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Dover CARES sweeps election (Intelligent Design loses big)
York Daily Record ^ | 11/9/2005 | Michelle Starr

Posted on 11/08/2005 11:05:11 PM PST by jennyp

Dover CARES swept the race for school board Tuesday defeating board members who supported the curriculum change being challenged in federal court.

After months of fierce campaigning that included some mudslinging from both sides, new members of the board are Bernadette Reinking, Rob McIlvaine, Bryan Rehm, Terry Emig, Patricia Dapp, Judy McIlvaine, Larry Gurreri and Phil Herman.

The challengers defeated James Cashman, Alan Bonsell, Sherrie Leber, Ed Rowand, Eric Riddle, Ron Short, Sheila Harkins and Dave Napierskie. Results are not official until certified by the county.

“We’re still in shock because we were expecting to have some wins,” said Dapp, who won a two-year term. “We weren’t expecting to have all eight.”

Dapp said “we recognized very quickly that we were a very cohesive, well-working team. I think that is one of our many strengths of what we will bring to the board.”

Candidates weigh in

Board members Bonsell and Harkins, who had voted in favor of adding intelligent design into the ninth grade science curriculum, received the least amount of votes, with 2,469 and 2,466, respectively. Bonsell and Harkins did not return phone calls about the results Tuesday.

Reinking, who was running for a four-year term, received the most overall votes with 2,754.

“It’s a nice thing,” she said. “I’m very flattered and very humble about the whole thing.”

During the campaign, the eight Dover CARES candidates had questioned the incumbents’ truthfulness and fiscal responsibility, while the eight incumbents touted their achievements in keeping taxes in line and the ability to provide quality education.

Cashman, who was running for a four-year term, had said during the day Tuesday that “I expect to win, but it’s not a big celebratory thing.”

About the loss, Cashman said, “We put our effort into this and we tried to manage the school district as conservatively as we could. I have nothing to be ashamed about.”

Rehm said he believed the voters responded because of the challengers’ combined efforts. It wasn’t one thing. They went door-to-door, held public meetings and didn’t exclude anyone, said Rehm, who won a four-year seat.

A major topic in this year’s race was the 2004 curriculum change that added a statement about intelligent design to the ninth-grade science curriculum.

The elected board members oppose mentioning intelligent design in science class. Rehm was one of 11 parents who sued the board in U.S. Middle District Court. The trial concluded Friday and Judge John E. Jones III hopes to have a decision before the year’s end.

Effects on ID Case

Regardless of the election results, those six weeks of the trial have not been lost, according to attorneys on both sides.

“The suit goes on,” said plaintiffs’ attorney Steve Harvey of Pepper Hamilton. “The mere election of a new board does not change anything.”

Harvey and defense attorney Richard Thompson of Thomas More Law Center said Jones has a set of facts to use to determine his ruling.

Harvey said he did not want to speculate on the fallout of what the new board might do. Thompson gave several scenarios.

The new board could change the policy and determine how it will handle legal appeals. It could keep Thomas More or choose another firm if it wishes to continue the case to keep intelligent design in the curriculum.

If the judge rules against the board, Thompson said, the new board could decide not to fight and could therefore be stuck with the plaintiffs’ legal fees, as requested in the suit.

“What is done is done,” Reinking said about the court proceeding, “but to take it to the Supreme Court? To me that won’t be an issue.”

ACLU attorney Witold Walczak said if the board abandons the intelligent design statement, the plaintiffs want a court order stating the new board won’t re-institute it.

“It actually is a way to conclude the litigation,” Walczak said. “The parties sign essentially a contract that says they will stop the unconstitutional conduct.”

Outside ID

Though intelligent design has captured international attention, it was not the only issue in the election.

For example, Dapp said looking at the district budget is one of the new board’s first challenges.

Property taxes, fiscal responsibility, a teachers contract and full disclosure of board members’ actions arose during the campaign.

Roughly 200 teachers attended the board meeting Monday night to show their support for a new contract. Their old contract expired in June.

Sandi Bowser, president of the teachers union who lives outside of the district and didn’t vote for board members, said the union didn’t officially support one group, but the teachers who have been vocal supported Dover CARES.

“I think that the people who are working with Dover CARES have children in the district and are concerned about some of the things that are going on including intelligent design in the science classroom,” she said.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events; Philosophy; US: Pennsylvania
KEYWORDS: crevolist; evolution; intelligentdesign; notbreakingnews
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To: PatrickHenry

Thanks for the ping. Keep religeon out of science.


201 posted on 11/09/2005 12:37:56 PM PST by MonroeDNA (Look for the union label--on the bat crashing through your windshield!)
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To: highball
You call him a hero, I never said he was.

I did not call you a liar. I said your characterizations (based on what you wrote in that post to me) are not worth much. I wont spell it out for you.

For the record, it is not necessary to chose one or the other. Thats part of the 'gambit' here from the cult of cosmo-evo.

