FOCUS Many student newspapers have strange relationships with the peo ple who control the newspaper's budget and, to some extent, editorial positions. At times, for various rea sons, student governments, universi ty administrators or faculty advisers attempt to control a newspaper’s content through prior censorship, by removing editors they disagree with or through other, more subtle, forms of manipulation. Student journalists maintain, however, they art1 protect ed by the First Amendment, which guarantees freedom of the press. Editors asked to resign posts By Bradley S. Altman ■ The Oracle U. of South Florida The U. of South Florida Student Government Senate, citing biased cov erage, sexism and alcohol abuse, asked the editorial staff of the student news paper, the Grade, to resign this spring. Paul Kern, senate pro-tempore, wrote the resolution after students com plained to him about Oracle coverage, he said. “The students feel the Oracle is lacking. We represent students.” “The intent of this resolution is to make the Oracle more receptive to stu dents' needs,” Sen. David Ozner said. "We have a responsibility to lie on record and let them know we are dissatisfied.” Editor-in-Chief David Whitehead said he would not resign, nor would he ask Ins editorial staffto resign. "1 think we’re cov ering the important things and our cov erage has been fair,” he said. He said the editorial policy of the newspaper would not change because of the resolution. Not all senators agreed with the reso lution. Thirteen senators voted for the resolution, nine senators voted against and 10 abstained. Faculty Adviser Rick Wilber said he does not think the resolution lsjustified. “1 think David Whitehead and his staff are doing a goodjob 1 support them fully. “It is unfortunate that Student Government became involved with the content of a student newspaper That is a strange thing for a student govern ment to do.” PRESS CENSORSHIP GRANT r CAHMICMAEL. IH- iAhlA.N A-V • . • Mt . *, Editorial staff locked out of offices By Jonathan Levy ■ T'he Daily Tartan Carnegie Mellon U. The Duquesne l' Student tiovemment Association suspended the student newspaper's constitution after an investigation the editors say started because tlie paper continued to run a family planning ad the association found inconsistent with the university's mission The SGA also changed the inerting witn l irumm Uidisc.iss mi'marges. niter me meeting, the SliA, citing a lack of coo|H*ration, upheld the suspension .•Vs the dispute continued, the Duke editorial board began publishing its issues off-campus as The Daily Free Dress Liter the S( 1A Executive Board voted unanimously to lift the suspension of the Duke's constitution, hut suspended Drumm from participation in the Duke's operation pending resolution of the charges brought against her In March 1989, the Duquesne 1' Judicial Board convicted Drumm with failure toobev locks on l he Duquesne Dukes office and refused to allow the staff to publish unless the editor in-chief resigned. The publishing suspension was eventually lift ed, but the editor was not allowed “Obviously, they have the right to elose down a student organization, but when the student govern ment closes down the newspaper, that’s not right.” — Paul Kominos, Duquesne U. senior directives ot university olii rials and failure to follow university policy. She was acquitted on charges of theft of university policy, misuse of documents and tamper to return. The Duke ran the ad three times against SGA wishes. After the first time, SGA President [ lappy Meltzer asked Duke Editor Rebecca i )rumm not to run it again because it conflicted with the Catholic beliefs of the university, a private school in Pennsylvania. After the ad ran again, Meltzer stmt a letter toDrumm stating, “The ad should not reappear. It it does, the SGA will have no choice but to examine the operation of the student newspaper.” But Melzer said, "The suspension has nothing to do with the ads that appeared in print." He said the timing of the investi gation was coincidental and that its focus was the existence of a Duke off-campus checking account and improprieties sur rounding Drumm’s re-election as editor in March 1988 Immediately after the SGA voted for suspension, it held a inf' with the I!Jon editorial elections. Drumm, who was scheduled to graduate last May, was sen tenced to probation for one year or until graduation. She was also barred from participation in any student organization, including the Duke She acknowledges speaking with officials about the external bank account, but says they only asked, not ordered, her to move the money 'The Duke didn't feel we should move the funds on campus because.' the university could have complete control of them,” Drumm said Duquesne senior Paul Kominos feels the situation was han dled improperly. “Obviously, they have the right to close down a student organization, but when the student government clos es down the newspaper, that’s not right." News editor sues, newspaper changes policy By Michael Ashcraft ■ The Daily Bruin U. of California, Los Angelas California State U. at Northridge agreed to declare its student newspaper a ‘public forum’ and changed its policy concerning the publication of controversial articles as part of a settlement with a former student editor who was suspended for reprinting a cartoon some called racist. The university agreed to permit publication of con troversial material without the faculty adviser’s per mission unless the material could be obscene, libelous or an invasion of privacy. In addition, the settlement included $93 in back pay for the editor and removal of his two-week suspension from university records. James Taranto, former news editor of The Daily Sundial, was suspended from his editor’s job in 1987 after he wrote an opinion piece criticizing the U. of California at Los Angeles student publication board for its handling of a controversy about an anti-affir mative action cartoon. Taranto also reprinted the cartoon, which por trayed a rooster admitted into UCLA through affir mative action. “U.C. Rooster” ignited a student protest at UCLA and led to the one-day suspension of the 1986-87 Daily Bruin Editor-in-Chief Ron Bell. “This serves to call attention to the nationwide trend to censor conservatives on campus,” Taranto said. He called the settlement “a clear victory for free speech.” Taranto said he had been punished for his conser vative views, and with the help of the American Civil Liberties Union sued the university on the grounds that his free speech rights had been violated. Cynthia Rawitch, the faculty adviser who suspend ed Taranto, denied the charge of squelching conser vative viewpoints. “There has never been any attempt to suggest that student opinions needed to be watered down.* Taranto called the old policy of checking controver sial stories with the faculty adviser a form of prior cen sorship. When he was suspended for failing to confer with the adviser, he made a national issue of his case. The civil lawsuit had been scheduled to go to trial in June before Taranto settled with the university. Bell, who will graduate this year, said the decision represents a victory for free speech. “It's a strange day when the opinion editor of a newspaper can’t print what he strongly feels in his newspaper without consulting an adult authority.*