The New York Times
September 26, 2005
A Web of Faith, Law and Science in Evolution Suit
By LAURIE GOODSTEIN
DOVER, Pa., Sept. 23 - Sheree Hied, a mother of five who believes that
God created the earth and its creatures, was grateful when her school
board here voted last year to require high school biology classes to
hear about "alternatives" to evolution, including the theory known as
intelligent design.
But 11 other parents in Dover were outraged enough to sue the school
board and the district, contending that intelligent design - the idea
that living organisms are so inexplicably complex, the best explanation
is that a higher being designed them - is a Trojan horse for religion
in the public schools.
With the new political empowerment of religious conservatives,
challenges to evolution are popping up with greater frequency in
schools, courts and legislatures. But the Dover case, which begins
Monday in Federal District Court in Harrisburg, is the first direct
challenge to a school district that has tried to mandate the teaching
of intelligent design.
What happens here could influence communities across the country that
are considering whether to teach intelligent design in the public
schools, and the case, regardless of the verdict, could end up before
the Supreme Court.
Dover, a rural, mostly blue-collar community of 22,000 that is 20 miles
south of Harrisburg, had school board members willing to go to the mat
over issue. But people here are well aware that they are only the
excuse for a much larger showdown in the culture wars.
"It was just our school board making one small decision," Mrs. Hied
said, "but it was just received with such an uproar."
For Mrs. Hied, a meter reader, and her husband, Michael, an office
manager for a local bus and transport company, the Dover school board's
argument - that teaching intelligent design is a free-speech issue -
has a strong appeal.
"I think we as Americans, regardless of our beliefs, should be able to
freely access information, because people fought and died for our
freedoms," Mrs. Hied said over a family dinner last week at their home,
where the front door is decorated with a small bell and a plaque
proclaiming, "Let Freedom Ring."
But in a split-level house on the other side of Main Street, at a desk
flanked by his university diplomas, Steven Stough was on the Internet
late the other night, keeping track of every legal maneuver in the
case. Mr. Stough, who teaches life science to seventh graders in a
nearby district, is one of the 11 parents suing the Dover district. For
him the notion of teaching "alternatives" to evolution is a hoax.
"You can dress up intelligent design and make it look like science, but
it just doesn't pass muster," said Mr. Stough, a Republican whose idea
of a fun family vacation is visiting fossil beds and natural history
museums. "In science class, you don't say to the students, 'Is there
gravity, or do you think we have rubber bands on our feet?' "
Evolution finds that life evolved over billions of years through the
processes of mutation and natural selection, without the need for
supernatural interventions. It is the foundation of biological science,
with no credible challenges within the scientific community. Without
it, the plaintiffs say, students could never make sense of topics as
varied as AIDS and extinction.
Advocates on both sides of the issue have lined up behind the case,
often calling it Scopes II, in reference to the 1925 Scopes Monkey
Trial that was the last century's great face-off over evolution.
On the evolutionists' side is a legal team put together by the American
Civil Liberties Union and Americans United for Separation of Church and
State. These groups want to put intelligent design itself on trial and
discredit it so thoroughly that no other school board would dare
authorize teaching it.
Witold J. Walczak, legal director of the A.C.L.U. of Pennsylvania, said
the plaintiffs would call six experts in history, theology, philosophy
of science and science to show that no matter the perspective,
"intelligent design is not science because it does not meet the ground
rules of science, is not based on natural explanations, is not
testable."
On the intelligent design side is the Thomas More Law Center, a
nonprofit Christian law firm that says its mission is "to be the sword
and shield for people of faith" in cases on abortion, school prayer and
the Ten Commandments. The center was founded by Thomas Monaghan, the
Domino's Pizza founder, a conservative Roman Catholic who also founded
Ave Maria University and the Ave Maria School of Law; and by Richard
Thompson, a former Michigan prosecutor who tried Dr. Jack Kevorkian for
performing assisted suicides.
"This is an attempt by the A.C.L.U. to really intimidate this
small-town school board," said Mr. Thompson, who will defend the Dover
board at the trial, "because the theory of intelligent design is
starting to gain some resonance among school boards across the
country."
The defense plans to introduce leading design theorists like Michael J.
Behe, a professor of biochemistry at Lehigh University, and education
experts who will testify that "allowing students to be aware of the
controversy is good pedagogy because it develops critical thinking,"
Mr. Thompson said.
The case, Kitzmiller et al v. Dover Area School District, will be
decided by Judge John E. Jones III of the United States District Court,
who was nominated by President Bush in 2002 and confirmed by a Senate
vote of 96 to 0. The trial is expected to last six weeks and to draw
news coverage from around the world.
The legal battle came to a head on Oct. 18 last year when the Dover
school board voted 6 to 3 to require ninth-grade biology students to
listen to a brief statement saying that there was a controversy over
evolution, that intelligent design is a competing theory and that if
they wanted to learn more the school library had the textbook "Of
Pandas and People: the Central Question of Biological Origins." The
book is published by an intelligent design advocacy group, the
Foundation for Thought and Ethics, based in Texas.
Angry parents like Mr. Stough, Tammy Kitzmiller, and Bryan and Christy
Rehm contacted the A.C.L.U. and Americans United. The 11 plaintiffs are
a diverse group, unacquainted before the case, who say that parents,
and not the school, should be in charge of their children's religious
education.
Mr. Rehm, a father of five and a science teacher who formerly taught in
Dover, said the school board had long been pressing science teachers to
alter their evolution curriculum, even requiring teachers to watch a
videotape about "gaps in evolution theory" during an in-service
training day in the spring of 2004.
School board members were told by their lawyer, Mr. Thompson, not to
talk to the news media. "We've told them, anything they say can be used
against them," Mr. Thompson said.
The Supreme Court ruled in 1987 that teaching creation science in
public schools was unconstitutional because it was based on religion.
So the plaintiffs will try to prove that intelligent design is
creationism in a new package. Richard Katskee, assistant legal director
of Americans United, said the "Pandas" textbook only substituted
references to "creationism" with "intelligent design" in more recent
editions.
Mr. Thompson said his side would prove that intelligent design was not
creationism because it did not mention God or the Bible and never
posited the creator's identity.
"It's clear they are two different theories," Mr. Thompson said.
"Creationism normally starts with the Holy Scripture, the Book of
Genesis, then you develop a scientific theory that supports it, while
intelligent design looks at the same kind of empirical data that any
scientist looks at," and concludes that complex mechanisms in nature
"appear designed because it is designed."
A twist in the case is that a leading proponent of intelligent design,
the Discovery Institute, based in Seattle, removed one of its staff
members from the Dover school board's witness list and opposed the
board's action from the start.
"We thought it was a bad idea because we oppose any effort to require
students to learn about intelligent design because we feel that it
politicizes what should be a scientific debate," said John G. West, a
senior fellow at the institute. However, Professor Behe, a fellow at
the institute, is expected to be the board's star witness.
Parents in Dover appear to be evenly split on the issue. School board
runoffs are in November, with seven candidates opposing the current
policy facing seven incumbents. Among the candidates is Mr. Rehm, the
former Dover science teacher and a plaintiff. He said opponents had
slammed doors in his face when he campaigned and performed a "monkey
dance" when he passed out literature at the recent firemen's fair.
But he agrees with parents on the other side that the fuss over
evolution has obscured more pressing educational issues like school
financing, low parent involvement and classes that still train students
for factory jobs as local plants are closing.
"There's no way to have a winner here," Mr. Rehm said. "The community
has already lost, period, by becoming so divided."
* Copyright 2005 The New York Times Company
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