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- <text id=91TT0435>
- <title>
- Feb. 25, 1991: It's A Grand Old Flag
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Feb. 25, 1991 Beginning Of The End
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE GULF WAR, Page 55
- It's a Grand Old (Politically Correct) Flag
- </hdr><body>
- <p> The last strains of The Star-Spangled Banner had faded from
- the court at Madison Square Garden, when Seton Hall
- University's Marco Lokar, an Italian citizen, came onto the
- floor to play ball in this land of the free. Each time Lokar
- touched the ball in the Feb. 2 game against St. John's
- University, the crowd booed and jeered the sophomore, the only
- player not wearing an American flag on his uniform. That night
- turned out to be the last time the flagless Lokar would wear
- his school's jersey. Last Wednesday he quit the team and dropped
- out of school. "I have received many threats, directed both
- toward me and my wife Lara, so that our life has become very
- difficult here," he explained. "We have decided to return to
- our hometown, Trieste."
- </p>
- <p> Lokar's story is one of the more poignant examples of the
- harm that forced patriotism can inflict. As public backing for
- the war grows to near 80%, intolerance of failure to support
- the war in a politically correct way is on the rise. There have
- been acts of violence against antiwar protesters, though
- freedom of expression is one of America's most cherished
- principles. In Maplewood, Mo., a suburb of St. Louis, Timothy
- Dunn went out to pick up his morning newspaper and found that
- his antiwar sign had been torched by a primitive incendiary
- device. Prowar demonstrators in another Missouri town attacked
- a car draped with a peace sign. They shoved flagpoles through
- the windows and shouted, "Commie faggots!" at the two men
- inside. At the Defense Language Institute at Fort Ord in
- California, a Russian instructor's car was towed off the
- parking lot after the decorated Vietnam War veteran refused to
- remove PEACE IS PATRIOTIC and SAY NO TO WAR signs from the
- window of his van. The military said they were simply carrying
- out regulations requiring a permit for such displays.
- </p>
- <p> When prowar sentiment is being expressed, however, rules
- that limit expression of a political idea have a way of being
- waived, modified or ignored. Authorities at Cornell University
- decided not to discipline students flying flags from their
- dormitory windows, despite residential contracts that for
- safety and maintenance reasons prohibit hanging anything from
- the window. The University of South Carolina officially frowns
- on students' leaning out of their windows and using Super Glue
- to affix flags and banners to their buildings. But officials
- tolerated the practice at one patriotic freshman dorm, where
- displays inside the window would not have been visible. After
- protests, the University of Maryland withdrew its objection to
- students' flying flags.
- </p>
- <p> Any additions, subtractions or alterations to official
- uniforms usually invite disciplinary action, except,
- apparently, in wartime. Late last month, the New York City
- police department overruled itself and decided that flag
- patches larger than a lapel pin but no bigger than 1.5 in. by
- 2 in. would not violate its strict standards. A Worcester,
- Mass., court officer fought for and won the right to wear a
- yellow ribbon below the breast badge on his uniform, unless a
- particular judge decides it might disrupt his courtroom. When
- a gate attendant at Miami's Opa-Locka Airport was told to
- remove her yellow ribbon, she refused, saying, "If they want
- my ribbon and my flag, they'll have to take my shirt with it."
- The county manager quickly clarified the policy against
- political paraphernalia. Said he: "I believe the display of
- yellow ribbons should not be viewed as a political statement
- but rather as a symbol that we remember the men and women
- serving in the Persian Gulf." Even at Disney World, whose
- efficiency and neutrality rival those of Switzerland, the
- strict dress code has been modified to allow those among its
- 32,000 employees who do not deal directly with the public to
- wear yellow ribbons.
- </p>
- <p> Would a black armband be exempted from official regulations
- as readily as a yellow ribbon or a flag? So popular is the war
- effort that the question has not come up yet--and Marco Lokar
- did not stay around long enough to raise it. But as people like
- Lokar and Dunn are finding out, the fewer dissenters there are,
- the more they need protection.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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