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Thursday, November 15, 2012

North Carolina Makes it a Crime for Students to “Torment” School Employees By Putting Their Photos Online « Student Activism

North Carolina Makes it a Crime for Students to “Torment” School Employees By Putting Their Photos Online « Student Activism:


North Carolina Makes it a Crime for Students to “Torment” School Employees By Putting Their Photos Online

Superintendent Heath Morrison
(still legal in CA)
A new North Carolina law makes it a crime for any student to, “with the intent to intimidate or torment a school employee,”
a. Build a fake profile or Web site.
b. Post or encourage others to post on the Internet private, personal, or sexual information pertaining to a school employee.
c. Post a real or doctored image of the school employee on the Internet.
Story time.
When I was in tenth grade, my school’s principal ordered the installation of several video cameras at the school’s entrances (and, if memory serves, in certain hallways). The year was 1984, and I was pretty bookish for a juvenile delinquent, so I ran off a handful of 8.5 by 11 posters bearing her photo and the message “BIG SISTER


New CSU Chancellor Requests, and Receives, a Pay Cut

When incoming Cal State system chancellor Timothy P. White takes office at the end of the year, he’ll be making about $40,000 less than his predecessor.
That’s because White, in a letter to the CSU trustees, requested a 10% pay cut as his contribution to balancing the system’s books.
White’s salary reduction doesn’t apply to other top administrators in the CSU system, of course, and amounts to just one fifty-thousandth of the system’s state appropriations for the coming year, so assessing whether it’s a