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May 05, 1995 - Image 43

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1995-05-05

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

MAKE THIS YOUR YEAR.

Get Into A Corvette.

Can religious holidays be
observed in public schools?
No matter how secular Christ-
mas has become, it still marks
the Christian belief that their
savior was born on that day;
therefore, any religious obser-
vance of this and other holidays
is forbidden. Teachers may use
the holidays to teach about reli-
gion but in doing so may not ad-
vocate one religion over another.

1995 CORVETTE

$399*

per month

Can religious songs be
sung at concerts in Decem-
ber?
December concerts frequently
feature songs related to
Chanukah and Christmas. It is
recommended that the concerts
not go heavy on the devotional
songs like "Silent Night" or "Drei-
del, Dreidel, Dreidel" but instead
have more songs like "Jingle Bell
Rock" or "Frosty the Snowman."

Are religious clubs accept-
able?
The Equal Access Act requires
that schools treat religious clubs
that are initiated, led and spon-
sored by students the same as
any other club that is not cur-
riculum related.
School officials have a right to
monitor the clubs but cannot
lead, start or sponsor such
groups.

$1,950





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Washington (JTA) — The
Supreme Court heard arguments
in a potentially explosive case
that could have serious and far-
reaching ramifications for the tra-
ditional separation of church and
state.
The court must decide if the
University of Virginia, a state
school, can deny funds for a stu-
dent-run Christian magazine.
The student editor, Ronald
Rosenberger, sued, saying the
school violated his right to free
speech when it refused his $5,800
in funding.
The university argued that the
magazine falls under the rubric
of "religious activity," and fund-
ing the publication would lead to
an entanglement of church and
state.
This is the court's first church-
state case this session, and it
comes as some justices have in-
dicated they are moving toward
a view that would accommodate
more religious practices in pub-
lic venues, according to observers.
Still, there was no clear sense of
how the justices would rule.

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CORVETTE

Jack

Can the school grounds be
used by religious groups?
Yes, as long as the buildings
are made available to other civic
organizations. The groups must
be subject to the same terms as
the other groups. ❑

Supreme Court
Hears Case

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