English 8 News Article

That’s not what happened Book Cover That’s not what happened
Kody Keplinger
Fiction
Scholastic Press
August 28, 2018
Paperback
203

Victim wakes up with        

death on her mind

By: Jacob Duitsman

Virgil County News

 

     Lee Brown, Kevin Brantley, Brenna DuVal, Jared Grayson, Rosi Martinez, Sarah McHale, Richard McMullen, Thomas Nolan, Aiden Strood, and Essie Taylor are all victims of the shooting that took place at Virgil County Highschool. Each with their own story, but which one is right? All have been twisted and turned because of fame. Except one. The one I will expose in this article.

“ I was one of the four girls in that bathroom… I was one of the girls that saw Sarah McHale murdered. They all say she died proclaiming her faith up to the very last minute, but I know that, that’s not what happened.” Lee Brown said in her first interview. “Why would they hold the real story in”?

“Maybe the truths are better left buried. Maybe we should stop it all”. But Lee Brown then Realized it had to get out. She wanted just one more person to get on board. Kellie. If she says her story then it will all be out there. Then she won’t have to hold all the guilt and lies anymore.

The cross necklace they found on the floor was not Sarah’s and the story of her defending her faith is a lie. The necklace was owned by somebody no one would expect. Kellie R. Graynor, who was chased out of town with her family so that Sarah could be the hero. Kellie was unpopular quite and not pleasant to be around. She wore a cross necklace NOT  Sarah McMullen!

Finally, after being obsessed for three years Lee Convinced Kellie to tell her story. In other words… the truth. Kellie told everybody about how she was the one wearing the necklace and she was the one defending her faith. Ashley accidentally overheard Kellie saying that and mistook it for being Sarah’s voice, so the rumor spread and it became a fact.

Overall people just wanted to believe that Sarah was a great young martyr who was willing to die for her beliefs. Which is true but it’s the wrong person. Lee and Sarah were just hiding in the bathroom and Kellie happened to be in there. The shooter came and killed Sarah leaving only the nine others to tell the story. It only took three years. Now you know the truth

Advice on running your website

Congratulations, you now have a website. You might be wondering, “Why do I have a website?” That’s a question for a different post. Of course, having a website is a little bit of a responsibility. Here are some things that you should keep in mind now that you have one.

  • Don’t post information that is too personal on your website. You shouldn’t post your address or phone number. You shouldn’t post anything that you would be upset about if everyone in the school (or the world) found out about.
  • Give people a little context before you start writing. You might start a post off with something like this, “This post is a reflection on the third chapter of John Steinbeck’s novel, Of Mice and Men. I wrote this when I was in 10th grade for English class.”
  • People will eventually comment on things that you put on your website. If the comment looks like spam, you should delete it. If you don’t delete it, you will get a lot more spam. They target people who do not delete spam. If a comment isn’t nice, you should delete it too. You want your website to be a nice spot to visit.
  • Try to avoid being negative. If there’s something that you want to write about and it sounds like a complaint, why not try to write it as a suggestion on how something can be improved instead. I’m sure you get bonus points every time your website makes the world a better place.
  • Be a little bit selective about what you decide to put on your website. It should be a little more professional than Facebook, Twitter or Instagram.
  • What you write is more important than how your website looks, but having a good looking website says something to your visitors too. If you need help with your website, ask someone who has a nice looking website. Or you can ask at help.lincolnlutheran.org. You can also stop by the Tech Center.
  • How you classify posts is important. Always click on a Class and Grade before you post. If it applies, click on one or more Categories and Interests as well. This will help other people find what they are looking for on your site.
  • You can add other Interests (or delete some). You do that from the Posts menu. You can also add Classes. In fact, you’ll have to. Pro Tip: You can say item they should appear under by setting the Parent item. Once you add more Interests or Categories, remember to put them in your menu as well. You’ll find that under Appearance.
  • In the Plugins menu, there are other tools that you can add to your website. But don’t keep them unless you use them, because every plugin slows your website down a little bit.  After you get good at using the basic WordPress tools, and you’ve written a few dozen posts, you can upgrade your account to have access to more tools.
  • Most of the content on your website will be posts, but you can also publish pages. You use pages for things that will never (or very seldom) change. If you make a page, don’t forget to add it to your menu.
  • Images can make your website more fun. Sometimes it’s easy to pick an image. Just take a picture of what you are writing about. But remember that if you use an image off the internet that you should have permission to use it. You can get images like that from Google or Flickr. Those links go to the sections of Google and Flickr image search where people put images for other people to use.

By the way, you should probably make it so that other people can’t see this post. There’s a lot of advice here, so rather than delete it, do one of these things: Change it’s Status from “Published” to “Draft”. Then it will be available to you in the admin section of your website, but people who visit your site won’t see it. Or, you could change the Visibility from “Public” to “Private”. If you do that, then you’ll still see it on your website (if you are logged in), but other people will not.