"H. Beam Piper & J. J. McGuire - Null-ABC" - читать интересную книгу автора (Piper H Beam)




Prestonby took the thick-barreled gas pistol from the shelf under the lectern and shoved it into his hip
pocket; Yetsko picked up a two-and-a-half foot length of rubber hose and tucked it under his left arm.
Together, they went back through the wings and out into the hallway that led to the office. So a
Twenty-second Century high school was a place where a teacher carried a pistol and a tear-gas
projector and a sleep-gas gun, and had a bodyguard, and still walked in danger of his life from armed
'teen-age hooligans. It was meaningless to ask whose fault it was. There had been the World Wars, and
the cold-war interbellum periods—rising birth rates, huge demands on the public treasury for armaments,
with the public taxed to the saturation point, and no money left for the schools. There had been fantastic
"Progressive" education experiments—even in the 'Fifties of the Twentieth Century, in the big cities,
children were being pushed through grade school without having learned to read. And when there had
been money available for education, school boards had insisted on spending it for audio-visual
equipment, recordings, films, anything but textbooks. And there had been that lunatic theory that children
should be taught to read by recognizing whole words instead of learning the alphabet. And more and
more illiterates had been shoved out of the schools, into a world where radio and television and moving
pictures were supplanting books and newspapers, and more and more children of illiterates had gone to
school without any desire or incentive to learn to read. And finally, the illiterates had become Illiterates,
and literacy had become Literacy.

And now, the Associated Fraternities of Literates had come to monopolize the ability to read and write,
and a few men like William R. Lancedale, with a handful of followers like Ralph N. Prestonby, were
trying—

The gleaming cleanliness of the corridor, as always, heartened Prestonby a little; it was a trophy of
victory from his first two days at Mineola High School, three years ago. He remembered what they had
looked like when he had first seen them.

"This school is a pig pen!" he had barked at the janitorial force. "And even if they are Illiterates, these
children aren't pigs; they deserve decent surroundings. This school will be cleaned, immediately, from top
to bottom, and it'll be kept that way."

The janitors, all political appointees, Independent-Conservative party-hacks, secure in their jobs, had
laughed derisively. The building superintendent, without troubling to rise, had answered him:

"Young man, you don't want to get off on the wrong foot, here," he had said. "This here's the way this
school's always been run, an' it's gonna take a lot more than you to change it."

The fellow's name, he recalled, was Kettner; Lancedale had given him a briefing which had included
some particulars about him. He was an Independent-Conservative ward-committeeman. He had gotten
his present job after being fired from his former position as mailman for listening to other peoples' mail
with his pocket recorder-reproducer.

"Yetsko," he had said. "Kick this bum out on his face."

"You can't get away with—" Kettner had begun. Yetsko had yanked him out of his chair with one hand
and started for the door with him.

"Just a moment, Yetsko," he had said.