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TODAY'S
ISSUE
Backpacks
for kids can be bad for their physical health
By David M. Richardson, D.C.
Special to GwinnettForum.com
(Editor's note: today's author is a chiropractor
and a graduate of Georgia Southern University and Life University.
He is also a board member of the Suwanee Business alliance. He
has been in practice since 1984 and has an office on Horizon Park
Dive in Suwanee. His web site is www.RichardsonChiro.com
-- eeb)
AUG. 7, 2006 -- If a woman carrying an oversized purse for a day
of shopping or a man toting his own golf bag for nine holes of golf
triggers shoulder and back aches at the end of the day, imagine
the daily stress for a child carrying 25-50 percent or more of their
body weight in a school backpack.

Richardson
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This is a growing health concern, not only for the school children
of Gwinnett County but also those in school systems nationwide.
If you have children, grandchildren, or friends with children attending
school, this message should be of interest to you.
What are the reasons for this physical stress on our children?
Lack of time is a major factor. The push to get in more curriculums,
the growing sizes of our schools, and the tightly-staggered busing
schedules accommodating elementary, middle, and high school transportation
needs, all contribute to the problem. Five minute breaks between
classes combined with a long physical distances between classrooms
and over-crowded hallways don't allow students enough time to get
to their lockers. There is not enough time to swap out books and
get to their next destination before the bell rings.
To quote one Gwinnett County high school student: "I get five
minutes between my classes. In one class I'm at one end of the school
in a first floor classroom. When the bell rings, I practically run
to get from that class to my next class on the second floor, on
the other side of the school. I'm out of breath by the time I get
there from rushing and carrying books
."
Lack of time between the last class and the first bus arrivals also
prevents students from dropping off unnecessary books at the end
of the day. The result is that children arrive at school and leave
school carrying all of their books in their backpacks, carrying
them all day since there's no time between classes to drop them
off (or pick them up).
Consider this quote from a local high school PTA member in response
to an email exchange on this same topic: "Oh, I know where
you are coming from. We went through eight weeks of therapy last
year with our [sophomore] daughter [82 pounds / backpack 61 pounds]."
When discussing problems relating to the neck, back, and spine,
there is a tendency for people to think only of muscles, discs,
joints, or bones. Excessive backpack weight can also have a damaging
effect on delicate nerves branching off from the spine. Since the
nervous system controls and coordinates all functions in the body,
including all organs, the symptoms that manifest may include problems
not normally associated with the spine.
It is beyond the space to cover all aspects of this issue, but it
is a topic worthy of discussion and will hopefully support some
future solutions. Until remedies are in place, if you have a child
with back or neck complaints, take him or her to a health care professional
as soon as possible. Excessive spinal weight bearing over time is
detrimental to posture and health in general, and may result in
large numbers of the next generation going into adulthood with chronic
health problems.
ELLIOTT
BRACK
More parents want schools to start after Labor
Day
By
Elliott Brack
Editor and Publisher
GwinnettForum.com
AUG. 7, 2006 -- Evidence is coming in that the public school systems
in Georgia should re-consider their wholesale adoption of a pre-Labor
Day beginning of school. The death of another football player already
this season, in Rockdale County last week, only underscores the
problems.

Brack
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Needed more than anything is for school systems, their boards and
employees, to halt lock-step thinking, and consider alternative
approaches that have the possibility of at least being as good an
approach, if not better, than the present calendar.
Consideration One: the deaths to student-athletes on the
searing football fields during the Dog Days of summer.
With coaches pushing their young charges to get into condition,
and the necessary exercises and sweltering drills in intensive heat,
this can lead to dehydration and exhaustion. If school started later
in the year, the opening of football practice could start later
instead of during the high heat of mid summer.
Football players are not the only ones involved. Band and drill
teams begin practice, too. All suffer from the heat. Parents are
concerned about all these young charges being able to survive the
extreme heat of summer. If delaying the drills a week or two would
stem one or two deaths, it would be worth the change alone.
Consideration Two: energy usage. Cutting out classroom time
during the hottest days of summer (July and August), and shifting
these class days to May, when it's not so hot, would be a major
savings to air conditioning across the entire state. Remember who
eventually pays the cost of this current high air conditioning bill:
the public taxpayer in each county.
A fear popping up this summer has been the possibility of electrical
BrownOuts. Should this happen during a heat wave, it would only
increase the problems, and no doubt cause more than a few deaths.
