10
VOLUME 123, NUMBER 16 ROSENBERG-RICHMOND, TEXAS AND TEXAS COASTER www.fbherald.com 75 CENTS HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL Overtime wins, district loss- es highlight weekend hoops; see Sports Good Afternoon Fort Bend Journal Around the Bend Obituaries Today’s Scripture Royal Neighbors The Royal Neighbors of America — Chapter 7826, will hold its final meet- ing on Monday at Schulze’s Barbecue. Meal will be provided. Call 281-232- 3490. Sugar Land Garden Club The Sugar Land Garden Club pres- ents “Garden Design Spring 2015” by Billy Marberry on Tuesday at the Knights of Columbus Hall, 702 Bur- ney Road, Sugar Land. Refreshments 9:30 a.m.; program starts at 10 a.m. Harvest Fest meeting Needville’s Harvest Festival com- mittee will meet Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. in the park office, 3001 Violet Street, Needville. Call 281-468-9314. Lamar graveside salute A memorial ceremony honoring Re- public of Texas President Mirabeau B. Lamar will be held at Lamar’s gravesite in Morton Cemetery, Richmond, on Monday, Jan. 26 beginning at 1 p.m. The event is free and the public is invited to attend. LIFE classes LIFE University is holding free classes for the community on Tues- day nights. Dinner is served at 6:30 p.m. for $1 per person. Classes go from 7-8 p.m. Classes for adults: family fit camp, career develop- ment, anger management, ESL and grief class. Call 281-342-3805 to reg- ister. Childcare is provided for up to 4-years-old and homework help for grades 1-5. Archeology society Daggers, bows, spears and armor from over 400 years of Japanese history will be the subject of a free program presented by Dirk Van Tuerenhout, PhD, to the Fort Bend Archeological Society at 7 p.m. on Tuesday in the assembly hall of the Gus George Law Enforcement Acad- emy, 1521 Eugene Heimann Circle, Richmond. “I like nonsense, it wakes up the brain cells. Fantasy is a necessary ingredient in living, it’s a way of looking at life through the wrong end of a telescope and that enables you to laugh at life’s reali- ties.” — Dr. Suess Janie Warstler getting the good word out to the public for January’s AARP Chapter 1772 monthly member- ship meetings ... Also, Marti Preuss doing her darn best in getting a fabulous rate . ... Con- grats to Richmond residents Michaela Huebotter and Tamunotein Tariah for making the President’s List at Texas A&M University-Kingsville. Phyllis Nan Esker, 70 William Marshall, 80 Luis Bultron, 53 When the angel of the Lord appeared to Gideon, he said, “The Lord is with you, mighty warrior.” See page 5 — BH Judges 6:12 7 2 86037 20032 MONDAY, JANUARY 19, 2015 Nonsense HERALD STAFF Prospective volunteers interested in making a difference in the lives of chil- dren in 2015 need look no further than the Child Advocates of Fort Bend. Beginning Feb. 2, Child Advocates of Fort Bend will be offering a week-long training class to train volunteers to advo- cate for abused and neglected children. This is one of two opportunities in 2015 to complete the volunteer training class in a single week. Volunteers must be over 21 years of age, complete an application and submit to background screening. For more in- formation or an application, contact vol- unteer services at 281-344-5100 or rluke- [email protected]. Child Advocates of Fort Bend is a non-profit agency dedicated to providing a voice for abused and neglected chil- dren. It currently serves more than 400 children each month through its Court Appointed Special Advocates (CASA) program and Children’s Advocacy Cen- ter. WES GARDNER [email protected] A high-speed pursuit involving five local police agencies ended with the alleged suicide of 21-year-old Andres Nunez Sunday morning after he led offi- cers on a nearly two-hour chase through- out Houston and surrounding areas. Fort Bend County sheriff’s deputies responded to a call in the 16100 block of West Belfort around 9:45 a.m. after re- ceiving reports of shots being fired into a residence, according to sheriff’s office spokesperson Bob Haenel. Upon the deputies’ arrival, Nunez fled the scene, leading them and units repre- senting the Houston, Stafford and Sugar Land police departments, and Toll Road Authority officers, on a chase. The pur- suit spanned SH 6, Westpark Toll Road and U.S. 59, Haenel added. According to the sheriff’s office, Nunez had been firing at officers in pur- suit throughout the chase. The pursuit came to a halt around 11:45 a.m. near the 16500 block of U.S. 59 after Nunez’s pickup truck suffered a flat tire, causing the vehicle to crash. It remains unclear whether Nunez shot himself before or after the crash, officials added. No injuries were sustained by law- men involved in the chase, Haenel said. He added that the sheriff’s office is still investigating the incident to determine a motive. HERALD STAFF It’s almost 50th reunion time for the Lamar High Class of 1965, and orga- nizers are trying to get in touch with 26 classmates whose contact information they don’t have. The class is holding the reunion on Saturday, April 18 at the Fort Bend Coun- try Club in Richmond, between 6-11 p.m. Dinner is included in the $40 per person or $75 per couple cost. Deadline for reservations is March 13. Further information can be found on the class’s Facebook page online at www. facebook.com/Lamar1965 and by phon- ing one of the following: Rene Rosenbush Lamb, 281-344-7012; Celia Barrett Busby, 281-702-4177; Ginger Ashley Lamkin, 281-232-2955; Mary Romo Pina, 713-377-3392; Suzanne White, 512- 842-4022. The 26 classmates not yet accounted for are Dennis Adams (Crowell), Charles Austin, Charlotte Blackwell Edmonds, Doyle Edmonds, Martha Brown, Janell Burkhart, Benita Carranza, Susan Christman, Tavita Fernandez Reid, Rudy Gaona, Ernest Garcia, Elena Gon- zales and Mary Kaluza; Also, Francis McGee, Maria Moreno Locknor, Richard Reeves, Avelina Ro- silez, Connie Ross Parchment, Judith Rothe, David Schulze, Dolores Sopchak Means, Lory Tejml Shaddock; Raymond Torres, Daniel Vitek, Patricia Willard and William Zepeda. Child Advocates offers class Lamar ‘65 reunion April 18 High-speed pursuit ends; driver dies MYRTLE BEACH, S.C. (AP) — Sen. Ted Cruz urged archconservatives on Sunday to help nominate a Republican from their own ranks in 2016 or risk losing a third consecutive national election. The unspo- ken message: someone like him. Cruz called GOP nominees like Mitt Romney in 2012, John McCain in 2008 and Bob Dole in 1996 “good, honorable and de- cent men” but not conservative enough. All lost their bids for the presidency. “If we nominate a candidate in that mold, the same people who stayed home in 2008 and 2012 will stay home in 2016 and the Democrats will win again,” Cruz told hundreds of activists at the South Caroli- na Tea Party Coalition Convention. South Carolina will cast the South’s first primary ballots in 2016, shortly after the Iowa caucuses and New Hampshire primary. Cruz’s appearance came days after Romney confirmed at the Republican Na- tional Committee’s winter meeting that he’s considering a third White House bid. Romney weathered an uneasy relation- ship with the GOP’s conservative wing in 2012 in part because no single candidate among several conservative alternatives could sustain a viable campaign. But this time former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush and New Jersey Gov. Chris Chris- tie are in the picture, courting some of the same donors, consultants and media attention that went to Romney four years ago. Neither has committed to a cam- paign yet. Tea party convention goers from sev- eral states this weekend have expressed optimism that the new dynamic could create an opening for Cruz or another es- tablishment critic if he can consolidate rank-and-file conservatives who distrust the GOP’s traditional power structure. Cruz, beloved among tea party conser- vatives for his role in the partial govern- ment shutdown in October 2013, pointed to the GOP’s success in the November midterms as proof that the nation is ready for an unapologetically conserva- tive president. The “Washington gray- beards” warned that the fight over the nation’s borrowing limit was “too risky” and would cost Republicans in 2014, he said. “We just saw an historic tidal wave of an election,” Cruz said, adding that the “graybeards” still haven’t admitted their political calculus was wrong. The senator mocked President Barack Obama, comparing him to one-term Pres- ident Jimmy Carter, who lost in 1980 to GOP icon Ronald Reagan. Cruz rips Obama, GOP establishment HERALD STAFF The Fort Bend Junior Service League and Memorial Hermann Sug- ar Land Hospital have joined together to present the FBJSL Spring Fling, “A Red Carpet Affair.” The cocktail chic event will be held on Saturday, April 11. A majority of proceeds will benefit Hope for Three Autism Advocates. The charitable organization provides fam- ily assistance/financial aid for early diagnosis assessments, treatments/ therapies, prescriptions, special diets and educational tools to families with children diagnosed with Autism Spec- trum Disorder in Fort Bend County. All remaining proceeds will bene- fit the FBJSL Community Assistance Fund, which allows FBJSL to extend financial support by providing grants to local charitable organizations. The “Red Carpet Affair” will take place at the Skeeters’ Constellation Field Insperity Club. The fundraising events include a casino, live auction, Champagne and Diamonds raffle, wine and spirits pull, bid board and the op- portunity to knock one out of the park from home plate at Constellation Field. For more event details, sponsorship opportunities or donations, please con- tact FBJSL Spring Fling Chair Ashley Van Hoozer at springlfi[email protected] or visit the website at www.fbjsl.com. More information about Hope for Three Autism Advocates is available online at www.hopeforthree.org. FBJSL spring fling event set Front row from left are committee members Star Edwards, Amy Brown, FBJSL president Debbie Buckner, spring fling event chair Ashley Van Hoozer and FBJSL board liaison Mimi Zaybak. Second row: Tina Worrell, Janelle Chinweze, Meichelle Benard, Ashley Aborisade, Heather Hernandez, Stacie Janak, Rahila Sultanali, Tara Kuykendall, Chastity McPeters and Alyssa Har- rison. Third row: Nicola Johnson, Jennifer Kirkpatrick, Marla Van Meter, Crystal Collins, Taylor Connor, Shirley Merritt, Mary Lovely, Jenny Rouse and Lyndsay Pilkinton. Back row: Kendra Paul, Conseulo Haller, Arnetta Yardbourgh Brie Durham, Lawren Eckhardt, Samantha Trate and Courtney Bass. Not pictured are Committee members Trudy McDade, Fallon Moody, Raquel Patterson Bonnie Stewart, Russelle Waldorf and Johnnie Wright. Spring fling committee Fort Bend Junior Service League Sophia Stockton, left and Emma Marin, hold hands while wearing pajamas for the Smith Elementary School Pajama Jam Friday night. See more photos of the event on page 3. Pajama Jammers HERALD PHOTO BY JENNIFER SCOTT

