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Email: president@lwvcomal.org
LWV of the Comal Area
PO Box 311324
New Braunfels, TX 78131
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Date: 4/19/2023
Subject: April 2023 VOTER
From: LWV Comal Area



April 2023 VOTER

OFFICERS & DIRECTORS

PRESIDENT
Jerrie Champlin 
 
VP-ORGANIZATION
Kristen Coppock
 
VP-PROGRAM
Daphne Spraitzar
 
VP-VOTERS SERVICE
Laraine Henchal
 
SECRETARY
Ada Conlan
 
TREASURER
Roxanna Deane
 
DIRECTOR, MEMBERSHIP
Vacant
 
DIRECTOR, PUBLICITY
Cassie Wedding
 
DIRECTOR, YOUTH
EMPOWERMENT
Sheila Pattison
 
CHAIR, NOMINATING 
COMITTEE
Robin Engel
 
 
League Leaders needed! 
Contact Us  to volunteer
  Calendar
 
WHEN: Saturday, April 22, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. 
WHERE: Headwaters at Comal
                333 Klingemann
                New Braunfels, TX 78130
Volunteer at Earth Day Celebration
 
WHEN: Sunday, April 30, 1p.m. to 4 p.m.
WHERE: New Braunfels, TX 
Volunteer at CycloViva
 
WHEN: Wednesday, May 10, 6:30 p.m. to 8 p.m.
WHERE: Texas A&M Comal AgriLife Extension
                 325 Resource Dr.
                 New Braunfels, TX 78132
 
 WHEN: Saturday, June 10, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
WHERE: Comal County Fairgrounds
        701 Common St
                New Braunfels, TX  78130
Contact Us  to volunteer
 
 WHEN: Saturday, June 17, 9 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.
WHERE: Westside Community Center
2932 S IH Frontage Road
New Braunfels, TX  78130 
Contact Us  to volunteer

 
 
 
 
 
 
 Welcome New Members!
 
Bethany Green, New Braunfels
Betty Groepper, New Braunfels
Ginny Jones, New Braunfels
Audrey Schell, Canyon Lake
 
 
Most people join the League 
because they are asked.
 
Ask a friend!
 
Ready to join?New Member Signup 

From the President
 
As we celebrate National Volunteer Week, I am once again struck by what our small group of awesome volunteers has accomplished to empower voters ahead of the May 6 local elections.  Thank you!
 
Coming up is our Annual Meeting at which members elect new Directors, approve next year's budget and review the past year.  The new Executive Director of our community partner the Comal County Conservation Alliance will join us to introduce himself and speak about what's ahead for CCCA.  
 
Members only can find more information in the website Document Library under LWVCA Documents - May 2023 Annual Meeting file.  Members should have already received an email with the Nominations and Budget documents links, and will receive an email by April 25, with final meeting details and a RSVP request. Please note, we need members to RSVP to ensure that we have a quorum for the meeting.  I hope to see you there!
 
 -Jerrie Champlin

Pictured above: Top right:  Timberwood Park Elementary entrants with art teacher Jill Corona. 2nd row, left to rightt:  6-8th grade entry from Ty C; Church Hill Middle School art teacher Kendra Ferrell, Ty C.  and LWVCA Youth Empowerment Director Sheila Pattison; Overall 1st Place winner from Dylann P., Danville Middle School. 3rd Row: 1st Place, K-2nd grade from Makena S. TimberwoodPark ES; Makena S. and proud mom; 1st Place, 3-5th grade from Diyanna C., Seele Elementary. 4th row: Contest judges Janyth Fredrickson, Juliana Zengler, Jan Ashcraft, Elizabeth Alvarado-McVey and Janice Nance; 1st Place 6-8th grade from Aubrey S., Danville MS.

Art Contest Winners Announced

 

 Local K-8th graders amazed the League of Women Voters Comal Area (LWVCA)  and contest judges with the creativity and impact of their entries in the Be My Voice-VOTE Art Poster Contest sponsored by the League January-March 2023.  


