1961 October 15

Hunter College Denies Permit to Conservative “National Review” – ACLU to Defend Magazine

 

Hunter College in New York City had sponsored a series of forums on social and political issues for several years. There were protests, however, against a forum featuring The National Review, a conservative magazine founded and edited by the prominent conservative William Buckley. The college president threatened to ban all non-college groups in the future if ordered to allow The National Review.

The ACLU announced on this day that it would defend the free speech rights of conservative spokesperson Buckley and The National Review.

William Buckley became notorious when, in the early years of the AIDS crisis, he suggested that all gay man be tattooed on their buttocks. See March 18, 1986.

Read about William F. Buckley: Linda Bridges and John R. Coyne, Jr., Strictly Right: William F. Buckley, Jr. and the American Conservative Movement (2007)

Visit the National Review web site here

Learn about the 100 Year fight for free speech in America: Lee C. Bollinger and Geoffrey Stone, The Free Speech Century (2018)

Find a Day

Go
Abortion Rights ACLU african-americans Alice Paul anti-communism Anti-Communist Hysteria Birth Control Brown v. Board of Education Censorship CIA Civil Rights Civil Rights Act of 1964 Cold War Espionage Act FBI First Amendment Fourteenth Amendment freedom of speech Free Speech Gay Rights Hate Speech homosexuality Hoover, J. Edgar HUAC Japanese American Internment King, Dr. Martin Luther Ku Klux Klan Labor Unions Lesbian and Gay Rights Loyalty Oaths McCarthy, Sen. Joe New York Times Obscenity Police Misconduct Same-Sex Marriage Separation of Church and State Sex Discrimination Smith Act Spying Spying on Americans Vietnam War Voting Rights Voting Rights Act of 1965 War on Terror Watergate White House Women's Rights Women's Suffrage World War I World War II Relocation Camps

Topics

Tell Us What You Think

We want to hear your comments, criticisms and suggestions!