TF South Retires Rebel Flag
Transcription
TF South Retires Rebel Flag
Not to be taken from this room STARTING A NEW TRADI ION imm, T F S o u t ByJOANCARREON Times Correspondent LANSING - Students, faculty, administrators and some parents marked the passing of one tradition Thursday and the start of another at Thornton Fractional South High School. In an emotion-charged ceremony, two of the high school's decades-old Rebel flags were officially retired and replaced with a new one bearing the Rebels nickname. The change occurred during an all-school assembly filled with pomp and circumstance and complete with members of a U.S. Army Color Guard, representatives of the Lansing Veterans Memorial Committee and the Lansing Historical Society, speeches by students ail h r e t i r e s R e b e Kirk Gill and Julie Wysocki, and performances by the high school's concert choir, concert band and pompon squad. The tone for the assembly was set early on as some students cheered, whistled and applauded when two Rebel flags were hoisted above the floor of the main gym while the band played its rendition of "Battle Hymn of the Republic." The student audience, some wearing Tshirts imprinted with the Rebel flag and others holding up smaller versions of the Confederate symbol, grew boisterous at irarious points during the ceremony. Reaction to the removal of the 33-year-old school symbol and the installation of a new one appea-ed split See FLAG, Page A l l along racial lines. Clusters of students, most of them African American, stood and cheered as the Rebel flags were taken down. Many white students booed. Groups of white students also booed the raising of the new "Rebels" flag, while many African-American students shouted and clapped. Principal James Spivey also was greeted with boos from students as he took the podium. "This is the end of a year-long process in which we have looked at the state of the nation. We have looked at ourselves and the past," he said. "TF South is a great school with a great past and, in spite of your feelings now, has a great future." After the assembly, Spivey said he thought the program was a good one but was disappointed by the students' behavior. "I wish that the students had been a little more accepting of the change," he said. During the assembly, one of the retired Rebel flags was presented to Lansing Veterans Memorial Foundation P r e s i d e n t and Founder Tom Luberda, and another to both Loretta Johnson, president of the Lansing Historical Society, and museum Curator Betty Humphrey. The new flag, designed by TF South seniors Kevin Riordan, Anthony Wills Jr., Kevin Houston and Joel Paris, was lifted into place above the center of the gym floor for the ceremony, but will be moved to its permanent location below the scoreboard. Among the school district dignitaries on hand for the event were Thornton Fractional Township High School District 215 Superintendent Kenneth Olsen, Assistant Superintendent John Zelanik, Business Manager Douglas Handley and school board members Karen Walker, Marcia Pavich and Nancy Paliga. After the assembly, many students were willing to sum up their feelings about the change. "I think it (the new flag) looks nice compared to what they used to have," said senior Carl Tigner., Julie Wysocki, who is a senior and vice president of the student senate, said she thinks people have to learn "they can't get everything they want and (that) things change. "I'm glad t h a t this whole process has been completed and we can start a new tradition," she said. "All the people that were booing were just kind of being ignorant," said freshman Jonathan Cannon. J o h n Vanderhoeck, a senior who is a member of the high school's varsity basketball team, expressed his displeasure with the new flag. f l a g UWHK MEM m m , m ILLINOIS m / School board member Karen Walker, left, became emotional during the flag replacement ceremony Thursday at Thornton Fractional South High School. Times photos by Rob Brown Continued from Page A-l l "I don't think it's good. It's nothing. It says 'Rebels,' " he said, adding he didn't vote for any of the new banner choices and thinks the old Rebel flag should have remained. "I don't think it's fair to the school if the majority doesn't want it (to be removed),'' he said. '• The new flag was chosen by students and faculty last week in a school-wide election. The entry was one of 13 up for consideration. The entries were narrowed to two final-, ists from which the winning design was then selected. The removal of the Confederate symbol comes nearly a year after an African American p a r e n t told school board members, among other things, that he was offended by the use of the Rebel flag as a school symbol and suggested it be taken down. The remark touched off months of discord within the school and community over the appropriateness of the flag's continued use. In J u n e , the school board concurred with a student/faculty committee's recommendation that the stars-and-bars symbol be removed and a new banner designed to represent all of the high school's students. Kevin Riordan and Anthony Wills Jr. said they think it is fitting to have the school's nickname in the new flag. "Look at our assembly," Riordan said. "We are a bunch of Rebels." Above, nembers of the Lansing Veteran; Memorial Committee take dovn the Confederate flag Thursday at TF South. At left, while sone booed, other TF Soith students cheered as the new school flag was raised ThursdcV- . 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