http://www.cnn.com/2005/LAW/01/13/evolution.textbooks.ruling/index.htm
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 A federal judge in Atlanta, Georgia, has ruled that a suburban county
school district's textbook stickers referring to evolution as "a
theory not a fact" are unconstitutional.
In ruling that the stickers violate the constitutionally mandated
separation between church and state, U.S. District Judge Clarence
Cooper ruled that labeling evolution a "theory" played on the popular
definition of the word as a "hunch" and could confuse students.

The stickers 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."

The disclaimers were put in the books by school officials in 2002.

"Due to the manner in which the sticker refers to evolution as a
theory, the sticker also has the effect of undermining evolution
education to the benefit of those Cobb County citizens who would
prefer that students maintain their religious beliefs regarding the
origin of life," Cooper wrote in his ruling.

Cooper said he was ruling on the "narrow issue" of the case, brought
against the Cobb County School District and Board of Education by four
parents of district students, was whether the district's stickers
violated the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment.

His conclusion, he said, "is not that the school board should not have
called evolution a theory or that the school board should have called
evolution a fact."

"Rather, the distinction of evolution as a theory rather than a fact
is the distinction that religiously motivated individuals have
specifically asked school boards to make in the most recent
anti-evolution movement, and that was exactly what parents in Cobb
County did in this case," he wrote.

"By adopting this specific language, even if at the direction of
counsel, the Cobb County School Board appears to have sided with these
religiously motivated individuals."

The sticker, he said, sends "a message that the school board agrees
with the beliefs of Christian fundamentalists and creationists."

"The school board has effectively improperly entangled itself with
religion by appearing to take a position," Cooper wrote. "Therefore,
the sticker must be removed from all of the textbooks into which it
has been placed."

Five parents of students and the American Civil Liberties Union had
challenged the stickers in court, arguing they violated the
constitutional separation of church and state.

The case was heard in federal court last November. The school system
defended the warning stickers as a show of tolerance, not religious
activism as some parents claimed.

"The Cobb County school board is doing more than accommodating
religion," Michael Manely, an attorney for the parents, argued during
the trial, according to a report from The Associated Press. "They are
promoting religious dogma to all students."

Lawyers for Cobb County, however, argued in court that the school
board had made a good-faith effort to address questions that
inevitably arise during the teaching of evolution.

"Science and religion are related and they're not mutually exclusive,"
school district attorney Linwood Gunn said in an AP report. "This
sticker was an effort to get past that conflict and to teach good
science."

According to the AP, the schools placed the stickers after more than
2,000 parents complained the textbooks presented evolution as fact,
without mentioning rival ideas about the beginnings of life.



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