Houston area students protest immigration reform proposal
— reported by the Houston Chronicle
About 150 students from an Aldine school staged a walkout this morning, hiking several miles to protest a potential congressional crackdown on illegal immigration.
After walking some eight miles from Eisenhower High School, 7922 Antoine, to the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services office at 126 Northpoint Drive, the group stood outside holding signs and a Mexican flag for about two hours.
By 2 p.m. the students had dispersed but few if any appeared to have boarded the school buses sent to retrieve them.
[snip]
Other students said they walked past Aldine High School which was locked down so others could not leave.
[snip]
Houston-area students march to City Hall
— reported by the Houston Chronicle
Hundreds of students from Houston-area schools skipped class this morning to march in the rain to City Hall and participate in other local rallies to protest tighter restrictions on immigration.
Hector Arguelles, 18, said he and about 100 other students from Jeff Davis High School felt inspired to walk out today after seeing teens protest nationally Monday.
He prepared and distributed a flier to help his classmates understand the main points of proposed federal legislation that aims to make it a crime – rather than a civil violation – to live in the United States without proper documentation. The legislation would also put penalties on employers who hire immigrants and build fences along parts of the U.S.-Mexico border.
[snip]
At least a dozen school buses were parked along McKinney. The buses were sent by the Houston Independent School District to drive students back to Austin, Davis and Sam Houston high schools. By 1 p.m., school officials announced that the students were back on their campuses.
[snip]
Students protest proposed tighter rules
Walkouts that were organized over the Internet held at Eisenhower and other schools
— reported by the Houston Chronicle
[snip]
About 150 students, most of them Hispanic, left Eisenhower around 9 a.m. and walked nine miles to an immigration office, where they stood outside holding signs and a Mexican flag for nearly two hours.
By 2 p.m. the students had dispersed at the urging of about a dozen police officers, but none boarded the four school buses sent to retrieve them.
Students at several other schools in Houston also walked out in opposition to proposed federal legislation that would impose new penalties on employers who hire illegal immigrants, build fences along parts of the U.S.-Mexico border, punish those who assist illegal immigrants, and make it a crime — rather than a civil violation — to be in the United States without proper documentation.
The marches were organized primarily over the Internet after several massive protests took place last week around the country, including one in Houston on Saturday that drew 6,000 marchers.
[snip]
More headlines:
- Hundreds Of Students Walk Out, Protest Immigration Legislation
Schools To Punish Students Who Walked Out Of Class
— reported by Click2Houston.com - Students in suburbs join mass protest
— reported by KHOU CBS Channel 11
” About 500 students from Pasadena ISD schools joined in the mass protest.” - Thousands of students rally in Dallas again
— reported by the Houston Chronicle
“Thousands of Texas high school students walked out of class for a second straight day today, rallying in support of immigrants as Congress considers new immigration law.” - Thousands of local students rally at city hall over immigration
— reported by KTRK ABC Channel 13 - Thousands of students protest immigration proposals
— reported by KHOU CBS Channel 11 - Students stage walkout protest over immigration
— reported by KTRK ABC Channel 13 - Houston-area students march to City Hall
— reported by the Houston Chronicle
Super web site. Very easy to search for history of March 29, 2006 for first case study due for doctoral studies
gracias