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Student's freedom of speech
Court Allows Student's Anti-Bush T-Shirt
Court Allows Student's Anti-Bush T-Shirt
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Friday, June 29, 2007
WASHINGTON, (AP) --
Putting its recent ruling on student speech into practice, the Supreme Court on Friday rejected a school district's appeal of a ruling that it violated a student's rights by censoring his anti-Bush T-shirt.
A seventh-grader from Vermont was suspended for wearing a shirt that bore images of cocaine and a martini glass — but also had messages calling President Bush a lying drunk driver who abused cocaine and marijuana, and the "chicken-hawk-in-chief" who was engaged in a "world domination tour."
After his suspension, Zachary Guiles returned to school with duct tape covering the offending images.
