 Visit www.springbreakalternative.org for information and to register for the 2007 Anti-Death Penalty Alternative Spring Break, March 12-16, 2007
The info below is about past spring breaks.
The 2006 Alternative Spring Break is being organized by Texas Students Against the Death Penalty Below is a video of the 2005 Alternative Spring Break It was produced and directed by Sarah Garrahan
Below is information from the 2005 Spring Break last year. For information on the 2006 Spring Break visit the website of TSADP  ANTI-DEATH PENALTY ALTERNATIVE SPRING BREAK
Volunteer for Five Days of Activism and Education to Stop Executions
Pictures from Spring Break More pictures (with comments) taken by Abe Bonowitz of Citizens United for Alternatives to the Death Penalty Video of TV coverage, including shots of Death Penalty Issues Lobby Day rally at the capitol on March 15. There are reports from two different TV stations on this file. The report with the shots of the rally are in the second story that aired on KEYE, which appears about three minutes into the clip. This is a large 84 MB file, so it is only accessible if you have a broadband connection. Click below for a report on Alternative Spring Break in "The Corrections Connection"
: Alternative Spring Break: Students Speak Out Against the Death Penalty
By Meghan Mandeville, News Research Reporter Here is an article in the Spanish language newspaper Rumbo
March 12-17, 2005 in Austin, Texas
Still a few rooms available for $25 for the whole week!
Alternative Spring Breaks are designed to give students something more meaningful to do during their week off, rather than just spending time at the beach or sitting at home catching up on school work. The specific purpose of this Alternative Spring Break is to bring students to Austin for five days of anti-death penalty activism and education. We will provide participants with workshops that will teach them skills they can use to go back home and set up new anti-death penalty student organizations or improve ones that may already exist. The skills participants will learn can also be used in other issues besides the death penalty. Activities include a Death Penalty Issues Lobby Day on March 15th and a direct action day on March 16th.
Students will gain valuable training and experience in grassroots organizing, lobbying, preparing a direct action and media relations. They can apply what they learn against the death penalty or in their activities involving other issues. Workshop presenters include Walter Long on "The Death Penalty in Texas"; Abe Bonowitz on "Organizing a Direct Action"; Brenda Bowser of the Death Penalty Information Center on "Working with the Media"; Dr Michael Young of UT-Austin on "How Movements Make an Impact"; Les Breeding on "Influencing the Texas Legislature" and a "Live from Death Row" event .
Alternative Spring Break Schedule
-
Saturday,
March 12Saturday's events will be held on
the University of Texas campus in room 3.112 of Building A of the Jesse H. Jones
Communications Center (CMA 3.112), which is
located at the corner of Dean Keeton and
Whitis Avenue. Dean Keeton is also known as
26th Street.
- 1- 3:00 PM Housing check-in for people who have
signed up for housing. Meet at The Goodall
Wooten Co-ed Dormitory, 2112 Guadalupe
(Corner of 21st and Guadalupe). Parking is available
behind the building.
Most
people will be staying here, however a few people will
be at a couple of other dorms nearby. If you can not
check in by 3 PM, then just go directly to the
Communications Building, CMA 3.112 where the
Saturday workshops are taking place and you can
check in to your room after the workshops.
- 4:00 - 5:00 PM "The Death Penalty in Texas",
talk by Walter Long, a nationally known expert
on the issue of banning executions of juvenile
offenders. Walter is an attorney who represented
Napoleon Beazley and Karla Faye Tucker, among
others.
- 5 - 6 "How Movements Make an Impact:
Lessons From The Past" Dr. Michael
Young of the University of Texas at Austin
Sociology Department will provide a survey of the
impact of American social movements throughout
history. He will focus in particular on the movement
to abolish slavery and the civil rights movement and
possible lessons for the anti-death penalty
movement. Dr Young provided us an outline and notes of his talk.
- 6 PM "Live from Death Row" event
organized by the Austin chapter of the Campaign to
End the Death Penalty featuring a live phone call
from an inmate on California's Death Row in San
Quentin Prison. Calling in via speakerphone will be
Stanley "Tookie" Williams, who was nominated in
2001 for a Nobel Peace Prize for his series of
children's books and efforts to curtail youth gang
violence.
Free Pizza and soda served at first night's
events. - Evening Time on your own for enjoying
Austin, including the SXSW film
festival.
-
Sunday,
March 13
- Sleep in late, because we know everyone wants
to stay out late Saturday night and enjoy their visit
to Austin
- 1 PM Meet at The Goodall Wooten
dormitory to travel out to the neighborhood where
we will be collecting petition signatures.
- 1:30 - 2 PM Abe Bonowitz will talk about about
direct action, so everyone can start getting ideas of
what action we want to plan for Wednesday.
- 2 - 3 PM Training on Door-to-Door Canvassing
(Rachel Penticuff, TMN's Executive Director, will
lead workshop)
Held at St. Catherine of Siena
Catholic Church,
4800 Convict Hill Rd in
South Austin.
- 3-6 PM Door-to-Door Canvassing
collecting signatures on moratorium petitions in
the district of State Representative Terry Keel, who
is chair of the House Committee on Criminal
Jurisprudence.
- Evening Time on your own for enjoying
Austin
-
Monday,
March 14 Monday's workshops will be held
on the University of Texas campus in room 3.112 of
Building A of the Jesse H. Jones
Communications Center (CMA 3.112), which is
located at the corner of Dean Keeton and
Whitis Avenue. Dean Keeton is also known as
26th Street.
