Pubdate: Tue, 03 Jun 2008 Source: Rutland Herald (VT) Copyright: 2008 Rutland Herald Contact: http://www.rutlandherald.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/892 Author: Gordon Dritschilo Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States) MIDDLEBURY BOARD SLATES SCHOOL PAPER DISCUSSION MIDDLEBURY -- A high school teacher said he hopes to spark discussion on how to best supervise the student newspaper. A publishing class that would focus on putting out the paper is tentatively on next year's schedule, according to Principal William Lawson. Timothy O'Leary, an English teacher who ran the journalism class that put out the paper this year, said he hopes to take advantage of a School Board discussion of the class to talk about censorship issues. The board meets at 5:30 p.m. today at the high school. The Tigers' Print, put out by students at Middlebury Union High School, caused a stir in April with an article in which it named a student who admitted to smoking marijuana before class. Lawson said he advised against naming the student, but did not forbid it. Friday, he said he wishes he had. "I think the fact that he allowed himself to be identified could have been injurious to him and could have subjected us to litigation," Lawson said. Lawson stressed his problem was not with the story itself, but with naming the specific student. In the wake of the story, Lawson said he would keep a closer eye on the paper's content. He said nothing was censored in the May issue and the April issue remains available on the Web site. "I don't want to censor," he said. "I don't want to be in that position. Do I think I have a right to? I do have a right to. I would go to the end of the earth to not exercise that option. "I hope I can encourage people to use good judgment so that's not necessary." Lawson said his record is second to none in tolerating diverse views, to the point where he has been criticized for some of the groups he has allowed into the school. He said The Tigers' Print ran a number of controversial pieces that he made no attempt to rein in. In 13 years, Lawson said, MUHS has not had a paper as good as The Tigers' Print and he has never felt the need to step in. O'Leary said that Lawson's decision came without any discussion and he argued that if the school wants to teach good journalism, it needs to adopt a hands-off policy. "The administration making this claim has really had a chilling effect on what students are writing, collaboration of ideas in the classroom," he said. "I think it leads to a kind of self-censorship, on a conscious and an unconscious level." While professional writers self-censor in a sense and editors have a say over what goes into print, O'Leary said collaboration is healthy because of the daily relationship between members of the staff. Edicts from outside the staff have a different effect, he said. "That type of censorship does not have a place in a class you call journalism," he said. O'Leary argued that while someone on the staff should certainly serve as an adviser, ultimate authority must reside with students if the paper is going to function as a student voice. O'Leary said he did not think there should be an adult with the authority to veto a story or part of a story. "If we want to understand any group, it's important to give them the opportunity to have that voice," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin