6 U. THE NATIONAL COLLEGE NEWSPAPER News Features MARCH 1989 6 U.THENATINALCOLLGE EWSAPERNew Feaure * MRCH198 ok 0 L:FOCUS T Several privately funded con- servative college newspapers have been launched in the past year. Some are at odds with administra- tors and others on campus over their editorial content. U. Focus takes a look at their disputes. Dartmouth Review gains attention on '60 Minutes' By Rosamond Hong The Dartmouth Dartmouth College, NH The nasty character of infight- ing between the staff of The Dart- mouth Review and Dartmouth College administrators hit prime time last semester when "60 Mi- nutes" aired a segment titled "Dartmouth vs. Dartmouth," de- tailing the controversy behind the Review's suit against the college. Calling the Review a "thorn in (the College's) side," Morley Safer interviewed former Review editor Christopher Baldwin and Dart- mouth President James Freedman. The 15-minute segment pre- sented what college spokesman Alex Huppe termed a "fair and objective treatment of what's going on here at Dartmouth." The Review is taking the college to court "over the right to bash anyone they like, or more accur- ately, anyonethey don'tlike," Saf- er said. The segment focused on the suspension of Review staff mem- bers after harassing a black music professor on campus. The Review is suing the college because it feels the administration has violated its right to free speech. Professor Jeffrey Hart was also interviewed in the segment. "The charge of racism against the Dartmouth Review is a slimeball attempt at intimidation that is absolutely reprehensible," Hart said. "These students were not punished because of what they wrote,"Freedmansaidinthe tele- cast. "Freedom of speech is essen- tial at Dartmouth. It has pro- tected the Review for the past eightyearsandwilcontinueto do so." When questioned about the Re- view's attack on Professor Wil- liam Cole and his method of teaching, Baldwin answered, "We are witnesses to higher education. When something smells bad, you know it stinks." Harmeet Dhillon, current edi- tor in chiefoftheReview, said she feels the segment sided with the college "to a certain extent." The segment "revealed a lot ab- out the Review's arrogance and deception," Huppe said. A Walk on the Right Side Conservative papers rouse controversy By Debbie Abrams The Daily Pennsylvanian U. of Pennsylvania Journalists have long claimed the role of watchdog over their govern- ments - on a national level, in indi- vidual cities and on college campuses. But recently, role reversal has be- come more commonplace, with adminis- trators and student governments at several schools closely monitoring - and sometimes interfering with - the operations of campus publications whose political leanings are to the right side of the political spectrum. Although editors of the papers have not proved outright censorship, they have charged that students, faculty and administrators attempt to hinder the newspapers - through means ranging from the suspension of editors to the revocation of funding - because the veiwpoints they espouse run counter to the mainstream of society. Harmeet Dhillon, editor in chief of the controversial Dartmouth Review, said the paper, founded in 1980 as the "The growing conservative force threatens the liberal establishment. Freedom of speech (on the liberal side) is very strong, but on the other is non-existent." - HARMEET DHILLON first conservative college paper in the last 50 years, serves as a model for con- servative papers across the country. Since the paper's founding, more than 100 right-wing papers have sprung up on college campuses. Earlier this fall, a conservative news- paper at Colby College in Maine created a stir on campus when it published an unsigned column which contained material that many at the college found offensive to women and homosexuals. The school's Student Association, which funds the paper, threatened to withdraw support unless the Colby Crossfire printed an apology for the statements. The newspaper's editor-in- chief, Gregory Lundberg refused, saying the forced retraction would con- stitute censorship. And the association revoked the $700 it planned to allocate to the paper. Lundberg said much of what appeared in the paper was harmless. "One one-thousandth of the text was what people were offended by," Lund- berg said, claiming that most of the arti- cles which appeared in the publication's fall issue concentrated on the presiden- tial election and other national issues. He called the fund withdrawal "unbri- dled hypocrisy." School funding is often a key revenue source for college papers. Many of the papers started in recent years do not have enough money to publish reg- ularly. The Dartmouth Review, the nation's most famous - and infamous - con- servative college publication is a $150,000 corporation, Dhillon said. She asserted that the only reason the pub- lication has survived in the face of the administration's actions is that they rely solely on outside funds, such as alumni donations and subscriptions. "The reason why we continue to be vocal is because we are independent," she said. But most other conservative papers do not have extensive outside support. Publications like Colby's Crossfire, Princeton's Sentinel and U. of Pennsyl- vania's The Red and Blue are smaller newspapers that have at one time re- ceived or applied for student funds. But none of the papers are currently being financed by their universities. "A lot of conservative papers are going to private funding - advertising and donations," said Joe Weinlick, edi- tor of The Red and Blue, which was de- nied funding earlier last semester. "There are some pretty uptight peo- ple here," said Colby's Lundberg. " I think (the incident) was blown out of proportion." The same complaint has been lodged against the Dartmouth College admi- nistration - only three editors at the Review, who were suspended last year, have filed a lawsuit against the college. For the past year, the Review has d- rupted relations on the New Hampshire campus - first with a confrontation be- tween the paper's editors and a black professor and most recently for printing an editorial that has been denounced as anti-Semitic. Last March, three editors were sus- pended due to a confrontation with Dartmouth Music Professor William Cole over an article the paper ran crib cizing Cole's teaching abilities. More recently the Review drew charges of anti-Semitism from the cam- pus community over an article which likened Dartmouth President James Freedman to Adolf Hitler. "The growing conservative force threatens the liberal establishment," Dhillon said."The Dartmouth Review has never had more to write about than it does now. Freedom of speech (on to liberal side) is very strong, but on the other is non-existent." Sentinel editor David Miller also said his paper often upsets the campus com- munity because it runs counter to cam- pus mainstream opinions. "The more successful we put across our opinions, the more angry they get," Miller said. I PA PE RS U ND ER A TTA CK emment, not the administration, was responsiblefor closing the spectator, oneofeight student papers. At Going against the grain . . . Recently, the U. of lowa, more than 300 students and faculty the Vassar Spectator was closed down by the Vassar members signed an ad in the school's daily news- Student Association for printing the "Hypocrite of paper criticizing the conservative Campus Reviewfor the Month" award. The paper gave the prize to encouraging attacks against homosexuals. One con- Anthony Grate, a black Vassar student who made servative paper, Campus Report, is distributed anti-Semitic remarks to a Jewish student at a recep- nationally to more than 300 campuses. The paper, tion hosted by the Spectator after having earlier published by Accuracy in Academia, attempts to complained of racism on campus. The Spectator counter other points of view, CampusReportField reported that after the Jewish student argued that his Director Kip Karady said. "Say a professor is ancestors had also been slaves, Grate said, "So teaching an economics course from a Marxist point what, I hate Jews." According to Vassar College of view, then we expose that," he said. Jaret Press Secretary Dicksie Sheraton, the student gov- Seiberg, The Eagle, American U., DC