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Censoring
the Student Press
By John K. Wilson
Any day now,
the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals in Chicago will issue one of the
most important decisions in the history of the campus press. The
case is Hosty v. Carter, and the principles at stake not only will
determine whether college students have the right to print what
they want, but also will affect the idea of academic freedom itself.
The Hosty in
Hosty v. Carter is Margaret Hosty, a graduate student at Governors
State University in south suburban Chicago, where she helped edit
the Innovator newspaper until it started printing articles critical
of the administration. In 2000, a few days after Governors State’s
president sent a campuswide memo denouncing the newspaper, the dean
of students called up the Innovator’s printer to order him
not to print any further issues of the paper without prior review
of the content by the administration. The state of Illinois
continues to defend the administration’s actions, and asserts
that college students should be treated like high school students
and subjected to the censorship of student newspapers.
Faculty Advisors
Fired
The right of students to produce a newspaper without direct censorship
by the administration are well established. But administrators are
beginning to realize that the faculty advisor can be a powerful
force in controlling student newspapers. In the past year, faculty
advisors faced an unprecedented number of firings.
Barton County
Community College (Great Bend, Kansas): the Board of Trustees fired
Jennifer Schartz, part-time professor and adviser of the Interrobang,
on April 20, 2004, without explanation. The Interrobang had published
a letter to the editor, written by a former basketball player, critical
of the coach, despite being asked by the administration to censor
it. University lawyers wrote to Schartz, “since Barton County
Community College is ultimately responsible for the content of this
publication, it is the Administration’s position that letters
of this type will not be printed as letters to the editor,”
but Schartz noted that censoring the newspaper would be illegal.
The board ordered her to ban negative letters from the student newspaper,
Interrobang, after a letter from a former basketball player criticized
the coach. “the Administration has decided that no letters
to the editor will be published which are by and large personal
attacks upon other members of the Barton County Community College
family. I am certain that you and your student staff persons do
not agree with this position but unfortunately, the ultimate responsibility
from a liability perspective with regard to this newspaper falls
on the greater College community and this is why this decision has
been made.²
Vincennes University: Michael Mullen was removed as student newspaper
adviser to the Trailblazer, claiming that he was fired because of
stories criticizing the administration for failing to investigate
a theft of the newspaper, and questioning whether the president
had enough experience for the job. After an April Fool’s issue
in 2003 offended some people, Dean of Humanities Mary Trimbo ordered
the newspaper not to produce another, but it did in 2004. Mullen
declared, “I think the message is loud and clear — if
you speak out, you will pay.”
Manatee Community College: the student newspaper, The Lance, was
banned and a journalism class for Fall 2004 eliminated because it
published a March 2004 story without prior approval from the faculty
advisor. The newspaper may be allowed to resume in the fall of 2005.
An article titled “Dude, where’re my student activities?”
complained about the lack of events on campus. Rebecca King, a faculty
adviser to the newspaper, said about the administration’s
decision: “They thought of it as protecting the college from
what could be unflattering coverage. Do I think that’s censorship?
Yes. But I don’t think anybody was intentionally trying to
censor the students.”
Long Island University: faculty adviser Mike Bush was fired and
editor Justin Grant was suspended from the newspaper for a month
because an article appeared in the Jan. 21, 2004 Seawanhaka about
the grades of the student government president who resigned. Administrators
took control of the newspaper and changed the office locks. In a
story about the resignation of the student government president,
the newspaper reported his poor grades that another reporter had
found and confirmed with several students. Although no university
records were released, the university claimed that the student newspaper
was violating federal privacy laws which prohibit the administration
from releasing personal records of students.
Arapahoe Community
College: Chris Ransick was dismissed as newspaper adviser after
battles over content of the paper. Fort Valley State University
in Georgia: Dan Archer, faculty advisor, was dismissed over content
issues in the student newspaper. Kansas State University: Ron
Johnson, director of student publications and adviser to the Kansas
State Collegian, was fired from these positions by the administration.
Members of the Black Student Union had called for Johnson’s
resignation after the paper did not cover the Big 12 Conference
on Black Student Government. In 2004, the Collegian was named the
best four-year daily broadsheet newspaper in the country. Journalism
school director Todd Simon declared, “It’s kind of like
a coach; if the record is middling, usually you change coaches.”
