June 7, 2007

American flags vandalized

CHEYENNE - Mayor Jack Spiker is telling the American Legion Post 6 that the destruction of about 100 small American flags at a cemetery was a “combination of some innocent mistakes and maybe some vandalism.”

What destroyed the flags at Olivet Cemetery remains unknown, however.

Legion members said last week that the flags appeared to have been damaged by a lawn mower. But Spiker said he doesn’t believe that was the case.

City crews have admitted running over two or three flags by accident. But one mower operator, Rob Allen, said it would be outrageous for nearly 100 flags to be damaged. “We try as hard as we can, and from what I saw, they weren’t run over by a mower,” he said.

City Parks and Recreation Director Rick Parish said the city plans to replace the flags and will determine what new procedures need to be made.


Raleigh Rule Restricts Number of Flags Allowed for Display to Three

June 4, 2007

City Tells Store Owners: Take Down Flags or Face Fine

To show his patriotism, Raleigh store manager David Brown flies the American flag, but the city said he and a neighboring business both have too many flags and that there’s a limit on how many you can display.

“This store was opened in 1999, and those flags have been up there since 1999,” Brown said.

Raleigh code allows for three flags to fly. The Fiddle Stix that Brown manages has seven, so the city said four flags must wave goodbye.

Just south on Capital Boulevard, Martin Auto Haus flies 10 flags and has been told to temper its display.

“We’ve had our flags up since we opened this business and haven’t thought about taking them down,” said business owner Kevin Powell.

He said the flags are his tribute to those serving overseas.

“The people that are serving our country, they have to see that we’re supporting them,” Powell said. “Until they come back home, we’re going to keep our flags up.”

City officials said the choice in a three-flag maximum or a $500 fine.

“If the city tells us to take them down, come Sunday, we’ll take them down,” Brown said. “I just want to make sure all the veterans in North Carolina and the city of Raleigh know what the city is trying to do with our flags.”

The stores have until Sunday to take down the flags. Store owners said they were told the orders they received were part of an effort to clean up Capital Boulevard.


Raleigh Rule Restricts Number of Flags Allowed for Display to Three

June 4, 2007

City Tells Store Owners: Take Down Flags or Face Fine

To show his patriotism, Raleigh store manager David Brown flies the American flag, but the city said he and a neighboring business both have too many flags and that there’s a limit on how many you can display.

“This store was opened in 1999, and those flags have been up there since 1999,” Brown said.

Raleigh code allows for three flags to fly. The Fiddle Stix that Brown manages has seven, so the city said four flags must wave goodbye.

Just south on Capital Boulevard, Martin Auto Haus flies 10 flags and has been told to temper its display.

“We’ve had our flags up since we opened this business and haven’t thought about taking them down,” said business owner Kevin Powell.

He said the flags are his tribute to those serving overseas.

“The people that are serving our country, they have to see that we’re supporting them,” Powell said. “Until they come back home, we’re going to keep our flags up.”

City officials said the choice in a three-flag maximum or a $500 fine.

“If the city tells us to take them down, come Sunday, we’ll take them down,” Brown said. “I just want to make sure all the veterans in North Carolina and the city of Raleigh know what the city is trying to do with our flags.”

The stores have until Sunday to take down the flags. Store owners said they were told the orders they received were part of an effort to clean up Capital Boulevard.


Flags Replaced With Swastikas in Wash.

May 30, 2007

Vandals burned dozens of small American flags that decorated veterans’ graves for Memorial Day and replaced many of them with hand-drawn swastikas, authorities said Monday.

Forty-six flag standards were found empty and another 33 flags were in charred tatters Sunday in the cemetery, authorities said. Swastikas drawn on paper appeared where 14 of the flags had been.

Members of the American Legion on this island off Washington’s northwest coast replaced the burned flags with new ones Sunday afternoon.

The vandals struck again on Memorial Day after a guard left at dawn, the San Juan County sheriff’s office said. This time, the vandals left 33 of the hand-drawn swastikas.

“This is not an act of free speech. This is a crime,” Sheriff Bill Cumming said in a statement released Monday afternoon.

Investigators believe there’s more than one culprit, based on the number of flags that were vandalized, Cumming said in a telephone interview. But authorities have no suspects, he said.

The sheriff said deputies were trying to lift fingerprints off what little physical evidence they were able to recover.


Flags fly for fallen soldiers

May 30, 2007

Flags fly for fallen soldiers

On Memorial Day, Americans pay tribute, recall sacrifices — and hit the road

By KAREN MATTHEWS - The Associated Press

Veterans and active soldiers unfurled a 90-by-100-foot U.S. flag as the nation’s top commander in the Middle East spoke to a Memorial Day crowd gathered in New York’s Central Park on Monday.

Navy Adm. William Fallon, commander of U.S. Central Command, said America should remember those the day honors. “Their sacrifice has enabled us to enjoy the things that we, I think in many cases, take for granted,” he said.

Across the nation, flags snapped in the wind over decorated gravestones as many paid tribute to their fallen soldiers.

