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Monday June 18 11:44 AM ET
Supreme Court Won't Hear Student Prayer Challenge
By James Vicini

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Supreme Court (news - web sites) let stand on
Monday a ruling that students may offer group prayers at football games and
other sports events, assemblies, graduations or other school-related
ceremonies.

The high court refused to hear arguments that an Alabama law that allows
prayers, invocations and benedictions, even over the school public address
system and the classroom intercom, violates constitutional church-state
separation.

The 1993 law specifies that elementary and high school students, rather than
teachers or administrators, must initiate the prayer, which must be
nonsectarian, and that students cannot proselytize.

The law permitting voluntary prayers was challenged by Michael Chandler, a
former high school vice principal in DeKalb County, who filed the lawsuit on
his behalf and that of his son, Jesse, who at the time was a public school
student.

The justices rejected the appeal without any comment or dissent. It marked
the second time the case had reached the Supreme Court.

A federal judge struck down the law as unconstitutional and issued an
injunction barring its enforcement. But a U.S. appeals court in 1999 allowed
the prayers.

The Supreme Court a year ago set aside that ruling and ordered the appeals
court to further consider the case in light of a Supreme Court ruling
striking down student-led prayers at football games.

Despite the high court's ruling, the appeals court once again upheld the
prayers. It said the high court ruling condemned school sponsorship of
student prayer while the appeals court condemned school censorship of student
prayer.

The appeals court also said the Supreme Court did not reject the possibility
of some private religious speech, even if it occurs in schools.

Attorneys for Chandler said the appeals court disregarded the high court's
decision, and that the court's long-standing precedents command reversal of
the ruling.

The Supreme Court in a 1992 ruling said public schools may not require
prayers by clergy members at graduation ceremonies. That decision reaffirmed
the Supreme Court's historic 1962 decision that barred organized, officially
sponsored prayers in public school classrooms.

Attorneys for Alabama said the case became moot on May 23, when Jesse
Chandler graduated from public high school. As a result, they urged the high
court to deny the appeal.

They also argued that the appeals court decision ''faithfully applies''
Supreme Court precedents.




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