[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Mail]  [Sign-in]  [Setup]  [Help]  [Register] 

AI is exhausting the power grid. Tech firms are seeking a miracle solution.

Rare Van Halen Leicestershire, Donnington Park August 18, 1984 Valerie Bertinelli Cameo

If you need a Good Opening for black, use this.

"Arrogant Hunter Biden has never been held accountable — until now"

How Republicans in Key Senate Races Are Flip-Flopping on Abortion

Idaho bar sparks fury for declaring June 'Heterosexual Awesomeness Month' and giving free beers and 15% discounts to straight men

Son of Buc-ee’s co-owner indicted for filming guests in the shower and having sex. He says the law makes it OK.

South Africa warns US could be liable for ICC prosecution for supporting Israel

Today I turned 50!

San Diego Police officer resigns after getting locked in the backseat with female detainee

Gazan Refugee Warns the World about Hamas

Iranian stabbed for sharing his faith, miraculously made it across the border without a passport!

Protest and Clashes outside Trump's Bronx Rally in Crotona Park

Netanyahu Issues Warning To US Leaders Over ICC Arrest Warrants: 'You're Next'

Will it ever end?

Did Pope Francis Just Call Jesus a Liar?

Climate: The Movie (The Cold Truth) Updated 4K version

There can never be peace on Earth for as long as Islamic Sharia exists

The Victims of Benny Hinn: 30 Years of Spiritual Deception.

Trump Is Planning to Send Kill Teams to Mexico to Take Out Cartel Leaders

The Great Falling Away in the Church is Here | Tim Dilena

How Ridiculous? Blade-Less Swiss Army Knife Debuts As Weapon Laws Tighten

Jewish students beaten with sticks at University of Amsterdam

Terrorists shut down Park Avenue.

Police begin arresting democrats outside Met Gala.

The minute the total solar eclipse appeared over US

Three Types Of People To Mark And Avoid In The Church Today

Are The 4 Horsemen Of The Apocalypse About To Appear?

France sends combat troops to Ukraine battlefront

Facts you may not have heard about Muslims in England.

George Washington University raises the Hamas flag. American Flag has been removed.

Alabama students chant Take A Shower to the Hamas terrorists on campus.

In Day of the Lord, 24 Church Elders with Crowns Join Jesus in His Throne

In Day of the Lord, 24 Church Elders with Crowns Join Jesus in His Throne

Deadly Saltwater and Deadly Fresh Water to Increase

Deadly Cancers to soon Become Thing of the Past?

Plague of deadly New Diseases Continues

[FULL VIDEO] Police release bodycam footage of Monroe County District Attorney Sandra Doorley traffi

Police clash with pro-Palestine protesters on Ohio State University campus

Joe Rogan Experience #2138 - Tucker Carlson

Police Dispersing Student Protesters at USC - Breaking News Coverage (College Protests)

What Passover Means For The New Testament Believer

Are We Closer Than Ever To The Next Pandemic?

War in Ukraine Turns on Russia

what happened during total solar eclipse

Israel Attacks Iran, Report Says - LIVE Breaking News Coverage

Earth is Scorched with Heat

Antiwar Activists Chant ‘Death to America’ at Event Featuring Chicago Alderman

Vibe Shift

A stream that makes the pleasant Rain sound.


Status: Not Logged In; Sign In

United States News
See other United States News Articles

Title: No, a public university may not expel students for racist speech
Source: [None]
URL Source: http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/ ... el-students-for-racist-speech/
Published: Mar 10, 2015
Author: Eugene Volokh
Post Date: 2015-03-10 12:28:51 by A K A Stone
Keywords: None
Views: 6127
Comments: 43

Some Oklahoma University students in the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity were videorecorded singing (as best I and others can tell),

There will never be a nigger at SAE There will never be a nigger at SAE You can hang him from a tree But he’ll never sign with me There will never be a nigger at SAE

Oklahoma University president David Boren said, “If I’m allowed to, these students will face suspension or expulsion.” But he is not, I think, allowed to do that.

1. First, racist speech is constitutionally protected, just as is expression of other contemptible ideas; and universities may not discipline students based on their speech. That has been the unanimous view of courts that have considered campus speech codes and other campus speech restrictions — see here for some citations. The same, of course, is true for fraternity speech, racist or otherwise; see Iota Xi Chapter of Sigma Chi Fraternity v. George Mason University (4th Cir. 1993). (I set aside the separate question of student speech that is evaluated as part of coursework or class participation, which necessary must be evaluated based on its content; this speech clearly doesn’t qualify.)

