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Dixie State Dean Relies on Attorney General's Incorrect Legal Analysis

Despite continuing pressure on Dixie State University administrators to acknowledge and uphold students鈥 First Amendment rights to free expression and freedom of association, Dixie State has reiterated its refusal to officially recognize student group Phi Beta Pi because the group name has Greek letters in it. According to the  student newspaper, Dean of FIREDel Beatty won鈥檛 budge on the issue: 鈥淏eatty said the attorney general told [the administrators] there is no problem and urges DSU to ignore the media鈥檚 pressure because there is no valid case.鈥

Let鈥檚 take a closer look at the language Beatty is relying on.

Utah Assistant Attorney General D. Michael Carter wrote to FIREon September 6:

I would respectfully assert that Dixie State University鈥檚 policy restriction of Greek letters ... is narrowly tailored to serve its compelling interest to avoid the 鈥減arty image鈥 often associated with such organizations.

This question鈥攚hether the restriction on expression through Greek letters is 鈥渘arrowly tailored to serve [a] compelling interest鈥濃攊s often at the heart of cases involving content-based restrictions on speech. In the past, the Supreme Court has found, for example, that the government has a compelling interest in preventing the abuse inherent in creating . On the other hand, it concluded that California did not assert a compelling interest in prohibiting the sale or rental of  to minors, because there was no reliable evidence that such games had significant harmful effects on children.

Where does 鈥渁voiding a party image鈥 fall on that spectrum? It is difficult to imagine any sufficiently severe repercussions of such an image, particularly when taking into account the respected institutions often found in   . And if preventing the school from obtaining a 鈥減arty image鈥 is compelling, one would think that preventing a reputation for rudeness and incivility would be similarly 鈥渃ompelling,鈥 allowing schools the freedom to ignore the First Amendment and enact stringent speech codes. Of course, the long history of successful litigation against speech codes proves otherwise.

Considering this proffered rationale further, how far does Beatty think the school is empowered to venture in protecting the school鈥檚 reputation? If there were, in fact, myriad wild parties on campus, does Beatty (or the Assistant Attorney General) really think Dixie State could lawfully prevent the student newspaper from reporting on them?

Or perhaps the school鈥檚 past recognition of the 鈥淥rganization of Good Parties鈥 (an officially recognized student organization at Dixie State) makes the issue moot altogether.

Later in his letter, and again in his second letter to FIREon October 24, Assistant Attorney General Carter refers to Dixie State鈥檚 ban on Greek letters as a 鈥渢ime, place, and manner鈥 restriction, a kind of limitation on speech that is sometimes permissible under the First Amendment. Legitimate time, place, and manner restrictions could include, for example, disallowing parades after 2:00 a.m. or prohibiting demonstrations just outside classroom windows. However, time, place, and manner restrictions must be content-neutral鈥攊n other words, they must be justified without reference to the content or meaning of the speech.

But here, quite the opposite is the case. By the administration鈥檚 own admission, Greek letters are bannedbecause they are alleged to convey a certain meaning. Dixie State鈥檚 鈥渃ompelling interest鈥 in enacting the ban is plainly contrary to Carter鈥檚 assertion that 鈥渢here is no 鈥榗ontent-based鈥 ... restriction that anyone could reasonably find鈥 in the ban.

Phi Beta Pi wants to identify itself with a name that conveys the group鈥檚 focus on sisterhood and community service, goals shared by sororities nationwide. Neither Beatty nor the Attorney General鈥檚 office may, consistent with the First Amendment, ban Greek letters for the message he thinks they convey. Protecting the school from being judged as a 鈥減arty school鈥 is not a compelling interest鈥攏ot in the legal sense鈥攁nd banning letters simply for their perceived expressive value does not constitute a permissible 鈥渢ime, place, and manner鈥 restriction. Beatty told the  that the 鈥渘uisance鈥 of media attention to the case makes the administration 鈥渨ant to dig their heels in the ground even more.鈥 Maybe this remark reveals the real reason for Dixie State鈥檚 continued ban on Greek letters: not legal justification, but childish stubbornness.

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