According to Columbia University’s Rules of Conduct, the Ivy League school on Manhattan’s Upper West Side “cannot and will not rule any subject or form of expression out of order on the ground that it is objectionable, offensive, immoral or untrue.” Unfortunately, the principle does not seem to have been fully operative at Columbia’s highly ranked law school, where an application for formal recognition of Law Students Against Antisemitism was rejected because a majority of the student senate disapproved of its definition of antisemitism. When Marie-Alice Legrande, who is not Jewish, and several friends decided to form Law Students Against...