Paul Weinbaum, a resident of the Las Cruces area, brought two separate suits under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claiming that Las Cruces, New Mexico (the “City”) and the Las Cruces Public School District (the “District”) have violated the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment by displaying, in various forms, three crosses on public property. 1 Weinbaum sought de *1022 claratory and injunctive relief in both suits, as well as damages and attorney’s fees.
The district court evaluated Weinbaum’s claims using the three-part test set forth in
Lemon v. Kurtzman,
In Appeal No. 06-2355, Weinbaum and Boyd argue that the district court erred because the City’s symbol has the effect of endorsing Christianity. In Appeal No. 07-2012, Weinbaum asserts that the purpose and effect of the District’s display of three crosses on its maintenance vehicles and in two pieces of District-sponsored artwork is to endorse Christianity; he also takes issue with the District’s written policy regulating religion in the District’s schools.
In support of their position, Plaintiffs-Appellants note that this court has, in the past, held unconstitutional city and county seals that included crosses. We did not, however, issue a per se rule in those cases. These two Las Cruces cases illustrate the folly of doing so. On the whole, Establishment Clause cases are predominantly fact-driven, and these cases are particularly sui generis. Here, the City’s name translates as “The Crosses” and, perhaps unsurprisingly, the City has opted to identify itself using a symbol that includes crosses. Derivatively, the District uses a symbol including crosses to identify its maintenance vehicles and also displays on District property two pieces of artwork that contain crosses. We recognize that a government’s display of the Latin or Christian cross, and especially three such crosses, raises legitimate Establishment Clause concerns. Nevertheless, we affirm the district court’s decisions because Las Cruces’s unique name and history and the record in this case adequately establish according to requisite standards that the City and District’s challenged symbols were not intended to endorse Christianity and do not have the effect of doing so.
1. Background
A. The Cross
The Christian or Latin cross — a cross with three equal arms and a longer foot— reminds Christians of Christ’s sacrifice for His people.
See Las Cruces,
The district court also briefly summarized the cross’s occasionally checkered history as a symbol; that is, the cross’s transformation- — in the eyes of many— from a symbol of Christ’s love to a symbol of Christian conquest. See id. Because of this legacy, the cross, while humbling, inspiring, or empowering to some, intimidates, inflames, or unnerves others.
B. The Parties
The Plaintiffs-Appellants in Appeal No. 06-2355, Paul Weinbaum and Martin Boyd, are residents of the City. 3 Both allege that they are “constantly forced to view the Las Cruces symbol.” They also aver that, because they are not Christian, the symbol offends, intimidates, and alienates them.
Defendants-Appellees in Appeal No. 06-2355 include the City, the individuals who compose the City’s governing body (the City Council -of Las Cruces), and the City’s Mayor. The City is about 225 miles nearly due south of Albuquerque, New Mexico. Las Cruces was founded in 1849, incorporated as a town in 1907, and then reincorporated as a city in 1946. The City is now New Mexico’s second largest.
' In the companion case, Appeal No. 07-2012, Weinbaum again appears as the plaintiff-appellant, although in this second appeal he proceeds
pro
se.
4
Weinbaum resides within the District and his daughter, Olivia, is enrolled in a District school.
See Las Cruces,
C. Origin of the Name “Las Cruces” 5
By 1598, El Camino Real de Tierra Adentro (“the Royal Road to the Interior *1024 Lands”) passed through the area where Las Cruces was eventually founded. However, because of the area’s aridity and the local Native Americans’ hostility, very few settlers inhabited the area until the late 1840s. By 1849, though, a village about fifteen miles north of present-day Las Cruces had become overcrowded. The mayordomo of that village sought the help of the U.S. Army in resettling some of his townspeople elsewhere. To alleviate the overcrowding, a U.S. Army Lieutenant, Delos Sackett, “laid out a grid of streets using a rawhide rope” at the site of present-day Las Cruces and thereby founded a new town.
Historians have offered two theories regarding the origin of that new town’s name, “Las Cruces.” Some have argued that the settlement came to be called “Las Cruces” because the Butterfield Overland Mail Route — a trail from San Antonio to California — crossed El Camino Real in present — day Las Cruces. As such, Las Cruces was the “crossing” point of the two major trails. In his expert report, however, Dr. Hunner convincingly contends that this account is flawed. Indeed, this account appears anachronistic because the Butterfield Trail did not pass through present-day Las Cruces until the 1850s, a few years after Las Cruces was named.
Instead, Dr. Hunner and other historians argue that the City’s name is rooted in the appearance of memorials to the victims of a series of massacres in the area. Dr. Hunner notes that, “[i]n a tradition that continues to this day, crosses have been placed in New Mexico at the site of tragic deaths.” Present-day Las Cruces and its surrounding area had a series of such deaths. 6 Thus, Susan Shelby Magoffin, a settler, described the Las Cruces area in a diary entry from February 1847: “Yesterday, we passed over the spot where a few years since a party of Apaches attacked Gen. Armijo as he returned from the Pass with a party of troops, and killed some fourteen of his men, the graves of whom, marked by a rude cross, are now seen.” By 1849, it seems, a “forest of crosses” stood in the area. Hence, the City’s founding as El Pueblo del Jardín de Las Cruces (“the City of the Garden of the Crosses”).
