The Rockdale News Rockdale News Digital Edition November 5, 2014 | Page 8
Perspectives
Wednesday, Nov. 5,, 2014
Online Poll Question
Our Thoughts
What do you think about Georgia’s
new quarantine policy for people
who have been to outbreak countries?
In FAvor, Public Health is first
43
In Favor, but there should be
compensation for lost wages
8
Not sure
1
Not in Favor
5
Facebook Feedback
A Newton County
High School teacher’s classroom was
sanitized and the
teacher will not be returning
to teach until after receiving
medical clearance after her
husband reportedly returned
from Sierra Leone recently.
Suzie Zaman Brown: The
husband has no symptoms, which means
he’s not sick or contagious. This means
the wife/teacher could not possibly be sick
or contagious. It’s only spread through
bodily fluids. The fact that they sanitized
the classroom, which wasn’t necessary,
only added to panic. If the husband starts
showing symptoms then this teacher would
be considered a contact and would need to be
monitored.
Patty Jones: Who sanitized the
classroom? What did they use to sanitize
the classroom? What happened with the
materials that were used to sanitize the
classroom
Patty Jones: Why was sanitizing the
room not necessary? Nobody knows for sure
how the virus is spread. I don’t believe the
CDC
T. Pat Cavanaugh is the publisher of The Rockdale News and The Covington News. He can be reached at [email protected]
My grandmother knew
Lizzie Borden
Marc
Munroe
Dion
Columnist
To find out
more, visit
www.creators.
com
My grandmother arrived
in America eight years after
many people say Lizzie Borden
ax-murdered both her parents
on Aug. 4, 1892. A tiny, illiterate
woman who lived in America
for 67 years and never learned
to speak English, Delina Marie
Dion was so ungrateful for her
cotton mill job that she became
a socialist. She sent four boys to
World War II.
I still live in Fall River, Mass.,
where the murders occurred,
a town twitching with heroin
addiction, gang violence and a
12 percent unemployment rate.
In my grandmother’s time,
there was more work around,
all of it available to 8-year-old
children. Cotton mills were
“If you’ve never heard an exsharecropper talk about giving
one bale of every two to the ‘boss,’
or a pre-union coal miner talk
about 14-hour, no-overtime shifts
under the mountain, you can blab
about the ‘free market’ all you want
and not know what the hell you’re
saying.”
kept warm and humid, a perfect
breeding ground for germs.
Tuberculosis killed workers.
Children died like kittens
— one “mew” and gone. My
grandmother lost seven children.
The poor medicated their lives
with whiskey and the Catholic
Church.
Read more