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ACLU Hopes 'I Heart Boobies!' Case Can Set School Standard

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Monday, February 25, 2013   

PHILADELPHIA - Bracelets worn by two Pennsylvania middle school girls to promote breast cancer awareness are at the heart of a federal court case being heard in Philadelphia. In 2010, 13-year-old Brianna Hawk and 12-year-old Kayla Martinez were suspended from school in Easton after wearing bracelets that read, "I (Heart) Boobies! (KEEP A BREAST)." The bracelets, which are distributed by the Keep A Breast Foundation through local stores, had been popular with Easton Area Middle School pupils since the beginning of the 2010-2011 school year.

However, on October 27, 2010, the day before the Easton School District's Breast Cancer Awareness Day, the school principals announced that the bracelets would no longer be allowed in the schools.

Mary Catherine Roper, an attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union, which is representing the girls, suggested that Easton education officials had over-reacted.

"We think the administrators are simply mistaken about the word 'boobies'. Nobody other than the school's administrators think that's a bad word; it's simply the word young girls use to refer to their breasts."

Last week, lawyers for both sides were in federal court in Philadelphia.

School district officials argue that the ban on the bracelets was designed to encourage decorum in school and discourage misbehavior.

Roper pointed out that it took two months after the bracelets appeared for the district to take action, and in that time, students largely rose to the challenge of taking the bracelets for what they were.

"You didn't have boys running around saying foul things about girls' boobies and so on, which is obviously the concern of the school administrators."

Roper said that, with the suspension of the girls now far in the rear-view mirror, she's hopeful the court will make a decision that sets a tone for school districts handling this type of situation in the future.

"There aren't a lot of cases; there isn't a lot of guidance for school administrators, and so this is an opportunity for the court to actually be very helpful, and I think that is clearly what they're focused on," the ACLU lawyer said.

The entire 14-judge court is hearing the case. There's no word on when a ruling may come.






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