“Their conduct is an affront to our values, damaging to our community
and in clear violation of our community standards,” he wrote to
students, faculty and staff on Monday.
A private college in Pennsylvania expelled three
students over a campus radio broadcast in which they made racist
comments and used a slur.
Bucknell University
president John Bravman met with about 1,000 students and staff about the
matter on Tuesday, a day after sending a late-night email revealing the
expulsions.
“Their conduct is an affront to our values, damaging
to our community and in clear violation of our community standards,” he
wrote to students, faculty and staff on Monday.
Bravman
did not identify the students but shared their comments from a March 20
WVBU-FM broadcast in “the interest of transparency and candor.”
He said one of the students used the N-word, a second said “black people should be dead” and the third said “lynch ‘em.”
Bucknell
spokesman Andy Hirsch said an inmate a nearby prison heard the comments
and reported them to a prisoner advocacy group, the Lewisburg Prison
Project. The group then contacted a university faculty member, who
alerted the radio station’s adviser.
Hirsch said
the school’s senior staff investigated. The students were suspended and
interviewed before the dean of students expelled them, he said.
“I would emphasize that the context really doesn’t matter once you see what was said,” Hirsch said.
Hirsch declined to say if alcohol was involved, noting investigations were still ongoing.
“I
can tell you that there were other people at the station,” he said.
“Whether or not they were there at the time when this happened, we’re
still looking into all those details.”
Bucknell, a
liberal arts school with about 3,600 undergraduates, is located in
Lewisburg, about 50 miles north of Harrisburg. The student body is 79
percent white, 5 percent Hispanic, 4 percent Asian and 3 percent
African-American.
The Lewisburg Prison Project said an inmate at the federal penitentiary in Lewisburg wrote a letter about the comments.
“He
didn’t feel this is right and thought something should be done about
it,” said David Sprout, a paralegal for the group. Sprout said he did
not know what the inmate was serving time for.
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