"To Kill a Mockingbird" has been removed from a school curriculum in a Mississippi school district because it "makes people uncomfortable."
Let's make the censorious, racist asses who run the Biloxi schools uncomfortable until they decide differently.
Let's make the censorious, racist asses who run the Biloxi schools uncomfortable until they decide differently.
Dr. Larry Drawdy
Interim Superintendent
P.O. Box 168, Biloxi, MS 39533
160 St. Peter Ave. Biloxi, MS 39530
Secretary: Mrs. Lee Ann Dubaz
Telephone: (228) 374-1810, X-1118 FAX: (228) 436-5171
Ms. Pamela Manners
Interim Assistant Superintendent
Secondary Programs and TestingP.O. Box 168, Biloxi, MS 39533160 St. Peter Ave. Biloxi, MS 39530
Secretary: Mrs. Michelle Johnson
Telephone: (228) 374-1810, X-1134
FAX: (228) 435-6289
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The Sun Herald reports
that Biloxi administrators pulled the novel from the 8th-grade
curriculum this week. School board vice president Kenny Holloway says
the district received complaints that some of the book's language "makes
people uncomfortable."
Published in 1960, the Pulitzer Prize-winning novel by Harper Lee deals with racial inequality in a small Alabama town.
A
message on the school's website says "To Kill A Mockingbird" teaches
students that compassion and empathy don't depend upon race or
education. Holloway says other books can teach the same lessons.
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