12-0 GRADY ONE WIN FROM GEORGIA DOME Grady students get
Transcription
12-0 GRADY ONE WIN FROM GEORGIA DOME Grady students get
S I N C E 1 9 4 7 www.gradyhighschool.org/ southerner An upbeat paper for a downtown school CROSS COUNTRY Boys finish second in state WES VERNON p. 15 AQUARIUM Atlanta’s newest attraction to open with a splash HOLLA BACK! p. 10 VOLUME LIX, NUMBER 3, NOV. 15, 2005 HENRY W. GRADY HIGH SCHOOL, ATLANTA BY MAX BEECHING he Knights continued their historic storybook season on Nov. 11 defeating the 10th-ranked Laney Wildcats 13-6 to advance to the quarterfinals of AA playoffs. If the Knights can get past Macon County in the AA quarterfinals at Grady Stadium Nov. 18, they’ll not only reach football’s final four for the first time since 1953 (see page 8 for complete coverage of that season), but they will make a reservation for their firstever game at the Georgia Dome. The Laney game marked Grady’s stiffest challenge of the season, and it was the season’s most dramatic. The game came down to one drive and one play. The Knights drew first blood with a 13-yard touchdown pass from junior quarterback Simeon Kelley to junior Devongalo Crawford, his third in two games. The point after was no good because of a fumbled snap. The Knights would then face some problems as Laney answered the Knights’ touchdown with a 70-yard screen pass that tied the game at 6. The extra point attempt was blocked. Penalties would hurt the Knights on their next scoring opportunity. They advanced the ball inside the Laney 4-yard-line but then lost their composure by committing four consecutive false start penalties. The lost yardage prevented even a field-goal attempt as the Knights had to punt instead. In the second quarter, starting junior running back Zach Koen went down with a game-ending see FOOTBALL page 16 SALLY ZINTAK 12-0 GRADY ONE WIN FROM GEORGIA DOME T THE KNIGHT’S NIGHT: Junior quarterback Simeon Kelley rips past the Laney High School defensive line in the secondround playoff game.The Grey Kights defeated the Wildcats 13-6 to reach the AA quarterfinals.The victory marked the first time Grady has won a secound-round playoff game since their 1953 championship season (please see page 8). NEWS BRIEFS City Council approves funding for Beltline GNN, Southerner capture Pacemakers GNN and The Southerner captured Pacemaker Awards at the NSPA-JEA fall convention in Chicago. Grady was the only school in the nation to win two. The Southerner also placed seventh in the Best in Show competition. Four students captured awards in the JEA Write-Off competition. BY CHELSEA SPENCER he Beltline is on the right track. On Nov. 7, members of the Atlanta City Council voted to create a Tax Allocation District to raise the nearly $2 billion needed to build proposed parks, transit, trails and other development. Now it is left up to the Fulton County Commission and the Atlanta Board of T Education to approve the plan. Public opinion of the Beltline has been shifting constantly since Mayor Shirley Franklin first created the Beltline Partnership in July to lead the program and coordinate progress between the city and other groups already involved. What once appeared to be an “emerald necklace” of parks and transit now appeals to and 10th Street. Developer Wayne Mason made a deal to sell the 7.4acre plot of land to Trammel Crow Residential earlier this year. “I have skepticism about the plan and the impact on the surrounding neighborhoods,” said Steve Brodie, who lost a bid for city council on Nov. 8. “It doesn’t represent see BELTLINE page 7 Grady students get working experience with RVI program French rioting won’t affect exchange plans Teens of North African and Middle Eastern descent began rioting Oct. 27 due to perceived neglect from the French government. The riots spread to some 300 French towns. APS officials said the violence won’t affect the system’s student exchange program. BY CARSON HALE he dimly-lit lobby of the downtown Renaissance Hotel gives off an air of modern elegance as businessmen ride escalators lined by boxy glass sculptures, and people with name tags mingle outside tall-doored meeting rooms. Within the same building, maids dressed in collared black and white shirts and bright lipstick navigate spacious elevators through a network of concrete hallways, and workers in bright blue uniforms stuff eight-foot washing machines with pounds of sheets and towels. These two worlds are separated by a single door; a tall, wooden T SARAH BETH McKAY First lady promotes APS debate program At a recent conference on education, Laura Bush honored an APS Debate Program initiative, Computer Aided Debate, as a program worthy of emulation. CAP is a project that encourages and strengthens the debate programs at a few APS middle schools. some as just another development scheme. Detractors are concerned that the plan concentrates too much on the development around the Beltline and not the Beltline itself. The public remained optimistic about the Beltline development until the first proposal was made: for two 39-story condominiums on the corner of Monroe Drive ATLANTA AREA ELECTIONS BRING LITTLE CHANGE On Nov. 8, incumbents Shirley Franklin (above) and District 6 councilwoman Anne Fauver both won, but Franklin won handily, garnering 93 percent of the vote, while Fauver beat opponent Steve Brodie by three votes. “Employees Only” door. While visitors to the hotel see only the carpeted, furnished side, Grady students in the Related Vocational Instruction program working at the Renaissance Hotel spend their weekdays “behind the scenes.” RVI, coordinated at Grady by Sheryl Newman, is a career/ technology program designed to teach students with disabilities skills needed for a job or work in a technical field. Participants learn employability skills, such as interviewing, and writing resumes. Ms. Newman’s students work at places such as Bobby Dodd see RVI page 12 c o m m e n t 2 THE SOUTHERNER EDITORIAL BOARD CHELSEA COOK REBECCA GITTELSON SARAH MARRINER ELIZABETH SCHENCK MICAH WEISS MATT WESTMORELAND SINCE 1947 Trash threatens choice Trash. It is a problem that continues to plague the school. After every lunch trash litters the courtyard and all around the campus. These lunch remnants serve as a daily visual reminder than many among us apparently feel that it’s the custodians job to take out our trash. Students like senior Kati Gaslowitz think that it is the students’ responsibility to pick up their own trash. “No one feels they have to do it [pick up trash],” Gaslowitz said. “The trash cans are in close proximity and the courtyard is still a mess.” Senior Brandon Sheats thinks that students should pick up their trash too because he fears the repercussions. “All I want is not to be forced to eat inside,” Sheats said. Although some students have done their part in cleaning up their trash, the clear majority just doesn’t care. If students keep this up then the administration will be forced to take away the privilege of eating outside. “The administration can go back to forced lunches if students don’t start picking up their trash,” Naomi Grishman said. The problem lies entirely with the student’s motivation to pick up his or her own trash. This chronic problem can’t be fixed any other way. Even when we are forced to have lunches inside, students quickly revert to old habits of leaving their trash around. Students may not realize that most schools don’t let their students eat outside and fail to appreciate the freedom they have here. If students don’t get their act together and pick up at least their own trash, then we may lose a privilege that we take for granted. There is nothing more the administration can do to help because there are plenty of trash cans around the campus. Students who don’t see the beauty of our campus or care about this school are the problems and only they can make the change for the better. “The administration can do lots of things, but as long as the students don’t accept responsibility then it won’t do much,” Grishman said. “It baffles me at why students don’t take more pride in such a beautiful campus.” It baffles us, too. We are all tired of this trash talk, so let’s do our part to end the problem and the endless discussion about it. ❐ Few votes sway election Sometimes the best civics lessons are learned outside of the classroom. Voting-age seniors who did not go to the polls on Nov. 8 for local elections should now realize how much each of their un-cast ballots could have mattered. As of Nov. 11, City Council candidate Anne Fauver held only a threevote lead ahead of her opponent, Steve Brodie. The most important issue of the campaign was support over the proposed parking deck in Piedmont Park. Fauver supports the parking deck, while Brodie opposes it. A majority of voters in Midtown, where most Grady students live, chose Brodie. If only a few more Midtown residents had voted, the outcome of the election could have been entirely different. Piedmont Park is a huge part of our school, and every student should care about what goes on there. Whether or not the parking deck is built depends in part on the outcome of the re-count for the elections. Those old enough to participate should have felt compelled to vote in the city council election. It is imperative that Grady students, and all young people, learn that no matter what their age, their votes and political participation can really have an impact.❐ C Nov. 15, 2005 O R R E C T I O N Divorce stereotyped as hateful, unhappy Dear Editors: I am writing in response to the article, “Our generation plagued by lasting effects of divorce.” (Oct. 18) The article gave good statistics about divorce around the United States but was too stereotypical about all divorces. The author stated that there are no “good divorces.” I strongly disagree with this statement. I believe that this is a view that TV has shown and has made many people believe that divorces have to have hatred and fighting. This may be the case in the majority of divorces but is definitely not the case in all. I am a child of divorced parents who went through all the fighting and hatred and custody battles and being stuck in the middle the author mentioned, but I have also seen the “good divorces” the author said didn’t exist. I got the understanding that the author thought all divorces made unhappy families. Divorced families may go through their hard times, but divorce can also lead to much more happiness for the parents and even for the kids. I have seen divorced parents who after realizing that the marriage wasn’t working became best friends and moved on with their lives. Some married couples are always fighting all the time. These couples should either try to work it out quickly or just move on, especially if the couple has children. Seeing your parents fight and scream derogatory comments at each other is hard to deal with. Divorce in these situations is probably the best option, because it can minimize the fighting a great deal. Basically, the author’s portrayal that divorce has to be bad is too narrow, and she should realize that divorce can also be a very beneficial move for families. Michael Harper sophomore ‘Tattoos’ challenged views, got attention Dear Editors: I am writing this letter in response to an article in the Oct. 18 edition of The Southerner entitled “Grady students go more than skin-deep with tattoos.” At a first glance, I wasn’t sure if I wanted to waste my time reading it or not. I’ve always felt that tattoos are just a way to poison your skin that you end up regretting when you get older, but I decided to read the article anyway. The article gave a lot of information about why students get tattoos in the first place. I think that it is one way to honor and remember loved ones, but there are other ways to go about doing this other than getting a tattoo. I feel that the quotes put in the article about how it feels to get a tattoo are just a bit graphic. I’m glad that you put them in there, though because I feel that it might help students to get a real feel for the pain that they are in for if they get a tattoo. I also wanted to point out that the caption under the photo for the article has incorrect dates in it. The tattoo on Sykes’ arm says his sister died in 1997, while the caption says she died in 1999. I suggest you check your facts next time, especially when your picture has the correct information right above it. So, in conclusion, I agree with Chavez. If you are going to get a tattoo, then do it a little later in life, when you have more experience and know what you plan to do with your life. If you still insist, then get one that has meaning to you, something that you won’t mind having permanently on your skin. Lauren Dellinger sophomore S In the Oct. 18 issue, we incorrectly identified sophomore Jamison Kinnane as a junior in the page 6 story “Past, present Grady mothers run unopposed for city office.” We also stated that sophomore Jessie Andrews was a freshman in “Changing of the guard: Grady loses cross country title at the citywide meet” on page 16. Also, the last paragraph was misleading. Pett is not the only team manager; she is one of three. The other two are Michelle Wilco and Katie O’Brien. In the same issue, we incorrectly spelled the names of Ashley Tannehill, Lauren Dellinger, and Jillian Woodliff. On page 15 of the Oct. 18 issue, the caption for the story “Grady students go more than skin-deep with tatoos” is incorrect. We stated that Cedric Sykes’ sister Crystal lost her life in 1999. As the photograph shows, however, she lost her life in 1997. In the page 18 story “Knights’ perfect record promises playoffs,” we incorrectly stated that the Grady Knights football team was 8-0. At the time, their record was 9-0. The team’s record is currently 12-0. Staff Managing editors: Chelsea Cook, Matt Westmoreland Design editors: Alex Daniels, Duy Lam Copy editor: Chelsea Spencer News editors: Allana Neely, Robert Sanders Comment editors: Sarah Marriner, Elizabeth Schenck People editors: Allison Farnham, Shearlon White Sports editors: Patrick McGlynn, Woody Morgan Special section editor: William VanDerKloot Photo editor: Chelsea Spencer Nexus managing editor: Micah Weiss An upbeat paper for a downtown school Staff: Lee Allen, Curry Andrews, Jessica Baer, Asa Beal, Max Beeching, Erik Belgum, Leah Bishop, Chloe Blalock, Andrew Bracken, Lena Brodsky, Jeffrey Carpenter, Alastair Carter-Boff, George Demeglio, Emma Din, Lily Feinberg, Rebecca Gittelson, Ramika Gourdine, Hanna Griffiths, Carson Hale, Sean Harrington, Stone Irvin, Sam Johnson, Travis Jones, Kenny Jones, Robinson Levin, Sarah Beth McKay, Greg O’Donnell, Julia Oliver, Carson Phillips-Spotts, Madeline Webb, Sally Zintak Photo adviser: Dawn Wadsworth Adviser: Dave Winter Print staff: Alvin Hambrick, Harlon Heard, Michael Jackson, Adlai McClure, Charlotte Napper, Benjamin Shaw The Southerner, a member of GSPA, SIPA, CSPA and NSPA, is a monthly student publication of: Henry W. Grady High School 929 Charles Allen Drive NE Atlanta, GA 30309 The Southerner welcomes submissions, which may be edited for grammar, inappropriate language and length. Please place submissions in Mr. Winter's box in the main office. Subscriptions are also available. For more information, please contact Mr. Winter or a member of the staff. We can be reached at dwinter@atlanta.k12.ga.us or at the Southerner office, 404-802-3041 THE SOUTHERNER c o m m e n t Nov. 15, 2005 3 Ansley Mall tops list of Midtown endangered species Imagine a new addition to the retail business scene of Midtown, a new shopping district that incorporates both the outdoor essence of Piedmont Park and the “urban edge” of Downtown. At first glance, the plans seem appealing with a new public park and at least a dozen residential SARAH MARRINER buildings with ground-level retail. Even more enticing is the idea of a convenient transit line that will eliminate many transportation and parking issues. The whole idea sounds great, right? But what if I were to tell you this development would replace our beloved Ansley Mall? The Atlanta Development Authority describes Ansley Mall and its surrounding developments as “a flourishing retail area” that provides “much needed neighborhood retail amenities to the area” in its “Vision for the Beltline,” but it goes on to say that the mall’s “low density character limits its potential as a vibrant and unique retail district.” What? The place where, as a 4-year-old, I asked my mom, “Why is that man dressed like a woman?” isn’t vibrant and unique enough? It has much more character than what the ADA and Steve Selig, president of Atlanta retail developer Selig Enterprises Inc. and owner of the Ansley Mall property, are planning to put in its place. No matter the time of day or night, Ansley Mall is crawling with characters. Although the mall serves most of Midtown including Morningside, Ansley Park, Piedmont Heights and Virginia Highlands, it still has the feel of a small-town neighborhood. On every visit, you run into someone you know. At a recent informational meeting about the Beltline, a presenter described Ansley Mall as “just a 1960s strip mall surrounded by an asphalt parking lot.” There is no doubt the mall is a little outdated, and whether the Beltline becomes a reality or not, the redevelopment of Ansley Mall is inevitable. Though the structure is retro, the stores are far from outdated; in fact, the mall has been adding new businesses like LA Fitness, Cold Stone Creamery, and Moe’s Southwest Grill that were opened in 2002 and 2003. The addition of these new businesses proved to be a good idea; since LA Fitness opened, the parking lot stays full. It’s the chain stores like these that have kept the mall running, but the reality is that even with the booming business the mall is experiencing, the property is too valuable for what’s there now. The thought of the source of so many of my childhood memories becoming another Midtown development project is frightening. No matter what happens to the mall, though, I will still have the memories of getting leaf cookies and hugs from Ken Yoss at the Royal Bagel, which went out of business more than seven years ago, dancing and singing my heart out on the stage at the main entrance, and getting a scoop of ice cream on a hot day at the Baskin Robbins that has since become home to Moe’s. Ansley Mall is where I got my first pets, where I opened my first checking account and where my parents first met (at the Laundry Lounge). Ansley Mall is not just a ’60s strip mall, it’s our ’60s strip mall where the soul of Midtown lies. And the memories, the heart, and the character