But when the students tried to hand out the first
issue of the new monthly paper, administrators of the public community college
tried to stop them, Glenn said. After student editors consulted a conservative
advocacy group that threatened to sue the university, they say they expect no
future resistance.
In October 2006, Glenn and his staff handed out 500
copies of the first issue of Vox Veritas, a free newspaper devoted to
conservative Christian issues. But after they had finished handing out the
issue, a professor told them they were not allowed to hand out the newspaper on
campus, Glenn said.
Before publishing the second issue of the paper in
November 2006, Glenn said he consulted with Sue Montesi, Delta College’s
dean of students and educational services, about handing out the paper on
campus. Glenn said he received Montesi’s verbal permission to distribute
the paper, but “couldn’t get it in writing.”
According
to Delta College’s student regulations, students can hand out written
material in public areas of passage on campus without prior approval, as long as
it does not interfere with “normal college activity.”
Leslie
Myles-Sanders, general counsel at Delta College, said the school took issue with
the paper’s distribution, not its content. Myles-Sanders said the students
were “putting stacks” of the paper around campus, not handing out
each copy.
But Glenn said his staff members were handing out the
newspapers and he believes the administration’s actions were based on the
paper’s content, not its method of distribution.
While distributing
the November 2006 issue of Vox Veritas, police confronted both Rachel
Butts, managing editor, and Paul Boothroyd, an editorial board member, and told
them they could not hand out the paper. Butts said when she attempted to
distribute the newspaper, Delta College police officers confiscated more than
250 copies and told her to speak with administrators or leave the campus. The
papers were returned after Butts told a Delta administrator she would be seeking
legal advice.
“They gave no example of why they were stopping
us,” Butts said. “I was really upset about it because as a college,
I think they should teach us to practice our First Amendment
rights.”
Across campus, Delta campus police also confronted
Boothroyd, but he was allowed to continue handing out the 35 copies of the paper
he had, he said.
Glenn said he contacted the American Family
Association’s Center for Law and Policy, located in Tupelo, Miss. He said
that after the organization threatened to sue Delta College for violating the
students’ constitutional rights, the college allowed them to hand out the
paper on campus.
Myles-Sanders said to her knowledge, there was “no
problem” when the students distributed the next issue in December
2006.
Glenn said after receiving legal help, he did not anticipate
trouble from college officials when the students distribute the January issue of
the Vox Veritas next week.
By Jared Taylor, SPLC staff
writer
© 2007 Student Press Law Center
Share
For More Information:
< Return to Previous Page