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My Left Nutmeg

Wilton High School's free speech - Update - play deleted

by: Sue

Sat Mar 24, 2007 at 08:34:30 AM EDT


(From today's NY Times. - promoted by tparty)

Where were our local reporters on this?

UPDATE:
The students have had to take down the script from their
website:


Current Version
We've been advised to take down the script for now. Sorry for the inconvenience.

Sue :: Wilton High School's free speech - Update - play deleted
From Alison Leigh Cowan in  The New York Times:

Filed under, "We don't want to hurt anyone's feelings":


WILTON, Conn., March 22 - Student productions at Wilton High School range from splashy musicals like last year's "West Side Story," performed in the state-of-the-art, $10 million auditorium, to weightier works like Arthur Miller's "Crucible," on stage last fall in the school's smaller theater.

For the spring semester, students in the advanced theater class took on a bigger challenge: creating an original play about the war in Iraq. They compiled reflections of soldiers and others involved, including a heartbreaking letter from a 2005 Wilton High graduate killed in Iraq last September at age 19, and quickly found their largely sheltered lives somewhat transformed.

Excellent. The group that is too young to drink but old enough to be drafted starts to consider life outside Wilton.


But even as 15 student actors were polishing the script and perfecting their accents for a planned April performance, the school principal last week canceled the play, titled "Voices in Conflict," citing questions of political balance and context.

The principal, Timothy H. Canty, who has tangled with students before over free speech, said in an interview he was worried the play might hurt Wilton families "who had lost loved ones or who had individuals serving as we speak," and that there was not enough classroom and rehearsal time to ensure it would provide "a legitimate instructional experience for our students."

"It would be easy to look at this case on first glance and decide this is a question of censorship or academic freedom," said Mr. Canty, who attended Wilton High himself in the 1970s and has been its principal for three years. "In some minds, I can see how they would react this way. But quite frankly, it's a false argument."

BONG HITS 4 JESUS!!!

It seems that Mr. Canty hasn't read the 1969 decision in Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District which says that government officials cannot punish speech with which they disagree. Canty even produced one student, Gabby, who objected.


At least 10 students involved in the production, however, said that the principal had told them the material was too inflammatory, and that only someone who had actually served in the war could understand the experience. They said that Gabby Alessi-Friedlander, a Wilton junior whose brother is serving in Iraq, had complained about the play, and that the principal barred the class from performing it even after they changed the script to respond to concerns about balance.

"He told us the student body is unprepared to hear about the war from students, and we aren't prepared to answer questions from the audience and it wasn't our place to tell them what soldiers were thinking," said Sarah Anderson, a 17-year-old senior who planned to play the role of a military policewoman.

Bonnie Dickinson, who has been teaching theater at the school for 13 years, said, "If I had just done `Grease,' this would not be happening."

Or Godspell.


Frustration over the inelegant finale has quickly spread across campus and through Wilton, and has led to protest online through Facebook and other Web sites.

"To me, it was outrageous,'' said Jim Anderson, Sarah's father. "Here these kids are really trying to make a meaningful effort to educate, to illuminate their fellow students, and the administration, of all people, is shutting them down."

First Amendment lawyers said Mr. Canty had some leeway to limit speech that might be disruptive and to consider the educational merit of what goes on during the school day, when the play was scheduled to be performed. But thornier legal questions arise over students' contention that they were also thwarted from trying to stage the play at night before a limited audience, and discouraged from doing so even off-campus. Just this week, an Alaska public high school was defending itself before the United States Supreme Court for having suspended a student who unfurled a banner extolling drug use at an off-campus parade.

So if you hold the play in a church, you also get detention? Nah, Mr. Canty can't possibly be that much of a j#@k, can he? He doesn't seem to have a good track record:


The current issue of the student newspaper, The Forum, includes an article criticizing the administration for requiring that yearbook quotations come from well-known sources for fear of coded messages. After the Gay Straight Alliance wallpapered stairwells with posters a few years ago, the administration, citing public safety hazards, began insisting that all student posters be approved in advance.

Around the same time, the administration tried to ban bandanas because they could be associated with gangs, prompting hundreds of students to turn up wearing them until officials relented.

"Our school is all about censorship," said James Presson, 16, a member of the "Voices of Conflict" cast. "People don't talk about the things that matter."

I wonder if they have hallway and classroom cameras.


After reading a book of first-person accounts of the war, Ms. Dickinson kicked off the spring semester - with the principal's blessing - by asking her advanced students if they were open to creating a play about Iraq.

