University of Missouri: Censors Student Group鈥檚 T-Shirts Advocating for Marijuana Legalization
Cases
University of Missouri, Columbia
Case Overview
In September 2015, the University of Missouri chapter of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (MU NORML) sought to sell T-shirts to raise money for the chapter and raise awareness of marijuana policy issues. The group was required to apply for approval for the T-shirts鈥 artwork because it used the university鈥檚 name and images. Mizzou rejected MU NORML鈥檚 first T-shirt design, requesting that its cannabis images be removed because Mizzou鈥檚 licensing policy 鈥減rohibits the use of alcohol or drug related images.鈥 A second version of the T-shirt was also rejected because it incorporated an image of the campus skyline, which the university considered a trademark violation.
On October 5, MU NORML president Benton Berigan received an email from Mizzou notifying him that the group鈥檚 proposed designs were rejected because of their 鈥渄rug-related imagery, specifically the cannabis leaf.鈥
FIRE wrote to Mizzou twice, warning the university that it was violating the First Amendment by rejecting MU NORML鈥檚 T-shirts because it disagrees with MU NORML鈥檚 viewpoint. The only response 蜜桃直播 received was an email from Mizzou Interim Chancellor Hank Foley that read: 鈥淚 thank you for your interest and for your letter.鈥