NATION IN BRIEF

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Sunday, March 5, 2006

Teacher's Hitler Remark Embroils School District

DENVER -- The day after President Bush's State of the Union address, social studies teacher Jay Bennish warned his world geography class not to be taken in.

"Sounds a lot like the things that Adolf Hitler used to say," Bennish told students at the suburban high school. "We're the only ones who are right, everyone else is backward and our job is to conquer the world."

The teacher quickly made clear that he was not equating the president with Hitler, but the damage was done. A sophomore in the class had recorded the lecture on an MP3 player, and this week turned it over to a local conservative radio show.

Bennish, a five-year veteran of Overland High School, was placed on paid leave by the Cherry Creek School District on Wednesday, sparking an uproar over the issues of free speech and proper classroom behavior. About 150 Overland students walked out on Thursday to protest Bennish's absence, and the teacher's lawyer -- who met with district officials Friday -- has threatened a federal lawsuit.

Attorney David Lane argued on the Mike Rosen radio show, which had aired the tape, that what his client said is not so outlandish and was intended to provoke students to think about current events. "Maybe it's not mainstream, middle-American opinion," Lane said. "But the rest of the world agrees with him."

Tustin Amole, a spokeswoman for the school district, said officials are investigating whether Bennish had violated a policy that says teachers may not intimidate students who hold political beliefs different from their own.

"Teachers do have a First Amendment right to express their opinion," Amole said, "but it must be in the context of the material being taught, and it must provide a balanced point of view."

* * *

· LEEDS, Maine -- A wind-whipped fire destroyed a farmhouse in which Civil War general and Howard University founder Oliver Otis Howard once lived. Owner David Fortin said the fire started while he was using a space heater in an adjoining woodshed. He and a handyman working on plumbing escaped without injury.

· DETROIT -- The price for a spot in Detroit's Woodlawn Cemetery has jumped thousands of dollars since civil rights icon Rosa Parks was entombed there in the fall. The spaces in the renamed Rosa L. Parks Freedom Chapel were each priced at $17,000 before the cemetery donated sites for Parks, her husband and her mother. Now, the spaces cost $24,275, and as much as $65,000 for the slots nearest to Parks's crypt. No one has bought one.

· HARTFORD, Conn. -- Activists propose playing recordings of classical music in Barnard Park to annoy drug dealers and prostitutes, making them leave. "Beethoven is not going to save you," University of California at Los Angeles musicologist Robert Fink said. "Some of the greatest composers in history are now being viewed as some kind of bug spray or disinfectant."

-- From News Services



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