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CA: Judge rules UC system bias suit can proceed
North County Times ^ | 8/9/06 | Jennifer Kabbany

Posted on 08/09/2006 10:28:22 AM PDT by NormsRevenge

MURRIETA ---- A lawsuit claiming the UC system discriminates against Christian beliefs by rejecting some private Christian schools' courses for college-entrance credit may proceed, a federal judge ruled Tuesday, rejecting the university's argument that the case should be tossed.

U.S. District Judge S. James Otero's ruling states that claims in the lawsuit are worth pursuing. The suit was filed by Calvary Chapel Christian School in Murrieta, six of its students and the Association of Christian Schools International, which represents more than 4,000 religious schools nationwide.

"Members of the Supreme Court have articulated on various occasions that a university's decisions regarding admissions policies deserve a measure of sanctity," Otero stated. "However ... the freedom that a university enjoys to determine its own admissions policies is not without limit."

On Tuesday, the Murrieta students' attorney hailed the ruling as a crucial victory validating the lawsuit, while a spokesman for the University of California system dismissed the decision as "no surprise" and said the 10-campus university system should prevail in the final verdict.

The lawsuit contends the system discriminates against Christian schools by rejecting some courses for college-entrance credit because they include or are based upon Christian viewpoints, citing several English, science and elective courses rejected by the system in the last few years.

Part of those claims include that the UC system is denying some science courses that use popular Christian science textbooks because its officials don't approve of the fact that they espouse creationism, or the belief that a supreme being created the universe.

UC system officials have maintained that there is no such bias against Christian academics and that they just want students admitted into the system to be prepared for its academic rigors.

"We will vigorously defend ourselves," Ricardo Duran, a spokesman for the UC system, said in response to the ruling. "We believe we have not been discriminating and we believe that ultimately we'll prevail because the facts are on our side."

Murrieta attorney Robert Tyler, who is representing Calvary Chapel Christian School and its six students, hailed the ruling as a "great initial victory."

"The facts of the case as presented so far reveal the UC school system has engaged in discriminating against Christian schools based on their viewpoints and not based on objective standards," Tyler said, adding that he expects the case to go to trial in six months to a year.

None of the six students named in the lawsuit was available for comment Tuesday, Tyler said.

He said that of those six students, two graduated in June, one of whom went to a private Christian university and another who went to a junior college to take part in their basketball program. The remaining four are applying to the UC system, he said.

The UC system's Duran said that nine seniors from Calvary Chapel Christian School in Murrieta were enrolled in UC universities and start classes this fall. He said their enrollment illustrates that the school's students have access to the system, which its officials say is the largest public research university system in the world.

The crux of the lawsuit centers around several rejected courses submitted by Calvary Chapel for credit into the UC system, such as "Christianity's Influence on America," which a UC document cited as "too narrow (and) too specialized" as reasons for not approving the course.

Another Calvary Chapel course rejected by the UC system was "Christianity and Morality in American Literature." The class was described in documents as an "intensive study in textual criticism aimed at elevating the ability of students to engage literary works." Authors students would have studied included Mark Twain, Edgar Allen Poe, Benjamin Franklin and C.S. Lewis.

Otero summarized the lawsuit by stating that it argues the UC system is violating the school's and students' First Amendment rights through "content regulation, viewpoint discrimination, prescription of orthodoxy and chilling of rights."

"Fundamentally, the government is forbidden from engaging in regulation of speech based on its substantive content or its message," he stated.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Government; US: California
KEYWORDS: academia; antitheist; churchandstate

1 posted on 08/09/2006 10:28:23 AM PDT by NormsRevenge
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To: LouAvul

fyi .. It's not a tentative ruling anymore.

--



Judge tentatively rules Christian students can sue UC system ^
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1657125/posts
Posted by LouAvul
On News/Activism ^ 06/28/2006 8:52:07 AM PDT · 4 replies · 389+ views


2 posted on 08/09/2006 10:29:18 AM PDT by NormsRevenge (Semper Fi ......Help the "Pendleton 8' and families -- http://www.freerepublic.com/~normsrevenge/)
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To: NormsRevenge

'"Fundamentally, the government is forbidden from engaging in regulation of speech based on its substantive content or its message," he stated.'

That doesn't many any crackpot can make up a half-baked theory about the origins of life on earth and expect to earn university credits for it.


3 posted on 08/09/2006 10:31:47 AM PDT by Sols
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To: NormsRevenge
Would be interested to see if courses like "Gays through History" or "Womym reacting the Evil American Government" or "Stonewall - The Greatest Revolution of All" were given transfer credits...
4 posted on 08/09/2006 10:32:11 AM PDT by 2banana (My common ground with terrorists - They want to die for Islam, and we want to kill them.)
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To: 2banana

I thought about transferring within my state university system and conctated the new school about what credits they might honor. Despite being within the same public university system within the same state, I couldn't get half of my more specialized credits and electives transferred. Usually only core curriculum classes seem to transfer properly.


5 posted on 08/09/2006 10:35:27 AM PDT by Sols
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To: All

Isn't UW Milwaukee who will be giving college credits for '9/11 was an inside job conspiracies'?

This ruling, though isn't about college credit. It's about the content of high school courses, and that UC system is denying admission based purely on the fact that Christian ideology is interjected into course studies.


6 posted on 08/09/2006 10:57:10 AM PDT by Madeleine Ward
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To: Sols

Ahem. If you'd bothered to read the post, you'd know that there weren't any classes mentioned that even pertain to the question of origins. Go peddle your crevo flame war somewhere else.


7 posted on 08/09/2006 2:02:14 PM PDT by HKMk23 (TAG! You're IT!)
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To: HKMk23

"Part of those claims include that the UC system is denying some science courses that use popular Christian science textbooks because its officials don't approve of the fact that they espouse creationism, or the belief that a supreme being created the universe."


8 posted on 08/14/2006 10:31:44 AM PDT by Sols
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To: Sols

I don't know how I missed that the first time around; I'd have sworn up and down I'd read the whole thing. Sorry. I apologize unreservedly and stand corrected.

This is fallout of the collision of worlds; the white-hot interface between competeing philosophies, each vying for universal acceptance as fact.


9 posted on 08/14/2006 1:56:52 PM PDT by HKMk23 (Just 8 shopping days left before 8-22-2006!)
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