Wildcat Tales Issue 6 Jan. 28

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wildcat ales plano senior high school

plano, tx 75075

www.wildcattales.com

volume 67

issue 6

january 28, 2013

Photo submitted by Madea Neyor

300 children in Monrobia, Liberia wave brand-new school supplies given to them by junior Madea Neyor. She can’t make them forget the civil war the village has been trying to recover from for the past decade, but she can offer them a new focus: education.

Giving across the globe As “Sunny boy” wrote his name in his notebook he told junior Madea Neyor that the second he got home he was going to put it underneath his pillow. At this moment, Neyor realized that all her hard work had become worth it. Since 2003, Liberia has been trying to recover from a civil war. According to Neyor, most of those suffering are the kids. Because 68 percent of civilians are living in poverty, most families can’t afford to put their kid into school or can’t pay for the necessary school supplies. Neyor has decided to begin to help out this poor country. “I’ve visited the kids before because I wanted to see what it was like there the first time I went,” Neyor said.

By Brooke Combs “I visited schools and such. The schools were in poor while we were playing basketball. It was terrible. Some of condition and had no air conditioning. Some schools did the other people in our grade and I decided it was up to us have brand-new chairs due to donations from other groups to rebuild it.” and organizations. I saw kids that didn’t have school Neyor decided that she wanted to help the Liberian kids supplies and also a lot of them didn’t have proper clothes. by giving them more than clothes. She bought them school At church, we raised money to get clothing for them.” supplies with money she raised from selling her AP U.S. Like Neyor, junior Taylor Chambers found her incentive History semester exam study guides. She sold each copy for to help out others when she went on a trip two summers $10 and it all went towards the school supplies. She ended ago. She went on a mission trip to Prescott, Ark. with her up raising $650, giving each of 300 kids a notebook, a pack church, Christ United Methodist Church. of pencils, sharpeners and erasers. “The basketball court near an elementary school was in Continued on page 3 terrible shape,” Chambers said. “Everyone would fall down

Viva Shields

Beyond skin deep

By Kaitlin Fischer Speaking in the language he teaches, Spanish teacher Gregory Shields stands in front of the class telling the story of how he met his wife. It was while they were studying abroad in Mexico during their third year of college at Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah. As they were sightseeing together, they found a Mayan calendar that they both enjoyed and wanted to buy. Thinking that since she was buying one it wasn’t necessary for him to buy one, Shields decided against purchasing the memento. Shields thought, if they got married, they both did not need to have the same calendar – but he did not want to seem too forward. After returning home from Mexico in June, they became engaged in October and married in December. Later, his wife told him that she was trying to talk him out of buying the Photo by Kaitlin Fischer Mayan calendar because she was going Spanish teacher Gregory Shields presents his to buy it herself. She also did not want Teacher of the Year award. them to have the same calendar if they eventually have a family and was worried were to get married. Shields relates this that living on a teacher’s salary would story to what they are currently learning make that difficult for him. He took in class to get his students interested in different classes, including economics, to the language. In January, he won Teacher become a banker. However, Shields also of the Year. took advanced Spanish classes to earn Since he was a young boy, Shields knew easy credits, as he was already fluent in that he wanted to be a teacher. When the language. Shields watched his own teachers explain “It was the only class that I was a new subject, he would wonder if he really, really passionate about,” Shields could ever do that. said. “Although I am interested in some “I just realized at a very young age other concepts, those would only become that I was thinking like a teacher,” Shields hobbies, whereas the Spanish class and said. “I was picturing myself as a teacher. the teaching classes were the ones I was It was a natural decision when all of a interested in actually doing homework sudden I realized, ‘I want to imitate them, for. There were classes where I was like, because I think I want to be a teacher.’” ‘Ugh, I have to do that homework.’ But When Shields attended Brigham these were the classes where I would have Young University he tried to find fun doing the assignments, so it just made professions other than teaching to work sense. If I like it, I probably should stick towards. Shields knew that he wanted to with it.”

By Rachel Chen The needle sinks into her skin and vibrates back and forth, leaving a trail of color behind. She does not think she will ever regret what she is doing and seeing it right now, it is exactly how she imagined it would be. For senior Logan Freeman, getting a tattoo when she turned 18 was anything but a reckless decision. Freeman and her mother had planned the perfect tattoo for months. They looked at pictures of different ones online until they found the one they wanted to base her design on: a butterfly, with a pink ribbon as the body. Freeman’s mother had breast cancer, and Freeman hoped the tattoo would remind her of her mother’s strength and show her mother how much she cared for her. Freeman’s mother passed away on July 29 last year, but Freeman had no doubt that she would get the tattoo anyway. On her 18th birthday, accompanied by her father and some friends, Freeman got the tattoo she and her mother had designed together on her left shoulder blade. “It was perfect,” Freeman said. “I looked in the mirror after the tattoo artist was finished and I almost started crying. I got home that night and I literally cried because it was so perfect. It was exactly like what my mom and I had imagined and he just drew it in two tries.” Senior Faith Casper has two tattoos, both signifying ways she hopes to live her life. The first one is on her ribs and says “be strong, be blessed”. The phrase is the slogan of Micaela’s Army, a campaign for a friend who passed away from leukemia almost two years ago. “When things are really hard for me I always remember how strong she was,” Casper said. “I remember that when you are strong, you can get through things and you are blessed in everything. I love explaining it because when I get to, it makes her more alive. I tell them that I got it for my friend who passed away and that it’s kind of what I want to live my life by.”

Spanish teacher wins Teacher of the Year Students get tattoos in memory of loved ones

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Photos submitted by Logan Freeman

Left: Senior Logan Freeman and her mother, Shannon Freeman, rest at their home the day before she passed away. Right: Freeman designed her breast cancer ribbon and monarch butterfly-themed tattoo with her mother.

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