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Moot Scrimmage: Day One Showdown!

 

It’s been an educational weekend for SHSU’s first-ever Moot Court team.   Following a pleasant evening at the Art Department’s Gala (where the students spent some enjoyable time  with Dan Phillips)…

Phillips_Students_Web…the Moot Court Team embarked on a late-night trip to Dallas, where the UNT Law School’s Moot Court scrimmage was scheduled. More than fifty teams competed, making this the largest scrimmage in the Texas Undergraduate Moot Court Association’s history.

The set-up for such a scrimmage is as follows:

  • Day One: There are three rounds of tournaments, which serve as qualifying rounds. Each team is scored in points, with the points determining which team wins and which team loses. The won-loss record then determines whether the teams compete on Saturday (teams need to win two of their three rounds, with a tie-breaker based on a complex system of schedule strength and points). The points are further used to determine individual awards.
    • Points: Speakers are scored on four dimensions, each constituting up to 100 points. An award-winning speaker will likely accumulate 360 or more points (90+ average) over the four dimensions: knowledge, response, forensics, and demeanor
  • Day Two: Day two then follows in a playoff-style system, with winning teams proceeding to the next round. There are four such “playoff” rounds, moving from the “Sweet Sixteen” to the finals.

The logistics alone are a daunting enterprise.  Registration, for example, ended at 11:30am on Friday, and only then could tournament directors begin the pairings and room scheduling processes.  Between 11:30 and 2:00pm, a series of orientations (e.g., bailiffs, coaches, competitors) took place, while other tournament officials tried to finalize the schedule.  It was an impressive display of organization!

Moot_Court_Contestants_Web

We were a bit anxious, but we tried to enjoy ourselves….

Kristyn_James_Web…pairing off into teams during orientation…

Austin_Chelsea_Smiling_Web…

Kaitlyn_Alex_Web

Between orientations and a quick lunch, we grabbed what study time we could come by…

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…with help from our coach.

Moot_Court_Studying_3_Web

…but, ultimately, game-time arrived, and we began the tournament.

The Tournament

A typical contest includes an 18 minute argument from the petitioner (split between the two team members), followed by a 20 minutes argument from the respondent (again, split between the two-team members), followed by a two-minute rebuttal from the petitioner (the time for rebuttal can be modified up front, but two minutes is a typical time).

The tournament is run by a tournament director.  This tournament’s director was Andrew Sommerman, who is the founder of the American Undergraduate Moot Court Association and a local Dallas attorney.  Also helping run the show was Dr. Kimi King, who works tirelessly to help her students and to help keep the tournament moving on schedule.

Three judges oversee the competition, interjecting as they see fit. A “hot” panel interjects often; a cold panel interjects rarely.  Some contestants enjoy the give and take; others do not.  A good judge will pose questions designed to assess the competitors’ knowledge, strength of arguments, and ability to think on their feet.  Some judges are better than others at directing such questions.

Following the contest, the competitors (and audience) leave the room, giving the judges time to complete their ballots and prepare remarks.  Once the ballots have been completed, the judges ask the competitors to return and go over the strengths and weaknesses of the competitors.  Good judges mix specific and general advice and do so constructively.  Less helpful judges speak in vague generalities or offer idiosyncratic advice based on their personal/ideological reactions.  Fortunately, few judges fell in the latter category, and even they can be helpful, because such judges exist on the bench in real life.

For our team,  the rounds were immensely helpful.  While they didn’t turn out well in terms of wins and losses, they did turn out very well in terms of gaining information and experience.  For Kaitlyn Tyra, she said it was a good opportunity to “gain a realistic view of the competition in the state.”  This, she continued, was particularly helpful for a first-year team such as SHSU, which hasn’t seen the competition before.  For Austin Campbell, the trip was helpful because it helped build “synergy among most of the team’s members.”  For Kristyn Couvillion, it allowed “observation of the state’s best speakers, and the skills they have, as well as the benefits of receiving specific feedback from judges.”

