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402 lines
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Newsgroups: alt.atheism
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From: shallit@graceland.uwaterloo.ca (Jeffrey Shallit)
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Subject: "From The Motel Room To The Classroom: Nobody Escapes The Gideons"
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Message-ID: <C0wnA2.FL8@math.uwaterloo.ca>
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Organization: University of Waterloo
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Date: Fri, 15 Jan 1993 17:01:13 GMT
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Lines: 396
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This article is reprinted (with permission) from Freethought
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Today, bulletin of the Freedom From Religion Foundation.
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For more information, write
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Freedom From Religion Foundation
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P. O. Box 750
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Madison, WI 53701
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USA
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(608) 256-8900
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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From The Motel Room To The Classroom: Nobody Escapes The Gideons
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By Prof. Allen Berger
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[This is excerpted from a speech given at the 15th annual Freedom From
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Religion Foundation (FFRF), December 5, 1992, San Antonio Texas.]
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It really is a pleasure to be here. My wife and I are finding this a
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very congenial group, one quite different from the groups we're most
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accustomed to. We live in a small rural town in the bible belt of
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Indiana, and I'm an unbelieving Jew who teaches at a Catholic college!
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At that small Catholic college in Rensselaer, a colleague of mine and I
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have formed an organization that you ought to know about it. It's a
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rather small organization. In fact it only has two members. But it's
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acronym is far better than yours, and I think you might want to
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consider merging with us. Your acronym is "FFRF" ("Ferf"). Our acronym
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comes from the days when "7-Up" used to advertise itself as the
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"Uncola." Our organization is called "UNGOD." UNGOD stands for Unholy
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Nihilists for Godlessness Over Deism, and if you'd like to entertain a
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merger, we would be interested in your buying us out.
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Many of you may have seen in the press just this past week a report
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about the Holiday Inns nationwide, which are now facing some legal
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action because it's been reported that in many of their hotel rooms
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there are peepholes made by carving away the backing on the mirrors.
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The news media are assuming, of course, that those peepholes are being
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used by sexual voyeurs. I think the news media have really missed the
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story here. In truth, it's the Gideons who are using the peepholes, and
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they've been trying to find out who's been placing all those damned
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Freedom From Religion Foundation stickers!
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I would truthfully like to encourage you as an organization to expand
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and better publicize your efforts in placing those stickers in Gideon
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bibles, because if you could do that you might so preoccupy the Gideons
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and so overstress their resources that they wouldn't have the manpower
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or the money to bring their bibles to the fifth-grade classrooms.
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The reality is, of course, that the Gideons place bibles in public
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school classrooms all over America. For some reason, I'm not sure what
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it is--it's their logic and they don't share their logic with me--they
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always choose the fifth grade. This happens especially in small towns
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and especially in the bible belt, but it goes on from the East coast
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all the way to the West coast. The New Jersey Supreme Court in the
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1950's ruled that this practice was unconstitutional. The practice has
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also been ruled unconstitutional in the federal court of the Eastern
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District of Arkansas. The Supreme Court has never ruled on this issue
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but they refused to grant cert. out of the case that came out of the
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New Jersey Supreme Court. But as the school board in Rensselaer,
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Indiana pointed out, decisions from the New Jersey Supreme Court are
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not binding in other parts of the country.
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This issue rarely comes to trial because the Gideons very carefully and
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craftily withdraw from communities whenever there's a controversy. When
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someone like me complains about bible distribution, the Gideons give up
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the practice and move on to the next town, to come back as soon as the
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complainer moves away. Thus the issue is never tested in the courts.
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In our case the bibles never actually got to the fifth-grade classroom.
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We found out about bible distribution in the public schools from a
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friend who is a teacher in a neighboring school corporation, an
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ex-student of mine. She came to me one day and said: "You know what
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happened to me the other day in school? The strangest thing. Two Gideon
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representatives came to my classroom, and I just felt funny about it.
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It didn't seem right. But the principal came by and said, 'It's okay.
