Students for Monteiro hold second rally outside Sullivan Hall

More police officers were present at Sullivan Hall on April 16 than the protest a week earlier.

More police officers were present at Sullivan Hall on April 16 than the protest a week earlier. MARCUS MCCARTHY | TTN

Students for Monteiro, the student coalition supporting the reinstatement of African American studies professor Anthony Monteiro, marched around Main Campus and held a rally with other community protesters Wednesday, April 16.

In anticipation of the protest, Temple police officers were outside Anderson and Gladfelter halls and security guards were checking identification at the doors instead of inside.  The protesters did not march to these buildings.

More police officers were present at Sullivan Hall on April 16 than the protest a week earlier.

“We just want people to feel safe,” Acting Executive Director of Campus Safety Services Charlie Leone said. “We don’t know what [the protesters] are going to do. It’s just a precaution.”

Temple police officers were also posted at the entrance to Sullivan Hall and crowd control barriers were again in place on Beasley’s Walk by the time the protesters arrived an hour later.

Monteiro’s students and community members from his class “Philosophy and Black Liberation,” taught on Saturdays at the Church of the Advocate, attended the rally and joined in the march.

The protesters set up speakers outside Sullivan Hall and about 20 people spoke, including Glen Ford, executive editor at the Black Agenda Report, a Black Left site that Monteiro has contributed to before.

Monteiro, a non-tenure track associate African American studies professor, was notified in February that his contract would not be renewed for the next academic year. Students for Monteiro claimed the decision was a “retaliatory firing” in response to his activism and calls for the firing of College of Liberal Arts Dean Teresa Soufas, student representation on the Board of Trustees and better relations between Temple and the surrounding community.

The rally ended with a 15 minute speech from Monteiro. The protesters then went to meet and discuss their future plans.

Joe Brandt can be reached at jbrandt@temple.edu or on Twitter @JBrandt_TU.

Students for Monteiro hold rally, march to Sullivan Hall

Students stood outside Sullivan Hall to hand in a petition. They waited roughly 30 minutes until administrators came outside to take the petition.

Students stood outside Sullivan Hall to hand in a petition. They waited roughly 30 minutes until administrators came outside to take the petition.

Members of the coalition Students for Monteiro held a rally this afternoon to demand the reinstatement of Anthony Monteiro, an adjunct African American studies professor whose contract is not being renewed.

People Utilizing Real Power and Temple Democratic Socialists, the main student organizations in the coalition, spoke about topics ranging from gentrification to alleged racism in the College of Liberal Arts and their feelings about Monteiro in front of the Bell Tower. The students said that Monteiro was scheduled to speak, but he was not present and told The Temple News he had not planned to.

After the speeches, the group of about 30 protesters marched toward Anderson Hall and north past the Tyler School of Art before circling back and arriving at the doors of Sullivan Hall, which houses administrative offices.

The protesters chanted “Monteiro in, Soufas out,” “beat back Temple’s attack” and “up with the people, down with the police.” While the protesters gathered around the front door of Sullivan Hall, Temple police put up crowd control barriers on Beasley’s Walk, where there is a side door.

After about a half hour of chanting, Acting Executive Director of Campus Safety Services Charlie Leone along with William Bergman, special assistant to President Theobald, came outside to receive a petition from the protesters. Estimates for the number of signatories to the petition varied, with members of Students for Monteiro citing numbers between 500 and 900.

Last week, the protesters were stationed in front of the Bell Tower gathering signatures for their petition, which made four demands: reinstate Monteiro with tenure, fire CLA Dean Teresa Soufas, get student representation on the Board of Trustees and foster better community relations for Temple.

After Bergman and Leone took the petition, PURP member Paul-Winston Cange dismissed the crowd and announced a joint community-and-students protest on Wed. April 16 at 1 p.m.

“We’ll be right back here next week,” Cange said.

Joe Brandt can be reached at jbrandt@temple.edu or on Twitter @JBrandt_TU.