
Cyclist Injured
Still in ICU
originally published May 2, 2007
Sam Lane, Jr. (left) with his younger brother, Ben, and sister, Mary Mills Ritchie, in a family photo from Thanksgiving 2004.
Local cyclists have been in a somber mood after a Prince Avenue accident on Friday, Apr. 27 sent 22-year-old Sam Lane to the Intensive Care Unit at Athens Regional Medical Center. Lane was riding east on Prince (near the Daily Groceries Co-op and the old firehall that houses the Athens-Clarke Heritage Foundation) around 6:20 p.m. when a westbound car turned left onto Hill Street in front of him. Lane was thrown into the air and sustained a skull fracture. He was not wearing a helmet. His brain stem was bruised, according to his father, Sam Lane, Sr. Lane has no other broken bones, and no injuries except for scrapes from the neck down. Police have charged the driver of the car in the accident, Seyborn Gordon, with DUI, failure to yield right-of-way, serious injury by a vehicle, and no proof of insurance.
When Flagpole talked with Lane's father on Tuesday evening, May 1, Sam Lane had been taken off of the sedatives and morphine administered to keep the swelling in his brain stem in check. The young man underwent surgery during the weekend so doctors could insert a device to monitor the pressure on his brain. He still had not regained consciousness since the accident, but he had responded to nurses’ verbal stimulation by squeezing their hands when they asked him to. Lane, Sr. expected that Lane would be in intensive care for as long as two more weeks, with an expected hospital stay of perhaps two months, and rehabilitation to follow, most likely in the family’s hometown of Jackson, MS.
Lane's father was realistic, but hopeful in looking forward. “It is absolutely, positively going to be a long haul and a long road back,” he said. “One hour at a time becomes one day at a time, then a week at a time, and so on… but right now, it’s slow going.” According to doctors, he said, his son is “ahead of the game” given the type of injury he sustained, presumably due in part to his youth and generally good physical condition. Lane, Sr. was unable to predict how full of a recovery to expect over the long-term, but said doctors had told him, though there are no guarantees, that a complete recovery is not impossible.
Lane’s family seemed to be coping well, given the situation. “We’re tilling new ground here that we never want to till again,” his father said. It’s been a real help, he said, that so many of Lane’s friends have offered support and help. “I knew he had a lot of friends, but not to this magnitude. In the face of a really bad thing, you at least learn what kind of a support system you’ve got, and he’s got a good one here.” Members and employees of the Daily Co-op, where Lane (an English major in his junior year at UGA) has been a working member, have organized support activities that include a donation jar at the store (open to all, of course), home-cooked meals for Lane’s family, and a poster at the co-op, to be signed by friends and given to Lane when he regains consciousness. Fellow Critical Mass riders and friends of Lane’s are organizing a ride on Friday, May 4 at 4:30 p.m. to show their support for him and to initiate discussion among themselves of bike safety.
It is a bitter irony that Lane’s accident occurred at the start of the weekend of the Twilight Criterium, the professional bike race that always seems to draw extra numbers of citizens out into the streets on their bikes as well. Lane, a regular cyclist according to friends, was on his way to catch up to a monthly Critical Mass ride when the accident occurred. According to a friend, Ann Rogers, he was running late for the ride because he’d gone home to get a headlight. Several riders on a different monthly group ride, Courteous Mass (organized by local nonprofit BikeAthens) witnessed the accident as they traveled west on Prince Avenue. According to Peter Norris, a BikeAthens member and regular rider, the members of the Courteous Mass ride immediately crossed the street to help, setting up a barricade with their bikes, directing traffic, and administering first aid until police and paramedics arrived. Both Courteous Mass (the BikeAthens-sponsored ride) and Critical Mass (which is held in cities around the world, but is not organized by any particular group) are aimed at increasing cyclists’ visibility on local roads and drivers’ awareness of them, though the two rides differ in approach.
Witnesses have been shaken up for several days after seeing the accident. According to Norris, the glare of the late-day sun could have been a factor in the accident; he noticed it, he said, as he cycled west on Prince just before the accident.
“If some bit of good could come out of this,” Lane's father said, it would be that more cyclists who don’t wear helmets would do so. “This is a big bike town… and that’s a good thing,” he added. “Drivers and bikers need to be careful. They have to be cognizant and aware of each other.” For now, Lane's father said, he appreciates the support the family has received. “You really find out how much people love you in a situation like this.”
Georgia’s Beaches
Who Owns Them, and Who Cares?
originally published May 2, 2007
Dorinda Dallmeyer
Dr. David Dallmeyer and his students lie down on the beach to get a close-up view of the processes happening there as driving winds come in off the water. “You can sit there and watch it change with every variation in wind, tides, waves, currents,” he says. “Nothing is constant about a beach except change.”
The fate of Georgia’s coast has been in the political spotlight recently. The final hours of this year’s legislative session at the Georgia General Assembly (now over, but for the special session to work out the state budget) saw a bill about development on Jekyll Island making its way to a difficult compromise that will preserve the island’s undeveloped south end for now. (If you missed it, you can read about some of the details on that story in last week’s Capitol Impact column, available here.) And although they’ve temporarily faded from view, threats to Georgia’s marshes were in the headlines just a few months ago, too. The natural environments of the coastal salt marshes, barrier islands and beaches are far more intact in Georgia than anywhere else on the East Coast, thanks to a variety of protections that have so far stood the test of time.
Professor David Dallmeyer is a UGA geologist who often takes large groups of students to the coast for education in the field. His groups often explore the still-natural beaches of Jekyll Island. Flagpole recently had a chance to ask Dallmeyer some questions about the Georgia coast.
Dorinda Dallmeyer
“The salt marshes, themselves, are the single most important element of the Georgia coast,” says David Dallmeyer.
Dorinda Dallmeyer
Dorinda Dallmeyer
400,000 Photographs Dramatize The Dead
originally published May 2, 2007
Patrick Snead
Some Athens Academy students last week laid out 400,000 photo-booth-sized photographs of fellow students on their gym floor to represent the 400,000 people estimated by aid organizations to have been murdered in the genocidal war in Sudan’s Darfur region. Max Ruppersburg organized the "laydown" at Athens Academy.
Patrick Snead
Students from all over the country contributed their photographs on the networking web site Facebook. Athens Academy students printed out 4,000 pages with 100 photos each, to dramatize the number of victims estimated to have been murdered in the Darfur genocide.
Patrick Snead
The tiny photographs covered most of the floor in the school’s gym.
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