On the basis of this evidence, Dr. Hun-ner concludes that “the newly created town in 1849 was named after the crosses that marked the graves of the travelers on the historic trail.” Despite Dr. Hunner’s conclusions, Plaintiffs-Appellants persisted before the district court in claiming that “Las Cruces” can be translated as “the crossings.”
See Las Cruces,
D. The City’s Use of Crosses in its Symbol
In the suit giving rise to Appeal No. 06-2355, the Plaintiffs-Appellants challenge the City’s official symbol (the “symbol” or “seal”). See Att. A. The symbol consists of three interlocking crosses surrounded by a sun symbol. The center cross is white and slightly taller than the two outside, blue crosses.
Prior to 1946, however, the City’s seal depicted a bunch of grapes. Dr. Hunner “found no accounts of how the city chose three crosses for its logo.” Nonetheless, his report details what he was able to uncover about the gradual evolution of the City’s symbol and seal. 7
However it originated, the symbol is currently used as the City’s official seal. As such, the symbol appears on Las Cruces public property, including signs, flags, buildings (such as City Hall and the City library), official uniforms (such as those of the City’s police and firefighters), and vehicles. Moreover, the symbol appears on public documents including the City’s letterhead, notices, maps, brochures, and advertisements. In some cases, the words “City of Las Cruces — For Official Use Only” attend the symbol. The City expended public monies on both the development and distribution of the symbol.
Other entities in Las Cruces have also adopted crosses as part of their trade dress. For example, the Chamber of Commerce adopted a symbol with three crosses in 1970, explaining: “The three crosses were joined at the ends of the transverse bars and at the top of the uprights to combine forever the three cultures basic to the area-Indian, Latin, and Anglo.” Many businesses in the area similarly include three crosses in their logos.
D. The District’s Display of Crosses
In the litigation underlying Appeal No. 07-2012, Weinbaum challenged (1) the symbol that appears on the District’s maintenance vehicles, see Att. B; (2) a sculpture located outside the District’s Sports Complex, see Att. C; (3) a mural located within Booker T. Washington Elementary (“BTW Elementary”), a District-run school, see Att. D; and (4) the District’s Policy #424, which expounds the District’s stance on “Religion In The Schools,” see Att. E.
1. The Maintenance Vehicle Symbol
As noted above, the City’s 1965 Annual Report bore the same symbol that now appears on the District’s maintenance vehicles.
See
App. B. The district court found that the District has marked its maintenance vehicles with the symbol
*1026
since at least 1969.
8
LCPS II,
2. The Sports Complex Sculpture
The District’s regional sports complex features a multi-purpose stadium that seats over 10,000 people. Just a few years after the stadium’s completion, the District’s Local Selection Committee, in conjunction with New Mexico Arts in Public Places Program, solicited designs for a sculpture that would decorate the south exterior wall of the complex.
See LCPS I,
Bird entitled her sculpture “Unitas, For-titudo, Excellentia” (“Unity, Strength, Excellence”).
Id.
at 1123-24. The artwork features a rusty steel ring with a diameter of 7.5 feet in which an arching stainless steel bar intersects three vertical stainless steel bars of varying lengths.
See id.
at 1124;
see also
App. C. The sculpture’s title is inscribed in capital letters along the bottom portion of the steel ring.
LCPS I,
3. The Mural at Booker T. Washington Elementary
Weinbaum also challenges a mural located at BTW Elementary.
See
App. E. A grant from the U.S. Department of Education’s 21st Century Community Learning Centers program funded the mural. Between 1998 and 2000, this program disbursed federal grants to school districts to encourage educational projects involving student artwork.
See LCPS II,
*1027 Under BTW Elementary’s grant, certain students participated in an after-school program, the Safe After School Program, run by a local non-profit. Third, fourth, and fifth grade participants in the program designed the mural with the help of a New Mexican artist named Ken Wolverton. See id. Wolverton led a brain-storming session with the students, who then decided on the images and materials for the mural. Id. Wolverton then helped the children organize their ideas and transpose their artwork onto the mural’s ceramic tiles. Id.
The mural includes five tiles.
Id.
at 1190. The middle panel depicts three wooden crosses arranged in front of mountains resembling the Organ Mountains, a local topographical feature.
See id.; see also
App. D. The panel to the left of the middle panel portrays chiles, a chile field, and, again, the Organ Mountains.
