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Wednesday, May 19, 2004

The politics of poetry



I don't know why I'm just hearing about this now, and maybe you know about it already, but this story chaps my hide, as they say back home.



Bill Nevins, a New Mexico high school teacher and personal friend [of reporter Bill Hill], was fired last year and classes in poetry and the poetry club at Rio Rancho High School were permanently terminated. It had nothing to do with obscenity, but it had everything to do with extremist politics.



The "Slam Team" was a group of teenage poets who asked Nevins to serve as faculty adviser to their club. The teens, mostly shy youngsters, were taught to read their poetry aloud and before audiences. Rio Rancho High School gave the Slam Team access to the school's closed-circuit television once a week and the poets thrived.



In March 2003, a teenage girl named Courtney presented one of her poems before an audience at Barnes & Noble bookstore in Albuquerque, then read the poem live on the school's closed-circuit television channel.



A school military liaison and the high school principal accused the girl of being "un-American" because she criticized the war in Iraq and the Bush administration's failure to give substance to its "No child left behind" education policy.




Read the rest.



We had one of those recruiters a.k.a. "military liaisons" at our high school too. He had an office right next to the counselor and was very busy with certain seniors on "career counseling" days.

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