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Page 1: FBJSL spring fling event set - eType Servicesarchives.etypeservices.com/Fortbend1/Magazine75129/... · 2015. 8. 3. · Doyle Edmonds, Martha Brown, Janell Burkhart, Benita Carranza,

VOLUME 123, NUMBER 16 ROSENBERG-RICHMOND, TEXAS

AND TEXAS COASTER

www.fbherald.com 75 CENTS

HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL

Overtime wins, district loss-es highlight weekend hoops; see Sports

Good Afternoon

Fort Bend Journal

Around the Bend

Obituaries

Today’s Scripture

Royal NeighborsThe Royal Neighbors of America —

Chapter 7826, will hold its final meet-ing on Monday at Schulze’s Barbecue. Meal will be provided. Call 281-232-3490.

Sugar Land Garden ClubThe Sugar Land Garden Club pres-

ents “Garden Design Spring 2015” by Billy Marberry on Tuesday at the Knights of Columbus Hall, 702 Bur-ney Road, Sugar Land. Refreshments 9:30 a.m.; program starts at 10 a.m.

Harvest Fest meetingNeedville’s Harvest Festival com-

mittee will meet Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. in the park office, 3001 Violet Street, Needville. Call 281-468-9314.

Lamar graveside saluteA memorial ceremony honoring Re-

public of Texas President Mirabeau B. Lamar will be held at Lamar’s gravesite in Morton Cemetery, Richmond, on Monday, Jan. 26 beginning at 1 p.m. The event is free and the public is invited to attend.

LIFE classesLIFE University is holding free

classes for the community on Tues-day nights. Dinner is served at 6:30 p.m. for $1 per person. Classes go from 7-8 p.m. Classes for adults: family fit camp, career develop-ment, anger management, ESL and grief class. Call 281-342-3805 to reg-ister. Childcare is provided for up to 4-years-old and homework help for grades 1-5.

Archeology societyDaggers, bows, spears and armor

from over 400 years of Japanese history will be the subject of a free program presented by Dirk Van Tuerenhout, PhD, to the Fort Bend Archeological Society at 7 p.m. on Tuesday in the assembly hall of the Gus George Law Enforcement Acad-emy, 1521 Eugene Heimann Circle, Richmond.

“I like nonsense, it wakes up the brain cells. Fantasy is a necessary ingredient in living, it’s a way of looking at life through the wrong end of a telescope and that enables you to laugh at life’s reali-ties.” — Dr. Suess

Janie Warstler getting the good word out to the public for January’s AARP Chapter 1772 monthly member-ship meetings ...

Also, Marti Preuss doing her darn best in getting a fabulous rate. ... Con-grats to Richmond residents Michaela Huebotter and Tamunotein Tariah for making the President’s List at Texas A&M University-Kingsville.

Phyllis Nan Esker, 70William Marshall, 80Luis Bultron, 53

When the angel of the Lord appeared to Gideon, he said, “The Lord is with you, mighty warrior.”

See page 5

— BH

Judges 6:12

7 286037 20032

MoNday, JANUARy 19, 2015

Nonsense

HERALD STAFF

Prospective volunteers interested in making a difference in the lives of chil-dren in 2015 need look no further than the Child Advocates of Fort Bend.

Beginning Feb. 2, Child Advocates of Fort Bend will be offering a week-long training class to train volunteers to advo-cate for abused and neglected children.

This is one of two opportunities in 2015 to complete the volunteer training class in a single week.

Volunteers must be over 21 years of age, complete an application and submit to background screening. For more in-formation or an application, contact vol-unteer services at 281-344-5100 or [email protected].

Child Advocates of Fort Bend is a non-profit agency dedicated to providing a voice for abused and neglected chil-dren. It currently serves more than 400 children each month through its Court Appointed Special Advocates (CASA) program and Children’s Advocacy Cen-ter.