LWVCA is pleased to announce the following awards:
Dylann Parker, Danville Middle School, first place overall

Makena Shipkey, Timberwood Park Elementary, first place, K-2nd grade division

Diyanna Cruz, Seele Elementary, first place, 3rd-5th grade division

Aubrey Sralla, Danville Middle School, first place, 6th-8th grade division.


These prize winners are part of twenty entries from 8 schools selected to promote voting, and to appear in a video about the art contest (viewable at https://youtu.be/buDHCVYi9hw ) and in a future exhibition.  “Our judges weighed several factors from artistic composition to how well each piece communicated the impact of adult voting on children and their futures,” commented LWVCA President Jerrie Champlin. “Our goal is to raise awareness in students and in the community about how adults’ votes impact young lives, and to provide an opportunity for students to learn about the value of voting and democracy."

LWVCA Youth Empowerment Director Sheila Pattison added "The art contest is designed to engage elementary and middle school students through artistic expression.  We hope that the contest helps open their minds to the foundation of democracy and encourages dialogue with their parents. We’re grateful to all the young artists who shared their talents with us and to the educators, librarians, and parents who facilitated their participation. We also thank our distinguished judging panel:  Janice Nance, retired librarian and  Delta Sigma Theta Service Sorority member (Bexar Area Alumnae Chapter); Elizabeth Alvarado-McVey, LULAC member, quilter, and former educator;  Janyth Fredrickson, artist and past LWVCA Youth Empowerment Director; Juliana Zengler, artist and LWVCA student member; and Jan Ashcraft, retired educator. 

See a photo album at Be My Voice- VOTE! Art Poster Contest

Isabel Verver And The Little School of 400
 
[Community activist and LWVCA member Maria Saenz-Rodriguez commemorated Women's History Month by sharing the inspiring history of the Little School of 400 in the following letter to the New Braunfels Herald-Zeitung editor]
 

Women’s History Month 2023 is coming to an end soon and it is not often that we see much in the media about some very significant Latina women in Texas history. One such woman was Isabel Verver, a 17-year-old high school student, who believed that non-English speaking preschool children would not fall behind if they knew basic English words before they entered 1st grade. Verver was recently inducted into the LULAC Hall of Fame for her vision and devotion to education. 

 

The Texas Historical Commission marker honoring Isabel Verver and others associated with the Little School of the 400 is located in Ganado, Jackson County, Texas. The text of the marker below gives the background: 

 

“The Little School of the 400 was an educational project developed to integrate Spanish-speaking school children into the mainstream public school population. The program sought to teach these children a vocabulary of 400 essential words to enable them to successfully complete the 1st grade. Isabel Verver, a 17-year-old Ganado High School student, read an article in a Spring 1957 issue of Texas Outlook Magazine that expressed Felix Tijerina’s desire for such a program. Tijerina was a successful Houston businessman as well as the national president of the League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC). Verver contacted Tijerina and expressed her desire to implement such a program. Both Tijerina and Verver knew what it was like to be a 1st-grader unable to communicate with their teachers or fellow students, and hoped to remove that language barrier. Baytown educator Elizabeth Burrus supplied a list of 400 vocabulary words to Tijerina that she had formulated from years of teaching bilingual students. Verver taught the pilot class in Ganado during the summer of 1957 and produced 60 “graduates” in time for the fall school term. Seeing Verver’s success, LULAC established similar classes in towns such as Vanderbilt, Edna, Sugar Land, Aldine, Brookshire and Wharton for summer 1958. Tijerina and members of LULAC worked for passage of House Bill 51 during the 56th Texas Legislature. The bill established a state-sponsored program called preschool instructional classes for non-English speaking children and eliminated the need for the privately funded “Little Schools.” Head Start and other federally-funded programs of the 1960s eventually took the place of the state-sponsored program.”