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Frank Lay

3,805 bytes added, 13:42, 17 September 2009
New page: {{Infobox Biography | subject_name =Frank Lay | image_name =FrankLay.jpg | image_size =200px | image_caption = | date_of_birth = | place_of_birth = | date_of_death = | place_o...
{{Infobox Biography
| subject_name =Frank Lay
| image_name =FrankLay.jpg
| image_size =200px
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| date_of_birth =
| place_of_birth =
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| occupation =Principal, [[Pace High School]]
| religion =[[Olive Baptist Church|Baptist]]
| spouse =Nancy Barron Lay (m. 1969)
| parents =John Gordon and Margaret Lay
| children =Dr. Kristopher Lay<br/>Kace Lay Browning<br/>Kara Lay Whitney<br/>Klinton Lay
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'''Henry Frank Lay''' is the current principal of [[Pace High School]]. He was a named defendant in a [[2008]] [[ACLU]] [[Does v. School Board for Santa Rosa County, Florida|religious freedom lawsuit]] against the [[Santa Rosa County School District]] and was later charged with criminal contempt by [[U.S. District Court]] Judge [[Casey Rodgers]] for violating the terms of the consent decree agreed upon in the suit.

==Background & personal life==
A native of [[Santa Rosa County]], Lay is a 1966 graduate of [[Milton High School]]. He received his bachelor's degree in physical education from Troy State University in 1970 and a master's degree in the same from Georgia State University in 1974. In 1977 Lay became a coach and teacher at [[Pace High School]], and in 1989 he was named the school's principal.

Lay married the former Nancy Barron in 1969. She is now a reading teacher at Pace High. They have four children, two of whom are also teachers in the [[Santa Rosa School District]] (one at Pace High).

The Lays are currently members of [[Olive Baptist Church]], where Frank is a deacon and Bible teacher.

==King brothers==
In the 1990s, the Lays donated money and time to the [[Heritage Home]] shelter, taking a particular interest in four brothers who had been placed there by their financially distressed father, [[Terry King]]. They made arrangements for two of the brothers, [[Alex King|Alex]] and [[Derek King|Derek]], to visit their home on weekends. When the Heritage Home closed from lack of funding, the Lays became foster parents to 6-year-old Derek. He would live with them for the next seven years, during which time, the Lays later said, Derek became increasingly troubled. They sought help from counselors at their church, but eventually decided in October [[2001]] to return Derek to his father's custody. The next month, on [[November 26]], Derek and his brother Alex committed patricide.

==ACLU lawsuit==
{{main|Does v. School Board for Santa Rosa County, Florida}}
{{sectstub}}

The consent decree and order signed on [[May 9]], [[2009]] permanently enjoined school officials from "promoting, advancing, endorsing, participating in, or causing Prayers during or in conjunction with School Events" with specific instruction that "School Officials shall not encourage, solicit, or invite any person, either implicitly or explicitly, to deliver or offer a Prayer during or in conjunction with a School Event."<ref>[http://www.aclu.org/pdfs/religion/santarosaco_consentdecree.pdf Consent decree]</ref>

Insurance agency owner [[Robert Smith]], who graduated from [[Milton High School]] with Lay, established the [[Lay Freeman Defense Fund]] in August 2009 "to pay [the defendants'] legal expenses and to fight the ACLU."<ref>http://www.layfreemandefense.com/id62.html</ref> Within a month it had raised about $40,000 and growing.

==Community involvement & recognition==
*Deacon & Bible teacher, [[Olive Baptist Church]]
*[[Pace Area Chamber of Commerce]] "Man of the Year," 2005<ref>"Pace chamber honors leaders." ''Pensacola News Journal'', January 26, 2005.</ref>

==References==
{{refbegin}}
*Carmen Paige. "A principal's principles." ''Pensacola News Journal'', August 9, 2009.
{{refend}}
{{reflist}}

[[Category:Pace High School|Lay, Frank]]

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