Posted on 10/01/2001 4:06:24 PM PDT by Lecie
Flag display causes ruckus at Holy Cross
Monday, October 01, 2001
By Emilie Astell
Worcester (Mass) Telegram & Gazette Staff
WORCESTER-- Margaret Post took an American flag to work three days after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks to mourn the death of Todd Beamer, a close personal friend who was a passenger on United Airlines Flight 93 when the hijacked jet crashed in rural Pennsylvania.
She did not realize, she said Thursday, that by hanging the flag in a second-floor hallway of Beavens Hall at the College of the Holy Cross she would cause a commotion. Instead of allowing the flag to remain in place, Royce Singleton, chairman of the college's Sociology Department, asked Mrs. Post, a secretary in the department, to take it down.
She refused.
He took it down, folded it and placed the flag on her desk, she said.
I was doing a very patriotic thing on a national day of mourning, she said. Her only intention, she added, was to mourn the death of a friend and honor his memory.
Mrs. Post's husband, Robert, worked with Mr. Beamer at Oracle Corp. Mrs. Post and Lisa Beamer had accompanied their husbands on a business trip to Europe and returned home on Sept. 10.
Todd Beamer is believed to have been one of the passengers who tried to stop the hijackers. He called his wife on a cellphone minutes before the plane crashed, telling her that he and others planned to overpower the terrorists.
Mrs. Beamer was honored Sept. 20 at the Capitol during President Bush's address to the nation and received a standing ovation when she was introduced by the president.
Mr. Singleton acknowledged in an interview Thursday afternoon that he had taken the flag down, but declined to explain his reasons, saying that there was nothing to discuss with anyone outside the college.
I don't want to get into why it happened, he said. It was a decision I very much regret having made for many reasons.
Mrs. Post said she explained to Mr. Singleton that she was mourning a friend, but he told her that displaying the flag would make some students uncomfortable. After the incident, she received a letter from Mr. Singleton in which he expressed remorse, she said.
Mr. Singleton denied Thursday night that he said anything about students to Mrs. Post.
There is nothing that I can say that will make anybody understand the social context in which this occurred, he said.
There was still lingering shock, anxiety and anger that Friday, he said. Seeing the flag in the hallway upset him, he added, and stirred certain emotions in me. He did not elaborate on what kinds of emotions he experienced.
Two other professors in the department, whom Mrs. Post declined to identify, agreed with Mr. Singleton that the flag should be removed, she said.
The incident upset Mrs. Post and prompted her to leave the campus before lunchtime that Friday, Sept. 14. She returned to work the following Wednesday.
I started the day in honor and left in embarrassment and tears, the Auburn resident said. I'm a very patriotic person. I fly an American flag outside my home every day with a light on it.
When she returned to work, Mrs. Post met with Mr. Singleton and Stephen C. Ainlay, dean of the college. An agreement was reached allowing Mrs. Post to display a flag in her office. She now has a small flag on top of her desk.
Holy Cross spokeswoman Katherine B. McNamara called the incident a knee-jerk reaction on the part of Mr. Singleton and one that does not characterize the college.
The campus is filled with American flags, she said Thursday night. Holy Cross stands for academic freedom.
As news of the incident spread through Beavens Hall, Mrs. Post said, an employee in the psychology department, which is on the third floor of the building, retrieved the flag that had been taken down. The flag was then displayed in the third-floor hallway, with no objections.
An employee at Holy Cross for eight years, Mrs. Post said she still enjoys working there, although it has been stressful since the incident.
I know the professors in the department had a different interpretation of the flag than I have, she said, but it's not every day a secretary stands up to professors.
Give Em Hell "M"
Sirs, I cannot express to you enough my sense of outrage and anger at Royce Singleton's removal of the American flag after the Trade-tower bombing, whose very fabric was drenched in the blood of patriots. I have become sickened by the staggering amount of Liberalism being taught in US institutions of higher learning. As a person born and bred in the Holy Church, I am ASTONISHED that such a man teaches at your venerable Catholic university.
What right did Mr. Singleton have to block the hanging of America's official symbol, on the soil of the United States? What right did he have to stymie the patriotic expressions of an American mourning the attack of religious zealots who are ABSOLUTELY opposed to the United State's freedom's, and Christianity? In fact, doesn't Islam HATE the very 'Holy Cross' you are named after? Is Mr. Singleton a full-blown Socialist, or simply a Leftist? Either way his actions support insipid Godless secularism.
I am asking you to remove Mr. Singleton from his leadership position, and fire him, since this is an American college, and his actions reveal the heart of a traitor. You could at least send him on an unpaid sabatical for a year, as his actions are a grotesque parody of intellectual insight and moral probity.
I will not end my quest until I see justice in this matter. I will promote this phillipic from the Atlantic to the Pacific, via email.
Yours, Sean Ireland
http://www.freerepublic.com/forum/a3bb946392657.htm
His research and publications span social psychology, including work on group polarization...
Probably the only area in which he excels.
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