Daily Briefs

Arrests made following threats involving ­Michigan schools


PORTAGE, Mich. (AP) — Authorities say two students have been arrested following an investigation into a threat involving a school in southwestern Michigan.

MLive.com reports a potential threat was investigated this week involving Community High School, the Portage Public Schools' alternative high school program.

Meanwhile, a threat by an 18-year-old student of a shooting at Otsego High School led officials to keep students home Thursday. And WDIV-TV reports a 15-year-old student was arrested Wednesday following a threat involving Melvindale High School in suburban Detroit.

There have been a number of threats in Michigan since a massacre that killed 17 high school students and faculty last week in Florida.

In the Flint area, a letter to parents says a student who made a threat involving Clio schools was arrested and held pending possible charges.

 

Wayne State University to hold Haitian history lecture during Black History Month


In celebration of Black History Month, the Haitian Network Group of Detroit has partnered with Wayne State University to host a lecture next Tuesday, Feb. 27, by historian and author Millery Polyné on the legacy of the Haitian revolution and the poetry inspired by the uprising.

The lecture, “A Flame Superior to Lightning, A Sound Superior to Thunder: Haiti’s Revolutionary Legacy and ‘Monstrous’ Poetics,” will be held from 2 to 4 p.m. at the Wayne State University Law School’s Spencer M. Partrich Auditorium, located at 471 W. Palmer in Detroit.

The event is sponsored by Wayne State University’s Department of African American Studies, the Center for Latino/a and Latin American Studies, the Department of Anthropology, the Damon Keith Center for Civil Rights, the Department of History and the Humanities Center.

The program helps mark the more than 200 years since Haiti — known formerly as the French Caribbean colony of St. Domingue — declared its independence and ended a protracted revolutionary struggle that reverberated across the Atlantic and dramatically redefined freedom in the African Diaspora and beyond.

A Morehouse College alumnus, Polyné holds advanced degrees from the University of Michigan. His teaching and research interests focus on the history of African American and Afro-Caribbean intellectual thought, coloniality in the Americas, human rights and dictatorship, and race in sports. He has published numerous journal articles and the book, From Douglass to Duvalier: U.S. African Americans, Haiti and Pan Americanism, 1870-1964 (University Press of Florida, 2010).

Light refreshments and a book signing will follow his talk, which is free and open to the public. For additional information about the event or the Haitian Network Group of Detroit, please contact haitiannetworkdetroit.org or call 248-231-5767 or 248-514-6494.

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