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Olivia Konicek: Outstanding all around
By Hugh McMillan
KP News
Editor’s note: In June, many
outstanding Key Peninsula residents will graduate from
Peninsula High School and move on to college. We
congratulate these young men and women on their
achievements. Olivia Konicek is one of many students who
deserve recognition, and embodies the best of her
generation.
Longbranch resident Olivia Konicek
has been named a 2007 Student of Distinction. And well
she should be.
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Olivia Konicek checks in Spencer Baebler and
other student
volunteers for Campus Clean-Up.
Photo by Mindi LaRose |
From her performance as a third
grader in Evergreen Elementary, where she excelled at
virtually any project in which she was involved, through
her outstanding performance as a student at Key
Peninsula Middle School, and now approaching graduation
with honors from Peninsula High School, she has been not
only a student of distinction, but an athlete of
distinction and a student leader of distinction.
At KPMS, where for all three years
she maintained a 4.0 GPA, she took woodshop as a seventh
grader. As a class project, she built an Adirondack
chair admired by her peers and teachers. Ever generous,
when someone asked if she would make one for them, she
turned out another excellent chair. When her alma mater
Evergreen’s PTSA held a fund-raising auction, she
contributed a double Adirondack that brought in almost
$400.
As requests for the chairs began to
multiply, in order to gain access to a more extensive
variety of woods and to achieve discount prices on them,
she became a licensed business owner —at age 14.
Not only did Konicek continue to
excel academically and maintain her 4.0 average at KPMS,
she was a sought-after athlete and was voted team
captain on the basketball team in ninth grade. When an
injury took her out of basketball, she joined the PHS
swim team and was on the varsity squad for three years;
she also played water polo for two years.
Over the years, she capitalized on
the good fortune of traveling to Europe, Alaska, and
South America with her grandfather and with
environmentally responsible groups to absorb knowledge
of various countries and cultures, and to study and work
with those who, among other things, worked with hands-on
concerned peers and mentors in saving sea turtles from
predators and poachers. Konicek was always comfortable
in whatever surroundings she found herself, enjoyed
experiencing and learning from different cultures,
sometimes rather primitive living conditions, and the
cuisines of any nation.
She has helped set up the annual
Zoo Lights program at Point Defiance Zoo and Aquarium.
She is a generous giver who inspires others to follow
her lead. She organized a schoolwide service project
supportive of the Holiday Helper Program of the
Children’s Home Society. Konicek rallied 325 students in
13 classes.
“Together, we sponsored 53 kids for
the holiday season, each with an individualized
gift/wish and two clothing items,” she said. “Our PHS
students donated over $2,000 worth of gifts, thus
providing for 17 percent of the total number of children
sponsored.”
Konicek’s list of community
involvement is extensive. Among other things, she was a
YMCA Camp Seymour cabin leader intern for summer of 2006
and volunteered at camp a leader, teacher and staff
assistant; was cabin leader of 12 girls for Evergreen’s
fifth-grade camp in the spring of 2006, and tutored
second grade students in reading at Evergreen Elementary
once a week through Communities In Schools-Peninsula.
She was a nominee for the Key Peninsula Citizen of the
Year award in 2004.
On meeting a Hungarian exchange
student at PHS, she befriended her and on many days
drove her to meet and visit with a large number of
Konicek’s friends and to become acquainted with our part
of the world.
She served as President of PHS
National Honor Society’s 125 members last year, was CEO
of a “business” with a team of 16 juniors during
Washington Business Week, and won numerous athletic
awards including the Seamount League Junior of the Year
award, Most Inspirational, Most Improved, Rookie of the
Year, and Senior of the Year for her PHS swimming and
water polo career.
Despite all this, she is utterly
lacking in conceit, always considerate of others,
quietly, modestly self-assured, goal-oriented,
confident, helpful and, although she could likely attend
any university anywhere, probably with a substantial
scholarship, she has elected to attend Western
Washington University where she has been accepted in the
school’s Honor Program.
“It’s a good school offering just
what I want,” she said. What a credit to the community
to have such an outstanding young citizen.
©Copyright 2005-2008, Key Peninsula
News, all rights reserved.
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