Thursday, September 16, 2010

Chula Vista's Southwestern College: still “a culture of fear and intimidation”

CLAMPING DOWN ON THE AWARD-WINNING SCHOOL NEWSPAPER:

Southwestern College Halts Publication of Student Newspaper (Chronicle of Higher Education)

     Southwestern College … has temporarily halted the student newspaper from issuing a print edition, and student journalists allege it did so to prevent them from publishing articles before a heated election for the college's governing board. But the college denies any attempt at censorship and says the holdup is an administrative issue unrelated to politics.
     The paper, The Southwestern College Sun, won several national awards last year from the Society of Professional Journalists for stories that were critical of the college's president and board members. One board member, Jean Roesch, sharply criticized the paper last month and asked for more positive coverage.
     Staff members said on Thursday that college officials had barred them from publishing a paper before three members of the board face re-election on November 2. "We've been told we can't publish before the election," said Max Branscomb, the paper's faculty adviser. "It's outrageous, it's inexcusable, and it's flimsy."
     Southwestern has suffered from a revolving leadership and nasty battles between administrators, faculty members, and students. Last year, the college suspended four faculty members who participated in a campus protest against cuts to course offerings. In February, Southwestern's accreditor put the college on probation, citing a "culture of fear and intimidation," among other factors.
     A spokesman for the college, Chris Bender, said the allegations of censorship were "flat inaccurate." The college stopped publication of the The Sun because officials discovered this summer that the paper is in violation of a campus purchasing policy requiring administrative approval for printing costs, he said.
     Once the newspaper obtains proper approval for its printing costs, the paper can resume printed publication, he said. Until then, the newspaper is free to publish its stories online, he said.
     "It's not an issue of free speech or freedom of the press," Mr. Bender said. "It's a purchasing problem."

SEE ALSO: Student Journalists Say College Trying to Squelch Them (Inside Higher Ed)

UPDATE:

Our friend Philip Lopez commented as follows:

Thanks for the coverage. Here's copy of a letter I wrote to the San Diego Union-Tribune. I'll bet they don't print it.

RE: College newspaper threatened with publishing roadblock

     Taken out of context, the decision by Southwestern College administrators to halt the publication of our award-winning student newspaper because a contract with a printer hasn't gone out to bid might seem a reasonable, responsible protection of taxpayer money. But the big picture reveals something much different.
     First, the shennanigans and dubious ethics involved in awarding multi-million dollar construction contracts to firms who later kick back thousands of dollars to re-elect incumbent Governing Board members shows that District officials aren't particularly concerned about protecting taxpayer money. Giving a $100,000 contract to a public relations firm whose job is to "isolate extremists" reveals the mindset of the SWC Governing Board and administration: Anyone with a differing opinion must be silenced.
     This latest attempt to retaliate against the Sun is simply part of a long pattern of retaliation. The faculty advisor, who last year received the most prestigious national award possible for college and university journalism instructors, had his reassigned time eliminated. Just a few days ago, student journalists were threatened with criminal charges because they were taking school-owned laptop computers off campus to do their work.
     Criminal charges are not laughable, but administrators' logic is. Laptop computers are designed to be portable. Student journalists routinely cover stories outside the boundaries of the campus, and laptop computers--and school-owned digital cameras, as well--are the tools they use to do their jobs. If all students were forbidden from using school-owned equipment for off-campus school activities, then the the football team would have to leave its helmets and pads behind when it travelled on the road.
     Finally, the timing of this latest move against the Sun is curious. The student paper--containing articles critical of administration and the Governing Board--will not go to press just a few weeks before elections involving a majority of Governing Board members take place. Dusting off a decades-old policy, one which has never been enforced, to justify this action is simply another way of silencing dissent.

   Philip Lopez
   Southwestern College faculty member
   Chula Vista, CA

Tea Party gal on "orgy rooms" at colleges

• Christine O'Donnell on 'Orgy Rooms' at Colleges (Inside Higher Ed)

All eyes are on Christine O'Donnell, the Tea Party-backed candidate who won the Republican primary for U.S. Senate in Delaware on Tuesday. Among the various quotes from her past that surfaced on Wednesday were some views on coeducational dormitories. Salon found quotes she gave to The Washington Times in 2003, criticizing coeducational dormitories. The article excerpt:

"What's next? Orgy rooms? Menage a trois rooms?" asked Christine O'Donnell, spokeswoman for the Intercollegiate Studies Institute in Wilmington, Del., which publishes a college guide.

All this coedness is outside normal life, said Miss O'Donnell. "Most average American adults don't use coed bathrooms - if they had the option of a coed bathroom at a public restaurant, they wouldn't choose it." Coedness "is like a radical agenda forced on college students," she said.


• Low-Income Community-College Students Find Success at Selective 4-Year Colleges (Chronicle of Higher Education)

Low-income community-college students not only tend to excel academically but also often become student leaders after they transfer to a four-year college, according to a new report by the Jack Kent Cooke Foundation.

Those same students won over skeptical professors with their intellectual curiosity and appetite for extra work, the group said.

Those are some of the lessons learned three years after the foundation embarked on its Community College Transfer Initiative. The foundation is releasing a report today, titled "Partnerships That Promote Success: The Evaluation of the Community College Transfer Initiative," that highlights the various college programs and polices that contributed to student success. The report can be found at the foundation's Web site at www.jkcf.org….

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...