Photos are not encouraged in the tournaments (especially for those in smaller rooms, where they can be distracting), but we have a couple of action photos.  One is of Kristyn…

Kristyn_Speaking

…and one is of James Perry…
James_Speaking
By the end of the evening, teams waited patiently to see which ones would make the cut, and perform on Saturday.

Moot_Court_Contests_WebSadly, this did not include SHSU teams.  It was, however, a good end to the day, and the students were satisfied with their work.

Moot_Court_Post_WEbFor the winning teams, the day would start early the next day, with coin tosses at 8am.  Most of the losing teams went home.  SHSU’s moot court team, however, didn’t want to pass up the opportunity to see the winning teams in action another day, hear more of the questions that judges ask, and to learn more about the process.  In that spirit, we went back to the hotel, to prepare for another day of Moot Court.

 

 

Unknown's avatarAuthor mikeyawnPosted on October 11, 2015October 13, 2015Categories Art, Civic Engagement, Law, TravelTags Dallas, Law, LEAP Center, Moot Court, SHSU, TUMCALeave a comment on Moot Scrimmage: Day One Showdown!

Art + Community = A Lovely Way to Spend an Evening

 

The Art Department sponsored a nice evening for friends and supporters of the arts, honoring alumni, former faculty, and local artist/builder Dan Phillips.  With all the LEAP Center Ambassadors on hand, plus some of the “friends of the LEAP Center,” it was a great way to kick off the end of the week.

This was the Art Department’s second such gala and, again, chair Michael Henderson emceed the proceedings.  He was gracious and thankful, and repeatedly thanked the sponsors and the many people who support the arts in the community.

Henderson_Speaking_1_Web

Community, in fact, was the explicit theme of the evening.  We were happy to note that of the 29 registrants for heART of Huntsville, 19 were attendees at the Gala!

Art_Gala_Panorama_1_WebThe stars of the evening, however, were those being honored.  Henderson invited Linda Pease to memorialize local artists who passed away in the last year…

Pease_Speaking_1_Web
…and the Department honored alums Kim Cook and Dan Pratt; Art Department Scholarship winners; local art supporter and POLS faculty Jim Carter, who passed away in 2013; and former faculty Emmette Jackson, Charles Pebworth, Gene Eastman, Jimmy Barker, and Stanley Lea.  While the former faculty were not able to attend, Lea’s wife, Ruth, did attend.

Mayor Mac Woodward introduced the the major award of the evening…

Woodward_Speaking_4_Web

…which went to Dan Phillips for his support of the arts in the local community.  Phillips, of course, is a local builder, whose previous careers include work in Military Intelligence, the Dance Faculty at SHSU, and newspaper writer.

Phillips_Speaking_1_WebPhillips said very nice things about his wife, Marsha, who is a partner in the Phoenix Commotion enterprise and works as a part-time mentor at SHSU after a long career teaching at HISD.  Fifteen years ago, the two embarked on a new career building homes “made from unwanted materials for low-income people.”  They’ve now completed 24 projects, and their structures dot and enrich the community, adding character to a small, historic town, work that earned Phillips this well-deserved honor from the SHSU Art Department.

Phillips_Students_WebPostscript: Following the gala, seven of the LEAP attendees headed to Dallas for their first-ever Moot Court scrimmage, which will be described in future posts!

Unknown's avatarAuthor mikeyawnPosted on October 10, 2015Categories Art, Civic EngagementTags Art Department, Dan Phillips, LEAP Center, Michael HendersonLeave a comment on Art + Community = A Lovely Way to Spend an Evening

Art and Architecture in Huntsville

With the fourth week of heART of Huntsville came a focus on architecture with, of course, a healthy dose of art.  After weeks focusing on campus art, outdoor sculptures, David Adickes, performing arts, and Richard Haas, the final week of the program focused on three homes in the Huntsville Cultural District: The “Bone Home,” the Kellogg-Pritchett House, and the Wynne Home.

Part of what made the final week special was that Anina Moore, the Director of Communications for the Texas Commission on the Arts, traveled to Huntsville to observe the program.  This was her first real visit to Huntsville, and we hope she enjoyed it!

