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First Person: Stephen Stafford, 13-year-old Morehouse sophomore

Friday, January 22nd, 2010
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WHIZ KID: Stephen Stafford says he’s like any other kid — except that he learns very, very quickly.

While most of his peers slog through seventh grade, Stephen Stafford, 13, earns credits toward his pre-med, computer science and mathematics degrees at Morehouse University. The wide-smiling, fast-talking, classical piano-playing Lithonia resident has been labeled a “prodigy” (a term he doesn’t really like), has spoken at Ebenezer Baptist Church, and has fielded private-sector job offers – which he politely declined. CL’s interview with Stafford was cut short because he had to meet with Jermaine Dupri about filming a pilot TV show.

I started learning when I was 2 years old. My sister was 6 and she decided we were going to play school. But she was actually going to teach me things that she learned in school. She was teaching me how to count, how to add. And I caught on to that, and then my mom started teaching me. And when I started kindergarten, I was doing multiplication. And my mother said the other stuff was too easy. I was bored.

I was young at the time and I wasn’t used to repetition. Generally, when I understand something, we move on. With repetition, I’m like, “Why are we doing this when I already know it?” So then my mom decided on home school. I was able to go through the work extremely fast. And after doing that for a while, when I was 11 years old, my mom started having problems teaching me because it was algebra II. And she was having trouble with that. So I went to Morehouse. I didn’t know what the big deal was about going to Morehouse. I just knew it was the next step in my education – and I’m gonna do what my mother tells me to do. My first class there, college algebra, I got a 105 in that. The next class I took was pre-calculus and I got a 99 in that. And that was pretty much the test for whether I could stay at Morehouse. And considering the grades I got there, we decided I’d stay. And I guess you can say the rest is history.

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(Photo by Joeff Davis)

Regina Benjamin, your next surgeon general, has Georgia roots

Monday, July 13th, 2009

Jake Tapper of ABC News tweets that President Barack Obama today will name Dr. Regina Benjamin as surgeon general.

Benjamin, who’s the founder and CEO of the Bayou La Batre Rural Health Clinic in Bayou La Batre, Ala., isn’t as entrenched in Atlanta as local heartthrob Sanjay Gupta. (The CNN anchor and Atlanta-based neurosurgeon opted not to be considered for the post in March.) But she’s got a connection.

From Benjamin’s bio:

Regina Benjamin received a B.S. (1979) from Xavier University of Louisiana, attended Morehouse School of Medicine from 1980 to 1982, and received an M.D. (1984) from the University of Alabama at Birmingham; she also holds an M.B.A. (1991) from Tulane University. She completed her residency in family practice at the Medical Center of Central Georgia (1987).

Finally, those liberal elitists are showing some love for Southerners! 

(Courtesy MacArthur Foundation)