The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

An era of sometimes violent protests

- By LISA RATHKE

MONTPELIER, VT. >> Fearing a return to violent protests that roiled campuses in the 1970s, colleges and universiti­es are re-examining how to protect free speech while keeping students and employees safe in a time of political polarizati­on.

Campus police are trying new tactics to try to keep events peaceful, while other schools have abruptly canceled controvers­ial speakers over safety concerns, as the University of California, Berkeley, didwith conservati­ve writer Ann Coulter’s appearance, originally scheduled for Thursday.

In response to earlier rioting at Berkeley, the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Campus Law Enforcemen­t Administra­tors last month put on daylong protest preparatio­n and response training sessions at Chapman University in Orange, California, the University of Notre Dame in Indiana and the University of Maryland, attended by law enforcemen­t from about 40 colleges and universiti­es. Another training session will take place Thursday at the University of Hartford in Connecticu­t.

“Our mission is basically to protect the university’s mission, which is to have civil debate and present both sides of an issue and have things be done in a way that’s civil,” said the associatio­n’s president, Randy Burba, police chief at Chapman. “It’s a challenge to make that happen when there’s really opposing sides and views, but that’s really what we’re supposed to do.”

Burba declined to offer specifics about the training, to avoid disclosing proprietar­y police tactics.

But, he said, the sessions were a chance to remind campus police of best practices: to know and be engaged with the college community, do research on speakers, look at what’s happened at other campuses, and meet with the leaders of protest groups ahead of time to talk about their plans and the college rules.

At Vermont’s Middlebury College last month, protesters shouted down guest speaker Charles Murray, a social scientist who critics say used pseudoscie­nce to link intelligen­ce to race in the 1994 book “The Bell Curve.” Afterward, protesters surrounded Murray and professor Allison Stanger, with a protester pulling Stanger’s hair, police said.

The protesters also climbed onto the car carrying Stanger and Murray and rocked it. Stanger, who was treated for a neck injury and a concussion, said she feared for her life.

Middlebury said last week that 70 people may be subject to discipline, and that more than 30 students so far had been punished, but officials did not elaborate.

Stanger wrote an editorial about her experience, saying the country’s “constituti­onal democracy will depend on whether Americans can relearn how to engage civilly with one an- other, something that is admittedly hard to do with a bullying president as a role model. But any other way forward would be antithetic­al to the very ideals of the university and of liberal democracy.”

Bertram Johnson, chairman of the political science department that co-sponsored the event, last week wrote in the college newspaper that it was a mistake for him to offer a co-sponsorshi­p without wider consultati­on.

Complicati­ng efforts to keep the peace is that protesters and event sponsors sometimes aren’t connected to the schools hosting them.

Auburn University last week cited safety concerns in canceling an appearance by white nationalis­t Richard Spencer, arranged by an outside organizati­on, but a federal judge prevented the school from doing so. Three people were arrested for disorderly conduct.

Texas A&M University has begun requiring that speakers be sponsored by a student, faculty or staff organizati­on after a former student arranged a speech by Spencer in December.

The school held a simultaneo­us counter-event in the stadium called Aggies United, with speakers and musical acts, instead of a potential confrontat­ion at the building where the speech was held, spokeswoma­n Amy Smith said.

Berkeley’s cancellati­on of Coulter’s appearance came days after violent clashes at a rally in support of President Donald Trump off campus, in downtown Berkeley.

Coulter had vowed to speak Thursday anyway but hinted Wednesday she might call off her plans. The university says it’s preparing for possible violence whether she shows up or not.

Students who invited her have sued the university, saying it is violating their right to free speech.

Protests on the Berkeley campus that stopped a speech of right-wing commentato­r Milo Yiannopoul­os on Feb. 1 resulted in injuries to six people and three arrests. Prosecutor­s have declined to press charges in two of those cases, the school said.

 ??  ??
 ?? LISA RATHKE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this March 2, 2017, file photo, Middlebury College students turn their backs to author Charles Murray during his lecture in Middlebury, Vt. After a series of protests around the country, some institutio­ns are rethinking their security and tactics in...
LISA RATHKE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this March 2, 2017, file photo, Middlebury College students turn their backs to author Charles Murray during his lecture in Middlebury, Vt. After a series of protests around the country, some institutio­ns are rethinking their security and tactics in...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States