I don't know enough about the case, and the things I responded to were not about the case either, but internal to the dynamics on this forum.

Wolf
202 posted on 11/09/2005 12:41:21 PM PST by RunningWolf (tag line limbo)
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To: RightWingAtheist

I think Derbyshire is being too nice here. The IDers and Creationists are idealogical allies of the Left; there's no difference in their philosophy or policics; they just have differing labels. Both groups are out to destroy scientific inquiry. The Scientolgists, New-Agers, etc. are just wannabes.


203 posted on 11/09/2005 12:46:21 PM PST by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch ist der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: RunningWolf

So you're not actually reading about the case at hand, you just like to hang out here and make snarky remarks about other posters?

That says it all. Sheesh.


204 posted on 11/09/2005 12:48:00 PM PST by highball ("I find that the harder I work, the more luck I seem to have." -- Thomas Jefferson)
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To: highball
make snarky remarks about other posters

We all thought you had cornered that market.

Wolf
205 posted on 11/09/2005 12:53:03 PM PST by RunningWolf (tag line limbo)
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To: Ichneumon
ID = Insouciant Dishonesty?
206 posted on 11/09/2005 12:54:02 PM PST by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch ist der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: RunningWolf

LOL!

I'm willing to debate you on the issue at any time, if you're actually interested in doing so.


207 posted on 11/09/2005 12:57:07 PM PST by highball ("I find that the harder I work, the more luck I seem to have." -- Thomas Jefferson)
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To: Ichneumon

With the votes hanging around the 50% mark, losing all eight is a 1 to 255 shot. You'd make more money betting on the double zero.


208 posted on 11/09/2005 12:57:11 PM PST by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch ist der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: Quark2005

209 posted on 11/09/2005 12:59:46 PM PST by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch ist der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: Thatcherite

Of course, as they have been shown willing to lie under oath about one thing, why assume they are telling the truth about fincances. (Same comment I have been making about The Clintons for over a decade now.)


210 posted on 11/09/2005 1:10:20 PM PST by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch ist der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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Vox-populi-PLACEMARKER


211 posted on 11/09/2005 1:37:01 PM PST by jennyp (WHAT I'M READING NOW: Art of Unix Programming by Raymond)
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To: Gumlegs
That'll teach me to post before reading the other answers.

Great minds think alike....

;-)

212 posted on 11/09/2005 1:44:48 PM PST by longshadow
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To: Ichneumon
The fact that Lemaitre himself was religious is completely beside the point, although for some reason you keep trying to make it the point, despite the fact that no one else is.

I think the salient point is that Lamaitre derived the BBT from the combination of Hubble's red-shift data and the field equations of GR, not from some religious document or doctrine. The fact that he also found it secularly satisfying is a coincidence, one to which the theory's genesis is clearly unrelated. In short, Lamaitre proposed the BBT because the SCIENTIFIC observational evidence and theorectical calculations demanded and supported it.

In the case of the Dove Case, the tell-tale finger prints of religiously, not scientifically, derived Creationism was all over the "suggested reading material," the board members' motives, and the legal team's impetus to find a school board dumb enough to be their jurisprudential guinea pig.

213 posted on 11/09/2005 2:04:14 PM PST by longshadow
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To: Doctor Stochastic

Looks like I got my Savages confused!! Thanks for clearing that up...


214 posted on 11/09/2005 2:05:38 PM PST by Quark2005 (Science aims to elucidate. Pseudoscience aims to obfuscate.)
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To: Quark2005
1720 could very well be a huge number if the error bar on 1 is big enough! Teach the controversy!

It is well established that 1=2 for very large values of "1."

"1" -- a Constant in Crisis! Teach the Controversy!

215 posted on 11/09/2005 2:09:33 PM PST by longshadow
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To: jennyp

ID is to biology what socialism is to economics.


216 posted on 11/09/2005 2:15:15 PM PST by muir_redwoods (Free Sirhan Sirhan, after all, the bastard who killed Mary Jo Kopechne is walking around free)
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To: muir_redwoods

Creation science is to science what Ebonics is to English.


217 posted on 11/09/2005 2:20:32 PM PST by PatrickHenry (Reality is a harsh mistress. No rationality, no mercy)
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To: RunningWolf
Behe admitted under cross examination that astrology meets his definition of a scientific theory.

The only way he can get his garbage accepted as "scientific theory" is to change the definition.

218 posted on 11/09/2005 2:45:30 PM PST by jess35
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To: RadioAstronomer

You should know it is no longer the Beagles Barf. It is now the Cabal Corral.


219 posted on 11/09/2005 3:02:08 PM PST by furball4paws (One of the last Evil Geniuses, or the first of their return.)
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To: furball4paws; RadioAstronomer

Just a name change. Same management, same great food (ptui!)


220 posted on 11/09/2005 3:34:53 PM PST by furball4paws (One of the last Evil Geniuses, or the first of their return.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 219 | View Replies]


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