of Ansley Mall will remain long after the redevelopment takes over. ❐ ATLanta’s new brand fails to give our city the identity it deserves “I Love N.Y.” Appealing and straightfor ward. “What happens in Vegas stays in Vegas.” Humorous and provocative. “A t l a n t a : LEAH BISHOP O p p o r t u n i t y, Optimism, Openness.” Umm, come again? This is the slogan that Atlanta recently unveiled in a $8.8 million-plus campaign to “brand Atlanta.” The main purpose of the slogan is to attract businesses and tourists to Atlanta. Maybe city officials and the marketing team were “optimistic” in seeing this as an “opportunity” to divert attention from the “openness” of the fact that we have high smog levels, horrible traffic, and are located in the state with the worst SAT scores in the nation. Atlanta is undoubtedly in need of an identity, but will this logo deliver? Or will it simply be a repeat of the ’96 Olympics “Izzy” mascot disaster? Successful logos should not have to be explained. Instead, they should be catchy, visually appealing, and depict the most important aspect of the product or, in this case, the city. Atlanta’s logo however, is none of the above. When I look at the red encircled “ATL,” the words opportunity, optimism, and openness are not the first things that come to mind. The one distinguishing feature of the logo is the emphasis on “ATL” (the city’s internationally known airport abbreviation.) If the logo-artists’ intent was to come up with something new and innovative, it’s already been done by Atlanta’s own hip-hop artists. Could it be possible that the logoartists got their cue from a certain small and unknown local duo that goes by the name of Outkast? Their chart-topping 1996 album ATLiens brought the three letters A, T, and L to an entirely new meaning and level of popularity. ATLiens, among other songs that refer to ATL or A-Town, publicize and represent the city better than the ATLOpen campaign ever will, but without the $8.8 million price tag. Perhaps even the afro-wearing “So So Def ” cartoon overlooking I-75/85 captures the essence of Atlanta better than the bland red-andwhite logo that will soon be ubiquitous throughout the city. While the logo is by no means hideous, it’s absolutely not worthy of being branded on bumper stickers, key chains, coffee mugs, or other souvenir paraphernalia. And it definitely wouldn’t make me eager to pack up the family or business and head straight towards Atlanta. ❐ Sky-high gas prices will benefit, change America for the better Many of you may be happy that gas prices have come down recently, back to a respectable pre-Katrina $2-plus per gallon. Not me. I miss the ELIZABETH SCHENCK days when we dreaded a trip to the nearest money-guzzling gas station nearly as much as a date with masked murderer Mike Myers himself (At least it was only our wallets that got murdered). Unaccustomed to such skyrocketing gas prices, we were beside ourselves when $40 only got us as far as $20 did some months earlier. Even though a couple of Friday night movies may have turned into an extra few gallons of gas, however, soaring gas prices are just what we need to set our country on a new track. If you compare gas prices in the U.S. to those in Europe, you will see that we have nothing to complain about. It costs much less to fuel our polluting vehicles here than it does in, say, France, where local gas-pumpers fork over an average of $6 per gallon. So, are Parisians as fearful of this fossil fuel as we Americans? Are their lives made a living hell by high gas prices? No. Absolutely and positively not. Paying for gas is most likely at the back of every Frenchman’s mind—as it should and will be in the average American’s some day, hopefully soon. Most other Europeans suffer as France does when it comes to sky-high gas prices. That’s why Europe has come up with effective ways of evading the gas issue that is felt quite keenly in the United States at the moment, causing the average European to be minimally affected by fuel costs. Sure, they own cars like we do, but more than 50 percent of European cars are fuel-efficient diesel vehicles, and those that are not are comparably smaller than any type of vehicle we have here in the U.S. Most European countries also rely heavily on efficient and well-managed mass transit systems for transportation, of which we should be envious. Although we do have mass transit systems (if you can call them that since they are hardly used en masse), they are not nearly up to par with those in Europe. MARTA, our city’s rail system, cannot even be compared to London’s glorious and never failing-to-be-efficient Tube. An electric railway that is both above and below ground, the London system is the oldest and largest of its kind in the world. It has 275 stations and stretches more than 253 miles, inviting an average of 3 million Englanders to board the system each day. Traveling from here to there on the Tube is both safe and easy. Can you image how convenient it would be to be able to travel quickly from Candler Park to Athens on MARTA for an evening football game? Currently, MARTA only transports local Atlantans around metro Atlanta and does not even reach Marietta, let alone Athens. Call me crazy, but it seems to me that those Europeans have it pretty good over there, saving money and shedding pounds at the same time—and we should aspire to be more like them as far as fuel economy and transportation goes. An efficient mass transit system and smaller more fuel-efficient vehicles, like hybrids, are ideal—both would benefit our country more than we could imagine. But let’s face it. Things will continue as they are unless something forces them to change. Atlanta could be the next London. So the next time you give your gas sucker a little juice, don’t look at gas prices with such disdain. Let’s hope the numbers keep getting higher and higher with a world of positive advancements and developments in mind. ❐ c o m m e n t 4 THE SOUTHERNER Out to lunch not to launch It was an ordinary afternoon—the sun was shining, students were exchanging stories about their days, and objects, from tennis balls to rocks, were flying through the air. What seems like a day in RAMIKA GOURDINE the park or a mean-spirited practical joke is neither, but simply lunch in the upper courtyard. Horseplay and long distance games of catch have recently become the norm. If it were just an issue of having fun and enjoying a little time out of a stressful day, that would be one thing. But when people start getting hurt, something has to be done. Once some students’ recreation forces others to spend their breaks dodging miscellaneous objects or going to the nurse because they failed to do so, it comes time for the administration to take action. When students can’t show they know any better than to throw a rock, especially into a group of people, someone should lose some privileges. Ms. Grishman’s announcement that there would be three days without anyone eating in the courtyard was a necessary first step. At first glance the measure may have seemed harsh and unfair. If everyone didn’t take part in the throwing, why should everyone be punished? Why didn’t the administration just punish the rock thrower severely? The simple answer is fairness. Although some may say that they saw a certain student with a rock, that certain people were in a group or something may have come from that general direction, there is no concrete way to prove any one person’s guilt. The only way to prevent punishing an innocent party, while letting the guilty go free, is to make a smaller restriction on everyone. The role of discipline from the administration should be more than just punishment in retrospect; instead, to U.S. moral compass a broken one STONE IRVIN ensure that the school is a safe environment for all, preventative measures must be taken. How many more people would be hurt if Ms. Grishman and other administrators had cared more about a few days outside than the well-being of the student body? In addition to showing that they cared, the administration’s actions sparked conversations about lunchtime behavior. When students hear an announcement from Ms. Grishman or from anyone else for that matter, their first inclination is to tune it out. What good is an announcement asking students not to break the rules? We’re told every day to pick up our trash, but if you see the courtyard after lunch, it’s still a mess. Only when personal interests are at stake do a large enough group of students really start to pay attention. Those who complained should remember the most basic commandment of high school behavior: don’t misbehave and no one will get punished. And the implied you in that commandment has another responsibility: if you see someone misbehaving, then speak up. Every day the student body hears Grady’s motto: “Individually we are different, together we are Grady.” Maybe it’s time to take responsibility and realize that it’s time for Grady to take care of Grady. Three lunches in the practice gym are nothing when compared to the possible harms that will occur if we are allowed to flout school rules without consequence. Instead of complaining about the administration, why don’t students make a conscious effort to do what they’re asked to do and encourage others to do the same? ❐ Uniform serves as symbol of pride, honor The word uniform means one form, and is used to associate g r o u p s of people RYAN BETTY with other people of the same group. The purpose of the uniform is to make everyone look the same, despite skin color, gender or age. Even though each branch of the armed forces has altered the appearance of the American uniform over the years, its purpose and form has remained the same as when it began. To me, however, my uniform means much more. My uniform is important to me because wearing it honors those who have served, fought and died for our country. When I put on my uniform, I put on the same uniform as the American soldiers who stormed the artillery-blasted beaches of Normandy on D-Day to free France from the Nazis in World War II. When I put on my uniform, I put on the same uniform that was worn by those who lost their lives in the Vietnam War in an attempt to stop the Communists from taking over the country. When I put on my uniform, I wear the same uniform that has been worn in every American conflict. I feel Nov. 15, 2005 privileged to wear this prestigious I gained a rank and awards uniform, and I feel obligated to until my uniform illustrated my properly represent those who distinction from my peers. It served and died for their nation. gives me confidence when I see When I think about the fact people who I don’t know wearing that thousands died wearing the the uniform. I know I’m a part of same uniform I am privileged a team of thousands of people my to wear, I am filled with pride. age also trying to improve their My uniform is an icon of those mental and physical conditions who make our world a safer place while becoming better citizens. to live. The fact that two of my I feel self-confidence because I uncles, my grandfather, my aunt know that when I put on my and my brother have served in uniform I make everyone in my the military brings a closer bond family proud. I know that I am between my uniform and me. doing something good for myself M y and others. My uniform is important uniform is M y to me because it is a direct u n i f o r m important to me is a direct tribute from me to those because reflection who have served, fought it boosts of me and my selfgives me and died for our country. confidence something of and personal morale. When I which I can be proud. When put on my uniform and look at someone who doesn’t know me myself in the mirror, I take pride looks at my uniform they can in myself, my appearance and my tell my rank among the vast team nation. I see a person who has a of cadets. When someone who I future and a person who is not know sees me, they can see the afraid to show his intelligence. progress I’ve made because they My uniform is a way for me to can observe how I have gained blend among the masses of the pins and stripes. When I look JROTC team, while at the same at my awards, I can see how I time providing for me a way to have progressed and see things stand out amongst my fellow at which I am proficient. For JROTC mates. instance, when I received the Best At first, my uniform started Driller Cadet award and others out as the basic black shoes, saw it, they could immediately green pants, green shirt, and tell that I was the best at drilling green hat. Over time, however, in my class. My ribbons also “ serve to record the events in which I have participated while in JROTC. When someone looks at certain ribbons, they can tell that I have participated in the yearly Veteran’s Day parade in downtown Atlanta. When I look at my uniform I feel proud because I look neat, professional and well-groomed. It makes me feel proud because I know that all of my hours of ironing, folding and creasing paid off and that others will also be able to see that. My uniform is mine, not in a sense of ownership, but in a sense of customization. Nobody else’s uniform in my battalion has the exact same ribbons and awards as me. Although we are a collective, we are also individuals who should be able to show our own personal achievements. My uniform allows me to do just that. I am proud of my uniform because I know I am following in my brother’s and my cousin’s footsteps of JROTC excellence. I know that they went through the exact same program and that they turned out to be outstanding citizens, just like I will one day. My uniform is important to me because it shows all of my hard work in the JROTC program. It is a unique part of me. It helps me become a better citizen. ❐ T h e United States promotes a platform of morality, toleration, and basic freedoms… and then fails to live up to it. I have seen the erosion and often complete denial of all three of these principles by the very people who claim to uphold them. For all the work put into making Americans equal, we still have trouble enforcing our lofty ideals today. Take the recent Republican push for photo identification at the polls. While seemingly innocent, it disfranchises elderly, poor and disabled voters who would have trouble getting photo ID’s. It brings to mind another move for disfranchisement in the early 1900s, which required passing a literacy test to vote. The policy stripped the black community of the right to vote and led to the Atlanta Race Riot of 1906. This is an extreme case, but if Georgia allows itself to backslide on voters’ rights issues, we could find ourselves in dire straits. Tolerance is supposed to be a hallmark of the American way. But what about the repeated denial of marriage rights for homosexuals, who are just as American as any other U.S. citizen? Giving homosexuals marriage rights would not hurt American values, but America plays up its “integrity” while violating human rights. More despicable is the blatant disregard for the separation of church and state, and, by association, freedom of religion. President Bush played up Harriet Miers as an evangelical Christian. It is understandable that the Republicans would want to rally support from their base of Christian voters, but it is also disturbing that this would be the only reason she would be considered for a spot on the Supreme Court. Although Samuel Alito has judicial experience on the Court of Appeals, his choices also reflect a religious agenda. We are a part of the religious frenzy in this country that is being scoffed at by Europeans, who have already experienced religious intolerance in a very large way. If reactionaries like Pat Robertson get their way, the U.S. may have its own dark age with which to deal. The illusion of the U.S. government’s integrity must be exposed, or we will suffer the steady removal of our rights. Voter rights, gay rights and religious freedom are not solely a registered voter’s right to vote, a homosexual’s right to marry, or your right to worship. These rights protect everybody, in some way or another. So think twice before refusing rights to the needy, or risk living in a world where the people don’t look out for one another, and the tyranny of mankind is unchecked. ❐ THE SOUTHERNER Nov. 15, 2005 c o m m e n t 5 Silver lining found even in most tragic circumstances I have recently be much fun. I didn’t know how serious their experienced a death in dad’s state was, and I thought that it meant my family. My uncle that I would have to give up my weekend to was only 50 years sit around with them. Even when their dad got old and left behind to my house, and they were here all the time, I a beautiful wife and still didn’t even hang around much more than three children. He usual. I tried to stay home more, but I ended worked hard, not up picking my social life over them. When my SALLY ZINTAK only at his job, but in uncle’s illness became more serious, I saw my everything else he did. cousins losing hope. I began to spend more Everyone who knew him had a wonderful and more time with them at my house. Over story to tell about his life, and I can’t think of time, our conversations turned from small talk one time that I ever had a bad thought about about our classes and sports teams to in-depth him. His death was horrible for everyone, but conversations about what was really going on at the same time it created both a wonderful in our lives. I realized that my cousins meant and ironic time of my life that I will carry with more to me than anything else I had going on. me forever. The social life that had seemed so important My uncle became ill while visiting his son didn’t matter at all. I put everything else aside. in the U.S. Army at Fort Hood, Texas. The When my uncle died we were all at the house doctors told us that my together. I became a support Even at the worst of system for my cousins and uncle probably wouldn’t live. times...if you just step learned how much it meant He suffered from HepatitisC, liver failure and an back you can usually find to them that I was there. infection that was poisoning something wonderful and Beyond how much they his organs. My aunt flew needed me, I realized that irreplaceable. to Texas to be with him; we were not only family, but their kids, my cousins, came to stay with my best friends. Whenever we were all together, it family. We found a friend with a private jet and seemed like nothing could hurt us anymore. brought my uncle back to Atlanta. We set up a I lost my uncle, and my cousins lost their hospice in my basement and had nurses come dad. I