Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

New fort, goal nets

Pupils draw up wishlists out of Tele cash prizes

- BY SHEANNE MULHOLLAND

THERE were gasps and cheers from schoolkids as we announced our Pounds for Primaries winners – each receiving a share of £10,000.

Thousands of tokens were sent into the Evening Telegraph from schools in our distributi­on area, in the hope of winning some cash.

Participat­ing schools were arranged into three categories depending on school roll and those with the most tokens in each category became winners.

Scooping the top prize of £2,000 was Ss Peter and Paul Primary School, in Coldside, closely followed by Murroes Primary School in Angus winning £1,500.

A further £1,000 was won by Glebelands Primary School in Stobswell, and smaller amounts were secured by other schools in Dundee and surroundin­g areas.

Kids were delighted with the good news, delivered to them in person by Evening Telegraph editor Dave Lord.

At Murroes Primary School, Darcy McIntosh and Gracie Simpson, both P7, and Molly Sangster, P3, were then sent around the classes with the cheque.

Gracie, 11, said: “People were cheering when we told them and the teachers were surprised – no one knew we’d won. They were shocked because it’s so much money.”

The excitement was quickly followed with suggestion­s from the pupils of how the money could be spent.

Darcy, also 11, said: “Most people are saying they want a new fort (outdoor play equipment). Some of the boys said nets for the football goals.”

Science equipment was also suggested and head teacher Caroline MacDiarmid confirmed that is likely to be what the money is used for, along with toys for younger year groups.

She said: “It will make a huge difference to us. In a school this small the budget gets swallowed up with pencils, paper and jotters.

“It’s a luxury to have money to spend on toys and science equipment – that needs to be replenishe­d every year, batteries need replaced and bulbs break.

“Some of the kids were saying they wanted a new fort but that will cost £20-30,000, so we’ll need to do a larger fundraisin­g project for that.”

Children at Glebelands Primary School were also keen to spend their funds on outdoor play equipment.

P2b pupil Molly Davidson, six, brought 123 tokens into the school from her gran. She said: “I’m delighted. I think we should get monkey bars.”

And her classmate, Max Adamson, also six, agreed. His family collected around 150 tokens and Max says they are all “happy” with the win.

“My grandad was jigging when my granny told him,” he added.

P5b pupil Leo Goodchild, nine, said: “We could get more toys and outdoor stuff for the playground, like wooden equipment to climb on.”

Art supplies, video games and new books were also suggested by the children, but head teacher Rob Gill said the money will go into a pot towards a new outdoor play structure.

He said: “We’ve lost quite a lot of our outdoor playground equipment, it was old and had to be removed for safety reasons.

“The parent council want to

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 ?? ?? Tele editor Dave Lord presents the cheque to Murroes pupils, top and above.
Tele editor Dave Lord presents the cheque to Murroes pupils, top and above.
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