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We've given them permission.' They came in, they distributed bibles to
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all the children, and gave a brief talk."
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I was flabbergasted. I had no idea this occurred in America. At the
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same party that evening was the assistant superintendent from our local
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school corporation. My wife's a teacher in that school corporation and
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so he and I are friends. I walked up to him and said, "You wouldn't
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believe the story I just heard! We don't do that in Rensselaer, do we?"
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He said, "We've been doing that in Rensselaer for 40 or 50 years."
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Turned out the Gideons were about to come into the fifth grade
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classrooms the very next week. My son was a fifth grader. Obviously
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that gave us good standing to complain, and we complained--not to the
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Gideons but to the school corporation. The school board did not respond
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to my letter of complaint. Instead they gave it to the press. Bibles in
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the local schools very quickly became a cause celebre and local
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churches began organizing to pressure the school board to continue the
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practice. At a meeting in December, 1989 they announced that they would
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in fact continue the practice. So the Gideons were never given the
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opportunity to withdraw from Rensselaer, Indiana as they have withdrawn
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in other parts of the country when complaints have been raised.
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Assuming we win this lawsuit, the school board in Rensselaer has not
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done any favor for the Gideons, International.
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Our lawsuit was begun in January, 1990. I contacted the Indiana Civil
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Liberties Union (ICLU). They have been good enough to represent us and
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we are quite grateful for that.
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The purpose of Gideon bible distribution, obviously, is a key issue in
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our case. In talking about the purpose we need to talk about the
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purpose of the Gideons, on the one hand, and also the purpose of the
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school corporation which allows the Gideons to distribute their bibles.
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The purpose in both cases is pretty clearly proselytizing, not
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education. I must tell you I have no problem with religion in public
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school classrooms so long as it is a matter of teaching comparative
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religion, teaching the role of religion in society. It would be nice if
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those teachings could include some freethought perspectives. But I
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don't think that's a constitutional issue.
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The purpose of this bible distribution is gaining converts. That's very
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clear from the inserts which the Gideons placed in these little bibles.
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The Gideons call themselves "an international association whose purpose
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is the promotion of the Gospel of Christ to all people to the end that
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they might come to know the Lord Jesus Christ as their Personal
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Savior." The back cover of the bible reads: "My decision to receive
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Christ as my Savior, confessing to God that I am a sinner and believing
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that the Lord Jesus Christ died for my sins on the cross and was raised
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for my justification, I do receive and confess him as my personal
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savior."
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That's the Gideon's purpose. How about the school board's? The
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Rensselaer school board, of course, has said "We're just about giving
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local organizations a forum. Our purpose is not to evangelize. That's
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their purpose." It's pretty clear that, in fact, the school board's
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purpose is proselytizing as well. The bible is not used in the
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classroom for any educational purposes; the students are told by Gideon
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representatives how valuable the book is and to take it home and read
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it. The schools are directly implicated in the distribution; teachers
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and principals are directly involved in the mechanics of distribution.
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The school board made a big deal in announcing it was all "voluntary."
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In fact, parental permission slips supposedly were sent out. Turns out
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that that hasn't been done for at least 10 years; nobody much cared
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about parental permission slips. Even with parental permission slips, I
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believe there is a serious constitutional violation.
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That the purpose is proselytizing is especially clear when Gideon bible
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distribution is placed in context in our own local schools. Other
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organizations come into the schools to distribute sign-up sheets for
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Girl Scouts, swim teams, essay contests for the DAR. Only one other
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organization, to our knowledge, has ever distributed real literature in
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the public schools, an organization called the "In Jesus's Love
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Foundation," which has distributed books to elementary children in the
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public schools, such as Young People of the Bible.
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Beyond that, my wife and I have attended school events, such as honors
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programs, where the school chorus has provided entertainment-- singing
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Christian hymns at secular school events. The football coach at the
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local high school engages his team in a mandatory saying of the "Our
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Father" at the end of every game. It's pretty clear that the Christian
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influence is overwhelming in the public schools, and that the school
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board endorses Christian evangelizing.
