During
the high school's televised announcements that morning, two students on the
broadcast wore Chick-fil-A T-shirts, Snyder said.
The
students didn't say anything about the Gay-Straight Alliance or the school's
LGBT community, but she believes they knew what they were doing.
The
appearance started a flurry of tweets, with students calling out the two boys
who wore the Chick-fil-A shirts.
The
tweets continued over the weekend, and on Monday students who tweeted at the
boys wearing the shirts were called to the high school principal's office.
Students
were told they were being punished for tweeting during school hours, and
because some of their tweets contained obscenities, Snyder said.
She
said about 15 students were suspended and others were given detention....