High schools may change dress code The...
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High schools may change dress code
The Huntington Beach Union High School District on Tuesday will
consider revising its dress code policy to allow students’ religious
expression.
Trustee Matthew Harper brought the agenda item forward and
suggested the revision in response to a group of Fountain Valley High
School seniors who were left out of their senior picture last year
because of their clothes, Harper said.
A group of students reportedly assembled to form a religious
message in the photo, which Harper believes is not punishable under
the district’s dress code.
Students wore T-shirts that, when put together, formed a crucifix
and spelled out “Jesus [heart] you.”
“My understanding is that they were told to move to the back of
the photo, then to scatter, then to turn their T-shirts inside out or
get another shirt,” Harper said. “No student was given suspension or
other such punishment. Instead, the interference from the school
administrators led to the exclusion of some students from the senior
class photo.”
Harper is proposing that the dress code be revised to articulate
students’ religious clothing rights so administrators have no
question in the future about how to handle a similar situation.
The proposed addition to the dress code is as follows:
“The Huntington Beach Union High School District shall not
restrict students from wearing clothing that is worn in response to,
and as a physical expression of, a sincerely held religious belief.
Such clothing includes, but is not limited to, headwear, jewelry, and
clothing with religious text or symbols.”
There will be a separate agenda item Tuesday that will decide
whether to retake Fountain Valley High School’s senior class photo.
Marina student and dog are tops
Marina High School’s Leila Bicos and her dog Tia competed
Wednesday in the Eukanuba National Championship, a dog show in Long
Beach that requires junior handlers to carry at least a B average.
Leila, 16, won three prizes with the Rhodesian Ridgeback at a Cal
State Long Beach dog show in June, including the prestigious Best In
Specialty Show. She was also awarded as Best Junior Handler and along
with Tia won Best in Sweepstakes. Leila was the youngest competitor
ever to win all three awards, and is now the 12th-ranked junior
handler in the country for all 25 hound breeds and second-ranked for
Rhodesian Ridgebacks.
Competing against 89 of the best junior handlers in the country
Wednesday, Leila faced the second- and third-ranked dogs in the
nation for her breed.
Leila maintains a 4.2 grade point average at Marina while
competing in some of the nation’s most prestigious dog shows. She and
Tia will compete in the Westminster Dog Show in February.
Leila also plays field hockey on Marina’s varsity team and
participates in the Futures program, the Olympic training camp for
field hockey, rides and jumps horses at the Huntington Beach Riding
School two or three times a week and has volunteered at the
Therapeutic Riding Center.
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