Students Demand That Officials Ban Confederate Flags From Va. Campus

Confederate battle flags fly outside the museum at the Confederate Memorial Park in Mountain Creek, Ala., Tuesday, July 19, 2011. More than 60,000 Confederate veterans came home to Alabama after the Civil War, and re... Confederate battle flags fly outside the museum at the Confederate Memorial Park in Mountain Creek, Ala., Tuesday, July 19, 2011. More than 60,000 Confederate veterans came home to Alabama after the Civil War, and residents are still paying a tax that supported them 150 years after the fighting began. The tax now pays for the park, which is located on the same 102-acre tract where elderly veterans used to stroll. The tax once brought in millions for Confederate pensions, but lawmakers sliced up the levy and sent money elsewhere as the men and their wives died. No one has seriously challenged the continued use of the money for a memorial to the ?Lost Cause,? although a long-serving black legislator wants to eliminate state funding for the park. (AP Photo/Dave Martin) MORE LESS
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Students at Washington and Lee University in Lexington, Va. are demanding that the school ban Confederate flags on campus, the Associated Press reported Thursday.

Students also want the school to stop allowing “neo-Confederate” marches on Campus on Lee-Jackson day, a Virginia holiday that falls on the Friday before Martin Luther King, Jr. Day.

The school is named in part after Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee, who is buried there. Eight Confederate battle flags hang in the Lee Chapel, according to the AP.

The group of students, who are calling themselves The Committee, told the school’s administration that they will commit acts of civil disobedience if the university did not meet their demands by Sept. 1. The students said they took action due to the “alienation and discomfort” they feel on campus.

Third year law student Dominik Taylor said that while students have felt uncomfortable with the Confederate symbols for a while, the events on Lee-Jackson day were the “last straw.”

“A lot of students of color have felt sort of ostracized during their time here,” he told the AP.

The Washington and Lee President President Kenneth Ruscio responded in a letter on Wednesday. He said that he took the students concerns seriously and that the school’s provost will speak with the students.

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