Principal tries to censor prom coverage
A controversy over the prom led Principal Jimmy Jones of Lamar High School to butt heads with editors of the student newspaper, The Viking Scroll.
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A controversy over the prom led Principal Jimmy Jones of Lamar High School to butt heads with editors of the student newspaper, The Viking Scroll.
Distributing fliers got a Montclair High School student quickly grounded by his principal.
Dan Vagasky, the 14-year-old editor of Ostego Middle School's student newspaper, the Bulldog Express, is trying to teach his school district a lesson in federal court.
The state court of appeals has dismissed a student's challenge to her former high school's prior review policy on the grounds that she has no legal standing to bring the case.
For a few days at least, Cynthia Hanifin seemed to have finally won the long-standing battle with her former high school principal.
The University of Maryland at College Park student newspaper, the Diamondback, has found itself in a freedom of information battle with the university over unpaid parking tickets.
Three state courts recently have ruled on separate freedom of information cases. In two of the three decisions, the court ruled in favor of opening records.
The Texas attorney general has handed down an informal ruling stating that a tape of a school board meeting that includes a high school student drama production is an educational record.
Athletic department officials at the University of Kentucky will have to make public the sources of any outside income, according to an opinion issued by the state attorney general.
From college campuses to the U.S. House of Representatives, the question of how open campus crime information should be is a topic of continued debate.
The Ohio Supreme Court has handed down a ruling that will open one school1s records previously kept from the public and help open secret campus judicial proceeding records in public universities across the state.
Student reporters at Georgia State University in Atlanta have recently found the effort to open campus judicial proceedings can be much more than an open and shut issue.
Moorhead State University in Minnesota and Virginia Polytechnic State University now share the distinction of being the first two schools found in violation of the Campus Security Act following compliance reviews by the U.S. Department of Education.
Witnesses presented testimony to the House Subcommittee on Postsecondary Education Training and Lifelong Learning in July regarding the Accuracy in Campus Crime Reporting Act (ACCRA), and the need for Congress to take action concerning campus crime.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit has agreed to rehear arguments in the case of Yeo v. Lexington and threw out its earlier decision.
A law nobody seems to know much about is causing confusion among student journalists.
A guide to avoiding trouble with your school.
The staff of the student newspaper at the University of Great Falls is questioning its publishing freedom after the president of the university stopped an advertisement for a family planning clinic.
The debate continues regarding the validity of ebonics, a term developed to describe a dialect of English used by some African Americans.
The Ames Daily Tribune is appealing a county district court's decision that required the opening of advertising and business records for the Iowa State University student newspaper, the Iowa State Daily.