The first poem is the first poem in Madrigals (with some minor changes - minus the first line, for instance.) and is called 22,000 dollars in 3 months.
I wouldn't call that 'some minor changes'. Blowing off the complete first line of a poem can't be 'minor'.
Comparing the poem above (as a whole) with
22,ooo Dollars in 3 Months just reinforces the impression.
A (needless) question comes to my mind:
If you were looking through an appealing collection of poetry that claims to contain "Early Selected Poems, 1946-1966", but then you'd suddenly realize that the very first poem of this book is a fucked up and castrated 1988-or-whenever-version of a poem originally written in ca. 1962 (according to a database you accidentally have access to), would you still buy this book, or would you hesitate?
I'm looking forward to a collection of Bukowskis poetry that hasn't been 'edited' at all.