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Wednesday, June 9,1999
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STATE NEWS
Confedei
publishe
By Arlie Porter
Associated Press
CHARLESTON ? Something seems
missing irom tne pnotograpn 01 a smiling
Gov. David Beasley and his family,
who are framed by the Statehouse in
the backgrbund.
A closer look at the picture on the
cover of the state's 1995 telephone directory
reveals the answer: The flags
atop the Statehouse, including the Confederate
flag, aren't shown.
After several legislators complained
last week about the Confederate flag
appearing in a picture on the cover of
the new legislative manual, The Post
and Courier set out on a search for the
Confederate flag in pictures.
The mission was to document how
often the Confederate flag is shown flying
above the Statehouse, as it does in
reality, the only state still flying it above
the dome.
A reporter scanned the covers of
thousands of state-published reports,
manuals and magazines at the State
Library.
He searched for the Confederate
flag at the Statehouse gift shop,
pored through promotional literature
put out by three state agencies, browsed
the Capitol Bookstore across from the
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Statehouse and logged on to the state's
official Web site.
The conclusion: Though the state
General Assembly flies the Confederate
flag over the Capitol, finding images
of the flag in recent state publications,
or any publication, is difficult.
Of 31 different images of the Statehouse
dome the newspaper could find,
the Confederate flag is shown clearly
in just one; the 1989-90 USC telephone
directory.
In 16 separate photos, the Confederate
flag, like the U.S. and S.C.
flags, droops down and is hidden by the
flagpole.
In nine photos, the Statehouse dome
is shown clearly, but all the flags are
cropped out.
In three photographs, the images
of the flags are blurred beyond recognition.
Sam Holland, photographer for the
Statehouse, said he tries to get images
of the Statehouse with and without the
Confederate flag. That gives clients a
choice, he said.
A client once jokingly asked for a
picture that included the U.S. and S.C.
flags, but not the Confederate flag, Holland
said. Because the flags fly above
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one another, "that's a little tricky," he
said.
Agencies that promote South Carolina
to out-of-state and international
businesses are loath to publish photos
that show the Confederate flag flying
above the Statehouse because of its perception
as a symbol of prejudice, Holland
said.
"It's just too inflammatory to be seen
by people from out of state. Overall, I
think we're embarrassed," said Holland,
who favors taking down the
battle flag and flying the less offensive
Stars and Bars flag as a compromise.
Rusty Reed, vice president of business
development for the Palmetto Economic
Development Corp., wasn't
certain why a picture of the Capitol
dome in his agency's brochure didn't
511UW UIC
But it's probably because it does
present a negative image, he said.
The whole idea of economic development
is to minimize your negatives,"
Reed said.
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