the
TOWER
Wednesday, Mar. 28, 2018 Volume 90 Issue 21 @thetowerpulse thetowerpulse.net
A weekly tradition since 1928
Grosse Pointe South High School 11 Grosse Pointe Blvd. Grosse Pointe Farms, MI 48236
STAFF APPRECIATION WEEK
MDOT grant improves safety IAN DEWEY ’18 Copy Editor
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MADELINE ALLEN & LAUREN NEMEH ’20 Staff Writer & Page Editor Student Association (SA) will be honoring South employees for all of their hard work throughout this school year with Staff Appreciation Week from April 9 to April 13. According to SA adviser Laura Distelrath, students have been showing their gratitude towards the staff for the past few years. “For as long as I have been at South we’ve done some sort of staff appreciation event, whether it’s been a luncheon, a gift or a week of gratitude,” Distelrath said. When it comes to planning a large event, communication is essential for it to be successful, according Distelrath added. “Anytime we are ordering something it takes communication with whoever we are ordering it from, whether its food or an item,” Distelrath said. Committee chair of Staff Appreciation Week, Shreya Rana ’19, organized the event in hopes of giving teachers the recognition she believes they deserve. “As a student who is heavily involved within the South community, I interact with the staff a lot,” Rana
said. “I feel like sometimes it can be hard to tell them how important they are in the students lives.” According to Simon Chen ’18, who is overseeing Staff Appreciation Week, giving back to South’s community is an ambition of SA. “Our goal is to have a fun week for the staff to show them we appreciate what they do and we’re grateful (for them),” Chen said. “People should know during Staff Appreciation (Week) you should let your staff members know you’re thankful for what they do, but also be thankful for them 100 percent of the time.” Starting on April 9 is a week’s worth of student-organized activities where staff can come together to bond over their efforts. “We have a staff gift we’re giving out, and our big event is the luncheon on Friday, where all of the staff can come together and enjoy a meal during lunch,” Rana said. In the past, staff appreciation week has proven to be successful in making South faculty feel proud of their work, according to Chen. “I remember some of the staff were surprised with the gifts we give them, and it made them happy,” Chen said. ”That’s really why I think it’s important-- giving
back to the people who help South run smoothly.” From the custodians to administration, Staff Appreciation Week brings staff together in and out of the classroom. “Not everyone is always recognized for what they do,” Chen said. “It’s nice to have a week where everyone on the staff is appreciated, (not just teachers), but everyone else too.” SA recognizes that credit is due to all the South employees that are involved with bettering students every single day. “We do this in SA because without the staff, none of our events would be possible,” Rana said. “Our goal as an organization is to appreciate the staff and hope they realize how much we love and appreciate them.” As Staff Appreciation Week approaches, students are given a time to reflect and recognize all the hard working faculty around them. “I want everyone to know you don’t need Staff Appreciation Week to appreciate the staff and tell them how much you appreciate everything they do for us,” Rana said. “Please take some time this week to feed into the cause and tell a staff member how much you love them.”
Class of 2020 plans spring carnival at South for Grosse Pointe elementary schoolers, community ELIZABETH FLOWER ’20 Copy Editor
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ouncy houses. Face painting. Balloon animals. These activities and more will be available for entertainment at South’s upcoming spring carnival put on by the class of 2020. The carnival will take place at South on Friday, April 13 from 4:30 to 7:30 p.m and will be held in three separate areas: the main gym, the girls’ gym and the commons. According to Olivia Stricker ’20, class treasurer, this event is aimed to-
“It’s a great way to bring the community together and to get the kids who are going to be coming to South eventually to see what it’s like,” OLIVIA STRICKER ’20
ward elementary schoolers. Stricker said it will cost each student 5 dollars to get in, however parents and children under elementary school age are free. “It’s a great way to bring the community together and to get the kids who are going to be coming to South eventually to see what it’s like,” Stricker said. All the money raised will be going to the class of 2020, and most of it will go to their prom fund, according to Stricker. “We’re hoping to make some profit
and cover the costs,” Stricker said. Stricker said the class has been planning the carnival since January and there will be 17 different activities available at the carnival, including food, which has to be paid for separately. “There’s a bunch of different games for the kids...like basketball, a sack race, stuff like that,” Stricker said. “There’s going to be two bounce houses, and we’re going to get some pizza, some cotton candy and some other fun food for the kids.” Michael Rennell, a government teacher at South, is the class of 2020’s adviser. He said something like this has been done before at North, but not yet at South. “I did it at North when I was the SA adviser, and it went over really well there, so we’re hoping it’s going to go over really well here,” Rennell said. Rennell said the class is mainly advertising the carnival through flyers. “We’ve already sent an electronic flyer to all of the elementary schools so they can attach it to their newsletter that’s going home, and we also have fliers we’re delivering to all the schools this week,” Rennell said. Andrew Fleming ’20, class vice president, said the class of 2020 decided to aim this fundraising event toward elementary schoolers because it would be easier to plan and they weren’t sure about the success of doing a high school carnival. “We realized it would be either too hit or miss with (high schoolers) coming or not,” Fleming said. “And then our adviser brought up the idea of doing an elementary school carnival. It
IMPORTANT DATES mar.
