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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsFreedom of Speech a Casualty of Official Response to Student Drinking
from truthdig:
Freedom of Speech a Casualty of Official Response to Student Drinking
Posted on Oct 19, 2013
By Alexander Reed Kelly
I went to my old university campus this week to seek insight on something that happened last weekend. The police breakup of a large party in Bellingham, Wash., the night of Oct. 12 led to an erratic skirmish in the streets between authorities and as many as 500 college-age partiers and onlookers, some of whom damaged city and private property by throwing glassware, pieces of cinder blocks and other objects. The police responded by trading their uniforms and squad cars for riot gear and an armored truck and set to dispersing the crowd with smoke, exploding pepper balls and densely packed beanbags fired from rifles. The event made international news. A photo of a girl twerking against a cop car appeared under the title Bellingham party riot fights police efforts to shut down fun on the website of the London Daily Mail.
What the police, local paper and many people around town have agreed was a riot, but which is probably better described as a large drinking party that grew unruly after police intervention, drew swift and fierce condemnation from the community. On Facebook and in conversations in bars and restaurants, locals and students have for six days called for a show of no mercy for everyone involved. In an official statement posted to the university website the following morning, Western Washington University President Bruce Shepard and the student body leader vowed to expel any students identified in the crowd by detectives reviewing photos posted on social media and taken by police. The student body Board of Directors approved a resolution condemning the event, and nearly 3,000 people signed a petition saying they deplore the violence and are proud of WWUs true values. The landlord of the place where the trouble began has promised to evict the tenants who threw the first party and send incriminating photos to their parents. The students involved whom I spoke to are terrified. It seems clear that if the community and the officials have their way, the consequences for those identified will be terrible.
Over the course of two days I spoke with six sociology professors in their campus offices. I explained to each that I was a former WWU student and a working journalist researching the event for a story that would express concern for the students and the severe punishments the authorities seem prepared, even anxious, to exact against them. The university administration, local paper and other sources of information dont seem to be trying to understand why Saturday night happened, I told the first professor. Im looking for an expert who can place the students behavior and the police response in their proper social context and help everyone involved have an informed discussion, rather than the emotional one thats currently prevailing. The professors chair squeaked as a moment passed. Im reluctant to discuss it because I wasnt there, the professor said. I only know what the papers reported, so I think it would be irresponsible of me to comment on something that directly involves our students.
The answer neither surprised nor satisfied me. I am aware of the tense, sometimes fear filled atmosphere that exists among faculty in most American universities, a consequence of recent changes in administrative structure and short budgeting. Hoping to encourage the professor to say more, I said, The community is coming down hard on these kids. The president has promised to throw them out. The chief of police is working to arrest them. Their futures are in genuine danger and no one with any power is in their corner. It seems to me they need their teachers now more than ever, especially those with expertise relevant to the fix theyre in. ......................(more)
The complete piece is at: http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/academic_freedom_a_casualty_of_official_response_to_student_distur_20131019
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