraduate majoring in media arts and studies, says. “They told us to attend the meetings. Now they’re changing the terms of the meeting.”

    Sticking to their lack of transparency, the WSU Board of Directors declined to answer questions from Metro Times and referred the issue to the administration’s public relations team. University spokesman Bill Roose declined to say whether the virtual meeting was in response to pro-Palestinian protests but issued a vague written statement.

    “Meeting formats and locations are determined at the discretion of the Board of Governors,” Roose wrote. “The Board chose a virtual format for its June 26 meeting.”

    Roose said members of the public can stream the meeting at wayne.edu/live and that anyone wishing to comment must submit their requests “up to 48 hours before the meeting.”

    In other words, the board can meet wherever it wants.

    Faculty members also expressed frustration and astonishment with the board’s decision to go virtual, saying the elected members are shirking their duties to be accountable and accessible. The board is also sending a message to students that their voices don’t matter, the faculty members say.

    “It’s a complete slap in the face to the students, faculty, and staff who want to be heard,” one professor, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of fears of reprisal, tells Metro Times. “It’s incredibly disheartening. The Board of Governors has a responsibility to the students, and instead of engaging with them, they are saying, ‘Your input means nothing to us.’”

    Steve Neavling

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  • Wayne State faculty demand President Espy’s resignation after student protest encampment raid

    Wayne State faculty demand President Espy’s resignation after student protest encampment raid

    Some Wayne State University faculty and staff members are calling on President Kimberly Espy to resign after authorizing police to raid a student protest encampment on campus.

    WSU cops cleared out the encampment Thursday morning and used force to prevent the anti-war activists — tuition-paying students — from returning to campus. Police tackled some of the protesters and tore off at least one woman’s hijab, even as the demonstrators were following the cops’ orders. About 11 activists were arrested.

    It was the second time in a little over a month that police used force to handle peaceful protesters on campus. At a WSU Board of Governors meeting on April 26, university police also pushed and yanked activists out of the public space for chanting, “We will not rest, until you divest.”

    “This is the second time that Espy has sat silent while her police force has directly targeted women and unleashed violence against them,” Bryan Victor, professor of social work, tells Metro Times. “Police forcibly removed a hijab that one of the protesters was wearing. We have lost all confidence in Espy’s capacity to lead.”

    Metro Times interviewed more than a dozen faculty and staff members, some of whom spoke on condition of anonymity because of fears of reprisal.

    They are considering organizing a no-confidence vote to pressure Espy to resign and to send a message that her actions were unjustified and immoral.

    “Wayne State’s actions were deplorable, disgusting, inappropriate, vial, and repugnant,” a professor in the College of Fine and Performing Arts says. “Pick any descriptor and it applies. Siccing the cops on students who are literally resisting and protesting a genocide demonstrates that the president lacks the moral clarity to do her job. She should step down. She’s not equipped to handle her responsibilities.”

    Activists set up the encampment on May 23 to call on the university to divest from companies connected to Israel. Espy agreed to meet with a limited number of activists if they abandoned the encampment on Memorial Day. The activists countered the request, saying they would meet Espy on their terms.

    In response to Thursday’s crackdown, a group of WSU workers also launched the Faculty & Staff for Justice in Palestine, an initiative that is part of a larger movement with more than 100 other groups on campuses across the country.

    “The FSJP stands in solidarity with our students and seeks to protect them from harassment, discrimination, and punishment,” a statement reads. “We are dedicated to reclaiming and protecting academic freedom and free speech within our university, which have become battlegrounds in the propaganda war against Palestinian freedom advocates. We will work in close collaboration with colleagues in Palestinian universities and other universities around the world, supporting public education about the ongoing Nakba and endorsing the principles of Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS).”

    After police forcibly removed activists from a public Board of Governors meeting in April, more than 100 faculty and staff members denounced the “racist assault” and “McCarthyite repression against students.”

    Professors accuse the university of exploiting diverse students as a recruiting tool, only to treat them unfairly on campus.

    “The university uses images of many of these students in their promotional materials,” Shannan Hibbard, a professor in the Department of Music, says. “The university literally uses the faces and images of these students that they unleashed violence on and brutalized. I know many of these students personally, and I am disgusted by this.”