still think about how wonderful it would and check on him periodically throughout the be if I could go back in time and make him day. My aunt basically lived at my house, and healthy again. By the last weeks of his life he my cousins would come over every day after could barely talk or walk, and he began to lose school. the life he had loved so much. But if it hadn’t My cousins and I had always had a good been for my uncle’s illness, I never would time together. We always looked forward to have had the chance to spend so much time holidays and family dinners, but after dessert, with my family and learn to love them more. we usually went our separate ways, not to When we were all together, I was truly happy. speak again until the next time our parents I was able to laugh and cry and feel accepted arranged dinner. I thought this was a good and loved by everyone in the room. It goes to relationship; most people I know barely ever show that if you look hard enough, everything see their relatives and are surprised that my has a silver lining. Even at the worst of times, cousins and I live in the same city. I was glad when you can’t see any light at the end of the that we were all the same age, that I was able to tunnel, if you just step back you can usually see them every holiday and that I could drive find something wonderful and irreplaceable. over to their house to just hang out. I was Now I talk to my cousins at least a few times always satisfied with our relationship. a week, and we see each other much more When I first found out my cousins would often. We’ve moved on, but I will never forget be staying with us for an indefinite amount of how we came together in the most tragic of time while their parents were in Texas, I didn’t times and found something to remember and relish the opportunity or think that it would appreciate forever. ❐ “ Thanksgiving feast a carnivorous guilt trip Thanksgiving is my favorite holiday. Sure, when we were little Thanksgiving was about the Pilgrims and the drawings of turkeys that we did in the ALASTAIR shape of our hands. CARTER-BOFF As I’ve matured, though, I realized that Thanksgiving is about one thing: food. When else can Americans of all ages consume as much food as our bellies can hold? Although mashed potatoes and cranberry sauce are worthy competitors, the turkey is, and always will be, the crown jewel of any Thanksgiving feast. This dilemma poses a conundrum for me. Being a vegetarian, I try to avoid meat whenever possible and usually succeed in doing so. But on this glorious day of feasting, what is a vegetarian to do? Should I forsake my meat-free diet for one day to indulge in the full spirit of the holiday? Do I stick to my diet and instead implement some faux turkey substitute in its place? I’m perfectly content with evading meat on Thanksgiving, but I can’t help feeling like I’m missing something that is absolutely necessary to enjoy the holiday. I could try and convince my father to cook Tofurkey or some other turkey alternative this year, but it seems to me that just like the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade and football games, turkey is a necessity come Thanksgiving Day. Even if I did coerce my father into cooking a substitute, I’m not sure I’d like it. I saw some sliced, sandwich style Tofurkey in the grocery store recently, so I bought it to see what it tasted like. Eating grilled cardboard is not what I have in mind this holiday. I suppose I could just avoid any meat or meat substitute this year, but that would leave me with a plateful of mashed potatoes, green bean casserole, and Grandma’s cranberry sauce. I’m all right with the mashed potatoes and green bean casserole, but Grandma’s cranberry sauce scares me. It jiggles even when you don’t poke at it, and I’m afraid that if I try to eat it, it’ll come to life and eat me instead, like one of those cheesy horror movies starring Boris Karloff or Bela Lugosi. I’m not sure what I’ll be eating for Thanksgiving this year, but, whatever I eat, I know that Tofurkey and cranberry sauce Police protection of Nazis a wretched use of First Amendment Sixtyf o u r years ago, American soldiers went across the Atlantic Ocean to SEAN HARRINGTON help fight against N a z i controlled Germany. Part of the Nazi ideology included the supposed supremacy of the Aryan race, or white-skinned, blue-eyed people with blonde hair. This led to the Nazi “death camps” and the extermination of millions who didn’t fit into the Nazis plan for the “Master Race.” We fought long and hard with our allies to bring the Nazis to their knees. Their May 7, 1945 surrender was supposed to be the end of the Nazi party as well. Many years were spent tracking down remnants of the party, however, and the hunt for some top officials continues even today. One development that wasn’t expected after the war was the eventual creation of the Neo-Nazis. They continue to bring their message of hate and white supremacy to the American public, most recently at a rally in Toledo, Ohio. On Oct. 11, a dozen members of the American Socialist Party, or Neo-Nazis, marched through the predominately black neighborhood of Polish Village in, as they so innocently described it, “a protest of black gang violence.” They didn’t need a permit because they walked on the sidewalk, a convenient loophole for them. Soon after they began, crowds of people came out to counter-protest. A large crowd that included many gang members formed, incensed by the appearance of white supremacists in their neighborhood. A verbal battle sprang up between the two groups, and it wasn’t long before eggs, bottles and bricks began to fly through the air, an action that caused the police to move in. That was the catalyst that led to the rioting. The crowd, angry that the police were protecting Nazis, erupted and turned their fury towards the police. Confronted with more than 600 angry rioters, the police brought out the tear gas and fired it into the crowd. Soon after, however, the determined and infuriated rioters re-formed nearby and proceeded to attack the cops with flying objects and to set fire to a bar and loot several stores. More than 100 people were arrested according to accounts from the Detroit Free Press. Although their actions were a little extreme at times, I feel that the crowd was completely justified in its anger and outrage. I realize that it was the constitutional right of those scumbags to march wherever they wanted, but the government should’ve intervened before the march took place. The Nazis should never have been allowed to march. What did the mayor and police expect the people to do, watch them march by peacefully, ignoring their racial slurs and insults on an “inferior” race? Hardly. In fact, authorities knew that trouble was coming. Two area gangs, Stickney 33 and the Dexter Boyz, renowned for their rivalry, allegedly made a truce in preparation for the Nazi march. Talk-show hosts in the area even let Neo-Nazi leader Bill White come on the air and speak, allowing him to spread his message of hate over the airwaves. The people were sufficiently angered even before the march began. The Nazis and their leader, Adolf Hitler, are some of the most despised people in world history. The fact that these Neo-Nazis associate themselves with those hateful teachings is enough to condemn them as it is. We went to war and hundreds of thousands of American people died to end the reign of the Nazis. The fact that they get protection from our government is completely ridiculous. I’m sure that if followers of Saddam Hussein started an organization supporting him and practicing his principles and ethics in America today, all of the members and those associated with them would be arrested immediately. Why is it any different for the NeoNazis? Yes that was 60 years ago, but almost half a million more soldiers died in that struggle than the current one in Iraq, and the atrocities racked up by Hussein do not outweigh the Nazi death camps. If so much emphasis is still placed on the Nazis and their defeat, why are Neo-Nazis allowed to freely congregate and organize marches designed to antagonize other citizens with their hate? Why are they all not locked up for associating themselves with a group that we shed American blood to destroy, a group that murdered millions and millions of innocents for the sake of a “pure” race? That they are allowed to do so is a huge abuse of the First Amendment and should be immediately rectified. ❐ n e w s 6 Nov. 15, 2005 THE SOUTHERNER BY MATT WESTMORELAND The start of the 2005-2006 school year brought with it a long list of mentoring programs aimed at providing the best possible education for all students. Principal Vincent Murray believes implementation challenges have been overcome and the programs are prepared to serve academic and social needs. “Last year, we didn’t have enough mentors,” Dr. Murray said. “We even had a waiting list of students wanting mentors. This year it’s worked very well, especially with the programs geared towards ninth graders.” Dr. Murray knows how important the programs are for the school. “They are a way of sustaining student achievement,” he said. “It’s a way for us to make sure they don’t fall through the cracks. This is a safety net. If you fall, we’re there to put you back on. It’s a support group.” One of Dr. Murray’s primary goals is to find mentors for minority males in the magnet after seeing their dropout rate from the program. “They were governed by how they were perceived by their peers,” Dr. Murray explained. “These opportunities can give them more self-confidence. They should be the center of what they want to do, not what other people think.” Returning from last year is Women Inspiring Self Enrichment, which focuses on female students. The program emphasizes how to set priorities, how to interact with others more effectively and how to organize time more efficiently. The program was run by former Grady health teacher Keri McDonald before she left the school last spring. Even after leaving the faculty, McDonald continues to work with her WISE students. Kaye Myles, who will also be working with the WISE program, has served for the last four years as program specialist for another mentoring effort: Project Success. “Project Success is a program that provides a select group of ninth graders with the academic preparation, remediation, occupational awareness, exploration and preparation for post-secondary education,” Ms. Myles said. “Some just need a little extra push or boost, and I’m here to provide that for them.” Ms. Myles’ role is much more than just administering the program. “I go into the classroom to monitor and work with the teachers,” she said. “I also encourage students to go to tutorials.” Ms. Myles sees mentorship as a chance to focus on students’ futures rather than just working with where students are now. “We also talk about careers,” she explained. “People come in to talk to the students. Last year we had a great representative from the Department of Labor come in and talk with the students. We encourage others to come in and talk about their professions as well.” While most students are asked to join the program during their freshman year, Ms. Myles doesn’t shut the door on anyone. “I never turn anyone down who wants to be a part of our program,” she said. There’s no question in Ms. Myles’ mind that she’s making a difference through her work. “I love my job. I am truly lucky and blessed to SALLY ZINTAK New school year brings host of mentoring programs LET’S TALK ABOUT ABSTINENCE, BABY: Students participate in Teen Talk, a program provided through a partnership with Tabernacle Baptist Church. The program provides mentoring and encourages abstinence. have these close relationships and connections with the students and their parents.” Ms. Myles, along with ninth-grade counselor Schalyse Jones, also sponsors the Ninth Grade Girls Group, designed to improve academic behavior and social skills. They plan to discuss challenges faced by adolescent girls. Another opportunity available to Grady students is Beacon of Hope, offered by Tabernacle Baptist Church. The program provides tutorials for neighborhood students on the GGT, as well as participation in a program called Teen Talk. This abstinence/ ethics education program discourages teen pregnancy, teen fatherhood, drugs and crime. “I have a great deal of respect for Beacon of Hope,” Dr. Murray said. “They’re trying to uplift their community through education and have several programs in place to do that. Students who won’t come to tutorial here for whatever reason go there, especially if there’s transportation.” ❐ SALLY ZINTAK Governor’s Honors Program already in full swing at Grady HANGING OUT: Members Sam Williams and Kati Gaslowitz do more than just attend meetings as club members. “On the Sunday of Daylight Savings, we had a tea party,” Gaslowitz said.“We ate at La Fonda, Urban Tea Party, and then TC. It was a great bonding time.” GSA members accepting of all BY REBECCA GITTELSON Grady has always prided itself for its openness and diversity. Yet, one segment, the gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender community, has not always been fully acknowledged. The Gay Straight Alliance, an extracurricular club open to people of all sexual orientations, returned to Grady’s campus for the first time since 2001. The GSA provides an open environment and support system for GLBT students and supporters. “We have to learn how to accept one another’s differences, and this is one of the aspects that was just absent in the consciousness of the school,” math teacher and club sponsor Andrew Nichols said. At meetings students are encouraged to share stories about the impact of their own, or others’, beliefs about sexual orientation on their lives. Mr. Nichols guided the club members to use their own experiences to create an honest and accepting environment in the club and at school. Mr. Nichols said, “The students said, ‘These have been my experiences so far as a teenager and things I’ve had to deal with at home and at school. This is who I am and where I am.’” Most club members define their sexual orientation as only part of their overall identity. “I don’t make a big deal out of [being bi-sexual],”said senior Kati Gaslowitz, president and founder of the current GSA. Another member of the club, a gay male senior preferred to remain anonymous. “Being gay is not necessarily all of who I am,” he said. “I’m a deep, complex person and who I choose to love is not the only part of me.” Last year he slowly began telling people of his sexuality. “The school has been extremely accepting,” he said. “I have not been discriminated against by anyone.” At home, however, his family’s reaction to gay people is different. “My father says things like, ‘AIDS was sent to kill gay people,’ and ‘God made Adam and Eve, not Adam and Steve,’” he said. Gaslowitz is well aware of problems at home. “Many [GLBT] teens have problems with their parents,” Gaslowitz said. “We’re working on making the community view [of GLBT people] more positive.” GSA serves as a “safe haven” for students who have experienced all types of reactions from their families. Senior Jessica Brandon views GSA as a club also meant to combat homophobic beliefs. “It is so ingrained that people use ‘gay’ as an insult,” Brandon said. “I think it’s important to realize that just because people have a different sexual orientation doesn’t mean they’re weird or not cool.” ❐ BY SAM JOHNSON Grady teachers nominated 60 students last month to take part in Georgia’s Governor’s Honors Program next summer. The 34 Grady students who accepted their nominations are in the midst of a long and competitive selection process. Of the 35 Grady students who accepted their nomination last year, seven were chosen to attend to the program. “The GHP is a highly acclaimed program that challenges the students’ skill and ability in their chosen subject,” said counselor Sheila Oliver, who directs Grady’s program. Ms. Oliver is responsible for obtaining nominations and guiding students through the process. The program encompasses six weeks of rigorous instruction that test and expand rising juniors’ and seniors’ knowledge in a certain field. Students from all over Georgia are nominated for this prestigious program, which is held at Valdosta State University. On Sept. 19, the Atlanta Public Schools GHP Kickoff Meeting was held at the Lakewood Stadium Office. Counselors, challenge teachers, and principals from the system’s 10 high schools were in attendance. On Oct. 7, teachers nominated students for the program and sent in their applications to the APS Gifted Program Office. On Oct. 24-27, the students participated in their citywide interviews. This round determines whether they would go to the state interviews, where they will compete against private-school students as well. Because of the tight time frame of the selection process, APS scheduled a “Success Strategies Workshop” on Jan. 6. This workshop will help the scholars hone their skills in their area for future GHP-related events. The statewide interviews are spread throughout January and February at Clayton College and State University in Morrow. After much deliberation, the state selection committee will announce GHP finalists the first week in April. The program itself will last from June 11 to July 22. The professors who will instruct the classes are college and high school teachers chosen according to their experience and by recommendations. Once the finalists are in Valdosta, their schedule will be intense; a normal day at the GHP is 16 hours long. The areas of concentration range from the arts to language, from agricultural-science to business management. Grady student Rafael Velez was nominated by Ms. Lisa Willoughby for theatre. If selected, he will be one of 600 Georgia students in the program next summer. “I have to perform two monologues and an improvisation,” said Velez, just before his preliminary interview. “I’m a little nervous, but I think I’ll make it.” ❐ THE SOUTHERNER n e w s Nov. 15, 2005 7 BY ALLANA NEELY One of the main topics among scientific and health institutions for the past few months has been bird flu. Many people across the globe fear a widespread pandemic that could take thousands of lives. “Many scientists believe it is only a matter of time until the next influenza pandemic occurs,” said Dave Daigle, spokesperson for the CDC. “The severity of the next pandemic cannot be predicted, but modeling studies suggest that the impact of a pandemic on the United States could be substantial.” Avian influenza