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New York Post
Wednesday, May 24 1950
Tantrums on the Campus
There are moments these days when it is difficult to tell the adults from
the children in Our Town. In rapid succession three top-ranking figures
in the city’s educational system have behaved like scared, screaming
citizens, creating a total picture of unacademic panic.
DR. HARRY D. GIDEONSE, president of Brooklyn College, has slapped suspensions
on six students who run the undergraduate newspaper. They were convicted
of publishing and “unauthorized” edition. The row all began
with the resignation of the paper’s faculty adviser who cautiously
disapproved publication of a news article reporting that Gideonse had
vetoed the faculty’s choice for head of the History Department.
Apparently no other faculty member was ready to step into the retired
adviser’s quaking boots and, under the college’s curious by-laws,
the paper could not be published without benefit of a faculty censor.
There upon the students published a paper on their own, financed out of
funds which they raised independently; the editor and his aides were promptly
suspended for “conduct unbecoming a student.” We think Gideonse
is guilty of conducting unbecoming an educator who has often boasted of
his own liberalism. The censorship requirement for a college publication
seems absurd enough; the reprisals invoked against the students for allegedly
“evading” the censorship are as humorless as they are high
handed.
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