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T-Shirt using U.S. Soldiers’ Names Under Attack

Posted in T-Shirts in the News, Shirts on May 22nd, 2007

"Bush Lied…They Died" reads a T-shirt sold by Dan Frazier out of Flagstaff, Arizona. The T-shirt lists over 3,000 names of fallen U.S soldiers in Iraq as a protest of the war. The T-shirts, among other paraphernalia, have recently come under scrutiny in several states including, Louisiana and Oklahoma, where a ban was passed on using the name of fallen U.S. Soldiers for commercial purposes. Florida and Texas have similar bans in the form of legislation waiting to be past, and now Arizona is considering such legislation.

The main opposition to such bans is a question of constitutional rights as Freedom of Speech, but in the case of Frazier’s Anti-War T-Shirts, it can be considered commercial speech, which is not entirely protected by 1st Amendment Rights, and subject to state regulation. Others have argued that use of the names is in public record and can be used in Plays, performances and articles, which may also generate commercial income. Some feel that placing the ban for use on commercial products like T-Shirts would undermine this allowance of public record. An Arizona State University Law Professor, Paul Bender, says that in the case of Frazier, he is not selling anything on the T-Shirt and is only making a political statement. The legislation in each state was largely influenced by the families of the fallen soldiers, who see a certain amount of disrespect in their loved ones’ names being used on Anti-War paraphernalia. Members of the families have said that their loved ones’ names should not be used to promote a political statement they might not have agreed with.

The legislation in Arizona would impose a fine of up to $2,500 on individuals and $20,000 on enterprises, along with 6 months jail time. It would also allow military families the right to sue over the use of their loved ones’ names without permission. The Florida legislation would only impose a $1,000 fine on commercial use of the Soldiers’ names without permission on items like T-Shirts.

While no prosecutions have been made in Louisiana and Oklahoma, a great deal of attention has been placed on Frazier’s possible case in Arizona, as a Phoenix area mother plans to sue him over use of her son’s name if the bill passes. The bills not only cover the use of names on T-shirts, but also photos of the soldiers used without permission. Congressional representatives in Texas, Florida and Arizona still have yet to decided whether or not to pass the ban and have made little indication of how they will decide.

Though illegal in two states, Frazier is still selling the Anti-War T-Shirts on his website, www.carryabigsticker.com

Original news source - Paul Davenport, Associated Press

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Buy a T-Shirt for Pregnant Women, get free “Pregnancy”

Posted in T-Shirts in the News, Shirts, Fashion, Maternity on May 9th, 2007

Pregnancy Magazine is featuring a special promotion for women who buy a T-shirt, with the phrase, "Expect Good Things" on it. By purchasing the $38 T-Shirt, buyers will get a 6 month subscription to the magazine, for a total of 6 issues.  The brown T-Shirt displays the phrase discretely across the front, adorned by familiar adjectives and verbs associated to pregnancy, like Love, Wonder, Cuddles, etc., in the background.

Of course the "Expect Good Things" Tee is designed for expectant mothers, as it comes from a partnership with Maternity Wear fashion designers, 2 Chix, out of Los Angeles, which sells "hip, trendy and fun" designs. The T-Shirt comes in what the company calls, a vintage styled wear, that is 100% Cotton, preshrunk for blossoming bellies. Moms-to-be can wear the T-Shirt proudly, announcing their news, and get loads of useful knowledge from Pregnancy Magazine, a combo that is both fashionable and intelligent.

The T-Shirt can be purchased at the www.2chix.com website, which is also linked from the homepage of www.pregnancymagazine.com

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Offensive T-Shirts Confiscated

Posted in T-Shirts in the News on May 6th, 2007

By Nasouh Nazzal, Staff Reporter

Ras Al Khaimah: Inspectors from the Department of Economic Development seized large quantities of T-shirts with "No Mohammad" printed on them, which were found to be offensive to Islam.

