When part-time
college student Jihad Daniel received a campuswide e-mail
invitation to see a movie about lesbians, he balked. "These
are perversions," he replied to the e-mail's sender,
asking that he no longer be sent information about
"Connie and Sally" or "Adam and Steve."
The next thing he knew, the 68-year-old student
at William Paterson University in Wayne, N.J., was
being accused of violating the state school's
antidiscrimination policy. A letter of reprimand followed in
June, describing his brief comments to the sender--the
head of the women's studies program--as
"derogatory or demeaning."
He took his case to a Philadelphia organization
that has become the go-to group for college students
and professors of all stripes who believe their rights
to free speech have been violated. Since 1999, the
Foundation for Individual Rights in Education has battled
pro bono for evangelicals and atheists, animal rights
activists and campus conservatives, and others who say
school administrations have silenced them because of
their points of view.
The group filed a complaint with the university,
saying Daniel's rights to free speech and due process
had been violated. The New Jersey attorney general
sided with the school, but the foundation said it will fight
to have the reprimand lifted.
With 11 employees in Philadelphia and a network
of dozens of volunteer attorneys nationwide, the
foundation has grown from an organization that
publicized student complaints to a resource for college
communities. The group's goal is to "transform the
culture of education into one that respects free
speech for everybody," foundation president David
French said.
He said the foundation has successfully defended
students, professors, and student newspapers in nearly
100 cases--at schools public and private, small
and large, urban and rural. Its most high-profile battles
have been against campus speech codes.
On its Web site, the foundation rates speech
codes of about 400 schools, lists codes of concern,
and indicates whether any related complaints have been
lodged. Outlawed behavior has included "sexually suggestive
staring," "inappropriately directed laughter," or saying
anything--intentionally or unintentionally--that
could embarrass someone else.
The cofounders of the foundation, best known by
its acronym, FIRE, are Alan Charles Kors, a
conservative professor of history at the University of
Pennsylvania, and Harvey A. Silverglate, a civil liberties
attorney in Boston. They met as students at Princeton
in the 1960s. Their organization took shape as the
result of an incident at Penn in 1993 that became
known as "the water buffalo case."
During the incident, a white student yelled from
his dormitory window to a group of black women who
were making noise and interrupting his studying: "Shut
up, you water buffalo. If you're looking for a party,
there's a zoo a mile (kilometer) from here." The women
charged the student, Eden Jacobowitz, with racial
harassment under the university's hate-speech policy.
Jacobowitz insisted his comment was not racist and
that the phrase "water buffalo" was a rough translation of a
Hebrew word for "fool."
The women later dropped the charges, and
Jacobowitz settled his lawsuit against the university,
with Penn admitting no wrongdoing.The case sparked
national debate on political correctness on campus and
prompted Penn to change its student behavior policies.
It also led Kors and Silverglate to establish FIRE a
year later.
In May the foundation won a case on behalf of a
student at Seminole Community College in Florida who
was barred from distributing pamphlets near a
cafe about cruel practices in slaughterhouses. Other
student groups were permitted to set up tables in the
high-traffic spot. (AP)