] The issue of student anti-war protests in schools came of ] age during another controversial military action, the ] Vietnam conflict, when a trio of Des Moines, Iowa, ] students took their cause of protesting the war all the ] way to the Supreme Court. In Tinker Vs. Des Moines ] Independent School District (1969), 15-year-old John F. ] Tinker, his younger sister Mary Beth and 16-year-old ] Christopher Eckhardt fought for their right to wear black ] armbands as a silent protest against the war. ] ] ] The school board banned such protests, the students ] refused to remove the armbands and they were told to ] leave school and not return until they complied with the ] school's policies. The district was eventually found ] guilty by the Supreme Court of denying the students' ] First Amendment rights. As a result, students' rights to ] free expression were broadened following the decision, ] though many schools now have "disruptive" clothing rules ] in their codes of conduct. MTV.com - News -Anti-War T-Shirts Land Teens, Lawyer In Hot Water |