A (H5N1), one type of bird flu, has been found throughout Asia and has infected some humans. In recent months, countries across the world have taken extreme precautions to limit the threat to animals and humans. According to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention, the bird flu virus doesn’t usually infect humans, although there have been several cases since the late 1990s. Birds transmit the virus through their saliva, nasal secretions and feces. Most cases of bird flu infection in humans are caused by contact with infected poultry or contaminated surfaces. Signs of human infection include typical flu-like symptoms, Pandemic Strategy: Bush’s $7.1 Billion Request from Congress Detecting and containing outbreaks $251 million Research for cell-culture technology development $2.8 billion Developing new vaccines and treatments $800 million Department of Health and Human Services and Defense (to purchase vaccines) $1.519 billion Stock up on antiviral medications $1.029 billion Ensure preparations on state and local levels $644 million SOURCE: USINFOR.STATE.GOV eye infections and pneumonia. It can also lead to severe respiratory diseases, such as acute respiratory distress, and other life-threatening complications. The virus was first spread from a bird to a human in 1997 during an outbreak of bird flu in poultry from Hong Kong. Eighteen people suffered severe respiratory illness and the virus claimed six lives. Since then, there have been other cases of H5N1 infection among humans in Thailand, Vietnam and Cambodia. About 50 percent of these reported cases ended in death. Many people fear a worldwide outbreak of the disease. If this occurs, the life-threatening disease could easily spread from person to person around the globe. Past influenza pandemics, including the “Spanish flu” in 1918-1919 and the “Asian flu” in 1957-1958, led to sickness, social disruption, economic loss, and hundreds of thousands of deaths. The government has taken major steps to combat a possible outbreak. On Nov. 1, President Bush outlined a $7.1 billion strategy to prepare for the dangers of the worst-case scenario, a pandemic influenza outbreak. In a speech at the National Institutes of Health, Bush asserted his plan to stock up on enough vaccine to protect 20 million Americans against the current strain of bird flu. The CDC, along with many other health centers around the world, has been conducting research to test a potential vaccine that could protect humans against the H5N1 virus in 2005. “There currently is no commercially available vaccine to protect humans against the H5N1 virus that is being seen in Asia and Europe,” Daigle said. “Vaccine development efforts are taking place, however, and a series of trials are underway.” ❐ from page 1 “good planning and it sets a poor example for the Beltline project,” Brodie said. Neighborhood organizations are concerned about redevelopment of historical areas and buildings, such as The Masquerade, which was built at the turn of the 20th century and is to be replaced by condominiums. “We like aspects of the Beltline,” said Boyd Coons, executive director of the Atlanta Preservation Center. “The concept is wonderful. What we’re worried about is how the city will execute it.” Coons emphasized that the city’s method is just as important as its plan. High-density development would bring added traffic to the areas around the Beltline, which seems almost contrary to the Beltline’s central goal of reducing vehicular congestion through enhanced public transit. Some opponents also feel that the entire Beltline plan overlooks low-income families due to the proposed high-priced housing. In addition to these concerns, everyone seems worried about the city’s adeptness in handling a project of this magnitude. “It will be difficult to bring the skills and ability together to handle a project this large,” Brodie said. Proponents have urged legislators to make a decision about TAD by the end of this year. TAD funding becomes available for use at the end of the year it is approved. Therefore, each year that the decision is postponed, property prices continue to rise and land opportunities are lost, hindering the ultimate financial stability of the project. SALLY ZINTAK BELTLINE plan causes tensions ANSLEY HITS THE TRACKS: The Beltline proposal slates the now one-story, outdoor Ansley Mall for redevelopment, allowing for two 20-story condos, retail space and restaurants. Supporters and detractors alike are unsure about such a rushed decision. “It does seem to be a very fast schedule,” said Doug Abramson, president of Friends of Piedmont Park and supporter of the proposal. “I personally would rather them professionally and comprehensibly get a plan together.” The TAD adds onto current tax rates and would only directly affect property owners who live along the Beltline. According to a feasibility study conducted in 2004, the process is expected to take about 25 years and would generate more than enough to pay for the Beltline plan. Despite ambiguities and complications, the idea of the Beltline still presents an extraordinary opportunity for Atlanta. As high-density development expands, the 22mile loop of paths and railways would alleviate increased traffic, fuse together Atlanta’s different neighborhoods and force the city to grow as a whole. Construction of the Beltline would open up countless investment opportunities and would create more than 70,000 jobs over the next 20 to 25 years. “[It is] a very achievable solution to a lot of the controversy,” Abramson said, referring to the parking issue currently plaguing Piedmont Park. “[The Beltline] is simply the most ambitious project that the city of Atlanta has ever engaged in.” ❐ PATRICIA KENDALL World rushing to beat bird flu GIVE ME A G: Junior Harry Buck and sophomore Kieran Maynard put up Grady posters, which design students created to arouse interest in different aspects of our school. School posters reflect work of Grady’s newest emphasis BY EMMA DIN You saw them, but weren’t sure what they were or who made them. The set of posters features five letters—G, R, A, D and Y. The black, white and imageless posters are filled from top to bottom with descriptive words. Officially called the Grady Identity Poster Series, the posters are the work of Ms. Patricia Kendall’s design students, who undertook the project of creating a group of posters that reflected Grady’s identity and motto: “Individually we are different, together we are Grady.” The students put up the posters the Monday of Spirit Week and are now working on new posters aimed to showcase what Grady is all about. “It was a two-pronged effort to reinterpret Spirit Week for the school and not focus on just football as usual,” Ms. Kendall said. “It was generated through consensus in the class to answer the question, ‘What does it take to be a Grady Grey Knight?’” Senior and design student Mary Lane loved the idea. “The point was to look at different aspects of Grady and what we embody and to get it out to the rest of Grady,” she said. The class decided to have four of the five letters each represent an aspect of Grady and let the fifth represent the combination of the other four. Known to the class as the “4 A’s,” they chose to have the ‘G’ represent art, the ‘R’ athletics, the ‘A’ academics, and the ‘D’ achievements. “When you look at them, you can look at them individually or collectively and still get the message,” Ms. Kendall said. “Every one of them could stand by itself, and in that way, they’re all a different way of interpreting Grady.” Starting two to three weeks into the school year, students split up into groups to brainstorm. The guidelines limited them to only black-and-white posters that had no images. No one was allowed to use more than 10 different words to describe their concept. “We didn’t know we could come up with so many words,” junior Marty Styles said. “We had a list of 50. The hardest part was actually cutting down the list to just 10.” The emotions and ideas that would typically be transferred through colors and photography were instead transferred through different letter types, fonts and strong adjectives. “Everyone tried to pick fonts that matched the concepts,” Lane said. “The ‘A’ represents academics, so the word fonts look scholarly, and the fonts on the art one look artsy and creative.” “We used no colors to show how easy it is to separate reality from the abstract,” Ms. Kendall said. “Most people’s concept of reality is color. When you take it away, people get confused. That’s why black-andwhite photography is so strong.” The design students incorporated their own feelings and perspectives into the project, with their word selection based on experiences from school. “It was easy to come up with the words because we go to Grady everyday,” junior Donald White said. “We just took things we saw and thought.” The design students feel as though they’ve successfully completed their mission. They’re also glad to have done something worthy of respect. “I see people actually stop in the hall and look at it and wonder who made it,” Styles said. “I feel like it finally gave the design class a voice in the school and the feeling that we’ve done something. More and more teachers are asking us to do stuff for them, and it’s gotten the word out about us.” Junior Britain Baker, who is not in the design emphasis, agrees with the success of the campaign. “The design class did a good job,” she said. “[The posters] were well done and creative.” Ms. Kendall hopes everyone takes away a renewed sense of what Grady is. “If you’re at Grady, you could be all of those things—academic, athletic, artistic, or an achiever,” Ms. Kendall said. “In a way, it’s almost the strongest poster of them all because it ties it all together. An artist can also be an athlete. No one person does any one of those exclusively. That’s what makes Grady diverse.” ❐ 1953 Championship Team A SEASON TO Wilbur Lofton carried the ball, and the team, to a 27-6 victory Aiken said. But it would be the beginning of a rivalry that still over Southwest Fulton Oct. 8. stands today. On Oct. 17, No. 7-ranked Grady upset No. 3-ranked North Decatur dominated the first half, limiting Grady to minusFulton 7-6 as the Knights moved up to No. 3 in the state. 18 yards rushing and passing, which also scoring a touchdown Grady continued its winning streak by beating Northside on a 85-yard drive. The score remained 6-0 until the third High, now North Atlanta, 28-6 at Grady Stadium on Oct. quarter, when Lofton ran 78 yards for a touchdown that tied 24. the game. The extra point split the uprights and sealed a 7-6 The undefeated Grey Knights would not stay that way for Grady win. The win marked the first time the Bulldogs had long as they took on Murphy High School on Oct. 30. After lost at home in six years and 31 appearances. an early Murphy touchdown, a 25-yard run by Jerome Grady had upset Decatur and now faced an unbeaten Lanier Green, followed by a 40-yard run by Lofton, set up team that boasted the fastest line in Georgia. According to Grady for a 9-yard run into the end zone to tie the The Atlanta Constitution, Lanier’s only weakness was in the game at 7. clarinet section of the band. Grady headed into Macon as a The score was deadlocked until the fourth quarter, two-touchdown underdog determined to prove the prediction when Murphy ran in another touchdown, but false and bring home a state title. missed the extra point, making it 13-7. Grady never More than 10,000 spectators were expected at the game, but got it going again and Murphy ran out the clock on because of the torrential rainstorm, only 7,000 showed up and quarterback sneaks, handing Grady its first lost of the the majority were Lanier Poet fans. Grady struck first on the season and dropping them to No. 7 in the state opening drive, carried by Davis and Lofton. rankings. Davis opened up the game with a 34-yard kickoff return to The next week, Grady quickly bounced back the Grady 45-yard line. Several running plays and a 21-yard by beating Bass High School 26-0. Lofton had an pass from quarterback Sidney Reese set up the Knights on the exceptional night, gaining 157 yards on 15 carries with Lanier 15. Lofton battered his way for five yards, and Davis two scores. Davis also chipped in with his first full-time ran it for the last 10 for a touchdown. Lanier answered with performance since his injury with 86 yards and a 15-yard two minutes left in the first half but couldn’t convert the extra touchdown run for the final score of the game. point due to a bad snap. The teams headed for the locker A week later, Lofton led Grady to a 13-0 win against room with Grady leading 7-6. O’Keefe with two touchdowns. This win also moved The brilliant punting of Lofton kept the Poets Grady to No. 4 in the rankings. “Grady always backed up against their own end zone and Grady fought with O’Keefe,” Aiken recalled. “We just in control. Grady quick-kicked every third down. hated each other.” Holding true to tradition, a Lofton had four remarkable punts, a 36-yarder that fight broke out at Grady Stadium. “All players landed at the Lanier 26, a 46-yarder that landed at cleared the benches and got at it, except one. the 8, a 44-yarder the landed at the 2, and a 53Randy Wilkerson stayed on the sideline and yarder that was grounded at the 1-yard line. He placed his hand over his heart as the Grady band did all this with borrowed cleats because he forgot played the national anthem in order to try and his own at home. stop the fight,” Aiken said. Lanier had their backs to the end zone the After beating O’Keefe in the last regular whole game, and Grady finally got a safety by season game, Grady played Sylvan High dragging Lanier’s back-of-the-year in Georgia, WILBUR LOFTON School for the city championship. Davis scored Billy Kitchens, down in their end zone to score three touchdowns, leading Grady to a 21-6 victory and the the last points of the game. They had won the football AA city crown. state championship by a score of 9-6. In Grady’s second post-season appearance of 1953, they took The season was like a dream from which the underdog on the Decatur Bulldogs in front of 8,000 fans at Decatur. “It Grady Knights never wanted to wake up from. Fifty-six years was the first time [Grady] had anything to do with [Decatur].” later, that dream is alive again. ❐ Source: ghsfha.org Grady By The Numbers State Title Total Weeks Ranked #1 Region Titles (‘93, ‘98, ‘05) Longest Losing Streak (9/13/9611/01/96) ROAD TO THE vs. Marist 41-0 Game 1: Grady opened the season with a convincing victory over the War Eagles. vs. Smith 6-6 Game 3: The offense struggled as star tailback, Jeff Davis, ran for the Knights’ only touchdown of the game. [2-0-1] Longest Win Streak (8/19/05current) All-State Players 12 [5-0-1] vs. N. Fulton 7-6 Game 6: Behind all-state fullback, Wilbur Lofton, Grady upset the No. 3 ranked team in the state. Different opponents 14 54 vs. Murphy 7-13 Game 8: The Knights suffered their only loss of the season and dropped to No. 7 in the rankings. [6-1-1] [9-1-1] vs. Sylvan 21-6 vs. Decatur 7-6 Game 12: Wilbur Lofton’s 78-yard run in the third quarter put Grady on Game 11: Coming off an injury, Jeff top and ended the Bulldog’s Davis ran for three touch- six-year home-unbeated streak. downs to help the Knights capture the city champion[10-1-1] ship. Public Schools athletics director Sydney Scarborough would randomly place coaches at different schools. Coach Russell landed a coaching position at Grady. “I thought it was academically the best school in town,” Russell said. “There was a great faculty with great chemistry, and we got the school off to a really good beginning with our football team.” Two seasons after coming to Grady, Coach Russell was promoted to head coach and athletic director following the departure of Spec Landrum in 1951. In his first season as head coach of the 1952 Knights, Coach Russell went 6-3-1 and graduated all-state left end Allen Ecker. The next year Coach Russell led the Knights to their only state championship. Underdogs in both the Decatur and Lanier playoff games, critics doubted Grady would make it past the city championship. Coach Russell’s Grey Knights surprised everyone by taking the north Georgia and state titles. “Nobody really gave us a chance to win it,” Coach Russell said. “We played in a torrential rainstorm but Wilbur Lofton kicked them into submission.” Lofton, the all-state fullback also took the role as a punter and effectively backed Lanier [11-1-1] vs. Lanier 9-6 Game 13: In a rainstorm in front of 7,000 fans, the Knights held on to a slim lead to claim their only state championship to date. up enough to prevent an offensive attack. He and running back Jeff Davis were the two standouts on the team, but Coach Russell stressed that it was a team effort. “Lofton and Davis got most of the ink, they were our ball carriers,” Coach Russell said. “But the strongest characteristic of our team was the team. No one stood head and shoulders above another.” Before leaving for an assistantcoaching job at Auburn and later Vanderbilt, Coach Russell started a wrestling team, coached Grady’s boys basketball team to the first televised high school basketball game in Georgia, and had the only other undefeated regular season for football when the 1957 Knights went 9-0-1. After brief stints at Auburn and Vanderbilt, Coach Russell landed the job of defensive coordinator at the University of Georgia under Coach Vince Dooley. Creating the “Junkyard Dogs” defense for which UGA is known, Coach Russell coached for Georgia for 17 years and played a part in the Bulldogs’ 1980 national championship. One year later he left UGA for his first head-coaching job since Grady to restart a football program at Georgia Southern University. A new president decided to revive the football program after a 40-year hiatus. “The president was looking for something exciting and thought bringing back football would be good for the school,” Coach Russell said. Coach Russell started a club team and found himself surrounded by good players. But with an initial $200 recruiting budget, compared to $250,000 at UGA, Russell knew that it was going to take more than just good players. “Things got better after the SOUTHERNER ARCHIVE BY PATRICK MCGLYNN Coach Erskine “Erk” Russell had arguably the biggest impact on football in the state of Georgia. Russell, 79, who began his career at Grady, won a state title in high school, and national titles at the University of Georgia and at Georgia Southern University. His unparalleled coaching career resulted from a