The scoop on the Stars and Stripes
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Danette Goulet
COSTA MESA -- Children sat wide-eyed and wary, listening intently to
what they were told was their flag speaking to them.
It was an old, booming voice that gave a bit of history about Old
Glory, including how it came by that nickname.
Each morning before classes begin, children all over the country place
their right hand over their hearts and pledge their allegiance to their
flag and country.
It becomes second nature to children, to recite that pledge.
In their third year of this somber tradition, second-grade students at
Kaiser Primary Center learned a bit about the flag they salute each day.
Speakers from the Costa Mesa Orange Coast Lions Club tried to give
students a better understanding of the importance of the Stars and
Stripes and the reasoning behind the reverence.
There is meaning behind the flag’s three colors, the children were
told: red for courage, white for liberty and blue for loyalty. Students
also learned that the seven red stripes and the six white ones stood for
the 13 original colonies of the United States.
Students watched and listened intently as Lions Club members explained
how the appearance of the flag that was flown in 1775, with its British
flag in the corner to show ties to the mother country, was altered over
the years to become the flag flown today.
In a show of proper respect for the flag, the Costa Mesa Fire
Department Color Guard presented the flag.
When the men marched in, children stood. Some covered their hearts.
One student, Spencer Lindsay, 7, cupped his right hand over his eye in an
attempt at a salute.
As the color guard’s trumpet player performed the “The Star-Spangled
Banner,” children began to sing softly.
It seemed an amazingly patriotic reaction, until the next segment of
the assembly.
It seems it was one of several songs children had learned for the
occasion. One after another, children sang patriotic songs accompanied by
their music teacher on the piano.
As children filed out, each was given his or her own small flag and an
information sheet to reinforce some of the information they had learned.
* IN THE CLASSROOM is a weekly feature in which Daily Pilot education
writer Danette Goulet visits a campus within the Newport-Mesa Unified
School District and writes about her experience.
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