See LCPS II,
Prior to designing the mural, the students decided on where to locate the mural. The students opted for a prominent place in BTW Elementary’s hallways. Id. An explanatory plaque credits the 21st Century Community Learning Center for funding and attributes the mural’s design to the Safe After School Program’s students “with the visual artist Ken Wolver-ton.” 11 Id.
k- Policy #
Lastly, the district court construed Weinbaum’s pro se pleadings to allege that certain elements of District Policy # 424 (the “Policy”), “RELIGION IN THE SCHOOLS,” are unconstitutional and that the District applied the Policy unconstitutionally.
The Policy governs the role of religion in the District’s school system. It begins by stating that “[pjublic schools have the responsibility to teach about religion but shall neither actively sponsor nor interfere with religions.” See App. E. Thereafter, the Policy incorporates the three prongs of Supreme Court’s Lemon test as a set of guidelines. Id. The Policy comprehensively addresses the various legal limitations and responsibilities that regulate the role of religion in the curriculum, the observance of religious holidays, and the depiction of religious symbols. Additionally, the Policy provides that “[r]eligious symbols may be displayed or used as a teaching [sic] resource provided no effort is made to impose any particular beliefs which may be associated with such symbols. They may be used as examples of a culture and/or a specific religious heritage.” Id.
F. The District Court’s Opinions
In the City symbol case, the court exhaustively explicated the history of the Latin cross as a symbol, the City’s history, and the City’s use of the contested symbol. With this factual foundation settled, the court turned to the
Lemon
test, as shaped by subsequent Supreme Court cases. First, the district court held that the City’s secular justifications for using its symbol
*1028
were persuasive because the symbol “literally reflects the name [of the City].”
Las Cruces,
In the companion case, the district court conducted a very similar analysis, but factored in the school context. The court ultimately granted the District summary judgment on the issue of whether the District’s display of the Sports Complex sculpture violates the Establishment Clause.
See LCPS I,
Weinbaum appeals the court’s grants of summary judgment in both cases, as well as its post-trial decisions. In addition, Weinbaum’s pro se brief in No. 07-2012 asserts that the district court was biased against him and identifies a series of decisions by the district court that Weinbaum believes were erroneous.
II. Discussion
A. Jurisdiction
As a threshold matter, Article III requires that the Plaintiffs-Appellants have standing to bring these cases.
See O’Connor v. Washburn Univ.,
416 F.3d
1216,
1222 (10th Cir.2005). The district court concluded that Plaintiffs-Appellants had standing.
See Las Cruces,
“To demonstrate standing, a plaintiff must allege actual or threatened personal injury, fairly traceable to the defendant’s unlawful conduct and likely to be redressed by a favorable decision of the court.”
Foremaster v. City of St. George,
Here, Plaintiffs-Appellants allege that the City’s use of its symbol “directly affects [them] because the use is conspicuous, resulting in direct, personal contact with [them].” Similarly, in his complaint against the District, Weinbaum alleged that “[t]he
constant exposure
to the typical three Latin crosses found on [District] ... property is a constant reminder to [him] and his child that they are less that [sic] fully accepted in the community and in the schools.” These facts suffice to show an injury in fact under
O’Con-nor. See also Reynoldson v. Shillinger,
B. Standard of Review
We review
de novo
a “district court’s findings of constitutional fact” and its “ultimate conclusions” regarding a First Amendment challenge.
See Fleming v. Jefferson County Sch. Dist.,
With respect to the district court’s grants of summary judgment to the City and the District, we must ensure that “there is no genuine issue as to any material fact” and that the City is “entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R.CrvP. 56(c). We “view the evidence and draw reasonable inferences therefrom in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.”
Grace United Methodist Church v. City of Cheyenne,
Lastly, in considering Appeal No. 07-2012, we must “construe[ ] liberally” Wein-baum’s
pro se
pleadings.
Hall v. Bellmon,
C. The First Amendment’s Establishment Clause
The first clause of the First Amendment provides, “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion....” U.S. Const, amend. I. This substantive limitation applies also to the “legislative power of the States and then-political subdivisions” as a result of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Santa Fe Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Doe,
*1030
Despite scattered signals to the contrary,
14
the touchstone for Establishment Clause analysis remains the tripartite test set out in
Lemon. See Utah Gospel Mission,
This court “interpret^] the purpose and effect prongs of
Lemon
in light of Justice O’Connor’s endorsement test.”
O’Connor,
To sum up, the hybrid
Lemon
/endorsement test has three prongs.
See O’Connor,
Applying the first two prongs involves an objective inquiry. In deciding whether the government’s
purpose
was improper, a court must view the conduct through the eyes of an “ ‘objective observer,’ one who takes account of the traditional external signs that show up in the ‘text, legislative history, and implementation of the statute,’ or comparable official act.”
McCreary,
We must also consider the government s secular justification for its challenged conduct when applying the purpose prong.
See Utah Gospel Mission,
Similarly, the “effect” prong looks through the eyes of an objective observer who is aware of the purpose, context, and history of the symbol. The objective or reasonable observer is kin to the fictitious “reasonably prudent person” of tort law.
