Jones Library: The people's living room
I guess Bill Clinton would say it depends on how you define "censorship".
Clearly Jones Library Director Sharon Sharry subscribes to the American Library Association's definition: "A change in the access status of material, based on the content of the work and made by a governing authority or its representatives. Such changes include exclusion, restriction, removal, or age/grade level changes.
The group of concerned parents who want to relocate the "Tintin" series of colorful comics believe there's a "principled middle ground" that would allow for "placing material that uses derisive portrayals of a racial group that has been historically discriminated against purely to entertain the reader, as is the case in the comics, to areas for older readers."
But clearly, that would be a "Change in the access status of the material, based on content ..." Or in the eyes of the ALA, censorship.
And of course the concerned parents "drive this point home" using the racially offensive book "Simple Additions by a Little Nigger," as an example of a historically dated work targeted at children they would expect not to find in the Jones Library.
And last I looked (this morning), the book "Simple Additions by a Little Nigger" was NOT available at the Jones.
But I'll let the two opposing sides speak for themselves: