4A COTTAGE GROVE SENTINEL March 11, 2015 O PINION Replacing Harrison School building (soon) is an absolute must BY JON STINNETT Sentinel Editor C ottage Grove needs a new Harrison Elementary School, and the community has a good chance in the near future to build its replacement. A couple months ago, I was asked to serve on a committee of about 40 community members, school dis- trict staff and school board representatives tasked with dis- cussing a local option bond levy that could potentially be used to replace the nearly 70-year old building on 10th Street. My reasons for agreeing to serve on the committee were my own, as each member of the committee would likely agree. During numerous visits to Har- rison to cover the activities of students and staff there, I’ve become aware over the years of the cramped conditions at the school and the calls to replace it, and as one of the school’s neighbors, it’s been educational to watch the area around Har- rison bog down with the before and after-school traffi c created by an almost complete lack of parking. There’s also the matter of my daughter, who at 3 ½ years old is scheduled to attend Harrison in the fall of 2016. Like any parent, I want what’s best for my child, and I want a better experience for her, her friends and peers than can cur- rently be had at Harrison. At a tour of the school on Feb. 24, Principal Ali Nice and South Lane Maintenance Supervisor Matt Allen talked of the school’s many shortcomings, a tour re- counted in the March 4 edition of the Sentinel. It’s diffi cult to imagine anyone taking a similar tour of the school and not seeing the need to replace it. Over the years, I’ve done my best to cover local issues fairly while keeping my own personal perspectives out of the equa- tion, and as such the invitation to serve on the Bond Advisory Committee brought up the po- tential that I may be too close to the story to cover it without bias. Looking back, it seems that I may have worked to self-censor a bit with regard to the situa- tion at Harrison — my account of the tour of the school barely scratched the surface of what is wrong with a school building that was built to host far fewer students than currently attend school there in an entirely dif- ferent era for this town. The pic- tures I managed to take of the tour did little to showcase the basic disintegration of the build- ing or the challenges faced by staff to simply make the build- ing comfortable and effective for the daily education of over 400 young people. But make no mistake — Har- rison Elementary School is fall- ing apart, and remodeling the building is not an option when the space needed for an expan- sion cannot be found at the cur- rent site. A replacement must be built, and soon, and school dis- trict personnel believe the tim- ing is right to put the issue be- fore those who have the power to band together to make it hap- pen — local taxpayers. Talk of replacing Harrison waned in recent years, with budget slashing by the School District accompanying a severe economic downturn. But the economy continues to recover, and the opportunity to begin a new bond for Harrison after a signifi cant interest rate decrease on the bond used to build Cot- tage Grove High School means the new school could be built with little to no increase in local property taxes. I believe Cottage Grove has a responsibility to give its young people the best education pos- sible, and a safe, functional and comfortable Harrison School is a big piece of that effort. As such, I’ll be wholeheartedly support- ing a levy to fi nance the con- struction of a new school at the Taylor Street site of the former Cottage Grove High School. In the meantime, I’ll pass coverage of the Bond Advisory Commit- tee’s recommendations to Senti- nel staffer Matt Hollander. The potential bond will be a part of the local conversation for some time to come, as the District is targeting either the May or November 2016 ballot to put the issue before voters. Of similar importance to replacing Harrison will be the decision on potentially using bond funds to make other upgrades in the Dis- trict such as replacing the War- ren H. Daugherty Aquatic Cen- ter, and in the coming months, it will be interesting to see what the committee recommends in regard to those upgrades. In the meantime, the District has set up a survey on its website aimed at gauging public opinion on the potential bond, and I strongly urge those interested to take a few minutes to make their views known. The survey can be found at https://www.surveymonkey. com/s/SchoolBondSurvey. into the sea, then dropped a big section of the galley roof on top of it, breaking Zube’s arm and relieving the desperate crew of one of their two oars. “We did our best to get back to the wreck,” Zube recounted, “but failed, and, believing all hands save ourselves were lost, we got up sail and stood out to sea. As I knew the coast to be a desolate one, I thought it best to keep the boat well out, hoping to fall into the path of steam- ships.” Meanwhile, back on the hard-pressed Emily G. Reed, the captain