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Welcome to
Call to Decision
AR K-4 School Books:
Masturbation,
Homosexuality, Abortion
Hitting The Books
By George Archibald
The Washington Times
9-23-5
- Objections of Arkansas
parents to graphic descriptions of sexual acts in books
offered to students in their school libraries have fueled
a feud in the Ozarks.
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- Some parents say the books
are so shocking they "will curl your toes." The
school superintendent compares the protests of parents to
"cancer."
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- The furor began eight months
ago in Fayetteville, home of the University of Arkansas,
with the self-consciously liberal instincts of a college
town, but surrounded by a conservative, church-going
county in the heart of the Bible Belt. Fayetteville votes
Democratic, and Washington County votes Republican.
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- Laurie Taylor first went to
the Fayetteville Board of Education in January with
concerns about three books containing explicit
descriptions and pictures of sexual activity. She and
others subsequently formed a group called Parents
Protecting the Minds of Children.
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- One book for children in
kindergarten through fourth grade, "It's So
Amazing," raised parents' ire with its narrative and
illustrations portraying, with a positive tone,
masturbation, homosexual relationships and abortion.
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- A book for ninth-graders
called "The Teenage Guy's Survival Guide"
describes pornography as "natural and fine."
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- The district administration
agreed May 28 that the three books posed a problem and
sequestered them in a parents-only section of the school
libraries, not available to children. The parent group has
since flagged 53 books in the Fayetteville High School
library and one in middle and junior high school
libraries, citing their explicit descriptions of how to
engage in various types of sexual relationships, and
validating sexually active teens. The parents say another
50 books under review might be problematic.
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- "They're beyond
vile," Mrs. Taylor said of the 53 novels her group
has asked the school board to sequester in parent-only
sections of the school libraries. "They're not
informational, they're not sex education.They're just
pandering sex to young people. It will curl your
toes."
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- The parents have appeared
regularly at school board meetings all year to voice their
concerns. The unfolding story has widely reported by the
state's major newspapers and television stations, and has
become a staple of radio talk shows.
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- Bobby C. New, the
superintendent of Fayetteville Public Schools, declined to
respond to four written requests from The Washington Times
for an interview or for comment.
-
- Mr. New recently told
talk-show host Don Elkins of Station KFAY-AM in
Fayetteville that he takes "Mrs. Taylor's problem and
challenge very seriously, but we can't stop flying the
airplane because we have a parent that is not satisfied,
or parents that have issues with us."
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- The school division has had
a committee reviewing and deciding on one book at a time
since the first three were flagged in January, he said,
and will review the subsequent 53 books on the complaint
list one at a time.
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- The parents object that this
delays resolution of the conflict. Some teachers agree.
"It took about six months for the district to deal
with the first three books Taylor challenged," said
Debbie Pelley, a 27-year veteran English teacher in
Jonesboro, a college town (Arkansas State University) in
another part of the state. "At that rate, it will
take 11 years to process [all the] books that Laurie and
other parents have identified that are even worse than the
first three."
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- Mr. New told the radio
interviewer: "This issue is not time-sensitive; it's
quality driven."
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- He takes issue with Mrs.
Taylor's claim that many of the listed books were
pornographic. In an e-mail message he said: "This is
nonsense about pornography and all that kind of
information. We will take issue and have an honest
disagreement over that."
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- He described the parent
effort to identify sexually explicit books in school
libraries as "almost a cancer that grows within the
total body of our school district. What we try to do is
work through that issue."
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- The superintendent said
school librarians are careful to purchase only books
recommended by the American Library Association. The
Library Association regards objections to almost any book
as censorship, even books for elementary and secondary
school libraries.
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- "I will defend our
librarians to the bitter end," Mr. New said.
"They are professional, trained, serious [teachers]
who totally, totally have a process of reviewing
everything that is ordered, to include reviewing critics,
national critics that have been identified by the American
Library Association as being credible."
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- Susan Winborn Heil, at-large
board of education member, said emotions were running high
in Fayetteville. "I have found that the majority of
the highly emotional people I have talked with don't have
a good handle on the facts, but are relying on what they
have heard to be the truth." A methodical review of
each book is necessary, she says.
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- Mike Masterson, a columnist
for the Arkansas Democrat Gazette in Little Rock, the
state's largest newspaper, calls Mrs. Taylor's cause
"selfless and noble."
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- "She has had the gall
to insist that parents of all elementary, middle and high
school-age children actually be informed when their
children check out one of the more-than 70 books that
concern her," he wrote in a recent column.
"These would be books that speak in grossly
inappropriate terms about promiscuous romps of all
imaginable shapes and forms, including incest with both
parents."
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- Placing such books in a
restricted section of the library and school notification
of parents for their consent when their children seek
access in person or by Internet request is appropriate,
Mr. Masterson wrote.
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- "This issue ... is only
about a parent's right to rear children in the way he or
she believes is best without the state providing hidden,
potentially corrupting influences."
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- Copyright © 2005 News World
Communications, Inc. All rights reserved.
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