TOWER the
Wednesday, Oct. 21, 2015 Volume 88 Issue 6 thetowerpulse.net
A WEEKLY TRADITION SINCE 1928
@thetowerpulse
Gross e Pointe S outh, 11 Gross e Pointe B oule vard, Gross e Pointe Far ms, Michigan 48236
VARSITY CLINCHES SPOT IN PLAYOFFS
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PHOTO BY JON THEROS
GRIFFIN BROOKS ’16 // Staff Writer ecuring their playoff spot, varsity football team beat Utica Ford 28-7 last Friday. The Blue Devils started out slowly against Utica’s aggressive football team, giving up an interception and a 53-yard touchdown in the first two minutes of the game. However, they rebounded in the first series of the in the second quarter when Michael Stuhldreer ’16 forced and recovered a fumble at Utica’s 10-yard line. “When we got that fumble recovery on the goal line and punched it in for seven, at that point they completely unraveled. They had momentum, and they lost everything,” Mac Cimmarrusti ’16 said. “That score turned the tide of the game for sure. Michael Stuhldreer turned the tide of that game.” South got on a roll after the turnover. They quickly followed up with a touchdown run from Garrett Hudson ’16 to tie the game 7-7. Later in the second quarter, quarterback Logan Mico ‘17 had a 25-yard touchdown pass to David Burnett ‘16 and a one-yard touchdown run to give South a 21-7 lead going into the second half. South put the game out of reach with a touchdown pass from Mico to Sam Jones ’16 to make the score 28-7. That touchdown capped off a run of 28 unanswered points by the Blue Devils. “When they came out and we threw that pick and scored immediately I
thought this game was coming away from us.” Cimmarrusti said. “Then we did what we have done every game. We just rallied back, got to them, hit them hard, and they didn’t want to play at the end of the game.” The team doesn’t know who they will play in the playoffs, head coach Tim Brandon said. The way Michigan high school football is designed, the division that a team is in is not decided until the regular season is done. A certain number of teams make the playoffs, then the teams are broken into eight divisions, Brandon said. “We don’t know what division we will be in yet,” Brandon said. “Right now we’re on the border between Division I and II.” If the football team is in Division I, they will most likely be in a district with Cass Technical High School, Warren Mott High School and possibly Fordson High School, Brandon said. If they are in Division II, then their district will include East English Village Preparatory Academy and potentially De La Salle High School. The team is excited to advance to the playoffs after not making them last year and look forward to their first round game in two weeks, Will Poplawski ’16 said. “We’re in the playoffs now,” Poplawski said. A little undisciplined sometimes in the game, but we stopped them when we needed to, and we’re going to the playoffs, that’s all that matters.”
Bathrooms closed due to vandalism, infrastructure
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The fall choir show will take place this Friday and Saturday. <see page 3>
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The last home varsity football game will be this Friday against Dakota at 7 p.m.
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Hall monitor Julie Kolomjec said in order to stop this vandalism from happening, hall monitors need to check all the bathrooms on their floor make sure there is nothing bad going on. In addition to the main building and S building bathrooms being vandalized, the third floor IA building bathroom has had issues as well, Hamka said. This bathroom had its stall door striped from its hinges, and the administration has not yet caught the culprit. “Those doors kept coming off,” Hamka said. “Whether they were being torn off or falling off, I don’t know.” Regardless of who did it, he said the district has hired an outside company to renovate the doors. “We have actually gotten a company that have come out and given us a bid on putting all new doors on the stall doors upstairs,” Hamka said. While Hamka said that the third floor bathroom will be fixed soon, it might take a little longer due to the time it takes to order and ship the parts needed. Hamka said the other bathrooms should be up and running by this week. Meanwhile, Hamka said he expects students to uphold the Student Code of Conduct while using school property. “I would continue to encourage our students to use our bathrooms responsibly and be the great kids we know them to be,” Hamka said.
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JD STANDISH ’18 // Staff Writer Vandalism and structural concerns have led to the closures of two boys bathrooms at South--the first in the first floor main building and the second in the first floor S building. Beginning last year, vandalism has continued to be a topic of concern for administrators and is adding to the problems these old bathrooms already have, engineer Mike Torongo said. In addition to the vandalism, the main building bathroom was undergoing renovations, Principal Moussa Hamka said, due to problems with its infrastructure. “Some students were causing a mess in the bathroom,” Hamka said. “But we also know that we had some structural issues.” The main building boys bathroom is the old one that has just recently been worked on, Hamka said. Plumbing issues were fixed by putting new vacuum breakers on the urinals, which suck down the water to be flushed down the pipes, Hamka said. However, We have actually problems persisted, since some gotten a company of the urinal pipes leaked and that have come out required repair. To fix this, the and given us a bid on urinal drains were snaked and putting all new doors on fixed by the South custodians the stall doors upstairs. and engineers, allowing the main building bathroom to be MOUSSA HAMKA reopened. PRINCIPAL The S building bathroom, however, is closed solely because of vandalism, Torongo said. “They (students) kept jamming up the toilet with toilet paper, and actually we found a little bit of everything--pencils, quite a bit of unique items, we’ll say, aside from toilet paper,” Torongo said. This vandalism has been fixed, but it also forced administrators to lock the bathroom full time as a precautionary measure, since they suspect this illegal activity was happening there, Hamka said. The only way to gain access to the bathroom now is for students to ask a hall monitor to unlock it for them. Although the first floor main building being locked didn’t significantly affect Ian Dewey ’18, he said the closure of the S building bathroom is extremely inconvenient. He resents that he has to track down a hall monitor to gain entry to the S building bathroom. “Usually it doesn’t affect me, but sometimes I’m on the brink of death, and my prostate is about to explode,” Dewey said.
Freshman senator elections will take place next Tuesday. <see page 4>