Volume 26 Issue 2

Page 1

Coppell High School 185 W Parkway Blvd Coppell TX 75019 VOLUME 26

ISSUE 2

November 2014

Pg 12-13

Pg 17

Pg 20-21

Preventing sexual assault

Mockingjay Madness

Winter sports preview

www.coppellstudentmedia.com

Against the odds

IN ISSUE

CHS alum battles rare autoimmune disease STEM class awarded $10,000 grant MIT announces STEM Academy as one of 15 prestigious winners of InvenTeam grant. NEWS Page 4

Biased view of history Staff writer Thomas Rousseau emphasizes that schools should teach the good, bad and ugly of American history. OPINIONS Page 8

Student with condition shares experience Senior Brianna Haynie has ability to taste names, words. STUDENT LIFE Page 11

Curtain call: Tech theatre teacher to retire Bill Ballard enters final year of teaching, makes every day count with students. ENTERTAINMENT Page 16

Day in the life: Sports Trainers Sports writer Marcus Krum follows athletic trainers on a game-day to get behind-the-scenes look at what all they do. SPORTS Page 23

SARAH VANDERPOL Photographer @SarahVanderPol

F

or new college student Mikayla Bass, life was good. Stepping into college as a junior and receiving a scholarship to play college volleyball at St. Mary’s University in San Antonio, Mikayla couldn’t have been happier. However, in January, Mikayla’s world took an unexpected turn, causing her life to completely change. “In November, our mindset was that she was as happy as she could be, in a wonderful place, playing on the court, loving life, doing her college kid thing, president of the Fellowship of Christian Athletes, just really blossoming as a young lady. Two months later she was too weak to brush her own teeth and we didn’t know why,” Kelly Bass, Mikayla’s mother, said. Mikayla, a 2012 Coppell High School graduate, had begun experiencing unusual symptoms while at St. Mary’s, such as trouble eating, trouble with her vision, and the temporary paralyzation of her finger but dismissed them. After they continued, she called her mom. Together, they went to the doctor only to be told that Mikayla was on drugs, which was far from the truth. Mikayla went about her college kid life and returned to school. After returning to practice with her team at St. Mary’s after Christmas break, Mikayla was unable to complete the warm

up without beginning to wheeze and hyperventilate. At that point, she knew that the strange symptoms she had been experiencing were serious and something was wrong. She called her mother and they found another doctor; this one knew exactly what was going on. After only a few minutes, he diagnosed Mikayla with Myasthenia Gravis. “I had never heard of MG so at the time I just thought it was a bunch of mumbo jumbo and I was going to be fine,” Mikayla said. “When reality set in, it became extremely hard to deal with because I realized that the person I had been was now dead, and I was having to start all over.” Myasthenia Gravis is a rare autoimmune disease attacking the receptors of the muscles that only 25,000 Americans have. When one’s brain tells the muscles to move, it communicates through a connector point. With Myasthenia, that connector point is damaged. Since the connector is damaged, the effects fluctuate. “I could be normal now, and in two minutes I could be paralyzed. It’s minute to minute, hour to hour, day to day. It changes all the time,” Mikayla said. The disease affects one’s ability to move any of their voluntary muscles. The scariest part of it all is that the disease has no known cure. In fact, the mainstream medical system knows hardly anything about Myasthenia Gravis at all. > see Bass page 10

Photo Courtesy // Kelly Bass Coppell graduate and setter Mikayla Bass was a two-time champion at Coppell. In 2009, she was part of the Class 5A CHS state championship girls soccer team and in 2011, she was part of the Class 5A CHS state championship volleyball team.

DEA hosts informative parent seminar SUMMER CRAWFORD News Editor @summercrawfordd

The Sidekick // Amanda Hair

H

eroin, cocaine, marijuana, methamphetamines, ecstasy, hydrocodone: these are all drugs that have become norms for society members to abuse. Not only are these drugs affecting high school students, but they are also impacting college students. Coppell is no exception to this drug plague. Assistant Special Agent Calvin Bond in the Dallas Field Division led a drug awareness seminar on Oct. 28. Bond is in charge of four enforcement groups in Dallas of police officers and Drug Enforcement Agency members. This event was sponsored by the Coppell Independent School District, City of Coppell and the DEA in order to inform both students and parents of drug use, abuse and their consequences.

Assistant superintendent Brad Hunt facilitates a question regarding the drug awareness presentation in the Coppell Middle School West auditorium on Oct. 28, 2014. “We want to make sure that the perintendent Brad Hunt said. “It’s drugs and alcohol is the first students have the armor that they really important that at first we step to helping us empower ourneed to fend off and deal with have an awareness and an under- selves with how to deal with it.” issues that might be related to standing of what is going on, and drugs and alcohol,” Assistant Su- a realization that talking about > see Up page 5


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