Her visit, and our final week, kicked off with a tour of Dan Phillips’ Bone Home.  For many of the Ambassadors, it was our second visit to the home, but for Ambassador Kaitlyn Tyra, it was a first-time visit.  Phillips began with an overview of his philosophy, his company (Phoenix Commotion), and his work.

Phillips_Speaking_4_WebHis talk is always engaging, mixing construction realities, with political preferences (e.g., recycling, sustainability), and philosophy (aesthetics).

Phillips_Speaking_6_WebFrom there, the tour began.  The students posed with Phillips in the kitchen…

Phillips_Galvan_Tyra_Chapa_Web…where observers can note the intriguing floor patterns, and the bone-top counters.  They also got a good look at the bone-bedecked stairway…

Stairs_Bone_Home_Web…and the bottle-cap bedroom floors.

Bottle_Cap_Floor_WebThe back-door patio, which connects the home to the studio, is also worth noting.  The wall is adorned with decorative bones…

Bone_Wall_Web

…and guests can rest in the bone chairs and bone table-top…

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…and enter the studio through a door equipped with bone handles.

Bone_Doors_WebThe studio was determined by Constance to be the perfect place for a selfie or a groupie:

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…and she may have gotten every person in the photo!  Mr. Phillips is in the front center, alongside Huntsville artist Lee Jamison, the owner of the Bone Home, George Boone, and the aforementioned Anina Moore.

Following the Bone Home tour, we made our way to the Kellogg-Pritchett House, where Mary Laura Gibbs offered a wonderful tour.

Gibbs_Speaking_1_WebThe foyer, Victorian parlor, and Gazebo room were the highlights, although the top-secret attic is always a treat.  Adding to the pleasantness and education of the evening was the presence of Lee Jamison, who did much of the artwork in the “KP” house.  In particular, he did Gazebo room, which is painted in mural fashion as though it were an actual gazebo, replete with sky-views, vine-covered lattice, and the obligatory animals (e.g., hummingbird) attracted to foliage.  The artwork also gave participants a chance to search for these animals, including the Texas-themed butterfly, seven-legged spider (said, Lee Jamison: “I’m an artist not a mathematician!”), and red, white, and blue snake.

Gazebo_Room_WebAnd Constance enjoyed the photographic possibilities of the parlor.

Constance_Gabel_Web

As SHSU students, it was also helpful to learn about “Professor Joe Pritchett,” who owned the home, and who was the Dean of Students for more than three decades.  Interestingly, he rode his horse to school until the 1930s.

With a fond farewell, to the KP house and its four porches…

Kellogg_Pritchett_1_Web…we headed to the Wynne Home, where we enjoyed their community art exhibit and heard from Ms. Moore about the work of the Texas Commission on the Arts.

Moore_Speaking_WebThe food, prepared by Sharon Rose, and sponsored by the Friends of the Wynne, was wonderful!  It contributed greatly to everyone’s cheerful time:

Wynne_Home_Gallery_WebThe heART of Huntsville program brought many wonderful people together, and it was an amazing opportunity to learn more about art, artistic venues, local artists, and the community in general.

The heART of Huntsville will be offered again next year in September and October.

Unknown's avatarAuthor mikeyawnPosted on October 8, 2015October 8, 2015Categories Art, Civic EngagementTags Anina Moore, Dan Phillips, heART of Huntsville, Kellogg-Pritchett Home, LEAP Center, Phoenix Commotion, SHSU, Texas Commission on the Arts, Wynne Home1 Comment on Art and Architecture in Huntsville

Down with the Downtown

 

For the third week of heART of Huntsville, participants were taken to Huntsville’s historic downtown to see parks, art, and fine arts at multiple locations, followed by a fine dinner at Carboneras.

Leading this tour was Linda Pease, the city’s long-standing public art authority.  Pease isn’t an artist, but she has been behind much of the beautification of the community for the past forty years or so, and she offered an oral history of Huntsville’s art scene.

The tour began at Founders Park, on the southeast corner of 10th and University.  This small park was created in the late 1980s at the springs that served as a meeting place between Huntsville’s founding father, Pleasant Gray, and the Bedias Indians.  From the spring sprung Huntsville, as more settlers settled, business thrived, and civilization eventually flowered.  The site recreates the springs with a small, shallow pond, and artists Monica Taylor and Larry Zink created statues of Indians at the site.

