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Mock Commission Meeting :t.>; ~I. }'\ ~ ~ I Wi I i --- ~-~~,,~...,.~_. ~"" High [ Senior Miami ~hool. IP .der S. IY Ath- honor al s tu - '5 at its taking day at Nor- ~ach. l also If Alan 'rence lczyn- :hool's Ire $18 6 for my is ee Dr. more ~vent, - - I I ! ~ i' f ~ ., f j L f. " ~ f 1 ~ I l i t i I i i I r ! t I t I [ I I i I 1 I I 1.- I I I ( j I I I I ! i i !' ~ 1 I f 1 f .~ ~ MIAMI BEACH BY ANDREA TORRES atorres@herald,com Students from local schools recently got in the act for Miami Beach's ongoing 90th birthday celebration when they reenacted the city's very tirst commission meeting. The'y gathered May, 16 in commission chambers at City Hall, wore hats and bow ties and endured silver hair spray and makeup. Jan Vleeschou- wer, a ninth-grader at Miami Beach Senior High, said the subterfuge was necessary to "embody the wisdom" that comes with age. To transform himself into John N. Lummus, the city's first mayor, Jan also adopted a Southern accent and studied up on the history of the city, including diving into Lummus' book, The Miracle of Miami Beach. Jan and 10 other students performed the reenactment based on minutes from the April 6, 1915, Miami Beach City Commission meeting. Local historians Abraham D. Laven- der and Carolyn Klepser reviewed the script for accu- racy, though the students con- tributed improvisational snip- pets between agenda items. After a couple of rehearsals that allowed students to famil- iarize themselves with the AS PART OF MIAMI BEACH'S ONGOING 90TH BIRTHDAY CELEBRATION, LOCAL STUDENTS RE-CREATED THE CITY COMMISSION'S FIRST MEETING FROtv11915 pronunciations for words such as "ordinances" and "adjourned," Lavender, presi- dent of the Miami Beach His- torical Society, introduced the "meeting" tq a small audience of teachers frOln Nautilus Middle and Miami Beach Senior High schools, plus city officials. , "The most important issues of the time were street light- ing, sewers, sidewalks and other municipal improve- ments," Lavender said. During the play, students were encouraged to impro- vise. At one point Jan, speak- ing as Lummus, jokingly sug- gested he wasn't interested in spending money on education. TURN TO MOCK, 6 That drew a sharp retort from eighth-grader Taylor PLAYERS: Taylor Calibo, 14, of Nautilus Middie School, and Luelle Llorens, 18, of Beach Senior High School, performed in a mock commission meeti'ng to commemorate the 90th anniversary of the city of Miami Beach. The students' mock 1915 City Commission meeting will be televised on Miami Beach's Channel 20 from 8:30 to 9 a,m, before the City Commission meetings of June 8, July 6 and 27 and Sept 7, You can also watch the meeting online, at www.miamibeach fl.gov /videol video_archive.asp, TO WATCH THE MEETING I ~1~3l1 ANDREA TORRES/HERALD STAFF Miami 3 U"l o o N 0) N >- <l: L ~ <l: o z ::> CJ) o -l <l: 0:: W I W I l- E o u -0 iii Qj L ~ 3: 3: a; 2.: ACT NG MIAMI BEACH c v L ~'~ lJ) o o N cri N >- <t 2: ~ <t o Z ::::) lJ) o ...J <t 0:: W I W I f0- E o u -0 ~ OJ ..c 3 ~ ~ co 2: The Historical Museum of Southern Florida will offer Tropical Explorers Summer Camp 2005 that will take campers on imaginary and real-time journeys through South Florida and the Carib- bean. Camp starts June 6 and runs through Aug. 5, with registra:' tion available by weekly ses- sion or for the entire nine weeks. Hours will be 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays at the Histori- cal"Museum, 101 West Flagler St., for children 6 through 12 years old. Some of the camp's high- lights include meeting Carib- bean artists who will help the Tropical Explorers create Caribbean-inspired works of arts; directing a production For information, call the Historical Museum of South- ern Florida at 305-375-1492 or visit www.historical- museum.org. about the early days of South Florida and playing characters like Mary Brickell, Julia Tuttle, Ralph Munroe and other Miami founders. There will also be field trips and guided tours to sites such as the Cutler Ridge Fossil Site, the Miccosukee Indian Village, Gusman Center for the Performing Arts, the Dade County Court House and- Lummus Park. Sessions are $110 a week for museum members; $120 for nonmembers, with discounts available for multiple sessions. \ Camp take~ journeys though South Florida DOWNTOWN MIAM At WRIGHT / For The Herald Al Wright, who lives on Ocean Terrace in Miami Beach, shares this picture of Miami at sunset, taken from his balcony. 'The sunsets are fantastic!' Wright says. Show Us Your Neighborhood is a feature spotlighting photos submitted by readers, Send pictures and descriptions to editorJim Murphy at jmurphy@herald,com. SHOW US YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD \ ANDREA TORRES/HERALD STAFF LOOKING BACK: Chris Lewis, 18, of Miami Beach Senior High School, participated in a mock commission meeting. Lewis is shown with local historian Abraham D. Lavender, who reviewed the students' script for accuracy Calibo, who played original city clerk J.F. Canova. , "Education is important. That is how we are going to build the leaders of tomor- row," Calibo said. While they acted out the meeting in about 20 minutes, Louis Armstrong music played in the background. Overall, the students seemed to take their mock jobs seriously, submitting to makeup sessions and wrin- kling their faces to add a few years. Attempts at realism were sometimes betrayed by con- cessions to reality - such as when Theo De Freze, a fourth-grader at Morningside Elementary-, sat on a phone book so he could see the other commission members over the table.. In the end, the l)tudents fol- lowed the script - and his- tory - by grappling with top- ics such as boardwalks, a post office" schools and city statio- nery. Afterward they had a mod- ern pizza party, and hob- nobbed with the likes of cur- rent Mayor David Dermer, Vice Mayor Luis R. Garcia, the City Attorney Murray Dubbin and Commissioners Saul Gross, Matti Bow'~r and Richard Steinberg. "I know this was a serious day, but I liked that I was able to make people laugh," Jan said. "I learned a lot because we were able to interact with each other and understand the way a city is developed and the way it grows. "I. mean, it used to be all swampy, and today it is what John Lummus wanted it to be - a tourist attraction." · MOCK, FROM 3 ..~r~~rliE)(e1H.~...N~._......._~."-".~Y..~ Students hold mock meeting .~a~~a~..A=a.8..~.e.a..~.