OK, they went through the proper channels. And it looks like Gabby had changed her mind:


In March, students said, Gabby, the junior whose brother is serving in the Army in Iraq, said she wanted to join the production, and soon circulated drafts of the script to parents and others in town. A school administrator who is a Vietnam veteran also raised questions about the wisdom of letting students explore such sensitive issues, Mr. Canty said.

The experience was becoming, apparently,  meaningful to more than one student. The script was reworked and finessed:


In response to concerns that the script was too antiwar, Ms. Dickinson reworked it with the help of an English teacher. The revised version is more reflective and less angry, omitting graphic descriptions of killing, crude language and some things that reflect poorly on the Bush administration, like a comparison of how long it took various countries to get their troops bulletproof vests. A critical reference to Donald H. Rumsfeld, the former defense secretary, was cut, along with a line from Cpl. Sean Huze saying of soldiers: "Your purpose is to kill."

Patriotism was added -


Seven characters were added, including Maj. Tammy Duckworth of the National Guard, a helicopter pilot who lost both legs and returned from the war to run for Congress last fall. The second version gives First Lt. Melissa Stockwell, who lost her left leg from the knee down, a new closing line: "But I'd go back. I wouldn't want to go back, but I would go."

But, with issues like this, there is always one pissy puss who has strong feelings about violent video games, er, protecting us from ourselves:


On March 13, Mr. Canty met with the class. He told us "no matter what we do, it's not happening," said one of the students, Erin Clancy.

I wonder what political party Mr. Canty votes with.

But wait, was Gabby a plant?


That night, on a Facebook chat group called "Support the Troops in Iraq," a poster named GabriellaAF, who several students said was their classmate Gabby, posted a celebratory note saying, "We got the show canceled!!" (Reached by telephone, Gabby's mother, Barbara Alessi, said she had no knowledge of the play or her daughter's involvement in it.)

Ahh, the Sargent Schultz defense. I predict that Gabby won't be sitting with the cool kids any time soon.

Back to the detention question. Can they still perform in a church; off school grounds?

Mr. Canty has looonnnngggg arms:


In classrooms, teenage centers and at dinner tables around town, the drama students entertained the idea of staging the show at a local church, or perhaps al fresco just outside the school grounds. One possibility was Wilton Presbyterian Church.

"I would want to read the script before having it performed here, but from what I understand from the students who wrote it, they didn't have a political agenda," said the Rev. Jane Field, the church's youth minister.

Mr. Canty said he had never discouraged the students from continuing to work on the play on their own. But Ms. Dickinson said he told her "we may not do the play outside of the four walls of the classroom," adding, "I can't have anything to do with it because we're not allowed to perform the play and I have to stand behind my building principal."

Ms., Dickinson, don't you have tenure yet? Won't SOMEONE bring this principal down a few pegs? A super-glued whoopy cushion? SOMETHING!

However, it turns out that someone really loves the play:


The latest draft of the script opens with the words of Pvt. Nicholas Madaras, the Wilton graduate who died last September and whose memory the town plans to soon honor by naming a soccer field for him. In a letter he wrote to the local paper last May, Private Madaras said Baqubah, north of Baghdad, sometimes "feels like you are on another planet," and speaks wistfully about the life he left behind in Wilton.

"I never thought I'd ever say this, but I miss being in high school," he wrote. "High school is really the foundation for the rest of your life, whether teenagers want to believe it or not."

Private Madaras's parents said they had not read the play, and had no desire to meddle in a school matter. But his mother, Shalini Madaras, added, "We always like to think about him being part of us, and people talking about him, I think it's wonderful."

Show the students some support on their webpage.

Crossposted at DailyKos.com

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"Voices in Conflict" text (4.00 / 2)
Wilton Villager Friday May 12, 2006

Baqubar, North of Bagdad

Hi, I'm just sitting here in my room with nothing to do so I figured why not write home. It is getting hot out now. It's in the low 100's now, and every day it goes up a degree or two.
We'll be sitting in our air conditioned rooms listening to music or doing whatever it is that everyone does and you step out your door and BAM it feels like you are on another planet.
Life here is alright more often than not. On our down days, a lot of guys watch movies and things but what they think about are all the things different in their lives: will their wives and girlfriends still be there at home; will they recognize them, what they regret not doing; what they wish they hadn't done; what they fear; and what they appreciate more being here.

I never thought I'd ever say this but I miss being in high school. High school is really the foundation for the rest of your life, whether teenagers want to believe it or not, it really is. I've been thinking a lot about fate while I've been here. I screwed up in high school, big time, but I can't help but think that maybe I was meant to join the army. It has changed me into a person I would never have become other wise.