Though the energy the schools could save by not having school in
July and August is not large, still every little bit counts when
the electrical grid is threatened. Taxpayers would also benefit
from not paying higher air conditioner bills during high summer
months.
Consideration Three: the way schools schedule classes is
today given as a major reason to start school early, so that students
will finish a unit, and be tested before Christmas. This is semantics,
and comes from the way the school systems schedule teaching of content.
With schools trying to schedule equal semesters each year, they
break into two equal class segments the content being offered in
various classes. But what is being taught is the total year's English
class. It really doesn't matter if Chaucer is taught before or after
Christmas.
If schools would throw out the semester system, teachers could
schedule tests after 75 days (just before Christmas). When school
began again in January, they would simply pick up the subject content
where they left off, and test after reasonable times the additional
matter.
With schools locked into the "equal semester" approach
when teaching half a class material, it complicates and obstructs
the calendar, for no logical reason. Careful planning of subject
matter could get around this testing point, if the course schedule
were attacked in this way.
Consideration Four: perhaps the biggest barrier to starting
school later is the obstructions put up by school officials. They
resist change mightily. Even when Georgia was adopting a semester
calendar, lamentations came from educators continuously.
Yet Georgia parents are getting more vocal in wanting to get the
state back to a traditional start of school after Labor Day. More
parents are complaining about heat strokes, energy waste, and school
officials being set in their ways.
Parents wanting school to start after Labor Day won't go away.
Change can happen. What we need is for school boards and officials
to start understanding this.
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FEEDBACK
8/7: Wants candidates to talk real issues,
not sling muc
Editor, the Forum:
I've voted in every primary and every election since I was old
enough to vote (I'm 55). Usually, I can vote for the platform and
accept that I won't always love the candidate.
In this election, not one candidate has stepped forward to talk
about real issues and tell me what they will do to make my county
and my state stronger and better. The name calling and mud slinging
has been so offensive, I think it demonstrates very poor character.
What a waste of their time and money, what a constant irritation
to listeners, and what a poor example they set for the children
who are watching and learning how adults communicate.
So, while I drag myself to the polls to vote, it's with complete
cynicism. I'm not apathetic - I'm completely disgusted. I voted
against Cathy Cox and Mark Taylor in the Democratic Primary. I'll
vote against somebody in the runoffs. Perhaps the exit polls should
track who the voters voted "against" instead of "for"?
-- Pat Sabin, Lilburn
UPCOMING
Suwanee
mayor gives State of City address Tuesday night
Mayor Nick Masino will offer the annual State of the City address
at the August 9 Suwanee Business Alliance meeting at Suwanee City
Hall. The meeting, which is open to the public, begins at 6 p.m.;
refreshments from The Fresh Market will be served. Masino will share
some of the City's major accomplishments over the past year and
provide information about significant upcoming projects. The Suwanee
Business Alliance, a network of Suwanee area businesses that fosters
communication and commerce among members and supports the Suwanee
community, hosts the State of the City address each year.
Georgia Gwinnett College
aims focus at improved services
In coordination with Gov. Sonny Perdue's recent launch of a "Customer
Service Improvement Initiative," Georgia Gwinnett College President
Daniel J. Kaufman says that GGC is poised to implement a plan for
improved customer service beginning in August, when students first
arrive on campus. The initiative unites all state agencies in an
effort to make Georgia the best-managed state in the country.
Dr. Kaufman says: "Serving students is the central focus of
the learning experience. Our campus initiative will provide the
highest quality learning experience using the most advanced technologies
- allowing students to access vital information both on and off
campus."
Earlier this year, Kaufman appointed Gene Ruffin, GGC library director,
as the college's customer service champion to launch, guide and
manage improvements that will make the services provided by each
campus "Faster, Friendlier and Easier" to access.
Ruffin says: "We have a unique opportunity as the first college
in the nation to implement a customer service culture from day one.
It will be a natural part of our daily business operations allowing
us to make daily improvements."
Georgia Gwinnett College is now accepting applications for fall
2006, its inaugural class. Current college students with at least
45 college credit hours who are interested in completing a bachelor's
degree in biology, psychology or business should apply online at
www.ggc.usg.edu
or www.gacollege411.org.
Classes for freshman begin fall 2007.
