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4:06 PM, May 3, 2012 • By DANIEL HALPERMembers of Tufts University's men's crew team have been suspended for wearing what some are calling an inappropriate T-shirts to an annual school function, Spring Fling, an end of year school wide concert.
"The tank tops in question have the phrase 'check out our cox' written across the middle, a reference to the 'coxswain' (pronounced coxun) in crew who sits at the front of the boat and gives instructions to the other rowers," the Tufts Daily reports. "Below the words is an image depicting four rowers in a boat and a coxswain in front of them who appears to be shouting directions." (An image of the picture can be viewed here.)
This year's Spring Fling lineup included Lupe Fiasco, White Panda, and Guster.
It was not the school that suspended the rowers, however; it was the coach, who reportedly made the decision after a so-called "bias incident" report was anonymously received by the Massachusetts school. "[T]he report stated that the shirts were offensive toward women and promoted a culture of rape and sexual aggression."
Not all members of the crew team wore the T-shirts, and only those who did were suspended.
But the suspension "will only affect the rowers’ participation in this weekend’s New England Championships, not their university standing," the Tufts Daily reports. "Neither the novice nor the varsity squad will have enough eligible rowers to fill a boat, and therefore neither team will compete this weekend. In addition, the team’s co-captains were asked to surrender their captain positions."
Members of the crew team have written letters of apology.
UPDATE: Tufts president Anthony Monaco has reinstated the shirt-wearing members of the crew team:
Dear Members of the Men’s Crew Team:
I know that this has been a challenging week following the determination by the coaches that the large majority of the team had broken team policy and disobeyed explicit instructions by Coach Britt by producing, purchasing, and wearing as a group unauthorized tee-shirts at Spring Fling last Saturday. I have now had a chance to review the circumstances and the consequences with the coaches, Athletics Director Bill Gehling, and the deans. At my request, they have agreed to reinstate the team, ending the suspension that was announced Tuesday.
I share the coaches’ concern for the importance of adherence to team policy, which was clearly violated. Infractions of policy should and do carry consequences. In this case, however, we must balance the internal question of team discipline with the university’s commitment to an environment that supports free expression.
I know that the coaches themselves strongly support free speech, and that they acted not in a spirit of censorship but in the interests of team-building. The issues, however, have become inextricably intertwined in this case. Under the circumstances, I believe that your suspension to date, and the written apologies you have offered for breaking team rules and for any unintentional offense your tee-shirts caused, constitute sufficient consequence.
Coach Caldwell is informing the organizers of New England Rowing Championships that you will compete there this weekend, and you and your colleagues on the women’s team have my very best wishes for success.
Sincerely,
Tony Monaco
3:20 PM, Mar 9, 2012 • By EMANUELE OTTOLENGHIEvery time trouble has erupted in Iran against the regime—1999, 2003, and, most recently, 2009—university students have been at the forefront of protests. This is partly why Iran’s current president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, has been battling over control of Iran’s biggest institution of higher learning for the last three years.
Read more... 8:01 AM, Mar 1, 2012 • By WILLIAM KRISTOLAs his 80th birthday approaches, TWS contributor and friend (and my teacher) Harvey Mansfield is profiled in the Harvard Crimson. It's a perceptive and fair article, and provides further evidence for the hopeful view that today's students are surprisingly open-minded and intelligent despite—or because of—the fog of political correctness and intellectual vapidity that has descended on the faculties and administrations of our great universities.
Read more... 11:04 AM, Oct 25, 2011 • By CHERYL MILLERThe radicals have won at Brown University. Even as other elite schools are welcoming ROTC back, the corporation, the University’s highest governing body, has affirmed President Ruth Simmons’s recommendation to maintain its campus ban on ROTC.
Read more... 1:14 PM, Oct 20, 2011 • By CHERYL MILLERROTC will not be returning to Brown University if the corporation, the university’s highest governing body, follows the recommendation just released by President Ruth J. Simmons.
Read more... And move to prevent the rise of the next Barack Obama.1:13 PM, Aug 31, 2011 • By DANIEL HALPEROne would not expect that college campuses would go out of their way to accommodate the habits of the Republican speaker of the House, John Boehner. But how respectful are colleges of the current occupant of the White House? Not very, it would seem.
CNN reports:
Read more... 1:49 PM, Aug 23, 2011 • By THERESA CIVANTOS
The mission of the modern university professor is not merely “forming competent and efficient professionals capable of satisfying the demand for labor,” Pope Benedict XVI said in a speech in Madrid on Friday. Instead, professors and students should be “looking for something more lofty and capable of embracing the full measure of what it is to be human.”
Read more... 2:02 PM, Jun 8, 2011 • By DANIEL GELERNTER
Yale University has now canceled the Yale Initiative for the Study of Antisemitism (YIISA), the only such program in the country. The New York Post reports that the reason for the program's termination was not lack of interest, but, likely, the program's insistence on covering all forms of anti-Semitism—Muslim anti-Semitism included.
Read more... The sex toy mini-scandal does its work.1:00 PM, May 12, 2011 • By CLAUDIA ANDERSON
Professor John Michael Bailey’s course on human sexuality has been dropped from Northwestern University’s offerings in psychology for next year. The publicity surrounding an optional after-class live demonstration of a motorized sex toy apparently had a sobering effect in the hallowed halls.
Read more... 1:57 PM, May 6, 2011 • By CHERYL MILLER
As expected, the Yale College faculty voted Thursday to remove all obstacles to hosting an on-campus ROTC program. The Yale Daily News reported a “significant majority” in favor. According to a source, support was so strong a simple show of hands was enough to decide the issue; no ballots necessary. Yale has been in talks with the Navy and Air Force about restoring its ROTC programs.
Read more...
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