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Fired Mizzou Professor Melissa Click Appeals Termination

"The curators bowed to conservative voices," said Melissa Click, fired after calling for "some muscle" to eject a videographer during protests.
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KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A former University of Missouri assistant communications professor is appealing her firing last month over her role last year in a race-related student protest, suggesting that her ouster was political.

Melissa Click, in a statement Tuesday, insisted her Feb. 25 dismissal by the university system's governing curators was unfair by failing to follow the normal, on-campus procedures for reacting to faculty misconduct. More than 100 state lawmakers, mostly Republican, had called for her removal.

"In their decision to terminate my employment, the curators bowed to conservative voices that seek to tarnish my stellar 12-year record at MU," Click wrote. "Instead of disciplining me for conduct that does not 'meet expectations for a university faculty member,' the curators are punishing me for standing with students who have drawn attention to the issue of overt racism at the University of Missouri."

Related: Mizzou Fires Professor Who Called for 'Muscle' Against Student Reporter

Click, 45, said the governing board "is using me as a scapegoat to distract from larger campus issues, but their termination of my employment will not remedy the environment of injustice that persists at MU."

A spokesman for the curators, John Fougere, said Tuesday that board had no comment.

Click's statement came a day after the American Association of University Professors announced that three members would visit the Columbia campus later this month to investigate the process leading to Click's firing.

Click's supporters have questioned the curators' move to decide Click's fate rather than allowing the school to use its normal procedures for reacting to faculty misconduct.

Related: Mizzou President, Chancellor Resigning Amid Racial Turmoil

In voicing support of Click's firing, top university administrators cited her run-ins with police during October protests in Columbia and with two student journalists weeks later on the Columbia campus, including a videotaped confrontation where she called for "some muscle" to remove a videographer from the protest area.

Click has said she regretted her actions. But in Tuesday's statement, she wrote that "I will not apologize for my support of black students who experience racism at the University of Missouri."