Sunday, September 18, 2011
Flag display leads to suspension.
Flag display leads to suspension. A seventh-grade geography teacher in Lakewood Lakewood.1 City (1990 pop. 73,557), Los Angeles co., S Calif., a residential and industrial suburb of Long Beach; inc. 1954. Nearby are extensive aerospace, high-technology, and electronic industries.2 City (1990 pop. , Colorado'sCarmody Middle School was recently suspended sus��pend?v. sus��pend��ed, sus��pend��ing, sus��pendsv.tr.1. To bar for a period from a privilege, office, or position, usually as a punishment: suspend a student from school. with pay for refusing toremove flags displayed in his classroom. Eric Hamlin said that the flagsof China, Mexico and the United Nations were relevant to theintroductory geography unit he teaches at the start of each school year,but district officials felt that the actions violate a state law banningthe display of foreign flags on state property. After Hamlin received awritten reprimand REPRIMAND, punishment. The censure which in some cases a public office pronounces against an offender. 2. This species of punishment is used by legislative bodies to punish their members or others who have been guilty of some impropriety of conduct towards them. and the flags were still up the following day,Principal John Schalk escorted the teacher from the building. A district spokesperson explained that flags can be displayed aspart of specific lessons, but not for the duration of a six-week unit,as the teacher evidently intended. Hamlin said he has been flying flagsin the same manner for three years with no complaints, even putting upIraq and Palestinian Territories This article is about the Palestinian territories as a geopolitical phenomenon. For more on their geography, demographics and general history, see West Bank and Gaza Strip.The Palestinian territories flags at times. Although he receivedpermission to return to the classroom, Hamlin informed the district thathe would not return to Carmody Middle School, since his presence mightbe a distraction DistractionDivination (See OMEN.)Porlocka “person from Porlock” interrupted Coleridge while he was recollecting the dream on which he based “Kubla Khan”. [Br. Lit.: Poems of Coleridge in Magill IV, 756] in the wake of recent events. School officials agreedto try and find another teaching position for Hamlin within thedistrict. jeffcoweb.jeffco.k12.co.us
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