Founders_Park_Web

Taylor and Zink also contributed to the downtown area by assisting Richard Haas with his revitalization of the downtown square.  Haas, an artist, informal architect, and unofficial “urban planner,” created 14 art works in the downtown area in the 1990s.

Pease_Speaking_2_WebPerhaps the finest of these artworks is the three-part mural of Sam Houston on the east side of the Smither Building on University Avenue and 11th Street.  This mural depicts Sam Houston in battle, with the Indians, and as gentleman of Huntsville, Texas.

Pease_Speaking_4_Web

Other key works include the faux Roman ruins, the mural of Leadbelly on Sam Houston Avenue, and the movie posters on the front of the Old Town Theater.

Speaking of which, the group also got a tour of this theater during a rehearsal of King Lear. Participants were able to explore the theater’s balcony…

Lear_Rehearsal_Web…watch portions of the play…

Lear_Rehearsal_4_Web…and meet many of the cast and crew…

Lear_Rehearsal_3_Web…and truly see “behind the scenes”…

Lear_Rehearsal_5_WebBruce Chabot, a professor at SHSU’s English Department, is the director of the play, and the production crew graciously provided some comped tickets to members of the first-ever heART of Huntsville cohort.

Another downtown treat is the Art Department’s “Satellite Gallery” at 1204 University Avenue.  Here, art students and art alumni display their work for the public.  Following a quick tour of this gallery, the group headed to the historic Cafe Texan, where Linda Pease shared more information about Richard Haas….

Pease_Speaking_Cafe_Texan_1_Web…pointing out the work he did on the Leadbelly Mural…

Pease_Speaking_Cafe_Texan_3_Web…and discussing many of the other Haas detailing around the square.

Pease_Speaking_Cafe_Texan_2_Web

Interestingly, Haas has produced more than 60 exterior murals in his career, and more than twenty of them have been destroyed by the elements or, more often, by construction projects.  But his work still exists around the world, in Fort Worth…

…in New York…

[Richard Haas wall painting on South Street and Peck Slip.]

…St. Louis…

…and many other cities.

Interestingly, however, the largest concentration of his works is in Huntsville, Texas.

With help from the LEAP Center, Art Department, and the Huntsville Public Library, Richard Haas will be in town November 19th, 2015.  He’ll deliver remarks on campus and at the Huntsville Public Library, where he has donated the studies for his Huntsville murals.

Unknown's avatarAuthor mikeyawnPosted on October 2, 2015Categories Art, Civic Engagement, PoliticsTags Art, heART of Huntsville, Huntsville, LEAP Center, Murals, Richard Haas, SHSULeave a comment on Down with the Downtown

Moot Court Practices

The LEAP Center runs SHSU’s Moot Court team, and students have been working feverishly to prepare for the upcoming scrimmage (October 9-10) and tournament (October 23-24).  The Moot Court is a great way for students to prepare for law school, and it combines people’s greatest fear (public speaking) with pre-law students’ greatest anxiety (preparing for law school)!

Austin_Speaking_2_Web

The Team

SHSU’s Moot Court team consists of six students: Kaitlyn Tyra, Alex Galvan, Austin Campbell, James Perry, Chelsea King, and Kristyn Couvillion.  They receive no academic credit for being on the team, but it is something that law schools look at, and if done correctly, can result in enhanced skills, increased confidence, a resume entry, and even a letter of recommendation.  Their coach is Jean Loveall, a Program Coordinator for the LEAP Center, professor of the pre-law cohort, and an attorney who received her JD from SMU School of Law.  Mike Yawn is the LEAP Center director, and he helps out when needed.

The Process and Timeline

The Texas Undergraduate Moot Court Association provides the Moot Court problem in May, and students and coaches work on the problem over the summer and early fall.  After much reading (the entire problem consists of 19 cases, each average 15-20 pages) and many questions, the coach has a better idea of who is ready and who isn’t.  If necessary, the coach may cut team members who are not putting in the necessary work or who aren’t showing the necessary improvement.   Some students, after getting a better sense of what attorneys do, change their mind about being on the team.

