Issue 3

Page 1

the

FINANCIAL FROSTBITE

>>Mackenzie Wylie

ISSUE 3 SHAWNEE MISSION EAST PRAIRIE VILLAGE, KS OCT. 6, 2009

Spanish National Honor Society left without a winter project after Franklin Children’s Center closes due to budgetary woes

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>>GriffinBur

his winter, there won’t be any careening bikes or RC cars zipping down the halls. No more tiny hands inspecting new clothes or smiles with baby teeth missing. Last spring, the Franklin Children’s Center, a Kansas City, Kansas daycare for children of low-income parents, shut down. The Center was part of the larger Franklin Center, Inc., a non-profit corporation that also included a volunteerrun grocery store, coffee shop and school. Gone with the Children’s Center is East’s winter project sponsored by the Spanish National Honor Society (SNHS.) Started by East Spanish teacher Nora Pinkston in 1990, the project raised money to buy gifts and hold school-wide parties for the children.

For senior SNHS member Annie Haynes, the program was a benefit to both the Children’s Center kids and the students who participated. According to Haynes, it gave students an opportunity to give back to the community. “[The closing] is sad for the kids but it’s also sad for East,” Haynes said. “It was a chance for people to do something not quite so selfish.” SNHS sponsor Katherine Kessler found out about the Children’s Center’s financial trouble in 2007, the year she became project sponsor. That year, a Center parent e-mailed Kessler and told her that the Franklin Center was in poor financial shape. Kessler and the SNHS officers met with then-principal Dr. Susan Swift to devise a way to help the Center.

The group decided to cap how much donated money could be used for each child. They then took the leftover money and donated it directly to the Franklin Center. Ultimately, East generated more than $770 in direct donations. However, the contribution was only a tiny fraction of what the Center required. “After we gave the money, [final Franklin Center director Thelma Frank] called me and she was like ‘I’m in tears, you guys are amazing’,” Kessler said. “But it was still only a drop in the bucket compared to what they would’ve needed.” Frank could not be reached for comment. The Franklin Center got started in November 1978, when founders Terry Woodbury and his wife Eldonna sent the Wyandotte school board a petition, asking them to not tear

>>continued on page five

FEATURES: Latin students in JCL (pg. 11) SPREAD: Junior’s graffiti in art fair (pg. 14-15) SPORTS: Senior go-karts (pg. 26)


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