By TODD RICHMOND, Associated Press Writer Todd Richmond, Associated Press Writer – Fri Apr 9, 4:35 pm ET MAUSTON, Wis. – Mike Taake has taught sex education for 30 years, and he says he knows what doesn’t work: just telling kids to wait. The Mauston High School health teacher has used abstinence-only and comprehensive curriculums, and he said students need all the information they can get about sex to make the best choices. But teaching them about contraceptives could land him and other teachers in court. Juneau County District Attorney Scott Southworth last month sent a letter to area school districts warning that health teachers who tell students how to put on a condom or take birth-control pills could face criminal charges. The warning has befuddled teachers, school administrators and parents in Southworth’s poor, rural county. “Seems like a step back in time,” Taake said of Southworth’s logic. Southworth, a Republican and a Christian evangelical, took issue with a law Democratic Gov. Jim Doyle signed in February requiring schools that teach sexual education to adopt a comprehensive approach.