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Spring Break begins for the district. Return to school is April 9.
apr.
Spring Carnival
Hosted by Class of 2020 Student Council
Face Painting, Obstacle Course, Cotton Candy, Games, and MORE!
For all K-5 students
Friday, April 13 4:30-7:30 Grosse Pointe South Gym INFOGRAPHIC BY IMRAN SIDDIQUI ’20 Admission: $5 for students. FREE for adults and children under 4
still gets us involved in the community, but it’s not to an extent where it would be too hard to plan.” Fleming said the council had many goals in putting on the carnival. “We wanted something we could really plan out thoroughly and work toward so we could all have something big we could show for ourselves,” Fleming said. “We wanted to really have an impact on a certain part of the community while also finding a way to raise money for ourselves.” Stricker said her role as treasurer and being part of the executive board (e-board) involves a lot of organizing. “We all have a certain section of the carnival to oversee, but overall as an e-board together, we’re setting up the advertising, we’re assigning people to different stations... and we’re sending people out to set posters up at all the elementary schools and get posters up at local businesses,” Stricker said. Stricker said there is also a lot of
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work involved in the planning process. According to her and Rennell, there are about 30 student council members, each in charge of an activity. “It’s really great because we have a lot of people willing to help out and they’re really taking a lot of their own stations on themselves,” Stricker said. Rennell said his role as adviser is to guide the students throughout the planning process. “I make the kids do all the planning: they’ve picked the events, they’ve contacted all the vendors we’ll be using, they’re making the purchases we need to make,” Rennell said. Fleming said there is an opportunity for NHS students to volunteer, and any other contributions are welcome as well. “It’s a really fun event and that if anyone would like to get involved, then we’d happily welcome your contribution,” Fleming said. “We’re looking forward to having a really fun event.”
Staff appreciation Week begins and continues all week.
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ne of the biggest concerns of any parent is their child’s safety, and with the approval of a grant from the Michigan Department of Transportation (MDOT) Maire parents are hoping to ensure just that through better traffic signals and other safety measures on Cadieux. According to Maire Principal, Sonja Franchett, the grant proposal has been in the works for two years, under “a collaborative team of Maire parents, Maire teachers, Grosse Pointe City Police, Grosse Pointe Park Police and City Managers.” “A lot of the signs on walking streets, and painting on the roads are very faint,” Franchett said. “So we want to make im-
We want to make improvements so that when children are walking or riding their bikes it’s very clear that this is a school or community area. SONJA FRANCHETT Maire Principal provements so that when children are walking or riding their bikes it’s very clear that this is a school/community area.” Although there hasn’t been any accidents as of yet, many local parents are concerned about unsafe driving habits in the area, including Lauren Carlson, a Maire parent and one of the organizers in writing the grant proposal. “Because Cadieux is an exit off the highway, it is a main artery for traffic to come into the Village; because of the hospital further down Cadieux, there is a pretty serious amount of traffic that comes through,” Carlson said. And according to Carlson, this flow of traffic leads to potentially dangerous driving. “There are a variety of interactions that drivers have with the pedestrians,” Carlson said. “On Friday afternoon, an older gentleman was taking his time to drive through the light, and he was being cautious of kids who were crossing on Waterloo, and he was going very slow; the driver behind him was laying on the horn, and there was kids all over the place. And the driver tried to go over the lane, into oncoming traffic to get around this slow motorist. This is absurd behavior, especially in a school zone.” To alleviate the problem, the grant includes things such as radar speed signs to make it clear to drivers that the area around Maire is a school area. Additionally, “planted buffers” between the sidewalk and the street will be added to ensure further student safety, according to Heidi Hannans, a Maire parent who has also been working on the proposal. “In front of Maire school, the sidewalk goes all the way to the street, and generally, there’s a planted area which demarcates the sidewalk, so some of the grant money will be used to put in a small buffer there,” Hannans said. According to Hannans, the committee working on the grant proposal has been working closely with the Michigan Fitness Foundation, a sub-set of MDOT dedicated to community projects which encourage walking to school. “They (The Michigan Fitness Foundation) have given us their input as to what they feel is reasonable and what they feel the deficiencies are, so I don’t anticipate any situation where we don’t get the grant,” Hannans said. “And if there was I think we would quickly re-submit.”
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SAT/PSAT for Grades 9-11 will take place in the morning. No school for seniors.