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Why liberal Wesleyan students are boycotting the school newspaper

Students at the Middletown, Conn., college circulated a petition demanding that the school cease funding The聽Wesleyan Argus newspaper.

By Michelle Toh, Staff writer

Wesleyan University is a prestigious campus known for its progressive culture. So it is surprising to many that the school is now embroiled in a contentious censorship battle as some students demand that the century-old newspaper be shut down.

The story began two weeks ago, when an opinion piece questioning the Black Lives Matter movement was published in The Wesleyan Argus. Here鈥檚 an excerpt from the piece:

Students who objected created a petition now being weighed by the student government, which states that The Argus has failed historically to be inclusive of minorities' voices and demands that copies of the paper on campus be recycled. The petitioners also want diversity training for all student publications, and argue that funding should be withheld until their requirements are met.

The Wesleyan Student Assembly discussed the petition聽on Sunday, culminating with Kate Cullen,聽president of the assembly,聽saying in a prepared statement that it would host another forum on the petition this weekend.

But Executive Editor Gabe Rosenberg told the Associated Press that the paper is looking into arranging outside financing.聽

He said the newspaper is committed to improving its diversity issue but he disagrees with opponents' tactics.

"I totally agree the newspaper is not a perfect place. We just cannot support their methods," Mr. Rosenberg said.

University President Michael Roth agrees. In a statement titled "Black lives matter and so does free speech," he and two other administrators condemned what they described as harassment of the author and of newspaper editors.

鈥淒ebates can raise intense emotions, but that doesn鈥檛 mean that we should demand ideological conformity because people are made uncomfortable. As members of a university community, we always have the right to respond with our own opinions, but there is no right not to be offended,鈥 said the statement.

The topic of 鈥 鈥榝ree and unfettered鈥 speech is increasingly coming up against a new generation of students, some of whom have an expectation that they have a right not to read or hear ideas that differ from their worldview or make them uncomfortable,鈥澛牶=谴笊衤爌reviously reported. 鈥淲hat began in the 1990s as political correctness 鈥 a desire not to offend others 鈥 has now morphed into what one academic observer calls 'empathetic correctness' 鈥 a desire never to be offended.鈥澛

This report contains material from the Associated Press.