Millions more kicked off summer with trips to beaches or their backyard grills. AAA estimated 38 million Americans would travel 50 miles or more during the weekend — up 1.7 percent from last year — even with gas averaging $3.20 a gallon for self-service regular.

In Washington, motorcycles driven by military veterans and their loved ones roared to the Vietnam Veterans Memorial. It was the 20th year the group, Rolling Thunder, has taken to the streets in support of the U.S. military.

SOMBER PRESIDENT

President Bush spoke at nearby Arlington National Cemetery, honoring U.S. troops who have fought and died for freedom and expressing his resolve to succeed in the war in Iraq.

“From their deaths must come a world where the cruel dreams of tyrants and terrorists are frustrated and foiled — where our nation is more secure from attack, and where the gift of liberty is secured for millions who have never known it,” the president said.

‘GOING GOT TOUGH’

At Fort Bragg, N.C., the commanding general of the Army’s Green Berets said the troops who have died around the world were “soldiers we could count on when the going got tough.” Thirteen Green Berets who died during the past year were honored, as were 109 former Green Berets who died during the period.

“We always could count on our Special Forces brothers to be there with us, regardless of the odds against us,” Maj. Gen. Thomas R. Csrnko said.

A ROSE TO REMEMBER

At a Memorial Day ceremony at the Kansas Statehouse, Cindy Butler placed a rose beneath the state’s official wreath in honor of her son, Sgt. Jacob Butler, the first Fort Riley soldier killed in Iraq. She was joined by Joe Butler, Jacob’s twin brother.


Prayer for Peace, Memorial Day, 2007

May 28, 2007

 Prayer for Peace, Memorial Day, 2007
A Proclamation by the President of the United States of America

On Memorial Day, Americans pause with solemn gratitude and deep respect for all our fallen service men and women who have given their lives for our country and our freedom.

Through the generations, the courageous and selfless patriots of our Armed Forces have secured our liberty and borne its great and precious cost. When it has mattered most, patriots from every corner of our Nation have taken up arms to uphold the ideals that make our country a beacon of hope and freedom for the entire world. By answering the call of duty with valor and unrelenting determination, they have set a standard of courage and idealism that inspires us all.

All Americans honor the memory of the lives that have been lost in defense of our freedom. Our Nation mourns them, and their example of strength and perseverance gives us resolve. We are also thankful to those who have stood by our service men and women in times of war and times of peace.

Today, the members of our Armed Forces follow in a proud tradition handed down to them by the heroes that served before them. They are protecting our Nation, advancing the blessings of freedom, and laying the foundation for a more peaceful tomorrow through service that exemplifies the good and decent character of our Nation. America is grateful to all those who have worn the uniform of the Armed Forces of the United States, and we will never forget their sacrifices for our liberty.

On Memorial Day, we honor all those who have fallen by remembering their noble sacrifice for freedom. We also pray for our troops, their families, and for the peace we all seek.

In respect for their devotion to America, the Congress, by a joint resolution approved on May 11, 1950, as amended (64 Stat. 158), has requested the President to issue a proclamation calling on the people of the United States to observe each Memorial Day as a day of prayer for permanent peace and designating a period on that day when the people of the United States might unite in prayer. The Congress, by Public Law 106-579, has also designated the minute beginning at 3:00 p.m. local time on that day as a time for all Americans to observe the National Moment of Remembrance.

NOW, THEREFORE, I, GEORGE W. BUSH, President of the United States of America, do hereby proclaim Memorial Day, May 28, 2007, as a day of prayer for permanent peace, and I designate the hour beginning in each locality at 11:00 a.m. of that day as a time to unite in prayer. I also ask all Americans to observe the National Moment of Remembrance beginning at 3:00 p.m., local time, on Memorial Day. I encourage the media to participate in these observances. I also request the Governors of the United States and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, and the appropriate officials of all units of government, to direct that the flag be flown at half staff until noon on this Memorial Day on all buildings, grounds, and naval vessels throughout the United States, and in all areas under its jurisdiction and control. I also request the people of the United States to display the flag at half staff from their homes for the customary forenoon period.

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this fifteenth day of May, in the year of our Lord two thousand seven, and of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and thirty-first.

 http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2007/05/20070515-7.html


Vandalism Against Flags Hurts Us All - From the Times Record, Arkansas

May 25, 2007

We don’t often take note of vandalism. A little graffiti here, a couple of smashed windows there. It’s not good, and we don’t love it, but things happen. Unless they happen directly to you, it’s easy to shrug and go on, chalking it up to the price of doing business in a free society.

But the desecration of the flags on Garrison Avenue is a kick to the gut for all of us.

Some of us fly our flags all the time, and some are holiday flag fliers. But of all the days of the year, even more than Flag Day itself, the day to fly the flag with pride and humility and gratitude is Memorial Day. For years, Waldo Fisher, a Vietnam veteran, took his Darby Junior High School students to the U.S. National Cemetery in Fort Smith to decorate with flags, a tradition he continued even after he retired and even after his son fell in battle. We still feel a lump in the throat when we think of those respectful young people learning what duty and sacrifice really mean and what their cost can be.

