May 5, 2009

Ty’Sheoma Bethea's Letter Results in New Furniture for her Run-Down South Carolina School

Villagers, do you remember Ty’Sheoma Bethea? She was the young 8th grader who wrote a letter to congress to let them know about the dilapidated condition of her South Carolina school. Check this video as a reminder:




The students of J.V. Martin Junior High School in rural South Carolina were elated Monday to find new furniture and a freshly painted cafeteria, thanks to a student’s plea, a president’s speech and a businessman’s response. [SOURCE]
"I was amazed. They changed the whole thing," said eighth-grader Jessica Manning, 13. "It let me know somebody cares about us."
Darryl Rosser, CEO of classroom furniture supplier Sagus International, called Principal Amanda Burnette the day after Obama read Bethea’s plea. Over the past weekend, Sagus sent nearly 2,000 pieces of furniture (value: $250,000) on four tractor-trailer loads. Volunteers worked throughout the weekend to put the surprise together.

The cafeteria is newly painted in the school’s black and gold colors, with a three-dimensional Wildcats logo behind the stage. Words of encouragement from leaders such as Thomas Jefferson and Martin Luther King Jr. adorn the walls. But the students chose as their favorite these words of President Obama: "Change will not come if we wait for some other person or some other time. We are the ones we’ve been waiting for. We are the change that we seek."

The student who brought the attention to J.V. Martin said the correctly-sized furniture will help students focus.

"Even though our dream is not yet completed … We now have a better school. We now feel better about our school," Ty’Sheoma Bethea said. "We are not quitters," she added, mimicking the words in her letter, "and we are not through."
Villagers, I think that this is where we should all remind ourselves ... 'YES WE CAN!'

4 comments:

clnmike said...

That was heart warming.

Unknown said...

Mike - Yeah ... sometimes my blog tends to focus on negative stuff ... it is nice to have a good news story!

Martin Lindsey said...

I'm glad one of our young people was able to see that our words have an impact and can bring about practical results even at a young age.

Unknown said...

Martin - Amen!