Friday, September 5, 2008

Book Banning Barracuda?


We interrupt our regularly scheduled blog for a special announcement.

I don't usually post content from other sources but I came across the following article on the Boston Herald's website. In the days to come I suspect more interesting facts about Sarah "Barracuda" will come to light. And you wonder why I love politics so much; it's like real life soap opera except the people aren't as attractive and the scandals are more compelling!

Palin asked Wasilla librarian about censoring books

By Rindi White / Anchorage Daily News
Thursday, September 4, 2008

WASILLA -- Back in 1996, when she first became mayor, Sarah Palin asked the city librarian if she would be all right with censoring library books should she be asked to do so.

According to news coverage at the time, the librarian said she would definitely not be all right with it. A few months later, the librarian, Mary Ellen Emmons, got a letter from Palin telling her she was going to be fired. The censorship issue was not mentioned as a reason for the firing. The letter just said the new mayor felt Emmons didn’t fully support her and had to go.

Emmons had been city librarian for seven years and was well liked. After a wave of public support for her, Palin relented and let Emmons keep her job.

It all happened 12 years ago and the controversy long ago disappeared into musty files. Until this week. Under intense national scrutiny, the issue has returned to dog her. It has been mentioned in news stories in Time Magazine and The New York Times [NYT] and is spreading like a virus through the blogosphere.

The stories are all suggestive, but facts are hard to come by. Did Palin actually ban books at the Wasilla Public Library?

In December 1996, Emmons told her hometown newspaper, the Frontiersman, that Palin three times asked her -- starting before she was sworn in -- about possibly removing objectionable books from the library if the need arose.

Emmons told the Frontiersman she flatly refused to consider any kind of censorship. Emmons, now Mary Ellen Baker, is on vacation from her current job in Fairbanks and did not return e-mail or telephone messages left for her Wednesday.

When the matter came up for the second time in October 1996, during a City Council meeting, Anne Kilkenny, a Wasilla housewife who often attends council meetings, was there.

Like many Alaskans, Kilkenny calls the governor by her first name.

"Sarah said to Mary Ellen, ’What would your response be if I asked you to remove some books from the collection?" Kilkenny said.

"I was shocked. Mary Ellen sat up straight and said something along the line of, ’The books in the Wasilla Library collection were selected on the basis of national selection criteria for libraries of this size, and I would absolutely resist all efforts to ban books.’"

Palin didn’t mention specific books at that meeting, Kilkenny said.

Palin herself, questioned at the time, called her inquiries rhetorical and simply part of a policy discussion with a department head "about understanding and following administration agendas," according to the Frontiersman article.

Were any books censored banned? June Pinell-Stephens, chairwoman of the Alaska Library Association’s Intellectual Freedom Committee since 1984, checked her files Wednesday and came up empty-handed.

Pinell-Stephens also had no record of any phone conversations with Emmons about the issue back then. Emmons was president of the Alaska Library Association at the time. Books may not have been pulled from library shelves, but there were other repercussions for Emmons.

Four days before the exchange at the City Council, Emmons got a letter from Palin asking for her resignation. Similar letters went to police chief Irl Stambaugh, public works director Jack Felton and finance director Duane Dvorak. John Cooper, a fifth director, resigned after Palin eliminated his job overseeing the city museum.

Palin told the Daily News back then the letters were just a test of loyalty as she took on the mayor’s job, which she’d won from three-term mayor John Stein in a hard-fought election. Stein had hired many of the department heads. Both Emmons and Stambaugh had publicly supported him against Palin.

Emmons survived the loyalty test and a second one a few months later. She resigned in August 1999, two months before Palin was voted in for a second mayoral term.

Palin might have become a household name in the last week, but Kilkenny, who is not a Palin fan, is on her own small path to Internet fame. She sent out an e-mail earlier this week to friends and family answering, from her perspective, the question Outsiders are asking any Alaskan they know: "Who is this Sarah Palin?"

Kilkenny’s e-mail got bounced through cyberspace and ended up on news blogs. Now the small-town mom and housewife is scheduling interviews with national news media and got her name on the front page of The New York Times [NYT], even if it was misspelled.

Find Daily News reporter Rindi White online at www.adn.com/contact/rwhite or call 352-6709.

To see more of the Anchorage Daily News, or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to http://www.adn.com.

Copyright © 2008, Anchorage Daily News, Alaska

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.


4 comments:

  1. I'm not sure what you mean by that "sigh". Are you so impressed by my blog that you're sighing with admiration? Are you sighing out of boredom? Are you sighing because you're afraid the republicans might get elected? I bet it's the first one!

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  2. is Sarah Palin the "hockey mum" woman who's been all over my tv screen this past week? if so, maybe she should think about banning loud-mouth, freakishly right-wing nut-job politicians, instead of worrying about what people read. oh, wait. i forgot. reading equals thinking, and, God knows, we can't be having people thinking, can we?

    let's see if we can make a sentence out of the following junbled up words, shall we?

    HELL IN A HAND BASKET WE ARE ALL GOING TO.

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  3. Yes she's the self-proclaimed Hockey Mom, former Miss Alaska contestent, former Miss Wasilla, former sports caster, former PTA member, former mayor of Wasilla, Alaska (population 6700), and for the past 20 months, govenor of Alaska (population 690,000)- she seems perfectly qualified to be President of the USA doesn't she? Oh yes - her hubby Todd was a member of the Alaska Independence Party (AIP) which advocates secession from the United States. He quit the party in 2002 - the same year Sarah ran for Lt Gov.

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