Pubdate: Wed, 04 Jun 2003 Source: Commercial Appeal (TN) Copyright: 2003 The Commercial Appeal Contact: http://www.gomemphis.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/95 Author: Wayne Risher Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?135 (Drug Education) SEX, DRUG SLOGANS PROMPT INQUIRY INTO KIRBY ANNUAL Whatever Happened To "Most Likely To Succeed?" To the dismay of parents and school officials, Kirby High School's yearbook included such superlatives as "Most likely to . . . Be a pimp (girls); Stripper; Be a porno producer; Drunk at graduation." One page listed "student pickup lines," while quotes from seniors included: "Light that Green, Smoke that Green, Pass that Green." More than 60 sex or drug references were found on 12 pages parents distributed at the school board's meeting Monday. Board members asked administrators to investigate what happened. Much of the offending material can be heard routinely in rap music lyrics. Indeed, lists of seniors' favorite songs and performers yielded about a dozen sex and drug references. But principal Thomas Killough and school board member Sara Lewis said educators must hold school publications to higher standards than commercial radio or TV programming. Killough on Tuesday mailed an apology and offered to replace the flawed yearbooks Thursday and Friday. Only students who turn in the original can get a new copy. Killough didn't expect anyone to cry censorship, and neither did media law experts. "(School administrators) are within their rights to do this," said Elinor Grusin, an associate journalism professor at the University of Memphis. "The Supreme Court gave school officials the right to determine what's educationally appropriate for younger students." "Not that I agree with it," she added. "I think we're teaching the wrong civics lesson to kids, that they have to accept censorship." Others said it's up to educators to help guide students about what's appropriate for such publications. "They live in a world where the music the references allude to are everyday life," said Mark Goodman of the national Student Press Law Center. "They're not automatically looking at these issues in the way adults in the community are." Neither Memphis nor Shelby County schools appears to have policies on student publications. Kirby's yearbook adviser, English teacher Keith Williams, couldn't be reached. Killough said he couldn't say whether disciplinary action was being considered. The principal blamed the problem on an Internet-based yearbook publishing service being tried for the first time. Pictures and text were submitted online, and the school didn't receive page proofs before it was printed. Williams edited out vulgar language online, but his fixes didn't make the finished product, Killough said. Grusin teaches media law and is project director of The Teen Appeal, a monthly newspaper produced by city high school students. "Students are always pushing the envelope," Grusin said. "Some of the things that are uppermost in their minds seem to deal with topics that get under the skin of administrators, because they have to do with sex or drugs or pregnancy. They don't always understand how far they can go in talking about these things." - --- MAP posted-by: Jackl