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Ellenoff, M.D.
EDUCATION
Student Profile:
► Amelia Cole, senior
► The Galloway School
By the end of high school, Ame
lia Cole will have received a dozen var
sity letters for her participation on The
Galloway School’s soccer, basketball and
cross country teams.
Cole’s athletic achievements put her
in the running for the special 12-letter
award, a rare achievement in Galloway
history.
“Only one girl got the award last
year,” Cole said. “It’s really not that com
mon for people to earn so many letters.”
Excellence in the athletic arena has
always been her goal, but Amelia didn’t
always have the 12-letter award to work
toward until high school.
“I’m not even sure I knew about the
award until sometime in freshman year,”
she said. “But when I found out about
it, it became my goal to get the award,”
Cole said.
Cole had a strong foundation for the
skills she developed as an athlete and
student at Galloway. She began playing
soccer at the age of 3, and it has become
an integral part of who she is.
“I started going to Galloway before
I was 3, so everyone knows me there. I
have an older sister so they always knew
me and they’ve always supported me,”
Cole said.
One of her supporters is her for
mer soccer coach, Edgar Flores. Flores
was her sister’s coach as well as Ame
lia’s coach in her freshman year, and is a
close family friend. Flores now coaches
at Dunwoody High School but has re
mained an important member of Cole’s
support system.
“He was my coach, but he’s also a
friend. He gave me a lot of advice. He
always tells me to play with heart and
fight for what I believe in,” Cole said.
Flores described Amelia as “fast and
fearless,” and a strong competitor. “She
was always competing — with herself,
with her sister, to make the team better,”
Flores said. “She’s a unique athlete ...
If Galloway has a Hall of Fame, someday
she’ll be in it.”
s Next:
Amelia plans to attend Elon Uni
versity in North Carolina in the fall.
She intends to keep playing soccer and
to major in Special Education or Early
Childhood Education.
Tins article was prepared by Varsba
Narendra, a student at Dunwoody High
School.
Do you know a standout high school student?
Send nominees to editor@reporternewspapers. net.
Holy Innocents’ Episcopal School
develops in students a love of learning,
respect for self and others, faith in God,
and a sense of service to the world
community.
- Mission Statement
HOLY INNOCENTS’
EPISCOPAL SCHOOL
www.hies.org
404-255-4026
All-School Open House, Saturday, Jan. 25,1:00 p.m.
A community of1,300 students, ages 3-years-old through 12th Grade.
18 | DEC. 27,2013 — JAN. 9, 2014 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net