Paths of Protest
Description
A Virtual Experience Through Student Struggles at the University of Michigan
Jim Toy was raised in a small rural Ohio town in the 1930s and 1940s, and he recalled feelings of isolation related to having to hide his identity as a gay man—and deal with widespread anti-Asian sentiment. At the age of 40, he became what is believed to be the first person in Michigan to publicly come out as gay during a speech at an anti-Vietnam War demonstration in 1970 Detroit. Toy also cofounded Gay Liberation Front organizations in Detroit and Ann Arbor.
Here you can see the University of Michigan's President’s house. Living here seems pretty nice right?Last year, Jon Vaughn and protestors of the Hail to the Victims movement lived here on the street in a camper and tents for 150 days. Beginning on October 21, 2021, through March 7, 2022, they stayed through winter storms and freezing days to protest the university’s poor handling and lack of response to the sexual assault allegations against Dr. Robert Anderson, a physician who was employed by the school for over 40 years.
“Friendship” and “character.” The cornerstone of the historically female Michigan League, laid in 1928, is said to represent these two traits, while the historically male-only Union—which was brought up earlier—has statues said to represent “athleticism” and “scholarship.” Though this difference in language may seem minute, it emphasizes a long history of female oppression at the university level.
This is the Rackham Graduate School building, housing the university’s graduate school headquarters. Most U-M students have been taught by a Graduate Student Instructor, or GSI. They are likely a member of GEO, the Graduate Employees’ Organization. GSIs form the front line of many courses here, doing a significant amount of the university’s undergraduate teaching.
A hub for students of color at the University of Michigan, the Trotter Center's modern architecture stands proudly on State Street, representing decades of Black student activism. It was only recently given its prominent home on campus in 2019, but has been a valuable resource for multicultural students since the 1970s.
Some students stay in town, but most go home, work summer jobs, or have summer internships only to return in the fall for another year of school and football. 1998 was a bit different than usual, however. A group of students who completed Union Summer internships with the AFL-CIO, the largest American labor union, started SOLE, Students Organizing for Labor and Economic Equality, upon their return to Ann Arbor.
On October 14, 1960, John F. Kennedy stood on the steps at the Michigan Union, delivering a swift yet impactful speech at a campaign stop for the 1960 presidential election. While JFK flew in late intending to get some sleep, ten thousand students gathered at 1:40am, flooding State Street in anticipation of what their future president would say.