It is funny, we got into the first real political discussion the other day, needless to say it was very heated but it was cool to hear all the different points of view on the War from people who had all been put in the same situation and face the same things, literally side by side. Eh, I guess it is just another one of those fleeting thoughts that flutter through a bored mind.

I hope everyone at home is doing alright.

Nick Madaras

Complete text at this url:

http://www.freewebs....


Tammy Duckworth (4.00 / 1)
Maj. Tammy Duckworth, National Guard

I am not going to dishonor the effort in saving my life by saying "Woe is me, I got no legs." Well, I got one knee. There are guys who have none, guys who are blind. I have my arms, my face, my brain. This is a pretty good life I have compared to what it could be. Plus they make prosthetic high heels. I checked into it. Not three-inch stilettos, but at least an inch or two of heel. I'll be good to go.



This is a complete outrage. (4.00 / 1)
Tell me, "Mr." Canty, are you afraid that enlistment will drop if your students are actually allowed to think about this war and their own government's role in it? Do you have recruiters from all arms of the military standing outside your cafeteria doors passing out literature as each and every lunch period gets out, like our high school does? You are supposed to be preparing these kids for life, not sending them out into it deaf, dumb and blind. I have a real problem with people like you, Principle Canty, in positions of leadership, not leading.

I hope these students fight this like they have never fought anything before.

I believe that time wounds all heels. -John Lennon


Shame on Principal Canty (4.00 / 2)
In just a few weeks' time, tens of thousands of teenaged American boys and girls will enlist in the armed forces, be trained to fight, and just weeks later, many of them will be transported to Iraq to fight and die.  Many will soon come back to America on guernies, heavily sedated with brain injuries, which have been called "the signature wound of this war," with shredded arms and legs, or missing whole limbs.  One out of three will soon return to their homes afflicted with combat-related psychiatric illnesses that will plague many for the rest of their lives.  That is the reality.  Just look at the faces of the dead on the Jim Lehrer News Hour every night- young men and women barely older than the kids who wanted to put on that play. 

Yet while Principal Canty apparently has no problem with army and marine recruiters showing up in their fanciest dress uniforms to entice those young people with offers of signing bonuses and money for college, exposing those same young people to the reality of shooting and killing is somehow unacceptable.  Does Principal Canty really believe it moral or ethical to hide the true face of combat from students who will be fighting in Iraq within a few short months?  How is it that those same kids can view the grisly combat of Ultimate Fight Club on television every night at home, but they must be shielded from the actual words of soldiers nearly their age who are experiencing combat.

I am old enough to remember the trauma of the approach of the draft when I was a teenager and the all-too-real possibility of being sent off to the horrific war in Vietnam.  Back then, every young man was faced with the danger of being sent off to war.  Is Principal Canty trying to hide the reality of war from those students who might be disposed to enlist?  Is he attempting to boost military recruitment by hiding the facts of fighting from likely recruits.

Those young people and tens of thousands like them every year are faced with death and killing in that senseless conflict.  The students who attempted to put on that play should be feted for their courage.  Principal Canty should be excoriated for trying to hide the true face of war from those who might soon face it.


What Are the Wilton Parents Thinking? (4.00 / 1)
The paper didn't get the PTO's opinion, just Canty's. So I wonder what the Wilton parents think? As a parent of a teenager, I want my child to know exactly what war is. Why would parents who love their children try to hide the dangers of war from them?

Are Wilton parents OK with a high school principal who bullies students into suppressing discussion of the war -- a war that their own kids might decide to fight and die in?

Canty obviously cares more about pleasing Conservative/Republican town members than he does about the lives of kids at his school. He is not the kind of principal I would want at my child's high school. You would think that Wilton parents would care enough to speak up. 


[ Parent ]
Let's host and support an out-of-school production (4.00 / 3)
Seriously.  We just need a venue and some production support.  Let's help them.

Their teacher can't be insubordinate to the principal, but she obviously has done a tremendous job of teaching these kids and crafting an educational and transformational project that has taught these students to actually care about what's going on in the world around them.  If she can't support the out-of-school production, we can. 

I used to teach high school English and was the president of my high school's drama club in the dark ages.  We have friendly donors and an awesome DTC in Wilton.  We can raise money for them here on MLN, too.

I'm so proud of these kids.  Who's up for helping them?


Good idea - Wouldn't recommend the Wilton Playshop though... (4.00 / 2)
Appears that the local playhouse would not be a good idea...Ms. Gabriella Alessi-Friedlander appears to be headlining in several of their productions over this coming summer, and would likely make sure it got cancelled there too.
Either way, the Wilton HS principal is way out of line, and is in way to deep.