    Faculty and staff members also admonished Espy for resorting to force to handle peaceful students who only want their voices to be heard. They point to the brutal crackdowns at other colleges, including the University of Michigan, saying Espy should have known that the encampment crackdown would further inflame tensions and demoralize students.

    click to enlarge

    Steve Neavling

    Wayne State University police arrested nearly a dozen pro-Palestinian activists Thursday.

    “Imagine sitting in your office at Wayne State University after having watched what happened at Harvard, Yale, and other universities and saying, ‘What I should do is the same absolutely stupid thing,’” a professor says. “Not only does Espy have vial political beliefs, but she isn’t learning what she’s seeing around the world. How dumb is she?”

    Thousands of students have been arrested on campuses around the country in recent weeks for protesting Israel’s U.S.-backed brutality, and police have used aggressive tactics to crack down on dissent. At the University of Michigan last week, police in riot gear used batons and pepper spray to drive protesters back from their encampment before tossing tents, supplies, and students’ belongings into trash containers. The violent actions by police led to larger protests as supporters of free speech rights joined the activists to condemn the universities.

    Instead of sitting down with students to discuss their demands, Espy chose violence and the suppression of free speech, faculty and staff members say.

    “It doesn’t take a lot of research to understand that there is a better way to handle this,” a professor says. “There were no attempts to do this differently. And there have been multiple times when Espy deliberately misled her students and even misrepresented her own intentions to make it seem like she was going to bargain in good faith.”

    Morhaf Al Achkar, professor of Oncology at the Wayne State University School of Medicine, says universities should be havens for free speech, and college leaders should encourage dialogue.

    “When we are in our classrooms, we pose questions, and sometimes you are faced with silence,” Al Achkar, who is from Syria, says. “Now you have the students talking. And you have the community here. Let the community engage. Let the students deliberate. We support them and are behind them. This is a formative moment for every student here. And we stand behind it.”

    The staff and faculty members say they’re proud of the students for having the courage to speak out.

    “I am incredibly proud of them, and I am deeply inspired by their bravery,” Julia Yezbick, a professor in the Department of Communication, said three days before the encampment was raided. “Many of them are young, and they are very intelligent and so well spoken. And they have done their research, and they are standing firmly in what they believe. It’s incredible walking through camp because we see our students here, and they’re showing up.”

    Another professor, who is a licensed mental health professional, says students have been dealing with so much anxiety and uncertainty over the past few years, from the mass shooting at Michigan State University and the COVID-19 pandemic to the violence against Palestinians.

    “After going through all of that, they’re showing up here with bravery,” he says. “They are seeing everything that has been happening in Gaza over the last six months. They’ve gone through so much, and it’s just nauseating to think that they’re putting themselves in this position and the response is, again, more violence.”

    Al Achkar says the violence against students will be “a tragic and dark stain in the history of this institution.”

    Meanwhile on Thursday evening, dozens of activists gathered outside the jail to support the students who were arrested.

    In a statement Thursday, Espy defended the raid, claiming the encampment was unsafe and scaring other students.

    “At Wayne State, we live by an unwavering set of values — including collaboration, integrity, diversity and inclusion — as well as a commitment to safety, security and equity for our entire campus community,” Espy said. “As president, I have a responsibility to uphold these values for all to live, learn and work.”

    Espy added, “Since the encampment was established on May 23, it presented legal, health and safety, and operational challenges for our community. University leadership repeatedly engaged with occupants of the encampment.”

    Steve Neavling

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  • Wayne State cops use force to remove peaceful pro-Palestinian activists from campus

    Wayne State cops use force to remove peaceful pro-Palestinian activists from campus

    Police in riot gear resorted to violence to remove pro-Palestinian activists from Wayne State University campus early Thursday morning, tearing down a protest encampment and arresting about six peaceful demonstrators.

    Campus police swarmed the encampment shortly before 6 a.m. after giving three warnings for activists to disperse.

    Protesters, most of whom are tuition-paying students, complied with the demands and were forced to retreat to a public sidewalk just outside of campus along Warren Avenue. Police formed a line to prevent activists from returning to campus.

