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-   -   A blast from the past! (http://www.fishingbanter.com/showthread.php?t=3417)

Scott Seidman January 6th, 2004 04:24 PM

A blast from the past!
 
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/01/06/nyregion/06SCHO.html

My high school, South Shore, is listed as one of a dozen in the city
violent enough to merit police patrols!

Scott

Willi January 6th, 2004 06:35 PM

A blast from the past!
 


Scott Seidman wrote:

http://www.nytimes.com/2004/01/06/nyregion/06SCHO.html

My high school, South Shore, is listed as one of a dozen in the city
violent enough to merit police patrols!

Scott


From my perspective, things haven't changed since I was in high school.
We had National Guard troops deployed on and off at my high school for
two years with local police officers present for the whole time. We
entered the school walking by about 50 troops lining the sidewalk. We
has to hold a picture ID next to our faces, which was checked before we
could enter. There were rotating TV cameras at the intersection of every
hallway, that were monitored in a room that "Command Central" had
appropriated.

The "action" almost always started in the lunchroom. Someone would throw
some food then it would be plates and trays and finally chairs. This
would cause the student body to start racing around in the hallways and
ended with everyone milling around on the street in segregated groups.
All this was documented by the omnipresent TV crews. My uncle called me
from California to tell me that he saw me on TV running out of the school.

Although there were fights, no weapons were ever involved and there were
no serious injuries.

My other disruptive high school experience was when I taught high school
in Charleston West Virginia for ONE semester. These were "textbook
riots". The local religious organizations decided that the high school
text were "pornographic." There were demonstrations, the Klan came
around and there were frequent bomb threats. During the Spring, I spent
more time outside on the grounds instead of in the class because of the
bomb scares. Again, no ever got seriously hurt.


Willi




Scott Seidman January 6th, 2004 08:42 PM

A blast from the past!
 
Willi wrote in news:3ffaffdb$0$199$75868355
@news.frii.net:

Although there were fights, no weapons were ever involved and there

were
no serious injuries.


There's a few differences between times now and times then. Cops have
been deployed in this school for about 10 years now--it just seems to be
hitting the press in a bigger way.

The "no weapons" and "no injuries" didn't apply when I was there 20 years
ago. Plenty of weapons were in the school (some, I know, were carried
because perfectly good kids were scared to be there), and plenty of
people got hurt. It's much worse now. The weapons were mostly knives
and box cutters back then. Now, as in many schools in the country, the
weapons are guns, despite metal detectors.

The scariest thing was told to me by one of my oldest friends, who ended
up being one of the police officers patrolling this particular school in
the mid '90s. The cops in the schools consider the high schools to be
one of the most dangerous duties they can pull! Students attempted to
disarm him three times in two years of duty, and they managed to disarm
one of the police women stationed at the school, stealing her weapon
right out of her holster. He still considers himself lucky not to have
been seriously hurt.

When I was there 20 years ago, the place was evacuated twice during
school hours-- once for riots (I swear, right in the middle of a social
studies exam I was tanking, and on my way out I passed two overturned
police cars), and once for an arson fire (I swear again, right in the
middle of my calc AP exam, which had to be finished two weeks later, and
filed with "testing irregularities" at Princeton) that was easily brought
under control. I remember at least one bomb scare that had the place
evacuated after hours. Muggings were a regular event. All this went on
despite the fact that this was the first high school in the state to have
full video surveillance of all the hallways and stairwells. Two years
after I graduated, about 20% of the school was burned down in an act of
arson, during school hours.

South Shore has been consistently rated highest in murders and violent
crime for high schools in the five boroughs, and about fourth for crime
overall (that low ranking has the alumni pressuring the administration
for a new arson coach!).

I don't know if you've ever spent any significant amount of time in an
area with high gang activity. The callous disregard for life is
absolutely horrific, and its a ton worse now than it was twenty years
ago. Back then, when a high school student met a violent death, it was
still a surprise--I'll never forget the night my brother found a kid from
down the street near death from a stab wound in our driveway (he lived,
even though his heart was nicked). Today, that kind of event is
tragically a fact of life.

Scott




Mike Makela January 7th, 2004 05:28 AM

A blast from the past!
 
Damn...you guys need to relocate...

Out here in good ole' Perkiomenville their still trying to figure out the
knife thing...it could ages until we progress past the bow and arrow thing.

Mike

"Willi" wrote in message
...


Scott Seidman wrote:

http://www.nytimes.com/2004/01/06/nyregion/06SCHO.html

My high school, South Shore, is listed as one of a dozen in the city
violent enough to merit police patrols!

Scott


From my perspective, things haven't changed since I was in high school.
We had National Guard troops deployed on and off at my high school for
two years with local police officers present for the whole time. We
entered the school walking by about 50 troops lining the sidewalk. We
has to hold a picture ID next to our faces, which was checked before we
could enter. There were rotating TV cameras at the intersection of every
hallway, that were monitored in a room that "Command Central" had
appropriated.

The "action" almost always started in the lunchroom. Someone would throw
some food then it would be plates and trays and finally chairs. This
would cause the student body to start racing around in the hallways and
ended with everyone milling around on the street in segregated groups.
All this was documented by the omnipresent TV crews. My uncle called me
from California to tell me that he saw me on TV running out of the school.

Although there were fights, no weapons were ever involved and there were
no serious injuries.

My other disruptive high school experience was when I taught high school
in Charleston West Virginia for ONE semester. These were "textbook
riots". The local religious organizations decided that the high school
text were "pornographic." There were demonstrations, the Klan came
around and there were frequent bomb threats. During the Spring, I spent
more time outside on the grounds instead of in the class because of the
bomb scares. Again, no ever got seriously hurt.


Willi







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