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TODAY'S
ISSUE
Gwinnett Medical Center
honors volunteer Dick Berry
By Kyle Brogdon
Special to GwinnettForum
LAWRENCEVILLE, Ga., May 9, 2006 -- Dick Berry, longtime volunteer
at Gwinnett Medical Center, was honored recently at the hospital's
annual Volunteer Appreciation Luncheon at the Atlanta Marriott Gwinnett
Place in Duluth. Berry was recognized for volunteering 687 hours
in 2005, more then any other volunteer at GMC. He has donated 4,000
hours since 1997.
Berry resides in Cumming with his wife Janice, who has also served
as a volunteer at GMC. He has been volunteering at Gwinnett Medical
Center for nine years and currently volunteers three days a week.
Berry can be found at the front desk at 7:30 a.m., as he is usually
the first volunteer to arrive. He begins his day by preparing and
setting out materials that are needed for guests and volunteers.
Berry says: "Being part of a team is my favorite thing about
being a volunteer. It is not about an award or ego but about being
dedicated to a cause that you feel strongly about. The volunteers
at GMC have a goal of making the hospital as great as it can be.
GMC is already in the top five percent of hospitals nationwide for
clinical quality, and it's my job to be a part of that support staff
that makes us really great."
Gwinnett
Hospital Volunteer Dick Berry, right, with new Hospital President
and CEO Phil Wolfe.
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Cynthia Chandler, director of volunteer services at GMC, says:
"Dick is such a wonderful volunteer. He truly brings the spirit
of volunteerism with him each day as he volunteers at the front
desk and in our on-call office. He's always there to lend a hand,
often going above and beyond the call - and always with a smile."
More than 250 volunteers from all around the Hospital System also
received recognition for their lifetime years of service.
Five volunteers were recognized for their total number of hours
they have volunteered: Gladys Mickles, 14,200 hours; Marty Henck,
8,950 hours; Betty Walls, 8,250 hours; Bernice Johnson, 7,700 hours;
and Hazel Young, 6,950 hours. GHS board members, Hospital Authority
members and GHS staff attended the luncheon honoring the volunteers.
GHS has several locations throughout Gwinnett County in need of
volunteers. Gwinnett Medical Center - Duluth will open in October,
2006. For more information about volunteering or to become a volunteer
please call 678-442-4318 or go to www.gwinnettmedicalcenter.org.
* * * * *
Gwinnett Hospital System, anchored by flagship
Gwinnett Medical Center, is a not-for-profit healthcare network
providing high quality facilities and services to Gwinnett and the
surrounding community. With over 4,000 employees and 750 physicians,
the System provided care in 2005 to almost 400,000 patients. In
2006, Gwinnett Hospital System received the HealthGrades® Distinguished
Hospital Award for Clinical Excellence, ranking among the top 5%
of all hospitals in the nation for overall clinical performance.
To learn more, visit www.gwinnettmedicalcenter.org.

ELLIOTT
BRACK
Aurora Theatre's "Guys and Dolls"
is stunning performance
By Elliott Brack
Editor and Publisher
GwinnettForum.com
MAY 9, 2006 -- A stunning performance! That's the best way to describe
the Aurora Theatre's current staging in Duluth. Its production of
Guys and Dolls captivates the audience. The theater is moving to
facilities in Lawrenceville in August, with Guys and Dolls continuing
in Duluth through the end of May., and to be the final performances
in Duluth.

Brack
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If you like live stage presentations, the sheer exuberance and
talent will impress you. And if a fan of Damon Runyon's New York,
you'll see characters like Harry the Horse, Benny Southstreet, and
Big Louie from Chicago you think were coming direct off Broadway,
what with their authentic accents, their period zoot suits and fancy
dress.
And once the musical is over, you leave humming the familiar tunes.
If like me, you'll wind up for the next two or three mornings with
one of those lyrics continually running through your mind.
"I got the horse right here, his name is Paul Revere
"
"Adelaide, Adelaide, ever-loving Adelaide
"
"
..I've never been in love before
."
Ah, local theater is wonderful and close to home, providing a cultural
bonanza to the community, and often enjoyed with folks you know
in the audience, friends and neighbors. Any community is lucky to
have good, local theater available.
Most responsible for theater at the Aurora is the husband-wife
team of Anthony Rodriquez and Carol Ann Pence. They've put in 10
years diligence, produced ever-more-professional offerings, and
gained credibility with the local community. And it all took place
in space that was once a department store in downtown Duluth, retro-fitted
into an intimate theater, though with a small staging area.
Now after considerable community discussion and offers, the theater
is moving to Lawrenceville, to find much more spacious facilities
in a converted church. But these new facilities will not be available
until early next year.
Lawrenceville city officials, who have been eager to lure the Aurora
to their town, had hoped that the new facilities would be completed
in time for the 2006-7 season. When it became apparent they would
not be on time, the city made the fourth floor of the new city hall---up
until then unfinished expansion space---available to the theater
troupe. That's where the Aurora will open its first performance
on August 14, to be the musical, Lucky Stiff. .And happily, there
will be plenty of parking space around the new site.