2. Likewise, speech doesn’t lose its constitutionally protection just because it refers to violence — “You can hang him from a tree,” “the capitalists will be the first ones up against the wall when the revolution comes,” “by any means necessary” with pictures of guns, “apostates from Islam should be killed.”

3. To be sure, in specific situations, such speech might fall within a First Amendment exception. One example is if it is likely to be perceived as a “true threat” of violence (e.g., saying “apostates from Islam will be killed” or “we’ll hang you from a tree” to a particular person who will likely perceive it as expressing the speaker’s intention to kill him); but that’s not the situation here, where the speech wouldn’t have been taken by any listener as a threat against him or her. Another is if it intended to solicit a criminal act, or to create a conspiracy to commit a criminal act, but, vile as the “hang him from a tree” is, neither of these exceptions are applicable here, either.

4. Some people have suggested that the speech may be evidence of discriminatory decisionmaking by the fraternity in admitting members. A university may demand that groups to which it provides various benefits not discriminate in admissions. See Christian Legal Society v. Martinez (2010). Indeed, nondiscrimination rules are applicable to groups generally, even apart from any benefits they get; much depends on whether the groups are seen as small and selective enough to be covered by a right to “intimate association,” and on whether apply antidiscrimination law to the groups would interfere with the groups’ expression of their ideas, and thus burden their right to “expressive associations.” See Roberts v. U.S. Jaycees (1983); Boy Scouts of America v. Dale (2000). The university might thus be able to discipline students who (a) are involved in a fraternity’s admissions decisions, and (b) can be shown to have denied membership to people based on race, or intentionally tried to communicate to potential members that they would deny them membership that way. I don’t think that a discussion saying that discrimination ought to take place, or even that at some unspecified time it will take place, would suffice to constitute a violation of the antidiscrimination rules, though it might be used as evidence in a future case where discrimination against a particular applicant might be alleged.

But even if the group is found to have discriminated against black applicants, and some particular members were found to have participated in that decision, the penalty for that has to be based on the penalties that are actually meted out to people who violate this rule. If discrimination by a group generally leads to a fine against the group, or a reprimand of the participants, or even derecognition of the group, the university can’t then expel students who engage in the same action but who also engage in constitutionally protected speech — that sort of disparate treatment shows that the school is really punishing people for their speech, not for their conduct.

This is a familiar principle from antidiscrimination law: if a black student is expelled based on conduct for which white students are generally just mildly reprimanded, the law recognizes that the expulsion was based on the student’s race, not just the student’s punishable conduct. The conduct in that situation is being used in large part as a pretext for race discrimination. Likewise, if SAE members are expelled based on conduct for which people who didn’t engage in SAE’s speech would generally just be mildly reprimanded, the expulsion would be based on the speech, not the members’ punishable conduct, which would just be pretext for punishing students for the ideas they were expressing to each other.

5. Of course, this just applies to the university. It certainly makes sense that the national fraternity may suspend the student chapter, and that other fraternity or sorority organizations refuse to deal with the chapter (or even its students). Fraternities, at least in principle, aim to promote certain principles of morality and behavior, such as the national SAE’s True Gentleman creed:

The True Gentleman is the man whose conduct proceeds from good will and an acute sense of propriety, and whose self-control is equal to all emergencies; who does not make the poor man conscious of his poverty, the obscure man of his obscurity, or any man of his inferiority or deformity; who is himself humbled if necessity compels him to humble another; who does not flatter wealth, cringe before power, or boast of his own possessions or achievements; who speaks with frankness but always with sincerity and sympathy; whose deed follows his word; who thinks of the rights and feelings of others, rather than his own; and who appears well in any company, a man with whom honor is sacred and virtue safe.

