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Politics : The Donkey's Inn -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Patricia Trinchero who wrote (9565)11/8/2004 10:18:00 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15516
 
If Bush expands his war, we shouldn't be surprised.
I wonder how many civilians Americans will kill
in the house to house fighting in Fallujah.



To: Patricia Trinchero who wrote (9565)11/8/2004 10:37:05 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15516
 
Evolution textbooks row goes to court

Gary Younge in New York
Tuesday November 9, 2004
The Guardian

A suburban American school board found itself in court
yesterday after it tried to placate Christian fundamentalist
parents by placing a sticker on its science textbooks saying
evolution was "a theory, not a fact".

Atlanta's Cobb County school board, the second largest board in
Georgia, added the sticker two years ago after a 2,300 strong
petition attacked the presentation of "Darwinism unchallenged".
Some parents wanted creationism - the theory that God created
humans according to the Bible version - to be taught alongside
evolution.


Shortly after the stickers were put on the books, six parents
launched a legal challenge, with the support of the the American
Civil Liberties Union. It started yesterday.

"I'm a strong advocate for the separation of church and state,"
one of the parents, Jeffrey Selman, told the Associated Press. "I
have no problem with anybody's religious beliefs. I just want an
adequate educational system."

The board says the stickers were motivated by a desire to
establish a greater understanding of different view points. "They
improve the curriculum, while also promoting an attitude of
tolerance for those with different religious beliefs," said Linwood
Gunn, a lawyer for Cobb County schools.

The controversy began when the school board's textbook
selection committee ordered $8m (£4.3m) worth of the science
books in March 2002. Marjorie Rogers, a parent who does not
believe in evolution, protested and petitioned the board to add a
sticker and an insert setting out other explanations for the
origins of life.

"It is unconstitutional to teach only evolution," she said. "The
school board must allow the teaching of both theories of origin."

Her efforts galvanised the fundamentalist community.

"God created earth and man in his image," another parent,
Patricia Fuller, told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. "Leave this
garbage out of the textbooks. I don't want anybody taking care
of me in a nursing home some day to think I came from a
monkey."

Wendi Hill, one of the parents who signed the petition, said:
"We believe the Bible is correct in that God created man. I don't
expect the public school system to teach only creationism, but I
think it should be given its fair share."

Cobb county achieved what it believed to be a compromise by
adding stickers to the books which read: "This textbook
contains material on evolution. Evolution is a theory, not a fact,
regarding the origin of living things. This material should be
approached with an open mind, studied carefully and critically
considered."

But secular parents believed the board had been browbeaten.

"I'm shocked Cobb County is handling it this way," said Gina
Stubbart, who served on the textbook selection committee. "The
average person knows evolution is a widely accepted scientific
theory."

This year Georgia's schools superintendent, Kathy Cox,
removed the word "evolution" from the state's science teaching
standards, but she quickly backtracked after receiving nearly
1,000 complaints.

In 1987, the supreme court ruled that creationism was a
religious belief that could not be taught in public schools along
with evolution.

Since then creationism has been repackaged as the theory of
"intelligent design".

This contends that life on Earth results from a purposeful design
rather than random development and that a higher intelligence is
guiding this process.

Pennsylvania's Dover area school board has already voted to
teach intelligent design.

The hearing in Georgia will have to establish whether intelligent
design is in fact a religious theory; and if so, whether the
stickers which mention neither intelligent design, nor religion by
name, violate the separation of church and state.

The issue of creationism in schools has long been a point of
contention between fundamentalists and secularists in the US.
In 1925, John Scopes went on trial for teaching evolution in
Dayton, Tennessee, in what became known as the monkey trial.

It ended with Scopes being fined $100 for violating a Tennessee
law that forbade the teaching of "any theory that denies the
story of divine creation as taught by the Bible and to teach
instead that man was descended from a lower order of animals".

guardian.co.uk