    “There’s no riot here! Why are you in riot gear?” activists chanted.

    Meanwhile, cops tore down Palestinian flags and knocked over tents, protest signs, tables, and boxes full of water bottles and food.

    @metrotimes #detroit #metrodetroit #wsu #waynestate #waynestateuniversity #gaza #palestine #israel #ceasefirenow ♬ original sound – Detroit Metro Times

    “Everyone was given ample warning,” university spokesman Matt Lockwood tells Metro Times. “Officers told everyone to clear out. We didn’t want anyone to get hurt.”

    The raid came one week after activists set up the encampment and demanded that Wayne State divest from companies with links to Israel. On Memorial Day, U.S. Rep. Rashida Tlaib, the only Palestinian American in Congress, joined protesters after WSU President Kimberly Espy set a deadline that evening for activists to abandon the encampment.

    As rumors of an imminent raid circulated, about 200 protesters gathered at the encampment. On Tuesday morning, Tlaib, a Detroit Democrat, told police that she and the activists were not leaving.

    At about the same time, the university canceled on-campus events and moved to remote classes, citing a “public safety issue.”

    Only a couple dozen protesters were at the encampment when the raid occurred.

    click to enlarge

    Steve Neavling

    Wayne State University police faced off with protesters, demanding they leave campus.

    At 6:30 a.m., activists marched on a public sidewalk to the southern edge of campus and were confronted by more police in riot gear. Cops demanded that the protesters leave campus. As the activists retreated as ordered, several cops wielding batons lunged at protesters, throwing them to the ground, pouncing on them, and threatening to use pepper spray. Several protesters were handcuffed and whisked away.

    The cops’ decision to escalate the confrontation only stoked more anger.

    “40,000 dead, and you’re arresting us instead!” protesters shouted at police, referencing the number of Palestinians killed by Israelis since the war began in October.

    “Fuck your handcuffs, we’re not going anywhere,” the activists chanted.

    click to enlarge A Muslim activist yells at Wayne State University police, “40,000 dead, and you’re arresting us instead!” - Steve Neavling

    Steve Neavling

    A Muslim activist yells at Wayne State University police, “40,000 dead, and you’re arresting us instead!”

    Mohammed Abuelenain was sleeping in a tent in his pajamas when police ordered activists to leave Thursday morning.

    “They came in the middle of the night when there was barely any of us,” Abuelenain tells Metro Times. “So it really shows they were being cowards for not showing up when we’re able to protect ourselves.”

    Abuelenain says the activists are demanding more transparency from Wayne State.

    “We’re protesting the genocide and Wayne State University’s investments in Israeli companies,” Abuelenain says. “And we are diverse. We want full disclosure, not simply what the endowments are and what possible percentages could be put into Israeli companies. We want full disclosure, and we want WSU PD to stop sending the chief of police to Israel to be trained by the [Israel Defense Forces].”

    click to enlarge Wayne State University police arrested several pro-Palestinian activists on Thursday morning. - Steve Neavling

    Steve Neavling

    Wayne State University police arrested several pro-Palestinian activists on Thursday morning.

    In a statement Thursday morning, Espy says the decision to raid the encampment came after consulting the WSU Board of Governors, university leadership, and other community leaders.

    “At Wayne State, we live by an unwavering set of values — including collaboration, integrity, diversity and inclusion — as well as a commitment to safety, security and equity for our entire campus community,” Espy said. “As president, I have a responsibility to uphold these values for all to live, learn and work.”

    Espy added, “Since the encampment was established on May 23, it presented legal, health and safety, and operational challenges for our community. University leadership repeatedly engaged with occupants of the encampment.”

    On April 26, pro-Palestinian activists turned out at a WSU Board of Governors meeting to demand divestment and began chanting, “We will not rest, until you divest.” Campus police, some in plain clothes, converged on protesters and pushed and yanked them out of the public meeting as they linked arms and continued to chant.

    More than 100 faculty and staff members condemned the use of force.

    Steve Neavling

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  • Student encampment demands Wayne State University ‘divest from genocide’

    Student encampment demands Wayne State University ‘divest from genocide’

    click to enlarge

    Steve Neavling

    A pro-Palestinian encampment was erected at Wayne State University.

