KENTUCKY -- Kentucky State University, which is being sued by former students for violating their First Amendment rights in Kincaid v.
Tag: Spring 2000
Supreme Court upholds student fees
WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Colleges and universities may use mandatory student activity fees to finance campus groups that engage in political speech as long as the funding system is viewpoint-neutral, the Supreme Court ruled in March.
In a unanimous decision, the Court rejected the argument of Christian and conservative students at the University of Wisconsin at Madison that the university's fee system violated their First Amendment rights by forcing them to fund groups they disagree with on political, religious or ideological grounds.
Writing for the majority, Justice Anthony M.
Federal judge prohibits Ohio schools from releasing campus court records
OHIO -- A federal judge refused to give a newspaper access to the student disciplinary records of two Ohio universities on March 20, saying the files qualify as education records and are protected from public release by federal law.
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Supporter wants federal press protections
MASSACHUSETTS -- Out of frustration with the slow progress supporters have made in getting states to pass anti-Hazelwood legislation, one adviser is working to pass a bill at the national level.
Harry Proudfoot, a newspaper adviser at Westport High School, said he believes passing one bill in Congress will be easier than passing 44 bills in the states.
State attorney general says fraternity party police report exempt from law
MISSISSIPPI -- The state attorney general's office said in January that the University of Mississippi does not have to release campus crime reports or police logs pertaining to a 1999 fraternity party incident that sent five female students to the hospital.
The Daily Mississippian, the university's student newspaper, and The Clarion-Ledger, a Jackson newspaper, requested the reports from campus police shortly after the incident occurred in November.
Student body president, administrator halt Md. newspaper’s presses on election day
MARYLAND -- The administration of Morgan State University agreed to reimburse the school's student newspaper in March for advertising revenue it lost after school officials ordered the printer to delay delivery of the election-day issue.
Spokesman editor Kevin Howell also asked administrators to reprimand the two people involved -- the school's student activities coordinator and student government association president -- for effectively censoring the newspaper because of their suspicions that the issue contained candidate endorsements.
Howell said SGA president Julian Dash called him on the morning of March 16 asking to see a copy of the newspaper.
Kentucky will require colleges to make police logs more open
KENTUCKY -- A new state law will require colleges and universities to provide more timely and public information about campus crimes starting in September.
Under the Michael Minger Act, post-secondary institutions must keep an accurate log of all crimes reported on campus available to the public.
Commentary provokes principal to pull papers
OREGON -- The Elkton community was not partying like it was 1999 when the millennium edition of the Elkton High School student newspaper, The Elk Call, hit the school's newsstands in December.
A sarcastic commentary published in reply to a letter from a community member about the poor grades of Elkton students prompted the school board to halt the distribution of 500 newspapers and order them destroyed.
The commentary was written by newspaper staff member Andy Baird in reply to a letter to the editor from an Elkton community member bemoaning academic problems at the school.
Appellate court to hear Kincaid oral arguments
OHIO -- The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit will hear arguments in the college censorship case Kincaid v.