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More than 80 “famous Americans’”

visited Elm Lawn Elementary’s gym-

nasium on Wednesday of last week.The historical figures were actually

part of the school’s second annual waxmuseum and was the culmination of a

month-long project by the fifth-gradeclass. Each student studied a different

famous American historical figure, puttogether a display and did an oral pres-

entation. On Wednesday night, stu-dents were in costumes and “frozen”

like wax figures.“As any good teacher does, we bor-

rowed the idea from a different schoolin another district,” he said. “Each year

we have evaluated the project andmade small adjustments to keep it

aligned with our teaching goals and toour standards.”

Students spent about two weeks re-searching and taking notes. They also

read biographies, searched online,watched videos and conducted inter-

views.Elm Lawn fifth-grade teacher Kevin

Pauls estimated more than 250 peoplevisited the wax museum on Wednes-

day.The students were provided a list of 

about 125 individuals to choose fromalthough they can also pick a different

person if they have a special interest,Pauls said. Some of the famous people

in attendance this year were EmilyDickinson, Dian Fossey, Ben Franklin,

Jackie Kennedy, Lewis and Clark,Georgia O’Keefe, Sally Ride, Jackie

Robinson and George and MarthaWashington and The Wright Brothers.

Pauls said this is the second year theschool’s fifth-grade team - Lindsay

Muniz, Lisa Webber, Tanya Zempeland himself - has done the project al-

though he and Webber have been doingsomething very close to this since they

started at Sunset Ridge in 2004.“This year’s project turned out great

even though we changed some of thekey skills we taught because of the

change in our writing curriculum,” hesaid. “In the past our greatest amount

of time was teaching about writing aresearch paper, but since that doesn’t fit

in exactly with the Units of Study pro-gram, we changed the focus to research

skills and oral presentations.”

Middleton High School seniors

Mike Hoot and Matt Weber wereawarded Outstanding Delegates at this

weekend’s Chicago InternationalModel United Nations Conference.

Hoot represented the Minister of Commerce and Trade in the Historical

Soviet Cabinet in 1950 at the dawn of the Korean War.

“Our mission was to decide whetheror not to support the Communist gov-

ernments in China and North Koreawhile at the same time working against

U.S. interests,” he said. “In the end, webrokered a cease-fire agreement in

Korea and negotiated a seat for China

in the U.N. Security Council.”Weber represented India in the pres-

ent-day U.N. Security Council. He

took a lead role negotiating a treatywith Pakistan to resolve the Kashmir

territory dispute. “We agreed to begin

withdrawing troops over a two-year pe-

riod followed by a partition of the landunder mutually agreed to conditions,”

he said.Both Hoot and Weber had to re-

spond to 2 a.m. crises in which theywere awoken in the middle of the night

and had to rush to an emergency meet-ing of their respective committees. In

the Soviet Cabinet the crisis wasChina’s entry into the Korean War. In

the Security Council, Turkey invadedSyria. Both committees worked until

sunrise before the crises were finallyresolved.

Hoot and Weber are president andvice president, respectively, of the

MHS Model UN Club. Both have beenmembers since their freshman year.

Twenty-five MHS students partici-pated in the Chicago conference repre-

senting India, Croatia, and Libya. Morethan 1,000 students from around the

world, including Spain and Lithuania,also took part.

Next up for the Middleton club is the

North American International ModelUN Conference sponsored by George-

town University, in Washington D.C.from Feb. 14-17, 2013.

PAGE 20 MIDDLETON TIMES-TRIBUNE THURSDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2012

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History comes to life at Elm Lawn Elementary

Great weekend for MHS students at Model UN

Photo contributed

Wesley Carpenter as Walt Disney.

Photo contributed

Middleton High School seniors Mike Hoot, left, and Matt Weber, right,

by PERRY HIBNER

 Middleton Cross Plains Area School Dist.

by PERRY HIBNER

 Middleton Cross Plains Area School Dist.

Jazz Society

grant for

Sauk Trail

The Madison Jazz Society recently

awarded grants from its MemorialSchool Grant Fund to music programs

in seventeen Wisconsin schools. Thegrants are funding jazz centered pro-

grams designed to help students learnabout and perform jazz.

In announcing the awards, grantcommittee chairman Bob Schwartz

stated, “We are very pleased that thesegrants will assist students from all over

Wisconsin now and in years to come.We are sorry we could not fund all of 

the requests submitted. We are thrilledto see that many schools throughout the

state are working to provide opportuni-ties for their students to learn about

America’s original art form – jazz.”One of the grants was awarded to

Sauk Trail Elementary School in Mid-dleton, with John Becker, director. The

school received $400 to help under-write the Making Jazz Music Child’s

Play, 4th Edition program.It was also announced that $500 will

go to underwrite the MMSD HighSchool Jazz Festival held December 10

with jazz bands from Madison East,Madison West, Madison Memorial and

Middleton High School.More information on the school

grant program and the Society can befound at www.madisonjazz.com.

Formed in 1984, the Madison JazzSociety is a non-profit, all volunteer or-

ganization formed to encourage theperformance of and education about

 jazz.

Photo contributed

John Becker, right, band director

at the Sauk Trail, receiving the grant

from MJS member Gary Poulson.


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