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LettersPublished on March 12, 1998Hoop Schemes: A Legacy of Corruption At long last the emperor's Nike cloak has been ripped off and the naked dishonesty and raw corruption of this "program" has been exposed. And make no mistake, it is corruption that will be the legacy of Stingarees basketball, not the tradition that coach Frank Martin likes to trumpet. The ball is now very deep in the court of the Florida High School Activities Association and the so-far silent administrators of the Dade County school system. This lawlessness should also be the concern of every Florida legislator. And wouldn't it be stunning if the power of shame provided by Mr. Powell's expose moved the Miami Herald to give us more than prep sports pablum and utilize their vast resources to actually protect this community's young people from exploitation. We'll see. Carolyn Thompson-Moore Hoop Schemes: May I Remind You, Mr. Principal... As a student from the first graduating class of MAST Academy, I find it necessary to respond. I would like to emphasize that many students attended MAST Academy because they wanted to study. They wanted an education -- period. Yes, marine biology was a real perk. However, many of us also took those "wonderful" advanced-placement English and history classes, not to mention all the math. It was a lot of work, but we were happy to have been educated at an institution that was more concerned with what we were learning than with ball games. Perhaps if administrators put more emphasis on education rather than winning basketball games, there wouldn't be articles published about high school kids traveling outside their designated school zones to play a ball game. Teaching young men to dodge the rules is not what many would call preparation for real life. When will students begin traveling to receive better educations? Winning is not necessarily always something to respect and cherish. The fact that we are given the opportunity to learn and educate ourselves, however, is. I hope Victor Lopez realizes that a student's education should be a higher priority than winning a basketball game. If he doesn't, I will be happy to be the first in line to remind him. Heather J. Wilson Killian Nine: Proud Kid, Shameful Administrators I wonder what it would feel like to shit on the swollen egos of principal Timothy Dawson, school district spokesman Henry Fraind, and Superintendent Roger Cuevas. Those last two shameless assholes, with their mail-order college degrees, have no moral stature to judge or condemn anyone. I hope you reprise your information about how the school district police have dealt with adult administrators who show up at work drunk, belligerent, and abusive ("Flunk Out," July 17, 1997). They sure don't get the hardball and unconstitutional raw deal the students received for no reason other than to allow Dawson to posture as a tough disciplinarian and for other officials to pretend to uphold moral values. As a 48-year-old adult, I'm very proud we have kids like the Killian Nine. I am ashamed we have public officials like those mentioned above. Jose Fernandez Killian Nine: It Hurts, It Stinks, It Bleeds For whatever reason, some people have made racism the focus of their objections to the pamphlet. After reading it, I can see it as only a passionate indictment of hypocrisy aimed at all -- from school officials to security personnel to fellow students. Taken to its logical conclusion, it denounces us as well for our complacency and denial. If I were one of the parents, I would shake the youngsters' hands and thank them for the wake-up call. Concerning their racial epithets like "nigger" and "spic" and "honky," I prefer to hear them and deal with the users' shortsightedness and frustration.
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