long history with the game of football. As a successful high school athlete, Erk Russell had scholarship offers from the University of Alabama and Auburn University. Coach Russell made his decision to play football at Auburn but also played basketball, baseball and tennis while earning his bachelor’s and master’s degrees. He lettered in all four varsity sports, the last Tiger to do so. With the time commitment expected of today’s collegiate athletes, it’s unlikely to. “I went from one season to the next,” said Coach Russell explaining how he managed to juggle athletics with academics. “I went to school, it was a routine thing. College sports weren’t as specialized as they are today.” One year after graduating Russell took his first job as defensive line coach, tennis coach and boys basketball coach. At the time Atlanta CHAMPIONSHIP 01 01 03 07 [1-0-0] Erk Russell: Grady tenure jumpstarted legendary career CRADLE: Months before delivering Grady its first state championship, second-year head coach, Erk Russell, proudly holds his newly-born son, John Erskine Russell. SOUTHERNER ARCHIVE BY WOODY MORGAN Grady High School was a different place in 1953. The school’s 1,600 students placed Grady in the largest classification in Georgia. About 40 percent of those students were Jewish, earning Grady the nickname of “Hebrew High.” Some students hopped the trolley to get to and from school. The school was not integrated yet, eighth grade was a part of high school, and a school lunch cost 35 cents. There were sock hops with live bands and girls wearing letter jackets as a sign of “going on steady.” “It was like Happy Days personified,” said Ken Aiken, who played football at Grady and was a sophomore tackle on the team in 1953. While the football program remains intact, Grady has undergone extreme changes, but few remember the magic of the 1953 season. That was the year Grady defied the skeptics and won its only football state championship. It all started with hard work and respect for their coach, JEFF DAVIS Erskine Russell. “We would have run through a brick wall for him,” Aiken said. And they did. The team did not practice on campus but made the daily trek through Piedmont Park to the current location of the Botanical Gardens. The Piedmont practices were long and hot, with no water. “[Coach Russell] ran us to death, especially up that hill next to where the Botanical Gardens now stand,” Aiken said. “We never had water on the field during practice, but Coach brought a case of Cokes to the field after practice once, and we all thought that was wonderful.” All of the wind sprints, all the calisthenics, all the sleds and dummies paid off when Grady played their first game of the season against the Marist War Eagles on Sept. 12. “Back then, Marist was a nobody,” Aiken said. Grady crushed the War Eagles 41-0 in the then-6-year-old Grady Stadium. Grady continued their romp by trouncing Fulton High School the next week by a score of 39-6. On Sept. 25, Grady’s game with Smith High School ended in a 6-6 tie. A touchdown by Grady’s star tailback, Jeff Davis, was the only thing that kept Grady in the game. On Oct. 3, Grady plowed through West Fulton High School 25-6. Grady got the win but lost Davis to a shoulder injury, causing him to miss the next six games. All-state fullback SOUTHERNER ARCHIVE REMEMBER HUDDLE UP: Coach Russell discusses strategy with his players before the North Fulton game. A crowd of 7,000 fans packed Grady stadium, the second largest ever. first installment,” Coach Russell said. “We just had to make the best of everything we had.” Two years later his team joined the NCAA at the Division I-AA level. One year after returning to NCAA football in 1984, the GSU Eagles captured their first national championship. Coach Russell and the Eagles won their second title in two years in 1986 and finished with a perfect record in 1989 to complete a third national championship. “After 40 years of coaching I decided to hang it up after the 1989 season,” Coach Russell said. The three-time Coach of the Year for Division I-AA colleges attributes his success to luck and being surrounded by good, sometimes great, players. Coach Russell still holds the title of America’s winningest college coach with a 78.8 percent winning percentage (83-22-1). His success can be measured by his record but also by his enjoyment. “I enjoyed it all,” Coach Russell said. “I wouldn’t trade anything for the experience and association I had at any level.” ❐ n e w s 10 THE SOUTHERNER Nov. 15, 2005 BY JESSICA BAER The Georgia Aquarium will officially open its doors to the public Nov. 23. It is the world’s largest aquarium, containing more than 8 million gallons of fresh and marine water that will house 100,000 animals representing 500 species from around the world. The 550,000 square-foot facility is located on a 9-acre site in Downtown Atlanta, next to Centennial Olympic Park and the Georgia World Congress Center. The aquarium is home to Ralph and Norton, two whale sharks who are the largest fish on the planet. Their specially designed habitat alone takes up 6 million gallons of the facility’s water supply. The aquarium will be divided into five main viewing areas: Freshwater, Cold Water, Coastal, Open Ocean and Georgia Quest. They May 2003 breaking ground represented the start of Atlanta’s expensive and ambitious projects. It was founded in large part through a $200 million donation from Bernard Marcus. Marcus, co-founder of Home Deport in 1979 with Falcons owner Arthur Blank, is a major player in the revitalization of Atlanta. “Bernie Marcus wanted to give back to the community that helped build Home Depot up into what it is today,” said Dave Santucci, director of public relations for the aquarium. “He wanted to build something everyone could enjoy.“ Atlanta-based corporations such as AirTran Airways, Bell South, Coca-Cola, Georgia Pacific and SunTrust have also made large donations to help fund the new aquarium. Annual passes for the museum cost $59.50 for adults, $43.25 for children ages 3-12 and $48.75 for seniors ages 55 and up. Many hope the new aquarium will anchor downtown’s revitalization effort. SALLY ZINTAK Atlanta set to open world’s largest aquarium Nov. 23 GO FISH: The Georgia Aquarium, which is scheduled to open on November 23, 2005, will contain more than 100,000 animals of over 500 species. The opening of the aquarium will create over 200 job opportunities and is expected to attract more than two million visitors in the first year. “We’re expecting two million visits in the first year,” Santucci said. “Bringing them downtown will really help [revitalization]. “The CNN Center, new world of Coca-Cola and the Children’s Museum are all nearby. The whole downtown area is going to see a lot more visitors downtown and that’s good for business.” Organizers hope the facility will attract more than 2 million visitors in the first year and create more than 200 jobs, as well as offering hundreds of volunteer positions. There are other ways in which the aquarium plans on giving back to the community. Planners say it will add a new dimension to Georgia’s education curriculum. Twenty-five percent of the floor space has been dedicated to educating students of all ages who visit the aquarium. More than 70,000 schoolchildren are expected to visit the site in the first year. “We have a very unique facility,” Santucci said. “School groups have an entirely separate area for themselves. We adhere to all of the standards, whether local, state or federal, in terms of being an educational field trip. We’ll teach them about conservation, and animals so they’ll take something away from the experience and have a lot of fun.” ❐ BY ROBERT SANDERS released Nov. 10. It features many artists Openness. Opportunity. Optimism. who performed during the half time show These three words, one part of Atlanta’s along with other unannounced Atlantanew advertising campaign, portray the based artists and the full Atlanta Symphony feelings Mayor Shirley Franklin hopes the Orchestra. “Brand Atlanta” campaign will bring to the “Brand Atlanta is coming to life city’s image. with support from every sector of our The multimillion dollar advertisement community,” Mayor Shirley Franklin effort is part of the Mayor’s New Century told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Economic Development Plan. It was “This generous and enthusiastic response formed in hopes of attracting tourist and exemplifies our city’s opportunity, optimism businesses by giving Atlanta its own brand. and openness as expressed in the Brand Last month Mayor Franklin and the Atlanta campaign itself.” Brand Atlanta Team unveiled Atlanta’s For $2.49, “The ATL” is now available theme—Opportunity, Openness and as a ringtone through Cingular Wireless. Optimism, along with a red-and-white Profits of its sale will be split equally logo that highlights the “ATL” in Atlanta’s between the Dallas Austin Foundation and name. the Brand Atlanta, Inc. Many high profile local rap artists, But response has been lukewarm. Callers including Ludacris and Jermaine Dupri, to two popular Atlanta radio stations, have dubbed Atlanta as the “ATL” and the Q100 and V-103, have declared the song Campaign chose to make it official. The was more “not” than “hot.” Five out of six campaign enlisted the help of popular local respondents to a recent ajc.com poll disliked hip-hop producer Dallas Austin to compose the song with one respondent saying it was Atlanta’s anthem, “The “Izzy, set to music.” ATL” to accompany the Brand Atlanta is coming to Although the campaign new logo and theme. life with support from every may not be a hit with “The lyrics of ‘The sector of our community. everyone, the organization is ATL’ embody Atlanta’s not hurting for money. On essence through music, Mayor Shirley Franklin Oct. 25 the Brand campaign which has become reportedly received more a crucial element of than $6.9 million in Atlanta’s cultural fabric,” Austin said in a contributions from local organizations and press release following the announcement. businesses bringing its total to more that “While the lyrics came from my personal $8.8 million. experiences, the song has universal appeal Major contributors include the Metro because it brings Atlanta’s story to life and Atlanta Chamber of Commerce, the has a powerful message of opportunity.” Atlanta Convention and Visitors Bureau The Anthem was performed publicly for and the Metro Atlanta Media General the first time during the half time show of Managers. Large donations were also made the Oct. 24 Falcons game. The song was by Atlanta-based Coca-Cola Co., Georgiaperformed by many local artists, including Pacific Corp. and Turner Broadcasting Inc. Monica, 112, Eric “Ricky” McKinnie of the “It’s no surprise that many large businesses Blind Boys of Alabama, Sammie, Jagged in Atlanta are involved with the campaign,” Edge and Rehab. The Atlanta Symphony said Fredrick Allen, author of Atlanta Youth Orchestra, All Atlanta Chorus Rising: The Invention of an International and the Halftime Live Marching Band City and former political columnist for the accompanied these Atlanta-based singers. AJC. “What is good for the city is good for The final cut of Atlanta’s new anthem was the business in the city.” ❐ “ ROBINSON LEVIN Brand Atlanta logo, song unveiled to mixed reviews WALK OUT DEJA VU: Ansar Hines,Thanh Vu,Jessica Brandon,Alexandra Black,Chelsea Polk,Alexandra Becker,Jamal Makanjuola, Ryan Betty, Christopher Taylor and Kellisha Stewart take part in the Nov. 2 walkout. The estimated 20 Grady students who participated were much less than the estimated 130 who walked out last January. Grady students repeat anti-Bush walkout BY ROBINSON LEVIN It’s 11:35 am on Nov. 2, but unlike most Wednesdays, Hannah Mitchell is absent from her third-period physics class with Jeff Cramer. It’s not because she is uninterested in Mr. Cramer’s lesson, she is downtown participating in a rally, against President George W. Bush, sponsored by World Can’t Wait. “Voicing my opinions and standing up for my beliefs of what is true and unjust is more important than being in class,” Mitchell said. It’s a timely protest: the day of the walkout comes on the one-year anniversary of Bush’s re-election. World Can’t Wait used the event to call for Bush’s resignation. Their efforts were supported by walkouts and rallies across the nation in New York, San Francisco and 44 other American cities according to their organization’s web site. Around 600 people attended the Atlanta rally, including students from Grady, Decatur and Druid Hills high schools, Inman and King middle schools, The Paideia School and many Atlanta-area colleges. Unlike the Jan. 20 walkout marking the president’s inauguration, in which more than 130 Grady students walked out of school, this year’s crowd was much smaller. Many attribute this to the spray paint along the walkways that were filled with vulgar comments. “[The graffiti] was disrespectful to the school and [was] a bad organizing technique,” said senior Micah Weiss, who organized last year’s walkout. “It turned a lot more people off than it turned on.” Despite threats of suspension from the school administration minutes before the walkout, some Grady students felt that voicing their opinion was more important than the potential consequences. “Getting out of my everyday routine is more important than anything else,” Weiss said. Many students were armed with notes from parents when they went to sign out before leaving to participate. “There was never any question about my parents supporting it,” junior Alexandra Black said. “Our generation is going to get stuck with the bad policies set by President Bush.” Others were drawn towards the rally more by impulse. “I didn’t sign out,” said one Grady student, who requested his name be withheld. “I had no parental consent but I’ve evaded the system up to this point.” “About seven [students got caught],” said senior Jessica Brandon, “out of the 20 that were there.” ❐ p e o p l e Nov. 15, 2005 11 THE SOUTHERNER Robo squad putting out BEST effort LILY FEINBERG BY LILY FEINBERG When several parents proposed a Grady robotics team in the fall of 2004, nobody could have predicted the success that has marked the Grady Gearbox Gangstaz’ first year of existence. “Last fall, a group of parents approached the school saying, ‘We want the kids to have a robotics team,’” said math teacher and sponsor Mr. Andrew Nichols. He explained, however, there was a problem preventing the team from forming—money. The program required $10,000 for regional and national competition fees. Fortunately, the team found a sponsor. “Through some lucky contacts, we got the $10,000 from Turner [Studios],” Mr. Nichols said. “With that we registered and in January we started the program.” Mr. Nichols joined the program last year and is currently an adviser. He thinks that robotics offers a great opportunity for the students to apply concepts learned in school and make connections among different subjects. “There’s no place in the curriculum for the kids to apply science and math like this,” Mr. Nichols said. “They’ve got biology and physics and geometry and algebra, but this is where they get to apply it. It’s the actual engineering that combines it all.” The team has three mentors—Gardner Chambliss, father of Scott Chambliss; Jeff Rees, a friend of Chambliss’; and Vinton Woolfe, former teacher and robotics coach at North Atlanta High School—who advise the students in the concepts and plans for the robot. The national program in which the team participates is called For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology. FIRST provides each team with a kit containing parts and instructions for playing a game. The team has six weeks to build a robot before shipping it to regionals, where finalists advance to the national level. First-year teams can also qualify for a rookie all-star competition at the regional and national levels. Last year’s team not only made the final round of competition at the Peachtree Regional Tournament but also won the regional rookie Teen girls feel stress of school NEED A HAND? Juniors Anna Alexander and Ngan Vu work together to attach the arm mechanism of the BEST robot. The BEST season is now over and the team will reconvene in January to begin the FIRST robot project. all-star tournament. They qualified for the national tournament, where they made it to the first round of competition. This semester, the team is participating in a smaller-scale program, Boosting Engineering, Science and Technology. About half of the students working on the BEST robot are veterans from last year, while the others are new to the robotics team. Freshman Zach Gaslowitz joined the Grady robotics team after participating in the Inman Middle School robotics program. He became interested in the Grady team through the involvement of his sister, senior Katie Gaslowitz. “Last year I went to the competitions and saw Grady doing very well and winning,” he said. Freshman Miriam Huppert was not on the Inman team, but joined Grady’s robotics team for a different reason. “It appealed to me to be able to build something and not just go out and buy it,” she said. Huppert assists in both the robot’s construction as well as its promotion. “I like how we have so many new people and how they’re so willing to work and add so much energy to the team, but it is sort of frustrating sometimes,” junior Anna Alexander admitted, referring to the unfamiliarity of new members with the workings of the robotics team. “But,” she added, “I know we won’t be making the same mistakes later.” Alexander said that while the team gained a lot of experience from its participation in FIRST last year, the team is not immediately putting everything it learned to use. The team plans to take the best aspects of its robot from the FIRST competition last year and of its robot from the BEST competition this fall and combine them in the robot for the upcoming FIRST season. Not only did the Gearbox Gangstaz come away from last year’s tournaments with more experience and insight in the way of robotics, they also learned that organization is key when it comes to building robots. “We thought [that] we’d learned our lessons as far as organization was concerned,” Mr. Nichols said. “But working on BEST has really proved that the students have more to learn.” On Oct. 22, the robotics team competed in the “Atlanta hub tournament,” as Mr. Nichols puts it, for the BEST program. They came in seventh place, just snagging a spot in the regional finalist tournament. Though the team won no awards at the hub tournament, it