PRESS RELEASE:  Contact: Kirk D. Lyons 828-669-5189
4 FEBRUARY 2003
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

 

Dubose Middle School Grudgingly
Respects Dixie Kids Rights

 

Summerville, SC - Facing impending litigation, a populist parents uprising and concerted heat from two Charleston area Sons of Confederate Veterans Camps, the principal of Dubose Middle school has grudgingly lifted his school wide ban on Confederate symbols (see letter attachment below).

 

The SLRC attorneys', representing 6 Dorchester County families with students attending Dubose Middle School, called the attorney for the Dorchester County Schools last Thursday, notifying the schools attorney that the SLRC's attorney team needed to meet with him regarding the Confederate flag ban at Dubose Middle School. "Is there any point in our talking?" asked SLRC attorney Lourie A. Salley, III. "Definitely!" the school's attorney replied.  A meeting was planned for early this week.

 

On Friday, January 31, Principal Burke issued his letter rescinding the ban.

 

"This is a textbook case of how parents demanding accountability from their public servants can change the system for the good of all students," said SLRC board member H.K. Edgerton. "It is also a textbook case of cooperation between parents, lawyers and community heritage support groups," Edgerton added.

 

The SLRC warmly commends Rick & Kim Bokern and their daughter Kelly, Mike & Melly Brown and their children Jessica and Jaime for their effective advocacy in standing up for their rights and the rights of all students at Dubose Middle School.

 

Further a great deal of credit and thanks go to the Secession Camp and the Horace Lawton Hunley Camp, Sons of Confederate Veterans for their solid support of the parents and students and their great work in focusing public attention on the flag issue.

 

The SLRC wishes to clarify a statement in a Charleston Post & Courier article on the flag ban that appeared on February 1, 2003: to wit:

 

"The situation drew the attention of the Southern Legal Resource Center, which has handled Confederate flag cases.

 

The Bokerns joined fellow parent Mellie Brown, whose daughter was given in-school suspension in October for wearing a Confederate shirt, to protest the ban.  Working with the Southern Legal Resource Center, several families are forming a local chapter of the League of the South to provide a support group to other students who may face similar situations."

 

The Southern Legal Resource Center wishes to clarify the above paragraph in that it DOES NOT organize for the League of the South or any other organization.  We do encourage families to form their own support group and to join community heritage organizations that support them.

 

The Southern Legal Resource Center is a non-profit, South Carolina public law firm that serves as the legal voice of the Confederate Southern American community and through that community, ALL Americans.


 

1st Attachment

DUBOSE MIDDLE SCHOOL
1000 DUBOSE SCHOOL ROAD
SUMMERVILLE, SC 29483

Raymond A. Burke:  843-875-7012
Principal Fax:  843-821-3995

January 31, 2003

Dear Parents/Guardians:

During the past school years, DuBose Middle School has attempted to create an environment wherein children feel safe and have a strong sense of positive belonging.  The school’s dress code was established to help ensure safety.  However, the events over the past couple of weeks have overshadowed the school’s initial focus on safety replacing it with media hype, creating unnecessary anxiety and consuming valuable energy that should be directed towards student instruction and achievement.

 

The safety and well being of our children is important to us, but equally important to us is an environment that is conducive to learning.  Therefore, effective February 3, 2003, students may again wear Confederate apparel to school as long as it does not denigrate another racial group or cause disruptive behavior in the school thus causing an unsafe environment. Please be mindful that any attire that creates an unsafe environment will not be tolerated and will be handled on an individual basis.

 

The administration and staff at DuBose Middle School thank you, our parents for your patience and your continuous support as we have wrestled with these issues during the past weeks.  With your support and guidance, I know that the DuBose Middle School students will comply with the school’s request.  It is now time to bring closure and to move forward.

 

Sincerely,

Raymond Burke, Principal


 

2nd Attachment

Story last updated at 5:59 a.m. Saturday, February 1, 2003

Principal lifts ban on flag shirts
BY ALLISON L. BRUCE
Of The Post and Courier Staff

 

SUMMERVILLE - Some students at DuBose Middle School can pull their Confederate flag shirts out of the drawer Monday now that a ban has been lifted.

 

A letter to students Friday says they will be allowed to wear shirts bearing the flag again, as long as they do not "denigrate another racial group or cause disruptive behavior in the school thus causing an unsafe environment."

 

For the parent of one DuBose Middle student, the letter was a victory.

 

"This is exactly what I was hoping would happen," said Kim Bokern, who took issue with the ban after her daughter was taken out of class for wearing a T-shirt with the Confederate flag.

 

Principal Raymond Burke imposed the ban after several students wore Dixie Outfitters shirts to school that incorporated the Confederate flag with a picture of black people picking cotton.

 

The shirts offended some students by tying the Confederate flag to the degradation of a race, Burke said, and they created unrest at the school.  For him, that made it a safety issue.

 

With dress codes left up to the discretion of principals, Burke had the school district's support.

The issue came to a head when eighth-grader Kelly Bokern came to school after the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday wearing a shirt that incorporated the Confederate flag and the South Carolina state flag on the back.  Bokern said she was threatened with in-school suspension if she did not change her shirt.  She eventually was given another shirt by the office and sent back to class.

 

District officials could not be reached for comment Friday night, but a copy of Burke's letter offers an explanation for why the ban was axed.

 

"During the past school years, DuBose Middle School has attempted to create an environment wherein children feel safe and have a strong sense of positive belonging," the letter reads.  "The school's dress code was established to help ensure safety.  However, the events over the past couple of weeks have overshadowed the school's initial focus on safety replacing it with media hype, creating unnecessary anxiety and consuming valuable energy that should be directed towards student instruction and achievement."

 

The situation drew the attention of the Southern Legal Resource Center, which has handled Confederate flag cases.

 

The Bokerns joined fellow parent Mellie Brown, whose daughter was given in-school suspension in October for wearing a Confederate shirt, to protest the ban.  Working with the Southern Legal Resource Center, several families are forming a local chapter of the League of the South to provide a support group to other students who may face similar situations.

 

Kim Bokern mentioned a letter to the editor that advised her daughter to "sit back on the couch and get used to it."  She said the experience showed her daughter how important it is to stand up for her beliefs.

 

"I think it shows her that, no matter what the outcome, if you believe in something, you fight for it," Kim Bokern said.

 

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