WES [email protected]

A high-speed pursuit involving five local police agencies ended with the alleged suicide of 21-year-old Andres Nunez Sunday morning after he led offi-cers on a nearly two-hour chase through-out Houston and surrounding areas.

Fort Bend County sheriff’s deputies responded to a call in the 16100 block of West Belfort around 9:45 a.m. after re-ceiving reports of shots being fired into a residence, according to sheriff’s office spokesperson Bob Haenel.

Upon the deputies’ arrival, Nunez fled the scene, leading them and units repre-senting the Houston, Stafford and Sugar Land police departments, and Toll Road Authority officers, on a chase. The pur-suit spanned SH 6, Westpark Toll Road and U.S. 59, Haenel added.

According to the sheriff’s office, Nunez had been firing at officers in pur-suit throughout the chase.

The pursuit came to a halt around 11:45 a.m. near the 16500 block of U.S. 59 after Nunez’s pickup truck suffered a flat tire, causing the vehicle to crash.

It remains unclear whether Nunez shot himself before or after the crash, officials added.

No injuries were sustained by law-men involved in the chase, Haenel said. He added that the sheriff’s office is still investigating the incident to determine a motive.

HERALD STAFF

It’s almost 50th reunion time for the Lamar High Class of 1965, and orga-nizers are trying to get in touch with 26 classmates whose contact information they don’t have.

The class is holding the reunion on Saturday, April 18 at the Fort Bend Coun-try Club in Richmond, between 6-11 p.m. Dinner is included in the $40 per person or $75 per couple cost.

Deadline for reservations is March 13. Further information can be found on the class’s Facebook page online at www.facebook.com/Lamar1965 and by phon-ing one of the following:

Rene Rosenbush Lamb, 281-344-7012; Celia Barrett Busby, 281-702-4177; Ginger Ashley Lamkin, 281-232-2955; Mary Romo Pina, 713-377-3392; Suzanne White, 512-842-4022.

The 26 classmates not yet accounted for are Dennis Adams (Crowell), Charles Austin, Charlotte Blackwell Edmonds, Doyle Edmonds, Martha Brown, Janell Burkhart, Benita Carranza, Susan Christman, Tavita Fernandez Reid, Rudy Gaona, Ernest Garcia, Elena Gon-zales and Mary Kaluza;

Also, Francis McGee, Maria Moreno Locknor, Richard Reeves, Avelina Ro-silez, Connie Ross Parchment, Judith Rothe, David Schulze, Dolores Sopchak Means, Lory Tejml Shaddock; Raymond Torres, Daniel Vitek, Patricia Willard and William Zepeda.

Child Advocates offers class

Lamar ‘65 reunion April 18

High-speed pursuit ends; driver dies

MYRTLE BEACH, S.C. (AP) — Sen. Ted Cruz urged archconservatives on Sunday to help nominate a Republican from their own ranks in 2016 or risk losing a third consecutive national election. The unspo-ken message: someone like him.

Cruz called GOP nominees like Mitt Romney in 2012, John McCain in 2008 and Bob Dole in 1996 “good, honorable and de-cent men” but not conservative enough. All lost their bids for the presidency.

“If we nominate a candidate in that mold, the same people who stayed home in 2008 and 2012 will stay home in 2016 and the Democrats will win again,” Cruz told hundreds of activists at the South Caroli-na Tea Party Coalition Convention.

South Carolina will cast the South’s first primary ballots in 2016, shortly after the Iowa caucuses and New Hampshire primary.

Cruz’s appearance came days after Romney confirmed at the Republican Na-tional Committee’s winter meeting that he’s considering a third White House bid. Romney weathered an uneasy relation-ship with the GOP’s conservative wing in 2012 in part because no single candidate among several conservative alternatives could sustain a viable campaign.

But this time former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush and New Jersey Gov. Chris Chris-tie are in the picture, courting some of the same donors, consultants and media attention that went to Romney four years ago. Neither has committed to a cam-paign yet.

Tea party convention goers from sev-eral states this weekend have expressed optimism that the new dynamic could create an opening for Cruz or another es-tablishment critic if he can consolidate

rank-and-file conservatives who distrust the GOP’s traditional power structure.

Cruz, beloved among tea party conser-vatives for his role in the partial govern-ment shutdown in October 2013, pointed to the GOP’s success in the November midterms as proof that the nation is ready for an unapologetically conserva-tive president. The “Washington gray-beards” warned that the fight over the nation’s borrowing limit was “too risky” and would cost Republicans in 2014, he said.

“We just saw an historic tidal wave of an election,” Cruz said, adding that the “graybeards” still haven’t admitted their political calculus was wrong.

The senator mocked President Barack Obama, comparing him to one-term Pres-ident Jimmy Carter, who lost in 1980 to GOP icon Ronald Reagan.

Cruz rips Obama, GOP establishment

HERALD STAFF

The Fort Bend Junior Service League and Memorial Hermann Sug-ar Land Hospital have joined together to present the FBJSL Spring Fling, “A Red Carpet Affair.”

The cocktail chic event will be held on Saturday, April 11.

A majority of proceeds will benefit Hope for Three Autism Advocates. The charitable organization provides fam-ily assistance/financial aid for early

diagnosis assessments, treatments/therapies, prescriptions, special diets and educational tools to families with children diagnosed with Autism Spec-trum Disorder in Fort Bend County.

All remaining proceeds will bene-fit the FBJSL Community Assistance Fund, which allows FBJSL to extend financial support by providing grants to local charitable organizations.

The “Red Carpet Affair” will take place at the Skeeters’ Constellation Field Insperity Club. The fundraising

events include a casino, live auction, Champagne and Diamonds raffle, wine and spirits pull, bid board and the op-portunity to knock one out of the park from home plate at Constellation Field.

For more event details, sponsorship opportunities or donations, please con-tact FBJSL Spring Fling Chair Ashley Van Hoozer at [email protected] or visit the website at www.fbjsl.com.

More information about Hope for Three Autism Advocates is available online at www.hopeforthree.org.

FBJSL spring fling event set

Front row from left are committee members Star Edwards, Amy Brown, FBJSL president Debbie Buckner, spring fling event chair Ashley Van Hoozer and FBJSL board liaison Mimi Zaybak. Second row: Tina Worrell, Janelle Chinweze, Meichelle Benard, Ashley Aborisade, Heather Hernandez, Stacie Janak, Rahila Sultanali, Tara Kuykendall, Chastity McPeters and Alyssa Har-rison. Third row: Nicola Johnson, Jennifer Kirkpatrick, Marla Van Meter, Crystal Collins, Taylor Connor, Shirley Merritt, Mary Lovely, Jenny Rouse and Lyndsay Pilkinton. Back row: Kendra Paul, Conseulo Haller, Arnetta Yardbourgh Brie Durham, Lawren Eckhardt, Samantha Trate and Courtney Bass. Not pictured are Committee members Trudy McDade, Fallon Moody, Raquel Patterson Bonnie Stewart, Russelle Waldorf and Johnnie Wright.