See Gaylor,
*1032
The school context changes these objective inquiries only slightly. Because “attendance is involuntary” and children may be impressionable, “[t]he Court has been particularly vigilant” in ensuring that schools comply with the Establishment Clause.
Edwards v. Aguillard,
With this in mind, we must conjure a slightly different objective observer for purposes of challenges to a school district’s conduct. The Supreme Court has in one case considered an Establishment Clause challenge from the perspective of “an objective Santa Fe High School student,”
see Santa Fe,
In addressing this issue, the district court below relied on the analysis of a divided panel of the Second Circuit in
Sko-ros. See LCPS I,
[T]he relevant objective observer ... is an adult who is aware of the history and context of the community and forum in which the religious display appears, and who understands that the display of a religious symbol in a school context may raise particular endorsement concerns, because of the pressure exerted on children by the law of imitation.
Skoros,
With these principles in mind, we turn to the instant Establishment Clause claims. In Appeal No. 06-2355, the Plaintiffs-Appellants argue only that the City symbol has the effect of endorsing Christianity. Likewise, in his pro se brief submitted in Appeal No. 07-2012, Weinbaum argues that the District’s sculpture, maintenance vehicle symbol, mural and policy *1033 have the effect of endorsing Christianity. But we construe his brief also to contend that the District had an unconstitutional motive in selecting and displaying the sculpture and mural. Neither appeal advances an excessive entanglement argument.
1. The Las Cruces City Symbol
The issue here is whether the City’s symbol has the effect of endorsing Christianity. We first consider the objective perception of the symbol’s purpose because purpose may lend some evidentia-ry weight to an inquiry of effect. Effects are most often the manifestations of a motivating purpose. As background, we note that the evidence regarding the City’s adoption of the symbol is indeterminate, but there is no evidence that the City’s purpose was to advance religion. However, the City offered various secular justifications for the symbol, including identification of City property and identification with the City’s unique historical name. We presume, then, that an objective observer would not conclude that the City adopted the symbol with the purpose of endorsing Christianity.
We turn next to what context and history would tell an objective observer about the symbol’s effect. Context carries much weight in the Establishment Clause calculus.
See McCreary,
Here, Las Cruces’s unique history explains why the City’s name translates as “The Crosses” and, relatedly, why the City uses crosses in its symbol. Dr. Hunner— the Rule 706 expert—established that the City’s name derives from its founding near the site of a make-shift cemetery. Thus, the City’s name derives from the “forest of crosses” that once memorialized those massacred in the area. This history is not arcane; in fact, the City has made these historical facts readily available in an explanatory brochure, “History of the Crosses: How Las Cruces Got Its Name,” which Dr. Hunner’s report substantiates.
See O’Connor,
It is also important here to observe the widespread use of multiple crosses throughout the community to signify a connection to- the City. Rather than being a unique effort by the City to advance religion, it appears that symbols containing multiple crosses identify many secular businesses within the Las Cruces community. The use of crosses, by all accounts, is common in Las Cruces, even setting aside the City’s use of its symbol. As such, our concern that the City’s imprimatur attends the symbol’s religious imagery dissipates. In this context, the objective observer would not be struck by the City’s incorporation of crosses into its symbol and would not see that symbol as an endorsement of Christianity.
Friedman v. Board of County Commissioners of Bernalillo County,
Robinson v. City of Edmond,
The seal of Las Cruces presents an altogether different situation. Compelling evidence here establishes that the symbolism is not religious at all. Rather, it simply reflects the name of the City which, in turn, reflects a series of secular events that occurred near the site of the City. Unless one were to attack the very name of the City itself—an attack which is not advanced here—it is hardly startling that a City with the name “The Crosses” would be represented by a seal containing crosses. And indisputable evidence showed that' even the name of the City reflected merely the cemetery, representing the violence in the area rather than proselytizing forces in general or a particular faith. So here, unlike in Robinson or Friedman, we have a secular symbol, which could be, and was, understood to be secular by the residents of the City. 20
A closer analogy to the Las Cruces seal is the seal of Austin, Texas, at issue in
Murray v. City of Austin,
What makes this case close is the City’s use of
three
crosses, and the fact that the middle cross stands taller than the outside crosses. Still, the effect of the seal is not to endorse Christianity. First, because the City is called “The Crosses,” of course, the use of multiple crosses makes sense. Questioning the exact number of crosses or their layout would “immerse[] [us] in the minutiae of graphic design,”
Murray,
2. The Maintenance Vehicle Symbol
Weinbaum also challenges the use of a symbol very similar to the City’s seal on the District’s maintenance vehicles. He asserts that the vehicles’ symbol has both the purpose and effect of endorsing Christianity. We disagree.