    Pro-Palestinian activists set up an protest encampment at Wayne State University on Thursday evening and are making multiple demands, including that the school divest from companies with links to Israel.

    About 200 protesters rallied outside the university’s Welcome Center on Thursday before some of them gathered in the encampment, where they pledged to stay until their demands are met.

    Zaynah Jadallah, a Wayne State alumnus, listed numerous demands that include the university’s Board of Governors passing a ceasefire resolution that acknowledges “a genocide being carried out by the U.S. and Israel against the indigenous Palestinian population.” She also called on the university to apologize for campus police using “excessive force” to remove protesters from a Board of Governors meeting on April 26.

    Other demands include creating scholarships and fellowships for Palestinians, fully disclosing all of the university’s investments, and ending the campus police department’s trips to Israel.

    It’s not yet clear how police are going to handle the encampment.

    Wayne State University spokesman Matthew Lockwood told Metro Times that police are monitoring the situation.

    click to enlarge Pro-Palestinian activists at an encampment at Wayne State University. - Steve Neavling

    Steve Neavling

    Pro-Palestinian activists at an encampment at Wayne State University.

    “A small encampment of pro-Palestinian protestors was set up on our campus,” Lockwood said in a written statement. “It is an evolving situation, with public safety on site to ensure that it is peaceful, safe, and non-disruptive to our campus operations.”

    Inside the encampment on Friday morning, about 20 protesters sat peacefully under the shade of a tree, talking in hushed tones. The camp was ringed with signs that read, “Divest from Genocide,” “Fund Our Education Not Our Occupation,” “Enough,” and “From Palestine to the Philippines, Stop the U.S. War Machine.”

    Other universities have been criticized for forcibly disbanding similar camps and pepper-spraying and arresting activists.

    On Tuesday morning at the University of Michigan, police in riot gear used batons and pepper spray to drive protesters back from their encampment before tossing tents, supplies, and students’ belongings into trash containers.

    Dana, a WSU alumnus who declined to give her last name, said the encampment represents liberation.

    “We are here continuing the efforts of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, and we have our liberated zone, and we’re continuing the student movement towards diversity,” Dana said.

    @metrotimes Days after police dismantled a student anti-war protest encampment at the University of Michigan, a new one is being set up at Wayne State University in Detroit. #detroit #metrodetroit #michigan #gaza #palestine #israel #ceasefirenow ♬ original sound – Detroit Metro Times

    Steve Neavling

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  • Wayne State faculty, staff condemn ‘racist assault’ on protesters who demanded divestment from Israel

    Wayne State faculty, staff condemn ‘racist assault’ on protesters who demanded divestment from Israel

    More than 100 faculty and staff members at Wayne State University denounced a “racist assault” on protesters demanding the school divest from companies linked to Israel.

    In an open letter this week, the employees condemned WSU President Kimberly Espy and the Board of Governors for their silence as campus police forcibly removed protesters from a Board of Governors meeting on April 26.

    The students were calling on the university to pull money from Israel-related companies as the country continues its brutal war on Hamas in Gaza.

    “We particularly condemn President Kimberly Espy and the Board of Governors, who looked on silently as a large group of mostly Arab, Muslim, and Jewish students were assaulted and violated by campus police and security,” the letter states. “The attacks embody the latest wave of racist and McCarthyite repression against students on campuses across the United States.”

    During the Board of Governors meeting, protesters began chanting, “We will not rest, until you divest.” Campus police, some in plain clothes, converged on the protesters and pushed and yanked them out of the meeting room as they linked arms and continued to chant. Video of the incident was posted on social media by Detroit Documenters.

    The board refused to consider a resolution that the Student Senate approved in November that called on WSU “to develop socially responsible criteria for our university’s investments to ensure that we are not complicit in war profiteering and investing in companies that knowingly contribute to or benefit from human rights violations in Palestine and around the world.”

    Faculty and staff were in attendance to urge the board to pass the divestment resolution, pointing out that Israel killed more than 34,000 Palestinian civilians, more than a third of whom were children, since the Hamas attack on Israel on Oct. 7.

