-Caveat Lector-

http://www.newsbytes.com/news/01/171976.html

Online Index Documents Censorship, Free Speech Incidents

By Michael Bartlett, Newsbytes
NEW YORK, NEW YORK, U.S.A.
07 Nov 2001, 7:51 PM CST

 The National Coalition Against Censorship (NCAC) today unveiled an online
index of what it calls, "various censorship and free expression incidents"
stemming from the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

 The NCAC claims in a press release it is the, "only organization that is
actively tracking how the events of Sept. 11 have affected political dissent
and free expression in schools, entertainment, news, media and art."

"Throughout U.S. history, threats to national security have tested the
tolerance of our nation for different ideas and opinions," Joan Bertin,
executive director of the NCAC said in a prepared statement. "I suspect that
the resulting fallout from the events of Sept. 11 will, once again, challenge
us to recognize that the strength of our democracy lies in our commitment to
the ability of people to political dissent, free press and open government."

The index is a compilation of a variety of incidents from across the country,
ranging from a painting being temporarily removed from the Baltimore Museum
of Art because it contained the word "terrorist," to a record of newspaper
columnists fired for criticizing President George W. Bush's actions in the
days after the terrorist attacks.

In many cases, the index contains links to newspaper or online news
organization Web sites that contain the original stories. Examples of these
stories include:

- On Sept. 19, according to an Associated Press article reprinted on the
freedomforum.org site, the library director at Florida Gulf Coast University
in Fort Myers, Fla., ordered her staff not to wear stickers bearing the
slogan, "I'm proud to be an American," because she feared they might offend
the school's 200 foreign students.

- The following day, a Pittsburgh substitute teacher was suspended over notes
he scribbled on a newspaper, according to a story in the Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette.

John Gardner told the newspaper the words, "Osama bin Laden did us a favor.
He vulcanized us, awakened us and strengthened our resolve" came from a TV
newscast, and he wrote them in the margin of a newspaper. Gardner said he
collected many such sayings, including one from President Bush that said,
"we're going to be stronger because of it," for a book he is writing on
making the best of bad situations.

Gardner transferred the comment to a notebook and threw the newspaper away.
Another teacher spotted the paper and reported only the first part of the
quotation, "Osama bin Laden did us a favor," to the office. Gardner then was
escorted off school property by campus police and was told he was suspended.

The next day, Sept. 21, Gardner was reinstated, and school officials
reportedly said the writings were "found to be benign," and "there was a
misunderstanding."

- On Oct. 10, Neil Godfrey attempted to board a United Airlines flight from
Philadelphia to Phoenix, Ariz. According to the Philadelphia citypaper.net
site, Godfrey was carrying the book, "Hayduke Lives!" a 1991 novel about a
radical environmentalist who blows up construction projects he believes are
destroying the landscape.

The book, whose cover illustration featured a hand holding sticks of
dynamite, made Godfrey the target of an extended interrogation by
Philadelphia police, Pennsylvania State Troopers, airport security and the
National Guard.

Eventually, Godfrey was cleared by security but was barred from getting on
the plane by United. An unidentified airline representative told Godfrey he
would not be allowed to board for three reasons: he was reading a book with a
bomb on the cover, he purchased his ticket on Sept. 11 and his Arizona
driver's license had expired.

Godfrey said he bought the ticket shortly after midnight on Sept. 11, several
hours before terrorists hijacked the doomed airliners, and he insisted his
license was not expired, but he still was denied entry on to the plane.

- A week before Halloween, an article in the Topeka (Kan.) Capital-Journal
detailed the mandate by the site council for McCarter Elementary School
regarding costumes. Students were ordered to wear only "patriotic" costumes
to school on Oct. 31.

According to the newspaper, other schools in Topeka "encouraged" pupils to
wear red, white and blue, but only McCarter mandated it.

More information on the NCAC is available at http://www.ncac.org .

The censorship index is on the Web at
http://www.ncac.org/issues/freeex911.html .

Reported by Newsbytes.com, http://www.newsbytes.com .

19:51 CST

(20011107/Press Contact: Gary Daniels, NCAC, 212-807-6222, ext. 22 /WIRES
ONLINE, BUSINESS/ATWORLD/PHOTO)


© 2001 The Washington Post Company

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