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Dixie State's Refusal to Recognize First Amendment Gains More Attention
Last week, a new semester began at Dixie State University, and while the classes may have changed, the schoolās refusal to uphold its studentsā First Amendment rights to free expression and free association remains the same.
After senior re-applied for official recognition for her student group, Phi Beta Pi, Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS wrote a third letter to the school on December 18 explainingāagaināwhy Dixie State cannot ban Greek letters in club names just to avoid a āparty schoolā image. We sent the letter to Dixie Stateās trustees, as well as the Board of Regents of the Utah System of Higher Education.
Disappointingly, Indigoās group was denied recognitionāagaināon January 8, reaffirming Dixie Stateās placement on Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOSās 2013 list of the ā.ā With continuing media coverage of the case, Dixie State administratorsā supposed efforts to protect the schoolās reputation are achieving the opposite effect.
On Monday, the student newspaper reported on the universityās inclusion on Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOSās dishonorable list and relayed remarks from two communication professors at Dixie State. Professor Eric Young said that Dixie Stateās restrictions on club names āinterdicts what free speech is all about.ā Professor Randal Chase also questioned the policyās constitutionality, and explained Dixie Stateās motives:
Paranoia against the party image stems from deep-rooted historical contexts, Chase said. The hierarchy of DSU places an importance on keeping things under control and silencing outsiders. Chase also said there are a handful of families in the community that have political power, and members of administration are anxious not to displease them.
An opinion piece published in (St. George, Utah) earlier this month cautions that Dixie Stateās loyalty to certain members of the local community might drive away potential students from outside of southern Utah. Noting Dixie Stateās place on Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOSās āworst schoolsā list for denying Phi Beta Pi recognition, the piece warns:
If the disapproval ... continues, DSUās reputation will be tarnished not because of it being known as a party school, but one that actively stifles studentsā right to free speech. This is one of the biggest turnoffs to anybody researching the possibility of attending the school.
Meanwhile, Dixie State is struggling to provide new justifications for its rejection of Phi Beta Pi. Dean of Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS Del Beatty is now that the Greek letters themselves are not the problem, but his and other administratorsā past statements and actions indicate otherwise.
To start, Dixie State created the policy disallowing all clubs except honor societies from using Greek letters in their names specifically in response to Klabanoffās request for recognition of her group. Subsequently, both Beatty and Director of Student Involvement & Leadership Jordon Sharp repeatedly cited that new policy as the reason for denying Phi Beta Pi recognition. Beatty and Sharp have also explicitly stated that the group could be approved with all the same goals and planned activities, just under a name without Greek letters. Most recently, in denying recognition to Phi Beta Pi, Sharp wrote to Klabanoff: āI see that Greek Letters remain in the club name which as you know is against our bylaws. Therefore, I have again denied this request.ā
Still, and Sharp argue that denying Phi Beta Pi official recognition is necessary in order to ensure that prospective students are not misled into thinking there is a fully-funded Greek life system on campus. Sharp wrote in an email to Klabanoff on January 8: āI don't want students to go to our website, go through the clubs list, and transfer here under the assumption that we have a Greek Program.ā
It is disingenuous, after months of citing concerns about the schoolās āparty schoolā reputation, to now claim that Dixie State is simply trying to avoid perpetuating some sort of fraud upon Greek hopefuls considering Dixie State. The real risk for potentially-misled prospective students comes from the fact that Dixie State (PDF) students freedom of speech and assembly, while failing to provide as much. And itās a flat-out insult to Dixie Stateās students for Beatty to dismiss repeated calls for the university to respect its studentsā basic First Amendment rights as āgrasping at straws,ā as he does .
Anyone who cares about the integrity of the university and about its students should be worried students will visit the schoolās website, review the Student Code, and enroll or transfer there under the assumption that the school has a commitment to protecting student rights to free expression and association. It does not.
Image: Indigo Klabanoff
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