UMR, the media and the war on error

It’s been a long, exhilarating, frustrating week for the media relations staff of our campus. As mentioned in the previous post, my conference plans were pre-empted on Tuesday, Feb. 27, when I received word of an incident on campus in which a graduate student claiming to have a bomb and anthrax was subdued by campus police, then arrested and charged with six felonies. (It turns out there was no bomb, the white powdery substance the suspect carried was sugar and it was all a hoax.)

As I made my way back to Rolla from Myrtle Beach via a layover in Atlanta, I followed the story as it unfolded and stayed connected with our media relations folks via email and cell phone. (Thank you, Myrtle Beach airport, for free WiFi.) The picture I put together based on many of the media and blogosphere reports I read between flights was pretty sensational, as you might expect.

At the outset, we did not release the student’s name. He hadn’t yet been charged, and we decided that the release of that information should come either from the city police or the county prosecuting attorney. But we did respond in the affirmative when one reporter asked if the student was an international student. Once that was mentioned, right-leaning bloggers like Little Green Footballs and conservative commentators like Rush Limbaugh homed in on that fact and leapt to the conclusion that the student must be an Islamic terrorist. (Limbaugh’s link was publicly available yesterday, but now it’s exclusive to members, and I haven’t kept up my membership. But the headline, “Sudden Jihad Syndrome Hits University of Missouri-Rolla,” sums up the gist of his take.)

Add to that the fact that the police had described his activities as “terroristic,” our decision to cancel classes for the day, and the mention of “anthrax,” and the presence of a bomb deactivation unit from a nearby military base, and you have the ingredients for some mighty fine tabloidism.

The update to Little Green Footballs’ initial report included this snippet:

The CNN report includes this:

The man’s identity and nationality were not released, though school spokesman Lance Feyh said he was an international student.

And from there the comments focused on the conspiracy to withhold his name and ethnicity.

But the blog’s later update sets the record straight:

The student who terrorized the University of Missouri-Rolla has been identified as a graduate student from India. … That looks like a Hindu name, but the types of threats he made were right out of the Islamic terror playbook.

Sighs.

To top it all off, a guy who is most likely a dittohead called me at the office Thursday afternoon. The conversation went something like this:

Dittohead: Are you all the ones who had the student that did the bomb threat?

Me: Yes.

Dittohead: What was his nationality?

Me: Who are you affiliated with, sir?

Dittohead: I’m with myself.

Me: OK. We don’t release that information due to FERPA, the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act. [Had he pursued, I would have explained that it was public record and he could obtain the information from the prosecuting attorney’s office.]

Dittohead: Well he’s a graduate student, so he’s an adult, right?

Me: He’s still protected by FERPA.

Dittohead: Was he a diaperhead?

Me: [pause]

Dittohead: He was a f___ing diaperhead, bitch!

Dittohead: [click]

Some folks wonder why I love this job so much. It’s because of the people.

Chief Illiniwek’s last dance

At tonight’s University of Illinois basketball game, the Fighting Illini’s mascot, Chief Illiniwek, will dance his final dance. In a news release (PDF) issued last week, the university announced it was dropping the chief as its mascot after tonight’s game.

Chief Illiniwek

Illinois is the latest in a long line of universities to get rid of Native American mascots, following in the footsteps of schools like Marquette and St. John’s. Writing in PopMatters, Tim Giago, an Oglala Lakota, provides a historical perspective of the battle to drop the chief and notes that “not all ‘traditions’ are honorable.” But not all U of I students are happy with the decision and are showing their displeasure by wearing “chief” apparel today and then switching to black after tonight’s game. Many of the 3,500 students who joined a Facebook group in protest of the decision are expected to dress accordingly.