--- !signs/object:Article attributes: title: "Patriotic Insanity: Three Minnesota Junior High Students Suspended for Not Standing During Pledge" source: Associated Press author: summary: "Fourteen-year-old Bishop Edens was suspended from school Friday because he wouldn't stand for the Pledge of Allegiance, but he was quickly invited back once his principal learned that rule might be unconstitutional. The back-and-forth came on the second day of controversy at Dilworth-Glyndon-Felton Junior High over the school's policy of requiring students to stand - but not necessarily recite - during the pledge. Edens saw three of his classmates get disciplined by Principal Colleen Houglum on Thursday, so he decided to break the rule on Friday in protest. "I feel I should speak my mind about this whole thing," Edens said." text: "Edens was suspended Friday and went home, but his family told The Forum of Fargo that Houglum invited the teen back to school that afternoon. Attorney Roger Aronson, who represents 1,700 secondary school principals in Minnesota, said he advised Houglum on Friday that requiring students to stand could violate their right to freedom of expression. Houglum confirmed in a written statement to The Associated Press that three students were suspended Thursday for violating the DGF Student Handbook. She said the handbook says "all students will stand" during the pledge but also says students aren't required to recite it. But Houglum also said school officials were reevaluating the policy. "It is our understanding that the phrase, 'all students will stand' may need to be modified to address the protection of the individual's form of expression," she said. The principal told the students during the class Thursday that it was disrespectful to sit during the pledge, especially with U.S. troops fighting in Iraq, Edens said. A boy and two girls spent the day in in-school suspension.