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Editor’s Note: A final agenda is
available to media. Contact Elizabeth Smith.
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – Ninth-graders from across the state, including
the Mobile, Montgomery, Birmingham and Tuscaloosa areas, will be
on The University of Alabama and Stillman College campuses next
week to learn lessons in leadership.
Stillman College and UA are sponsoring the Michael A. Figures Leadership
Experience, scheduled for July 20-23. Students will be housed in
residence halls at Stillman and attend seminars at both institutions.
The program will conclude with a luncheon on Wednesday, July 23
at the Indian Hills Country Club where Alabama state Sen. Vivian
Davis Figures (D-Mobile) and UA President Robert E. Witt will make
presentations.
The Michael A. Figures Leadership Experience is named in honor
of the late Sen. Michael A. Figures (D-Mobile) and is designed to
develop leadership skills in young people who demonstrate the capacity
for leadership, but have not yet held leadership roles. Participants
are incoming ninth graders who were initially selected by their
school counselors before going through an additional interview process.
Sessions include topics such as personal and professional etiquette
and dressing for success, negotiation and consensus building, public
speaking, career planning and interpersonal relations. One of the
highlights of the event is student participation in Moot Court with
Judge John England on Monday July 21 from 9:45 a.m. to 11 a.m. at
the UA Law School.
Vivian Davis Figures, the widow of Michael A. Figures, will be
present during the program to share her late husband’s vision
and his 3 B’s: Be prepared; Be there; and Be on time. The
late Figures espoused that while some rare individuals may be born
leaders, most become leaders through a commitment to personal growth
that includes building strength of character, embracing high moral
and spiritual values and acquiring knowledge through education.
Figures was a five-term senator who died in Mobile on Sept. 13,
1996 of a brain hemorrhage. The 49-year-old legislative leader was
only the third African American to serve in the state senate. Figures
was a Mobile attorney and was widely recognized as a skilled debater
whose passionate oratory helped him have an extremely successful
political career. He worked to involve the African American community
in the political process in the aftermath of the Civil Rights era.
In the 1980s, Figures was the attorney in a lawsuit against two
Ku Klux Klan members convicted in the 1981 lynching of Michael Donald
in Mobile. A jury returned a $7 million judgment that bankrupted
the United Klans of America. In 1995, Figures was elected Senate
president pro tem in January 1995, which made him the third most
powerful man in the state. He was known for his ability to resolve
conflict rather than champion it. At the time of his death it was
widely thought, both inside the state of Alabama and in Washington,
D.C., that Figures had a long and successful political career ahead
of him.
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