However, something about this article struck me...the "offended" student was said to have wanted to join the production...then circulated the script.

Natalie Kropf, Seth Koproski, and James "Jim" Presson all interviewed for this article are directly involved and perform and/or direct several plays at the Wilton Playshop ... the same ones that Gabby is in.

Please, here's just some speculation on my part here...pure speculation...Sounds to me that she wanted to be in a starring role, and when found out she couldn't, circulated the script to other parents and "others" in town. Gabby knew just who to complain to. And don't tell me her mother didn't know about the play or her involvement in it...Mom knows all about all of her daughter's plays I'm sure...

Gabby got what she wanted, attention and revenge at those who snubbed her, but at a price...Now she's brought a firestorm down on not just her, but the Wilton HS principal, and those around him.

I'm glad that more attention to is being brought to academic censorship, it is absolutely deplorable.
Perhaps now since this story is out there in the mainstream media, these Wilton students and their important message can be shared to a much larger audience.


[ Parent ]
Hmmm (0.00 / 0)
Are you sure you're not thinking of High School Musical?
It would be pretty amazing if this was all about some teen drama queen.

The mother sounds too stage-mom great to be true. My daughter did this all on her own......yeah, sure.

It's Morning in America. Too bad Reagan's not here to see it. - Me


[ Parent ]
Scroll down to "Student's" post (0.00 / 0)
it sounds as though the principle was feeling threatened by a lawsuit from Gaby and her "family".

I believe that time wounds all heels. -John Lennon

[ Parent ]
Tinker v. Des Moines (0.00 / 0)
Much as my heart is with the students, Hazelwood v. Kuhlmeier, which upheld administration censorship of a school newspaper, is probably the controlling precedent in this case.  In other words, the school district will probably win any legal challenge.

Censorship does not include this (3.00 / 2)
Certainly the school can censor for profanity, for sexual innuendo, for disruptive speech.  But really!  This play simply consisted of the words of young men and women deployed to a combat zone.  Haven't thousands of high school kids across the country been encouraged to correspond with troops in the field? 

This isn't legitimate censorship of irresponsible or offensive speech; it is an attempt to silence students who wish to portray the reality of life at war that so many of their peers will soon face.

Shame on Principal Canty!


[ Parent ]
I just e-mailed (4.00 / 2)
Westport Country Playhouse and asked if they were willing, or knew of anyone who could provide a venue.

We'll see.


Awesome (4.00 / 1)
Aren't Paul Newman and his wife  great patrons of the Playhouse?  Given Newman's position on the war, I think he'd be someone who'd love to support these great kids.

[ Parent ]
I'll take 20 tickets (4.00 / 1)
and be able to sell them off in a New York Minute.

"I am not a Blogger...But I play one on the internet."

[ Parent ]
I'd buy tickets too (0.00 / 0)
Hmmm... tough one... another performance of Guys and Dolls or something that demonstrates the true meaning of performance art?

Yeah, I'd buy tickets for that. Count me in.


[ Parent ]
Shorter Canty - You want the truth? You can't handle the truth!!! (4.00 / 2)
He told us the student body is unprepared to hear about the war from students, and we aren't prepared to answer questions from the audience and it wasn't our place to tell them what soldiers were thinking

This is the same pathology that infects the White House, manifest in a high school. The authority figure is beyond questioning, he and only he determines what the public is or is not capable of "handling". Clearly, Principal Canty either considers his students incapable of understanding the war, or he thinks they are capable but shouldn't be allowed to help others understand it. Either way, Daddy knows best. And when Daddy makes a rule, he sticks to it cause he's the decider: "no matter what we do, it's not happening".

"I think the economic logic behind dumping a load of toxic waste in the lowest wage country is impeccable and we should face up to it."

-Lawrence Summers


This is one of the reasons I quit teaching (0.00 / 0)
Administrators are idiots--especially those in high schools.

Someday over a beer... (4.00 / 2)
...I'll tell you the story of my last principal, here in Connecticut.  In the hallway, one student set another student's hair on fire with a lighter.  A huge flame ignited in a "whoosh" due to all the flamable products in the girl's hair.  I ran over and put the fire out with my bare hands. 

And what happened?  I got scolded by my principal for not using a "more proper method to extinguish the flame". 

When I think of going back to the classroom, that's the first thing that always comes to mind.  I quickly talk myself out of it.


