Archives
 By  Staff Reports Published 
2:51 am Wednesday, September 8, 2004

Exactly whose homework is it anyway?

By Staff
Leada DeVaney, Editor
In the midst of weekend hubbub, I got a lesson on how to build a guillotine. Before you call the police, let me explain.
Greg's son had a school project that involved, for some reason I'm still working on, building a guillotine. This social studies project comes on the heels of another one where students had to build a boat, similar to one that might have been used by early explorers.
It was during the boat project I learned that when Greg and Derek worked on projects such as this, I shouldn't expect simplicity. There was something in their genes that required them to break out the power tools, wood and nails. I discovered this after I suggested making the boat out of a tissue box, only to be looked at with a "what is she talking about?" look.
The boat turned into an intricate engineering project involving clamps, popsicle sticks, glue and paint. In the end, I was impressed. It may not have been seaworthy, but it sure was spiffy looking.
So, I expected no less in their construction of the beheading device. Knowing it was in capable hands, I went to another part of the house. I saw them both head for the garage, where Greg has been storing most of his things until the Sept. 18 wedding. Before long I heard a saw and then some hammers.
Derek stuck his head in the kitchen.
"Do you have any wood glue?" he said.
I scrounged around until I found some.
A few minutes later, he popped back in.
"What about string? And tin foil?"
An old tangle of embroidery floss solved that dilemma, as did a sheet of shiny aluminum foil.
Greg walked in.
"Do you have any spray paint?"
I found a can of black spraypaint, the perfect color for the instrument of death.
Another hour or so later, I was called out to the garage. Sitting on the work bench was an amazingly professional guillotine. It was about 6 inches tall and had a working blade, although that part was nothing more than a piece of cardboard covered in the foil. The "blade" slid up and down on the grooves they had made in the wood, the track as smooth as glass.
It was a work of art, even if there wasn't a tissue box is sight.
Derek seemed obviously proud, showing me how the string made the blade move up and down. He moved on, though, walking inside to play video games. The true pride, however, shown in his dad's face.
"Did you see it?" he asked as he wiped the paint off his hands. "Pretty cool, huh?"
"Yes," I replied. "I think you, I mean Derek, will definitely get an 'A.' Maybe next time, the teacher will let you build a whole fort."

Also on Hartselle Enquirer
Final Hartselle superintendent candidate interviewed
Hartselle, News
May 16, 2025
Superintendent candidate: Hartselle’s tradition of excellence is its draw
Hartselle, News
May 16, 2025
Hartselle Tigers clench tenth state title in program history
Hartselle, Hartselle High School, News, ...
May 16, 2025
Making an impact: Group graduates from Student Impact Program
Brewer High School, Danville High School, Falkville High School, ...
By Tracey Tylman 
May 15, 2025
The Hartselle Area Chamber of Commerce celebrated another season of the Student Impact Program on May 13. Students from the Morgan County area graduat...
Hartselle drops Game 1 of state championship series to Chelsea
Hartselle High School, News Main, Sports
Caleb Suggs 
May 15, 2025
OXFORD — The Hartselle Tigers are in familiar territory. Hartselle dropped Game 1 of the Class 6A state championship baseball series to Chelsea on Wed...
Chamber to host candidate training workshop May 16
Hartselle, News
Rebekah Yancey 
May 14, 2025
The Hartselle Area Chamber of Commerce will host its Candidate Training Workshop May 16, from 8-11 a.m. at the Historic Train Depot. This half-day, ha...

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Latest Stories