Apparently a group of girls was running around campus today throwing away all of the copies of the printz they could find due to a comment in there making a sorority look bad. I'm not sure this is true at least the reason for it I'm not sure about, but I thought someone here might know more about it. Someone said they destroyed/stole over 4000 copies.
I'm not sure what to call this action, seeing as how the label "terrorist" has already been used up to describe the people who just complain about what they don't like . . . .
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Love your enemies. It makes them so damned mad. ~P.D. East
LVN wrote: I'm not sure what to call this action, seeing as how the label "terrorist" has already been used up to describe the people who just complain about what they don't like . . . .
If LVN is referring to my use of "Taliban" when describing those trying to impose their beliefs, taste or preferences on others through the use of power, then I need to make a correction here. LVN and I could never agreed on the issue of the "Taliban" being "terrorist". Is stealing papers a "terrorist's act"? However, it could be an act of "Taliban" if performed by campus Police.
I never heard anyone being upset about people "complaining", but rather being upset because they tried to use power to impose their view on everyone else.
Stealing the papers is more an act of power than writing a letter to the editor. And over a sorority. Sheesh.
(Actually, it's an act of childishness, silliness, and vandalism. I just could not resist . . . now Atheist, could you turn down an opening like that?)
__________________
Love your enemies. It makes them so damned mad. ~P.D. East
LVN wrote: Stealing the papers is more an act of power than writing a letter to the editor. And over a sorority. Sheesh.
(Actually, it's an act of childishness, silliness, and vandalism. I just could not resist . . . now Atheist, could you turn down an opening like that?)
LVN, I knew you were baiting me, but couldn't resist. Must be a slow Friday evening.
Friday, November 03, 2006 Someone coordinated an effort to remove all of our print editions from news stands yesterday. We received calls all day about groups of girls taking whole stacks and dumping them in the garbage or driving off with them.
After hearing about one incident, we ran to the scene and, sure enough, the garbage can nearby contained all of the newpapers supposed to be in the stand.
So, we filed a report with the police (laughable) because the Printz costs 25 cents per issue after the first four per customer.
The bottom line: Some group on campus destroyed approximately 4,000 newpapers. Of course, we know who is responsible and why they did it. But, without proof, we aren't going to reveal this.
posted by Executive Editor David McRaney at 10:50 AM
Would somebody post the article which presumably prompted the attempt to suppress? That gets some more exposure for it. And maybe the Printz could also run off a few thousand copies of the piece and post people at key locations around campus handing them out. The perps need to learn that, in this day and age, calling attention to an issue in this way can be worse than letting it slide.
Playboy arrives Elise Jordan Issue date: 11/2/06 Section: News
[CORRECTION: In the Thursday print edition of The Student Printz, Elizabeth Brown was identified as a member of Chi Omega sorority. She is a former member. The Student Printz regrets the error.]
Playboy employees said Tuesday their visit to Hattiesburg has been a success so far despite having to work around Mississippi age restrictions....
At least 2,000 copies of Thursday's edition of the University of Southern Mississippi student newspaper went missing after initial distribution, Student Printz staff members said Friday....
...The large-scale theft of student newspapers is increasingly common, said Mike Hiestand, an attorney and legal consultant to the Virginia-based Student Press Law Center....
..."Students and sometimes school officials are seeing this as a very effective form of censorship," he said. "It's the most effective form of censorship - to take the paper and trash it so no one can read it."...
[CORRECTION: In the Thursday print edition of The Student Printz, Elizabeth Brown was identified as a member of Chi Omega sorority. She is a former member. The Student Printz regrets the error.]
[CORRECTION: In the Thursday print edition of The Student Printz, Elizabeth Brown was identified as a member of Chi Omega sorority. She is a former member. The Student Printz regrets the error.]
I like that aphorism: "No harm, no foul." Unfortunately, I think the press -- including the student press -- sometimes act as if their standard retraction magically reverses all harm.
So the Printz prints a story that incorrectly identifies a potential Playboy model as a member of a particular group. Certain members of that group believe that the erroneous association would damage their collective reputation.
What to do?
Certainly, the obvious and correct answer is: do nothing. Let the erroneous information be disseminated, then begin the work of doing whatever it is one does to restore or repair one's damaged reputation. With any luck, the Printz will print a retraction. Yeah, that's the ticket. A retraction will wipe the slate clean.
Apparently, someone decided that this tempest was in her teapot. She decided to actually take action. True, the article is still available online, but there, at least, we readers will be treated to the corrected version.
Yes, the perps'll have to answer for their actions when they are identified. It's hard for me to figure what their crime will be. Probably vandalism, not theft. How does one steal something that is put out to be taken without charge? Anyway, they will be nailed and the embarrassment to any organization to which they belong probably will be greater than had they posed bare naked for Playboy. Oh well, they'll live and learn.
I am sympathetic to those who advertize in the Printz; their messages did not reach the audience for which they paid. But I have to say, a part of me admires someone with the gumption to take a little risk and solve the problem directly, with a certain irony ("stealing" free papers) and simplicity.
only the first 4 copies are free after that they cost $0.25. Thus it is theft. I think they should bust them for Theft and vandalism. Hopefully they will be suspended. USM should expect better of it's students even those who are in greek organizations. In the original article Ms. Brown expressed the fact that members of Sororities were warned if they tried out they wouldn't be allowed to say in the organization. I guess she was correct.
