February 26, 2016

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The Gatepost volume

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84 • number 17

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BLACK LIVES MATTER

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Jennifer Johnson/The Gatepost

TEACH IN

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Bailey Morrison/The Gatepost

(Top Left) Trayvon Martin, whose death influenced the start of the Black Lives Matter movement. (Top Right) Psychology Professor Robert Martin did a group experience with his students about privilege and inequality. (Bottom Left) An image from one of the numerous Black Lives Matter protests that have occurred across the nation. (Bottom Right) Biology Professor Bryan Connolly teaches students how plants can be used as “a tool for social change.”

By Michael B. Murphy Editor-In-Chief By Alexandra Gomes Associate Editor By Jennifer Johnson News Editor By Julia Sarcinelli News Editor By Bailey Morrison Assistant News Editor

In honor of Black History Month, FSU professors are currently engaged in a Black Lives Matter teach in across campus. According to sociology professor and cocreator of FSU’s Black Lives Matter teach in Virginia Rutter, over 200 classes from 33 different disciplines are participating in the weeklong event. In an email, Rutter said the teach in would include over 2,000 students. Departments involved in the teach in include Communication Arts, Fashion, Sociology, Biology, Physics and Criminology.

The Black Lives Matter movement was founded by activists Opal Tometi, Patrisse Cullors and Alicia Garza “in the aftermath of the Trayvon Martin decision, as a corrective to the sense, made sharper and sharper with multiple cases of shootings, that black lives don’t matter,” according to an informational sheet for the University’s teach in. Additionally, according to the informational sheet, over 102 unarmed AfricanAmericans have been killed in 2015 alone. President F. Javier Cevallos said in an

email, “As a university, I think the teach in idea is exactly the way to proceed: have an open and honest conversation about the events and the effect they have on us. By tying the diverse issues to different academic disciplines, we all learn how wide the impact they have on society. I am really thankful to the faculty that came up with the idea and to all who decided to incorporate the topic in their courses.” He added a university is a “place to ex- See TEACH IN page 4

Inside The History of Hip-Hop: Byron Hurt Screens Doc at DPAC 13

The Mazgal Duo: Professors Milot and Anderson unveil art 10

Men’s Ice Hockey Glides into MASCAC Tourney 18


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