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CAU Women's Basketball Championship Celebration Set For March 28

The Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (SIAC) champion Clark Atlanta University Lady Panthers will be honored during a post-season celebration on the CAU campus on Thursday, March 28 at 1.p.m.

The Lady Panthers basketball team, led by Head Coach Vanessa Moore, captured their first SIAC title since 1999 with a win over Benedict College on March 2. Under the four-year tenure of Athletic Director Dr. Tamika Smith-Jones, Clark Atlanta has won seven championships in five sports.

The Lady Panthers, who were seeded No. 8 fell to the top-seeded Sharks of Nova Southeastern University, 87-60, in the first round of the NCAA South Region Division II Tournament at the Don Taft Arena in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., on March 8.

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Atlanta Hawks to Hold Poetry Slam Finals for Atlanta High School Students Thursday

The Atlanta Hawks Organization will host its fourth annual Poetry Slam Finals Thursday night, March 21. The event will be held at the Hard Rock Café.

Nominations for the Atlanta Hawks Poetry Slam were accepted through February 15, 2013 and open to high school students in grades 9-12 who attend school within 75 miles of Philips Arena. The final round of the competition will feature 15 students from 12 different schools in seven different counties throughout Georgia.

This year's theme was "My Atlanta" and finalists will be judged on connection to the topic, overall message and originality/creativity.

Judges will include Atlanta Hawks Forward Dahntay Jones, Devika Rao of the Atlanta Journal Constitution, Trent North, Director of Community Affairs and Program Compliance for Carrollton City Schools and poet, novelist and editor Collin Kelley.

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Update on Injured Hawks Cheerleader Kristen

Atlanta Hawks cheerleader Kristen was seen last night by physicians at Atlanta Medical Center and released following examination, according to a release from the Atlanta Hawks.

Earlier in the evening, she suffered a fall, landing on her head and neck during a performance between the third and fourth quarter of the Hawks' game against the Dallas Mavericks.

Kristen, whose last name was not provided by the team, was removed from the court on a stretcher after falling.

Hawks coach Larry Drew said that she was doing better.

Check the homepage of the Atlanta Daily World for a video of how Kristen sustained the injury.

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Falcons Stadium Deal Approved by City Council Could Cost Atlanta Up to $900 Million


The biggest major hurdle has been cleared on the path to a new stadium for the Atlanta Falcons as the Atlanta City Council voted late Monday night to approve a funding plan for the new $1 billion retractable roof stadium.

Falcons owner Arthur Blank called it ''a win-win'' and earlier promised that the new stadium will help the city continue to compete for all major events, including the Super Bowl. ''That's the only secret ballot in the NFL,'' he said. ''We'll have to earn it. But this public support is an important piece.''

Mayor Kasim Reed called the arrangement ''a great public-private partnership'' that will benefit the city and the state.

The council voted 11-4 in favor of using city hotel-motel taxes to pay an estimated $200 million toward construction costs and potentially several times that toward costs of financing, maintaining and operating the stadium through 2050.

All things considered, the cost to the public could actually end up being closer to $900 million. Through principal and interest payments, the hotel-motel tax could be as much as $450 million over 30 years and, according to projections cited by the AJC, another $450 million could go to the stadium over the years for operations and expenses through a "waterfall" fund.

The $200 million number is a conservative estimate of the cost. The money going toward the stadium comes from the 39.3 percent of Atlanta's 7-cents-per-dollar hotel-motel tax that is mandated by state law to go to the GWCCA or a stadium project.

In light of those numbers, council member Aaron Watson said he would no longer characterize the public contribution to the project as only the $200 million toward upfront construction.

"I, for one, haven't heard much discussion of what the entire amount is going to be over the next 30 years," Watson said. He added he "had taken some comfort" in the $200 million figure but "had been nervous the number was actually more."

The contract to build the stadium is based on the framework of a deal announced on March 7 at City Hall, which came after months of private negotiations - and several years of planning and studies - involving the governor's office, the World Congress Center Authority and the mayor's office, among others.

After last week's stadium deal announcement City Council President Ceasar C. Mitchell said he was encouraged and promised public hearings in the near future.

Those meeting never happened and the City Council held only one open public forum about the project, at which former Atlanta Mayor Andrew Young voiced support for it, saying the stadium was "another opportunity that gives [Atlanta] a chance to shape the future."

Common Cause Georgia, a government accountability and advocacy group, however, claims that the entire project has been put together behind closed doors and the public has been misled.

"You're left very clearly with the negotiating parties excluding the public while including the public's money," Common Cause board member Wyc Orr has said in earlier statements.

Maria Sporta of Saporta Report wrote early in February that the amount taxpayers would contribute to the project had been determined long before the project was even announced to the public.

"The amount of hotel-motel taxes that would be invested in the project was determined nearly three years ago when the General Assembly agreed to extend the hotel-motel tax collected in the City of Atlanta and in unincorporated Fulton County," she wrote.

Further, money from the hotel-motel tax will go to the stadium for the next 30 years regardless of how much it is.

"Now here is where it gets interesting," writes Saporta. "Under the GWCCA-Falcons agreement, if the hotel-motel tax generated more than the estimated $300 million, the excess taxes would go into a 'waterfall' fund that would go to pay for other debt on the project, or go into a refurbishment and maintenance reserve account, or go into a fund for capital improvements.

"So whether the state provides $200 million or $300 million in bonding capacity, the amount of hotel-motel taxes collected remains the same...All surplus hotel-motel taxes would still be invested in the stadium development."

The vote by the City Council came three days after the Georgia World Congress Center Authority approved the deal and left just a vote by Invest Atlanta, the city's economic development agency, for the stadium project to move forward. The board of Invest Atlanta, which would issue the bonds to fund the public portion of the construction cost, is expected to vote Tuesday.

The Falcons expect to be playing in the new retractable roof venue in 2017, while their current home, the Georgia Dome, would be demolished. By August, the city and the GWCCA will try to work out a deal to buy Friendshp and Mount Vernon Baptist churches on the preferred site south of the Dome.

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Atlanta Dream Signs Sydney Carter To Training Camp Contract

The Atlanta Dream recently announced the team has signed Sydney Carter to a training camp contract.

Carter, a 5-6 guard, was a standout at Texas A&M, helping the Aggies win the 2011 NCAA National Championship while being named the Most Oustanding Player at the Dallas Regionals that season. A three-time co-captain for Texas A&M, Carter was twice named to the Big 12 All-Defensive Team.

Carter averaged 11.2 points, 3.3 rebounds and 3.1 assists as a senior, earning All-Big 12 Second Team honors. She was honorable mention All-Big 12 as both a junior and sophomore, and was a member of the Big 12 All-Freshman Team. She most recently played in one game as a rookie with the Chicago Sky in 2012.

"Sydney is an excellent ball-handler and scorer," said Dream Head Coach and General Manager Fred Williams. "Her speed and quickness enable her to get to the rim, score or pass. She will be a good addition to our squad."

The two-time Eastern Conference Champion Atlanta Dream will tip off its sixth season in the Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA) on May 25 at Philips Arena.

Photo courtesy of Big12sports.com

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