By September, team members should be ready for public, semi-formal practices.  In the last month, for example, the SHSU Team has engaged in two practices .  Local attorneys served as judges, and the students got their chance to show their stuff in a courtroom setting, while having questions fired at them.

Kaitlyn_Speaking_Web

It can be rough going, but it is also rewarding.

Moot_Court_Practice_Campbell_Web

Students have the chance to improve their critical thinking skills, their understanding of legal and political issues, and their ability to think on their feet.

October is the month for the formal scrimmage and the tournament.  This year, scrimmages will be held at St. Mary’s and UNT Law schools.  SHSU chose to participate in the UNT law school scrimmage because all three of its teams could participate (St. Mary’s limited participation to two teams).  This scrimmage will take place October 9-10.  Although the performances do not count in the point system determining whether a team goes to finals, it’s an important performance.  Coaches assess the students’ performances and have the chance to make final team assignments for the tournament.

Kaitlyn_Speaking_Web

Teams consist of two members, and both argue in front of the three justices, with time roughly split between the two members.

Moot_Court_Perry_Couvillion_Web

This year, the tournaments are held at Texas Tech Law School and Texas A&M law school. SHSU is participating in Tech’s tournament on October 23-24.  This is the real deal, and the winners of this tournament will go to Nationals in Washington, DC, which are held in January.

Alex_Speaking_Web

Looking Ahead

Loveall and Yawn are always on the lookout for potential members.  Some students, for example, watched the practice moot court proceedings to see what might be in store for them next year. Other activities also provide Loveall and Yawn the opportunity to find students who have strong oral communication skills, a knowledge of basic law and politics, the desire to become an attorney, and a strong work ethic.

Loveall_Students_WebJamaus, Brittany, & Beatriz get a head start
on next year’s tournament.

Unknown's avatarAuthor mikeyawnPosted on September 30, 2015September 30, 2015Categories Civic Engagement, Civil Rights, Law, PoliticsTags Jean Loveall, LEAP Center, Moot Court, SHSU, TUMCALeave a comment on Moot Court Practices

LEAP Center Does Time: Huntsville Unit Tour

With some help from TDCJ CFO Jerry McGinty, LEAP Center students and guests went behind bars on Thursday, touring the Huntsville Unit (aka Walls Unit).  The guest list included attorneys Audrey Biggar and Jeremy Romoser, City staff Marla Diers, SHSU Staff Deanna Briones and Renee Starns, and retired teacher Leanne Woodward.

TDCJ_Tour_Web

The extensive tour included the historic part of the Walls Unit, where Clyde Barrow and Chief Satanta once served time, and the solitary confinement cell of John Wesley Hardin–who spent two years in solitary.  It also included the holding cell for the death chamber, as well as the death chamber itself, by far the most sobering part of the tour.

The execution chamber is a small room, painted green, with a gurney located in the center.  The gurney has numerous straps to hold down the inmate in his final minutes, and only three individuals are permitted in the room: the condemned inmate, the warden, and the chaplain.  Invited guests witness the execution from viewing rooms.  The execution has a live feed, but no recording equipment.

Also of interest was the textile mill, supervised by James Langley, who gave us a tour of its many-faceted operations.  We saw how inmates made cotton for the uniforms; material for the mops, used at units across the state; and even the material used in mattresses for the inmates (and sold to Universities for dorm bedding!).

Finally, we concluded the tour with a walk-through of the chapel, the cell block, and a Q & A period following the tour.  Perhaps most interesting is the sheer magnitude and diversity of running the prison system.  While most people realize this involves guarding and housing inmates, few people probably realize that there more than 100 units across Texas; or that TDCJ owns some 1,600 horses; or that TDCJ farms produce millions of eggs; or that TDCJ is left to bury some 100 inmates annually, inmates who either don’t have families or whose families don’t have the means or desire to provide a burial themselves.

