Take this question about whether colleges should be able to restrict speech “expressing political views that are upsetting or offensive to certain groups.”

Roughly a quarter of Democrats, independents and Republicans said colleges should be able to restrict such speech.

Here’s a related question about whether college administrators should be policing costumes:

Democrats are much more supportive of school policies that restrict what costumes students can wear — but such policies are advocated by a majority of Republicans and independents, too.

The survey also asked students about press coverage. It found that a quarter of Republicans and just over a quarter of Democrats and independents believe students should be able to prevent reporters from covering protests held on college campuses.

There were also several questions about rationales invoked when denying the press access to a public event (access that is guaranteed by the First Amendment) and whether those justifications are “legitimate.” These rationales included a belief that the press will be “unfair”; the fact that “people at the protest or public gathering want to tell their own story on the Internet and social media”; and that participants “say they have a right to be left alone.”

Every one of these reasons was deemed legitimate by at least 4 in 10 members of each political group.