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Despite court ruling, UWM won’t censor students, dean says

When a student newspaper published a review in 2001 that said Jewish producers had caused a “Blitzkrieg” of one-sided movies about the Holocaust as a form of revenge, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee administrators denounced it as repugnant but defended the paper’s right to express such views. The Leader may not enjoy such a defense should it print a similar article this year.

In June, the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Chicago ruled that college newspapers can be subject to the same type of censorship as high school newspapers. The decision, which applies in Illinois, Indiana and Wisconsin, came in a case out of Governors State University in Illinois. It could affect more than newspapers. Mark Goodman, executive director of the Student Press Law Center, said all subsidized college activities involving student speech, such as groups that bring speakers to campus, are subject to censorship unless they can prove they are a public forum, a place or publication for free expression.