Spring fling committee

Fort Bend Junior Service League

Sophia Stockton, left and Emma Marin, hold hands while wearing pajamas for the Smith Elementary School Pajama Jam Friday night. See more photos of the event on page 3.

Pajama JammersHERALD PHOTO By JENNIFER SCOTT

Page 2: FBJSL spring fling event set - eType Servicesarchives.etypeservices.com/Fortbend1/Magazine75129/... · 2015. 8. 3. · Doyle Edmonds, Martha Brown, Janell Burkhart, Benita Carranza,

2 Monday, January 19, 2015 NEWS ForT BEnd HEraLd

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Today in HistoryBy THE aSSoCIaTEd PrESS

Today is Monday, Jan. 19, the 19th day of 2015. There are 346 days left in the year. This is the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday.Today’s Highlight in History:

On Jan. 19, 1915, Germany car-ried out its first air raid on Brit-ain during World War I as a pair of Zeppelins dropped bombs onto Great Yarmouth and King’s Lynn in England.

On this date:In 1807, Confederate Gen. Rob-

ert E. Lee was born in Westmore-land County, Virginia.

In 1853, Giuseppe Verdi’s op-era “Il Trovatore” premiered in Rome.

In 1861, Georgia became the fifth state to secede from the Union.

In 1937, millionaire Howard Hughes set a transcontinental air record by flying his monoplane from Los Angeles to Newark, New Jersey, in 7 hours, 28 minutes and 25 seconds.

In 1942, during World War II, Ja-pan invaded Burma (Myanmar).

In 1944, the federal government relinquished control of the na-tion’s railroads to their owners following settlement of a wage dispute.

In 1955, a presidential news con-ference was filmed for television and newsreels for the first time, with the permission of President Dwight D. Eisenhower.

In 1966, Indira Gandhi was elected prime minister of India.

In 1970, President Richard M. Nixon nominated G. Harrold Carswell to the Supreme Court; however, the nomination was defeated because of controversy over Carswell’s past racial views.

In 1977, in one of his last acts of office, President Gerald R. Ford pardoned Iva Toguri D’Aquino, an American convicted of treason for making wartime broadcasts for Japan.

In 1981, the United States and Iran signed an accord paving the way for the release of 52 Ameri-cans held hostage for more than 14 months.

In 1992, German government and Jewish officials dedicated a Holocaust memorial at the villa on the outskirts of Berlin where the notorious Wannsee Conference had taken place.

Ten years ago: Previewing his second inauguration, President George W. Bush pledged to seek unity in a nation divided by polit-ical differences, saying, “I am ea-ger and ready for the work ahead.” Condoleezza Rice won strong but not unanimous endorsement as secretary of state from the Sen-ate Foreign Relations Committee, which voted 16-2 to recommend her confirmation. The American Cancer Society reported that can-cer had passed heart disease as the top killer of Americans age 85 and younger. Former chairman and chief executive of Citicorp Walter B. Wriston died in New York at age 85.

Five years ago: In a major upset, Republican Scott Brown captured the U.S. Senate seat held by liberal champion Edward Ken-nedy for nearly half a century as he defeated Democrat Martha Coakley in a special election. Eight people were shot to death in Appomattox, Virginia; Christo-pher Speight later pleaded guilty to murder and was sentenced to five life terms. Hamas command-er Mahmoud al-Mabhouh was slain at a posh airport hotel in Dubai (officials in Dubai have ac-cused Israel of carrying out the killing). Former “Survivor: Pa-lau” contestant Jennifer Lyon, 37, died in Sublimity, Oregon.

One year ago: An Islamic militant group in Russia’s North Caucasus claimed responsibil-ity for recent twin bombings in the southern city of Volgograd and posted a video threatening to strike at the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi. Peyton Manning threw for 400 yards and two touchdowns to lead Denver to a 26-16 victory over New England and send the AFC champion Broncos to their first trip to the Super Bowl in 15 years. Russell Wilson threw a 35-yard touchdown pass on fourth down and Seattle’s top-ranked de-fense forced two late turnovers, lifting the Seahawks into their sec-ond Super Bowl with a 23-17 victo-ry over the San Francisco 49ers for the NFC championship.

Happy birthday to Jackie Rainer, from husband Frank Rainer, daughters Arneisha, Tayrn and Eryn, mother Zelma Hicks, father Redd Flora and sib-lings Andrea, Ricky, Karen and Rodney. With love from the rest of the family.

Your Worldin Five Minutes

By THE aSSoCIaTEd PrESS

NATION WORLD STATEMLK remembered

SAN ANTONIO — Pa-rades and other commu-nity events were planned across Texas to remember slain civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. The march in San Antonio was expected to draw a crowd of more than 100,000.

Fire damages cabooseTEMPLE, — Nobody has

been hurt in a fire that dam-aged an antique caboose at a Central Texas railroad museum. Investigators are trying to determine what sparked the blaze at the Temple Railroad and Heri-tage Museum.

Dog turns upKOKOMO, Ind. — Jo-

eAnn Navarro of Galves-ton, whose dog vanished last year, says she’s ecstat-ic after her beloved pit bull turned up alive and well in a central Indiana city some 1,100 miles away.

Gunshots investigatedWILMINGTON, Del. —

Law enforcement officials have boosted security at the Delaware home of Vice President Joe Biden after several gunshots rang out from a vehicle speeding by the property over the week-end.

Pipeline spills oilBILLINGS, Mont. — Mon-

tana officials said that an oil pipeline breach spilled up to 50,000 gallons of oil into the Yellowstone River near Glendive, Montana, but they said they are unaware of any threats to public safety or health.

Cosby welcomedTURLOCK, Calif. — Bill

Cosby was embraced by fans during his first performance in California since allega-tions of past sexual assaults surfaced. Only one protester showed up to Cosby’s comedy tour stop.

Strike kills generalTEHRAN, Iran — Tehran

and the Iranian Revolutionary Guard. have confirmed that an Iranian general was among the seven killed in what the Leba-nese militant Hezbollah group has described as an Israeli air-strike in Syria.

Executions continueJAKARTA, Indonesia — In-

donesia is sticking to its policy of executing drug offenders, including foreigners, and an official said Monday that the withdrawal of the Dutch and Brazil ambassadors will not disturb its diplomatic ties with those countries.

Cabinet convenedANKARA, Turkey — Tur-

key president Recep Tayyip Erdogan convened a Cabinet meeting for the first time, a po-litical maneuver that is raising concerns among critics that he is pushing ahead to expand the powers of the largely ceremo-nial presidency.

Area Birthdays

Sign Me Up!

Note: The deadline for Area Birth-days is 9 a.m. Monday through Friday, and 4 p.m. Friday for the weekend edition. Any birthdays called in after that will go in the following day.

Cancer 5K runSplashing Thru Cancer 5K

Color Run benefiting Kids With Cancer will be Saturday, Jan. 31, at Needville High School. Reg-istration will be at 8 a.m. with the race beginning at 9 a.m. Registration is $25 in advance and $30 on race day. To register, e-mail [email protected], go to www.Splash-ingThruCancer.com or check out Splashing Thru Cancer on Facebook.

