Public schools may curb grad prayer, proselytizing, appellate court says. (People & Events).Public schools may require graduation speakers to keep their remarks free of prayer and proselytization, a federal appeals court has ruled. Ruling in a case from the Bay Area of San Francisco San Francisco (săn frănsĭs`kō), city (1990 pop. 723,959), coextensive with San Francisco co., W Calif., on the tip of a peninsula between the Pacific Ocean and San Francisco Bay, which are connected by the strait known as the Golden , the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals said officials at Pleasanton Unified School District A unified school district is a school district which includes both primary school (kindergarten through middle school or junior high) and high school (grades 9-12). In Illinois, these districts are called unit school districts. did not violate former salutatorian sa·lu·ta·to·ri·an n. The student with the second highest academic rank in a class who delivers the salutatory at graduation exercises. Noun 1. Nicholas Lassonde's free-speech fights when they told him to remove about 200 words from his prepared remarks. The section was religious in nature, and included Lassonde's plea that fellow students "seek out the Lord." Lassonde, who graduated in 1999, was permitted to distribute copies of his full remarks, including the religious content, to fellow students after the ceremony. But he filed suit against the school anyway, with the aid of the Rutherford Institute Founded in 1982 by constitutional attorney and author John W. Whitehead, the Rutherford Institute is a civil liberties organization that provides free legal services to people whose constitutional and human rights have been threatened or violated. , a conservative legal group based in Virginia. He claimed that his free speech and religious freedom fights had been violated. The appeals court disagreed, asserting that school officials acted properly to ensure that the other students were not subjected to unwanted sermonizing. The court also rejected the claim that the school could have used a disclaimer that made it clear that Lassonde was speaking only for himself and not the school. Even a disclaimer, said the unanimous court, would not "change the fact that proselytizing amounts to a religious practice that the school district may not coerce other students to participate in, even while looking the other way." The Rutherford Institute has indicated it will appeal the Lassonde v. Pleasanton Unified School District ruling to the Supreme Court. In other news about prayer in public schools: * A bill that would allow public school students to give "inspirational" messages and benedictions at school events has cleared the Judiciary Committee Judiciary Committee may refer to:
Representatives are elected to two-year terms during even-numbered years. . State Rep. Wilbert Holloway (D-Miami) has introduced the bill annually over the past three years. It has passed the House each time but died in the Senate. Holloway's measure does not use the word "prayer" but is seen as a back-door school prayer bill. It would allow religious messages at graduation and other school-sponsored events if a majority of students vote for them. The Fort Lauderdale Fort Lauderdale (lô`dərdāl), residential, commercial, and resort city (1990 pop. 149,377), seat of Broward co., SE Fla., on the Atlantic coast; settled around a fort built (c.1837) in the Seminole War, inc. 1911. Sun-Sentinel editorialized against the measure, saying it would lead to religious coercion. "At official school functions, it forces some students and teachers to listen to prayers that they may not want to hear. An invocation or benediction benediction [Lat.,=blessing], solemn blessing usually administered in the name of God by a priest or a minister. The temple worship at Jerusalem had fixed forms of benedictions, and Christians have always given them an important place in ceremony, especially at the is a prayer; no one is fooled," observed the newspaper. "More than likely, it will result in the Christian majority of students at many schools offering prayers that `accidentally' mention Jesus Christ." |
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