SLRC UPDATE:
25 July 2001
Confederate
Flag Still Flies
LOS ANGELES TIMES
July 25, 2001
THE NATION
Confederate Flag Still Flies, as Do Lawsuits to Shelve It
Race: At least 30 disputes over students wearing the divisive symbol
reach courts.
ACLU backs its display this time around.
By JEFFREY GETTLEMAN, TIMES STAFF WRITER
ATLANTA - The controversy over the Confederate battle flag, it seems,
will never end. Now it's getting kicked around schoolyards across the
South.
In the first of at least 30 such
disputes to reach the courts, a rural Georgia school district that banned
students from wearing T-shirts emblazoned with the distinctive, divisive
Rebel cross won the first round when a federal judge temporarily upheld the
ban. But the American Civil Liberties Union has said it will press the
case, claiming the policy violates the right to free speech.
"The tension over this is
huge," said Seminole County school Supt. Larry R. Bryant, who drew up
the anti-flag rules for his 2,000-student district. "Unless we
banned the flag, there would be violence - and lots of it."
Despite all the soul-searching
over the last few years, Southern leaders continue to struggle over the
proper place for a painful piece of their history. Is the red and blue
standard that rebel troops carried during the Civil War a symbol of heritage
or hate? Does it belong anyplace - and if so, where?
The Seminole County suit is a
closely watched test case, the first of approximately 30 similar
school-related disputes from Texas to Virginia to reach the courts.
Though this week's ruling was only preliminary and both sides are digging in
for a longer fight, battle flag enthusiasts were discouraged.
(SLRC
Note: The heck we are - we saw this coming!!!)
"There's an institutional
bias against Confederate symbols with most school administrators in the
South," said Kirk Lyons, lead counsel of the Southern Legal Resource
Center, a North Carolina pro-flag group. "In all these flag cases, the
students are always the heavy underdog."
Georgia had almost put the issue
to rest in January. The state Legislature decided surprisingly quickly
to ditch the old state flag dominated by the Rebel cross for a new banner
that shrunk the emblem to a postcard-sized square.
Though some heritage buffs
complained, many residents were relieved to have the controversy
settled. Eight weeks later, school officials in Seminole County, a
peanut and cotton farming region near the Florida border, decided to ban any
display of the Confederate flag in school.
That would appear to prohibit
students from wearing a shirt decorated with Georgia's new state flag, the
same one strung up outside Seminole High School, because the banner includes
a small reproduction of the Confederate cross along its lower edge.
Nine high school and middle
school students, all white, were made into examples. Each had shown up
for class wearing a T-shirt with a depiction of the Rebel flag. They
were ordered to take the shirts off or go home.
For years the integrated
district, which is 52% white and 48% black, had a broad policy against any
clothing that sent "race-related" messages or were "offensive
to others." There had been fights in school 15 years ago between
black kids wearing black power T-shirts and white kids, the superintendent
said. The rules have been tightened to the point that even a
"black is beautiful" or Martin Luther King Jr. shirt is
prohibited.
The battle-flag T-shirts became
an issue this spring when white students started wearing them, Bryant said.
"My assumption is that
their parents were upset about changing the state flag," Bryant said.
In May, the ACLU asked for an
injunction against the school district's ban, claiming the policy was too
broad and that there was no evidence of disturbances caused by the Rebel
T-shirts. It was a contrarian position for the liberal ACLU, which had
called for removing the battle emblem from the state flag.
"This is a pure free speech
issue," said ACLU lawyer Robert Tsai. "There are a few instances
where schools can restrict free speech, but the standard is very high."
According to Tsai, the school
district must show a clear link between the T-shirts and serious
disruption. Tsai cites a 1969 Supreme Court decision that affirmed the
rights of student protesters in Iowa to wear black antiwar armbands to
school, despite fights that later broke out among students.
School lawyers countered that
students' 1st Amendment rights are more limited. As long as school
officials have a reasonable fear of disruption, they're allowed to ban the
shirts, the school lawyers said. They cited a 1972 case in which a
newly desegregated school district in Chattanooga, Tenn., was allowed to ban
Rebel-themed clothing.
At a hearing July 2, school
lawyers presented affidavits from African American students in Seminole
County who said they were offended by the Confederate shirts, including one
depicting a black field hand picking cotton. One student said he had
to hold another black youth back from fighting.
But several white students
testified the Rebel emblem was something to be proud of.
"It's one of the symbols of
the South and I chose to wear it," said Michelle Tucker, 14.
U.S. District Judge W. Louis
Sands, who is black, said he needs more evidence before he issues a
ruling. He denied granting an injunction against the school district
but set a date for more hearings in two months.
The judge wrote in a 16-page
ruling:
"The display of the
Confederate battle flag in an ethnically diverse public school environment
is made especially difficult because of the sharply divided views as to what
the flag represents."
*Times researcher Edith
Stanley contributed to this story.
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