#1 2008-06-07 16:35:30
Psych out
Many juniors and seniors were driven to tears – a few to near hysterics – May 26 when a uniformed police officer arrived in several classrooms to notify them that a fellow student had been killed in a drunken-driving accident.
The officer read a brief eulogy, placed a rose on the deceased student’s seat, then left the class members to process their thoughts and emotions for the next hour.
The program, titled “Every 15 Minutes,” was designed by Mothers Against Drunk Driving. Its title refers to the frequency in which a person somewhere in the country dies in an alcohol-related traffic accident.
About 10 a.m., students were called to the athletic stadium, where they learned that their classmates had not died. There, a group of seniors, police officers and firefighters staged a startlingly realistic alcohol-induced fatal car crash. The students who had purportedly died portrayed ghostly apparitions encircling the scene.
Though the deception left some teens temporarily confused and angry, if it makes even one student think twice before getting behind the wheel of a car while intoxicated, it is worth the price, said California Highway Patrol Officer Eric Newbury, who orchestrates the program at local high schools... (read more)
Nothing like a group of uppity mothers terrorizing their own kids to get a point across. These were obviously the same parents who delighted in telling their toddlers, "Where did Fluffy go? Oh, he's dead...Hahaha, just kidding. Daddy took him to the vet."
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#2 2008-06-07 16:44:23
There's a far, far more important life lesson for teens in this presentation: The authorities will lie to you at any time for any reason that suits them.
Folks, you can't put a price on that knowledge, and you can't teach it too young.
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#3 2008-06-08 05:25:45
This must have been especially fun for those students who knew someone personally that really did die in a car crash.
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#4 2008-06-08 15:34:14
Except in PS Your Cat is Dead, the cat really was dead...and the intruder had buttsecks with the dude that he robbed (or was it the other way around? I haven't read the play since high school).
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#5 2008-06-08 17:34:06
headkicker_girl wrote:
(or was it the other way around? I haven't read the play since high school).
Frum da Wikeez: "Wanting to teach the burglar a lesson, Zoole ties him up to his kitchen table, initially torturing him. Soon their relationship begins to take on a homosexual dimension, when Vito tells him he is gay and Zoole interviews him about his love life, supposedly "to get material for a novel". Zoole, who was previously shown as being in mourning for a male friend (similar to Brick Pollitt in Tennessee Williams's Cat on a Hot Tin Roof; Zoole's cat is named "Tennessee"), suddenly begins to question his own sexuality. He gets revenge on his former girlfriend, when she shows up in his apartment with her date, only to find him chatting with a young, attractive, bare-butted male tied to his sink. Eventually, Zoole and Vito come to terms with each other and the last scene hints at a deep friendship, if not perhaps relationship, of the two."
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#6 2008-06-09 08:24:28
I hope you liked it, your tax dollars paid to take that officer off the beat and send him on such an important errand.
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