    College students across the country are demanding universities pull money from companies that do business with Israel.

    When the board opted not to take up the divestment resolution, protesters began chanting.

    “That vote never happened,” the letter states. “As a result, students engaged in a peaceful, nonviolent protest demanding that university officials consider the Divestment Resolution.”

    The letter took aim at the swift, aggressive actions of police.

    “The President and Board looked on without emotion as the officers they oversee forcefully cleared the room of Arab, Muslim, and Jewish students, faculty, and community supporters,” the letter says. “Campus police, in violation of their own protocol, flagrantly laid their hands on female students who were doing nothing more than chanting. One student was inexplicably arrested, even though students never received any order to vacate or disperse.”

    The faculty and staff members called the police actions a “racist assault” and called for an apology.

    “We demand that President Espy and the Board of Governors issue a clear and unequivocal apology to the students, protect academic freedom, and commit to prevent police violence against students, faculty, and community members in the future,” the letter concludes. “HANDS OFF THE STUDENTS.”

    Wayne State officials didn’t immediately respond to Metro Times for comment.

    Steve Neavling

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  • A Professor Is Suspended for Suggesting It’s Better to ‘Kill’ Racist or Homophobic Speakers Than Shout Them Down

    A Professor Is Suspended for Suggesting It’s Better to ‘Kill’ Racist or Homophobic Speakers Than Shout Them Down

    Steven Shaviro, a professor of English at Wayne State University, in Detroit, was suspended this week for a Facebook post saying that it is “more admirable to kill a racist, homophobic, or transphobic speaker than it is to shout them down.”

    Shaviro prefaced the inflammatory comment by saying he does not support people breaking criminal codes. He also wrote in the now-deleted post, made on his personal Facebook page, that right-wing groups invite such speakers to college campuses “to provoke an incident that discredits the left.” Shaviro declined to comment to The Chronicle.

    In an email to the university community on Monday morning, M. Roy Wilson, the president of Wayne State, wrote that the university had referred the situation to “law enforcement agencies” and that Shaviro, who was not named in the email, had been suspended with pay “pending their review.”
    Asked why the university decided to report the professor to the police, a spokeswoman said that she could not provide information about personnel matters.

    We “feel this post far exceeds the bounds of reasonable or protected speech,” Wilson wrote in the email. “It is at best, morally reprehensible and, at worst, criminal.”

    Two graduate students who had worked with Shaviro told the campus newspaper that they didn’t think his post was threatening and that the professor was, in their view, simply drawing attention to a problem: speakers with offensive views who come to public universities primarily to spark protests.

    Over the last few years, many professors have drawn attention for provocative online comments about political issues. That attention is often stoked by conservative- and libertarian-leaning websites presenting the comments as evidence of liberal bias in higher ed — and, in some cases, calling for colleges to punish the professors. (In Shaviro’s case, Wayne State officials appeared to act before such articles were published.)

    The question of how colleges should respond in such cases has been extensively debated — particularly when professors are making comments as private citizens, outside of their professional capacity. Institutions have taken different approaches, with some defending a faculty member’s right to speak freely and others taking disciplinary action.

    Shaviro posted his comment as colleges across the country grapple with a fresh wave of demands from students to cancel events featuring controversial speakers this semester — particularly when those invited speakers oppose LGBTQ rights. The protests have prompted some critics to argue that students are unwilling to learn and merely aim to shout down opposing viewpoints when they come to campus.

    At Stanford University’s law school, the law dean and president apologized to a federal judge appointed under former President Donald J. Trump after he was heckled by students during a campus event. Students had called for the judge to be disinvited, arguing that he had made court decisions that harmed women and LGBTQ people. An administrator who stepped into the fray and condemned the judge’s viewpoint, while also supporting his right to speak, is now on leave following the incident.

    Mary Eberstadt, a conservative essayist who has written about, among other things, religious freedom, consequences of the “sexual revolution,” and critiques of pop culture, published a Wall Street Journal opinion piece on Sunday saying she refuses to speak at colleges where she believes she will be met by an “angry mob.” She said she’d just rescinded her acceptance of an invite to speak at Furman University.

    Sylvia Goodman

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