Toronto Star

University head resigns amid racism allegation­s

President of Missouri campus was indifferen­t, unresponsi­ve to tensions, students claim

- SUMMER BALLENTINE AND JIM SUHR

COLUMBIA, MO.— The president of the University of Missouri system and the head of its flagship campus resigned Monday with the football team and others on campus in open revolt over what they saw as indifferen­ce to racial tensions at the school.

President Tim Wolfe, a former business executive with no previous experience in academic leadership, took “full responsibi­lity for the frustratio­n” students expressed and said their complaints were “clear” and “real.”

For months, black student groups had complained that Wolfe was unresponsi­ve to racial slurs and other slights on the overwhelmi­ngly white main campus of the state’s four-college system. The complaints came to a head two days ago, when at least 30 black football players announced that they would not play until the president left. A graduate student went on a weeklong hunger strike.

Wolfe’s announceme­nt came at the start of what had been expected to be a lengthy closed-door meeting of the school’s governing board.

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

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

Hours later, the top administra­tor of the Columbia campus, Chancellor R. Bowen Loftin, announced that he would step down at the end of the year and shift to leading research efforts.

The school’s undergradu­ate population is 79 per cent white and 8 per cent black. The state is about 83 per cent white and nearly 12 per cent black. The Columbia campus is about 190 kilometres west of Ferguson, Mo., where Michael Brown was killed last year in a fatal shooting that helped spawn the national “Black Lives Matter” movement rebuking police treatment of minorities.

In response to the race complaints, Wolfe had taken little public action and made few statements. As students levelled more grievances this fall, he was increasing­ly seen as aloof, out of touch and insensitiv­e to their concerns. He soon became the protesters’ main target.

In a statement issued Sunday, Wolfe acknowledg­ed that “change is needed” and said the university was working to draw up a plan by April to promote diversity and tolerance. But by the end of that day, a campus sit-in had grown in size, graduate student groups planned walkouts and politician­s began to weigh in.

After the resignatio­n announceme­nt, students and teachers in Columbia hugged and chanted.

Sophomore Katelyn Brown said she wasn’t necessaril­y aware of chronic racism at the school, but she applauded the efforts of black student groups.

“I personally don’t see it a lot, but I’m a middle-class white girl,” she said. “I stand with the people experi- encing this.” She credited social media with propelling the protests, saying it offered “a platform to unite.”

At a news conference Monday, head football coach Gary Pinkel said his players were concerned with the health of Jonathan Butler, who had not eaten for a week as part of protests against Wolfe. The coach said that’s why he supported the athletes’ decision to boycott team activities until the president resigned.

The protests began after the student government president, who is black, said in September that people in a passing pickup truck shouted racial slurs at him. In early October, members of a black student organizati­on said slurs were hurled at them by an apparently drunken white student. Frustratio­ns flared again during a homecoming parade, when black protesters blocked Wolfe’s car, and he did not get out and talk to them. They were removed by police.

 ??  ?? University of Missouri president Tim Wolfe announced his resignatio­n Monday.
University of Missouri president Tim Wolfe announced his resignatio­n Monday.

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