[ Parent ]
Someday over a beer . . . (0.00 / 0)
Maura,
If Wilton h.s. is looking for a new principal -- and the superintendent should be -- I wonder whether maybe you might want to apply for the job!  You'd could knock some good, common sense into a whole bunch of automatons.
Best,Ann

[ Parent ]
Huffington Post has an article up on this, too. (4.00 / 1)

High School Principal Cancels Student-Penned Iraq Play

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/24/nyregion/24drama.html?_r=2&hp&oref=slogin&oref=slogin>/a>


Canty focused on what to think, not how to think (4.00 / 1)
Canty's focus is on what he wants to hear in the play, apparently, rather than on providing a quality educational experience on how to create a play. 

The Laramie Project is an example of a play created from over 300 interviews, diary excerpts, and perhaps news articles, inspired after the killing of a young man in Laramie, Wyoming...  The theatre which created it has evolved a teaching method for students and schools who want to create plays using their method.

For anyone reading this who would find such an experience interesting, you can contact the theatre here: 
http://www.tectonict...

I did find one local theatre director who said that the theater might be able to make the stage available for a reading in mid May, but it would depend on the theater board's approval. 

He thought the kids could make the play even better from some additional work, and that the work on the attributions was important to complete.  (This is a theatre that did in fact present The Laramie Project, so is aware that such montages are recognized as a legitimate theatrical approach.).


[ Parent ]
Also contact the Black Rock Arts Festival on their myspace place (4.00 / 2)
We'll see.

Let's go for the gusto! (4.00 / 1)
Can we get a copy of the script?  Post it online?  Get schools around the country to produce the play?  Sort of like Vagina Monologues for high school students wanting to talk about the Iraq War?

Can we get some of the video bloggers to tape it?  Put it up on the web?  Get it played on public access TV?

Other ideas to really make this take off virally?

Aldon


[ Parent ]
The Script (4.00 / 1)
The script is online at http://www.freewebs.....  There is also a guestbook there and it looks like a lot of people are interested in staging productions.

[ Parent ]
Rock The Truth Blog Expresses My Outrage... (0.00 / 0)
Rock The Truth (contains foul language)

OMG (0.00 / 0)
It's been front-paged at Firedoglake.


Student Free Speech according to the Supreme Court (4.00 / 1)
Folks, this is why Connecticut needs to get on the boat and pass an anti-Hazelwood law.

In 1988, when I was a high school sophomore, the U.S. Supreme Court in Hazelwood School District v. Kuhlmeier (1988) gave the Wilton principal the right to do what he did. I offer the relevant quotations of law from the decision so we can all gain a greater understanding of what we are up against. I consider student speech to be the bedrock of a strong Constitutional republic. I have also included the dissent for people to read the battle that went on at the Supreme Court level over this issue.

We must not merely direct our anger at the principal, but the source of power which he drew. Six states have rebelled against this restriction of student speech rights, and Connecticut must be the seventh.

484 U.S. 260
The question whether the First Amendment requires a school to tolerate particular student speech-the question that we addressed in Tinker-is different from the question whether the First Amendment requires a school affirmatively to promote particular student speech. The former question addresses educators' ability to silence a student's personal expression that happens to occur on the school premises. The latter question concerns educators' authority over school-sponsored publications, theatrical productions, and other expressive activities that students, parents, and members of the public might reasonably perceive to bear the imprimatur of the school. These activities may fairly be characterized as part of the school curriculum, whether or not they occur in a traditional classroom setting, so long as they are supervised by faculty members and designed to impart particular knowledge or skills to student participants and audiences. 270-271

We hold that educators do not offend the First Amendment by exercising editorial control over the style and content of student speech in school-sponsored expressive activities so long as their actions are reasonably related to legitimate pedagogical concerns.
274

Dissent
278
I
Public education serves vital national interests in preparing the Nation's youth for life in our increasingly complex society and for the duties of citizenship in our democratic Republic. See Brown v. Board of Education, 347 U.S. 483, 493, 74 S.Ct. 686, 691, 98 L.Ed. 873 (1954). The public school conveys to our young the information and tools required not merely to survive in, but to contribute to, civilized society. It also inculcates in tomorrow's leaders the "fundamental values necessary to the maintenance of a democratic political system...." Ambach v. Norwick, 441 U.S. 68, 77, 99 S.Ct. 1589, 1595, 60 L.Ed.2d 49 (1979). All the while, the public educator nurtures students' social and moral development by transmitting to them an official dogma of " `community values.' " Board of Education v. Pico, 457 U.S. 853, 864, 102 S.Ct. 2799, 2806, 73 L.Ed.2d 435 (1982) (plurality opinion) (citation omitted).

