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  • Pearl Harbor lost in shuffle

    Glendale News Press
    LATimes.com
    Dec 8 2004

    Pearl Harbor lost in shuffle
    Most schools skip marking Dec. 7, 1941, attack, instead honoring
    Memorial, Veterans Day.

    By Darleene Barrientos, News-Press and Leader


    GLENDALE — To those of the World War II generation, Dec. 7 will always
    be remembered as the date which will live in infamy.

    But for many local educators and students, apparently it's just
    another day.

    One sixth-grade Columbus Elementary school student quizzed by a
    reporter Tuesday incorrectly guessed that Pearl Harbor was a plane.
    His friend hit a little closer to the mark. He thought it had something
    to do with a war.

    But even as the rest of the country commemorated the 63rd anniversary
    of the attack on Hawaii's Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941 — the event
    that marked the United States' official entry into World War II —
    local schools went about business as usual.

    "We talked about it in each of the classrooms, but not as a unified
    school," said Kirk Dunn, Glendale Adventist Academy's principal. Most
    teachers at each school had the choice whether to address the event,
    but it was not known how many teachers mentioned it.

    No events to commemorate the event were planned at Flintridge
    Preparatory School in La Cañada Flintridge, spokeswoman Karen Kahler
    said. History teachers might have addressed the topic in Tuesday's
    lessons, but Kahler could not confirm that.

    Glendale Unified School District teachers were also given the
    opportunity to talk about Pearl Harbor with students Tuesday, but
    it wasn't known how many did. Sixth-grade Columbus Elementary School
    student Kostik Galstyan said he believed the schools should specially
    mark such an event.

    "I know how my life is because of the [Armenian] Genocide," Kostik,
    11, said.

    Hoover High School student Ben Silva, 14, said he thought
    administrators should have at least made a mention of the anniversary
    in his school's daily morning announcements.

    "They should have — it's an important day," Ben said.

    At Hoover High, school officials commemorate D-Day — the day that
    Allied soldiers landed in Normandy in a drive to defeat Nazi soldiers
    — Memorial Day and Veterans Day, Co-Principal Kevin Welsh said.

    "I think, when we memorialize and remember [Sept. 11], there's always
    a little bit of recollection that America was caught off guard. It
    was the most serious intelligence setback since Pearl Harbor," he
    said. And it seems that only in context of the 9/11 terrorist attacks
    that students seem to recall the date that Franklin D. Roosevelt
    declared would "live in infamy."

    At Glendale Community College, students and professors were also more
    concerned with upcoming final exams than remembering Pearl Harbor,
    but the attitude is also due to an emotionally charged past year,
    said Roger Bowerman, history professor and division chairman of
    social science.

    "Particularly since the invasion of Iraq, we're at greater unease at
    remembering something like that. The campus has its flag at half-staff,
    but I don't believe people see it or know why," Bowerman said.

    Part of the problem in remembering these history-changing dates
    and events is partly because they are merely just dates to this
    generation. If students were more aware of the 'why' behind some of
    these dates, they would probably remember them better, he said.

    "If it were not brought up by the press or films or TV, people
    would kind of forget, because people are [uninterested in history]
    in the United States. Many of them don't remember when the [American]
    Civil War was or even what caused it. History in public schools is
    very names and dates driven," he said.

    --Boundary_(ID_o7bs5l5D5vfELg8z5q+x8A)--
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