News that Stands Out
THE KNIGHT TIMES Official Student Newspaper of Episcopal High School
January 2020
4650 Bissonnet, Bellaire, Texas 77401
www.ehshouston.org
Volume 34, Issue 6
Annual auction EHS community participates in Interim Term From a trip to China to dancing and cooking, EHS does it all provides needed funds for EHS LARA VERSTOVSEK Staff Writer The Episcopal High School Annual Auction is a tradition with one simple goal: to raise necessary revenue for the school’s operating budget, and this year’s event will be held February 21. The theme is Blue Knight Masquerade, and guests will enjoy an elegant evening of masks and mystique. As part of the annual giving program, the auction opens doors and provides a breadth of opportunities for students. The generous support of families and faculty makes it possible for EHS students to experience an unparalleled offering of classes, build lasting relationships with a talented faculty, and be exposed to enriching opportunities. The generosity of the EHS community is also essential to the success of the school’s Financial Aid Program, giving financial assistance to deserving students. Episcopal has been presenting auctions since 1985 and continues to wow the crowd with outstanding venues and gatherings. Parents and friends work on the year-long process, gathering live and silent auction items, soliciting underwriting, producing an auction program, designing decorations, addressing invitations, and cataloging items. There are usually around 400 in attendance on auction night. EHS parents and community members are so supportive of the auction each year with around 100 EHS faculty and staff volunteering to help with logistics. There are over 200 EHS parent volunteers that help as well, year-round, securing items and performing other auction-related tasks. This year’s chairs for the event are Elizabeth and Will Galtney, Daryl and Aaron Hoover, and Carol and Gregg Thompson. Items for auction in the Online Auction and on Auction Night are in the categories of Home, Personals, Sports, Guys, Students, Entertainment, and Getaways. Auction Night has a Silent Auction, a Big Board, and a Live Auction. The Live Auction begins after guests are served a catered meal. EHS’s Online Auction will open to everyone for a week, around the first of February and will be the seventh online auction in the event’s thirty-six year history.
INSIDE Tex Mex Tailgate Annual club fair held during games against John Cooper
PAGE 2 Tuck Everlasting Rehearsals Students prepare for the musical this spring
PAGE 4 Features ........................ 2-3 Culture......................... 4 Entertainment .............. 5 Knight Shift ................. 6 Opinion ........................ 7 Sports ........................... 8
Mr. Storlie and Mrs. Philbrick took their Polaroid Class to Smither Park for an Interim Term day trip. The class members were given the chance to photograph their surroundings using their new knowledge of the cameras. Photo by Jami Rassy. CLAIRE FRANKFORT Staff Writer
During the first two weeks of January, EHS students immersed themselves into creative thinking classes as the school transitions the student body into second semester smoothly. Through this, Knights are able to postpone core classes and learn a variety of new disciplines. Students also had the opportunity to travel to San Francisco, China, and Washington D.C. Learn more about Interim Term on Page 3
Episcopal attends “HAMUN Forty Five” Conference LYNDON WALSH Staff Writer Episcopal High School’s Model United Nations (UN) Club spent two days out of school competing and representing Episcopal at the 45th Houston Area Model UN (HAMUN) Conference hosted at the University of Houston. Model UN in general provides the opportunity for students to break barriers that keep people apart in the world and promote world peace for future generations to come. At HAMUN, Episcopal represented the delegations of Sweden, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Belgium, the United States, and Great Britain. This year, about twenty-six student delegates spent over 15 hours debating a range of topics such as the decolonization of indigenous communities in South America and the general population’s exposure to electromagnetic radiation and the health risks. In crisis committees, Episcopal held two positions on the International Court of Justice where delegates are given the chance to act as judges deciding the fate of international legal cases as well as three positions on the Great War crisis debating the British and U.S .Home fronts. HAMUN is the one of the largest conferences in the Southern United States, hosting over 52 high schools and over 1,100 delegates. These delegates are then divided
into committees ranging from 8-300 people for the debates. In order to succeed in these committees, Episcopal’s delegates spent many hours preparing for the conference by writing position papers about topics on the view of the nation they represent. Each delegate is required to write at least one paper to submit, but many chose to submit two papers in hopes of earning any sort of award for their writing at the conference.
Model UN and HAMUN act as an opportunity for students to branch out and try something that they would not normally get to experience in a typical school day. Overall, the goal of Model UN is to expose the younger generation of the world to issues that they face or will face on a global scale, thus promoting world change. For now, Episcopal’s Model UN team is looking forward to its next conference.
EHS Model UN Club stands outside of the University of Houston Student Center preparing for a second day of the conference. Photo courtesy of Mr. Julius Michael.