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College forbids sale of ‘Christmas’ trees, OK with ‘holiday’ trees

By   /   November 27, 2012  /   No Comments

MORGANTON, N.C. (WordNews.org) Nov. 27, 2012 — Western Piedmont Community College officials forced a student club to stop selling “Christmas” trees and start selling “holiday” trees for a charity.

A college official told the club: “We cannot market your trees in association solely with a Christian event.”

The  sent a letter to the college today urging officials to change their course rather than change the name of the trees being sold.

“It’s ridiculous that anyone would have to think twice about using the word ‘Christmas’ as part of a Christmas tree sale,” said Legal Counsel Matt Sharp. “Not only is it perfectly constitutional to use the word ‘Christmas,’ it is unconstitutional to prohibit use of it. This is another perfect example of the immense misunderstanding that far too many college officials have about what the First Amendment truly requires.”

The student-led BEST Society is sponsoring the sale, which ends on Dec. 6. The club completed the necessary paperwork to have the event announced through numerous means on campus. The text they requested, “The BEST Society will be selling Christmas Trees,” appeared correctly initially in late October, but after a few days, the text was changed to “The BEST Society will be selling Holiday Trees.”

“As a result of this forced changed to their advertisements,” the Alliance Defending Freedom letter explains, “the BEST Society has received complaints from community members, several of whom have indicated that they will not purchase trees from the group because of the change in wording. This has resulted in direct harm to the club’s fundraising activity, the proceeds of which are being used to support Angel Tree, an organization that provides Christmas gifts to children.”

The letter goes on to say that “the censorship of the BEST Society’s message, and the requirement that its advertisements use the phrase ‘holiday tree’ rather than Christmas Tree, is a violation of the constitutional rights of the club members.”

The letter asks the college to return the club’s original wording to the announcements wherever they appear so that no legal action will be necessary.

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