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Our legal argument has relied on a case many of you may already be
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familiar with: Lemon v. Kurtzman, a case heard before the U.S. Supreme
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Court back in the early 1970s. Lemon v. Kurtzman requires that a
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government practice, to pass muster, must 1) have a secular purpose, 2)
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must not have the primary effect of inhibiting or advancing religion,
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and 3) must not foster an excessive entanglement with religion. Since
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Lemon v. Kurtzman in 1971, the Supreme Court has dickered a bit with
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that finding, although Lemon v. Kurtzman remains intact. The
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modifications have mainly come under the influence of Justice Sandra
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Day O'Connor.
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Justice O'Connor has modified the Lemon Test toward what she calls an
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"endorsement test" or an "endorsement twist" on the Lemon Test. For
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O'Connor the purpose prong of the Lemon Test asks whether government's
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actual purpose is to endorse or disapprove of religion and the effect
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prong asks whether irrespective of government's actual purpose, the
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practice under review in fact conveys a message of endorsement or
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disapproval. An affirmative answer to either question, she writes,
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should render the challenge or practice invalid.
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It is our belief that bible distribution in public schools violates all
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three prongs of the Lemon Test as amended by Justice O'Connor. First of
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all, bible distribution has a purpose which is not secular, and which
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in fact endorses religion. As I mentioned, the bible is not used for
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educational purposes in the classroom. The distribution has been going
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on, at least in Rensselaer, for 30 to 50 years. Nobody seems to know
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how long, but everybody seems to remember receiving a bible. The bible
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is an element in the distribution of religious veneration, not an item
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to be discussed or critiqued. And the endorsement of Christianity is
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especially clear when the distribution is placed in the context of
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other practices in the public schools.
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The second Lemon prong asks why would a reasonable observer perceive
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the practice as an endorsement of religion? The reasonable observer in
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this case is the fifth-grade student. Justice O'Connor is very clear in
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writing that religious intrusions in the public schools should be
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viewed from the perspective of the school children affected. I'll quote
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for you very briefly from her writing:
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"At the very least, presidential proclamations are distinguishable from
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school prayer in that they are received in a noncoercive setting and
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are primarily directed at adults, who presumably are not readily
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susceptible to unwilling religious indoctrination. This Court's
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decisions have recognized the distinction when government-sponsored
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religious exercises are directed at impressionable children, who are
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required to attend school, for then government endorsement is much more
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likely to result in coercive religious beliefs."
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What do the kids in Rensselaer see when they receive bibles in the
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public schools? They see two representatives from the Gideons
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accompanied to the classroom by the teacher and usually the principal.
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These are relatively unsophisticated observers. How do I know they're
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unsophisticated? Not only because I have a fifth grade son, who's
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actually more sophisticated than most, but friends of ours told us a
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funny story about the Gideon visit to their daughter's classroom. There
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was a man and a woman (usually it's two men who distribute Gideon
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bibles because it's an association of men-only) to distribute the
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bibles. They were introduced to the class by the teacher as the
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Gideons. Our friends' daughter came home that day and announced to her
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parents that "Mr. and Mrs. Gideon had been in school"!
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The teacher plays a direct role in organizing the kids, quieting them
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for the presentation from the Gideon representatives. The principal
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stands by at the doorway to the room. The teachers assist in the
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distribution. It certainly seems to me that the reasonable fifth-grader
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would perceive endorsement by school officials of this text.