The symbol on the maintenance vehicle confirms that the vehicles are associated with the District and the City. Weinbaum conceded that this is critical on school campuses, where safety concerns require that teachers, administrators, and parents be able to identify vehicles. More importantly, in Las Cruces’s unique context, the crosses signal an association with the City. *1036 Having generally approved the seal of Las Cruces, we have no difficulty approving a fairly similar representation of the District on its vehicles. 21
3. The Sports Complex Sculpture
Weinbaum advances similar claims about the sculpture located at the District’s Sports Complex. As did the district court, we reject his claims.
Here, the record relates little regarding the District’s actual purpose for selecting and displaying the sculpture. The District offered three secular justifications for its selection and continued display of the sculpture: (1) the sculpture beautifies the Sports Complex; (2) it is a monument to the pursuit of excellence; and (3) it embodies the community of Las Cruces.
See LCPS I,
An objective observer familiar with the sculpture’s context and history would not find that the District’s actual purpose in selecting or displaying the sculpture was to endorse Christianity. Weinbaum failed to raise any genuine issue of material fact in this regard. Rather, he essentially rested on (1) the fact that the sculpture contains three crosses, (2) the artist’s religious beliefs and (3) unsupported insinuations stemming from the religious beliefs of certain District officials. For the reasons below, we conclude that Weinbaum’s claim does not warrant a trial.
At first glance, the crosses in the sculpture are stylized and bear only a fleeting resemblance to the standard Calvary scene. However, even if the sculpture’s crosses were a more typical representation of Calvary, Las Cruces’s name and history eclipse the Christian symbolism. As discussed above, the City identifies with the crosses because of its unique history. The explanatory plaques corroborate this connection to the community. Further, because Weinbaum offered no credible evidence of an
ex ante
improper motive, the District may offer “campus beautification [as] a permissible justification” for selecting and displaying the sculpture.
O’Con-nor,
Moreover, Weinbaum cannot reach a jury merely by insinuating that members of the School Board acted with improper motives because of their personal beliefs.
See Munoz v. St. Mary-Corwin Hosp.,
*1037 Similarly, there is no material dispute about the objective effect of the sculpture. Cognizant of the sculpture’s purpose, context, and history, the objective observer would recognize that the sculpture does not have the effect of endorsing Christianity. The sculpture’s name, “Unitas, Forti-tudo, Excellentia,” alludes to the Olympic spirit, not to any shrouded religious themes. Cf. International Olympic Committee, The Olympic Charter 11 (October 2007), available at http://multimedia. Olympic. org/pdf!en-reportM22.pdf. Similarly, the sculpture’s explanatory plaque elucidates the District’s secular rationale for displaying the sculpture. As stated on the plaque, the sculpture intends to evoke the Las Cruces community and the hope that they would, as one, witness excellence at the Sports Complex.
A The Mural
After trial, the district court held that there was no evidence that the District’s actual purpose in sanctioning the BTW mural was to advance religion. In addition, the court held that the District’s secular justification for the mural’s content — namely that student participants in an after-school program created the artwork — was genuine.
See LCPS II,
First, the District had nearly nothing to do with the mural’s creation. Weinbaum instead must argue that the continued display of the mural establishes the District’s impermissible motive. Unlike the Kentucky statute struck down in
Stone v. Graham,
Second, an objective observer would not believe that the BTW Elementary mural has the effect of endorsing religion. The third, fourth, and fifth grade students who designed the mural saw the crosses as emblematic of their community, and not of Calvary. The mural’s gestalt corroborates this connotation of the crosses. Chiles, chile fields, a yucca plant, and the Organ Mountains place the crosses in context, namely the Las Cruces community, thereby emphasizing the local character of the collage’s imagery.
23
Cf. Van Orden,
*1038 5. Policy # ]$k
As discussed above, Weinbaum also challenges the very District policy that ensures compliance with the Establishment Clause. Yet, the objective observer would understand the measured tenor of the Policy from its very first sentence: “Public schools have the responsibility to teach about religion but shall neither actively sponsor nor interfere with religions.” The Policy sensibly and comprehensively addresses the issues implicated by teaching that touches on religion.
25
Nothing in the Policy, as written, creates doubts about its neutrality.
See Good News Club,
Weinbaum acknowledged on the witness stand that, other than the maintenance vehicle symbol and the BTW Elementary mural, he had no evidence that the District has misapplied Policy #424. Having affirmed the vehicles’ symbol and BTW’s mural, we reject Weinbaum’s as-applied claim.
In sum, Weinbaum offered no evidence that persuades us that the Policy, in any way, violates the Establishment Clause. Nor has he adduced evidence to suggest that the District has applied the Policy unconstitutionally.
6. Summary Judgment in Establishment Clause Cases
Finally, we address whether granting summary judgment on certain claims below was permissible under our Establishment Clause jurisprudence. Our
Lemon
/endorsement test is an “objective inquiry,” and we accordingly do not ask “whether particular individuals might be offended” by the government’s conduct.
