June 30, 2017 Alex City Outlook

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EXTRA! EXTRA! CELEBRATING 125 YEARS

Lighting the way for Alexander City & Lake Martin since 1892

Friday, June 30, 2017 • Vol. 125, No. 129 • www.alexcityoutlook.com • 75¢

Special section celebrates 125 years of The Outlook service to Alexander City and the entire Lake Martin Community with a special A special logo has been section that looks back at the featured in the pages of the paper’s history, the headlines newspaper over the last few printed in its pages, how things weeks – a symbol that The have changed and what the Outlook is celebrating its 125th future may bring. year. You will hear from owner Today, we kick off a Kenneth Boone, former celebration of 125 years of Editor KA Turner as well as By MITCH SNEED Editor

readers, prominent citizens and former employees about what the paper means to them. In addition to the big news events covered by the paper, there is a special section that highlights the top athletes that graced the pages of The Outlook. While newspapers in See 125 • Page 3

County schools take action on personnel moves

WHATLEY: Special session is very likely

By DONALD CAMPBELL Staff Writer

Personnel matters were the order of the day during a special call meeting of the Tallapoosa County Board of Education Thursday afternoon. Despite board members Matilda WoodyardHamilton and Randy Anderson being absent from the proceedings, the meeting was able to proceed with the other three members and Superintendent Joseph Windle in attendance. With several positions still left to fill, the board approved hiring Alicia Peters as an English and Language Arts teacher at Horseshoe Bend, Samantha Mask as an ELA teacher at Dadeville High School, Ben Burnett and Andrew Padgett to teach science at Dadeville High School, Melissa Box as a Pre-K teacher at Dadeville Elementary School and Rance Kirby to become the new assistant principal at Dadeville Elementary School. The board briefly discussed the positions remaining to be filled, many of which would be resolved during the next board meeting. With several principal contracts up, the board voted to approve renewing See SCHOOLS • Page 7

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Donald Campbell / The Outlook

Dorothy (Addie Caldwell), the Scarecrow (Kahlia Wilson), and the Tin Man (Luke Walker) prepare to follow the Yellow Brick Road during the Dadeville Summer Arts Enrichment Camp’s performance of “The Wizard of Oz.”

Summer arts program draws to a close Tales Around the World,” at 10 a.m. Even though they kept Elementary school the overall story the same, students from Dadeville and Dadeville’s participants put Horseshoe Bend gathered their own spin on the classic throughout the month of June tale, relocating Dorothy’s at their respective schools home to Alabama and for the 2017 Summer Arts Dorothy declaring that, after Enrichment Camp. The camp she had landed in Oz, she culminated Thursday morning must be somewhere north of with an on-stage performance Birmingham. in front of well receiving At Horseshoe Bend, their audiences. Dadeville’s performance consisted of performance began at 9 four separate stories under a.m. with “The Wizard of the banner of “Tunes & Tales Oz,” while Horseshoe Bend Around the World.” The opened their show, “Tunes & show began with the German By DONALD CAMPBELL Staff Writer

STAFF REPORT TPI Staff

Low

54708 90050

By MITCH SNEED Editor

tale of “The Pied Piper of Hamelin,” continued with the Native American story “The Sun and the Moon,” then told the Namibian story “How the Zebra Got its Stripes,” before concluding with the classic British folktale “Goldilocks and the Three Bears.” The four stories were sandwiched between a musical number, “Tour the World.” Both Ashley Gresko, the camp administrator at Horseshoe Bend, and Christie Davis, who administered the Dadeville sessions, said See PROGRAM • Page 7

State Senator Tom Whatley said that despite the likelihood of a special session to address some important issues including prison reform, the recently completed legislative session was productive. In a sit-down with The Outlook, Whatley speculated on what a recent court ruling meant to the urgency of action on the state’s prison and the successes on other fronts during session. Whatley “I do think that a special session is extremely possible,” Whatley said. “I don’t mean to speak for the governor, but we’ve gotten a letter from the federal government and we’ve now received an order from the court. There’s no question that we have to address it.” Whatley said that there were some solid ideas on prisons during the session, but neither cleared both branches of the legislature. He thinks some answers can and must be reached sooner, rather than later. “We had a prison plan and I voted for the prison plan that came out,” See SESSION • Page 3

TPI earns 20 awards from Alabama Press Association

Today’s

Weather High

Prison reform, infrastructure concerns could be addressed

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USPS Permit # 013-080

Lake Martin

Lake Levels

490.56 Reported on 6/29/17 @ 6 p.m.

LACEY HOWELL 256.307.2443

laceyshowell@gmail.com 5295 Highway 280, Alex City, AL

Work produced by Tallapoosa Publishers has been recognized as some of the state’s best in the 2017 Alabama Press Association’s Better Newspapers Contest. It was announced earlier this month that TPI had earned 13 awards for editorial content and seven for advertising. In addition to these awards, winners in 17 additional categories will be announced Saturday, July 8 at the APA Summer Convention in Orange Beach. Publisher Steve Baker said the awards reflect the staff’s commitment to an outstanding product and serving the needs of the community. “I am happy with how our staff members placed among the

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competition,” Baker said. “Awards are nice but they are not the reason we dedicate ourselves to producing our publications. We feel privileged to tell the story, be the watchdog, and keep the permanent record of Tallapoosa County and the people who call it home. We produce an award-winning quality newspaper every day, and I consider myself lucky to lead such a committed team.” Editor Mitch Sneed took four firstplace awards, two seconds and two thirds in the contest. Sneed’s firsts included Best Spot News Story in Division B for “Judge admits sexting,” Best Spot News Photograph in Division B for “Brawl Kenneth Boone / The Outlook at City Hall,” Best Human-Interest column in Division D with his This photo entitled ‘Supermoon Spectacular’ was judged as Dadeville Record piece entitled “Face the Best Feature Photo in the small daily class in the Alabama See AWARDS • Page 3 Press Association’s Better Newspapers Contest.

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