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"It will be a sad day for this country if children can safely attend
their classes only under the protection of armed guards." President Dwight D. Eisenhower on the violence aimed at black Americans in September 1957 at Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas. Eisenhower sent in the troops to protect children from the terrorists who were keeping them from attending school. |
#2
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#3
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#5
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On 12/24/2012 1:07 PM, BAR wrote:
In article , says... On 12/24/12 11:29 AM, wrote: On Mon, 24 Dec 2012 09:30:25 -0500, ESAD wrote: "It will be a sad day for this country if children can safely attend their classes only under the protection of armed guards." President Dwight D. Eisenhower on the violence aimed at black Americans in September 1957 at Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas. Eisenhower sent in the troops to protect children from the terrorists who were keeping them from attending school. There have been cops in middle and high schools here for decades but they are only there to catch a kid smoking a joint in the bathroom. The cop at Columbine was under specific orders not to engage an active shooter. I agree that to actually be effective a "guard" should get extensive training and that should be in conjunction with a planned procedure about what everyone else will be doing. Back in my high school days, we had a plainclothes police officer assigned permanently. He was armed, but I doubt he ever had to use his pistol, not back then. If memory serves, his name was "Al," everyone knew him and he seem to know everybody. In those days, high schoolers at our school engaged in pretty harmless mischief, not expensive vandali$m, and there weren't many fights. The cafeteria food was just awful, so many juniors and seniors "snuck" off campus to run over to an Italian deli a long block away and get a good sub sandwich. That infuriated the assistant principal, but not Al. He also strolled over there for lunch a couple of days a week, usually in the midst of a small crowd of students. For Al, a kid wanting a decent lunch was not an "offense" worth his time or trouble. Life was a lot simpler and safer in the early 1960's. ![]() Why would the put a plain clothes policeman in your school? So they are not sitting ducks... We had "narcs", young looking cops, who dressed a few years to far in the past and were always trying to get drugs. Most were spotted, identified and ostracized within the first hours of their appearance at our school. Most of us in high school had known each other since 5th or 6th grade. It was hard for an outsider to work themselves into our circles. You watched too much tv.... |
#6
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On 12/24/12 2:24 PM, JustWait wrote:
On 12/24/2012 1:07 PM, BAR wrote: In article , says... On 12/24/12 11:29 AM, wrote: On Mon, 24 Dec 2012 09:30:25 -0500, ESAD wrote: "It will be a sad day for this country if children can safely attend their classes only under the protection of armed guards." President Dwight D. Eisenhower on the violence aimed at black Americans in September 1957 at Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas. Eisenhower sent in the troops to protect children from the terrorists who were keeping them from attending school. There have been cops in middle and high schools here for decades but they are only there to catch a kid smoking a joint in the bathroom. The cop at Columbine was under specific orders not to engage an active shooter. I agree that to actually be effective a "guard" should get extensive training and that should be in conjunction with a planned procedure about what everyone else will be doing. Back in my high school days, we had a plainclothes police officer assigned permanently. He was armed, but I doubt he ever had to use his pistol, not back then. If memory serves, his name was "Al," everyone knew him and he seem to know everybody. In those days, high schoolers at our school engaged in pretty harmless mischief, not expensive vandali$m, and there weren't many fights. The cafeteria food was just awful, so many juniors and seniors "snuck" off campus to run over to an Italian deli a long block away and get a good sub sandwich. That infuriated the assistant principal, but not Al. He also strolled over there for lunch a couple of days a week, usually in the midst of a small crowd of students. For Al, a kid wanting a decent lunch was not an "offense" worth his time or trouble. Life was a lot simpler and safer in the early 1960's. ![]() Why would the put a plain clothes policeman in your school? So they are not sitting ducks... Doubtful. There were many entrances to that school, and it covered most of a large city block. On the other hand, this *was* in the days before Fox News and ready availability of Bushmaster-style rifles. |
#7
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ESAD wrote:
On 12/24/12 2:24 PM, JustWait wrote: On 12/24/2012 1:07 PM, BAR wrote: In article , says... On 12/24/12 11:29 AM, wrote: On Mon, 24 Dec 2012 09:30:25 -0500, ESAD wrote: "It will be a sad day for this country if children can safely attend their classes only under the protection of armed guards." President Dwight D. Eisenhower on the violence aimed at black Americans in September 1957 at Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas. Eisenhower sent in the troops to protect children from the terrorists who were keeping them from attending school. There have been cops in middle and high schools here for decades but they are only there to catch a kid smoking a joint in the bathroom. The cop at Columbine was under specific orders not to engage an active shooter. I agree that to actually be effective a "guard" should get extensive training and that should be in conjunction with a planned procedure about what everyone else will be doing. Back in my high school days, we had a plainclothes police officer assigned permanently. He was armed, but I doubt he ever had to use his pistol, not