Georgia Town Wants Integrated Prom - Not from The Onion Sadly

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PraetorianND

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Georgia Teens Fed Up With Segregated Proms - Yahoo!

The U.S. Supreme Court deemed segregated public schools unconstitutional in 1954, but the spirit of that ruling appears to have been lost in time in the tiny South Georgia town of Rochelle.
Students and parents are once again organizing separate proms for the high school's black and white students.
"We're embarrassed; it's embarrassing," white high school senior Stephanie Sinnot told WGXA-TV, the ABC News affiliate in Macon, Ga.
So a biracial group of four best friends who attend Wilcox County High School have set out to change history, raising money to host an integrated prom in the town of nearly 1,200 people, about 51 percent of them white, 46 percent black, according to census figures.
READ MORE: A 'First-Ever' Integrated Prom
Stephanie says she does everything with her three best friends, two of whom are black. "That's just kind of not right that we can't go to prom together," she said.
Senior Keela Bloodworth, another organizer of the integrated prom effort who's white, said her black friends wouldn't dare come to the other dance.
"They would probably have the police come out there and escort them off the premises," Bloodworth told WGXA.
It's not just the school prom that's segregated. Homecoming falls into the same pattern, featuring two separate dances. Senior Quanesha Wallace, a black student, was elected homecoming queen this year and a white student was voted homecoming king. But the two students attended separate homecoming dances.
The district hasn't paid for a prom in 30 years, leaving the planning up to student groups that are free to organize them as they wish, Wilcox County Schools Superintendent Steve Smith told ABC News.
Smith says that when the group of female students approached the Board of Education this time around about hosting an integrated prom, the district applauded their idea and even passed a resolution advocating that all activities involving students be inclusive and non-discriminatory.
"I fully support these ladies, and I consider it an embarrassment to our schools and community that these events have been segregated," Smith said. "Skin color seems to be a much larger issue for the adults than the students, and my prayer is that this effort will be a huge step toward reconciling the wrongs of the past."
Although the school district has been supportive, it hasn't offered to pay for the integrated prom. The students have set up a Facebook page asking the public for donations, but the idea hasn't been well-received by everyone.
"I actually put up posters for the integrated prom and we've had people ripping them down at the school," Keela told WGXA.
Wilcox County High School isn't the only school in Georgia that holds segregated school dances. Nearby Taylor County High School held separate proms until recently, as have a number of other schools located in small rural counties.
The reasoning seems to be same in all the cases: The school districts stopped sponsoring proms and left it up to student groups, which decided to hold separate events.
 

IrishSteelhead

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Don't wanna move too fast with this. The 50's was only 6 decades ago, might be too soon.....
 

In Lou I Trust

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I found a pic of last year's graduation ceremony...

4u7a8a9u.jpg


Edit: Say what you want about black and white photos but I think they add a touch of class.
 
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IrishLax

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I actually just posted this in the WSJ thread, but it definitely deserves its own one. Absolutely crazy the cultural differences between different parts of the country.
 

dshans

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This is disturbing to me in a number of ways. Foremost is that there are distinct black vs white proms in this day and age. That the students rely on funding from the school district to stage a social function is another.

Let me explain. In 1970 I was my (high school) senior year class president. When it came time to plan the traditional senior class play I called on the most creative and talented in the class. They came up with a black face Minstrel Show concept. While I understood their elevated ironic and sarcastic intent, I didn't think that their expectations would be met. There were too many "good old boys and gals" at the time.

They defended their artistic goals and proposed doing the show sans black-face. I spoke with the local head of the NAACP. He confirmed my thinking. Were mine a public school rather private, "it wouldn't happen." "We" came to a loggerheads and had no class play that year.

We were also the first class that held on off campus Prom. We raised enough money to rent a ballroom at a local high falutin' hotel and pay an expensive band to perform. That same "artistic cabal" were essential in decorating a black light "Nirvana, The Seventh Heaven" extravaganza. No funding from the school or school board.

Break the bonds.
 
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Redbar

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Same thing happened in Mississippi within the last three years, can't remember exactly when. And you know this past February Mississippi finally got around to ratifying the amendment to ban slavery. And we are outraged at the relatively short life (2 generations) of Affirmative Action.

Edit: I am not defending Affirmative Action, I am blown away by the outrage about one and not the other.
 
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IrishSteelhead

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What blows me away is Dshans graduated high school in 1970.

I always thought you were a class of '60 or earlier old friend!!!!!!!
 

dshans

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What blows me away is Dshans graduated high school in 1970.

I always thought you were a class of '60 or earlier old friend!!!!!!!

"... but I was so much older then... "

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