and surviving crew members — everyone who had chanced to be on the poop of the ship when she struck — had watched in horror as the boat full of men was apparently swatted into the sea by the falling gal- ley roof. Taking refuge as best they could in the stern of the dy- ing ship, they hung on, waiting for daylight, praying that they’d struck the sand at high tide. A few hours later, the fi rst rays of dawn showed them that they had. The receding waters had left the battered hulk of the old freighter in just a few feet of water. Into this they climbed and swam and waded up onto the beach — saddened by what they’d seen and thankful to be alive. A head count revealed that there were just fi ve of them, including the captain’s wife. The captain soon faced the grim duty of reporting the loss of 11 brave men. While he was doing that, four of those men were several miles away off the coast, trying desperately to keep their badly damaged lifeboat afl oat. In the miraculous melee of roiling wa- ter and broken stanchions and chunks of the ship’s galley that had somehow resulted in their escape from certain death, the boat had taken heavy blows, and several holes had been punched in its hull. The desperate men raced against time trying to saw off a piece of one of the waterproof compartments with their jack- knives — a tough task, consid- ering that the entire boat was made of galvanized steel. At length, they managed to wrench a piece off, and this they used to bail out the boat. “It took about half an hour to get the boat empty, and in another half an hour we would have to do it again,” said Zube. The balance of Valentine’s Day passed by on the tiny boat without a hint of rescue, and night found the men wind- burned, ravenously hungry and burning with thirst. They saw lights twinkling through the CONTACT YOUR ELECTED OFFICIALS Cottage Grove City Hall: 942- 5501. www.cottagegrove.org/ Garland Burback, Ward 3: 942-4800 Cottage Grove Mayor Tom Munroe: 942-5501. Kate Price, Ward 4: 954-9810 Lane County Commissioners: Cottage Grove City Councilors: Faye Stewart, East Lane Commissioner Lane County Public Service Building 125 East 8th Street Eugene, OR 97401 Phone: (541) 682-4203 Fax: (541) 682-4616 Mike Fleck, At Large: 942-7302 Heather Murphy, At Large: 942-3444 Jake Boone, Ward 1: 653-7413 Oregon State House of Representatives: Jeff Gowing, Ward 2: 942-1900 District: 007 900 Court Street NE Suite H-288 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: (503) 986-1407 Fax: (503) 986-1130 Email: rep.cedrichayden@ state.or.us Oregon State Senate: Sen. Floyd Prozanski (DEM) District: 004 900 Court Street NE Suite S-319 Salem, OR 97301-0001 Phone: (503) 986-1704 Fax: (503) 986-1080 Email: sen.fl oydprozanski@ state.or.us Rep. Cedric Hayden Offbeat Oregon History Sailors, miraculously saved from wreck, drifted 200 miles BY FINN J.D. JOHN For the Sentinel V alentine’s Day in 1908 was anything but roman- tic for the crew of the 215-foot windjammer Emily G. Reed. The night was dark, the weather heavy and the seas rough as the lookout strained his eyes, hop- ing for a fl ash of light from the Tillamook Rock Lighthouse to tell them where they were. Captain Kessel was a skilled navigator, and he’d seen worse than this. But he was worried about not being able to see the light. According to his calcula- tions, they should be approach- ing it even now. What Kessel didn’t know, though, was that his chronom- eter had broken. He was basing those calculations off bad data. And he was about to learn that the hard way. Around 1:30 a.m., as the lookout strained his eyes east- ward, he suddenly realized the ship was sailing through break- ers. And before anyone could do more than panic, the heavy sail- ing ship had beached itself with a mighty crunching shudder that told of heavy damage. The Emily G. Reed was a nearly 30-year-old hull, likely at least somewhat waterlogged; and the 2,100 tons of coal in her holds bore down mercilessly. With a tremendous cracking the old vessel’s back broke, and the bow lay over to port, fac- ing straight into the teeth of the oncoming breakers. Walls of green water started boarding the stricken ship, carrying scream- ing sailors off into the frigid night. “In a twinkling one of the lifeboats was smashed by a big wave,” First Mate Fred Zube told a reporter for the Portland Evening Telegram, “and the decks were so deep in the boil- ing water that there was no time to get aft, where Captain Kessel and his wife and some of the rest of the crew were.” In desperation, Zube and three other crew members leaped into the remaining lifeboat and cut the lashings as a second foam- fl ecked wall of green water de- scended on the deck. It picked the metal lifeboat up, half full of water, and threw it overboard Please see OFFBEAT, Page 11A The effects of soda and low-nutrient foods on children’s behavior BY JOEL FURHMAN, MD For the Sentinel T he standard American diet, chock full of soda and other sugary drinks, fast foods, and other low-nutrient foods, can have a major impact on the health and lives of our children. Rising rates of child- hood obesity driven by this way of eating have received much attention; however, low-nutrient foods are still having negative $ PUUBHF ( SPWF 4 FOUJOFM 116 N. Sixth Street · P.O. Box 35 · Cottage Grove, OR 97424 ADMINISTRATION: JOHN BARTLETT, Regional Publisher.............................. 