back then. If memory serves, his name was "Al," everyone knew him and he seem to know everybody. In those days, high schoolers at our school engaged in pretty harmless mischief, not expensive vandali$m, and there weren't many fights. The cafeteria food was just awful, so many juniors and seniors "snuck" off campus to run over to an Italian deli a long block away and get a good sub sandwich. That infuriated the assistant principal, but not Al. He also strolled over there for lunch a couple of days a week, usually in the midst of a small crowd of students. For Al, a kid wanting a decent lunch was not an "offense" worth his time or trouble. Life was a lot simpler and safer in the early 1960's. ![]() Why would the put a plain clothes policeman in your school? So they are not sitting ducks... Doubtful. There were many entrances to that school, and it covered most of a large city block. On the other hand, this *was* in the days before Fox News and ready availability of Bushmaster-style rifles. What does a particular "style" of rifle have to do with anything? A Remington/Benelli/Mossberg "style" hunting shotgun could have been just as bad, or worse, CT. |
#8
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On 12/24/12 2:33 PM, wrote:
On Mon, 24 Dec 2012 11:37:00 -0500, ESAD wrote: On 12/24/12 11:29 AM, wrote: On Mon, 24 Dec 2012 09:30:25 -0500, ESAD wrote: "It will be a sad day for this country if children can safely attend their classes only under the protection of armed guards." President Dwight D. Eisenhower on the violence aimed at black Americans in September 1957 at Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas. Eisenhower sent in the troops to protect children from the terrorists who were keeping them from attending school. There have been cops in middle and high schools here for decades but they are only there to catch a kid smoking a joint in the bathroom. The cop at Columbine was under specific orders not to engage an active shooter. I agree that to actually be effective a "guard" should get extensive training and that should be in conjunction with a planned procedure about what everyone else will be doing. Back in my high school days, we had a plainclothes police officer assigned permanently. He was armed, but I doubt he ever had to use his pistol, not back then. If memory serves, his name was "Al," everyone knew him and he seem to know everybody. In those days, high schoolers at our school engaged in pretty harmless mischief, not expensive vandali$m, and there weren't many fights. The cafeteria food was just awful, so many juniors and seniors "snuck" off campus to run over to an Italian deli a long block away and get a good sub sandwich. That infuriated the assistant principal, but not Al. He also strolled over there for lunch a couple of days a week, usually in the midst of a small crowd of students. For Al, a kid wanting a decent lunch was not an "offense" worth his time or trouble. Life was a lot simpler and safer in the early 1960's. ![]() We never had cops in schools in the 60s. I went to high school in the 1700 block of G st NW so we had plenty of places to go for a quick bite. They did not have the closed campus thing either. If you were not in class you could go. In fact they had a no smoking within a block of school thing so guys would go over to F street for a quick smoke between classes. The back steps of the school was a great short cut, through the alley. There was also a great little mom and pop tavern at 18th and F that had a passable 35 cent hamburger (vs a dime for what midwesterners call a "slider" at Little Tavern). A beer was 25 cents if you could trick them into believing you were 18. I really don't know why we had an actual cop in the school. Perhaps he was injured on his job as a cop and the school duty was a way to fill out his years for a full retirement. In any event, he was a very decent guy, well-liked and never one to bust your chops for minor "infractions." My recollection is that 17th & G is an area of mostly federal office buildings these days. |
#9
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![]() wrote in message ... On Mon, 24 Dec 2012 14:48:01 -0500, ESAD wrote: My recollection is that 17th & G is an area of mostly federal office buildings these days. G street dead ends into EOB on the east and is commercial going west. AAA was on the SW corner. There was a parking lot and then our school. The rest of the block was the YMCA. We were in the original YMCA building before they built the 2 new ones. The Pa ave side block was a collection of multi story offices with small businesses on the street level. --------------------------------------- Is this New Haven, CT? If so, that original YMCA must have been the one that I took lessons and got SCUBA certified in 1966. It was through a club called, "The Yankee Paddlers". Course was given by ex-Navy divers, (renamed Navy Seals in 1961). |
#10
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On 12/25/12 12:33 PM, Eisboch wrote:
wrote in message ... On Mon, 24 Dec 2012 14:48:01 -0500, ESAD wrote: My recollection is that 17th & G is an area of mostly federal office buildings these days. G street dead ends into EOB on the east and is commercial going west. AAA was on the SW corner. There was a parking lot and then our school. The rest of the block was the YMCA. We were in the original YMCA building before they built the 2 new ones. The Pa ave side block was a collection of multi story offices with small businesses on the street level. --------------------------------------- Is this New Haven, CT? If so, that original YMCA must have been the one that I took lessons and got SCUBA certified in 1966. It was through a club called, "The Yankee Paddlers". Course was given by ex-Navy divers, (renamed Navy Seals in 1961). No, Washington, D.C. The 'Y' in New Haven was on Chapel and Howe, I think. Used to go there many Saturdays with a couple of buddies in the winter to use the gym, play pickup b'ball, and go swimming. It was a two block walk from the bus stop. The Y was down the street from Hulls Hobbies, another great place to hang out. |
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