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DePaul breaches free speech law

Catholic university suspends teacher for arguing at fair

By The Associated Press

Posted: 1/26/07 Section: News
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Former DePaul University instructor Thomas Klocek poses for a photo outside a DePaul University building in Chicago in this May 5, 2005, file photo. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)
Former DePaul University instructor Thomas Klocek poses for a photo outside a DePaul University building in Chicago in this May 5, 2005, file photo. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)

CHICAGO - Free speech is a sin at DePaul University, thanks to a wave of political correctness at Catholic universities, according to a former professor who was suspended after arguing with pro-Palestinian students at a campus activities fair.

"A short conversation with some students about an admittedly sensitive subject, the situation in the Middle East ... has indeed changed my life quite radically," Thomas Klocek said during a speech on DePaul's campus Wednesday night. "I no longer teach here. I believe I am subject now to the vagaries of political correctness and that the administration is simply unwilling or unable to confront the situation directly, so I am the expendable one."

But school officials said Klocek's portrayal of DePaul as a despotic campus where free speech isn't allowed is inaccurate.

"We think it's belied by the fact that we allowed Mr. Klocek to come on campus and speak to our student body," said DePaul spokesman John Holden.

Klocek's suspension and subsequent defamation lawsuit against DePaul have been touchstones for conservative-leaning groups that point to the untenured instructor as a sacrificial lamb for political correctness run amok.

Klocek was an adjunct professor of critical thinking, writing and research for 14 years until he was suspended after a September 2004 incident involving students from two groups, Students for Justice in Palestine and United Muslims Moving Ahead.

Both Klocek and the student groups say an argument began after the instructor read a pro-Palestinian flier from one of the groups' tables. Among the topics was whether Palestinians truly exist.

Students complained to DePaul administrators that Klocek shouted, threw papers and stayed when he was asked to leave. But Klocek says he never threw papers or shouted, and is being punished for his opinions.

Klocek says DePaul asked him to give up his teaching assignment with pay for the following semester and said he couldn't return until he apologized to the students and agreed to have his classes monitored.

He refused, and filed a defamation lawsuit in June 2005 to make the claim that School for New Learning Dean Susanne Dumbleton and President Dennis Holtschneider had maligned him in the media.
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