After receiving five “outstanding” ratings from 1999
to 2003, Johnson received an “exceeds expectations”
rating in 2004 and was recommended for a raise. On July 6, 2004,
a federal judge ordered the administration to reinstate the newspaper’s
faculty advisor. California State University-Long Beach: Daily
Forty-Niner publisher William Mulligan was removed after printing
a full-page ad criticizing journalism department chair William Babcock
for his “chilling censorship warning” to the staff.
Babcock discouraged the newspaper from reporting the dispute within
the journalism department, declaring, “It’s not a news
story.”
Sex and the
University
Perhaps no topic is a greater source of censorship than sexuality.
Numerous newspapers have been censored or stolen because of sexual
content, especially at religious universities.
Spokane Falls
Community College: new campus rules will allow administrators to
fire or punish journalists and require advance permission for publishing
any “controversial material.” Two student editors who
printed a small photo of a couple having sex (covered with black
bars) were not fired because the previous policy would not allow
it.
University of
Missouri at Kansas City: a building manager removed 450 copies of
the University News because of a front-page article on “Sex
at Swinney.”
La Roche College: the president destroyed 900 copies of the April
14, 2004 La Roche Courier because a columnist advocated teaching
students about safe sex. University of North Florida: the student
government sharply cut funding for the student-run radio station
and required Osprey Radio to survey students every other week about
what music it should play. One student senator complained that the
station was playing “the filthiest, most vulgar, disgusting,
unbelievable stuff.”
University of Scranton: The 2004 April Fools edition of The Aquinas
led officials to shut down the newspaper for more than a month,
fire the editor, and remove all remaining copies of the newspaper.
The edition of The Aquinas included a “fictitious reference
to a priest caught fooling around with a woman during the screening
of The Passion of the Christ,” and a Celebrity Death Match
between the former and current university president. In a special
full-page “statement of ethics” in the May 13, 2004
issue of The Aquinas compelled by the university before the newspaper
was allowed to publish again, the staff and editorial board of the
newspaper promised, “it is important that we strive for the
same goals as our University” and added, “Though our
mission is to serve as a paper of record and voice of the student
community, we cannot appropriately foster the overall mission without
respect for the ideals of Jesuit pedagogy.” An editorial in
the same issue proclaimed, “Through errors of omission and
commission the newspaper developed a forked tongue. This will be
no more.”
Baylor University: The Lariat staff was threatened with disciplinary
action for a Feb. 27 2004 editorial supporting gay marriage. “Taking
into account equal protection under the law, gay couples should
be granted the same equal rights to legal marriage as heterosexual
couples,’’ the editorial said. In a strongly worded
statement that appeared in the newspaper on March 2, Baylor President
Robert B. Sloan Jr. denounced the editorial: “Espousing in
a Baylor publication a view that is so out of touch with traditional
Christian teachings is not only unwelcome, it comes dangerously
close to violating university policy, as published in the student
handbook, prohibiting the advocacy of any understandings of sexuality
that are contrary to biblical teaching,’’ Sloan wrote.
The student publications board, a group of faculty and administrators
overseeing the newspaper, called the editorial a violation of student
publications policy which says that student publications should
not ``attack the basic tenets of Christian theology or of Christian
morality.’’ The statement assures, “The guidelines
have been reviewed with the Lariat staff, so that they will be able
to avoid this error in the future.”
Other Cases
of Censorship
Other types of censorship range from newspapers being shut down
by the administration to efforts to fire columnists for expressing
controversial viewpoints.
Hampton University:
the president ordered newspapers confiscated after the students
refused to publish her letter on the front page, and instead printed
it on an inside page. After protests, Hampton adopted new policies
on Dec. 19, 2003 protecting freedom of the campus press and prohibiting
confiscation of newspapers.
Oregon State
University: The Daily Barometer fired columnist David Williams after
his column, “A message from a White Male to the African American
Community” offended many readings. It later was revealed that
parts of the column had been plagiarized from a syndicated columnist.
