University Newspaper Figures Out How To Get Around Administration's Censorship Orders

from the +1-for-cleverness dept

There are times when university newspapers come under pressure from university administrations to suppress certain stories. It rarely ends well. NiemanLab points us to a story about how the LaSalle University Collegian cleverly got around one attempt to suppress a story. First, the background. You might have heard the story about the LaSalle University professor who apparently hired strippers who did lapdances for students (and the professor) as a part of a “business seminar.” Having attended business school at one point in my life, I don’t recall that part of the curriculum.

Anyway, apparently the Collegian had a story about this incident ready to go before all the news broke, but the University ordered them not to publish it while it investigated. Instead, someone else broke the story and it went viral quickly, leaving the Collegian out on a story for which it had the scoop. After that, the paper again wanted to run its original story and again the administration blocked it. Eventually, the Dean of students said it was okay, but only if it ran below the fold (the lower half of the front page, for those not familiar with newspaper lingo). Apparently, this was not the first time the administration had ordered the paper to publish stories that were embarrassing to the school below the fold.

However, this time the paper’s editor was ready. Here’s what the paper looked like:


Photo by Sharon Gekoski-Kimmel of the Philadelphia Inquirer
If you can’t see it, the entire area “above the fold” is blank… other than the text:

See below the fold

The paper also put out an editorial explaining how it’s “not a real newspaper,” because as a student newspaper controlled by the University, it cannot print whatever it wants. In that editorial, they also admit that they only post their content online a day after the actual paper runs, because University officials wants to make sure that there are no “inaccuracies or ‘potentially damaging material.'” The editorial also admits that the paper has no Twitter or Facebook accounts, despite prior promises that they were coming… because the administration “did not feel comfortable with our news stories being distributed through social media.”

Frankly, the administration at LaSalle should be ashamed of itself. It’s not teaching these students journalism at all. It’s teaching them about a paranoid administration that wants to hide from the truth. This aspect of the story seems a hell of a lot more damaging to LaSalle University than the original story of the strippers. That could have just been one crazy professor. But the systematic censorship of a student newspaper concerning “damaging” content suggests a university that people shouldn’t want to be associated with. If an organization is afraid of the press, there’s usually a damn good reason why: because they have things to hide.

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Comments on “University Newspaper Figures Out How To Get Around Administration's Censorship Orders”

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22 Comments
Donnicton says:

Having attended business school at one point in my life, I don’t recall that part of the curriculum.

Wait, what? Realistically, that has to be the most accurate depiction of modern business that I’ve ever seen done in a school.

It’s the newer, more up-to-date curriculum accurately demonstrating the age old practice of taking a client to your local strip club to discuss business contracts and agreements.

If they don’t learn it in school, how the hell can they be expected to know how to properly execute these deals in practice?

Atomboy says:

Journalism 101

Frankly, the administration at LaSalle should be ashamed of itself. It’s not teaching these students journalism at all. It’s teaching them about a paranoid administration that wants to hide from the truth.

I and a few others might point out that this is exactly what happens at every major news organization around the world. That is the reality which we live in.

Vidiot (profile) says:

Brings back memories

“Having attended business school at one point in my life, I don’t recall that part of the curriculum.”
We actually did have a professor who a) showed his all-male class a 16mm breast self-examination film each semester, and b) organized a bus trip to the US Treasury each year… 15 minutes of snapshots on the front steps, then off to the Washington, DC strip clubs.

Kerry Kaye (profile) says:

“If an organization is afraid of the press, there’s usually a damn good reason why: because they have things to hide.”

Hmm, sounds very similar to the refrains from people happy to take away our rights: “only [guilty people/people breaking the law/people with something to hide/etc] [run from the police/think TSA searches are unreasonable/disagree with the president/etc].

That being said, I think stifling the press from publishing stories like these is “bad thing” and I wonder when people will realize that it will only come back to bite them.

Shon Gale (profile) says:

I thought you described Journalism perfectly and I quote ‘It’s teaching them about a paranoid administration that wants to hide from the truth. This aspect of the story seems a hell of a lot more damaging to LaSalle University than the original story of the strippers. That could have just been one crazy professor. But the systematic censorship of a student newspaper concerning “damaging” content suggests a university that people shouldn’t want to be associated with. If an organization is afraid of the press, there’s usually a damn good reason why: because they have things to hide.’
Isn’t that the description of Journalism and Politics. Hide from the truth.

Hephaestus (profile) says:

You are so wrong ...

“the administration at LaSalle should be ashamed of itself. It’s not teaching these students journalism at all”

In a world of corporate controlled big news media. This is exactly what they should be learning. How to suppress stories that do not meet the agenda of the people who run the news organization. They should sit back and print the corporate press releases they are given as news, and realize they are no longer journalists they are parrots. That idealistic urge to actually report the news needs to be beaten down and removed for the good of the powerful few ….

boomzilla (profile) says:

University administration censorship

The University of Missouri School of Journalism’s daily newspaper avoids administration censorship because it is owned by the School of Journalism Alumni Association, actually makes money and is thus insulated from similar situations that arise at other universities. This separation has proved handy, as you may imagine.

The Columbia Missourian is delivered every morning to the homes of paid subscribers who include residents who are neither students nor affiliated with the university, which is not the case with The Maneater [insert snarky comment here] free campus newspaper, so named for the school’s Tiger mascot.

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