READERS RESPOND -- Community discusses Newport Harbor’s halftime
show
As a band member of Newport Harbor High, I feel we have been unfairly
judged and portrayed. Thursday, I read about how “shocked and ashamed”
someone was at the “flying” of the Confederate flag. I thought to myself,
“Flying? We weren’t ‘flying’ the flag.”
Furthermore, that person didn’t need to feel shocked or ashamed. We
did not intend to cause any harm or send any “messages” to anybody. If we
did send a message about our “Sailor Pride,” it was only for us to learn
from the past and stand together as brothers under one flag. That was
exactly what our central backdrop intended to do, but it wasn’t seen
because the second layer did not come down.
After our field show competition last weekend, our band director had
also went around and asked other directors -- including African American
directors -- how they felt about the theme of our show. All the answers
came back positive.
I think that maybe people seeing our show should pay more attention to
the hard work that we had put into both the show itself, the music and
the different backdrops we painted. If they took time to listen to us and
really look at our props, they would realize that what we are doing is
advocating a united nation.
YI-CHUN CHEN
Newport Beach
* EDITOR’S NOTE: Yi-Chun Chen is a Newport Harbor High School senior.
We must be sensitive to others but not to the point of being
insensitive to the fundamentals of what represents the USA. It’s the
American flag. It was most alarming to me to read in the Daily Pilot that
the Newport Harbor High School principal has lost his principles by
deciding to cover the American flag because it may be offensive.
Are the minority of opinions ruling for the majority here? This
political incorrectness thing is going too far.
JAY BAKER
Corona del Mar
My name is Ian Douglas, and I am a junior in the Newport Harbor
Marching Regiment. For the last three years, nobody in Newport, including
The Daily Pilot, has cared about us. We weren’t recognized at all when we
went to Hawaii on Memorial Day to play at the USS Missouri. The Pilot,
like the rest of this city, has refused to acknowledge the fact that we
exist.
At every home football game Newport Harbor has, we do a field show. It
has been this way since our band director started to work there. For the
last three years, we have been ignored at the football games, though
finally the stands have started to acknowledge us this year.
The Nov. 9 football game was the first time we had our field show
completed. That was why we had our sets out on the field.
The way the crowd cheered almost brought a tear to my eye. Instead of
the 20 or so people who normally cheer for us, the whole stadium was
cheering.
That is the type of respect that we have dreamed that our school would
one day show us. Now we get called racist by people who haven’t even seen
the show because of the article in the Pilot.
We also were just accepted to the Tournament Of Champions with the
show that caused these problems. At the last competition, we asked every
African American director, assistant director and instructors what they
thought of the field show and they had no problems with it.
Next time, it would be nice to hear of the good things people do.
IAN DOUGLAS
Newport Beach
The Confederate flag is a part of American history. Like it or not, it
is there. Ignoring it will not make it go away, nor should we try.
Had the flag been used by the high school as a method to foster a
policy of racism, I would understand the outcry; but for some to suggest
it should have been adjusted simply because a large part of the visiting
audience was African American is ludicrous.
It was used as a historical reference. Nothing more, nothing less. It
is time that we make a stand against political correctness gone awry. I
would have hoped Principal Michael Vossen would have made that stand.
THOMAS HENDERSON
Newport Beach
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