Tinker teaches us that the state educator's undeniable, and undeniably vital, mandate to inculcate moral and political values is not a general warrant to act as "thought police" stifling discussion of all but state-approved topics and advocacy of all but the official position...Otherwise educators could transform students into "closed-circuit recipients of only that which the State chooses to communicate," Tinker, 393 U.S., at 511, 89 S.Ct., at 739, and cast a perverse and impermissible "pall of orthodoxy over the classroom," Keyishian v. Board of Regents, 385 U.S. 589, 603, 87 S.Ct. 675, 683, 17 L.Ed.2d 629 (1967).
286

Such unthinking contempt for individual rights is intolerable from any state official. It is particularly insidious from one to whom the public entrusts the task of inculcating in its youth an appreciation for the cherished democratic liberties that our Constitution guarantees. 290

For more info on student speech, check out Speech Rights of Public School Students


Wilton's state legislators are: (4.00 / 1)
Toni Boucher
Assistant Republican Leader

5 Wicks End Lane, Wilton 06897
Residence: 203-762-3232
Capitol: 1-800-842-1423

and

  John Hetherington
State Representative

697 Valley Road, New Canaan 06840
Residence: 203-966-9355
Capitol: 860-240-8700

Both Republicans - who are supposed to be for less government interference in our lives, right?  If you're in Wilton - you know what to do . . .


[ Parent ]
Here's the link to the student's page: (4.00 / 1)
Mr. Canty (0.00 / 0)
As a stundent of Wilton High School, I've been in on this controversy for about two weeks, and by the comments I've seen there are a few misconsceptions. First off, Mr. Canty is not to blame for what happened to the play. He encourages many discussions about the war, whether liberal or conservative, in the social studies curriculum (particularly in government classes), as well as in other academic courses. The year book issue quoted in the New York Times had more to do with profanity and dirty jokes than censorship of scholarly ideas and the gay straight alliance posters still hang around the schools. Like the year book, the poster approval had more to do with profanity than controversial opinions, as Mr. Canty approved the posters and the club itself. I am also familiar with the school after the two years that I have attended and I am sure his decision about the play did not come lightly. He certainly felt threatened by lawsuits from Gabby and her family, and he had to make a hard decision. But, between taking money out of the school system as a result of a play which could perform elsewhere, and sparking a discussion which will certainly prove to have educational purposes within the school, I believe he was right, and that James Presson should have turned his answer around. Also understand this: our school is not all about censorship, and our classrooms are full of very intelligent individuals. My english teacher actually told our class to dumb down our writing for the state mandated CAPT test, so that the grading system, which is based on students with lesser capabilities, would work for us. The theater group is not the only smart group of people, and most of us don't care about Britney Spears or Tyra Banks. Of course we live sheltered lives, but we are still taught whats going on outside. The sophmore english course included article excerpts about womens rights in Iraq and novels such as Black Boy, stressing the presence of racism in other countries and in our own. Obviously some students responses were more well put than others, but remember, we're all just high school students. Including those who put on the play.

Thanks for your perspective (0.00 / 0)
I really appreciate you joining us here and hope you will stick around in the My Left Nutmeg community!

[ Parent ]
Thanks for writing, Student. (0.00 / 0)
As my namesake indicates, I have three sons, two of which are in high school, and I pay particularly close attention to issues that affect students.

I don't think anyone here is questioning the intelligence of your school's students. And, I do think there's a pretty clear understanding of the issue over the production of "Voices of Conflict". I have seen this story being discussed on at least eight different blogs - by people all over the country. Frankly, the reactions are the same all over, as you are reading here.

I'm really disturbed by the implication that Gaby and her family were threatening to sue over the play being staged. It's a shame they took that stance - and, even more of a shame that it worked.

I admire your respect for Mr. Canty, and the pride you show in your school. You obviously care a great deal about what is going on there. I'm also glad to hear that Mr. Canty encourages discussion about the war, I'd be concerned if he didn't.

It's just a shame that what could have been the most important and effective discussion of all, was not allowed to take place.

I believe that time wounds all heels. -John Lennon


[ Parent ]
Ok, but... (0.00 / 0)
I don't see any explanation on your part as to what was wrong with the play and why Mr. Canty was justified in cancelling it. And why would the students be forced to remove the script from the internet?

[ Parent ]
Thanks for the perspective (0.00 / 0)
I don't doubt your assessment of the situation.  At least the real villains who forced the cancellation have been publicly identified.  High School principals aren't paid to be brave.

It's too bad the parents who were pro-play weren't as vocal.

Now that it has gained national attention, I'm sure that the fact that the play seems to be fully derived from other copyrighted material will become an issue as well.

