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yaledailynews.com - Rumpus scolded for Bush sto�</A>
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Published Friday, April 20, 2001
Rumpus scolded for Bush story
Yale tells tabloid to yank Secret Service story from its Web site

BY CHARLOTTE DEWAR
YDN Staff Reporter
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Comment on this articleRumpus is no stranger to controversy, but a recent 
article the campus tabloid ran on the first daughter is giving it national 
exposure and trouble with the Yale administration.

A story that ran in Rumpus' April edition about alleged mishaps in the Secret 
Service's protection of Barbara Bush '04, the daughter of President George W. 
Bush '68, landed the tabloid's editors in hot water with Dean of Student 
Affairs Betty Trachtenberg, who charged Rumpus staffers with exploiting 
Bush's presence on campus. At least two national publications, The Washington 
Post and tabloid The Star, have also taken an interest in Rumpus' report on 
Barbara Bush's security detail.

The cover of Rumpus' April edition screamed "O Daughter, Where Art Thou," and 
included a story on Barbara Bush's Secret Service attache at Yale. On April 
12, nearly a week after the issue had appeared in dining halls and newsstands 
around campus, Trachtenberg called Rumpus Editor in Chief Jared Leboff '03, 
Managing Editor Matt Johnson '03 and the article's author, Nathaniel 
Pincus-Roth '04, into her office. Following that meeting, Rumpus removed the 
current issue from the tabloid's Web site.

Meanwhile, the national press is exploiting this first leak of news of 
Barbara to its full extent. The Washington Post ran an article on its online 
edition April 10 written by Lloyd Grove reporting on Rumpus' coverage, but 
Post executive editor Leonard Downie later pulled it from the print edition, 
calling the story an "error" violating the newspaper's policy to protect the 
relatives of public figures. An issue of the national tabloid The Star 
available in various areas of the country starting Saturday also features a 
story based on the Rumpus article. The Star article will run under the 
headline "Bush's Kid's Wild Joyride Scares Mom to Death," said The Star 
reporter Steve Tinney.

The original Rumpus story claimed that on at least two occasions, the Secret 
Service officers assigned to Bush have inadvertently lost contact with her. 
Sometime last month, Rumpus reported, Bush and friends were driving to New 
York City when the agents following them got stuck at a toll booth for lack 
of the "E-ZPass," which electronically deducts tolls as cars drive through.

"They didn't have an E-ZPass, but we did, so after they paid their toll, they 
put on their sirens and sped 120 mph until they caught up with us," Rumpus 
quoted one of Bush's fellow passengers as saying. In another episode reported 
by Rumpus, a Secret Service agent asked a fellow resident of Bush's freshman 
dorm if she knew where Bush was and whether "[Bush] would turn her cell phone 
on."

Rumpus' sources tell the Yale Daily News they stand by their account of both 
stories.

Trachtenberg was critical of the story's accuracy and appropriateness, and 
called it "the most irresponsible kind of press that could possibly happen."

"I was filled with disgust when I read the article in Rumpus, and I'm filled 
with disgust that somebody else had to again capitalize on somebody else's 
privacy," she said. She added, "The article was filled with all kinds of 
inaccuracies." When pressed for specific examples, Trachtenberg refused to 
comment.

Leboff said he stands by his story. As a "public institution," he said, the 
Secret Service is fair game for a story. But, he said, Trachtenberg's request 
to have Rumpus take the story off the Web is reasonable given the 
circumstances.

"Its content is not specifically intended for any audience beyond Yale," 
Leboff said. "I don't think the response by Yale College was inappropriate."

Rumpus' removal of the story from its Web site has raised questions about 
free speech on campus.

Yale Herald Editor in Chief Kate Moran called Trachtenberg's request that 
Rumpus remove the story from the Web site "inevitable" but "unfortunate." 
Moran said that in her experience, Trachtenberg has been very sensitive to 
issues of free speech. But at the same time, Moran said the administration 
has occasionally offered "firm guidance."

As part of its research for the story, the Washington Post faxed the Rumpus 
article to the White House Press Office and the First Lady's Office, but the 
White House did not react to the story, a source at the Post said.

Copyright © 2001 Yale Daily News. All rights reserved.
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