NationStates Jolt Archive


Sanity returns to PA...

Lt_Cody
10-11-2005, 00:05
Link (http://www.nytimes.com/glogin?URI=http://www.nytimes.com/2005/11/09/national/)
November 9, 2005
School Board
Evolution Slate Outpolls Rivals
By LAURIE GOODSTEIN

All eight members up for re-election to the Pennsylvania school board that had been sued for introducing the teaching of intelligent design as an alternative to evolution in biology class were swept out of office yesterday by a slate of challengers who campaigned against the intelligent design policy.

Among the losing incumbents on the Dover, Pa., board were two members who testified in favor of the intelligent design policy at a recently concluded federal trial on the Dover policy: the chairwoman, Sheila Harkins, and Alan Bonsell.

The election results were a repudiation of the first school district in the nation to order the introduction of intelligent design in a science class curriculum. The policy was the subject of a trial in Federal District Court that ended last Friday. A verdict by Judge John E. Jones III is expected by early January.

"I think voters were tired of the trial, they were tired of intelligent design, they were tired of everything that this school board brought about," said Bernadette Reinking, who was among the winners.

The election will not alter the facts on which the judge must decide the case. But if the intelligent design policy is defeated in court, the new school board could refuse to pursue an appeal. It could also withdraw the policy, a step that many challengers said they intended to take.

"We are all for it being discussed, but we do not want to see it in biology class," said Judy McIlvaine, a member of the winning slate. "It is not a science."

The vote counts were close, but of the 16 candidates the one with the fewest votes was Mr. Bonsell, the driving force behind the intelligent design policy. Testimony at the trial revealed that Mr. Bonsell had initially insisted that creationism get equal time in the classroom with evolution.

One incumbent, James Cashman, said he would contest the vote because a voting machine in one precinct recorded no votes for him, while others recorded hundreds.

He said that school spending and a new teacher contract, not intelligent design, were the determining issues. "We ran a very conservative school board, and obviously there are people who want to see more money spent," he said.

One board member, Heather Geesey, was not up for re-election.

The school board voted in October 2004 to require ninth grade biology students to hear a brief statement at the start of the semester saying that there were "gaps" in the theory of evolution, that intelligent design was an alternative and that students could learn more about it by reading a textbook "Of Pandas and People," available in the high school library.

The board was sued by 11 Dover parents who contended that intelligent design was religious creationism in new packaging, and that the board was trying to impose its religion on students. The parents were represented by lawyers from the American Civil Liberties Union, Americans United for Separation of Church and State, and a private law firm, Pepper Hamilton LLP.


The Forces of Science have prevailed :D
Kecibukia
10-11-2005, 00:12
Who was it that posted pre-'97 versions of "of Pandas and People" that referenced creationists?
The Jovian Moons
10-11-2005, 00:29
Why didn't Kansas follow us?
Free Soviets
10-11-2005, 00:29
Who was it that posted pre-'97 versions of "of Pandas and People" that referenced creationists?

that'd be me
http://forums.jolt.co.uk/showthread.php?t=453036

the silly bastards essentially did a find/replace command on their book as soon as the supreme court decided edwards v. aguillard in 1987, since that pretty much killed any chance of a creationist textbook making it into public school. so they thought "maybe a creationist textbook wearing a cheap suit will work".
Sumamba Buwhan
10-11-2005, 00:32
booyah! good to see!

in your face people who think the biblical account of the beginning of the universe is science
Free Soviets
10-11-2005, 00:38
The Forces of Science have prevailed :D

of course, the local paper probably helped, since their coverage of the trial has shown just how IDiotic both the school board members and the cdesign proponentsists are.
H N Fiddlebottoms VIII
10-11-2005, 00:46
Why didn't Kansas follow us?
Probably got lost along the way. Politics is never a straight line. It's a forest, and it's easy to become conffused and forget where logic comes in.
Lt_Cody
10-11-2005, 00:57
Why didn't Kansas follow us?
Midwestern yokels, can never tell what that bunch does next :D
The Lone Alliance
10-11-2005, 01:13
Thank goodness! A win for the seperation of Church and State.
Reformentia
10-11-2005, 01:15
of course, the local paper probably helped, since their coverage of the trial has shown just how IDiotic both the school board members and the cdesign proponentsists are.

You know, that might just catch on...