The Southerner, Volume 67, Issue 5

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the Southerner S I N C E

VOLUME LXVII, NUMBER 5

Feb. 21, 2014

Jenn Steckl

HENRY W. GRADY HIGH SCHOOL, ATLANTA

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Sledders at the Ansley Golf Course take advantage of the first snow day on Jan. 29.

DUAL SNOWSTORMS HIT METROPOLITAN AREA A By J.D. Capelouto and Mary Claire Morris t 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday Jan. 28, Debbie Whitlock got a phone call from her 9-year-old son, a fourth-grader at E. Rivers Elementary School, as he was en route home on a school bus. “It was a strange cell-phone number. I could hear kids making noise, and I could hear someone crying, and I said, ‘Hello, hello, who is this?’” Whitlock said. “He said, ‘Momma, I don’t know where we are, but I’m scared, and I think we’re somewhere near home.’” Whitlock’s son, who was also on the bus with his third-grade sister, was one of several hundred

students throughout Atlanta who were stranded on school buses as bus drivers struggled to get kids home during the Jan. 28 snow and ice storm. While he was lucky enough to make it home, many students were left at school with no way to get home due to the storm and heavy traffic. More than 400 students and more than 50 staff members spent the night at North Atlanta High School, and approximately 150 students spent the night at E. Rivers. “My kids finally got home at 9 p.m.,” Whitlock said the night of the storm. “There are still 150 kids at the school. Only three of the 10 buses even made it to the elementary school.

They told the other buses not to bother so the buses have given up. The kids are spending the night on the gym floor, and I heard there are 12 teachers still there.” Early that Tuesday afternoon, as forecasted, it began to snow. APS middle schools were dismissed early at 1:30 p.m., and elementary schools and high schools were dismissed at the regular times of 2:30 and 3:30, respectively. Twelve hours later, due to bus transportation issues, many students and teachers were still stranded at schools. People navigating home from work and students trying to get home from school alike struggled with the weather,

and many got stuck on the interstate. At 5:30 p.m. Gov. Nathan Deal declared a state of emergency. The National Guard was not activated until midnight, after students had been stuck for nearly eight hours on highways in buses. APS issued a public statement at 10:30 p.m. stating that an emergency “shelter in place” was called for all students and staff who remained in schools. APS stated that they were continuing to transport kids who were en route for buses and were permitting parents to pick see SNOW, page 9

By Mary Claire Morris eventh-grader Jeffrey Del Bagno was in line to receive his game-day gear during football practice at Inman Middle School on Sept. 7, 2012. It was the Friday evening before the team’s weekend game. While he was waiting a room away from the coaches, Jeffrey was allegedly surrounded by four of his teammates, who proceeded to “bull-pen” him by surrounding and attacking him violently. Nearly six months later, Jeffrey’s parents filed a lawsuit against APS and the Inman administration. In the claim, filed on Feb. 27, 2013, the Del Bagnos said that the attack could have been prevented and was handled poorly by school officials. The students responsible for the attack, the Del Bagnos alleged, did not receive adequate discipline. “The ironic thing about this is that after Jeffrey was attacked, his nose was gushing blood... the coach threw him a towel and said, ‘Go to the bathroom and take care of your nose. By the way, before you leave, make sure you clean up every last drop of blood in the bathroom,’” said Jeff Del Bagno, Jeffrey’s father. “No EMPs [emergency paramedics] were called, no police, no paramedics, nothing.”

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Renovations at Maynard Jackson High School underscore deeper changes at the school, which has struggled with high student attrition and low test scores.

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Inman administration and football coaches along with APS officials declined to comment because the lawsuit is pending litigation. According to a report written by the surgeon who treated Jeffrey, Jeffrey’s nasal bone was injured and pushed within millimeters of his cranial cavity. Had the bone reached the cavity, his injury would have been “very serious and life-threatening.” In addition, the injury resulted in the obstruction of eight of his 10 sinuses. The report states that the injury to his nose could have been lifethreatening and would require a delicate reconstruction of his nasal bones, nasal airway and sinus cavity. Jeffrey underwent this surgery nearly four months after the incident on Dec. 20. “He had to have a three-hour under-the-knife corrective surgery,” Del Bagno said. “He was on the operating table for three hours and then had five monthsof outpatient procedures.” The day after the incident, Del Bagno sent his son to the football game, in the game day gear he had received, in order to show his attackers that they could not intimidate him, see BULLYING, page 8

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After four months in the making, Grady’s advanced musical theater class put on a production of the award-winning Thoroughly Modern Millie Jan. 16-18.

allison rapoport

Inman bullying incident results in lawsuit against school, system

STILL IN CHARGE: Murray told the staff on Feb. 25 to act with “grace and dignity.”

Murray: reassignment likely

Quinn Mulholland and Allison Rapoport Principal Vincent Murray told The Southerner that he has been told he will be reassigned from Grady. He said, however, that he won’t know where until April, when APS offers contracts to returning employees. For now, Murray asserted at a Feb. 25 faculty meeting, he will remain Grady’s principal. “I’m still your principal, and I don’t have any reason to doubt right now that I will be your principal,” Murray said. by

EXCLUSIVELY @ theSoutherneronline.com and our Facebook page: Check online for real-time updates as this story develops

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Unlike many of his sophomore peers, Justin Cucchi divides his time between swim team, Earth Club and many community-service opportunities.

Retired Grady track coach, Randy Reed passed away Jan. 14, 2014, after battling cancer. He touched many lives during his 40-year coaching career.


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