Museum meetingAny persons interested in

learning more about the accom-plishments of the Fort Bend County Museum Association in 2014 are welcome to attend its annual membership meeting at 2 p.m. on Sunday in the commis-sioners’ courtroom on the sec-ond floor of the Fort Bend Coun-ty Historical Courthouse, 401 Jackson St., in Richmond. RSVP at 281-342-1256.

Lamar ’75 grads soughtMembers of the Lamar Class

of 1975 are being sought for a re-union in 2015. Alumni are asked to provide their address, phone number and email address to Alice Martinez Compton at [email protected] or 713-705-2030 — or Paul “Dub” Sabrusela at [email protected] or 281-468-9184. Classmates may also join the Facebook page La-mar Mustangs Class of ‘75 40th Reunion.

Day, night ESL classesLamar CISD’s Project LEARN,

a family literacy program, offers English as a Second Language (ESL) classes for people in the dis-trict — day and evening classes, plus early childhood classes for children ages 0-3 while their par-ents attend class during the day. For more information, call 832-223-0421.

Vegetable-herb saleFort Bend Master Gardeners

will hold their annual vegeta-ble-herb plant sale on Thursday, Feb. 26, at the Bud O’Shieles Com-munity Center, 1330 Band Road. The doors open at 8:30 a.m. and the program will be from 9-11 a.m. Call 281-341-7068 or visit www.fbmg.com.

Master Gardeners saleFort Bend Master Gardeners

will hold their annual vegeta-ble-herb plant sale on Saturday, Feb. 28, in front of the greenhouse behind the Agriculture Center, 1402 Band Road. The sale starts at 9 a.m. and will run until 12 p.m. or until sold out. Call 281-341-7068 or visit www.fbmg.com.

Lamar parent meetingLamar High School is hosting a

parent PAC meeting from 6-7 p.m. on Monday, Feb. 2 in the library. All parents are invited to attend. Call 832-223-3154.

Garage saleCitizens of Beasley are organiz-

ing a city-wide garage sale for Sat-urday, Feb. 8 from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. A sign-up sheet is available at the Beasley City Hall for address list-ings.

DAR meetingThe Fort Bend Chapter Nation-

al Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution will meet Wednesday, Feb. 11, at 10:30 a.m. in the chapel of the First United Methodist Church, 3900 Lexing-ton Blvd., Missouri City. Our Feb-ruary program will feature Carol Lane, speaking of “Concerns of Police Survivors.” Contact Gwen Goldsberry at [email protected]. The Fort Bend Chapter website is http://www.texasdar.org/chapters/FortBend

Vegetable conferenceThe 30th annual Fort Bend Re-

gional Vegetable Conference is set for Thursday, Feb. 5 at the Fort Bend County Fairgrounds, Build-ings B &C, in Rosenberg. Regis-tration is from 7:30-8 a.m. with the conference running from 8 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Cost, including lunch, is $20 before Jan. 26 and $25 after Jan. 26. To register, go to agril-iferegister.tamu.edu/FortBend or call 979-845-2604.

Board electionsNeedville ISD on May 9 will

have an election to fill three po-sitions on the board of trustees. Postions 3, 4 and 5 have terms which are about to expire. To be eligible, an applicant must be a NISD resident. The first day to file is Wednesday, Jan. 28. The last day is Friday, Feb. 27.

Email your community items for the daily “Good Afternoon” and “Sign Me Up!” columns to [email protected].

TODAY’S WEATHERLocal 5-Day Forecast

Tue1/20

69/50Mainly sunny. High69F. Winds S at 5 to10 mph.

Sunrise Sunset7:18 AM 5:49 PM

Wed1/21

70/50Partly cloudy. Highsin the low 70s andlows in the low 50s.

Sunrise Sunset7:18 AM 5:50 PM

Thu1/22

63/46Partly cloudy. Highsin the low 60s andlows in the mid 40s.

Sunrise Sunset7:17 AM 5:51 PM

Fri1/23

46/38Cloudy with rain.Highs in the mid 40sand lows in the up-per 30s.

Sunrise Sunset7:17 AM 5:52 PM

Sat1/24

52/35Mix of sun andclouds. Highs in thelow 50s and lows inthe mid 30s.

Sunrise Sunset7:17 AM 5:53 PM

Area CitiesCity Hi Lo Cond. City Hi Lo Cond. City Hi Lo Cond.Abilene 69 42 sunny El Paso 67 37 sunny Midland 71 41 sunnyAmarillo 69 35 sunny Fort Stockton 71 45 sunny Raymondville 72 55 pt sunnyAustin 72 46 sunny Gainesville 66 41 pt sunny Rosenberg 69 50 sunnyBeaumont 67 47 sunny Greenville 67 43 mst sunny San Antonio 71 46 sunnyBrownsville 71 56 cloudy Houston 69 50 sunny San Marcos 71 47 sunnyBrownwood 71 39 sunny Kingsville 74 51 pt sunny Sulphur Springs 66 44 mst sunnyCorpus Christi 69 51 pt sunny Livingston 66 47 sunny Sweetwater 69 43 sunnyCorsicana 68 44 mst sunny Longview 66 41 mst sunny Tyler 67 44 mst sunnyDallas 68 43 sunny Lubbock 69 36 sunny Weatherford 71 44 sunnyDel Rio 72 45 sunny Lufkin 69 45 sunny Wichita Falls 68 40 pt sunny

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4 Monday, January 19, 2015 OPINION ForT BEnd HEraLd

Pat on the Back

Our View

Your View

Outside View

The First Amendment

Unfairly critical

Why governors are different

Republicans too hard on president

Facebook additions: friend or foe?

MLK Day not just 3-day weekend

Governors are different from members of Congress.

As he started a second term as Tennessee’s chief executive, Republican Bill Haslam told the New York Times: “One of the things about being governor is when you’re forced to actually bal-ance your budget, it makes peo-ple become much more pra gmatic very quick-ly.”

L e g i s l a -tors make s p e e c h e s ; g ove r n o r s make decisions. And then take responsibility for how those de-cisions impact the real people who live and vote in their states.

Gov. Brian Sandoval of Ne-vada defied tea party activists — and their obsessive hatred of Obamacare — and expanded Medicaid eligibility for his con-stituents.

“I’m the one who has to go out in a community, go to a school, a town hall, what have you, and be able to look people in the eye and be able to explain why I made a decision one way or the other,” he said in the Los Angeles Times. “And my con-science is clear when it comes to that decision, that it was the right thing for the people of Ne-vada.”

On the federal level, hard-right conservatives scream for a balanced budget amendment to the Constitution as a way of curbing excessive liberal spend-ing.

But in the states, which are required by law to balance their budgets, these strictures are of-ten having the opposite effect.

They are forcing governors to oppose expensive tax cuts

that would throw their balance sheets out of whack.

“It’s easy to say ‘I’d like to cut taxes.’ I would, too,” Haslam said recently. “It’s easy to say ‘I’d like to spend more.’ I would, too. (But) we haven’t suspended any law of economics here.”

One governor who tried to suspend those laws is Sam Brownback of Kansas, a former congressman and senator who decided to run the state on the ideological precepts he absorbed on Capitol Hill. Trust me, he said, if we slash taxes, we’ll in-crease revenue. The cuts will pay for themselves.

