MARIETTA - The American Civil Liberties Union has filed a federal lawsuit seeking to force the Cobb County school board to remove disclaimers on evolution from thousands of middle and high school textbooks. <br>
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The suit was filed Wednesday in U.S. District Court in Atlanta, just one day before the board was to discuss whether teachers should be allowed to teach faith-based ideas along with evolution as explanation for the variety of life. <br>
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The stickers, placed in new science books this month after requests from parents opposed to evolution on religious grounds, say evolution is a theory, not fact, and should be critically considered. <br>
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Jeffrey Selman, the father of an elementary school pupil, initiated the lawsuit. He said placing advisories in science texts is an attempt to inject religion into public schools. <br>
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``It singles out evolution from all the scientific theories out there,'' Selman said. ``Why single out evolution? It has to be coming from a religious basis, and that violates the separation of church and state.'' <br>
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The board discussion Thursday night was to focus on whether to allow science teachers to cover opposing concepts, such as intelligent design, which argues that a ``higher intelligence'' is responsible for the breadth of life on Earth. <br>
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The lawsuit claims the disclaimers are a ``fundamentalist Christian expression'' that promotes religion in public education. <br>
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Though the printed labels use vague language, the intention is clear, said Michael Manely, a Marietta attorney who is representing Selman on behalf of the ACLU. <br>
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``What it does is promote the establishment of creationism in public schools,'' Manely said. ``Why are they singling out evolution? Because from a creationist's standpoint, they don't have a problem with the theory of gravity.'' <br>
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Some parents in the county feel differently. <br>
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Acworth resident Bruce Horacek, whose children graduated from Cobb schools, said students are not being told of the faults in evolution. ``You cannot prove or disprove that evolution or inert materials created the diversity we have,'' he said. ``Evolution and creationism are both philosophies.'' <br>
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The issue appeared before the school board in March, when several dozen parents asked that alternatives be taught. They presented a petition signed by 2,000 county residents, demanding accuracy in textbooks. <br>
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The board adopted the labels, which say: ``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.'' <br>
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School board chairman Curt Johnston said the concerns of the community need to be considered in Thursday's meeting. <br>
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``The whole purpose of this discussion is to try to clarify what can be taught and what should be taught,'' Johnston said. <br>
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Similar debates have occurred elsewhere. <br>
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Ohio is considering state science requirements that would allow teaching of alternatives, including intelligent design. Kansas adopted standards that struck references to evolution, then reversed that stance after a new state board was elected in response. <br>
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In Georgia, Clayton County put evolution disclaimers in its science books in 1996, but has since removed them. Alabama put stickers on all biology books about the same time.
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