But back to the present run in Duluth: a strong performance by
the cast gave Guys and Dolls an authentic atmosphere of downtown
New York.
The character that we think gave the best performance was Bethany
Irby as Miss Adelaide, the leading female, who is Nathan Detroit's
fiancée of 14 years. She belts out songs of the musical with
depth and range. And her authentic thick New York accent makes the
role even more enjoyable. She was perfect. And Detroit's role by
none other than Rodriquez was also solid, as his deep voice penetrates
the audience. In case you don't remember, the role of Adelaide was
played performed in the movie by Vivian Blaine.
In the co-starring roles of Miss Sarah Brown and Sky Masterson,
Stacey Stone and Robert Egizio, play the roles skillfully, though
in less bombastic terms than the Adelaide-Nathan roles.
It's not an easy play to stage, what with lots of dancing, movement,
and continual set changes. Yet the skillful interpretation and adaptation
came off smoothly.
Do yourself a favor: get tickets now before the May 28 closing
(the theater was virtually full when we attended)
. to see
the Aurora's final, and excellent, performance in Duluth.
ABOUT
OUR SPONSORS
The
public spiritedness of our sponsors allows us to bring GwinnettForum.com
to you at no cost to readers. Today's featured sponsor is Mingledorff's,
an air conditioning distributor of the Carrier Air Conditioning
Company. Mingledorff's corporate office is located at 6675 Jones
Mill Court in Norcross Ga. and is proud to be a sponsor of the Gwinnett
Forum. With 18 locations in Georgia and South Carolina, Mingledorff's
is the convenient local source with a complete line for the quality
heating, ventilating, air conditioning, and refrigeration parts
and supplies you need to service and install HVAC/R equipment. Product
lines include Carrier, Bryant, Payne, Totaline and Aeroseal. For
all of your HVAC needs, and information on the products Mingledorff's
sells, visit www.mingledorffs.com
and www.carrier.com.
For a list of other sponsors of this forum, go to: http://www.gwinnettforum.com/about/sponsors.htm

FEEDBACK
5/9: Remembers Nixon claiming his opinions
were above law
Editor, the Forum:
I agree with the recent commentary on Democrats in that they will
need more than Bush bashing as a campaign platform. However Republicans
would be wise for once to hold the man accountable for his blatant
disregard for our Constitution. I am attaching this link to a Boston
website which lists over 750 signing statements from the President
in which he both signs a law into the record while claiming to have
the authority to disregard it if his interpretation differs than
the actual law.
The site is: (Click
here)
We have had at least one other president who made the assumption
that his opinions were both above the law as well as superseding
the law. His name was Richard Millhouse Nixon. I would like to remind
everyone that even Republicans at the time had voted to impeach
him prior to his resignation, because of his actions, not because
of his party. Republicans need to stop this almost cultish support
of anything Republican just as much as Democrats need to offer some
solutions rather than Bush bashing as campaign strategy.
The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act court provides for wiretapping
to be allowed right now on any suspected threat to our nation, while
also granting the authorities 72 hours to get judicial approval
from FISA judges. Only four of over thousands of these requests
since the law was created have been denied. This evidence is enough
for me to warrant impeachment of any sitting president, Democrat
or Republican. It is duplicitous at best to demand impeachment for
sexual indiscretions of a personal nature while tolerating blatant
violations of the Constitution.
-- Roger Hagen, Lilburn
UPCOMING
Gwinnett UGA schedules civil rights "rolling classroom"
University of Georgia undergraduates will have the opportunity
to explore civil rights history through a summer rhetoric course
offered by UGA's Franklin College of Arts and Sciences at the Gwinnett
campus in Lawrenceville.
The course, Speech Communication 3330: Rhetoric of the Civil Rights
Movement, includes a four-day "rolling classroom" tour
of museums, grave sites and historic locations of important civil
rights events in Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee and Georgia.
The speech communication course is open to undergraduate students
enrolled in UGA degree programs in Gwinnett or the main campus in
Athens. It meets the universitys cultural diversity requirement
and the Franklin College's multicultural requirement. Students must
participate in the tour to receive class credit.
The class will meet at UGA's Gwinnett campus, off Highway 316 at
Collins Hill Road, Monday through Thursday, 11 a.m. to 1:45 p.m.,
June 8-July 5. The 1,500-mile bus tour is scheduled for June 30-July
3 with stops in Anniston, Birmingham, Montgomery and Selma, Ala.;
Meridian, Jackson and Greenwood, Miss., including the Delta region;
Memphis, Tenn.; and Atlanta.
During the trip, "foot soldiers' of the civil rights movement
will speak to the students about their personal experiences, and
students will present parts of speeches that were given at each
location during a critical moment in civil rights history. According
to Rita Van Zant, speech communication instructor with UGA's Gwinnett
campus, interacting with historical figures and seeing the civil
rights sites firsthand gives students a better understanding of
the events and how rhetoric was used.
Van Zant first taught the summer course in May 2004: |"I created
this course because I teach rhetoric and there are very few times
in our nation's history where rhetoric was so important. It isn't
just the speeches, it is the media framing of the coverage and how
that affected the movement, the legal efforts of each side, the
various methods used by forces to persuade others that their side
was correct."
