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E N Q U I R E R   L O C A L   N E W S   C O V E R A G E
Thursday, September 16, 1999

Steelers fan dogged in pro-Browns school


Boy punished for wrong jersey

The Associated Press

        NORWALK, Ohio — School officials have apologized to a boy who was forced to sit in a corner for wearing a Pittsburgh Steelers black-and-gold jersey on his school's Cleveland Browns spirit day.

        Ten-year-old Eric Nutter and his mother, Debbie, have long been Steelers fans. So when Western Reserve Middle School about 50 miles southwest of Cleveland marked the return of the Browns to the NFL on Friday, the fifth-grader didn't wear the Ohio team's brown and orange.

        He came to the school wearing a Kordell Stewart jersey, honoring Pittsburgh's quarterback.

        While he expected some flak from classmates, he was surprised when his teacher, Brent Maillard, had him turn his desk around in the back of the classroom.

        “I had to turn around the whole time to see what was going on,” Eric told the Lorain, Ohio, Morning Journal, in a story published Wednesday. “I didn't like it.”

        After about two hours, Eric changed into a Cleveland Indians T-shirt for gym class. He kept the baseball shirt on the rest of the day and was allowed to place his desk back in its normal position.

        Eric's devotion was rewarded Sunday night, when the Steelers beat the Browns 43-0 in Cleveland.

        Mr. Maillard and Thomas Turner, the school's principal, met with Eric's parents Monday and found out they were angry after the boy came home from school in tears.

        “Until then, we didn't have any idea at all that he had been upset. On Friday, he kind of thought that it was funny. His desk was only moved back a couple of feet, and he only had to sit sideways. But it was all in fun. Apparently, at some point, his feelings were hurt,” Mr. Turner said Wednesday.

        Eric's stepfather, Robert Counts, has asked Western Reserve Superintendent Dennis Bahmer to discipline the teacher, who has been reprimanded.

        “We expressed our concerns to the family and apologized, and the teacher did the same,” Mr. Bahmer said. “It's one of those things that started out in fun, but for some reason was not taken that way.”

       



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