In recent years, downtown Fort Smith, as part of its general spiffing up for the summer and for the Old Fort Days Rodeo Parade, and as sign of its commitment to patriotism, placed flags all down the avenue, bolted to parking meters, making downtown look festive and patriotic.

But sometime overnight Monday, an unknown vandal or vandals stole six flags and then bent or twisted the six-foot poles from which they hung.

The cost to replace the flags is not insignificant; at more than $500, it’s enough, say Fort Smith police, to make the crime a felony.

But there is more to it than that. Some bottom-feeder among us has disrespected those who gave all, disrespected our service members and veterans, and disrespected each of us

We hope the police solve this crime quickly and definitively. We hope that if you own a flag, you will fly it properly and often. And especially, we hope you will fly it for Memorial Day and for those who earned our right to be flying it.


AmericanFlags.com to Give Away One Million Flags in Honor of Memorial Day

May 23, 2007

AmericanFlags.com ( http://www.americanflags.com ) announced today that it will immediately begin offering its website visitors free American Flags in honor of Memorial Day. The popular website - known as the world’s largest retailer of flags, flagpoles and patriotic products - will give away up to one million three-foot by five-foot American flags to recognize and remember the heroic efforts of those who have lost their lives while heeding our nation’s call to service. These flags were previously priced at $19.99, plus shipping and handling.”Memorial Day is more than a summer kick-off. It is a time for us to honor and give thanks to the brave men and women of our Armed Forces who continue to risk their lives — sometimes paying the ultimate price — in order to ensure the peace, safety and prosperity of their fellow Americans,” said AmericanFlags.com President/CEO Jeffrey Reynolds. “Every American should fly the flag proudly on Memorial Day and every day as a visible symbol of our deep gratitude to those who have served, and are currently serving in the armed forces. By giving these flags away, we couldn’t make it any easier and we know they’ll be flown proudly in communities across our great nation,” Reynolds added.

AmericanFlags.com is owned and operated by Precision Marketing Solutions, Inc., a privately held corporation based in New York. Visitors can claim their free flags by visiting http://www.americanflags.com

Contact: Jeffrey Reynolds info@americanflags.com 1-877-7OFFICE


American Flags Meant to Honor the Dead are Trashed

May 17, 2007

 

The red, white and blue - tossed in the trash. Now, a local woman disturbed by what she found, wants something done.

Among branches and other debris, dozens and dozens of American flags were left in a pile at the Eagle Mills cemetery in the Town of Brunswick. Just two weeks away from Memorial Day, a widow of a veteran made the discovery, and she turned to us, for help, in hopes of getting some answers.

As NEWS10’s John Craig reports, it was quite a shock when she first found the tossed flags.

Marie Fremont could not believe her eyes.

“The flag doesn’t deserve the garbage pile,” says Marie.

Marie was at the cemetery on Sunday, Mother’s Day, to put new flowers at her mother’s grave. She also picked up, cleaned the area - kind of policed the area - taking the branches down toward the shed, and that is when she found the other American flags.

“And when I got up here and discovered all these flags, it just broke my heart because my country means a lot to me and the flag means a lot to me,” Marie says.

She has a nephew about to serve in the Middle East, and her husband, Lawrence, was in the Navy. He served in the Korean War, and in his later years, he used to go around and put up new flags in cemeteries as part of the American Legion.

An official with the Eagle Mills cemetery says new ones were put up in preparation for Memorial Day, but says the old ones were “inadvertently” trashed.

“There’s many places to go to - you could take them to any American Legion,” says Marie.

“The cemeteries that we take care of, that doesn’t happen,” senior color guard, Tommy Doin says.

The Veterans of Lansingburgh are preparing for their annual rite of disposal of the flag.

“We accept all the flags and we put them in the repository here,” says Bill Rosado, with the Veterans of Lansingburgh. “We have a city permit that we get and we burn ‘em. That is the way you dispose of a flag at all times.”

“That’s, that’s sad…really, really sad,” Doin says about the flags found at Eagle Mills cemetery.

We called the cemetery’s assistant superintendent Tuesday night, who first said this “was news to him.” When we talked to him about 90 minutes later, he said the groundskeeper admitted he got “side tracked” with the flags, and would make sure a veterans group was contacted today.

The Veterans of Lansingburgh also asked us to mention that they will replace any old flag for you, free of charge.


Flags not lowered

May 16, 2007

UTE, Iowa — Why is it we couldn’t manage to get the flags at half staff at of all places the Veterans Park on Water Street when ordered by Gov. Culver to do so across Iowa on Wednesday in respect to the fallen Alta, Iowa, soldier who was killed in Iraq?

Being a member of the Iowa Army National Guard here in Sioux City I felt it was quite disrespectful to me and all area members and their families. It really shows true ungratefulness or just laziness. — Shawn Goslar