Table of Contents
FIRE Continues to Follow Dave Barry Incident at Marquette
FIRE continues to follow the case of Stuart Ditsler, the graduate student at Marquette University who was forced to remove an innocuous political quote by humorist Dave Barry from his office door. Although the Marquette administration claimed that the situation was resolved within the philosophy department, Ditsler told FIRE he was never notified of this alleged resolution. So the question remains: are students and faculty now permitted to post materials on their office doors at Marquette?
FIRE wrote to Marquette a second time, hoping to clarify the university’s position and establish a firm commitment to free speech on campus. Our letter again expressed concern over an e-mail sent to Ditsler from Philosophy Department Chair James South, which stated that the philosophy department is not a “free speech zone.” The practice of posting materials on doors, however, should be especially protected in a philosophy department—a department whose website maintains that it is dedicated to “the pursuit of truth” and that “philosophy provides a principal forum for the serious discussion of the basic questions of life.” How can philosophy students and faculty at Marquette discuss the basic questions of life if they are unsure that their expressions will be allowed? Freedom to express one’s opinions and beliefs is fundamental to such a dialogue.
FIRE is waiting for a response to its most recent letter to Marquette. We will continue to keep you posted on our progress there.
Recent Articles
FIRE’s award-winning Newsdesk covers the free speech news you need to stay informed.

Once, international students feared Beijing’s wrath. Now Trump is the threat.
As Trump adopts Chinese Communist tactics against Harvard, will fear of government backlash silence our campuses?

Trump’s executive orders: Due process, ‘breathtaking sweeps,’ and the evils of intentional vagueness — First Amendment News 472
First Amendment News is a weekly blog and newsletter about free expression issues by Ronald K. L. Collins and is editorially independent from FIRE.

The Supreme Court made your rights harder to defend — Congress must now step up
Lackey v. Stinnie gutted a key incentive for civil rights lawsuits. Now Congress must act to preserve justice for everyday Americans.

Salt Lake City eases off crackdown on salty speech after FIRE steps in
Salt Lake City revises decorum rules after booting a speaker — and being reminded by FIRE that criticism isn’t a crime.