SAE may quite rightly insist that people who so sharply depart from such principles no longer use SAE’s name. (I don’t think a university may suspend a fraternity just based on its speech, but that question is likely rendered moot by national SAE’s actions here.) Likewise, I imagine that the fraternity members’ speech will more generally affect their social lives and their professional lives, as some people choose not to do business with them in the future. (In some states, even private employers are limited in their ability to discriminate against employees or job applicants based on their speech, but that’s true only in some states and generally only as to employment; and, rightly or wrongly, such discrimination often happens without the applicant’s even knowing that it’s happening.) How long this sort of misbehavior should dog a person is an interesting ethical question, but in any event it’s pretty clear that the offending students are going to pay a substantial social and likely economic price for their actions.

Under the First Amendment, though, the government — including Oklahoma University — generally cannot add to this price, whether the offensive speech is racist, religiously bigoted, pro-revolutionary, or expressive of any other viewpoint, however repugnant it might be.

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 7.

#3. To: A K A Stone (#0)

The university did just expel those students.

So, as an act of power, they certainly can do it.

Now, the question is whether they can make it stick. And the answer is: probably. For what can the students do to force their way back in, other than sue?

And when they do, that will be the center of attention on them for the next 5 years. If they take the expulsion and disappear, they will be able to rehabilitate themselves somewhere, eventually. But if they sue, then this event will be the center of their lives for the next several years, and their chances of ever overcoming it will be vastly diminished.

So, they've been expelled, and they won't sue, and that will be that.

There will be no civil rights organization ready to take on THIS tar-baby of a case.

Constitutional? Unconstitutional? It will never be tested in court. Fait accompli: the students are expelled, and that is that.

Vicomte13  posted on  2015-03-10   14:59:27 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#7. To: Vicomte13 (#3)

I'm sure the school has a code of conduct which addresses this. Based on that, the expulsions will stick.

redleghunter  posted on  2015-03-11   0:17:23 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 7.

#9. To: redleghunter (#7)

I'm sure the school has a code of conduct which addresses this. Based on that, the expulsions will stick.

I would be more precise and say "Based on that, the expulsions will cite to a written code." I would say "Based on the students' lack of challenge, the expulsions will stick".

IF the students stood up full-throated, hired lawyers and fought to the death, they could probably overturn the convictions. They sang a song at a private function. It was an expression of free speech. The University is public. It can write rules saying that it can retaliate against disfavored speech, but the students could challenge that in federal court, and win on the First Amendment before the Supremes (assuming that there were judges willing to take the case).

The price of their "victory" would be lifetime name recognition, lifetime unemployment. The price to their families would be massive legal bills: no organization will take this case pro-bono: the students are students. So their parents would have to bear the full legal cost of fighting to "make a point"...and that point is? That people can't be outright expelled for singing nasty racist doggerel.

To fight this would probably eventually mean winning it, and that would probably be the ultimate Pyrrhic victory. You get to go back to a second-rate school to pay for a diploma you'll never be able to use, because nobody is ever going to hire you.

Far better to capitulate and disappear, than you blazon your name in lights and be all over the news, by name and face, for the next five years.

Worse, you'll have to keep apologizing for what you sang over and over again. The students probably didn't mean it, not to the depths their mere words would indicate. So they would have to crawl through the gutter of self-accusation for years and years to argue that they shouldn't be expelled from a second-rate school for a stupid mistake.

Or they would have to light themselves on fire and become radical racists, trying to get the sympathy of the Stormfront crowd. There are a couple of folks here on LF who would enthusiastically root for them...but not so much that they'd send actually MONEY to their legal defense fund.

In 2015, if you're going to exult in old-style racism, you should expect to be destroyed if you get heard, because you will be, and nobody is going to rally to your defense in any meaningful way.

If we had not killed a million people in a civil war over slavery, and if we had not sicced dogs and turned firehoses on peaceful black marchers and had Senate filibusters against black voting rights, in our lifetimes, this would not be the toxic plutonium waste of an issue that it is.

But we did. A lot of blood was shed, a lot of lives were damaged, and the victors of this fight in America are no more going to let the losers of that fight get back up and express themselves publicly than the Jews are going to let the Nazis do it. Nazis and American Black-haters fall into the same category: the designated Scum of the Earth, never, ever, EVER to be allowed so much as a shred of dignity, or even humorous regard, in the lands they devastated again. Americans poke fun at Nazis, because we beat them. But Nazis don't get to be anything other than invisible in Germany. Same thing with Black haters in America. They still exist, and there is no sense of humor about that in this society, particularly not when it's whites (and particularly Southern or rural whites) doing it.