struck success at the finals in Auburn, Ala., winning second place for the robot’s design elegance and simplicity, third place in T-shirt design, and second place overall, beating every other team from Georgia. In preparation for the FIRST competition, the Gearbox Gangstaz will have to do a lot of fund-raising, as their budget is expected to top $30,000. The team will again receive sponsorship from Turner, but will also need to find additional financial resources. “As for the future success of the team, Mr. Nichols has a very positive attitude. “Who knows if we’ll go on to the national championship, but we hope we’ll win,” he said. “At least we’re planning on it.” ❐ BY HANNA GRIFFITHS It had been a bad day for sophomore Corinthia Hayes. She got some bad family news and broke up with her boyfriend. “My friend asked me if I was OK,” she said, “and I just broke down and ran to the bathroom.” Hayes is one of many female students at Grady under an extreme amount of stress. Some students are involved in a myriad of activities after seven hours of school, which often don’t end until six or seven at night. This leaves little time for homework and even less for relaxation. When asked how much free time she gets each day Hayes looked astonished. “Freetime?” she asked with fake confusion. “Maybe half an hour, if that.” Dr. Roni Cohen-Sandler, author of StressedOut Girls, surveyed about 3,000 students and found that teenage girls went from school, to clubs, to sports practice, and got home late at night, unable to spend time with their families because of homework. “We have to challenge the notion that girls have to be busy all the time,” Dr. CohenSandler said. “They should have downtime. We are replacing quality family time with driving kids from one activity to the next.” Of 89 students surveyed by The Southerner, 61.0 percent of the girls said they felt like they were almost always under stress, versus only 31.4 percent of boys. The survey also proved that most students are stressed about school. “My parents say they were learning some of the stuff we are learning now during their senior year,” sophomore Sarah Smith said. “I think school is getting progressively harder,” senior Elissa Koehl said. “I was told my senior year was going to be easy, and it definitely isn’t.” Hayes explained that cheerleading helps her escape from stress. “But sometimes I go to practice [distracted] by stuff that happened that day, and I keep messing up; it all boils up inside you,” she said. Dr. Cohen-Sandler believes the media is also responsible for a great amount of the pressure. “Teenage girls on television are icons of perfection: they excel at sports, do well in school, and possess astounding beauty,” Dr. Cohen-Sandler said. “There has been a great effort to level the playing field,” she said. “Now girls think that because they have the opportunity to do things, they have to, and they have to do them perfectly.” ❐ Seniors, teachers direct slate of one-acts whose endings will surprise you BY ALI FARNHAM The Grady drama department revs up for another year of productions with its performances of one-act plays Dec. 1-3. Seniors Nyssa Daniels, Russell Owens, Vivi Chavez, Brandon Sheats and Anna Simonton, all students in Ms. Lisa Willoughby’s advanced drama class, will each direct a play of their choice. Ms. Willoughby and ninth-grade English teacher Mr. Scott Stephens will also direct their own plays. Though all of the seniors are new to directing, they have all had their fair share of acting. Chavez and Owens each played characters in the 2004 senior directors’ oneact plays. Chavez played the rebel sister in Grady graduate Cameron Carter’s Finding a Core. Owens is well known around Grady for roles such as Colehouse Walker in Ragtime. Daniels glowed as the Cheshire Cat in 2005’s Alice in Wonderland. Simonton participated in a 48-hour film festival in Los Angeles two years ago, and Sheats was a part of a 7 Stages production. Grady performs one-acts every other year, alternating them with children’s theater productions. “I wanted to pick a comedy because the last one-acts were all serious and dramatic,” Chavez said. Her play, The Philadelphia, centers around one man and his paranoia of living in a Philadelphia, a mind-set where you receive the exact opposite of what you ask for. Chavez chose to double-cast the play with the gender roles flipped. Owens’ play Wandering tells his life story. The play is fast-paced and the changes are “vaguely perceptible,” but the play is over within five minutes. “You have to strike a line between showing your actors what you want them to do, and letting them do it Grady’s One-Act Plays Wandering The Philadelphia Russell Owens Vivi Chavez Playwriting 101: The Rooftop Lesson Brandon Sheats It’s Not You The Grand Design The Lottery Nine,Ten Nyssa Daniels Anna Simonton Mr. Scott Stephens Ms. Lisa Willoughby on their own,” Sheats said. Sheats’ three-character play, Playwriting 101: The Rooftop Lesson, consists of a know-it-all teacher and a good Samaritan persuading a jumper not to commit suicide. Daniels’ play, It’s Not You, is about three friends: Amber, a young pregnant woman with frequent mood swings; her peacemaker husband, John; and Terry, the new friend. In the play, these friends drop their fourth friend, Natalie, on the basis that she is “really boring.” Simonton changes pace with her play The Grand Design. There are only two characters: John, a scientist selected to send a message into space, and his mother. They have a 10-minute phone conversation about what the message should say and how it would represent the human race. “What I like about [the play] is that it is so emotionally wellrounded,” Simonton said. “Parts of it are serious, but it’s not cheesy. So much of the emotion is subtle and that’s what makes it good.” Mr. Stephens shakes things up with his play The Lottery. Within the span of 20 minutes, he will have a total of 25 actors on stage. Though Stephens didn’t reveal the plot, he hinted that the end has a interesting twist. “You never know what it’s going to be like until you actually get people out there doing stuff, and then they surprise you,” Stephens said. “It’s going to be startling.” Ms. Willoughby’s play, Nine, Ten, underscores the meanings of her students’ plays. It is set on Sept. 10, 2001, when five people wait to see if they have jury duty for the next day. The audience learns that these five people either work in the World Trade Center, live in the surrounding area, or are about to catch a plane the next morning. “I always try to pick a play that fits,” she said. “One of the things I observed that was true of the other plays is that they all had to do with moments of decision, and many had a surprise ending. My play has both of those qualities.” ❐ p e o p l e 12 Nov. 15, 2005 from page 1 Stadium, Walgreens, Philips Arena and the Renaissance Hotel. Some also take classes at Atlanta Area Tech to learn a trade, like auto mechanics or carpentry. Students who do on-the-job training at the Renaissance Hotel meet with Pamela Gordon to learn the qualities of good leaders. Gordon makes her way through the hotel each day to check on students and evaluate their performance. “I try to get [the students] in the mind-set of a work force,” Gordon said. “I tell them, anyone can get a job, but you have to learn how to keep it.” Gordon checks up on the students periodically, as a teacher and go-between if there are any problems. “They think that I’m strict, but that’s what they need,” Gordon said. “Having a teacher or paraprofessional on the job really helps.” Ms. Newman says the program offers a chance for students to explore different careers to find the right one for them. “The premise behind RVI is to ensure that students who are enrolled in the program become productive citizens,” she said. Senior Chris Daniels, who sets up for banquets and special events, says Gordon’s training has been useful. Daniels has brought away advice for future job seekers. “You always have to keep up a good first impression,” he said. “Always do right and keep yourself in a good place.” Though he finds the job demanding, Daniels is considering working banquet setup on weekends as well. “It really does teach you to be responsible,” Daniels said. “They’ll leave you here by yourself if you don’t finish.” The Atlanta Public Schools System participates in numerous RVI conferences and competitions. Last May, APS won awards in career occupational thinking and job interviewing at a competition on Jekyll Island. Students can also enter projects to be judged in technical fields such as woodworking, metal working and graphic arts. Senior Alex Davis, who attends a half-day at Grady and half-day at Atlanta Area Tech, says the competitions are fun because everyone is friendly and helpful. “[The main benefit is] getting to know new people and seeing how they do things wherever they’re from,” he said. “You get to know their side of things.” By learning on-the-job skills in a certain field, students have a head start when they graduate. “If a child participates they have an advantage,” Ms. Newman explains. “If they do well, they can get hired. If not, it is still good to put on a resume.” Ms. Newman chooses students from the Program for Exceptional Children case load who demonstrate interest in some sort of career. She conducts career assessments and works to place them in a transitional program that fits their interests. She looks up available jobs, keeping an CARSON HALE RVI proves prosperous for dynamic students WHITE WASH: Loading the washers is junior Desmond Owens’ favorite part of his job at the Renaissance Hotel. The washing machines hold about 200 pounds of laundry. eye out on hiring positions at businesses where students already work. Ms. Newman has a thick scrapbook of her students’ achievements and pictures of various events to keep memories and to promote the program. She has a goal of getting 30 out of her 39 students involved in workbased training this year. Though her students at Atlanta Area Tech are always grateful to get out of class early, Ms. Newman misses the opportunity to see them. “I really wanted you to see the kids,” she said, “I’m just so proud of them.”❐ BY CHELSEA COOK Finding the recipe for crystal methamphetamine is easy. Step One: Access any computer with the Internet; perhaps use a computer in the media center at Grady. Don’t worry about the Internet filtering system, it won’t hinder you. Step Two: Use a search engine, such as Google.com, and simply type in the words “crystal meth.” A variety of websites will appear. One conversationally suggests the use of mason jars to “cook” the chemicals rather than jelly jars because they are thicker. Another site has intricate instructions about where to buy the essential chemicals and even has advice on what to do if someone gets suspicious. When purchasing Iodine Tincture, the website suggests telling the pharmacist that you’re using it for your horse’s hoof infection. It’s that easy. That’s the bad news. The good news, however, is that the majority of Grady students have no interest in making, or even trying such a substance. Only 16 miles away, some suburban high school students have made a different choice. Like high school students inside the perimeter, they are aware of the detrimental effects of the drug, perhaps more so since several have experienced it firsthand. “It’s curiosity,” said a former Wheeler High School senior, who agreed to share his experiences if he remained anonymous. “Everyone talks about how intense it makes you feel, and it’s something else to do, so you want to try it.” Crystal meth, cheaply and easily made from over-the-counter cold medicine or toxic chemicals such as battery acid, is becoming more popular in the kitchens, cars and pockets of rural and suburban high school students. According to the Drug Enforcement Agency, crystal meth is the No. 1 drug in rural America. “Every party we went to, someone had meth around,” Grady senior and former Marietta resident Lisa Lipham said. “Sometimes we wouldn’t even have to pay for it.” The drug has transcended the high school party scene. “It’s definitely replacing marijuana as the drug of choice around here,” said Chelsey Besser, a junior at Jackson County Comprehensive High School. The availability of crystal meth in the suburbs is steadily increasing. Because it’s so affordable and addictive, it’s creating an epidemic in rural areas throughout Georgia and America. CHELSEA COOK Crystal meth crisis wreaks havoc in suburban, rural Georgia REFLECTING ON HER ADDICTION: Senior Lisa Lipham demonstrates the meth habit that she kicked when she moved to Midtown. Since deciding to stop using the drug, Lipham wants to teach others about its dangers. “It just makes you feel invincible, confident and intensified,” the Wheeler senior explained. “And it really makes you want to have sex.” These teenagers agreed on the way meth made them feel, but not on the reasons for trying it. “I knew a lot of girls who did it to lose weight, and it worked,” Besser said. “But the longer you do it, the higher your tolerance becomes and so eventually you start to do it just to feel normal.” Several students said they became so addicted to the drug that when they came down from a high, they felt so depressed and sickly, that they kept taking the drug in order to feel alive again. “Their bodies get tired,” the Wheeler senior said. “You can’t sleep when you’re geeked up on meth, and that’s when it really starts to affect your body, in addition to your state of mind.” Many users describe the desire for the drug as if it were a craving for food. “It’s like when you’re so hungry that you feel like you might throw up,” a Jackson County student added. “That, plus a load of depression and hopelessness. That’s why people have to keep on doing it.” While it’s unclear exactly why people do crystal meth, it’s equally puzzling why people in urban areas don’t. Crystal meth had a huge impact on suburban communities but not in inner cities. “There’s nothing to do except party out here,” the Wheeler senior said. But some observers feel it’s not that simple. According to Benjamin Ewing, a writer for Brown University’s newspaper, The College Hill Independent, it’s not so much that there aren’t things to do in suburban America, but rather that there aren’t enough activities that are “comfortably dangerous.” “Scrabble is comfortable, Meth is dangerous,” Ewing explained in a September article. “Playing Texas Hold ‘Em, for example, is “comfortably dangerous.” While playing poker is probably just as common in the suburbs as it is in the city, Ewing may have a point about the need to explore the space between risky and dangerous. Several Grady students agree. “People at Grady definitely experiment here, but no one would ever go near crystal meth,” senior Ricardo Pereira said. “There’s enough to do in the city to where kids feel like they’re taking risks and being hard core without putting holes in their brain.” Comfortably dangerous, or even just comfortable activities are perhaps a good start to solving this problem. “I grew up in the suburbs, and it just seems like kids in the city get involved a lot earlier; they play soccer, they take ice skating lessons, they join Girl Scouts,” Savannah College of Art student Elizabeth Shockley said. Shockley suggests that if the kids had individual interests, they would eventually set individual goals, diverting them from making destructive decisions. Although crystal meth is extremely affordable, aiding to its popularity, the middle-class stability of most suburbs provides the means for many suburban teens to fund a drug habit. “There’s a lot more money out there,” senior Michaella Dirkes said. “I think those kids don’t understand the value of money because they don’t have to work for it.” While Lipham rejected that generalization, she also admitted that meth users use the money their own parents gave them to purchase crystal meth. “Me and my friends would get a $200 allowance every month, and so would a lot of kids we knew,” Lipham said. While the allowances may have been one connection between suburban students and their parents, a greater problem may be that other, more important connections are not sustained. “No kid can hide that they’re on meth, it’s impossible,” a Wheeler senior said. “[Parents] don’t want to believe that their kids are doing [crystal meth], so they ignore it.” According to the White House’s Office of National Drug Control, many measures are being taken to find a solution to this pervasive problem. Of course, their list includes prevention seminars in schools and harder punishments for offenders. A potentially effective solution, however, is limiting the sale of over-the-counter pseudophedrine, the main ingredient in several cold medicines, to 3.6 grams per purchase. This solution, however, is only in effect for drug stores that voluntarily enforce the rule, and crystal methamphetamine abusers can most likely find the pseudophedrine in other stores. Not to mention that crystal meth requires more than 15 different harmful chemicals, and there is no feasible way that the government could ban all of them. Without a government solution, suburban teens are left to fend for themselves. “I’m out of that environment, I’m clean, and I’m really happy,” Lipham said. While moving to Midtown saved Lipham, it can’t and won’t save everybody. The more you learn about crystal meth, the more helpless you feel. But you can’t solve a problem without defining and understanding its causes. It’s a first step.