Student protesters interrupt Missouri curators' meeting

University of Missouri senior and Concerned Student 1950 member Kendrick Washington, front, chants and marches with others after interrupting a Board of Curators meeting Thursday, Feb. 4, 2016 on the way to the student center, in Columbia, Mo. The group read a list of demands for improvements in diversity and expressed their support for professor Melissa Click. (Daniel Brenner/Columbia Daily Tribune via AP)
University of Missouri senior and Concerned Student 1950 member Kendrick Washington, front, chants and marches with others after interrupting a Board of Curators meeting Thursday, Feb. 4, 2016 on the way to the student center, in Columbia, Mo. The group read a list of demands for improvements in diversity and expressed their support for professor Melissa Click. (Daniel Brenner/Columbia Daily Tribune via AP)

COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) - Two dozen protesters twice interrupted a meeting of the University of Missouri system's governing board to read a list of demands for improvements in diversity.

The demonstrators on Thursday stood side-by-side, their arms locked, outside a room on the Columbia campus when the Board of Curators were starting a finance committee session. They returned later to interrupt the meeting as it was in session.

The protesters also yelled support for Melissa Click, the assistant communications professor suspended last week for her confrontation with student journalists during race-related protests in November.

The protests led to the resignation of President Tim Wolfe and Columbia campus Chancellor R. Bowen Loftin.

Members of the protest group Concerned Student 1950, who helped lead last year's protests, did not answer questions from reporters.

Upcoming Events