TWO SAY ACADEMY
SAVED DAUGHTER
March 29,1996
Copyright © 1996, St. Louis Post-Dispatch
By Kim Bell, Post-Dispatch Jefferson City Bureau
TWO SAY ACADEMY
SAVED DAUGHTER
LIFE AT BAPTIST
SCHOOL IS DESCRIBED AS STRICT- BUT SUCCESSFUL
The parents of a former student at
Mountain Park Baptist Academy describe life at the school as strict, with tight
restrictions on clothes and conduct.
Mountain Park Baptist Academy, where
16-year-old Andrew Futrelle II was slain Monday, charges parents $750 a month
for each child, with a one-year minimum. Many of the school's students come
from California, Oregon and Washington state. Juvenile courts in those states
refer many of the children to the academy in rural Missouri.
Tom and Pat Moore, of Piedmont, sent
their 12-year-old daughter to the school after she ran away from home with a
17-year-old boy two years ago. With their daughter now home, the Moores swear
by the school.
"The first thing people start
doing after a tragedy like this is accuse places of being cults," said Tom
Moore, who works at a rock quarry. "But it's not. It's a wonderful
school."
The school, about 110 miles south of
St. Louis, is run by the Rev. Bobby wills, 60, and his wife, Betty Wills, 58.
The school has strict guidelines.
Parents must agree to keep their
child at the academy for at least a year.
No visits for the first three months
- and only 17 days of visits for the entire year.
Students who
disobey rules get paddled after two warnings.
Students are awakened at 5 a.m., in
bed by 9 p.m. and must memorize 3 Bible verses a day.
Only one 10-minute phone call with
parents every two weeks.
All letters between parents and
children are screened by school officials.
"They didn't want us saying
negative things like, 'I miss you' or 'I wish you were home,'" Pat Moore
said.
When their daughter needed minor
surgery at a Poplar Bluff hospital, the parents had to observe the school's
policy on visitation. They were allowed in the waiting room, but could not see
the girl.
Tom Moore said the school helped his
daughter: "She's a Christian now."
Parents provide clothes for the
students; if the clothing is unacceptable, the school returns it to the
parents, Moore says. No black clothing and no short shorts are allowed. The
school prefers skirts for girls.
When their daughter's grandparents
gave her a fingernail clipper set as a gift, the school kept it under lock and
key, the Moores said.
Students can decorate their rooms
with stuffed animals, but no radios or TVs. The only books the Moores ever saw
were Bibles. On Friday nights, the school brought in a popcorn machine and
students gathered for "Movie Night". Only Disney movies were shown.
The Moores' daughter, who used to
make excuses to skip church on Sundays, now quotes Bible verses. After her first
three months at the academy, the Moores picked their daughter up for their
first visit. By academy rules, the Moores could not take her home. So they went
to Branson. "We saw the change in her immediately," Pat Moore said.
"When we stopped to eat at Hillbilly Junction, the first thing she did was
pray over her food."
The daughter, a smiling girl with
braces, said Bobby and Betty Wills, who she calls Mama and Papa, changed her
life. "I got saved," she said.