The Spectator (UWEC), January 26, "Public opinion sought in development of RA policy," by Emily Hartwig FIRE refuses to support the working group's advice because it does not explicitly guarantee the right of RAs to hold Bible studies in their rooms. · · · The Badger-Herald (UW-Madison), January 25, "UW advances own political agenda," by Darryn Beckstrom Not surprisingly, Mr. Reilly has not decided when he will make a final decision on the RA Bible study ban. And dont expect him to make a decision any time soon. If Mr. Reilly was genuinely interested in protecting the marketplace of ideas we have come to expect at an institution of UWs caliber regardless of the speechs popularity the unconstitutional ban would have already been lifted. · · · Student Press Law Center, January 25, "Florida university censors magazine for Jay Leno joke," by Ricky Ribeiro We produced our second issue and we actually asked the school for approval before we distributed, Ganz said. And after FIREs second letter to the school, it was pretty quick that they actually approved our second issue. · · · Ripon College Days (Wis.), January 25, "UWEC Bible study provokes controversy," by Sinead Devlin Interim Chancellor Vick[i] Lord Larson received a letter from the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education Oct. 17 which cited the school's actions as an unlawful infrigement of First Amendment rights.The organization requested that UWEC immediately end the ban on Bible studies. · · · Pennsylvania Independent, January 25, "Lighting the FIRE of Liberty in Philadelphia," by Chris Perez and Robert Shibley FIRE encourages all Penn students to take advantage of the tools we provide, to learn their rights, and to monitor and protect liberty on Penns campus. And if a situation does arise, remember: the resources of FIRE are there to protect you. · · · USA Today, January 24, "Students: Sexual harassment all too common on campus," by Mary Beth Marklein "There are aspects of harassment [policies] that nobody disagrees with," says Greg Lukianoff of the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, a Philadelphia-based non-profit. But "too many people think harassment is the same thing as being offended. Offending somebody is not a crime." · · · Townhall.com, January 24, "Republicans and Libertarians, unite!," by Mike Adams It is clearly unreasonable to request political organizations to admit members of opposing political parties. To require them to do so would sabotage the level of political discourse on campus. Therefore, these two groups have asked UNCG to change this policy. · · · The Daily News (Jacksonville, N.C.), January 24, "Are colleges trying to be too nice?," by Barry Smith The greater problem, however, isn't that the university could be setting itself up for a lawsuit. As Lukianoff points out, the real problem is the chilling effect that these policies have on free speech, freedom of expression and freedom of association. · · · Agape Press, January 23, "Univ. of Wisconsin Sidesteps System-Wide Policy on Bible Study Bans," by Jim Brown Having reviewed the report, FIRE says that the failure to recognize what it sees as a "glaring double standard" proves the school is "not serious about treating its students equally." · · · Cybercast News Service, January 23, "Judge Orders School to Reinstate Spanking Supporter," by Nathan Burchfiel Lukianoff said the college's president, Charles Beirne, "should be ashamed that his administration ignored its own rules, spent students' tuition money fighting litigation it invited, and cost one of its students a year of education simply because it did not like what he said in a theoretical paper." |
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