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‘Citizens’ Commended

High school essay writers honored by local chapter

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Coal City High School senior Zackary Landers reads the morning announcements over the school’s intercom system Thursday morning. Landers will be participating in a state competition for the DAR Citizenship Essay contest. (Herald Photo by Lisa Pesavento — lpesavento@morrisdailyherald.com)

The local chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution, the Alida C. Bliss DAR, honored the winners of their annual Good Citizen Award at a recent meeting.

The winners are seniors Olivia Kief, of Morris Community High School; Zackary Landers, of Coal City High School; Chelsea Schultz, of Gardner-South Wilmington High School; and Alejandra Carbajal, of Minooka Community High School.

Students were first nominated by teachers and guidance counselors in their high schools, then the finalists were selected by the student body seniors, who voted on the person in their class they thought to be the best citizen.

“They were first selected from their schools,” said DAR member Lea Sharp, “so they are all leaders in their school. Then three judges who were not affiliated with DAR read their essays.”

For the award and to advance beyond local recognition, each of the students was required to write a 550-word essay in a two-hour time period with no reference materials besides a dictionary. They were given the essay question in a sealed envelope when they sat down to write it.

This year’s topic was, “Our American Heritage and Responsibility of Preserving It — How are our Freedoms and Responsibilities as Good Citizens Changing?”

Each of the four later read their essay to DAR members.

“They were very thoughtful essays” Sharp said. “All of them. Especially since they had no clue what they would be writing about.”

Landers’ essay also won at the district level and will be entered against six other district winners for the state title, to be announced April 27. The winner of state will go to national competition.

Landers began his essay describing how the blood of our American Revolution fighters made us free, the lives of our military during World War II kept us free and it is now our responsibility to use our freedoms in a responsible way.

“With the rise of technology,” he wrote, “we are free to access huge amounts of information and use it for good and just causes. ... As a good citizen, a young American man or woman must not only be aware of these freedoms, but use them as well ... for the betterment of American society.”

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