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		<title>Male student who ran for prom queen suspended</title>
		<link>https://blogs.lotterypost.com/truesee/2010/5/male-student-who-ran-for-prom-queen-suspended.htm</link>
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			<title>Original Blog Entry: Male student who ran for prom queen suspended</title>
			<link>https://blogs.lotterypost.com/truesee/2010/5/male-student-who-ran-for-prom-queen-suspended.htm</link>
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			<pubDate>Sat, 22 May 2010 18:37:33 GMT</pubDate>
			<dc:creator>truesee</dc:creator>
			<description><![CDATA[<p> Prom queen in a dress? Not this guy this night<br /><br />Flanagan High School senior Omar Bonilla went from prom queen hopeful to not being able to go to prom at all. The school says he brought that punishment on himself.<br /><br />Omar Bonilla, a finalist for prom queen, wasn&#x27;t allowed to attend. PETER ANDREW BOSCH / MIAMI HERALD STAFF<br /><br />MICHAEL VASQUEZ<br /><br />Miami Herald<br /><br />After coming out of the closet this, his senior year at Flanagan High, Omar Bonilla decided to take it a step further: run for prom queen.<br /><br />He almost won -- Bonilla was among the top three vote-getters -- but in the past few days, it all unraveled.<br /><br />Fearful that other students would try to beat up a prom-goer in drag, the school administration asked him to wear a tuxedo to Friday night&#x27;s dance. And after two meetings with the school principal to plead for the right to wear a dress, Bonilla was slapped with a two-day suspension, the timing of which meant he couldn&#x27;t go to the prom at all.<br /><br />As students were racing off to prom, Bonilla was putting on his blue sequin dress -- but only to pose for a Miami Herald photographer.<br /><br />``This week was kind of, like, intense,&#x27;&#x27; said Bonilla, 19.<br /><br />It all started last month when the senior at the Pembroke Pines school decided he wanted to run for prom king, but with the intention of wearing a dress. School administrators ran the idea through the higher-ups and told Bonilla that prom queen might be more appropriate -- an option he liked even better.<br /><br />In soliciting votes from students, Bonilla -- like all other candidates -- posted posters around campus. His read ``vote Omar for prom queen -- time for a change.&#x27;&#x27;<br /><br />Along the way, Bonilla made the concession that, if he won, the prom king wouldn&#x27;t have to dance with him, as some kings might not be comfortable doing that.<br /><br />BEHAVIOR CITEDFlanagan&#x27;s principal, Sharon Shaulis, referred questions to a Broward schools spokeswoman. That spokeswoman, Nadine Drew, said Flanagan banned Bonilla from prom because of his unruly behavior -- not his unconventional wardrobe plans.<br /><br />On Thursday, Bonilla had a meeting set up with the school principal -- his second sit-down in two days. He was running late and inappropriately parked in a visitor parking space at the school. When schools police told him to move his car, he didn&#x27;t heed their warning.<br /><br />Bonilla said the principal -- citing rumors that other students might try to beat up a prom-goer in drag -- asked for him to come in a tuxedo instead of a dress. A schools police officer sat in on the second meeting.<br /><br />SAFETY AN ISSUEDrew confirmed that administrators were worried about safety.<br /><br />``More than ever before, those are real concerns these days,&#x27;&#x27; she said. ``Those are all taken very, very seriously.&#x27;&#x27;<br /><br />Bonilla refused to back down. A few hours after he left that second meeting, Bonilla was informed he&#x27;d been suspended.<br /><br />DID NOT WINThat was also the day the school announced Bonilla had come close, but failed to win, the title of prom queen.<br /><br />``They were looking for an excuse for me not to go, so they said I got suspended for a `minor disturbance,&#x27; &#x27;&#x27; Bonilla said.<br /><br />The suspension, said Drew, the spokeswoman, was solely because Bonilla had ignored security personnel after parking in the wrong place. Bonilla said he was in a daze that morning and he didn&#x27;t hear the security guards.<br /><br />Drew insisted otherwise.<br /><br />``He did hear them, he turned around, he acknowledged them,&#x27;&#x27; Drew said. ``But he did not heed or stop. . . He ignored all authority along the way, and that&#x27;s just not acceptable.&#x27;&#x27;<br /><br />`UNFORTUNATE&#x27;California&#x27;s Friends of Project 10, a nonprofit which provides educational support services to gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender students, called the last-minute nature of Bonilla&#x27;s suspension ``very unfortunate.&#x27;&#x27; Education Director Gail Rolf said Bonilla likely could have received help from advocacy groups if there were still time to appeal the decision.<br /><br />``The question is, would they have suspended another student for the exact same behavior?&#x27;&#x27; Rolf said. ``Because if not, that&#x27;s a lawsuit right there.&#x27;&#x27;<br /><br />Bonilla certainly wasn&#x27;t the typical prom queen candidate, but openly gay male students have run for the post at other schools before. Last year, at Southern California&#x27;s Fairfax High, student Sergio Garcia actually won the title of queen, though he nevertheless showed up in a tux.<br /><br />`PROVE A POINT&#x27;Bonilla said Flanagan is generally an accepting place when it comes to gay students, but his desire to wear a dress and become prom queen was aimed at those students who were still scared to reveal their true selves.<br /><br />``I wanted to just make a stand and prove a point,&#x27;&#x27; he said. ``Everybody is your friend, and you don&#x27;t have to care what people say.<br /><br />``Be fierce about it,&#x27;&#x27; he said. ``Show that you work it.&#x27;&#x27;<br /><br />Read more: http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/05/22/1642177/prom-queen-in-a-dress-not-this.html#ixzz0ogVB4gbt<br /><br />... &#x5b;&#xa0;<a href="https://blogs.lotterypost.com/truesee/2010/5/male-student-who-ran-for-prom-queen-suspended.htm">More</a>&#xa0;&#x5d;</p>]]></description>
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