Faisal Bin Fares, the Deputy Director at the Department of Economic Development said merchandise with a statement that offends the Prophet Mohammad (PBUH) by using his name in vain were seized at a shop in Ras Al Khaimah. He added that a Dh2,000 fine was imposed on the shop.

He stressed that inspectors confiscated all merchandise with this statement, adding that the market will be scanned for similar products to ensure that shops adhere to the protection of Islam and the Prophet.

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And you wore it well

Posted in T-Shirts in the News on May 6th, 2007

If you lived though rock’s golden age and all you got was that lousy Genesis T-shirt, don’t despair: you could be the owner of a valuable cultural artefact. Paul Morley remembers the time when merchandising actually meant something

As you slip into your favourite Sunday T-shirt, consider how much history is pressed into the garment and how much the image, logo or slogan that is, or isn’t, on the front, explains about your age, sex and cultural preferences.

You are dressing yourself in history and opening yourself up to interpretation. T-shirts as we know them - basic T-shaped undershirts that became over-garments once teenage fashion kicked in after the Second World War, took their shape in the late 19th century.

Legend has it that sailors, about to be inspected by Queen Victoria, were ordered to add sleeves to their working vests so that she would not have to face their hairy armpits.

By 1913, American sailors were wearing something that resembled our idea of a T-shirt underneath their itchy uniforms. At the end of the 1920s, the word ‘T-shirt’, already used by F. Scott Fitzgerald in his novel This Side of Paradise, made it into Webster’s Dictionary. Souvenir T-shirts promoting The Wizard of Oz in 1939 became instant collector’s items.

An American soldier featured on the cover of Life in July 1942 sporting a T-shirt

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T(shirt) Times

Posted in T-Shirts in the News on May 6th, 2007

By Jon Maletz
Aspen, CO Colorado

I could feel the man behind the pro shop desk eyeing me the moment I walked through the Aspen Golf Club doors.

I went through a checklist in my head. My fly is zipped. The barbecue stain on my left trouser leg is barely noticeable. My shoes match. I’m ready to hit the driving range.

As the man handed me my credit card and two tokens, he paused for a moment, then spoke.

"If you don’t wear a collared shirt next time, you won’t be allowed on the range," he said.

I was apologetic and a bit red in the face. Apparently my unnassuming, plain gray long-sleeved crewneck shirt proclaimed my egregious lack of respect for the sanctity of the game and my fellow golfers. (I can only imagine how he would’ve reacted had I worn my mesh tank top.)

I came to my senses, however, as I passed a man wearing Wranglers and a Hawaiian shirt standing over a 10-footer on the practice green. OK, so he had a collar - the major prerequisite - but he looked like he was dressed for closing day at Aspen Highlands.

I, on the other hand, looked like I had just come from communion. It wasn’t as if I was wearing a Led Zeppelin T-shirt with a cigarette burn on the sleeve or footy pajamas. The outfit, one of my finest, could’ve passed the discriminating taste of my grandfather, who routinely spends entire homilies pointing out the heathens in the first row wearing dungarees.

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Offensive Rutgers T-Shirts Tussle Ends in Accord

Posted in T-Shirts in the News on May 6th, 2007

By Francine Brevetti, BUSINESS WRITER

BERKELEY — A happy ending to an ugly shirt.
What started as a painful confrontation over offensive merchandise from a San Leandro supplier was settled harmoniously this week by management and consumers.

When Brandelyn Castine strolled into the three-level Futura across from the University of California, Berkeley campus on Saturday, she was "shocked to see a T-shirt that read ‘Rutgers Nappy Headed Hoes Basketball Team’ complete with a picture of a basketball with an Afro and an Afro pick."

The T-shirt comes on the heels of radio talk show host Don Imus referring to the Rutgers women’s basketball team as "nappy headed hos." The ensuing outcry led to his dismissal.

After a boycott of the Futura store’s products and a protest rally at the site, manager Jonathan Fernandez, Castine and her supporters reached an agreement this week about the future of merchandise sold at the Telegraph Avenue store.

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