And most especially when the "humor" is a white inside joke that is actually meant to, subtly, make the point that something is still a whites-only preserve. That flag doesn't get to be flown in America any more. Germans are prohibited from having Nazi paraphernalia of any kind. Their are not prohibited to let their minds go THERE. Americans are no PROHIBITED from letting little glimpses of that past shown, but anybody who is damnfool enough to do it who gets caught is publicly beaten with a tire iron, and NOBODY will come to his defense.

History has consequences. Slavery and segregation killed a lot of people and destroyed a lot of lives. One side lost, and the winners have no sense of humor about it whatsoever. This will not change until the generation that actually LIVED THROUGH SEGREGATION, which is still very much alive (and middle aged) has passed on, and their children have passed on. In the third or fourth generation hence, humor will return. Today, the wounds are too fresh to too many living people. It was a real blood and guns war, with lots of death and suffering, the winners are still alive, so are the losers, and the winners are never, ever, ever going to let the losers get back up.

There are still living Nazis in Germany. And those people will submerge that aspect of themselves for the rest of their lives. They shall not express it. They shall, in fact, SUBMIT their personal political views, utterly, to the force of the winners, just exactly as THEY made the people THEY dominated submit. The difference is that the Nazis lost for good, and will NEVER be allowed back up off of their supine, living-at-suffrance position of subordinated, silenced inferior scum until their last breath.

Same thing with American racists. The country went through too much on account of those scum. Whenever they or their kids ever show their heads, they will be beaten down, and to death if necessary, to make the point that there is, in FACT, NO FREEDOM OF SPEECH for THAT position. There was no freedom for slaves, despite the Constitution, and there is not, IN FACT, freedom of speech for people who hate and denigrate Blacks. And there never will be again. Once upon a time, they ruled, like Nazis. Now, like Nazis, they are defeated, and they will be held down, in submission, and beaten into silence ever single time they ever open their mouths.

War has consequences. The US Constitution itself, the Constitution of 1787, did not survive the Civil War that ended slavery. And the post-Civil War settlement of States Rights that allowed oppression that stopped short of slavery, only held for one more centuries.

After all of that struggle, and all of that bitterness, the victors are as bitter as the losers, and are every bit as determined to enforce THEIR will on the defeated as Bull Connor or any overseer ever was at enforcing his on the people whom they viewed as their inferiors. The two sides hate each other, one side won a two century struggle, many survivors of the fight are still alive.

There is no humor on matters of white racism towards blacks, and there isn't going to be, ever again, as long as we live. Some white fools need to periodically be legally lynched to remind the whites who think that way they they will stay in line or die.

That's the way it is. I cannot look at it and truly say that it is unjustified. It's revenge. Not Christian. But then again, boasting about keeping blacks out of a university club isn't Christian either.

I do feel sorry for the kids. They made a dumb mistake, and now their lives will not rise to the potential they had before. But that's true of anybody who plays with fire. If some German just loves swastikas because he finds them "artistic", he had damned well better learn to suppress his artistic proclivities, because his society will destroy him for it.

America used to destroy uppity blacks - with nooses, fire and dogs. Today, American destroys racist whites. The blacks were held down for 350 years. The racist whites have only been held down for about 30. Nobody alive will ever live in a time when white racists have freedom of speech again. It will be over a century. The First Amendment does not apply to white racist speech. Anybody who thinks differently is welcome to step up and be lynched: uppity white racists get legally lynched, as an example to the rest to SHUT UP.

That's the way it is. It is unconstitutional - technically. The Constitution did not save the blacks from the whites. The Constitution if fact offers no real protection to white racists, and it never will again. Ever.

The white racists lost, like the Nazis, and their nose will be ground back into the shit of their own defeat every single time they ever are stupid enough to stick it up again.

This is so. And it will not change. Those kids must not fight. They must be contrite. And they must build their lives anew, never going down that stupid path again - just like any other convict of a serious crime. Make no mistake: being an overtly racist white is as serious a social crime in America as being an uppity black was in the days of segregation. Racist whites are legally lynched, and they have no sanctuary. The wheel has turned, and it will not turn back - because the Mexicans don't care.

Vicomte13  posted on  2015-03-11 11:14:37 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#10. To: redleghunter, Vicomte13, A K A Stone (#7)

I'm sure the school has a code of conduct which addresses this. Based on that, the expulsions will stick.

