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Schools that canceled prom offer compromise

Celebration can go on, but with less decadence, Long Island principal says

Image: Hoagland
Brother Kenneth M. Hoagland, principal of Kellenberg High School, stands in the school's library in Uniondale, N.Y., in October. Hoagland sparked a national debate when he canceled the senior prom.
Ed Betz / AP
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updated 12:59 p.m. ET April 5, 2006

NEW YORK - Two Long Island high schools that canceled their senior proms after years of burgeoning excess that included limos and weekend house rentals in the Hamptons announced a cut-rate compromise Tuesday that will involve bus rides and other more modest arrangements.

Instead of hiring chauffeurs, students will take buses to a Manhattan pier for a dinner cruise. Instead of tuxedos and fancy ball gowns, the dress code will be jackets and ties for boys and dresses for girls.

The cost is expected to be about $100 per student — a fraction of the cost of the wild parties of the past.

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“The thing that we’re most pleased about is that this recommendation came from the students,” said Brother Kenneth M. Hoagland, principal of Kellenberg Memorial High School in Uniondale.

Hoagland sparked a national debate about the ostentatiousness and debauchery that accompany many senior proms when he said last fall that his school would no longer sponsor a prom. Weeks later, officials at nearby Chaminade High School did the same. Both are Roman Catholic schools.

Hoagland sent a 2,000-word letter last fall to Kellenberg students and parents, decrying the “bacchanalian aspects” of that school’s prom.

Principal decries ‘flaunting of affluence’
“It is not primarily the sex/booze/drugs that surround this event, as problematic as they might be; it is rather the flaunting of affluence, assuming exaggerated expenses, a pursuit of vanity for vanity’s sake — in a word, financial decadence,” Hoagland said in his letter.

This week, Hoagland said the decision to cancel the prom “awakened people and gave them courage to stand up, and I think that has helped restore things to sanity.”

“The students came to us ... after reading our letter, saying they understand there have been abuses and they accept that as a problem,” Hoagland said Tuesday. “They would just like to have an event that celebrates their four years together and the idea of a dinner cruise was agreeable to us.”

Parent Edward Lawson initially decried the decision to cancel the prom at Kellenberg, but later said he was pleased by the agreement.

“It’s a great compromise. The kids stood up for themselves and the administration is going along with it,” said Lawson, whose son Robert is a senior.

The Rev. James Williams, president of Chaminade, said the revised celebration “is much more consistent with the values we adhere to.”

“It doesn’t have all the flamboyance and the over-the-topness of ‘how can I outdo somebody else,”’ said Williams. In recent years, he added, the prom “became a question of who had the biggest limousine, who had the most outrageous outfit. And now all that’s gone.”

© 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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