As discussed in a prior post, this past December, gay teen Constance McMillen had requested of Itawamba Agricultural High School in Mississippi that she be allowed to bring her girlfriend as a date to the school prom and wear a tux. This month, the school (and fashion police) responded to both requests by canceling the prom. This week, McMillen and the ACLU were in U.S. District Court claiming the teen’s free speech rights were violated by the school’s move to cancel the dance.
The school’s actions have lead to criticism for both student and educators. Constance McMillen testified that she left school early the day after the district’s decision and didn’t go at all the next day. “There were so many dirty looks,” McMillen told the court. “A lot of people didn’t like me very much.” The school principle has not fared much better, saying he had been “bombarded” with emails, most from people criticizing the school district’s decision. “I’ve been called every name known to man,” Principal Trae Wiygul said. “I’ve been called a bigot and homophobic.”
Parents of students are now organizing a private prom, but how private is a question. According to McMillen, she didn’t get the memo. However, the ACLU and gay rights groups have also made plans for a May dance in Tupelo, Miss. that would be open to everyone, but geared toward gay students. Attorney Kristy Bennett says the publicity surrounding Constance McMillen’s struggles over her school prom will make the alternative dance a much better attended event.
The AP reports U.S. District Judge Glen H. Davidson, who is hearing the case, did not say when he would rule, however he promised to act quickly, because “time is of the essence.”
Related Resources:
- Judge hears lesbian teen’s suit to force prom (MSNBC)
- Mississippi School’s Prom Cancelled over Gay Date (FindLaw’s Law and Daily Life)
- Gay and Lesbian Rights / Sexual Orientation Discrimination (FindLaw)
- Civil Liberties (FindLaw)
- Mississippi lesbian alleges retaliation after prom date debate (The Clarion Ledger)
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