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At Grambling, Censorship of Student Paper After Publication of Controversial Pictures
Yesterday, Grambling State University (GSU) administrators of , the schoolâs student newspaper, after the paper published of young schoolchildren with a simulated noose around their necks. The children were being taught about racism and lynching in the wake of the publicity surrounding the âJena Sixâ incident and the subsequent protests.
Specifically, the paper posted several photos of the children with the noose to its website last week. After receiving a phone call from one of the paperâs advisers informing newspaper staff of the outraged reaction of some community and faculty members to the pictures, Editor-in-Chief DeâEric M. Henry and news editor Darryl D. Smith removed three of the pictures. Despite the paperâs voluntary removal of three of the more âgraphicâ pictures, Grambling President Horace Judson ordered his staff to remove all the photos from the article. In a , Henry describes the removal:
The decision to remove the three (3) photos did not come from GSU President Horace Judson. It was an editorial decision. However, the decision to remove all photos and the story (FIREat GSUâs Alma J. Brown sound off on Jena 6 protest) came from the office of the president and no student editors were present in the office at the time (Friday, Sept. 28).
One (1) Gramblinite adviser was ordered to remove everything pertaining to the Alma J. Brown Jena Six march by the presidentâs office. Student editors found out early Monday morning that everything regarding the Alma J. Brown demonstration had been removed from the site. Henry ordered that everything be re-uploaded to the Web site (thegramblinite.com) immediately with the exception of the three (3) photos.
âThe Gramblinite only did what our motto stands for: âWe donât make the news; we report it,ââ said Henry. âWe do not approve of censorship or prior review, and we stand by our editorial decision to inform the students of Grambling State University of news events that effect them on campus, in the community and everywhere.â
As Henry makes clear, the photos unilaterally removed by administrators have since been restored to The Grambliniteâs website. However, this restoration in no way absolves President Judson and Grambling State administrators of the clear act of censorship they committed by removing the pictures in the first place. As public university administrators, Grambling State staff have no legal authority to censor The Gramblinite or require Gramblinite editors to obtain permission prior to publishing articles and photographs. Unfortunately, as the Student Press Law Center (SPLC) , Grambling State administrators have an embarrassing history of attempting to censor The Grambliniteâjust last semester, after all, the administration first , then tried to impose a system of prior restraint, then gave up altogether and reinstated it. Now, unfortunately, it seems that GSU is back to its old tricks.
Luckily, however, it seems that The Gramblinite staff is up to the challenge of an administration hellbent on censorship: the SPLCâs quotes Henry confidently proclaiming that âwhat doesnât kill us makes us stronger.â
We at FIREwill be watching President Judsonâs response closely.
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