Pubdate: Wed, 21 Mar 2007 Source: Journal Times, The (Racine, WI) Copyright: 2007 The Journal Times Contact: http://www.journaltimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1659 Author: Mike Moore Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/opinion.htm (Opinion) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Bong+Hits+4+Jesus (Bong Hits 4 Jesus) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States) BANNER DAY FOR STUDENT RIGHTS? THAT'S HALF-BAKED It's OK to push the envelope, provided something important is inside. I'm not sure "Bong Hits 4 Jesus" qualifies. That's the wisdom one Alaskan high school student imparted on a banner during a field trip a few years ago, picking a fight that's now in the U.S. Supreme Court's lap. I bet student protesters never expected their right to free speech would hang on a decision like this. How will the history books look back and summarize the landmark case of Messiah v. Munchies? A few principals told me run-ins over student expression are fairly rare in Racine County schools, and when they arise they're quickly resolved. Usually the clash involves clothes. Junior can't show up in a T-shirt bearing F-bombs or a sworn devotion to beer. At Case High School, the staff ask that student to turn it inside out or change into one of the extra shirts on hand. "Most of the kids, they'll cooperate," Case Principal Tom Sager said. Pushing the envelope isn't always intentional. Burlington High School Principal Barb Kopack-Hill said students wear shirts to show loyalty to their NASCAR hero, except some also bear a beer sponsor's logo. Ads like that are so pervasive, hardly anybody notices anymore. "And they'll say, 'Wait a minute, this is just a racing T-shirt,' " Kopack-Hill said. Students don't get the same deluxe First Amendment package adults enjoy. In a school, Kopack-Hill said, the rules are "a little more stringent ... than freedom of speech alone would allow." Kids do have to earn their chutzpah somehow. Sometimes a Burlington student wears something with a message protesting the way a classmate was treated. That's allowed, as long as it doesn't break the other rules. "We want students to be socially active," Kopack-Hill said, "to take an active role rather than be apathetic." At Racine Lutheran, a dress code shrinks the clothing problem. There's still the possibility of messages on lockers or at sports games or whatever, but Principal Randy Baganz said students know coming into a Christian school how they're expected to behave. He's followed the Supreme Court case a little bit. "I guess it comes down to 'What is this guy's point?'" Baganz said. Without an answer to that question, this one registers a zero on the belly-fire meter. As a Christian, should I be offended by what's on that banner? As a guy whose paycheck is tied to free speech, should I shout for the guy's vindication? The guy, Joseph Frederick, was supposedly just trying to get on TV. The principal assumed his banner's message was a celebration of weed, yanked it down and suspended him. Then the five-year judicial dance began. Maybe he misunderstood. In preparing for the massive showdown they knew would come someday, students everywhere called for a jouster, not a jester. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake