The annual Rutgers University Board ofGovernors meeting was temporarily closed to the public Tuesday night after itschairman ordered the installation of a folding door following a man’s outburstand chanting from members of the audience.
Author: Nick Dean
UPDATED: Appeals court won't stop release of UNC athletic records
The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill has released hundreds of pages of athletic documents and media outlets are in the process of reviewing them.
Want to catch a movie? You bring the camera, they’ll bring the handcuffs.
People fully flexing the First Amendment by producing a major Hollywood flick can’t be photographed, according to the City of Fort Lauderdale.Fort Lauderdale police officers arrested a journalist for photographing the downtown building in which a film was being produced.Journalists can’t use the First Amendment to cover a form of free expression?
Judge orders release of Pa. university foundation's donation records
Astate court judge on Monday ordered the release of East Stroudsburg University Foundation’sdonation records, placing a hopeful capstone on a 2-year public records battle.
After 8-year legal battle, judge finds Howling Pig editor's rights were violated
A federal district court ruled Friday that a former college student whopublished a First Amendment-protected satirical newsletter was deprived of hisright against unreasonable search and seizure when police confiscated hiscomputer.
Student's suit against N.C. university seeks to open private campus police records
Nick Ochsner may have already walked across the stage, but he is stillfighting Elon University’s decision to withhold information about an on-campusarrest.
R.I. bill would open records of some private college police departments
The Rhode Island House of Representatives hasapproved a bill requiring private universities to release more informationabout crimes handled by campus police departments that employ full-fledgedpeace officers.
Media advisers group lifts censure of Western Oregon Univ.
CollegeMedia Advisers will no longer consider Western Oregon University a school thatinfringes on the rights of its student journalists thanks to a unanimousdecision by the group’s board of directors this month to lift a two-yearcensure.