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LAST UPDATED APRIL 2005
©Copyright 2005 NCAC
WEB DESIGN
Jeanne Criscola Criscola Design
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NCAC Censorship News Issue #89:
The Long And The Short Of It
Spring 2003
- When the director of the Emma Goldman Papers Project
asked permission to send a solicitation letter, officials
at the University of California at Berkeley, where the project
is housed, took out the red ink. At issue were quotes by
Goldman from the early 1900s, one of which urged people "not yet overcome by war madness to raise their voice of
protest, to call the attention of the people to the crime
and outrage which are about to be perpetrated on them."
Goldman, at the time, spoke in opposition to World War I.
The Chancellor, urged by NCAC and others concerned for freedom
of expression, reversed the decision.
- A Manhattanville College basketball player in New York,
Toni Smith, is turning her back to the flag during
the national anthem. Some applaud her, others heckle; the
college administration supports her right to protest.
- If Texas Congressmember John Carter has his way,
college students who download music and other copyrighted
material from the Internet may find themselves in jail.
He reportedly suggested that jailing students would stop
piracy.
- Paradise, an award-winning play by Glyn
O'Malley, which examines the impact of war on Israeli and
Palestine youth, will not be produced as scheduled after
Muslim leaders in Cincinnati protested. The play is about
two girls, a jihad-bomber and her murder victim. The Cincinnati
Playhouse had staged a reading for educators and leaders
of the Jewish and Muslim communities in February.
- Grand Rapids Community College found itself in a bind
when a legislator on the finance committee called to find
out if state money was being used in a local theater group
production of Corpus Christi at the college.
Constituents complained that the play is sacrilegious. Rather
than risk the legislator's ire, The Actors' Theatre moved
the play to the Fountain Street Church; its Reverend Judith
Walker Riggs said, "The great figure of Christ...cannot
be harmed by a few words spoken by a few actors in Grand
Rapids, MI. But some of our own hearts might be encouraged
to move away from narrow-mindedness, hatred and violence."
The college maintains its sponsorship of the Actors' Theatre.
- Joy Crane in Sioux Falls, S.D. had two pieces of
art removed from a government mapping center which regularly
hosts exhibits by local artists. Deeming them "inappropriate,"
the center removed sculptures of a tiny pregnant male, and
the Earth emerging from the birth canal. NCAC is urging
the center to develop exhibit policies that protect artistic
freedom.
- The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press has issued
a comprehensive report on actions the government has taken
since 9/11 to limit information available to the media and
to the public. The report, entitled Homefront Confidential:
How the War on Terrorism Affects Access to Information and
the Public's Right to Know, is the third in a series.
It analyzes the impact of the Homeland Security Act and
the USA Patriot Act, as well as the President's order for
military tribunals and secret detention hearings and the
Attorney General's directive on the federal Freedom of Information
Act. To view the report online, click here.
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