Court backs student's right to wear his principles on his shirt

US: A US student who sued school officials after he was made to censor a T-shirt that labelled President George W Bush "Chicken…

US: A US student who sued school officials after he was made to censor a T-shirt that labelled President George W Bush "Chicken-Hawk-In-Chief" and a former alcohol and cocaine abuser has won an appeal to wear the garment to school.

The 2nd US Circuit Court of Appeals on Wednesday ruled in favour of Zachery Guiles, who through his parents claimed his free speech rights had been violated when school officials, following a complaint by one parent, made him put duct tape over parts of his T-shirt that showed a Bush image surrounded by cocaine, a razor blade, a straw and a martini.

Guiles, who as a seventh- grader in 2004 wore the T-shirt to Williamstown Middle High School in Vermont once a week for two months after purchasing it at an anti-war rally, appealed the case after a lower court ruled in favour of the school. The school argued the images were offensive as they undermined the school's anti-drug message.

The T-shirt read "George W Bush" and "Chicken-Hawk-In-Chief" with a picture of the president's face wearing a helmet superimposed on the body of a chicken.

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The back of the shirt showed lines of cocaine, a martini glass and smaller print that accused Bush of being a "Crook", "Cocaine Addict", "AWOL", "Draft Dodger" and "Lying Drunk Driver".

The appeals court said while the T-shirt "uses harsh rhetoric and imagery to express disagreement with the president's policies and to impugn his character", the images depicted "are not plainly offensive as a matter of law".