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Sunday, September 21, 2003

Court bans religious gifts to classmates

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Kindergartners and first-graders may not distribute to their classmates gifts that bear a religious message, according to a ruling by a federal appeals court.

The 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals recently ruled in favor of a New Jersey elementary school in forbidding a boy from giving out pencils with the message "Jesus loves the little children" with a heart symbol substituted for the word love.

The classroom is not a place for student advocacy, wrote Chief U.S. Circuit Judge Anthony J. Scirica, speaking for the court in Walz v. Egg Harbor Township Board of Education. The school, he said, has a "legitimate area of control" regarding speech within school confines.

And the younger the student, "the more control a school may exercise," he added.

But the Charlottesville-based Rutherford Institute, which is representing Daniel Walz, now 9, plans to appeal the case to a full bench of 12 judges of the 3rd Circuit, and, if necessary, to the U.S. Supreme Court. The recent unanimous ruling, which was handed down Aug. 27, was made by three judges.

At stake, said Rutherford President John Whitehead, is constitutionally protected speech. He called the 3rd Circuit ruling "a dangerous trend."

"I call it the 9/11 fallout," he said. "The court says the schools have complete authority to decide what they want said. If they do not like a kid's religion, they can pick on the kid. Or if a black kid says Martin Luther King was the greatest person alive, if a teacher didn't like that, he could just kick the message out.

"This idea that we have to watch everything and give the authorities power contradicts a long line of Supreme Court cases," Mr. Whitehead said. "Even if the First Amendment is involved, the 3rd Circuit is saying control, control, control" goes to the schools.

The case began in April 1998 when Daniel, then 4, and his pre-kindergarten classmates attended a party at school. All of the children brought treats to share. Daniel came with the pencils, which the teacher confiscated. Daniel's mother, Dana Walz, who was in the classroom at the time as a chaperone, immediately appealed the matter to the principal.

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