It was a fantasy, of course. He couldn’t change economic real-ity. Now Kansas faces a budget shortfall of $710 million over the next two fiscal years, and Brown-back has tried to plug the gap with gimmicks: diverting mil-lions of dollars from highway funds and the state retirement system.

Bond rating agencies are unimpressed. They’ve already downgraded the state’s credit score and are threatening to do it again. Finally, the governor’s spokesman hinted recently that he would accept new revenue measures — a spasm of pragma-tism dictated by reality.

As a senator, Brownback never faced those pressures. As a governor, he cannot escape them. Nor can his fellow Repub-licans in statehouses across the country.

In Michigan, for example, Gov. Rick Snyder and legislators have agreed on a 1-point increase in the state’s sales tax that will re-quire voter approval this spring.

The proceeds would go toward improving schools and repairing infrastructure, and the governor confronted his critics by voicing what could be called The Gover-nors’ Creed: “This is about solv-ing a problem.”

Wyoming, Utah and Tennes-

see have now joined nine other states with Republican gover-nors in agreeing to expand Med-icaid coverage for low-income residents. One of those execu-tives, John Kasich of Ohio, has denounced his conservative foes by insisting that their opposition to Medicaid expansion “was re-ally either political or ideologi-cal” and not based on fact.

It wasn’t based on morality, either, said Kasich: “Now when you die and get to the meeting with St. Peter, he’s probably not gonna ask you much about what you did about keeping govern-ment small, but he’s going to ask you what you did for the poor.”

The GOP has a strong bench, with governors like Kasich, Scott Walker of Wisconsin, Chris Christie of New Jersey and Mike Pence of Indiana all considering presidential bids. Four former governors — Jeb Bush of Florida, Mitt Romney of Massachusetts, Mike Hucka-bee of Arkansas and Rick Perry of Texas — are itching to run as well.

As a country, we like electing governors because of their exec-utive experience and their roots outside Washington. Before Barack Obama defeated a fellow senator, John McCain, only two sitting lawmakers had ever won the White House.

But statehouse service is no guarantee of success in a presi-dential campaign. Romney gov-erned as a pragmatist on issues like health care, but was then pulled to the extreme right in the GOP primaries and lost his moorings.

It’s a good lesson. Those gov-ernors will be far more effective candidates if they embrace the creed of their breed and cam-paign on their strength — as pragmatists, not purists.

Reach Steve and Cokie Roberts at [email protected].

I have the utmost respect for President Barack Obama.

My political affiliation is irrel-evant, but it cannot be the easiest job in the world to man a country that has a population of over 300 million and so many working against you.

It just abso-lutely baffles me how much disrespect is aimed toward him.

I get not everybody is going to agree with his be-liefs or his decisions. You just cannot make every single per-son happy.

There are some things that I do not particularly agree with, but I would never stoop to the amount of disrespect I have seen and heard by numerous people.

It’s ugly.I will call out a group in particu-

lar: the Republicans.The constant bickering,

name-calling and, really, the lack of knowledge on numerous sub-jects – it’s embarrassing to watch.

One immediately coming to mind is Todd Akin, a Republican in Missouri, who stated that victims of “legitimate rape” very rarely get pregnant because their bodies pre-vent them from doing so.

Sen. Lamar Alexander, Repub-

lican in Tennessee, said, “I think video games are a bigger problem than guns, because video games affect people.”

“We may have to shed blood ev-ery couple hundred years to pre-serve our freedoms” was said by Joe Walsh, a Republican from Illinois.

I know there are many Demo-crats who have said really dumb things as well, but Republicans take the cake.

I find it difficult to take them seriously because it almost seems they have their heads buried in the sand.

They have more important mat-ters to worry about but they spend more time trying to pass bills on who should get married and how the government can add more con-trol over a woman’s body.

Republicans spent more time fighting with the president against important bills — jobs, equal pay for women, assistance for veterans, etc.

It’s either their way or the high-way.

The government shutdown in 2013 should be proof enough that they just don’t play well in the sandbox.

Now that they have control, it will be interesting to see how they can get work done since all eyes of America will be watching.

Well, not that we have a choice...I am still trying to wrap my

head around Ted Cruz, who has vehemently denied that climate change exists, has been appointed to chair the Senate subcommittee

on Space, Science and Competi-tiveness.

My grandfather worked for NASA in Huntsville, Alabama for many years, and he would roll over in his grave knowing that a man who tried to defund NASA is now in charge of it.

I can only hope that the Repub-licans’ pettiness over who is cur-rently president will be less im-portant and they can actually get work done.

Personally, I think the majority of the Republicans are cold-heart-ed and self-centered.

They don’t agree with some-thing? Fine, but rather than whine and pout, why not come up with alternative solutions?

Republicans have fought with every penny and dime to tear down the Affordable Care Act.

I haven’t read anything of alter-native solutions on how to handle healthcare in the United States from the Republicans.

We have the best healthcare in the world, but lack the ability to actually be able to take care of the people.

The president and his adminis-tration have tried to come up with solutions for many problems, but Republicans don’t want to play fairly.

It’s sad and embarrassing to this wonderful country of ours.

Reach Herald reporter Jennifer Scott at [email protected]. Her column appears weekly.

Marissa asked me if I had seen the new picture she had posted on Facebook this morn-ing. When I said I hadn’t checked my Facebook page since yester-day, she gave me a look as if I lived in a cave and cooked mast-odons over a wood fire for dinner. How out of touch could one per-son be?

“You hav-en’t checked your Face-book page in two days? How will you know what I’ve been do-ing?”

I do like Marissa, and I do want to know what she’s been doing, but not 50 times a day. Once a day. Twice a day, tops.

But more than her overshar-ing, what really bothered me was that she seemed to think that posting something on Face-book is the same thing as putting it on the front page of a newspa-per. How could anyone possibly miss what she had posted on Facebook?

I hate to tell her, but for all the chatter about the death of print, a thousand times more people will see the front page of this newspaper than will ever see her status update.

But telling heavy Facebook users that you only check it once a day, or that you don’t use it at

all, is like saying you don’t have indoor plumbing. How can you possibly live that way? Pretty easily, it turns out.

There are things about Face-book that I enjoy and there are things that annoy me to no end. In that way, it’s exactly like real life.

I like the quick little glimpses into the lives of my friends and relatives. My niece lives many states away and I rarely see her or her children, so I enjoy hear-ing about her family and seeing their pictures.

But she knows what’s post-worthy and what isn’t. In one post, she reported that she was walking home from the park with her 5-year-old when the kid spotted a police cruiser coming down the street.

She looked at her mother and said in a stage whisper, “Mom, it’s the police. Act normal!” Even if you don’t know the kid, that’s funny.

But for every Facebook friend I have that is careful only to post things of interest, there are two Marissas who will post their shopping lists, every picture they take with their phone — even if it’s a photo of his thumb — and the news that they’ve just gotten to a new level on Candy Crush.

All of this while they’re sup-posedly at work.

The worst offenders are the friends who post political screeds and cartoons. Unless they post screeds and cartoons that I agree with, which is automatically OK

I have no doubt that if Face-book had been around in Will Rogers’ day, his most famous quote would have been, “I nev-er met a man I didn’t want to block.”

