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View Full Version : Teen wants armor, sword in his yearbook photo



RichardCranium
01-13-2007, 11:43 AM
PORTSMOUTH, R.I. - Seventeen-year-old Patrick Agin often spends a week whittling a single arrow, and he’s learning to make chain mail armor by hand. So when it came time to submit a senior yearbook photo, he selected a snapshot of himself wearing chain mail and slinging a prop sword over his shoulder.

Portsmouth High School rejected the photo, citing a “zero tolerance policy” for weapons, and Agin and his family sued, claiming the school was violating his right to free speech.

But Agin and others who spend their free time sword fighting and feasting on medieval-style meals also wonder why the school would discourage his passion for a hobby they say offers tens of thousands of people a way to learn about history through hands-on experience.

“It’s no different from wanting to appear in a Boy Scout uniform,” said Tamara Griggs, a spokeswoman for the Society for Creative Anachronism, a group of 35,000 dues-paying members that stage mock battles, learn arts like calligraphy and conduct demonstrations in shopping malls. Agin belongs to the organization.

Popular activity in area
During the winter, the society holds one-on-one combat events at churches and schools. In better weather, regional groups called “kingdoms” rent campgrounds and stage epic battles with as many as 1,000 soldiers per side.

Portsmouth Principal Robert Littlefield said allowing a student to brandish a weapon in his senior portrait was against school policies. The school isn’t obligated to provide a forum for every student’s outside interests, he said.

“I don’t see our action as discouraging anyone’s hobby,” Littlefield said. “I don’t see our yearbook as a vehicle where we guarantee everyone an opportunity to broadcast their hobby to our audience.”

The ACLU, which filed the suit in federal court in December, calls the zero tolerance policy inconsistent. It points out that the school’s mascot, a patriot, is sometimes shown carrying a weapon.

A federal judge asked the state education commissioner to offer a recommendation in the case. He is expected to do so within weeks.

Agin came to the society through his mother, Heidi Farrington, who sews and sells re-enactment clothing to medieval fans.

“They really appreciate people researching things, whether it’s textiles or armor or food or any of the skills that would have been applicable,” Farrington said. She said she learned to spin wool through the organization.

Bad decision about individuality?
She said the high school’s decision sends a bad message about free thinking and individuality and could conceivably lead the school to ban masterpieces like Shakespeare’s “Macbeth,” which depicts a fatal stabbing.

“The schools have gotten so into standardization that they are starting to push it on the kids,” she said.

Ed Morrill of New York, a regional director whose society alter ego is Viscount Edward Zifran of Gendy, called the group “a very good place for someone to come and learn something new.”

Morrill, who began attending society events in 1973, said a lot of people don’t understand the group’s appeal, but he does: “It’s not your father’s organization. It’s something that’s different but something that’s socially acceptable.”

Society member Nicole Toscano understands the passion that would make someone pose for the yearbook in armor. The student at Simmons College in Boston joined the society at age 7 and works out to keep fit for mock sword fights.

“It’s just like any other sport or any martial art. I enjoy doing it just like I was playing football,” said Toscano, who also practices calligraphy.

Agin, who is considering joining the military after graduating this year, said he’ll likely opt for a pink tuxedo, not armor, to wear to his senior prom.

In the meantime, he plans to take part in more re-enactments.

“I’ve actually been talking to a knight to become a squire,” he said.



Someone you know, perhaps?

Sean of the Thread
01-13-2007, 11:46 AM
What happened to being a pimp and wearing a tuxedo in your senior pic?

Hulkein
01-13-2007, 11:47 AM
What a nerd.

Gan
01-13-2007, 01:49 PM
For a moment I thought Bob was in the headlines.

Then I saw it was in RI.

Dont get any ideas Bob!

SpunGirl
01-13-2007, 02:04 PM
Aw, that's cute. A girl I went to school with had her senior photo banned because she was wearing a bikini and combat boots, and her body was painted all over with the words "girls rock."

-K

The Ponzzz
01-13-2007, 02:06 PM
So if my hobbies are wearing a gimp suit and inserting a horsetail buttplug, we're cool for senior pics?

SpunGirl
01-13-2007, 02:32 PM
It depends, can a buttplug be classified as a weapon?

-K

Sean of the Thread
01-13-2007, 02:34 PM
Is it a 1h or 2h Blunt?

Augie
01-13-2007, 05:58 PM
Man when I was in high school, you had to get your pic taken by the school photographers. There was no submitting your own pics or props or anything. Everyone had the same outfit on (Guys had black jackets and ties with a white shirt, girls had this black wrap thingy).

Hrm...and that was only 9 years ago. Things sure have changed.

Ignot
01-13-2007, 06:26 PM
Talk about a geek. And I see why, what fucking parents are gonna go through the hassle of a lawsuit so their dorky son can where chain mail? Way to go Mom and Dad.

RichardCranium
01-13-2007, 06:30 PM
At least he isn't on a corner somewhere smoking every single one of his brain cells away or kicking someone's door off the hinges or beating the crap out of nerdy ass people for fun.

Lomoriond
01-13-2007, 07:41 PM
When I was in Jr. high... I watched three kids get in trouble under the zero tolerance policy... The first got EXPELLED for having a switch blade comb (looks like a switchblade, but with a black plastic comb instead of a blade) another got EXPELLED for bringing his GI joes to school (for his presentation on the contemporary western hero) because they had little 2 inch plastic guns.

The third kid stabbed someone with a pencil... not poked, not gouged.. but STABBED, as in, sunk 4 inches of #2 pencil into somebody's thigh. He got suspended for 2 weeks.... WTF!? He didn't have a weapon and was provoked/defending himself, therefore they couldn't expel him under zero tolerance.

Pencil = more deadly than 2 inch piece of plastic... kid's bring several handfuls of "weapons" to school every day, and they are quibbling over a PICTURE of a weapon?

It's not like this kid went to the mall and bought a katana and ninja outfit and started making death lists and talking about how to kill people... it's a constructive hobby with historical significance... if anything they should consider it a legitimate scholarly accolade to wear armor that he made himself while brandishing an era-relevant weapon.

But that's my 2 cents...

Schools are lame. I'm like Augie on this one... when I was in high school they made us get in a big long line and took our yearbook photos for us... then they took the biggest group of stuck up rich snobs to head the yearbook committee, so we basically got 120 pages dedicated to a handful of popular kids.