- 10:00 AM - Noon Workshop: "Working with
the Media" with Brenda Bowser, Communications
Director of the
Death Penalty Information Center.
- 12:00 - 2 PM Lunch on your own
- 2 - 4 Workshop: "Influencing the Texas
Legislature" with Les Breeding, former legislative
director for a member of the Texas Legislature.
During the workshop, participants will learn how to
interact effectively with legislators or legislative
aides. This workshop will also cover how to convince
student governments, city councils, churches and
other organizations to pass resolutions calling for a
moratorium on executions.
- 4 -6 Preparation for next day's Death Penalty
Issues Lobby Day.
This time is reserved as a work period to finish
preparing signs and the boxes representing the
misplaced evidence from the HPD crime lab that will
be used for the rally tomorrow. Participants should
have already made appointments to visit their
respective legislators before arriving in Austin.
- More time on your own for enjoying Austin
-
Tuesday,
March 15: Death Penalty Issues Lobby Day
Lobby day is organized by TMN and co-sponsored by CEDP, TCADP, TDPAM and State Representative Harold
Dutton. We thank everyone who donated money, time and energy for Lobby Day.
- 9:30 AM - 11 AM, Lobby Training Workshop
for
anyone coming to Austin just for lobby day.
Location: William P. Clements Building, Room 103.
Conducted by Les Breeding. 300 W. 15th Street,
Austin. Parking is available either at meters along the
streets or a short walk away at the Capitol Visitors
Parking Garage at 1201 San Jacinto located between
Trinity and San Jacinto Streets. Parking is free for
the first two hours and $.75 for each half hour
thereafter (maximum daily charge: $6.00) Map of the Capitol Complex.
- 9:00 AM - 11 AM Morning lobbying
appointments for people who attended the
Lobby training workshop on Monday.
- 11 AM Set-up boxes, table and other equipment
for press conference on the south steps of the capitol
- Noon Press Conference with among
others Jesse Quackenbush, the
attorney representing the family of Johnny Garrett,
who was executed by Texas in 1992. Many people
now believe that Garrett was innocent. Garrett was 17
at the time of the crime for which he was executed
and he was a person with mental retardation. Other speakers at the press conference or the rally included State Representative Harold Dutton, State Senator Leticia Van De Putte, State Representative Ruth Jones McClendon, State Representative Elliott Naishtat, Martha Cotera, Scott Cobb, Abe Bonowitz, Hooman Keshavars Hedayaty, Lily Hughes, Carol Byars, Sister Elizabeth Riebschlaeger and Omar Neal.
- 1 PM Rally on South Steps of Capitol
with 280 boxes representing lost evidence Rally
speakers will include the speakers from the press
conference and others, including Texas legislators.
- Afternoon: Visits with legislators and/or their
aides.
- 4 PM Meet in the Capitol Cafeteria to
socialize and exchange information about what
people learned during their visits with legislative
offices.
- More time on your own for enjoying Austin
-
Wednesday,
March 16: Direct Action Day Wednesday's
workshop will be held on the University of Texas
campus in room 3.112 of Building A of the Jesse H. Jones
Communications Center (CMA 3.112), which is
located at the corner of Dean Keeton and
Whitis Avenue. Dean Keeton is also known as
26th Street.
- 10 AM - 12 PM Workshop: "Organizing a
Direct Action" During the morning workshop,
participants will conceive, plan and prepare to carry
out a media stunt/direct action in the afternoon. The
presenter for the direct action workshop is Abe
Bonowitz of Citizens United for
Alternatives to the Death Penalty.
- Noon to 1:30 PM Lunch on your own
- After Lunch: Meet back in CMA 3.122 to continue
preparation of Direct Action
- 5:30 PM Carry Out
Direct Action at the Governor's Mansion (11th
and Lavaca). Pablo Melendez, Jr is scheduled to be
executed on March 16, so the direct action will be
designed to protest his execution. Melendez was 18
at the time of his offense.
- 7 PM Review of Lobby Day/Direct Action and
entire ASB (possibly over dinner somewhere)
-
Thursday,
March 17: Departure Day
- Students leave Austin when they get up if they
didn't leave Wednesday night
Housing is available for a fee of $25. We will house participants in double rooms at a dormitory near the University of Texas at Austin. Most students will be at The Goodall Wooten, a few people will stay in a dorm near the Wooten. You will share the room with another person. Click the logo to pay the $25 housing fee by paypal. You can also send a check for $25 to: Texas Moratorium Network 602 West 7th St, Suite 202 B Austin, Texas 78731 There is no participation fee for the Anti-Death Penalty Alternative Spring Break except for those people who need housing. If you do not need housing, because you live in Austin or you are making your own housing arrangements, then your participation is free, but please register so we know how many people to expect. Participants are expected to travel to Austin at their own expense and pay for their meals and incidental expenses while in Austin. If you can not attend the Alternative Spring Break yourself, you can still make a donation to sponsor a student who can attend.
Housing spaces are limited, so please register soon. Participants who register for housing need
to bring towels, sheets and pillows. If you would like to write a blog about your experiences at the Anti-Death Penalty Alternative Spring Break, just go to www.blogger.com, create your own blog and start blogging. We can link to your blog from our website. | Registration Form for 2005 Anti-Death Penalty Alternative Spring Break For more information, email us at:admin@texasmoratorium.org or call us at:
512-302-6715. If you would like to participate, but the $25 housing fee is too much for you (we know students have tight budgets), just email us. We can waive the fee for participants for whom it is a financial burden.
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