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the written permission from the National Coalition Against Censorship. LAST UPDATED APRIL 2005
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NCAC Censorship News Issue #70: The Long And The Short Of It Abortion, contraception, homosexuality and masturbation are words that aren't discussed in New York City's Community School District 24. The Board adopted a policy in 1987 to delete those words from curriculum materials. "Ask your parents," is District 24's pedagogical response to kids' questions. Now a Board member says the policy is too lenient and wants to ban all mention of those subjects anywhere on school grounds. This is the same district that rejected the "Rainbow Curriculum" in 1992. Cancellation of concerts by the popular folk-rock artists, Indigo Girls, at high schools in South Carolina and Tennessee, set off a series of protests by students who say that the concerts were canceled because the singers are lesbian. Many students were suspended for protesting. Ironically, the Grammy award-winning Indigo Girls had arranged a free concert tour of high schools to encourage students' musical interests after they had judged a Scholastic Magazine lyric writing contest. The Indigo Girls rented halls and invited students to attend as their guests. To read NCAC's press release, click here. A U.S. appeals court ruled that a St. Louis, MO school district did not violate the First Amendment when it fired teacher Cissy Lacks, for "allowing students to use profanity repetitiously and egregiously in their written work." Lacks, who once won an award as the nation's best teacher, had permitted her students to write as they speak in their creative writing classes (Censorship News 64). The decision overturns a jury verdict and award of $750,000 that Lacks' termination by the school board was not justifiable. The decision may be appealed. NCAC has joined the ACLU in an amicus brief to the US Court of Appeals in support of college students' press rights (Kincaid v. Gibson). Student journalists sued Kentucky State University for confiscating the college yearbook. The trial court ruled that censorship of student press permitted in public high schools (by the Kuhlmeier v. Hazelwood Supreme Court decision in 1988), allowed for censorship of college and university press as well (CN 68). The amicus brief contends that the lower court mistakenly applied Hazelwood to the college setting. Reason and the arts prevail
in Vermont. Someone raised questions about whether a multimedia work of art by
Ed Pepe, scheduled to be shown at the Helen Day Art Center in Stowe, Vermont
would offend "community standards." Fortunately, the Board of Directors decided
to include the pieces and to allow art patrons to judge for themselves. NCAC and
others urged this result, noting that art lovers and artists alike rely on galleries
to present various artistic visions and artistic forms of social and political
expression. |