TDCJ Captain Joe Byrd (Peckerwood Hill) Prison Cemetery. Huntsville, Texas

It’s a daunting enterprise. But the enterprise was explained coherently and, at appropriate times, even entertainingly by Warden Jones, CFO McGinty, and Officer Langley.

While TDCJ tours are not available to the general public, much of TDCJ’s history and artifacts can be viewed at the Texas Prison Museum on HWY 75N.

Unknown's avatarAuthor mikeyawnPosted on September 26, 2015September 26, 2015Categories Civic Engagement, Law, PoliticsTags Huntsville Unit, Jerry McGinty, LEAP Center, SHSU, TDCJ, Walls Unit, Warden JonesLeave a comment on LEAP Center Does Time: Huntsville Unit Tour

Outdoors with Huntsville’s Sculptures and Indoors with Huntsville’s David Adickes

It was a fun second week for participants in the LEAP Center’s heART of Huntsville program.  The week involved a behind-the-scenes tour of David Adickes’ “Big Sam” at the Huntsville Visitor Center, a bus tour of the city’s outdoor sculptures, dinner at the new Eclectic Studio, and a wonderful tour of the Adickes’ Foundation.

Jamie Matthews at the Visitor Center offered an informative and welcoming environment for us beginning at 6pm, with snacks and water on hand.  We were treated to a viewing of the short animated feature introducing the building of the Sam Houston Statue (and Sam Houston, the man)…

Visitor_Center_Web

…which was produced by SHSU students in the animation program of the University’s art department. Following the video, we visited the statue, gathered for a group picture….

Group_Statue_Web…and learned cool facts.  Did you know, for example, that there is a door to the interior of the statue, allowing people to climb to the top of Big Sam?

We also had an hour-long bus tour of Huntsville’s outdoor sculptures.  We would bet that most Huntsville residents don’t know the city has more than 30 such sculptures, including work by world-renowned artists such as Charles Pebworth (“Totem Number One” behind City Hall), Jesus Moroles (two outdoor sculptures on SHSU’s campus and four on the Wynne Home grounds), and Pompeo Coppini (Sam Houston’s grave monument)?  While those sculptors may be some of the more famous, there’s also the abstract Christ statue by Brother Melvin Meyer, who completed more than 10,000 sculptures (mostly from recycled materials) before passing away in 2013?  Or that one of Stuart Kraft’s two Huntsville sculptures was lost by Huntsville Independent School District?   Or that John Stewart’s “Reclining Figure” was inspired by the work of Henry Moore, perhaps the greatest 20th Century sculptor?  Or that the seven trees surrounding the “reclining figure” represent the seven astronauts lost in the 1986 Challenger explosion?  And how many people know that architect Harry Payne completed more seven or eight structures in Huntsville (e.g., Smither-Martin law firm, Sam Houston Memorial Museum) that are still standing? The arts are just one of the fun things to explore in Huntsville!

Bus_Pointing_WebFor most of us, our dinner was the first time to visit Eclectic Studio, but the food and the art will be bringing us back for more!

Dinner_PeasesAlthough normally specializing in vegan and vegetarian fare, the chef (Jennie Dickenson) catered to our meat-eating group with scrumptious ribs, potatoes, pasta salad, and wonderful hummus and chips.

Dinner_Adickes_WebOne of our participants, Betsy Maloney, even had some of her art work on the walls, along with art by Lee Jamison and Jennie Dickenson.  We’d like to thank the POLS department at SHSU for sponsoring this week’s activities and dinner!

The highlight of the evening was the tour of the Adickes’ Foundation, the old Huntsville High School on Avenue H.  Containing more than 300 pieces of art by Adickes, it is a wonderful place to spend an evening….

Paintings_Web…although, at times, there were so much art to see, we didn’t know which direction to turn!

Alex_Hallway_Web

Each of us had our favorite Adickes’ painting, and we made sure we got him in the picture with us, whether it was Karla…

Adickes_Rosales_Web…or Megan…

Adickes_Chapa_Web….or Alex…

Adickes_Galvan_Web…or Kaitlyn…

Adickes_Tyra_WEb

…we all had fun.  Even Ms. Woodward got into the selfie spirit!

