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      • After asserting that he has "free speech" and should be allowed to discuss the matter during the conference, Schuyler raised his arm in a Nazi salute and said "Sieg heil to you," a victory phrase once used by the Nazi Party and now used by white supremacists.
      www.thedp.com/article/2021/01/penn-robert-schuyler-open-letter-nazi-salute
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  2. Jan 26, 2021 · Earlier this month, Robert Schuyler, an archaeologist at the University of Pennsylvania (UPenn), sparked a storm of criticism when he used a Nazi salute and phrase during the plenary session of the Society for Historical Archaeology's (SHA's) annual meeting.

  3. Jan 21, 2021 · Penn professor Robert Schuyler used a Nazi salute and phrase at an archaeological conference earlier this month in an attempt to reference free speech suppression in Nazi Germany, sparking widespread backlash.

  4. Jan 12, 2021 · An archaeology professor has drawn condemnation for using a Nazi salute during an online video conference. Robert Schuyler, of the University of Pennsylvania, used the gesture during the...

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  5. Jan 11, 2021 · Attendees at last week's annual meeting of the Society for Historical Archaeology (SHA) were shocked by a public, online altercation that included a past president of the organization using a Nazi salute and phrase during the conference's opening plenary session.

  6. Jan 27, 2021 · Screen capture from video of Robert Schuyler, associate professor of anthropology and associate curator-in-charge of the historical archaeology section at the Penn Museum, as he makes a Nazi ...

  7. Jan 10, 2021 · Robert Schuyler, who teaches anthropology and holds a position at the Penn Museum, held his arm in a Nazi salute and said “Sieg heil to you” after a speaker told him that the meeting, a Society for Historical Archaeology conference plenary session, was not the place for him to discuss a question he had raised about membership.

  8. Jan 11, 2021 · Schuyler then performed the Nazi salute and used the Nazi victory phrase “Sieg heil.” Schuyler previously told the DP that he believed his speech was being suppressed, and his decision to use the phrase and gesture was meant to reference the limitations on free speech in Nazi Germany.

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