There was a cartoon in the New Yorker a while back that showed two people in front of a casket in a near-empty funeral home. One says to the other, “I thought there’d be more people here. He had so many friends on Facebook.”

Which points out the real problem with Facebook: Nobody has 500 close friends. Or a thou-sand. Or however many Face-book friends you have.

There’s nothing wrong with having a lot of Facebook friends. But some people think the more they have, the happier they’ll be. As if it’s a contest.

You probably have a lot of family members on Facebook, a lot of school chums, a lot of neighbors, a lot of co-workers. But how many of them would you loan money to?

How many of them would you tell about your drug or alcohol problems? How many of them want to hear about your eating disorder?

How many of those friends will call you up just to say “hi,” who don’t mind if you accident-ly wake them up, who miss you when you’re not around? Five hundred? Or five?

Reach Jim Mullen at JimMul-lenBooks.com.

Martin Luther King, Jr. Day is ob-served on the third Monday of Janu-ary each year, right around his Jan. 15 birthday.

It is a day to observe the legacy and life of the man who brought hope to millions of Americans during a time of unrest and tension.

As a man who endured threats, beatings and harassments almost every single day, King shared a global vision, inspiring peaceful protests.

He was the driving force behind the Montgomery Bus Boycott and Selma in Alabama and the March on Washington.

His actions promoted landmark legislation such as the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965.

King was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1964.

While demonstrating peacefully, he had been arrested 29 times, in-cluding in Birmingham where he wrote his infamous “Letter from Bir-mingham Jail.”

On the evening of April 4, 1968, while standing on the balcony of a motel in Memphis, the civil rights activist was fatally shot by James Earl Ray.

Ray, an escaped convict, pled guilty and was sentenced 99 years in pris-on.

He died in 1998.After years of campaigning by ac-

tivists, members of Congress and Coretta Scott King, President Ronald Reagan signed a bill in 1983 to create a federal holiday.

A number of states resisted, choos-ing to either give alternative names or combine it with other holidays in King’s memory.

It wasn’t until 2000 that all 50 states officially observed MLK Day for the first time.

Martin Luther King, Jr. Day is much more than just part of a “three-day-weekend,” giving many employ-ees and students a day off.

Dr. King had a dream that one day people would live in peace with one another, regardless of race.

Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to as-semble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.

I took the opportunity to read the historical marker at the Macario Garcia city park in Rosenberg.

In 1944, on at least one World War II mission, the difference between life and death may have been a young 24 year old army sergeant’s decision to charge.

Garcia did so by storming two German machine gun nests near Grosshau, Germany after seeing 15 of his fellow soldiers killed by enemy fire.

Although he was shot during the battle, he was credited with

killing 13 Germans and securing his company’s position.

Garcia was awarded the med-al of honor by President Tru-man in 1945.

Unfortunately, he was arrest-ed in Richmond in 1945 after being denied service at a local restaurant where Hispanics were not allowed. This is ines-capable.

LULAC came to his aid in 1947 and the case was highly visible during the civil rights move-ment.

I would like to encourage our

Fort Bend County educators to make it required reading for stu-dents to learn about our local he-roes and distinguished citizens and the extraordinary contribu-tions that make America a great country. Garcia was a native of Mexico.

Terry High School teacher De-nise Adams said in her 2013 Fort Bend Herald column, “And from that vantage all can sing togeth-er — let freedom ring.”

Sam CarlisiRosenberg

Macario Garcia: a true American hero

Here’s a pat on the back to needville ISd for offering abstinence programsto its junior high students, as well as ninth- and 10th-graders.

Cokie and Steve Roberts

Jim Mullen

JenniferScott

Ron DepuyCIrCuLaTIon ManaGEr

Gary MartinaSSISTanT ManaGInG EdITor

Lee HartmanGEnEraL ManaGEr

David ColemanaSSISTanT SPorTS EdITor

We invite your opinion This page is for everyone’s opinion, yours and ours. We invite you to express your views through our letters to the editor column, P.o. Box 1088, rosenberg, TX 77471 or e-mail is at [email protected]. only signed letters – preferably fewer than 200 words – can be considered. Please include your address and a telephone number for verification.

To subscribe or reach us The Fort Bend Herald (uSPS 241-040) is published afternoons Monday through Friday and Sunday at 1902 Fourth Street, rosenberg, Texas. 77471-5140. 281-232-3737 or 281-342-4474. SuBSCrIPTIon raTES: By carrier, $9 per month, $100 per year. Single copy: 75 cents, $1.25 Sunday. Mail rates on request. Entered as periodicals at the rosenberg Post office. www.fbherald.com

Bill HartmanCHaIrMan

Fred HartmanVICE CHaIrMan

Clyde KingPrESIdEnT

Mark ThormaehlenConTroLLEr

Page 5: FBJSL spring fling event set - eType Servicesarchives.etypeservices.com/Fortbend1/Magazine75129/... · 2015. 8. 3. · Doyle Edmonds, Martha Brown, Janell Burkhart, Benita Carranza,

Monday, January 19, 2015 NEWS ForT BEnd HEraLd 5

Celebrating His LIFE.Carrying On His LEGACY.Monday January 19, 2015

As a leader of the civil rights movement, Martin Luther King, Jr. worked tirelessly to promote justice, peace and equality for all people. His words and actions inspired millions around the world to fi ght injustice and engender change through nonviolence. To-day, much progress has been made, but much work remains to be done. You can honor Dr. King's memory through your actions by observing the MLK Day of Service on Monday, January 19. When we work together to make the world a better place through service to our communities, we come one step closer to realizing Dr. King's dream.

���� A SALUTE ����TO DR. KING AND HIS LEGACY

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ObituariesPhyllis Nan Esker

Phyllis Nan Esker, 70, passed away Saturday, Jan. 17, 2015 in Katy. She was born Sept. 26, 1944 in San Bernardino, California to Harry Grover Kaufman and Phyl-lis Archer Kaufman.

Survivors include her 4 daugh-ters, Lisa Matz and husband Charles, Tracy Rucker, Christy Brown and Michelle McDorman, her mother Phyllis Cralle and 8

grandchildren, Clayton Harwell, Quinton Esker, Coy Rucker, Cody Brown, Christopher Vasquez, Myles Matz, Madelynn Rucker and John Matz.

Funeral services for Nan will be held Thursday, Jan. 22, 2015 in the Chapel at Davis Greenlawn Funeral Home. Burial will follow in Greenlawn Memorial Park. The family will receive friends at the funeral home stating at Noon on Thursday until service time.

Tributes and words of condo-

lence may be left for the family at www.davisgreenlawnfh.com.

Arrangements are under the direction of Davis-Greenlawn Fu-neral Home, 3900 B.F. Terry Blvd., Rosenberg, Texas 77471.

William MarshallFuneral Services for William

Marshall, 80, of Sugar Land, Tex-as are pending with Hernandez Funeral Home, 800 Fourth Street, Rosenberg.Luis Bultron

Funeral Services for, Luis Bul-tron, 53, of Houston, Texas are pend-ing with Hernandez Funeral Home, 800 Fourth Street, Rosenberg.

HERALD STAFF

Calvary Episcopal Preparato-ry students returned this week from the Texas Association of Student Council District 13 winter retreat at Camp Allen in Navasota.