❐ THE SOUTHERNER p e o p l e Nov. 15, 2005 13 Fashion class memorializes AIDS victims Atlanta dining sticks to Southern roots through BBQ SARAH BETH McKAY BY SARAH BETH MCKAY What do AIDS, 54 tons of cloth, and the Grady fashion department have in common? Here’s a hint—1,600 panels of it were displayed in Piedmont Park before the annual AIDS Walk on Oct. 16. The AIDS Memorial Quilt, which is both the world’s largest folk art project and the biggest memorial to the AIDS epidemic, is made of more than 45,000 grave-sized panels. Students in the fashion design class are currently making a panel of their own, dedicated to all those in the world of fashion who have died from the AIDS virus. “I wasn’t able to participate in the walk, but through this quilt panel I can support the fight against AIDS,” said junior Alexandra Becker, who started putting the panel together in a tent next to the quilt display during the AIDS Walk with seniors Sam Willliams and Robin Blankenhorn and junior Jackie Nix. The panel, designed primarily by Williams, plays off the design for the Urban Couture Fashion Show poster. Since the quilt was moved to Atlanta more than three years ago, the NAMES Project Foundation, which serves as the quilt’s curator, has developed a close relationship with Grady. “It all started last year when we had some brochures translated into Spanish by students, and then we met [Grady art teacher] Vincent [Martinez], and he has supported us through the fashion show and now this panel project,” said Janece Shaffer, director of communications for the NAMES Project. “We love Grady.” Mr. Martinez has long been planning to have one of his classes contribute something to the quilt. “The [foundation] actually invited the fashion classes to design a Grady panel for the AIDS Memorial Quilt last year,” Mr. Martinez said. “We didn’t have time then because of the fashion show, but they re-invited us to make one REVIEW QUILTING FOR A CAUSE: In the meadow at Piedmont Park, Senior Sam Williams (left) and junior Alexandra Becker piece together the Grady AIDS quilt on the day of the AIDS Walk, when panels were displayed for the public. this year.” Last spring, the foundation lent several designer panels for display during the school’s fashion show. Students are just as enthusiastic about their participation in the AIDS quilt project. “I thought this would be something I could do to help, and I’ve been working on it every day since, as much as I can,” Blankenhorn said. Created in San Francisco in 1987, the AIDS Memorial Quilt has become a powerful representation of the damaging effects of AIDS worldwide, with each one of the quilt’s panels in memory of a victim of AIDS. If laid end to end, the panels of the quilt would stretch for 51.5 miles. Although the quilt mainly represents Americans (17.5 percent of AIDS-related deaths in the U.S. are memorialized), there are panels from 36 different countries. Twenty-two million people have died of AIDS. The NAMES Project Foundation elected to move the entire quilt to Atlanta for several reasons. One is the airport, which provides for easy distribution of pieces of the quilt. Other factors in the move were AIDS research centers like the Center for Disease Control and Prevention and the changing characteristics of the AIDS epidemic itself. As opposed to the mostly gay victims the quilt represented while it was in San Francisco, the majority of new AIDS victims in the U.S. are African Americans from the South. Both the NAMES Project Foundation and the quilt’s many observers view the quilt as an ideal way for grieving family members and friends to heal. “Anything that records or expresses sentiment or feeling about a loved one or humanity is important,” said Mr. Martinez, who has personally known AIDS victims. “We can’t hold these emotions in.” Another of the foundation’s main goals is to use the quilt to raise community knowledge about the extent of the AIDS epidemic. At its Inman Park location, the quilt is carefully stored, exhibited in a rotating gallery, or shipped out for display around the country. “There are 50,000 yards of quilt stored at our warehouse, and we send parts of it out to schools, universities and other organizations to raise awareness,” Shaffer said. “Unlike cancer, people don’t have to get AIDS; it can be prevented. We want people to be informed.” ❐ BY LENA BRODSKY Fact: Advanced Placement classes at Grady High School are open to all students, not just those in the magnet program. But the AP classes lack the diversity we celebrate at Grady. Peering into AP classes will show you mostly white faces from Grady’s magnet program. There are more nonmagnet students than magnet students at Grady, so why are non-magnet students few and far between when it comes to AP classes? “It’s an information problem,” said Erin Davis, the AP Economics teacher. “Magnet students are better informed of their choices. Non-magnet students don’t know that [AP classes] are open to everyone.” Many non-magnet students are truly unaware that everyone at Grady is welcome to apply to AP classes. It is possible, however, that many just shy away from signing up because they fear the workload or difficulty of AP classes. “I didn’t take any AP classes because I heard about all of the extra work that is expected of you,” junior Noah Conroy said. Conroy also didn’t know that nonmagnet students could apply for AP classes. “Now that I know I can apply, SALLY ZINTAK AP class enrollment fails to mirror school’s diversity THE WHITE STRIPES: Sixteen out of the 18 students in Mr. Brandhorst’s class are white. Mr. Brandhorst said that as many as five or six of his students were not in the magnet. I think I will next year,” Conroy said. “They look better for colleges, and it shows you actually care.” AP French teacher Dianne Simmons speculates that there are more magnet students in AP classes because of their future plans. “Maybe more magnet students are seeking to build their high school resume to apply to more competitive schools,” she said. With magnet students dominating AP rolls, the classes are also disproportionately white. The magnet program does not mirror the demographics of the overall population, so why is there this lack of diversity? The AP teachers have noticed the lack of racial diversity, more so than the lack of non-magnet students in AP classes, simply because race is visible to the eye. If students at Grady, magnet or non-magnet, are under the impression that AP classes are more challenging than nonAP classes, they are absolutely correct. “The content in an AP class is much more difficult, and there is simply more material to cover,” Ms. Davis said. “Even teaching an AP class is much harder than teaching my other classes.” Students, however, should not shy away from applying the next time the opportunity is offered. There are multiple benefits to taking AP classes at Grady. “The AP exam has fartherreaching consequences than EOCTs,” Ms. Davis said. If you score well enough, you can exempt taking the same course over again in college, and you can save money on tuition. AP classes are impressive on college applications. If you earn a C or better, they also add 10 points to your final grade in the class. The bottom line is that AP classes are open to everyone at Grady. The enrollment in them should approximate Grady’s demographics more closely. ❐ BY ALEX DANIELS Like most urban locales, Atlanta’s population is diverse, split up along all sorts of well-defined identifiers like race, sexual orientation and financial status. There’s not much I can say to change our city’s socioeconomic distribution, but this I can say: if there’s one thing that any Atlantan from any area can appreciate, it’s a hearty serving of barbecue and a side of corn bread washed down with a liter of sweet tea. The fine art of smothering well-cooked meat in delicious sauces is something that brings people together in a way little else can. Short on time and money, it came down to a tour of three of the most well-known barbecue restaurants in Atlanta. First was Dusty’s Barbecue, an old favorite on Briarcliff Road near Emory University. It’s a hot spot for the college crowd and Midtown families alike, who seem to enjoy North Carolina-style barbecue just as much as the Appalachianers. Their specialty item, without a doubt, is the classic chopped pork sandwich. Served on a simple bun and drenched in a choice of three types of sauces (regular, sweet and the vinegar-based hot), it’s guaranteed to hit the spot. For good measure, though, add a side of their homemade potato chips. Go to Dusty’s if you feel that a quick sandwich fix is in order. If you feel like really getting your fingers messy, you’ll want to look elsewhere, and anyone who’s been in Atlanta long enough knows that the place to be is Fat Matt’s Rib Shack on Piedmont Avenue at Rock Springs Road. After ordering at the counter, you can hit the patio outside or stay indoors for live music, which gives the shack a “blues joint” feel. Matt’s has a diverse mix of patrons, all in pursuit of its perfectly smoked pork covered in their signature sauce. A half-rack won’t last you very long, and though it may seem like a lot of food and will put you over $15, a full-rack is more likely to satisfy. It may take a little Drano to unclog those arteries, but your taste buds and stomach will be thanking you. Another hot spot on the Atlanta barbecue scene is Daddy D’z, on Memorial Drive near Oakland Cemetery. Despite the obscure location, there were a sizeable number of Midtown patrons. It just shows how far everyone, even yuppies will travel for good barbecue. For a guaranteed fill-up the $10 sample platter will give you a taste of what the Daddy has to offer. The signature Que Wraps (just imagine a tiny barbecue tortilla) and corn bread stood out, but the meat and rich Texas-style are hard to ignore. You certainly won’t leave hungry. No matter how divided or diverse this fair town becomes, it can never escape its southern roots. Buckhead or Bankhead, we’re all still south of the Mason-Dixon line, and we’ve all got a little barbecue sauce in our veins. ❐ s p o r t s 14 Nov. 15, 2005 THE SOUTHERNER Volleyball veterans optimistic for 2006 CARSON PHILLIPS-SPOTTS PRACTICE MAKES PERFECT: While most students enjoyed the Nov. 8 teacher workday off, juniors Donald White, Chris Goodine, and Nick Gibson practice with the rest of team. In order to improve, the team has mandatory morning practices from 6 to 7:45 a.m. Teams each return 3 starters, aim to improve, make playoffs BY CARSON PHILLIPS-SPOTTS As the Knights hit the court for the 2005-2006 season, expectations are simple: improve upon last year’s record. Both the girls and boys have taken steps to improve during the off-season and hope to fare well in 2005. The Grady boys led by Coach Douglas Slade have a common goal going into this season. “Our goal is to be competitive in every game we play this year,” Coach Slade said. “We’ve been practicing two times a day working on fundamentals and drills,” senior Lamarr Martin said. The tryout process is a long and strenuous one consisting of running, agility drills and fundamentals. For Martin, who transferred from Oakland earlier this year, tryouts were more than just physical. “I’m new to the school, and I knew I had something to prove on the court and something to prove to my teammates.” The process has been different for Martin who feels that basketball in Atlanta is different than in his hometown. “The pace of the game is slower in Atlanta because there is no shot clock.” Martin, as well as other transfer players, hope to contribute to a successful season this year. The new players will join three returning starters from last year’s squad. The Knights will play a tough schedule including games against region foes Lovett and Decatur. Early workouts have shown promise. “Sixteen players have come out for tryouts excluding the football players,” Coach Slade said. After Slade finalizes his roster, the team will suit up against Washington High School on Nov. 15 at 7 p.m. at the Grady Gym for their first real test. Coach Slade offers his own preview for the upcoming game and the season that follows. “We as a team are going to show hustle and determination.” The Lady Knights enter the season with high hopes as they try to improve upon last year’s good season. The Knights had a memorable season that ended in a first-round exit in the region playoffs to the Pythons of Paideia. The Knights hope to avenge that loss and to beat other region foes. “The first week of tryouts is mostly conditioning, and then it moves on to running basic plays and practicing fundamentals,” senior Kai Woods said. The team has been working since late summer to get in shape and to sharpen its skills. The early outlook for the Lady Knights is very positive. “We should definitely improve, as this is our second year playing together,” junior Tiffany Platt said. The girls team, just like the boys, is returning three starters. “We lost two strong players to graduation and transfer, but we’ve had a good turnout, and we have a lot of potential so I think we’ll be pretty good.” The Lady Knights will also take the floor Nov. 15 against the Washington Bulldogs at 5:30 p.m. “Look for us to be highly motivated and ready to play,” Platt said. ❐ BY KENNY JONES This year’s Grady girls volleyball team finished the season with a disappointing 8-16 record, ending with a first-round playoff loss to the Landmark Christian War Eagles. The Knights struggled to produce an effective offensive attack, losing both of their games 25-5. Landmark Christian was one of the best teams in the league, finishing first in Grady’s region and going on to win the area finals. Although this year did not meet expectations, Coach Paul Nicolson used this season to help rebuild the program. Nicholson wants to create a JV team that will hone and utilize the skill of newcomers to the sport. “I just don’t think it’s in the budget,” C o a c h Nicolson said. Graduation left Coach Nicolson looking for new talent in 2005. Some of the girls he found to fill his roster had never played competitive volleyball before. The number of girls that tried out for the team this year was so great that Coach Nicolson decided to expand the roster from 12 to 15 players. All of a sudden Coach Nicolson’s players went from being experienced athletes to amateurs. Coach Nicolson’s neophytes were needed on the court immediately. “[For a newcomer] I’ve gotten a fair share of minutes,” junior Dyci Manns said. The newcomers not only earned minutes but broke into the starting lineup. Newcomers like Ante Porter found herself “ becoming a frequent starter. “[Dyci] has poised herself to be a Grady volleyball superstar,” Coach Nicolson said. “[And Ante] became someone that the team could rely on to create opportunities.” All but two players, senior captain Jada Glasby and senior Sarah Evans, will be returning next year with a season of experience under their belts. The girls hope for a breakout season next year, but being placed in such a competitive AAA classification, the girls know it will take more than just new talent. “We have the ability to win, but we can’t wait until the middle of the season to start working hard,” junior and co-captain Emma Din said. “We need to get our act together before the season starts and realize that conditioning and doing the things that aren’t always fun are what will make us a strong team and actually competitive.” The Knights have their work cut out for them. The most important area the girls need to work on is the structure of their offense. At times the rookie-laden team seemed more concentrated on setting up a defense and returning the ball than winning the point. As a result the Grady girls lost all of their five region games, by an aggressive score of 273-126. Next year, though, the team should be more confident with their defense and have a more offensive mindset. “All things considered, we did fairly well this year,” Coach Nicolson said. “[But] We are really setting ourselves up to be outstanding next year.” ❐ We are really setting ourselves up to be outstanding next year. Coach Nicolson BY GREG O’DONNELL The members of Grady’s upstart swim team were hoping to make a big splash with their first full season. Instead the team and the season has been cancelled before it had the chance to create a ripple. In an e-mail message to his former team members, Coach Nikolai Curtis cited several reasons for shelving the season: the lack of consistent participation among those who signed up, the challenge of providing transporation to and from Washington Park pool and the prohibitive cost of paying for the many expenses that come with creating and sustaining a varsity sport. “It makes me really sad,” senior swimmer Caroline Moulder said of the cancellation. “In the beginning [the team] had a lot of potential and I think it would have been a great addition to the Grady sports program.” The campus got a glimpse of that potential when then senior Melanie Wagner competed for Grady Feb. 1 at the Metro Divisional Championships at the Westminster natatorium. GREG O’DONNELL Coach pulls the plug on a swim team before it starts FISH OUT OF WATER: Coach Nikolai Curtis consults with senior Caroline Moulder before cancelling the season. Wagner swam in two preliminary heats, ending a 49-year drought between meets for Grady, and creating much speculation about adding swimming to Grady’s athletics program. The very success of that program might have been the key factor that prevented swimming from being successful this year. “I would be hard-pressed to ask students who are having a successful season to take a break from the their regular routines and jeopardize their chances of winning a region championship or playoff games,” Coach Curtis said in this message to his former team. Only two swimmers—juniors Virginia Wagner and Jackie Nix—attended the first two swim practices, prompting Coach Curtis to reassess the viability of the program. “In this era of budget control, the system just won’t cover the expenses of having busses transport around 4-6 kids, pay the coach, and deal with the insurance costs.” Curtis also expressed concern that the bus would only transport the swimmers to practice, leaving them to arrange their own transportation after practice. Curtis credited the Wagner sisters for generating interest among Grady swimmers. More than 50 students expressed interest in the team after the first meeting. The coach had set a modest goal for the upcoming season: to qualify a swimmer for state. “I think we could have caused a little trouble for the [more established swim] teams,” Coach Curtis wrote to his prospective swimmers. The competition from the privateschool swim powers in the Atlanta area would have been a stiff challenge, but in the end the toughest challenge was just to field a team at all: “At first a lot of people expressed interest, but then they had too many extracurricular activities to attend the [three] practices [a week].” Coach Curtis thanked the swimmers and their parents; Ms. Sandra Ukah, the the team’s former assistant coach; and athletic director Doug Slade and principal Dr. Vincent Murray for their support in the attempt to launch the program. ❐ THE SOUTHERNER s p o r t s Nov. 15, 2005 15 SALLY ZINTA K BY TRAVIS JONES Grady’s boys cross country team came into the season with modest expectations, and some outsiders ranked them as low as seventh in their region. No one could have predicted the exclamation point placed on the end of their season. The underrated Knights entered regionals as a dark horse to claim the top spot. By the end of the race, all