I am sure the school has a code of conduct as well. The students apparently violated it. Whoever recorded the video/audio may have done so as well.

Expulsion for disciplinary reasons triggers the constitutional right to notice and a hearing. Government imposition of a stigma accompanied by an expulsion or dismissal meets the stigma plus requirement to trigger the constitutional due process rights as well.

The summary expulsion may not stick. The issue will be due process. Has the student been afforded timely notice and the constitutional right to be heard at a hearing? Does the student's presence endanger persons or property or threaten disruption of the academic process justifying immediate removal from school, (with the necessary notice and hearing to follow as soon as practicable).

It's a State school. The accused must be given a hearing with notice and an opportunity to be heard. If the school has not provided due process, this expulsion will fail. They must afford the required due process.

https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/419/565/case.html

U.S. Supreme Court

Goss v. Lopez, 419 U.S. 565 (1975)

Goss v. Lopez

No. 73-898

Argued October 16, 1974

Decided January 22, 1975

419 U.S. 565

APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO

Syllabus

Appellee Ohio public high school students, who had been suspended from school for misconduct for up to 10 days without a hearing, brought a class action against appellant school officials seeking a declaration that the Ohio statute permitting such suspensions was unconstitutional and an order enjoining the officials to remove the references to the suspensions from the students' records. A three-judge District Court declared that appellees were denied due process of law in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment because they were "suspended without hearing prior to suspension or within a reasonable time thereafter," and that the statute and implementing regulations were unconstitutional, and granted the requested injunction.

Held:

1. Students facing temporary suspension from a public school have property and liberty interests that qualify for protection under the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Pp. 419 U. S. 572-576.

(a) Having chosen to extend the right to an education to people of appellees' class generally, Ohio may not withdraw that right on grounds of misconduct absent fundamentally fair procedures to determine whether the misconduct has occurred, and must recognize a student's legitimate entitlement to a public education as a property interest that is protected by the Due Process Clause, and that may not be taken away for misconduct without observing minimum procedures required by that Clause. Pp. 419 U. S. 573-574.

(b) Since misconduct charges, if sustained and recorded, could seriously damage the students' reputation, as well as interfere with later educational and employment opportunities, the State's claimed right to determine unilaterally and without process whether that misconduct has occurred immediately collides with the Due Process Clause's prohibition against arbitrary deprivation of liberty. Pp. 419 U. S. 574-575.

(c) A 10-day suspension from school is not de minimis and may not be imposed in complete disregard of the Due Process

Page 419 U. S. 566

Clause. Neither the property interest in educational benefits temporarily denied nor the liberty interest in reputation is so insubstantial that suspensions may constitutionally be imposed by any procedure the school chooses, no matter how arbitrary. Pp. 419 U. S. 575-576.

2. Due process requires, in connection with a suspension of 10 days or less, that the student be given oral or written notice of the charges against him and, if he denies them, an explanation of the evidence the authorities have and an opportunity to present his version. Generally, notice and hearing should precede the student's removal from school, since the hearing may almost immediately follow the misconduct, but if prior notice and hearing are not feasible, as where the student's presence endangers persons or property or threatens disruption of the academic process, thus justifying immediate removal from school, the necessary notice and hearing should follow as soon as practicable. Pp. 419 U. S. 577-584.

372 F.Supp. 1279, affirmed.

Re free speech, see:

https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/410/667/case.html

U.S. Supreme Court

Papish v. Board of Curators, 410 U.S. 667 (1973)

Papish v. Board of Curators of the University of Missouri

No. 72-794

Decided March 19, 1973

410 U.S. 667

ON PETITION FOR WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES

COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT

Syllabus

Expulsion of student for distributing on campus a publication assertedly containing "indecent speech" proscribed by a bylaw of a state university's Board of Curators held an impermissible violation of her First Amendment free speech rights, since the mere dissemination of ideas on a state university campus cannot be proscribed in the name of "conventions of decency."

Certiorari granted; 464 F.2d 136, reversed.

PER CURIAM.

