See?
Bob Dylan's Masters of War is a hard-hitting, anti-war song produced more than 20 years before any current Boulder High School student was born.
More than 40 years after its release, the song has been resurrected at Boulder High with huge and confusing repercussions that prompted Secret Service agents to pay the campus a visit Thursday.
Some students and parents apparently let the Secret Service and talk-radio stations know they were unhappy with the plan of a trio of students to do a poetry reading of the song, accompanied by background music, according to Ron Cabrera, the school's principal.
Rumors were rampant that during an audition and rehearsal for today's talent show, the students changed Dylan's powerful last verse at the end of the song to say that they hoped that President Bush was going to die.
The last verse begins: "And I hope that you die; And your death'll come soon."
Secret Service agents interviewed Cabrera on Thursday to determine what all the uproar was about and whether any threats were being made against the president's life.
Boulder High was also the scene of a sit in after the elections because the kids didn't understand the result. Yep, nothing's changed.



Aw, don't be hatin'. Boulder keeps those right-wingers in Colorado Spring on their toes.
Posted by: Lauren | November 15, 2004 at 12:07 AM
I was born and raised in Boulder, and so was my wife.
It was crap like the recent "sit in", Naropa Institute, local politician Danish(hope I spelled that right), etc, etc, that drove me nuts about the town. There is a continous, never ending LLL atmosphere in Boulder that has driven everyone I know in that lived in Boulder to move some where else.
It's not just your alma mater that hasn't changed, it's the whole town.
LC Geno - Go Buffs
Posted by: LC Geno | November 14, 2004 at 08:47 PM