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- Path: sparky!uunet!usc!news.service.uci.edu!ucivax!bvickers
- From: bvickers@valentine.ics.uci.edu (Brett J. Vickers)
- Subject: News update: Creation/Evolution controversy
- Nntp-Posting-Host: valentine.ics.uci.edu
- Message-ID: <2B5F02C8.796@ics.uci.edu>
- Newsgroups: talk.origins
- Organization: Univ. of Calif., Irvine, Info. & Computer Sci. Dept.
- Lines: 129
- Date: 21 Jan 93 20:08:40 GMT
-
- From LA Times 1/21/93:
-
- BIBLES AND THE BOARD -- A SKIRMISH BREWING
- By Micahel Granberry
-
- VISTA, Calif. -- At Allen's Alley Cafe, the noontime conversation
- these days often turns to a hot topic: The city's school board,
- whose new members make up what many call a right-wing, Bible-beating
- majority bent on change.
- Skeptical parents envision a new era in which sex education classes
- serve as pulpits for preaching against abortion, and science courses
- teach that God created Earth in seven days.
- They fear that the new board will censor books, cancel programs for
- immigrant children, try to impose school prayer, oppose racial
- integration and abolish school-breakfast, self-esteen and drug-abuse
- programs, which conservatives view as government's encroachment on
- "family values."
- In this inland community of 76,000 in north San Diego County, where
- the biggest civic boast is having "the best weather in America," the
- controversy is nastier than anything that may have ever happened
- here.
- Susie Lange, spokeswoman for the state Department on Education,
- said California officials are "keeping a close eye" on events in
- Vista, where a right-wing coalition campaigned aggressively last fall
- and seized a school board majority -- three of five seats.
- Other school districts in California have seen conservatives running
- strong campaigns in recent years, but not going so far as to actually
- take control of a school board. "In that respect," Lange said, "Vista
- is unique. They actually achieved the majority."
- After a campaign aimed at getting out the vote at the city's
- churches, Joyce Lee and John Tyndall [an ICR member -bv] easily
- ousted moderate incumbents Lance Vollmer and Marcia Moore, joining
- fellow fundamentalist Deidre Holliday to form the majority whose
- newfound power is alarming to many.
- The first skirmish is expected tonight, when the board will consider
- two agenda items, both so controversial that the meeting has been
- moved from the offices of the Vigsta Unified School District to one
- of the city's larger auditoriums.
- At the request of a marine biologist concerned about the new members'
- ideology, the board will air its views on creationism -- but only as
- a discussion item. [I wonder if this marine biologist is Steve
- Linke, a past participant in t.o who works at Scripps in San Diego. -bv.]
- It plans to vote, however, on the hiring of four new attorneys, which
- has plenty of people worried and a few enraged.
- Poppy Dennis, head of The Community Coalition Network, a liberal
- group formed to counter the growing fundamentalist education movement,
- said the lawyers -- all of whom champion such conservative causes as
- the anti-abortion effort led by Operation Rescue -- are being sought
- for a reason.
- "Why would you put on the district payroll attorneys whose role
- has been to sue schools on behalf of various right-wing causes?"
- she asked.
- She predicted that the agenda of the new members will result in
- lawsuits, whether they are in response to the reinstitution of school
- prayer, the dismantling of bilingual and sex-education programs or
- the teaching of creationism. "And when such suits result," Dennis
- said, "the new members will want to make sure they have the right
- lawyers arguing for them."
- The conservatives, for their part, said they are not trying to push
- creationism in the classroom but indicate they will seek sweeping
- changes on other fronts.
- To many in the community, though, such change is long overdue.
- "Lately, we've been indoctrinating our kids more than teaching
- them," said satellite television dealer Morris Saracino. "The
- reason Johnny can't read is that we're so concerned with doing things
- the politically correct way that we've forgotten to teach him how
- to read and write, and to think for himself."
- "In my opinion, the older members on the board are overreacting
- to the newer members," retired businessman Donald Graham, 68, said
- over chicken-fried steak and cream gravy at Allen's Alley Cafe.
- "The new members haven't caused any trouble -- yet."
- The Vista Teachers Assn. bitterly opposed the election of the
- new members. Tom Conry, its president, cites litigation as a chief
- concern, in an economy and a school district where money is hard to
- come by.
- That has the state worred as well.
- "If nothing else, the hiring of those attorneys should bother that
- community greatly," said Lange, the education official. "When citizens
- see the board hiring four attorneys, and kids are going without books
- and roofs are leaking, somebody has questions to answer."
- New member Lee, who often carries her Bible with her and quotes
- from it freely, accuses the teachers association and some parents of
- "whipping up hysteria."
- Lee said teachers and parents are "overreacting," and that she and
- her colleagues have no intention of ordering the teaching of
- creationism.
- "They should all feel pretty secure with the precedent set in at
- least three court cases, saying you can't put creationism in a
- science classroom on equal footing with evolution," said board
- President Holliday, a member of the Christian majority. "Do I
- support this idea? I abide by the law and court decisions."
-
- Asked about sex education and immigration issues, however, Holliday
- declined to comment. Lee has publicly stated that she prefers a
- return to prayer in the schools and an end to the breakfast program
- for underprivileged students.
- As for teaching children of illegal immigrants, Lee recently told
- a Vista newspaper: "If you're going to cut the school budget, cut those
- who aren't American."
- Regardless of the board's intentions, the debate has stirred furor
- and plenty of fear.
- "All we hear about is that they want to make us pray in school
- and that they want to ban books," said Louie Archuleta, 17, a senior
- at Rancho Buena Vista High School.
- "They've already started banning books," said Mat Price, a 15-year
- old sophomore at the same school, claiming that Maya Angelou's
- autobiography, "I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings" and the Harper Lee
- novel "To Kill a Mockingbird" have been removed from school shelves
- because of sexually explicit scenes.
- School officials deny the assertion, but parents such as Poppy
- Dennis fear a kind of "self-censorship" will result as teachers
- adjust to the new political climate.
- Max Friedlander, owner of the Book Deli, a popular bookstore,
- has heard of the threat to ban books and calls it stupid, a word he
- also applies to the ongoing debate. He blames fear and mounting
- problems of gangs and drugs in a community "that's growing too
- fast" for igniting support for the so-called religious majority.
- "Regardless of where you sit politically," he said, "people
- around here are just scared, and that's at the root of the problem."
- At the cafe, retiree Graham blames the school battle on "a
- radical transformation. This little, rural, farming village
- suddenly feels overpopulated -- and scared. A lot of people don't
- understand why Vista, of all places, has such big, urban problems."
- "As a result, you have a battle over the school system, and
- it won't end soon."
-
- --
- Brett J. Vickers
- bvickers@ics.uci.edu
-