skeptics were silenced as Grady placed three runners in the top 10 en route to the region crown. Senior Wes Vernon, junior Stone Irvin and sophomore Max Leonard finished second, fourth, and sixth respectively. “I feel great because we ran as a team,” Irvin said. “We were encouraging each other. I didn’t think we would do as well as we did, considering [senior Collier Johnson’s] knee injury.” Coach Richard Buerkle pointed to Johnson as a key to the Knights victory. “CJ was hurt and ran only two minutes off of his best time,” Buerkle said. “He came out and ran a real gutsy race. He still broke 18 minute and was really the difference maker.” Vernon entered the backstretch with runners hot on his heels, provided a burst of energy and took sole possession of second. Despite his success, Vernon remained modest after the race. “I should have run about 30 seconds faster,” he said. This attitude pervaded the team. “We don’t want to get cocky, but I feel that we can give them a run for their money [at state],” Irvin said after the race. Though Grady was not considered a favorite entering state, the team’s convincing regional victory did leave them confident. “If we can get one more guy under 18 minutes, who knows?” Coach Buerkle said. “Maybe we have a Collier shot.” The Knights Johnson used their time wisely. They developed an aggressive strategy, and Johnson recuperated from his knee injury. When the time came for the team to travel to Carrollton for the state meet; however, Mother Nature threw them a curveball. Racetime temperatures were much higher than expected and the Knights were forced to alter their strategy right before race time. While originally planning to come out running at full speed, the runners were forced to pace themselves. The heat certainly altered the race, as several top runners from opposing schools passed out during the hilly 5-kilometer course at Carrollton. Vernon continued to impress, concluding his Grady career by finishing third in the state, and by once again pushing hard at the end to edge out opposing runners. Vernon was Grady’s lone representative in the top 10. Coming into the race, Grady was most concerned about Greater Atlanta Christian and The Wesleyan School, having already proven that they could beat other key opponents at regionals. As the results came in slowly over the loudspeakers at the awards ceremony, Grady runners were able to breathe a sigh of relief when GAC finished seventh. With a Lovett runner finishing second and three Wesleyan runners in the top 10, though, Grady fans were tense in the stands as teams were slowly recognized. Decatur finished fourth, and when Lovett was announced as the third place team, Grady was assured of their second place finish. After a labor-intensive season, the Knights capped their tremendous run with finishes that were both spectacular and unexpected at state and at regionals. With a move to AAA next season, the team hopes that they will be able to replicate their success against teams like Blessed Trinity and Westminster to whom Irvin referred as a “powerhouse.” “We have a strong base,” Irvin said. “I think we will do well, but we need to put the work in over this summer that we didn’t last year.” With a dedicated team and a great track record, the Knights are on pace for a tremendous 2006 season. ❐ SALLY ZINTAK Boys beat expectations, finish runner-up at state BY MY SIDE: Junior Carson Hale and sophomore Jamison Kinnane finished 49th and 47th at the state meet Nov. 5. Lady Knights take fifth at state BY ERIK BELGUM It took three tries to start the girls’ AA cross-country meet Nov. 5. Though the meet began with two false starts, flustering some of the Grady girls, they ended up flourishing with a fifth-place finish. The state meet is held each year on a hilly course at the campus of Carrollton City schools. The team, proving that their appearance at the meet was no fluke, came out strong. Two of Grady’s seven runners ran their personal records on the difficult course in unexpected heat. “Coach Cramer’s strategy was to not go out too fast because it was a hot day,” sophomore Jamison Kinnane said. “He said that we should run together and that helped a lot.” After the race, the team moved over to the baseball field for the awards ceremony. After the individual medals were awarded, team places were announced. Grady, finishing fifth, just missed the chance to bask in the spotlight of the podium designated for the top four teams. Two of the teams who beat Grady at the regional meet were in the top four at state including Holy Innocents’, who finished second, and Lovett, who won the AA girls championship. The battle for first place was a heated one. The two teams vying for the spot were Lovett and Holy Innocents’. The result based on the top five runners was a tie, so the championship was determined by the team’s sixth-place runners. Lovett’s sixth runner finished before Holy Innocents’ and so the Lionesses were crowned champions. Most of the girls were frustrated at not being in the top four but were pleased with their performance. Junior Leah Bishop was happy with her finish. “This year I placed 12th and last year I placed 14th,” Bishop said. “I’ve already run it [the course] five times, which helps a lot because I already know where all of the many hills are,” she said. Other runners thought that they could have done better. “ I felt like I did well, but could have gone a little faster at the end,” Kinnane said. “I didn’t like the steep hills on the course, but the downhill finish made up for it.” The girls qualified for the state meet following their fourth-place finish at the regional meet at Our Lady of Mercy on Oct. 26. Fourteen Grady girls competed in the regional meet’s varsity and junior varsity races. One Grady junior varsity runner was freshman, Jillian Woodliff, who finished first for Grady and sixth overall. Freshman Polly Zintak, who ran in the junior varsity race, felt good about her performance. “I liked the course a lot,” Zintak said. “It was my fastest time of the year.” Zintak finished seventh in the JV race. Some girls have noticed the team getting closer recently. “This year’s team has grown together and will be even stronger next year because we aren’t losing anyone,” Bishop said. Next year, the team hopes to repeat at state as they move up to AAA, where they will face schools like Westminster and Blessed Trinity. “We’ve been training since June and have spent a lot of time together,” Kinnane said. “Over the last two weeks, especially we’ve become like a family.” ❐ Braves to lose consistency with pitching guru’s exit Like a pyramid, the foundation of the Braves’ amazing run over the past 15 years has been DUY LAM built on three faces: manager Bobby Cox, general manager John Schuerholz and pitching coach Leo Mazzone. Unfortunately, one of those faces has recently fallen and like a pyramid will slowly cause the collapse of the team’s divisional dominance. After 26 years in the Braves organization, Mazzone has parted ways with the franchise for an opportunity to coach along side childhood friend, Sam Perlozzo of the Baltimore Orioles. Mazzone, along with Cox and Schuerholz, has been a constant in every single division championship during the team’s run making his participation no less important than either Cox’s or Schuerholz’s. The list of pitchers who have improved after coming to Atlanta or who have struggled after leaving Atlanta during Mazzone’s tenure as the pitching coach is too long to present here. The fact is not that Mazzone is more or less valuable than the other two. It’s not like Mazzone just so happens to turn every single guy the Braves find into a good pitcher, or that Schuerholz just so happens to find tons of diamonds in the dust. The fact is, however, that Mazzone’s impact on the Braves is irreplaceable and unprecedented. His legacy is made apparent by the consistency of the pitching staff during his tenure. As a team, the Braves have finished either first or second in the league in earn run average in 14 of the past 16 seasons. His staffs have produced nine 20game winners and six Cy Young Awards. Mazzone was blessed with talented pitchers in the “big three” in Greg Maddux, Tom Glavine, and John Smoltz, all of whom pitched most, if not all of their career under Mazzone. Since leaving Atlanta, both Maddux and Glavine have struggled with the Chicago Cubs and New York Mets, respectively. Mazzone’s greatest feat as a pitching coach is his success with reviving careers of pitchers. The number of pitchers who have seen a second life in their pitching career after coming to Atlanta include Jaret Wright, Mike Hampton and Jorge Sosa. Wright, 1-5 with an 8.37 ERA in 2003 with San Diego, was 15-8 with a 3.28 ERA in 2004 with Atlanta. Hampton, 7-15 with a 6.15 ERA in 2002 with Colorado, was 14-8 with a 3.84 ERA in 2004 with Atlanta. Sosa, who had a career record of 11-26 prior to coming to Atlanta, went 13-3 with a 2.55 ERA this season. Other pitchers include John Thompson and John Burkett, who had an All-Star season with Atlanta in 2002. Mazzone, however, should not get all of the credit for the success of these pitchers, nor should Schuerholz. It took the combined work of Schuerholz targeting and signing the pitchers and Mazzone conditioning and preparing them for their ultimate success in Atlanta. Remarkably, there have been just as many players who saw their careers decline after leaving Atlanta as the ones who improved during Mazzone’s tenure. Along with Maddux and Glavine, other players including Steve Avery, Kevin Millwood, and Denny Neagle, who all combined for 19 All-Star game appearances with Mazzone and zero since leaving Atlanta. The improvement of relief pitchers during Mazzone’s era is also astounding. A recent study by economist J.C. Bradbury of the “Mazzone Effect” shows that relief pitchers under Mazzone have ERAs of more than half a run less than their ERAs playing for other teams. The key to the long run by Atlanta in the ’90s and into the new millennium has been its consistent pitching staff. Without Mazzone on the bench, the Braves cannot continue their tradition of dominant pitching. A few years from now, we will look back and see that this was the first crack in the foundation, leading to the fall of the team’s historic run. ❐ s p o r t s 16 Nov. 15, 2005 FOOTBALL team’s playoff run best since 1953 season Brooks Co Greene Co Macon Co Greene Co Darlington Macon Co GRADY Dublin GRADY SECOND ROUND “This was a really big win for us, but in this time of the season each week gets bigger and bigger and we got to take one game at a time,” Ronnie Millen said. That approach has worked well all season. Millen’s greatest success as a coach has been his ability to mold his individual players into a cohesive unit. Under his leadership, the Knights completed the first perfect regular season in school history. The Knights finished the 2005 regular season unbeaten, untied and ranked ninth in the state in AA, The Knights hosted their postseason opener Nov. 4, against the 7-3 fighting Yellow Jackets of Rockmart who made their first post-season appearance in 16 years. The Knights beat Rockmart 3016 to advance to the second round of the playoffs. The Knights got on the board first with an 8-yard touchdown run from Crawford in the second quarter. Rockmart answered with a drive that began with a 60-yard kick return to the Knights 19-yard line and culminated with a 30-yard field goal. The Knights broke away by scoring 14 unanswered points on a 15-yard touchdown run from Crawford and a 19-yard touchdown pass from SECOND ROUND from page 1 ankle injury. The Knights then showed their depth as junior running back Dexter Barnett replaced the injured Koen and made the most of his opportunity, rushing for 158 yards on 10 carries. In the third quarter Barnett produced the decisive 86-yard touchdown run that put the Knights up for good, 13-6. “The coaches put it all on me, and I was able come through and help my teammates out,” Barnett said. With less than four minutes remaining in the game, the Knights forced a fumble and recovered it on the Laney 30-yard line. On fourth and one, however, the Knights failed to convert, giving Laney two minutes to mount a final drive. Laney was able to string some passes together and worked its way to the Grady 20-yard line where they faced fourth and 10 with eight seconds left in the game. With a raucous Grady crowd making it difficult to hear, Laney’s quarterback dropped back in the pocket and threw a high floating desperation pass in the end zone where it was picked off by sophomore cornerback Andrerius Thomas. A rush of joy went through the crowd as they rushed the field to celebrate the win. Cook Laney Cook AA STATE CHAMPIONSHIP Fitzgerald Buford Fitzgerald Buford Jackson Lovett Calhoun Heard Co Charlton Co Calhoun Morgan Co Charlton Co Kelley to junior wide-out Rico Robinson. Trailing 21-3, Rockmart tried to mount a comeback scoring a 15-yard touchdown run with 11 minutes left in the game. On their next drive Rockmart had the ball inside the 20-yard line and was threatening to score. Junior linebacker Elijah Carmichael snuffed out the threat by intercepting the Rockmart quarterback at the 10yard line and seizing the momentum in the Knights favor. Senior running back Cedric Sykes put the Yellow Jackets away for good with a 3-yard touchdown run. Rockmart then scored a cosmetic touchdown on its next drive with a meaningless 36-yard touchdown pass with 27 seconds left in the game. Although the Knights survived a tough test, some of the team’s weaknesses were exposed, including more than 100 penalty yards. The coverage team also gave up more than 145 return yards giving Rockmart great field position. Crawford was the difference maker in the game, scoring two rushing touchdowns. “D’Vangelo played well but you also have to credit some of his success to the offensive linemen,” Coach Millen said. “The offense and defense played very well; the players did a good job of executing each play and I was pleased.” Grady fans hope Millen stays that way – all the way to the Dome. ❐ Millen honored for standout coaching performance attack and a dominant defense, Millen has coached his team through many difficult opponents this season. One of these games, a 35-13 victory over the Decatur Bulldogs brought out the best in Millen and his team as they played on local television. This was Grady’s first televised appearance ever, and the team proved that they can perform at a high level under high pressure. The Knights are 12-0 this year and are three wins from a state title. Millen has been impressed with his team’s performance this season. “I think the kids are buying into ASA BEAL BY ASA BEAL For steering the Grey Knights to a perfect regular season, Grady Coach Ronnie Millen received the Coach of the Week Award from the Touchdown Club of Atlanta on Oct. 24. “It felt really good to get the award,” said Coach Millen, in his 17th season as a football coach for Grady. Each week the Touchdown Club of Atlanta, sponsored by the Atlanta Falcons, honors several coaches and players who help point younger players in the right direction down the road to success. Though Millen appreciates the prestigious award, he acknowledges that there are others who deserve credit for the team’s success this season. “I wasn’t totally responsible, the coaching staff and players have [contributed], too.” This award validates a program that has flown largely under the radar. Despite being in the shadow of perennial powers like Calhoun and Dublin, Grady cracked the top 10 in the state rankings. Grady won its region for only the third time. Millen’s strong performance and the Knights’ success on the field come as no coincidence. Utilizing a punishing rushing what we’re telling them,” said Coach Millen of the team’s renewed work ethic. The Knights are in the midst of a recordsetting season. No Grady football team has ever finished the regular season 100. Millen’s team clinched this distinction on Oct. 28 with a 35-14 victory over the Carver Panthers at Grady Stadium. After breaking their 51-year playoff drought last year with a win against Greater Atlanta Christian, Grady is poised to go deep into the postseason this year. Though Millen agrees that the team has the talent to be successful further down the road, he remains humble. “We do it one game at a time,” Coach Millen said. “We realize that any team can come out any given day and win against anybody.” When asked to explain the team’s success this year, Millen was quick to list several factors that have stood out in to explain the seasons. “It’s fortunate that we’ve been injury free,” Coach Millen said. “Veteran leadership has helped also.” On Nov. 4 the Knights survived the first round of the playoffs with a 30-16 victory over fourth-seeded Rockmart. They exemplified the spirit and intensity that have led them past the first round of the playoffs for the second consecutive season. While the football team is surely feeling confident coming off 12 straight wins, they must stay on point to continue their recent success. With a twinkle of pride in his eye, Millen expressed his optimism for the rest of the 2005 season. “[We have a] good enough team to go really deep into the playoffs,” Coach Millen said. Lining Grady’s halls are intimidating posters of the players and coaches of the football team. The school is alive with the spirit and excitement of the playoffs. With Millen at the helm and the Knight’s onfield talent waiting to be unleashed, football has never been more exciting at Grady High School. ❐ Knight Watch FOOTBALL BASKETBALL Boys & Girls Schedule Nov. 15 Washington 22 at Washington 29 at Decatur 5:30 p.m. 5:30 p.m. 5:30 p.m. Dec. 02 Therrell 06 at Carver 09 Cross Keys 10 Holy Innocents’ 12 at Paideia 16 Walker 5:30 p.m. 5:30 p.m 5;30 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. *All caps denotes HOME TEAM Jan. 03 at Pace 06 at Holy Innocents’ 10 Lovett 13 Decatur 14 Darlington 20 Carver 21 Paideia 24 at Cross Keys 27 at Lovett 28 at Darlington 31 at Walker 6 p.m. 7 p.m. 5:30 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 2:30 p.m. 5 p.m. 5:30 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. Feb. 03 Pace 5:30 p.m. GRADY 54, Walker 0 GRADY 41, Cross Keys 0 GRADY 35, Carver 15 GRADY 30, Rockmart 16 GRADY 13, Laney 6 Devongalo Crawford Junior FB Player Profile: Region 5-AA Standings *Grady *Decatur *Lovett *Walker Carver Cross Keys Region Overall W 5 4 3 2 1 0 W 11 8 7 6 3 1 L 0 1 2 3 4 5 L 0 1 3 4 6 9 Height: 5–foot–10 Weight: 205 Number: 33 Stats: 4 TD’s this season (3 playoff TD’s, 2 rushing, 1 receiving)