Johns Hopkins University: Viewpoint Discrimination Against Student Newspaper

Case Materials

Media Coverage

  • "Johns Hopkins initiates new distribution policy," Marnette Federis, Student Press Law Center News Flash, September 25, 2006: Greg Lukianoff, president of the advocacy group Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, disagreed, saying it is especially important to keep in mind how the new policy came into being.
  • "'Dirty, Gorgeous' Full-Throated Unfairness," John McCormack, National Review Online, August 10, 2006: Greg Lukianoff, president of the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE), says that even if there were errors in the article, it is unlikely that they would rise to the level of libel and that censoring student journalists isn’t the right answer: “If there were any inaccuracies in the article, let DSAGA prove it and make that information public. Silencing the Carrollton Record is not the way to solve this.”
  • "FIRE Blasts Johns Hopkins for Letting Conservative Paper Be Censored," Jim Brown, Agape Press, June 19, 2006: In May, the Carrolton Record published an issue critical of a group that brought a pornographic film director to the JHU campus. Afterward, hundreds of copies of the newspaper were stolen; however, according to the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE), the university administration "turned a blind eye to the theft."