Petitioner, a graduate student in the University of Missouri School of Journalism, was expelled for distributing on campus a newspaper "containing forms of indecent speech" [Footnote 1] in violation of a bylaw of the Board of Curators. The newspaper, the Free Press Underground, had been sold on this state university campus for more than four years pursuant to an authorization obtained from the University Business Office. The particular newspaper issue in question was found to be unacceptable for two reasons. First, on the front cover, the publishers had reproduced a political cartoon previously printed in another newspaper depicting policemen raping the Statue of Liberty and the Goddess of Justice. The caption under the cartoon read: ". . . With Liberty and Justice for All." Secondly, the issue contained an article entitled "M___f___ Acquitted," which discussed the trial and acquittal on an assault

Page 410 U. S. 668

charge of a New York City youth who was a member of an organization known as "Up Against the Wall, M___f___."

Following a hearing, the Student Conduct Committee found that petitioner had violated Par. B of Art. V of the General Standards of Student Conduct, which requires students "to observe generally accepted standards of conduct," and specifically prohibits "indecent conduct or speech." [Footnote 2] Her expulsion, after affirmance first by the Chancellor of the University and then by its Board of Curators, was made effective in the middle of the spring semester. Although she was then permitted to remain on campus until the end of the semester, she was not given credit for the one course in which she made a passing grade. [Footnote 3]

After exhausting her administrative review alternatives within the University, petitioner brought an action

Page 410 U. S. 669

for declaratory and injunctive relief pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 in the United States District Court for the Western District of Missouri. She claimed that her expulsion was improperly premised on activities protected by the First Amendment. The District Court denied relief, 331 F.Supp. 1321, and the Court of Appeals affirmed, one judge dissenting. 464 F.2d 136. Rehearing en banc was denied by an equally divided vote of all the judges in the Eighth Circuit.

The District Court's opinion rests, in part, [Footnote 4] on the conclusion that the banned issue of the newspaper was obscene. The Court of Appeals found it unnecessary to decide that question. Instead, assuming that the newspaper was not obscene and that its distribution in the community at large would be protected by the First Amendment, the court held that, on a university campus, "freedom of expression" could properly be "subordinated to other interests, such as, for example, the conventions of decency in the use and display of language and pictures." Id. at 145. The court concluded that "[t]he Constitution does not compel the University . . . [to. allow] such publications as the one in litigation to be publicly sold or distributed on its open campus." Ibid.

This case was decided several days before we handed down Healy v. James,408 U. S. 169 (1972), in which, while recognizing a state university's undoubted prerogative

Page 410 U. S. 670

to enforce reasonable rules governing student conduct, we reaffirmed that "state colleges and universities are not enclaves immune from the sweep of the First Amendment." Id. at 408 U. S. 180. See Tinker v. Des Moines Independent School District,393 U. S. 503 (1969). We think Healy makes it clear that the mere dissemination of ideas -- no matter how offensive to good taste -- on a state university campus may not be shut off in the name alone of "conventions of decency." Other recent precedents of this Court make it equally clear that neither the political cartoon nor the headline story involved in this case can be labeled as constitutionally obscene or otherwise unprotected. E.g., Kois v. Wisconsin,408 U. S. 229 (1972); Gooding v. Wilson,405 U. S. 518 (1972); Cohen v. California,403 U. S. 15 (1971). [Footnote 5] There is language in the opinions below which suggests that the University's action here could be viewed as an exercise of its legitimate authority to enforce reasonable regulations as to the time, place, and manner of speech and its dissemination. While we have repeatedly approved such regulatory authority, e.g., Healy v. James, 408 U.S. at 408 U. S. 192-193, the facts set forth in the opinions below show clearly that petitioner was expelled because of the disapproved content of the newspaper, rather than the time, place, or manner of its distribution. [Footnote 6]

Page 410 U. S. 671

Since the First Amendment leaves no room for the operation of a dual standard in the academic community with respect to the content of speech, and because the state University's action here cannot be justified as a nondiscriminatory application of reasonable rules governing conduct, the judgments of the courts below must be reversed. Accordingly, the petition for a writ of certiorari is granted, the case is remanded to the District Court, and that court is instructed to order the University to restore to petitioner any course credits she earned for the semester in question and, unless she is barred from reinstatement for valid academic reasons, to reinstate her as a student in the graduate program.

[...]

nolu chan  posted on  2015-03-12 00:26:16 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


End Trace Mode for Comment # 7.

TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Mail]  [Sign-in]  [Setup]  [Help]  [Register] 

Please report web page problems, questions and comments to webmaster@libertysflame.com