`IT'S TIME WE KNEW WHAT HAPPENED TO THE CHILDREN OF TABLE 34' Family Research Council Calls on Congress to Support the Child Protection and Ethics in Education Act of 1995 WASHINGTON, Dec. 7, 1995 -- "Fresh examination of the full range of erroneous and fraudulent findings in the Kinsey research is long overdue," Family Research Council Director of Cultural Studies Robert H. Knight said Thursday in a news conference to unveil the Child Protection and Ethics in Education Act of 1995. Knight made his comments in the 11:30 a.m. news conference at 2222 Rayburn as Rep. Steve Stockman (R-TX) presented the legislation. Mr. Knight made the following statement: "Family Research Council commends Rep. Stockman and the approximately 40 cosponsors on the introduction of The Child Protection and Ethics in Education Act of 1995, a bill designed to resolve unanswered questions about the ethics and scientific integrity of the sex studies by Alfred C. Kinsey in the 1940s and '50s. Despite the flaws identified by early critics of the Kinsey methodology and findings, the twin studies Kinsey's team authored, on male and female sexuality, continue to provide a pseudo-intellectual foundation for social change that has proven deeply injurious to children and families. "The 1990 book `Kinsey, Sex and Fraud' by Judith Reisman, Ph. D., and Edward Eichel, M.A. (Drs. Gordon Muir and John Court, eds.) revealed a variety of serious problems with the Kinsey research. According to scientific fraud specialist Dr. Walter Stewart of the National Research Council, evidence of these problems is compelling . . . disturbing . . . and requires investigation. A review of Kinsey, Sex and Fraud in the British medical journal The Lancet concluded that the book demolish[es] the foundations of the Kinsey research, which The Lancet editors concluded was unethical [and] possibly criminal. "The Lancet's characterization of portions of the research as possibly criminal is based on the inclusion in the male study of several tables compiled from information obtained by nine pedophiles. Table 34 reports the results of orgasm produced by adults in infants as young as a few months old. The current director of the Kinsey Institute, Dr. John Bancroft, now says that there was but one pedophile engaged in this infant molestation, but the Institute has refused to reveal his name, the names of his child and infant victims, or anything else about the circumstances under which this data was obtained and published. These and other key questions must be resolved now. "The introduction of The Child Protection and Ethics in Education Act today takes a significant step forward in the effort to learn the full truth about the Kinsey research. Given what we already know, it is unimaginable that any reputable scientific study, any curriculum, or any public policy today would be based on this work. The American people deserve a full accounting of the role that Kinsey played -- and is still playing -- in molding the sexual ethics of our nation and its children."