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If you can watch the video, it's pretty interesting to see what's going on at my school... at the newspaper that I'm Managing Editor of!
The big ruckus is over the fact that we printed a comic that depicted Jesus as a college roommate, complete with water-into-wine abilities. Some Christians got mad and called the news to report how miserable it made them.
That's the story from up here... what do you think of the article/situation? I see it as more free press for us!
Complete article:
PROVIDENCE -- Some students at Rhode Island College are upset after a cartoon showing Jesus as a great college roommate ran in the campus newspaper.
NBC 10's Larry Estepa said the cartoon, which ran in The Anchor, depicts Jesus with smelly feet, helping a student guzzle the water he transformed into booze from a faucet.
RIC chaplain Michael Najim called the cartoon immature and offensive.
"It was an unprovoked attack upon our faith," Najim said.
The cartoonists, Conor McKeon and Tony Pierloni, said they only wanted to inspire thought and stimulate dialogue.
"It's just a smack in the face for us. That's how I feel about it anyway," said student Katie Fernandes.
"The students that I know on campus who want to engage in dialogue take a more mature, intellectual approach to engage people in dialogue," Najim said.
Estepa said McKeon and Pierlioni would not go on camera, but wrote a statement calling the criticism a way to intimidate them into an apology. The students said they won't apologize and thank the college for supporting their First Amendment right.
"It's fully within our rights to print whatever we want. It's freedom of the press," said Jessica Albaum, executive editor of The Anchor.
The cartoon generated one letter of protest, written by student Jonathan Haynes.
"Democracy works on a balance between liberty and moral restraint. Without that moral restraint our liberty does not work," he said.
RIC spokeswoman Jane Fusco said the college takes a hands-off policy on a student run and funded paper.
"It's their paper so they have every right to express their opinions and to challenge them," she said.