University of California at San Diego: administrators temporarily
shut down a student television station because it showed the video
of the beheading of Nicholas Berg in Iraq, canceling all student-produced
shows for the remaining two weeks in the semester. St. Cloud
State University: former dean Richard D. Lewis sued the university
because of a critical article about him accusing him of anti-Semitism
that appeared in the Oct. 27, 2003 student newspaper, the University
Chronicle. The newspaper retracted the article and apologized to
Lewis. A judge dismissed the suit. Rutgers University: The Medium,
a campus humor magazine, offended people with a cartoon that declared,
“Knock a Jew in the oven! Three throws for one dollar! Really!
No, REALLY!” Some critics called for the publication to be
shut down. In fall 2003, the newspaper printed personal ads with
slurs against African-Americans, Asians, Hispanics, Jews, Christians,
women and homosexuals. Former New York City mayor Ed Koch denounced
the president for failing to punish the newspaper, and urged New
Jersey governor McGreevey to “initiate remedial action”
against the university. Carnegie Mellon University: President
Jared Cohon established a commission to review The Tartan, the student
newspaper, after an April Fools’ edition sparked protest because
it included a cartoon with a racial slur, poems about raping a teacher
and mutilating a woman with an ice skate, and an illustration of
female genitalia. The editor-in-chief fired the cartoonist (who
intended for the cartoon to criticize racists) and apologized, and
ceased publication for the rest of the semester, but the commission
will examine possible disciplinary action. A content review board
will examine future editions of the newspaper. Dean of Student Affairs
Michael Murphy, who will serve on the board, noted: “We all
make mistakes and people err in judgment, but this cannot be tolerated.
The Tartan is sitting in judgment of itself ... the administration
will also sit in judgment of The Tartan and the students involved
in this.” Demonstrators called for all the students involved
in allowing the racial slur to be printed to be suspended or expelled.
Cornell University: The campus NAACP sought to remove funding from
The Cornell American and The Cornell Review after articles on racial
preferences and violence were published that the NAACP regarded
as an “orchestrated attempt” at “hate.”
Roger Williams University: The Hawk’s Right Eye had its funding
cut off. President Roy Nirschel declared, “While we affirm
the right of campus organizations to hold different points of view
and to disagree, the university will not condone publications that
create a hostile environment for our students and community.”
Whittier College: a conservative campus newspaper, the Liberty Bell,
was not allowed to distribute on campus without prior approval from
the school publications board. Southwest Missouri State University:
officials investigated the faculty advisor and student editor of
The Standard for publishing an editorial cartoon (drawn by an American
Indian student) on Nov. 21, 2003 that a Native American group found
“offensive” because it shows two Native Americans meeting
a Pilgrim woman with a gift of canned corn, and the Pilgrim responds,
“Gladys, the Indians are here and it looks like they brought
corn...Again...” Editor-in-chief Mandy Phillips was told to
attend “mediation” and that reporting on the administration’s
investigation could violate university policy. Also, SMS Young Americans
for Freedom members claim they were prohibited from distributing
their newspaper on campus because they were not a recognized student
group.
Newspaper Trashings
One of the most common types of censorship is throwing copies of
a free newspaper in the trash. The most frequent reason for destroying
a newspaper continues to be endorsements in a student government
race.
Laramie County
Community College: more than 300 out of 1000 copies of the March
8, 2004 issue of The Wingspan were stolen. Editors blamed a student
government member who was angry about an editorial concerning tobacco
sales on campus. University of Central Florida: the homecoming
queen who asked friends to trash copies of The Future because of
an article revealing her criminal record was required by the university
to do 16 hours of community service and pay the newspaper $1,000.
University of Southern California: copies of the Jan. 27, 2004 issue
of the left-wing alternative newspaper The Trojan Horse were stolen,
probably because the issue focused on the Israeli/Palestinian conflict.
Queens College: On March 31, 2004, 80% of the 4,000 print run of
The Knight News was discarded because of a student government election
story. Cal Poly Pomona: 2,500 copies of the Poly Post were stolen
because of a story about the student government election. Western
Oregon University: most of the copies of the weekly student newspaper
were stolen; several eyewitnesses saw the subject of a political
cartoon about the student body election taking the newspaper.
University of Nevada at Las Vegas: On Oct. 16, 2003, copies of the
campus newspaper were put in garbage bags because of a column titled,
“Christopher Columbus, we salute you” which called American
Indians “primitive Stone Age level savages.”
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