Adickes_Woodward_Web

But the most successful was a group selfie…

Adickes_Groupie_3_Web

The LEAP Center Ambassadors have been to many art galleries as a group: the Art Institute of Chicago, the Museum of Fine Arts in Houston, the New Orleans Museum of Art, the Ohr-Okeefe Museum in Biloxi (designed by Frank Gehry), the High Museum in Atlanta, the Cleveland Museum of Art, the Blanton Museum of Art, the Ransom Center, and more.  But as one of the Ambassadors noted, “We’ve been to art museums all over the country, but this one was the coolest, because the artist is with us!”

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He spent time discussing how he made certain pieces (one he used coffee to get the color right!), of how tapestries were made, or the art that was in Elvis Presley’s home…

Adickes_Painting_Presley_Web…the stories were as interesting as the art.

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And for students who are political science majors, it was a treat to hear about the night he spent in the White House, when he had the privilege of going to the Kennedy Center with George H.W. and Barbara Bush, followed by a night in the Lincoln Bedroom.

Adickes_Story_WebIt was a fun, educational evening!

Adickes_Groupie_Web

 

 

 

 

Unknown's avatarAuthor mikeyawnPosted on September 23, 2015Categories Art, Civic Engagement, Food, FunTags David Adickes, Eclectic Studio, heART of Huntsville, LEAP Center, Outdoor Sculptures, SHSULeave a comment on Outdoors with Huntsville’s Sculptures and Indoors with Huntsville’s David Adickes

Council Member for a Day

LEAP students, looking to become more civically involved, had the opportunity to learn from Huntsville leadership Thursday afternoon. In what was considered “Local Government Day” at City Hall, LEAP students came prepared to re-enact a city council meeting, complete with scripts and councilmember assignments.

Woodward_Speaking_WebThe afternoon began with Mayor Woodward talking to students about the importance of civic involvement . We learned about his resume as mayor and of the ins and outs of holding the office. Mayor Woodward gave us a good portion of his afternoon to chat and answer questions before his next event. Taking his place, City Secretary Lee Woodward instructed us on city government and how it works. She spoke about the mission of the city, the different positions held by city workers, and what she does, specifically, as city secretary. Students, often coming to Huntsville from Houston where they are not as involved in the local happenings, listened intently, learning of all the opportunities that await them as members of the Huntsville community.

After learning about Huntsville’s Council-Manager system, students engaged in the exercise of the afternoon, acting out a city council meeting as members of the council and mayor. Each student was assigned to a different position, ranging from mayor to city attorney to hospital administrator, and we read from a script and extemporized the happenings of a typical city council meeting, including the proposal of a texting and driving ordinance–a topic of particular interest to college students.

City_Council_Mock_Web

We had the chance to be coached throughout by City Secretary Woodward and Professor Yawn, both of whom have extensive experience in the Tuesday night council meetings. Students acted their parts well for the most part and, in some cases, argued the proposal of the ordinance with the fervor of actual city council members. In all, we acted through two separate council meetings, with each of us switching roles.

Chapa_Speaks_Web

Overall, we did pretty well.  One of the most difficult things was adjusting to parliamentary procedure. Another was understanding the various rules under which city governments have to operate.  If nothing else, this was a good exercise to know how hard council members work for virtually no pay ($10 a meeting).

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Ending the afternoon, students enjoyed cupcakes from  and chatted about the excitement of being mayor or a councilmember for a few hours. We explored the park behind city hall and saw Charles Pebworth’s “Totem #1.” Inspired to become involved and entrenched in city politics, LEAP students left city hall eager to make a difference in the community. We would like to thank Mayor Woodward and City Secretary Woodward for their hospitality and for hosting LEAP during such an educational afternoon.

Selfie_COH_Web

Unknown's avatarAuthor mikeyawnPosted on September 20, 2015September 20, 2015Categories Civic Engagement, Jobs, LawTags City of Huntsville, LEAP Center, Lee Woodward, Mac Woodward, Mock City Council, SHSULeave a comment on Council Member for a Day

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