Table of Contents
Another Case of Outrage over Cartoons
About a month ago, two controversial comics were printed in the University of Connecticut's student-run newspaper The Daily Campus. One, titled "Victory Lap!," shows baseball players agreeing that girls are really made of "crabs, scrabs, and everything viral," while the other, "Milksteak and Jellybeans," shows a man tricking a woman into having sexual relations with him by convincing her to chase a ring he throws into the bedroom.
In response, have been strong, producing the kind of debate students should engage in. (The Hartford Courant provides an excellent .)
As for the The Daily Campus, Editor-in-Chief John Kennedy the student's free speech rights:
Both comics fell within the guidelines of the current [newspaper] policy, as well as within the rights given to all Americans in the First Amendment.
He later , however, that he would suggest that such cartoons not be published in the future—and both comics have been removed from the website. That's fine—it's the paper's prerogative to do what it wants.
The best news of all, given ÃÛÖÏãÌÒ's experience over the past 11 years, is that the university administration didn't intervene. According to the Hartford Courant, Michael Kirk, a university spokesman, that the newspaper was student-run and the administration "doesn't get involved with the content."
Independent newspapers, of course, are free to set and change their editorial policies as they see the need. Yet, if media like student newspapers and radio stations continue to surrender to calls for censorship based merely on claims of offense, a truly free press will be impossible.
Recent Articles
FIRE’s award-winning Newsdesk covers the free speech news you need to stay informed.