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By Chris Hoffman, CBS Pittsburgh
March 31, 2022
The Cooper Siegel Library branch in Sharpsburg said some of their books are not going in the right spots, and it's not an accident. Some books that talk about race, women and LGBTQ+ issues have lately ended up nowhere near their proper spots.
According to the branch manager, the incidents started in February and have continued into March. Now the Sharpsburg police are involved. The library said during Black History Month in February, "The 1619 Project," which details the Black experience in the United States, was moved to a used book sale. A few days later, a children's biography of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was replaced in a display by a children's biography of Adolf Hitler.
Moving into March, topics of women and the LGBTQ+ community came under attack. Someone put a written complaint on a children's book about anatomy and puberty. The note allegedly said, "do not read." The library said the books in question were written for children of all ages.
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