Students pay tuition and fees for the class, which is offered in
the first summer session, and an additional $100 for the "rolling
classroom" tour. Eligible students can have their tuition and
fees covered by the HOPE scholarship. Students are responsible for
lunch and dinner and any personal expenses incurred during the bus
trip.
Application or enrollment questions should be directed to Reginald
Moss, academic advisor in the Franklin College for Gwinnett, at
678/407-5230 or at rlmoss@franklin.uga.edu.
Any non-student interested in participating in the tour should
contact Van Zant at 828/699-6997 or at ugarvz@aol.com.
NOTABLE
Bowen Family Homes seeks $1 million for two charities
With help from sports personality and former Atlanta Falcons running
back Jamal Anderson, Bowen Family Homes broke ground last week on
the hometown builder's Healing House. The event kicked off The Bowen
Family Homes Healing House Raffle, through which the builder hopes
to raise $1 million for two of the area's top healthcare organizations
- Shepherd Center and Children's Healthcare of Atlanta.
Once David Bowen toured the Shepherd Center, he immediately wanted
to take action. "I was overwhelmed by the patients at the facility,
their many needs and the dedication shown by the staff there,"
says Bowen. "And Children's Healthcare is the same; both are
serving Atlanta-area families in irreplaceable ways. It is the custom
in our family and our company to support the community and charities
involving children, and this is another way we can help."
The Bowen Family Homes Healing House Raffle extends a long tradition
of giving back to the communities where Bowen builds. "Our
Texas Division was successful in raising $1 million in 2004 and
2005 for similar organizations, so we wanted to do this in the Atlanta
market as well," said Bowen. "We want to help Shepherd
and Children's meet their fiscal needs, but we also hope to bring
community awareness in regards to these organizations and the needs
of the families they serve."
Bowen Family Homes is building the Healing House in part through
donations of time, materials and labor from participating vendors,
including E&E Electrical Contractors, Inc., Ideal Development
Concepts, Robert Bowden, Inc., Pioneer Lighting, Zimmerman Painting,
Village Construction, Inc., RCS, Inc., Garner Plumbing, Case Lumber,
Level Creek Grading, Voyles Overhead Doors, Stock Supply, Georgia
Stone, Georgia Floors, Green Enterprises, Stuart Mechanical Services,
Mill Creek Concrete and Total Comfort Insulation.
For more information on the Bowen Home Raffle, visit the Bowen
Web site at www.bowenfamilyhomes.com/healinghouseraffle
or call 1-877- MY BOWEN.
RECOMMENDED
- An invitation: What
Web sites, books or restaurants have you enjoyed? Send us your
best recent visit to a restaurant or most recent book you have
read along with a short paragraph as to why you liked it, plus
what book you plan to read next. --eeb
GEORGIA
TIDBIT
Largest U.S. military airplane, C-5 Galaxy,
built in Marietta
The Lockheed-Georgia
C-5 Galaxy can carry 135 tons of cargo, making it the largest
production aircraft built in the United States. It is a vital part
of any military action in which large amounts of material need to
be airlifted around the world. It has a wingspan of just under 223
feet (compared with over 225 feet for the Boeing 747-400XQLR) and
is 247 feet long and 65 feet high. It has four engines. Until the
release of the Soviet Antonov An-124 Condor in 1982, the C-5 was
the largest and heaviest plane in operation.
The first C-5, built at Lockheed-Georgia (now Lockheed Martin)
in Marietta, first flew in 1968. The first Galaxy C-5A model rolled
off the assembly line on March 2 of that year. Delivery to the U.S.
Air Force started in 1970 with the C-5A model and ended in March
1989 with the C-5B model. In 1998 dollars, each C-5A cost about
$152.8 million, and each C-5B cost about $179 million.
In 2000, the U.S. Air Force Air Mobility Command had 126 C-5s in
operation. The plane was designed for carrying large amounts of
cargo and personnel. Its upper deck can carry 96 passengers and
crew members. At both ends of the aircraft large doors can swing
open to the cargo deck, and two rows of vehicles can drive on and
off at the same time. This lower cargo deck can carry a wide range
of cargoes, such as a 74-ton folding mobile scissors bridge; or
two M1-A1 Abrams main battle tanks; or seven UH-1 Huey helicopters;
or 270 personnel (reserved for emergencies and special operations);
or 135 tons of cargo.
In January 1999, the $454 million C-5 avionics modernization program
was awarded to Lockheed Martin at Marietta. This includes creating
new cockpit displays navigation systems, and autopilots. In December
2001, Lockheed Martin was also awarded a $1.1 billion contract for
the system development and demonstration phase of the C-5 reliability
enhancement and re-engining program which will develop the changes
needed to retrofit C-5s with a more reliable and efficient engine
that can provide more than 50,000 pounds of thrust.
THOUGHT
OF THE DAY
Here's another reason
to participate in your government
"The punishment which the wise suffer who refuse to take part
in the government, is to live under the government of worse men."
-- The philosopher Plato, via Roy McCreary, Dacula.
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is an online community commentary for exploring pragmatic and sensible
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