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The third prong of the Lemon Test is whether Gideon distribution in the
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public schools fosters excessive entanglement in religion. Obviously,
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we believe it does. Many of you are familiar with the "open forum"
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cases that have recently gotten a lot of media attention. The Supreme
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Court has ruled that if public high schools are an open forum, school
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boards cannot restrict religious groups from using that forum. The
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other side in our case has argued repeatedly that this is in fact an
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open forum case. However, what the Rensselaer school board is providing
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is not just a forum or place or facility. What the Rensselaer school
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corporation is providing, as are school corporations all over America
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where Gideon bible distribution is allowed, is a captive audience. The
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proselytizers are welcome. They are sponsored by school authorities,
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and in fact the school acts as a religious censor, in that the
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principal and superintendent in Rensselaer decide which groups to admit
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to the classrooms and which to deny admission to. Under oath, when we
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were taking depositions, my lawyer asked the superintendent would you
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allow other religious groups to distribute their literature and to make
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a brief presentation to the students in the classroom? She said, "Well
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of course we would--except for Satanists, and other religions like
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that!" Satanists are a pretty easy target, nobody seems to like
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Satanists. I don't know what she meant by "other religions like
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that." Probably freethinkers and bunches of others. Rensselaer is
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pretty isolated, a small town of about 5,000 people in the corn and
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soybean belt. We don't get many religious groups coming through
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requesting access to the schools, other than the Gideons and the In
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Jesus's Love folks.
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Lemon v. Kurtzman is not the only precedent that's important. The
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other very important precedent is the recent Lee v. Weisman ruling. I
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can't tell you how excited I am about meeting the Weisman family here
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in San Antonio this weekend. Prior to decision on Lee v. Weisman, our
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attorneys argued that we ought to win this case even if the court ruled
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against the Weismans and took the Bush Administration position that a
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governmental practice should only be ruled unconstitutional if it
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constitutes coercion--coerced religious belief or practice. In this
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case, clearly there is a coercive element in that fifth grade
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classroom. Of course, the Weismans, to my great surprise and I think
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somewhat to theirs, won their case!
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Our opponents had argued that our appellate hearing needed to be
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delayed because Lee v. Weisman would obviously change establishment
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clause law and necessitate a ruling against us. Now that the Lee v.
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Weisman decision has come down, our opponents have announced that it is
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irrelevant! What Lee v. Weisman did in part is that it left the Lemon
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Test intact. The justices of the Supreme Court said we need not return
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to this precedent and re-evaluate it.
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We have argued since the Lee v. Weisman decision, that the dominant
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facts which mark and control the confines of that case apply with even
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greater force to our case. And there is even greater reason to rule
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Gideon bible distribution in the public schools an establishment clause
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violation.
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The factual conclusions which the majority on the Supreme Court found
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compelling in Lee v. Weisman were the following: involvement of the
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school official in arranging the religious exercise, in this case a
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prayer at Deborah Weisman's graduation ceremony; the exaggeration of
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subtle, coercive pressures which exist in young children's school
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environments, particularly when directed by teachers or principals; and
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the fact that attendance and participation in the religious activity
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was in a fair and real sense obligatory.
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The fact situation is even more compelling in our case, we believe. The
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fifth-grade classroom, after all, is an environment with an even
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greater potential for subtle coercion, which Justice Kennedy noted
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existed in Deborah Weisman's situation. The average 10 year old
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fifth-grade student is an even more impressionable subject than the 14
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year olds in Deborah Weisman's class. The Gideon bibles are handed out
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during the course of the regular school day. Unlike the somewhat
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voluntary, though not entirely voluntary ceremony in Lee, in this case
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Indiana law obligates 10 year old students to attend school. The fact
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that the Gideon presentation occurs in the course of the regular school
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day, during which children are taught to pay attention to the contents
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of the instructional program, presents a more highly coercive
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atmosphere than the public graduation ceremony in Weisman. The public
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ceremony at which parents are present to counter or offset the
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religious prayers may be contrasted with the instructional nature of of
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the school day when students are unaccompanied by their parents.
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Lee v. Weisman leaves us cautiously optimistic with regard to the
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appellate outcome. Our case was argued in the Seventh Circuit Appellate
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Court in Chicago on October 21. We are awaiting a decision. Everybody
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tells me don't try to handicap the appellate court.