Good luck in school

It's Morning in America. Too bad Reagan's not here to see it. - Me


[ Parent ]
Thanks for your opinion, "Student"... (4.00 / 1)
But I must take issue with your conclusion regarding Principal Canty's decision.  The only reason you list as legitimate is the threat of a lawsuit from a family at school.  The first ammendtment's freedom of speech should not be surrendered because of the threat of a lawsuit, or, for that matter, when faced with any threat.  Indeed, the freedom of speech is questioned and cherished when that speech concerns controversial issues.  And that freedom is most important when those without power wish to speak out against those in power.  This is just such an occasion.

Your fellow students wished to express the confusion, the horror, the hope and despair of young people nearly the same age as themselves who were living through combat.  When I was your age, our country was engaged in another equally senseless and bloody conflict- Vietman.  Then as well, the freedom to speak out was challenged.  Many college students who demonstrated against the war were identified by their local draft boards, had their college deferments cancelled, and were forced into military service.  The government kept secret dociers on many others who opposed the war.  And as you probably know, the Watergate break-in that led to Nixon's resignation was related to war issues.

No, Student, it is precisely when controversial speech is most needed that the people in a position to protect it need to show courage.  Principal Canty should have shown that courage and faced down those who sought to muzzle his students.  Their dramatic production was meant to illuminate important truths.  Mr. Canty was wrong to demand that those truths and the power of their drama be suppressed.

You wrote about other groups of smart kids besides the theater group.  I would suggest that schools in the old Soviet Union had lots of groups of "smart kids" too.  So does communist China.  The question is not whether there are smart kids, but rather whether there are groups of courageous kids.  Because it isn't smart people who keep democracies alive; it is the people who stand up for truth and freedom against power.


[ Parent ]
Standing Ovation!!! (n/t) (0.00 / 0)


[ Parent ]
Student, (0.00 / 0)
I am a teacher, and I'm glad you wrote. However, all educators have a professional liability policy - mine is for $1,000,000. He has no reason to fear a lawsuit.

Also, I'm surprised that your teacher told you to 'dumb down' on the CAPT test - it's supposed to be an honest assessment of your abilities.

Producing less than stellar work in your district will bring down test scores, reduce real estate value and possibly cause her job loss if word got out he/she told you students to do it.


Actually (0.00 / 0)
A lot of standardized tests of student writing penalize students whose writing skills are REALLY great and go beyond the rubric that is expected for writing samples.  When I taught high school in VA, I often had to advise my really great writers to step back and just follow the really dry, really regimented 5-paragraph essay structure, as it was a safer way to get the highest scores in the rubric.

[ Parent ]
Oh, (0.00 / 0)
and I 'fine' my students 50 cents for every 'Yeah, but." You owe me about $2.00.

Rut-roh (0.00 / 0)
How much for a "yeah" these days?

[ Parent ]
When the Kiss Float Visited Wilton..... (0.00 / 0)
I told Dad that he shouldn't have been surprised wbout the reception (hassle) he got there.

At the time I described Wilton as New Canaan with NASCAR fans.

Little did I know...........

It's Morning in America. Too bad Reagan's not here to see it. - Me


That Was Me With The Kiss Float (0.00 / 0)
in Wilton - and I was indeed hassled!

[ Parent ]
Hmmm, interesting . . . (0.00 / 0)
I didn't realize Wilton is one of the places you had trouble.

I believe that time wounds all heels. -John Lennon

[ Parent ]
Sorry Jon, I should have checked the history (0.00 / 0)
As a Darien resident, I'm pretty familiar with Wilton.  It seems to me that the main achievement of Wilton town government has been its 30 year campaign to prevent the building of the Super 7 highway through the town.

Other than that, like Darien and New Canaan, Wilton Democrats are generally relegated to permanent minority status. Every board has a majority of Republicans, and those Republicans are usually picked behind closed doors by the senior folks on the Republican Town Committee.

Joe got 58% of the vote in Wilton to 34% for Ned.

Shays beat Farrell 56%-43%in 2006, 61%-39% in 2004.

2004: Bush 52% - Kerry 47%.
2000: Bush 55% - Gore 42%



It's Morning in America. Too bad Reagan's not here to see it. - Me


[ Parent ]
for everyone not in the wilton community (1.00 / 1)
im sick and tired of u guys acting like u lived here ur hole life.  u do not know the situation so dont act like it.  Tim Canty was in the right when he stopped the production of the play.  he initially allowed the play to be produced because he thought it was a good idea for the students to hear letters from the soldiers.  he did not expect the letters to be completely cut up and put together in a way that would suit the kids in their message.  with the play being very bias, he stopped production, saying that veterans and their familys would not want there letters to be portrayed in such a negative way and could be very offensive.  also we are not a preppy school. the statment that we all talk about stars was said by a gay guy who is hated by everyone and therefore has no friends.  we as a town have experienced a death in the community of a soldier in iraq.  Nicolas Madaras was killed by a roadside bomb and all these kids want to do to remember him is to screw with his letters that he sent home.  these stupid kids have no right to say that they are enlightening us about what is going on over there because we all know very well about what is happening.

welcome to the discussion (4.00 / 1)
It's good to get Wilton High School Students in on this debate:

First two quick guidelines.