I... But I have to say, a part of me admires someone with the gumption to take a little risk and solve the problem directly, with a certain irony ("stealing" free papers) and simplicity.
Think "guerrillas," not "terrorists."
I don't admire people who prevent me from getting information by imposing their censorship on everyone. Here are a few questions: Whose problem needed to be solved? Was the girl trying to get into Playboy a member of the sorority at the time, but was kicked out so the sorority could claim it wasn't one of their members? In other words when did the girl leave the sorority?
Voter wrote: Would somebody post the article which presumably prompted the attempt to suppress?
[original] Harris encouraged USM girls to "go for it" because "you have nothing to lose." She felt comfortable and had fun, although she initially thought it would be awkward.
Some USM students argue, however, there is something to lose. Elizabeth Brown. sophomore double nursing and exercise physiology major is a member of the Chi Omega sorority. Although she did not hear any direct threats, she said sorority women would be disaffiliated if they auditioned for Playboy.
MTV reality television vixen and Playboy model Trishelle Cannatella, a former USM Chi Omega sister, was once asked to forfeit her sorority pin due to her behavior.
Orfanos said sorority restrictions are contradictory of the theme of sisterhood. She said for sorority members to doubt their sister's judgment is "stupid and immature." She said Playboy's recent trip to Tulsa for auditions presented the same Greek issues.
Brown also said posing for Playboy is "a bad representation of USM." She added, "It's going to make us look really bad. Girls should have pride in where we go to school."
Aside from some negative feedback, ...
[revised] Harris encouraged USM girls to "go for it" because "you have nothing to lose." She felt comfortable and had fun, although she initially thought it would be awkward.
Orfanos said sorority restrictions are contradictory of the theme of sisterhood. She said for sorority members to doubt their sister's judgment is "stupid and immature." She said Playboy's recent trip to Tulsa for auditions presented the same Greek issues.
Some USM students argue, however, there is something to lose. Elizabeth Brown, a sophomore double nursing and exercise physiology major said posing for Playboy is "a bad representation of USM." She added, "It's going to make us look really bad. Girls should have pride in where we go to school."
"News Editor Brittany Brown said a close friend contacted her around 6:45 p.m. during an editor's meeting Thursday reporting to have a seen "a group of girls" in red jersey-style T-shirts and upside down visors take newspapers out of their racks at the Thad Cochran Center and throw them in two trash cans." ...
"We are checking into and following up on the complaint," said UPD Chief Bob Hopkins.
"We will be looking at video from several cameras in the Thad Cochran Center, and if any identifications can be made we will forward that information on to the Dean of Students."
...The Thad Cochran Center shows off this university's bounty indeed....
...A massive television screen greets visitors on the first floor, and images can be simultaneously broadcast throughout the building. Meanwhile, 120 security cameras keep an eye on the goings-on....
University of Southern Mississippi newspapers missing, some found in trash Paper featured front page story about Playboy Magazine photo shoots
MISSISSIPPI — Almost half of the press run of the University of Southern Mississippi's student newspaper disappeared from racks last week, but editors say the police are reluctant to investigate the theft because the newspaper is free....
Isn't it strange that there have been no proclaimations of righteous indignation from the Dome? This is a crime, one that goes against what the country stands for. Clearly the President has to stand up against this act of hooliganism and come out in favor of rational dialogue as befits an institution of higher learning.
What was I thinking, its obvious, the destruction of a free press is a hallmark of a totalitarian regime. The silence of the Dome crew should be taken as complicity or at least as condoning the act.
OM--i don't think you'll find a lot of faculty or others who see this incident as the "destruction of a free press." faculty are looking to the future, to the visit of the presidential search committee this week, and frankly could care less whether the administration said something about this incident. i think most faculty wish the administration would say something about other issues. the paper issue is generally a yawner.
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"After a diligent investigation by university police, about eight USM students will face punishment for trashing several stacks of the Nov. 2 Student Printz. ...
"We worked with faculty advisors of the sorority to help identify those people responsible," said University Police Chief Bob Hopkins, adding the students were identified through video surveillance. "It took about a day to see what happened." ...
The students responsible, he said, will together pay $750 in restitution to the Printz, apologize and perform community service as well as complete an online module about civility."
"It is nice to see that justice is served. Once again white, greeks can do anything they want on campus. They can drink, drink and drive, date rape, steal, and just get a slap on the wrist.
You can't tell me if this was eight black males they would have received the same treatment!"
"Last week we discovered who some of the people who had stolen copies of the Student Printz were. I didn't think that much of it until I heard the punishment. The $750 in restitution is what caught my eye. ... All this incident has shown me is that the rules are different on campus for some people. So, I encourage people who get in trouble the rest of this academic year and people who have already received punishment to get a lawyer and show them this incident."
Printz--Letter to the editor: White Greeks get off easy
With this light of a "slap on the wrist" to the students involved, does this mean that Joe Paul and Eddie Holloway's jobs will be "re-evaluated" when SFT leaves?
"Grand larceny committed by eight or more of our Greeks and what is to be done to them? How are they punished? They pay lower fines than they would if all eight of them missed a meeting of their Greek organization (according to unconfirmed accounts). ...
Where is the alumni outrage now? Where are the church groups and the BSU and even American Family Radio haranguing the good name of our school? Why aren't they demanding justice?
Has anyone questioned if these women should remain at USM or in their chosen field of study? Anyone other than the rest of us law abiding students?"