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08/14/06
AP
Centerpiece: Newspaper settlement left unresolved issues
By ROXANA HEGEMAN
Associated Press Writer
WICHITA, Kan. (AP) -- Jeremy Clawson had just gotten off the
phone in the fall of 2003 with a reporter from the St. Louis
Post-Dispatch, who called the Barton County Community College's
newspaper seeking background information on basketball player
Ricky Clemons' coursework at the Great Bend college.
That call left Clawson -- at the time editor of the college
paper, the Interrobang -- uneasy.
"I told our newspaper staff that if the Post-Dispatch
is reporting on our school, we should be reporting on this
story, too," Clawson would later testify in a deposition.
The unfolding story of academic and financial fraud of the
college's athletic department culminated in the felony convictions
of its athletic director and seven basketball and track coaches
and lead to the firing of the college's president.
The scheme involved the fraudulent use of campus and federal
work-study money to bypass a Kansas Jayhawk Community College
Conference rule prohibiting full scholarships at Kansas junior
colleges. Coaches -- two of whom were sentenced Monday to
probation in connection with the investigation -- believed
that ban put the Kansas schools at a recruiting disadvantage.
Along the way, the scandal may also have taken a toll on the
First Amendment press and speech freedoms of student journalists
and their embattled faculty newspaper adviser, who struggled
to cover on their own college campus a story that had become
national news.
A civil rights lawsuit filed against the college's board of
trustees by former newspaper adviser Jennifer Schartz was
settled last week -- just days before trial was set to begin.
Schartz called the settlement for $130,000 a vindication of
the principles for which she was fighting. But she did not
get her job back under the deal.
The case had been closely followed by First Amendment advocates
who point to a spate of firings in recent years of faculty
media advisers over the content of their college publications.
Among them is Kathy Lawrence, former president and chair of
the advocacy program for College Media Advisers, the trade
group representing faculty media advisers. She called the
Barton County deal a "fairly significant thing,"
but noted the out-of-court settlement did not reinstate the
adviser and set no case law.
"In that sense it didn't gain a lot, but I think it demonstrated
one thing: If you are going to do something to an adviser,
you had better be prepared to pay more than $100,000 for that
mistake. And that might be enough to make some schools think
twice," she said. "At least I hope it would be."
In her lawsuit, Schartz alleged the college's decision to
terminate her employment was in retaliation for her exercising
her First Amendment rights as a faculty adviser, for supporting
the First Amendment rights of her students and for her refusal
to censor the content of the student newspaper in violation
of the First Amendment.
Schartz lost her job after she refused to prohibit publication
of letters to the editor that were critical of Barton County
Community college staff. The school contended it had a right
to set a "reasonable policy" for letters to the
editor because the paper was an academic product published
by the college.
Since her firing, the school has adopted a policy stating
that the newspaper adviser cannot be held responsible for
what a student newspaper does, Schartz said, adding that if
that policy been in place when she was working for the college,
she would not have lost her job.
Her attorney, Larry Schumaker, said that policy acknowledges
students' freedom of the press, and that while not a part
of the settlement, it was a welcome outcome from the lawsuit.
"I think in a lot of ways the college is on the right
path of reaffirming its mission of educating students and
acting with integrity, and I don't know if going to trial
would have done any more to push them in that direction,"
Schumaker said.
Student journalists at the Barton County college were doing
responsible journalism in the best tradition of the craft
and the First Amendment, Schumaker said.
"They weren't doing anything at all inappropriate other
than following the story that deserved to be followed,"
he said. "Not only do you have the whole question of
censorship, but you have the question of what is this college
doing? What lessons are they teaching students when it comes
to being professional journalists and all that that entails?"
Allen Glendenning, the college's attorney in the case, said
trustees decided to settle the case after Schartz lowered
her financial demands to a level where it made more sense
to settle than to continue the litigation.
The college also argued that if a teacher's duties include
supervision of student activities, and she expressly refuses
to do so, the college was free to take employment action without
having to litigate questions about whether the refusal was
appropriate.
"It is very important those students not be muzzled and
the content of their newspaper not be dictated by some of
the targets of their stories," Lawrence said.
Two of the five colleges publicly censured by College Media
Advisers for their handling of First Amendment issues have
been in Kansas. In addition to its condemnation of the handling
of the Barton County case, the group also censured Kansas
State University for reassigning an adviser after the newspaper
was criticized for failing to cover a regional conference
on black student government.
Schartz was faculty adviser for the Interrobang from 2001
until 2004, when her contract was not renewed by the board
despite recommendations from her supervisors and then-college
president Veldon Law to continue her employment.
Zach Becker took over the editor's job at the Interrobang
after Clawson, a member of the Kansas National Guard, was
called up to active duty to serve in Afghanistan.
Becker, now 21 and a senior at Fort Hays State University,
had been a journalism major at Barton County Community College
but changed his major to psychology after transferring to
Fort Hays.
Becker published his own independent student paper, The Edge,
last year as an alternative to the official Fort Hays student
newspaper, which was running sexually explicit articles.
Becker told The Associated Press that Schartz taught him that
with freedom comes responsibility -- and that with journalism
you have to be responsible.
"Honesty, accuracy, integrity, fairness and public service
-- those are the things Mrs. Schartz taught us," he said.
"She taught us a lot."
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