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To our consternation and not surprise--given what we knew about Federal
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Circuit Judge Allen Sharpe, northern district, South Bend--Judge Sharpe
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had ruled against us. He said it was not an establishment clause case,
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it was a freedom of speech case. I am reading from his opinion:
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"One could view the Rensselaer policy as simply a trespass regulation
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controlling the access of nonschool persons or groups onto school
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campus during school hours, or it could be viewed as a program to make
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available to students locally generated literature reflecting many
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aspects of their community. In any event, the court finds that the
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defendant's policy satisfies the Lemon Test."
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Notice that Judge Sharpe focused on the school board policy. The policy
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statement simply reads: "Any group which would like to gain access to
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the classroom must have permission from the principal or the school
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superintendent." That reads to me like a trespass regulation. It reads
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to Judge Sharpe like the creation of an open forum--all are invited
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into the classroom. If all are invited, why not religious groups? To
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exclude religious groups would be to discriminate against religion,
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which the Constitution forbids, according to his rationale.
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Well, we never challenged the trespass regulation! What we challenged
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was the practice of Gideon bible distribution.
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You may have read in the press the following quote from Judge Sharpe.
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It's my favorite from his opinion. He wrote:
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"The court finds that no observer, Christian adherent or not, could
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reasonably view the Gideon organization's distribution of bibles in the
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Rensselaer schools as an endorsement of the Christian faith. Permitting
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the local Gideons to circulate their literature in public school
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classrooms is no more an endorsement of Christianity than allowing
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Little League baseball to disseminate its material endorsing the
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national pastime. Nor would a reasonable observer perceive a similar
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leaflet campaign by the American Civil Liberties Union or the
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Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith as an endorsement of the
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respective views of these organizations."
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What Judge Sharpe failed to realize is that nowhere in the Constitution
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does it demand separation of Little League and state! Nowhere in the
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Constitution, to the consternation of many of our opponents, does it
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demand separation of ACLU and state.
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Interestingly enough, the argument in the press is very different than
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the argument in the court. The issue is freedom of speech in the
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courtroom. In the court of public opinion the issue is freedom of
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religion. Except there's a great deal of confusion here as to whose
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religion is at issue. My wife and I recently gave access to a religious
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group from Florida called Coral Reef Ministries to our home. They came
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in and interviewed us for a TV show they were doing. We found that show
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quite interesting. In the introduction, the host said that the ACLU has
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filed a suit restricting the religious liberties of the children! Their
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freedom to be forcibly proselytized is at issue, I guess! At the same
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time, this same individual said the government can't prevent you from
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exercising your religion. Well the Gideons are exercising their
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religion. So you see, it's the Gideon's freedom of religion that's at
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issue! There's a great deal of confusion.
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Most annoying, of course, is how we are portrayed in the media,
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annoying but at the same time somewhat amusing. Robert Skolrood, a
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lawyer for Pat Robertson's National Legal Foundation out of Virginia
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Beach, Virginia, which is helping represent the school corporation,
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says, "This battle goes beyond the Gideons and the ICLU. We know that
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it's a spiritual battle. When you get in the courtroom you can see from
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the things that are said and the actions of the people." (I was
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flipping through Dan Barker's book last night [Losing Faith In Faith:
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From Preacher To Atheist, FFRF, Inc., PO Box 750, Madison WI 53701] and
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was interested to find a reference, where he suggested when anyone uses
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the word "spiritual" to challenge them to define it.)
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When I came to Rensselaer I found many people who believed that Jews
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had horns. And for Skolrood I still have horns. And I guess that's
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something of an honor.
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[Allen Berger is Professor of Anthropology and Assistant Vice-President
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for Academic Affairs at St. Joseph's College in Rensselaer, Indiana. He
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is also director of the Indiana Consortium for International Programs
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and a Board member of Planned Parenthood for Northeast and Northwest
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Indiana. He and his wife Becky are the parents of Joshua, 13, and
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Moriah, 9.]
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