No. 1: Don't be a jerk. If you want respect, show some respect.
No. 2: Read rule number one.

Now, here's where I disagree with you. You say  that these kids have no right to enlighten you about what is going on in Iraq. But that's not the point.

Tim Canty originally approved the play because he thought it would be a good idea for students to hear letters from soldiers. That's commendable. But because it was "biased," as you say, he canceled it. 

A play is a form of art. It will always be biased -- it will always reflect the opinion of the people who create it. The Crucible, one of the plays Wilton High produced in the past, was extremely biased. In fact, it got the author Arthur Miller, in serious trouble because it protested the McCarthyism of the 1950s.

If a principal, or some other official, stops a play because not everyone agrees with the message, then you wouldn't be able to ever create a controversial play.

For a HS drama class to try to produce a play that reflects the fear, pride, anger, etc., of soldiers -- or kids thinking about becoming soldiers -- is a great thing. It's a great learning experience for the actors and the student body. If you don't like the subject of the play, it's your right to not go see it.

And even though I don't live in Wilton, I have every right to express my opinion. Because sometimes, kids who you think "have no friends," as you say, ACTUALLY have a lot of friends. And many of those friends are right here.


[ Parent ]
Odd a kid (4.00 / 1)
would call other kids, the kids.

u think?


[ Parent ]
Regarding Madaras (0.00 / 0)
You're now the second person I have seen use Nicolas Madaras' memory as an excuse for banning the play. Yet I have seen no objection whatsoever from the Madaras family to the script or the material derived from Nicolas' letters. Is it possible that his family might actually consider it an honor to Nicolas for the WHS students to share some of the more difficult feelings that he had about the war? Or to share ANY feelings he had about the war that might cause discomfort to some in the audience? Is it possible that Nicolas might actually want his feelings shared so that perhaps others could make more informed decisions about their own choices as to whether or not to join the military?

I can't answer these questions because I do not know the family and I did not know Nicolas. I DID read in the media that the Madaras family did not want to take sides in the dispute. And I am concerned that students who are perhaps on the pro-war side of the fence, or who are discomforted by harsh portrayals of war, are misusing Madaras as a justification for silencing those they disagree with.


[ Parent ]
Is this the kind of Tolerance Taught at WHS? (0.00 / 0)
the statment that we all talk about stars was said by a gay guy who is hated by everyone and therefore has no friends.

What exactly is the importance of including "gay" in the description of this person other than as a smear tactic?


[ Parent ]
ur sorta right (0.00 / 0)
ur right for the reason that canty excepted the play, however i meant that he thought it was biased because the cast actually changed around a lot of what was said on the actual letters.  and as for the friends thing, i was just pissed that he basically called all of the wilton school a bunch of rich assholes who dont care

Give me a break! (4.00 / 1)
the statment that we all talk about stars was said by a gay guy who is hated by everyone and therefore has no friends.

That statement alone makes me think you are quite a bit callous and probably have been brain-washed enough by your parents who have been successful in passing on their bigotry unto you. Careful with what you say on this blog because you will be taken to task for it (if you are not troll-rated).

The arc of history is long, but it bends toward justice. --Martin Luther King, Jr.


[ Parent ]
Regarding lawsuit (0.00 / 0)
First off, thank you for respecting my comment about Mr. Canty. Secondly I would like to apologize about my assumption of a lawsuit from Gabbi, for which I had no real argument. I have also recently recieved information about Gabbi's side of the story. It appears that Gabbi and her brother were going to be played by two students, which neither she nor her family felt comfortable about. Therefore her and her brother were taken out of the script. Gabbi then decided to give the play her input by joining the class during frees, presumably to fill the gap created by the loss of these two characters. However, Gabbi said that her opinions regarding the good side of the war was not being heard. Basically, she felt the play was not balanced, so she sent it to Mr. Canty. If you want more of this story, I found it printed in today's (March 29, 2007) Wilton Bulletin. Also, to whomever mentioned administrators liability, thank you for telling me. I wasn't aware.

 
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