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C E L E B R AT I N G 1 0 0 Y E A R S O F WA K E F O R E S T ’ S S T U D E N T N E W S PA P E R VOL. 100, NO. 20
T H U R S D AY, S E P T E M B E R 2 2 , 2 0 1 6 “Cover s the campus like the magnolias”
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Students and staff gathered together on Monday, Sept. 19, to express their grievances against Residence Life and Housing’s enforcement of the window sign ban to initiate open dialogue with university faculty about how best to move forward with future window placements.
Campus window policy causes controversy The policy regarding window displays is temporarily suspended due to recent events in Magnolia Residence Hall BY JULIA HAINES News Editor hainjm15@wfu.edu
Several prominent staff and faculty members of the Wake Forest community, including dean of students Adam Goldstein and dean of Residence Life and Housing Donna McGalliard, hosted a discussion with students Monday, Sept. 19, regarding recent controversy about the housing policy on sign displays in dorm windows on campus. The conversation was prompted by an incident last week in which residents of Magnolia were asked by Residence Life and Housing to take down signs in windows to keep with a policy which bans students from displaying any-
thing in dorm windows. This includes political posters, alcohol bottles and Greek letters. Residence Life and Housing responded to reports about signs displayed by neighboring suites which included Black Lives Matter signs, Donald Trump endorsements and profanities directed at Trump. While the policy against displays in windows does include a caveat allowing students to display candidate endorsements, this caveat only takes effect during a 10 day period preceding an election. This year, that period does not start until Oct. 29, but will remain active through Election Day on Nov. 8. A photo of the three window displays was sent in an email to McGalliard and her staff late last week, and the suites were promptly asked to remove the displays. After the signs from the photo and a few other window displays, including a gay pride flag, were taken down, many students submit-
ted bias incident reports to the university. They referenced that Greek letters had not been removed from dorm windows and complained that the policy disproportionately affects students’ ability to express their identity on campus. “The issue here is not whether people are expressing themselves in the windows. It’s whether [the community] has a problem with the way students interact with each other on a day-to-day basis,” said senior Collin Dobbins. The policy has been placed under review for the time being in response to student concerns over the equality of expression on campus. In an email to students Wednesday, Sept. 21, McGalliard said that the policy will not be enforced during this review period. “I am very committed to making sure that [students] have an opportunity, as residents on our campus, to let me know how policies are affecting [them],” McGalliard said.
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