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ABC bans Flag
Message
From
09/10/2001 08:28:04
 
General information
Forum:
Politics
Category:
Other
Title:
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
00560873
Message ID:
00565857
Views:
58
>It wasn't an internet story, it was from the Dallas (Morning ?) News paper, about 4 or 5 years ago. There may be references to it, and similar stories on the web, but I haven't searched for them. Her parents took them to court and won the first case, lost the appeal, but won the Supreme Court, if I remember correctly, but how many can or will do that? A similar series of court cases envolved praying around the flag pole, having Bible study in class rooms after hours (even though other groups, some religious in nature were allowed to, Christian groups were singled out as 'prohibited'), and the list goes on. Each 'free exercise' of religion (guaranteed by the 1st Amendment) wasn't allowed unless someone had the money and time to fight the facists, and win in court. How many prohibitions of rights granted in the 1st amendment do we not hear of? I suspect they are like cockroaches, if you see one in the daylight that probably means there are dozens you can't see.

Jerry - I was curious about this schoolbus story, so I went looking for it. After a lot of searching, I've found two schoolbus/religion related incidents, neither of which exactly matches the above. Here's the one I think you're referring to:


Audrey Pearson: Pearson's mother contacted the Rutherford
Institute, a conservative legal group, after her daughter was told to
stop reading a Bible on a public school bus in Prince William County,
Va., in 1989. The principal had not understood that students are
permitted to bring religious material to school for their personal use
and her decision was quickly reversed once contacted by the
Institute. The matter never went to court, and the incident is now
eight years old.

The other case addresses the issue of organized prayer on the school bus:
Bible-Reading Bus Driver Reassigned

.c The Associated Press

MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) -- School officials reassigned a bus driver who told a boy to take part in Bible readings on the way to school or find another way to get there.

The driver, Cassandra Agee, would have a student read the Bible and have other students interpret them.

Joseph Brown, a 15-year-old freshman at Robert E. Lee High School, said Friday that when he questioned Ms. Agee about the readings, she told him he could find another way to school if he didn't like them.

"I told her, `You can't do this,"' Brown said. "She said she hoped the Lord would forgive me."

Brown's mother, Ruth Whittington, complained to school officials, and Ms. Agee was reassigned last week to another bus route.

"People tend to think about school buildings when prayer is concerned and not to buses," Board of Education spokeswoman Angela Mann said.

Ms. Agee could not immediately be reached for comment through school transportation officials. Officials said the system's bus drivers were counseled about the complaint, but refused to explain exactly what they were told.

AP-NY-10-17-98 1626EDT

Copyright 1998 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. All active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.

Tamar
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