USA TODAY, November 12, 2012
By Yamiche Alcindor
It was almost midnight when Ole Miss police officers came across a large crowd of students “shouting racial slurs and taunting other students with chants about the recent presidential election.”
Just minutes after President Obama was re-elected Tuesday, a crowd of 550 “agitated and angry” students and spectators gathered to not only attack his policies but shout about race, according to a University of Mississippi police report. More than 700 miles away in Virginia at Hampden-Sydney College, 40 students set off fireworks and broke bottles near the Minority Student Union house and yelled racial insults and threats at its residents.
How these students went from venting political frustrations to spewing racial epithets lies at the heart of American culture and ongoing issues of race despite having re-elected the nation’s first black president, school administrators and experts say. The incidents at both schools illustrate that though racial barriers at the White House may have been broken, discrimination that affects people’s daily lives remains.
“The anger wasn’t only about President Obama and his re-election,” said Keisha Bentley-Edwards, a professor at the University of Texas at Austin who studies race, adolescence and academic and social development. “It was overall frustration at the emerging power of diverse people in this country.” (more…)

