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U of M students walk out of class to protest racism on campus

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As part of a week-long movement to rally against racism on campus, hundreds of students at the University of Michigan staged a walkout Monday morning.

The students filled Fletcher Street and tried to slow down the bus system. They said it was an effort to show the inconvenience the minority black student population has felt while trying to get an education.

Last week, somebody wrote the N-word under the name tag of three black students.
Travon Stares was one of three black students targeted last Sunday.

Stares said his day, which he planned to use for study and preparation for the week, was inconvenienced to deal with the fallout.

“We’re out here to show that I was inconvenienced for a day. I wasn’t able to study so we’re going to be out here for an hour, a few hours … just to see what it feels like to be inconvenienced,” he said.
Flyers that called for a week of "action against anti-blackness and other forms of racism" have been circulating campus.

“Us as black students, we do not feel that we are welcome here," said Sophomore Nando Felten, who added that the black population at University of Michigan was only 4 percent.