NEW
JERSEY — Campus police at Rowan University are investigating last
week's theft of roughly 600 copies of the student newspaper, The Whit,
after it published the names of two students who were arrested on charges of
possession and intent to distribute marijuana.
The copies of the weekly
newspaper, which has a circulation of 3,000, were stolen from the student union
sometime after they were distributed March 1, said Editor in Chief Liz Zelinski.
Zelinski said she one of the newspaper's editors received a message via
Facebook, an online social networking site, from a female student expressing
anger over the article for identifying the students. Zelinski said she believes
the student is behind the theft, and she notified campus police of the
matter.
George Brelsford, the private school's interim vice president for
student affairs, sent a campus-wide e-mail that condemned the theft as a "threat
to both free speech and freedom of the press."
"Those responsible will be
subject to both criminal and campus disciplinary action," he said in the
letter.
Timothy Michener, director of Rowan University's public safety,
said they "know who is responsible for this, and public safety is investigating
them," according to an article in The Whit.
The paper contains a
statement that the first copy is free and additional copies are 40 cents. That
policy was introduced in December 2006 after a recent trend of student newspaper
thefts at college campuses nationwide, especially the theft of about 10,000
newspapers at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Zelinski
said.
The value was determined by dividing total cost among each paper
distributed, Zelinski said, adding that she considers the paper more valuable
when including the work the staff puts into producing the
newspaper.
"What we want to do is get restitution for the amount of money
in newspapers they took," she said.
By Brian Hudson, SPLC staff
writer