NOTABLE
Suwanee
selects BRPH firm to design new city hall
BRPH's
winning city hall design
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Suwanee City Council has selected BRPH of Marietta to design Suwanee's
new City Hall, expected to open at Town Center in early 2009. BRPH
was selected from among three design competition finalists, each
of whom created a design concept for the new City Hall. (A poll
by Gwinnett Forum showed 31 percent of readers liked the winning
design. )
BRPH's initial concept is of a two-story, 20,000 square foot building
that features an arch-shaped roofline that echoes the Town Center
amphitheater stage; open, glass front; 95-foot multipurpose tower;
marble-panel facade; grand foyer; and second-floor Council Chambers.
The complete City Hall design process is expected to take about
a year. Construction is slated to begin in September 2007.
Gwinnett to host women's
tennis tournament this fall
The Gwinnett Sports Commission reports that the 2006 U.S. Tennis
Association Women's 50k Classic will be held in Gwinnett November
13-20, 2006, says Peter Sherrard of the Gwinnett Sports Commission.
Gwinnett County was chosen as the 2006 tournament venue site because
of the amenities provided to the tennis players and their families.
A total of 60 professional tennis players from around the world
are expected to compete for the title. The site of the tournament
will be Collins Hill Athletic Club, which is a full-service tennis
and health club facility in Lawrenceville.
The Gwinnett Sports Commission and Collins Hill Athletic Club partnered
to bring this tournament to Gwinnett. Aubrey Jackson, Executive
Director, Collins Hill Athletic Club, says: "It is a great
feeling to know that we have a sports commission that recognizes
the economic impact of sports and I am excited we decided to partner
together to host this event."
In addition to the great sporting event, this classic is expected
to bring in 450 hotel room nights and generate more than $60,000
in economic impact.
The United States Tennis Association is the national governing
body for the sport of tennis and the recognized leader in promoting
and developing the sport's growth on every level in the United States,
from local communities to the crown jewel of the professional game,
the U.S. Open.
For more information on the event, contact Peter Sherrard at the
Gwinnett Sports Commission at 770-814-6052 or Aubrey Jackson at
678-985-9004 at Collins Hill Athletic Club.
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
Gold rush
into Cherokee Nation called "Great Intrusion"
By late 1829, north Georgia, known at the time as the Cherokee
Nation, was flooded by thousands of prospectors lusting for gold.
Niles' Register reported in the spring of 1830 that there were four
thousand miners working along Yahoola Creek (near Dahlonega) alone.
While in his 90s, Benjamin
Parks recalled the scene in the Atlanta Constitution (July 15,
1894):
Parks
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"The news got abroad, and such excitement you never saw. It
seemed within a few days as if the whole world must have heard of
it, for men came from every state I had ever heard of. They came
afoot, on horseback and in wagons, acting more like crazy men than
anything else. All the way from where Dahlonega now stands to Nuckollsville
[Auraria] there were men panning out of the branches and making
holes in the hillsides."
The sudden influx of miners into the Cherokee Nation was known
even at the time as the Great Intrusion. One writer said in the
Cherokee Phoenix, "Our neighbors who regard no law and pay
no respects to the laws of humanity are now reaping a plentiful
harvest. . . . We are an abused people." But there was little
the Cherokees could do; it seemed the louder they protested, the
more eagerly the miners came.
Gold rush towns sprang up quickly in north Georgia, particularly
near the center of the gold region in present-day Lumpkin County.
Auraria became an instant boomtown, growing to a population of 1,000
by 1832. The county seat, called Licklog at the time, in 1833 became
known as Dahlonega, for the Cherokee word tahlonega, meaning golden.
Within a few months after its establishment nearly 1,000 people
were crowded into the settlement, with about 5,000 people in the
surrounding county.
THOUGHT
OF THE DAY
We clearly know winner
of one war
"The only winner in the War of 1812 was Tchaikovsky."
-- Solomon Short
ADDITIONAL
UNDERWRITER
Seersucker Suit Society
An additional special underwriter today is the Seersucker
Suit Society. You can be cool and crisp during the summer
when you sport a seersucker suit. It works for both men and women
during the warmer weather, and epecially during Dog Days. You
will find that those who are attired in other hotter suits and
outfits will admire your style when you wear seersucker suits.
They are classics! These great suits don't get out of fashion,
and can last for years. Do your part by striking a blow for fashion
(and coolness) by proudly wearing your seersucker in good taste.
Visit
our web site to learn more.
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