Most Popular
Recent Blog Posts
National Features >
Word PowerLetters from the week of May 22, 2003Published on May 22, 2003Speech therapy: Joe Miller's series on the lack of compassion of the MSHSAA resonated with me ("War of Words," May 1, and "Word War 2," May 8). During my senior year at Wyandotte High School in Kansas City, Kansas, the principal used a mandate from the corresponding Kansas high school-regulating organization to disqualify me from debate and the National Honor Society. This was because I remained a member of a high school fraternity, which the regulators had decided was unacceptable. The girls loved our formal parties, and I wasn't about to cave in to some knucklehead regulators who really weren't that interested in the students they were supposed to be helping. These organizations have had the attitude he described for decades. (My experience was during the 1950-1951 school year.) These misguided outfits should either be abolished or reformed in Missouri and Kansas. P.S.: I still managed to graduate from KU and Harvard Law School. Word view: I want to thank Joe Miller for his "Word War" articles. I am a seventh-grade teacher in the Kansas City area. Urban students face many challenges, both in and out of school, and I appreciate it when students excel in their lives and their educational careers are noticed. In addition, the verbal applause Miller gave to Jane Rinehart in his article was both necessary and refreshing. I am a member of the Greater Kansas City Writing Project, as is Jane, and I worked with her in the past through the GKCWP. Her dedication was apparent then and is even more apparent as he wrote about the fight she is dealing with for her students. In a society where teachers are left out of important decisions concerning education and then blamed for student failure, and where teacher-student success is not always recognized (especially in urban environments), it was a beautiful thing to have Jane's and Marcus' (and the Central debate team's) situation not only spoken of well but spoken of at all. About Marcus and Brandon: I first met the KCC varsity policy team about a year and a half ago, when they stayed at my house during the Westside tournament. Leo, Donnell, Brandon and Marcus all slept in my basement. I have seen them off and on throughout the year, but they weren't able to come to our tournament due to their activities association, as I'm sure you are well aware of. I was disappointed not to see them all because other than being excellent debaters, they are all genuinely nice guys. The varsity policy debaters on the Westside team would never admit this, but the KCC debaters are some of the only competitive teams at the local tournaments. Some two-year-out varsity policy debaters find local tournaments frivolous because it is such an easy piece of hardware for them. Marcus and Brandon deserved to go to the TOC. I hope that just because their chance passed them by, you all won't give up trying to change the rule. Small talk: I just read Joe Miller's "Word War 2," and I'd like to say that the travesty perpetrated on our young intellectuals is an outrage to all intelligent people (by this I am not referring to the majority of the human race). "Anger may be foolish and absurd, and a man may be irritated when in the wrong, but a man is never outraged unless he is in some way at the bottom, right." -- Victor Hugo, Les Miserables. Gregory Weinkauf's review of the movie Narc had tears in my eyes from laughing so dang hard ("Straining Day," January 9). His review resembles what the hell is going on in Washington. (Especially between Bush and Maddass ... oops! I meant Saddism. No, it's Saddass. Oh well, take your pick, for they all fit!) And what funny-ass planet did you get Jen Chen from! Don't send her back, 'cuz we here on this jacked-up planet need crazy-ass aliens like her. Breakfast Club Incredible edible egg: Regarding Charles Ferruzza's "Moving on Up" (May 8): Like many former KC folks, there are a few obligatory stops we make every time we come home to KC: Bryants for barbecue, Kelly's for a beer and Cascone's for breakfast. Frank, George, Lou Ann and staff do a great job, but more important, the food speaks for itself. As eggs are my business, I am critical most times of how people cook them. If anyone can find a better breakfast than Cascone's two eggs over easy with Italian sausage, hash browns and red sauce with Roma toast, I'd sure appreciate them telling me. I would put their breakfasts up against any breakfast I've had in my many years of travel. Paris has nothing on the Northendor Cascone's, and Rome has lost the art of breakfast in comparison.
write your comment
|