Bauchman,
*1039 D. Weinbaum’s Assorted Other Complaints
Lastly, in Appeal No. 07-2012, Wein-baum asserts that the district court erred in (1) denying Weinbaum’s motion to put on a witness not listed in his initial pretrial order; (2) relying on Dr. Hunner as an expert regarding Las Cruces’s history; and (3) refusing to consider an investigative report that Weinbaum prepared regarding the District’s selection of the Sports Complex sculpture. Additionally, Weinbaum argues that the district court was biased against him.
‘We review a district court’s evi-dentiary decisions for an abuse of discretion.” McI
nnis v. Fairfield Cmtys., Inc.,
Having scrutinized the record and construed Weinbaum’s arguments liberally, we see no reversible error in the district court’s evidentiary decisions. Similarly, we reject Weinbaum’s argument that the district court was biased against his position.
III. Conclusion
In the past, we have expressed concern that “[w]ith no principled basis for distinguishing one seal from the next, our opinions will be fastidiously fact-bound and our precedent hopelessly abstract.”
Robinson,
These cases are the type that preclude a mechanical rule. Unequivocally, the City and District are currently displaying symbols and artwork that might be constitutionally suspect in some other American communities or in other contexts. But, Las Cruces is the “City of Crosses” and the use of crosses as a symbol therein is not a religious statement. As such, the City and District’s religious symbols “are not minor trespasses upon the Establishment Clause to which [we] turn a blind eye. Instead, their history, character, and context prevent them from being constitutional violations at all.”
Newdow,
ATTACHMENT A
[[Image here]]
*1040 ATTACHMENT B
[[Image here]]
ATTACHMENT C
[[Image here]]
*1041 ATTACHMENT D
[[Image here]]
*1042 ATTACHMENT E
Procedure í/424 - RELIGION IN l'HIi SCI IOOI.S Rev. im
Public schools have the responsibility to teach about religion but shall neither actively sponsor nor interfere with religions. The district recognizes that religion has played an undeniable role in the formation ofworld civilizations, the foundation of our country and the lives of its citizens. The place of religion in our society should be recognized as an important one.
The proper role of religion in the public schools is in its educational value and nonreligious observance or celebration. The schools can piuy a vital role in bringing about an understanding between peoples of different backgrounds. In that capacity and when appropriate within the curriculum, the schools- are valuable in teaching our children about various belief systems. Belief systems will be discussed in an atmosphere of tolerance and mutual respect. Intercultural programs or curriculum focusing on the role that religion has played in history, literature or in the development of society and the influence that religion has had on historical figures or movements arc acceptable and desirable. It is anticipated that students will also develop tolerance and mutual respect as they become aware of diverse belief systems and their current and historical impact on human culture,
A. RELIGION IN THE CURRICULUM
!. When religion is included in the eurricultun as part of the study ofart, literature, history, etc., it should be treated with the same objectivity and educational intent expected in other areas. Such studies should not foster any particular religious tenet or demean any religious belief.
2. Materials and activities should be sensitive to the diversity of belief systems.
3. Instructional activities addressing religion should meet the three-part test established by the .Supreme Court to determine constitutionality:
a. The activity must have a secular purpose.
b. The activity's principal or primary effect must be one that neither advances nor inhibits religion.
c. The activity must not foster an excessive govern- mental entanglement with religion.
4. When the subject of religion occurs naturally in studying other topics such as history, literature, culture, etc., it should be treated as part of that study. (For example: Study of American Indians, the Pilgrims, Greek mythology or the Crusades may be enhanced by the inclusion ofthe role of religion.)
5. Student initiated responses to questions or assignments which reflect their beliefs or nonbelieis about a religious theme will te accommodated when appropriate. (For example: Students arc free to express religious beliefs or nonbeliefs in compositions, art forms, music, speech, and debate.)
*1043 6. Students should Ik* taught to develop an appreciation oftlte value of religious liberty as guaranteed by the United States Constitution.
?. I he teaching of theories to promote a religious doat rine is not permitted. Religious theories' beliefs shall not direct curriculum content.
B. Kl UUiOl.S HOLIDAYS, SCHEDULES, ABSENCES
I. The origin and significance of diverse holidays ahull be presented in an unbiased manner without religious indoctrination. I ioliday activities should not be religious in nature. These activities may include the singing of some holiday songs with religious content, but must also include a balanced variety of music not solely of a religious nature. Such programs shall not include performances of religious dramas.
II. Neither instructional materials nor assembly programs may be used to promote, encourage or denigrate specific religious groups or religious activities.
i. Religious celebrations outside of school shall not be endorsed by the school district or by school personnel in school.
1. The district’s calendar shall be prepared so as to minimize conflict with religious holidays. Where con- flicts are unavoidable, care should be taken to avoid tests, special projects, introduction of new concepts and other activities which would be difficult to make up.
C RELKMOUS SYMBOLS
Definition: A religious symbol is any object which portrays or represents a religious belief. A religious symbol can also be an object which is so closely associated with reitgiun(s) or with the celebration of a religious holiday that it is commonly perceived as being of a religious nature.
