Showing her true colors Half an hour before she was scheduled to raise the American flag on the Target Field plaza, Sara Bodin was calm and relaxed.
"I've handled much more strenuous situations than this," the former U.S. Marine sergeant said with a smile.
But as the time came to raise the flag, things changed. A TV camera was pointed at her from close range, and a second later a gigantic version of her face appeared on the scoreboard. As the stadium announcer described her military career, which included a stint in Iraq, the crowd gave her an enthusiastic roar of approval. For a second, it appeared as if she might even tear up.
But her military discipline won out. As the national anthem started, she began raising the flag, changing the pace about halfway up the pole when she realized that her timing was not in sync with the music. She ended up nailing it: The flag reached the top of the pole at the instant that the last note of the song reverberated through the ballpark.
"I got a little nervous," she admitted after it was over. As a result of the adrenaline jolt, "I got a little off from the music, but I adjusted."
JEFF STRICKLER
The big picture Members of Cub Scout Pack 112 from White Bear Lake were warned not to admire themselves on the left field scoreboard while they were raising the Twins Territory flag before the game. The youngsters did just fine with that directive; the adults, not so much.
"We were told to look only at the TV camera" that was feeding the picture to the scoreboard, said Holli Marshall, the pack's senior adult leader. "But I had to look up and see what I looked like on the Jumbotron."