by Greg Lukianoff
April 15, 2005
While this is certainly not a FIRE case, it is, undeniably,
a pretty funny
story from today’s Chronicle of
Higher Education (registration required):
Fill a paper with gobbledygook, add some fake charts, slap
on a title dense with highfalutin scientific jargon, and—voilà!—a
highfalutin conference may actually accept it.
That's what happened when three students at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology submitted a nonsensical research paper to
the ninth World Multi-Conference on Systemics, Cybernetics, and Informatics,
scheduled to be held in
The paper, called “Rooter: A Methodology for the Typical
Unification of Access Points and Redundancy,” was accepted by the conference
organizers late last month. A computer program the students had created in
about three weeks to churn out phony computer-science language randomly
generated their four-page paper.
Sometimes people seem to think that while it may be
reasonable to oppose government officials’ usurping powers over speech,
association, religion, etc., we should be more willing to give these powers
over to college administrators or faculty because, presumably, they are more
enlightened and will use their power more justly. As I have often had to argue,
the people who run colleges and universities are just people, flawed and
capable of mistakes and abuses of power just like anyone else. The above story
is just a funny example of this fallibility, but it should remind readers that
our civil liberties need to be strongly protected under all circumstances
because errors of judgment and abuses of power can take decidedly un-funny
forms. Let’s not forget last
fall’s case of
In appealing his sentence, student Timothy Garneau explained
that the flier was intended to make light of the common frustration with people
who delay the elevator by taking it for just one or two floors instead of
taking the stairs. UNH rejected his appeal, and Garneau was ordered to move out
of his dormitory. Garneau reports that he is currently living out of his car.
One of the things that makes UNH different, however, is that I am still not sure that, despite our eventual victory in this case, those involved understand that they did something wrong by evicting the student in the first place. Those of you who are interested might want to contact UNH to see if Brad Williams, the resident director who was responsible for this whole ordeal, was ever punished for his cruel and flagrant disregard of his students’ rights or if he, like so many administrators who abuse their power, was simply allowed to keep going about his job believing that he had done his job correctly and that it was rather that pesky Constitution that was wrong.