1. Religious symbols may be displayed or used as a teach- ing resource provided no effort is made to impose any particular beliefs which may be associated with such symbols. They may be used as examples of a cutturc and/or a specific religious heritage.
2. Whenever appropriate, teachers are encouraged in their presentations to expose students to symbols and tradi- lions from a variety of cultures.
1. Religious symbols may be displayed for show-and-tell or reports or class discussions as long as their appear- anee is volunteered by the students and as long as the symbols are removed from display upon completion oftlte report or discussion,
D. PERFORMANCES, CEREMONIES, PROGRAMS AND GATHERINGS
1. School programs, assemblies or gatherings sponsored by the school shall not have a religious orientation. 1 low- ever, seasonal programs presented by school student groups may include religious *1044 music. Such programs shall include a balanced variety of music not solely of a religious nature.
2. The school district shall not conduct any baccalaureate service, nor shall it include religious invocations, benedictions or formal prayer at school sponsored events.
3, School musical groups may not participate, under the auspices ofthe school, in religious services,
E. WORSí IIP/PRAYER
1. Ho form of prayer, worship or expression of belief shall be prescribed or sanctioned in fact, or in appearance, by the schools,
2, Refer to Equal Access Procedurc/Policy 338.
F. PROSELYTIZING
1. In working with students, school district staff shall not proselytize or inject personal religious beliefs into any school related activities.
2. Unwelcome attempts by individuals or groups or students to impose religious beliefs or convert others to religious beliefs or to rtonbeltef arc not permitted in school related activities.
3. The distribution ofreligtous literature on school district property, unless directly related to instructional activities, is not permitted at any school related activities.
4. Non-student members of religious groups arc not allowed in the school to proselytize or recruit during the school day or during school activities.
NOTE: CLUBS FORMED FOR RELIGIOUS PURPOSES See Equal Access, Policy 338.
ATTACHMENT F
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Notes
. Martin J. Boyd, also a resident of Las Cruces, joined Weinbaum as a plaintiff in the *1022 suit against the City. We will refer to Wein-baum and Boyd as "Plaintiffs-Appellants." We have consolidated, for ease of disposition, Appeal No. 06-2355, which was orally argued, and Appeal No. 07-2012, which was submitted on the briefs.
. But not exclusively so; the cross is an oft-used symbol in other cultures and religions as *1023 well. See 5 Encyclopedia of Religion at 3434; 14 Encyclopedia of Religion at 9339 (discussing cross as symbol of tree of life).
. Olivia Weinbaum, Paul Weinbaum’s un-emancipated minor daughter, originally joined the two other plaintiffs. However, the district court dismissed her claims without prejudice because she did not make allegations sufficient to confer standing and, as an unemancipated minor, “she lacks the legal capacity to sue on her own behalf.”
See Las Cruces,
. In both cases, Weinbaum proceeded pro se before the district court. On appeal, however, he is represented by counsel in Appeal No. 06-2355.
.The district court appointed Dr. Jon Hun-ner, a professor of history at New Mexico State University, as an expert witness pursuant to Rule 706 of the Federal Rules of Evidence.
See Las Cruces,
. In 1712, Apache marauders killed members of a caravan in the area of present-day Las Cruces. Spanish soldiers arrived after the fact, buried the dead, and erected crosses over the graves. A little over a half century later, "a bishop, a priest, a Mexican army colonel, a captain, four trappers, and four choir boys” were killed in the same area. In 1830, "forty travelers from Taos” suffered the same fate. Finally, just a decade or so later, Native Americans killed fourteen soldiers in a convoy led by General Manuel Armijo, a Mexican governor.
. A July 1941 lease agreement between the Town of Las Cruces and Mrs. A.L. Sweet printed on city letterhead depicts a "a grouping of three crosses, the middle one larger and taller than the two flanking it” with the motto "The City of Crosses.” In 1946, Mayor Sam Klein requested that a new seal designed by City Attorney E.G. Shannon replace the old town seal. Shannon’s design also included three crosses. In the City’s 1963-1964 Annual Report, however, an unknown designer added a sunburst around the three independent crosses. A similar symbol appeared in the 1965 Annual Report. The District borrowed this particular iteration of the symbol, which now appears on the District’s maintenance vehicles. Dr. Hunner notes that, throughout the 1960s and 1970s, "the city also used a sunburst with three slanted crosses in front of the Organ Mountains.”
Three Las Cruces residents claim credit for the current City symbol. The record contains no evidence indicating that any of the three had a religious motive in creating the symbol. In fact, two explicitly denied any such intent.
. After delving into the history of the symbol’s use on District vehicles at trial, the district court found that the symbol was likely adopted at the suggestion of a former District Physical Plant Director.
LCPS II,
. The symbol has a diameter of 12 inches and depicts a blue sunburst with three blue crosses in a white ring in the middle of the sunburst.