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In foreign countries, postage extra. No subscription for less than Ten Weeks. Subscription rates are subject to change upon 30 days’ notice. All subscritptions must be paid prior to beginning the subscription and are non-refundable. Periodicals postage paid at Cottage Grove, Oregon. Postmaster: Send address changes to P.O. Box 35, Cottage Grove, OR 97424. Local Mail Service: If you don’t receive your Cottage Grove Sentinel on the Wednesday of publication, please let us know. Call 942-3325 between 8:30 a.m. and 5 p.m. Advertising ownership: All advertising copy and illustrations prepared by the Cottage Grove Sentinel become the property of the Cottage Grove Sentinel and may not be reproduced for any other use without explicit written prior approval. Copyright Notice: Entire contents ©2015 Cottage Grove Sentinel. effects on the physical and men- tal health of children who are not overweight. Children are not immune to the damaging health effects of the standard American diet, which can set them up for a lifetime of poor health ranging from heart disease to behavior problems and lower cognitive performance. On average, U.S. children and teens consume over 200 calories a day from soda and other sug- ary drinks, and it is estimated that about 14 percent of their calories come from fast food. As a result of the poor diets of American children, more than one-third of normal-weight teenagers (and about half of overweight teenagers) have at least one diet-related risk fac- tor for heart disease. These di- etary patterns have the potential to dramatically affect not only public health but the productiv- ity of our future adult popula- tion; studies have implicated poor diet in limiting intelligence and academic performance, and also have drawn parallels be- tween consumption of sweets during childhood and violence in adulthood. A study on soda consumption found an increase in behavior and attention problems in fi ve- year-old children (as assessed by their mothers) with increasing daily consumption of soda. For- ty-three percent of the fi ve-year- olds in the study drank soda at least once a day. The authors ad- justed their results for potential confounding factors that might affect behavior, such as hours of television and a stressful home environment, and still found a signifi cant association between soda consumption and aggres- sion, withdrawn behavior and poor attention. They proposed that caffeine and/or fl uctuations in blood sugar might be respon- sible for the association between soda and behavior problems. Blood glucose levels do affect the workings of the brain, and habitual high sugar intake has been shown to impair cognitive function. Several previous stud- ies on high school students have also associated soda consump- tion with aggressive behavior, as well as depression and self- harm. Plus, higher sugar sweet- ened beverage consumption is linked to diabetes, cardiovascu- lar disease and cancers. In addition to soda, higher fast food consumption in fi fth grade (four or more times per week) has been associated with poor- er academic progress in math, reading and science between fi fth grade and eighth grade. Children who ate fast food one to three times per week—a com- mon level of intake—compared to those who ate no fast food had lower scores in math. These results suggest that children eat- ing fast food frequently could slow their academic progress. The food habits children de- velop in their early years have a substantial impact on their physical health and mental well being throughout the rest of our lives. Parents need to know this information, so that they can help their children to live healthfully, maintain a positive mindset, and reach their full cognitive potential. Dr. Fuhrman is a #1 New York Times best-selling author and a board certifi ed family physician specializing in life- style and nutritional medicine. Visit his website at DrFuhrman. com. Submit your questions and comments about this column directly to newsquestions@ drfuhrman.com. The full refer- ence list for this article can be found at DrFuhrman.com. Letters to the Editor policy The Cottage Grove Sentinel receives many letters to the editor. In order to ensure that your letter will be printed, letters must be under 300 words and submitted by Friday at 5 p.m. Letters must be signed and must include an address, city and phone number or e-mail address for verifi cation purposes. No anonymous letters will be printed. Letters must be of interest to local readers. Personal attacks and name calling in response to letters are uncalled for and unnecessary. If you would like to submit an opinion piece, Another View must be no longer than 600 words. 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