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UPDATED: FIREWrites Wesleyan Student Assembly in Defense of āThe Wesleyan Argusā

If youāve been following the controversy at Wesleyan University that erupted after The Wesleyan Argus student newspaper published student and staff writer Bryan Stascavageās , then you know the Argusā staff was met with a petition from offended students demanding the paper be punished. This Sunday, the Argusā staff will learn whether the petition succeeded and whether it could lose a significant portion of its funding.
The that the paper could lose over half of its $30,000 budget, a cut proposed during the Wesleyan Student Assemblyās (WSAās) last meeting:
The resolution, which surfaced at the Sunday Wesleyan Student Assembly Senate meeting, would cull up to $17,000 from The Argusā printing budget of about $30,000 and use it to fund work-study positions at the top campus publications of studentsā choice, Stascavage said. The work-study positions would be aimed at increasing diversity in the campusā student publications, which are predominantly white. The resolution could not be found online.
Creating work-study positions at the Argus was one of the student protesters' , but they also had harsher demands, including calls to defund the Argus until it met standards of diversity and inclusion. Stascavage said he worries the new resolutionās stipulations could still impose a chilling effect on opinion pieces in the paper.
SPLC that students supporting the Argusā defunding āmaintain that the issue is one of diversity, not of censorship.ā
FIRE wholeheartedly disagrees, and we believe that threats against the Argusā funding are threats against a free student press at Wesleyan University. Thatās why weāre writing today to the WSAās president and leadership board to remind them of their obligation to uphold the expressive rights that are guaranteed, under university policy, to Wesleyan students and student press. We wrote in our letter:
As a private institution, Wesleyan is not bound by the First Amendment or the Supreme Courtās rulings. But the university makes numerous clear commitments to freedom of expression, which the WSA, acting as Wesleyanās agent in distributing funds collected through mandatory student activity fees, is obligated to uphold. The preamble to Wesleyanās Joint Statement on the Rights and Freedoms of ¹ū¶³“«Ć½app¹Ł·½, for instance, states:
Academic institutions exist for the transmission of knowledge, the pursuit of truth, the development of students, and the general well-being of society. Free inquiry and free expression are indispensable to the attainment of these goals.
Wesleyanās current student handbook further states:
In accordance . . . with the ideals of academic freedom, every member of the Wesleyan community should feel that he or she can enter into controversy without fear of being silenced or constrained. This communityās commitment to the free exchange of ideas and pursuit of knowledge requires a wide range of protections for speech and expression, even when noxious or offensive.
The WSA and Wesleyan students have numerous options available to foster the expression of more viewpoints on campus. They can achieve this by publishing op-eds in the Argus or joining its writing staff, or by starting their own newspapers or magazines, to name just a few. They cannot and must not, however, punish the Argus for publishing views that offend some in the campus community. As FIREexplained in our letter,
Defunding the Argus either in part or in full due to student opposition to its content stands indirect opposition to these admirable commitments to free expression. The WSA must not condition the funding it gives to the Argusāor to any student organization at Wesleyanāon the popularity of the opinions expressed by its writers. To do so would undermine freedom of expression at Wesleyan, make a mockery of journalistic freedom on its campus, and fail the WSAās responsibility to ensure access to the marketplace of ideas for all students, regardless of their opinions.
We hope to soon commend the Wesleyan Student Assembly for expressing its support of student press, acknowledging its commitment to Wesleyanās free speech promises, and resisting pressure to punish the Argus simply for publishing controversial opinions.
UPDATE: On Sunday, October 18, the Wesleyan Student Assembly voted in favor of massively cutting the printing budget of the Argus in the next school year and instead rerouting that money to work-study programs for student publications that will be awarded based on a strange combination of Google Analytics numbers and student votes. Whatever happens, the Argus looks set to lose substantial funding. FIREcovered the vote in a follow-up blog entry, Itās Already Been a Remarkably Bad Year for Student Press.
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