LCPS II,
A different symbol appears on all other District property — including buildings, stationary, and official documents. Id. at 1188. This second symbol consists of a Zia sun symbol, flanked by two cacti, with hills and an adobe structure in the background. See App. F. Charles Davis, the Vice President of the District’s School Board, explained that the District had the maintenance vehicles pri- or to the design contest for the new symbol.
.Bird denies that any religious inclination inspired her imagery.
See LCPS I,
. The district court found that the District’s school board never approved the mural’s design and that it was not required to do so. Moreover, no one at the District, BTW Elementary, or the non-profit apparently discussed whether the design conformed with the District's policy on religious imagery in the schools (Policy # 424) before the mural was installed.
LCPS II,
. We also conclude that Weinbaum has prudential standing to bring his claim against the District. As noted above, Weinbaum did not assert Establishment Clause claims on behalf of his daughter Olivia in the litigation underlying Appeal No. 07-2012. Rather, the essence of his claim is that he suffered a cognizable injury under the Establishment Clause because the District's actions infringe on
his
right to direct the religious education of his daughter. Because Weinbaum has asserted that District's conduct violates
his
First Amendment rights, this court need not invoke "judicially-imposed limits” on its power to hear this case.
See Sch. Dist. of Abington Twp. v. Schempp,
. Some doubt the historical provenance of the neutrality principle.
See, e.g., McCreary County v. ACLU of Ky.,
Regardless, even after the Supreme Court decided the twin Decalogue cases in 2005—
McCreary
and
Van Orden v. Perry,
. Supreme Court Justices have harshly criticized
Lemon. See McCreary,
. Of course, in other situations, the issues probed by the first two prongs would be framed in the converse: whether the government’s actual purpose was to disapprove of religion and whether the governmental conduct has the effect of
dis
favoring a certain
*1031
religion or religion generally.
See O'Connor,
. Undoubtedly, the "objective observer" is presumed to know far more than most actual members of- a given community.
Cf. ACLU of Ohio v. Capitol Square Review & Advisory Bd.,
. The dissenter on this point argued that the relevant objective observers are both (1) the "students in the [New York City] elementary and secondary public schools” and (2) their parents.
Skoros,
. American towns, cities, and counties commonly incorporate the subject matter of their name into their seals and flags. For example, the seal of Columbus, Ohio, predictably depicts one of Christopher Columbus's vessels (the otherwise nondescript sailing vessel is identified as such by a red Latin cross on the mainsail). See Wikipedia, Columbus, Ohio, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ColumbusLOhio. Similarly, the seal of Long Beach, California, depicts a long beach, see Wikipedia, Long Beach, California http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ Long-Beach'-California. Anchorage, Alaska, displays an anchor and a sailing ship on its seal and flag, see Wikipedia, Anchorage, Alaska, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anchorage’-Alaska, and the City of Palo Alto, which translates as "Tall Tree,” displays a tall tree on its *1034 seal, see City of Palo Alto, Independent Police Auditor's Interim Report 1 (2008), available at http://www.cityofpaloalto.or g/depts/pol/po-lice_information/default.asp (last visited August 19, 2008).
. To underscore the religious imagery of the seal, underneath the cross was a flock of sheep. Although again there was a post hoc effort to suggest that the imagery referred to sheep-raising activity in the area, the most obvious interpretation of the flock, as it appears under the radiant cross, is that it referred to the followers of Jesus.
.
We note here that the use of three crosses in the City seal has gone legally unchallenged for at least forty years.
See Van Orden,
. Additionally, we note that Weinbaum offered no evidence regarding the District's purpose in adopting the symbol. Objectively, we see no reason whatsoever to conclude that the District intentionally adopted the symbol to endorse religion.
. Having concluded that the District's purpose for selecting the sculpture was permissible, we also concur with the district court's decision regarding the District purpose in continuing to display the sculpture. Wein-baum’s arguments in this regard lack eviden-tiary support and thus fail to create a material factual dispute.
. The outermost images specifically connect the collage to BTW Elementary. John Schultz, the District’s former Coordinator for the Visual and Performing Arts, testified that BTW Elementary is one of the oldest schools in the community and, before desegregation, was the African-American school in Las Cruces. Thus, the image of a young, African-American child with a book on one end, and a depiction of Booker T. Washington himself on the other, tie the artwork to a unique community and school.
. The trial testimony also alleviates concerns about the effect the mural might have on BTW Elementary students. For example, one *1038 witness testified that District students begin learning about local history in kindergarten. This provides assurance that BTW Elementary students, like the objective observer attuned to the City’s history, see the crosses in a different light. Although another witness mentioned that churches in the community also display crosses, he went on to list other secular entities in BTW Elementary’s neighborhood that display three crosses to demonstrate a connection to Las Cruces.
. Weinbaum protests that the Policy uses the singular "religion” instead of "religions.” This, he claims, shows that the Policy "condones the advancement of the teachings of a singular religion in the public schools.”
See LCPS
/,
