School controversy becoming pink elephant-sized
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Alicia Robinson
The color of cotton candy is at the center of an issue some think has
become a media circus.
Ensign Intermediate School Principal Edward Wong pulled six
students from a class photo last week for wearing pink in a way
school officials thought could signify a party crew, which they
considered a precursor to a gang.
Other students walked out of the photo in protest and hundreds
wore pink the next day to show their support. Since then, various TV
personalities have jumped into the fray, with radio and TV host Ryan
Seacrest airing the issue on the radio Tuesday and four local TV
stations showing up at the school Wednesday.
School officials are ready for the issue to die down, but the pink
crusade shows no sign of stopping, with several Southern California
chapters of a sorority among those heeding Seacrest’s call to wear
pink Friday.
By putting the focus on the color pink, the media missed the main
point of the issue, which was making sure students don’t wear colors
that signify party crews, school district spokeswoman Jane Garland
said.
“They’ve made it into a joke instead of the fact that we’re trying
to curtail gang activities, the exact job we’ve been given to do,”
Garland said. “To me, it has hit a point of ridiculousness and I
think we should move on and talk about the real problems of educating
our children.”
Seacrest’s attention was drawn to the issue after the Orange
County Register ran a story including a student’s comment that the
“American Idol” host likes pink, said Martin Wagmaister, a producer
for the KIIS-FM (102.7) radio show “On Air with Ryan Seacrest.”
“We took that and just ran with it,” Wagmaister said.
Seacrest talked on the air about how it’s OK for anyone, male or
female, to wear pink, and the show has been getting calls from
supportive listeners all week, Wagmaister said.
“It’s crazy how it’s spread,” he said. “It spread so fast. We’re
just really surprised because we didn’t expect it to go as far as it
went.”
Various chapters of the Sigma Lambda Gamma sorority, including the
one at UC Irvine, planned to wear pink Friday, said Irvine chapter
President Beatriz Banuelos. Pink is one of the sorority’s official
colors.
“The fact that it said ‘think pink,’ it was a chance for us not
only to support a cause but for us to reaffirm what our color means
to us,” she said.
Wagmaister said Seacrest is aware that the school’s issue was with
possible party crew affiliation rather than just pink as a color.
“The whole issue started with Ensign Middle School and it
eventually ends there too, because we are supporting the students of
Ensign and we are supporting anyone else who’s ever had an issue with
wearing pink,” he said.
While the issue was a big deal to students at the time, it’s gone
way overboard since, said Julie, a parent of an Ensign student who
asked that her last name not be used.
The principal might have handled the situation better by letting
the students stay in the class photo and talking to them afterward
about what they were wearing, she said.
“I think we need to be fair toward Dr. Wong in that he’s just
looking out for the safety of these kids,” she said.
Garland said she hasn’t heard questions or complaints from
parents, but she has certainly heard from the media.
School officials aren’t saying the students pulled from the
picture are in a gang, but they have a responsibility to act if there
is even a possibility of gang-like activity, Garland said. This puts
the school in a tough position.
“If we become proactive, we’re questioned. If we don’t become
proactive, we’re questioned,” Garland said.
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers business, politics and the environment.
She may be reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail at
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