The two-day workshop gave students an opportunity to build friendships with students from diverse schools as they work on team projects, and to develop leadership skills they will need for college and be-yond.

Members were split into groups with students from schools throughout the Hous-ton area.

Student Council members

participated in different activ-ities such as Minute to Win It, and a logo-design activity and also built “Leader Ships.”

The “Leader Ships” were to be made from random items such as straws and bowls and were supposed to float. This ac-tivity required ingenuity and teamwork.

This year the them for Dis-trict 13 is “Don’t be a passenger. Be a part of the crew.” Students formed crews and worked to-gether to carry out different projects.

Calvary Episcopal Preparato-ry is unique among area schools in that all high school students get to participate in student council trips and activities.

Calvary Episcopal Preparatory students participate in winter retreat workshop

From left: Melissa Phan, Chase Ligon, Angelo Paca, Tristan Collom, Wes-ley Williams, Davette Stegman and Hailey Maierhofer.

Camp Allen

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6 Monday, January 19, 2015 SPORTS ForT BEnd HEraLd

BY DAVID [email protected]

Distric play was in full swing with all the area’s boys hoops teams last week. Here’s a look at how the local teams performed over the weekend.

Lamar 66, Angleton 63, OTThe Lamar Consolidated boys

got off to a good start in District 24-5A play, using a big second half to force overtime before knocking off last year’s district champ in the extra period.

Angleton led the Mustangs 33-25 at the half. Lamar outscored Angletong 15-12 in the third quarter before getting a 14-9 edge in the fourth to send it to overtime. There, the Mustangs outscored Angleton 12-9 for the victory.

Lamar (10-10, 1-0 in 24-5A) will travel to George Ranch at 7 p.m. Tuesday.

Foster 52, Calhoun 43PORT LAVACA — The Foster

boys opened district play with

a victory over the Sandcrabs on Friday.

Foster outscored Calhoun 15-10 in the fourth quarter to lock down the victory.

Evan Fairs had 12 points for Foster while Shawn Jennings scored nine. Teammate John My-ers had eight points while Josh Chilo scored seven.

Foster (14-4, 1-0 in 24-5A) will travel to Terry at 7 p.m. Tuesday.

Columbia 49, Needville 42NEEDVILLE — The Needville

boys lost their district opener to Columbia on Friday.

Needville (13-7, 0-1 in 28-4A) will travel to Brazosport at 7 p.m. Tuesday.

Travis 67, Kempner 53The Travis boys stayed perfect

in district play with a victory over Fort Bend Kempner on Fri-day.

Zach Naylor scored 23 points for the Tigers while teammate Hakeem Butler scored 10.

Travis (19-4, 8-0 in 23-6A) will travel to Hightower at 7 p.m.

Tuesday.

Brazos 56, Hitchcock 36HITCHCOCK — Brazos used

a big first half to beat Hitchcock on the road in District 24-3A play.

The Cougars scored 20 points in the second quarter to lead Hitchcock 32-15 at the half.

Josh Janicek led Brazos with 15 points. Teammate Dillon Gonzalez scored 11 points while Chris Demny and Jeremy D’Ru-bio each scored nine.

Brazos (6-14, 3-2) will host Hempstead on Tuesday.

EB 47, Van Vleck 46, OTEAST BERNARD — East Ber-

nard won a thriller against Van Vleck on Friday, needing over-time to stay perfect in 24-3A play.

East Bernard (4-0, 12-5) erased a four-point Van Vleck lead with 15 points in the fourth quarter.

Jared Rejsek had 12 pints, 11 rebounds and two blocks for the Brahmas. Teammate J.J. Talas had 13 points, 3 assists and 3 steals while Chris Baggett had 11 points.

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Two District 24-5A teams played opponents out-side of Lamar CISD and came away with losses. Here’s how the rest of the local girls teams per-formed over the weekend.

Calhoun 40, Foster 32The Foster girls opened strongly against the

Lady Sandcrabs, but a third-quarter rally by Cal-houn sunk their chances to pick up a first district victory.

Calhoun erased a 10-3 Foster lead after the first quarter, outscoring the Lady Falcons 25-10 in the second and third quarters combined.

Kristyn Williams scored 13 points with 8 re-bounds and 2 steals for Foster while Miranda Stephens had 10 points, 7 rebounds, 2 steals and a block.

Teammate Tamika Dixon had 6 points with 3 rebounds and 2 blocks.

Foster (7-15, 0-3 in 24-5A) will host Terry at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday.

Angleton 53, Lamar 44ANGLETON — The Lamar Consolidated girls

lost a road game to Angleton on Friday.Violet Reynolds scored 23 points and had eight

rebounds for the Lady Mustangs while teammate Kiana Palmer had 14 points and 7 rebounds.

DeijaBanion had 5 points and 4 assists.Lamar (8-9, 1-2 in 24-5A) will host George Ranch

at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday.

Columbia 51, Needville 50WEST COLUMBIA — Crissy Fiffie sank one

free throw with six seconds left to lift Columbia to a come-from-behind victory over Needville in a District 28-4A thriller.

Caroiine Briscoe led the Lady Jays with 16 points in the losing effort. Briscoe also had 2 re-bounds, 2 assists and 2 steals.

Teammate Rylie Roark had 6 points, 10 re-bounds and two steals while Autumn Matlock had 14 points, 10 rebounds, 2 assists and 2 blocks.

Needville (17-9, 2-1) will host Brazosport at 5 p.m. Tuesday.

Kempner 71, Travis 46The Travis girls offense flamed out in a big loss

to district foe Fort Bend Kempner on Friday.The Lady Tigers trailed Kempner 26-22 at the

half, but managed just two points in the third quarter as Kempner exploded for 29 of its own.

Queen Egbo led Travis with 17 points in the loss, adding 15 rebounds, 4 steals and 4 blocks. Teammate Zariah McInnis had 14 points, 3 re-bounds.

Travis (16-8, 8-2 in 23-6A) will host Fort Bend Hightower on Tuesday.

East Bernard 25, Van Vleck 24EAST BERNARD — The East Bernard girls

won a defensive struggle with Van Vleck on Fri-day.

Kristen Morse led the Brahmarettes (5-1, 10-12) with 8 points while teammate Samantha Show had 7 points.

Girls basketball roundup

Foster, Lamar, Needville all drop district contests

Boys basketball roundup

Lamar, EB capture district wins in OT

STaFF PHoTo By GARY MARTIN

Needville’s Bradley Rozner and his teammates dropped their district opener to Columbia on Friday.

Jumper

STaFF PHoTo By DAVID COLEMAN

Travis point guard Zariah McInnis and her team lost its second district game of the season in a big way to Kempner on Friday.

Blowout

East BernardKelley Kerlick, 5163, 1839, 213, 45-

49 (48), 5:22:05Ray Kerlick, 5312, 3397, 488, 45-49

(45), 5:25:49Veronika Ryza, 1489, 356, 66, 30-34

(30), 3:54:52FulshearJohn Gilbo, 4447, 2941, 477, 35-39

(39), 4:53:50Michael Gonzalez, 3247, 2234, 238,

50-54 (50), 4:32:02Chris Greenwood, 4017, 2688, 437,

35-39 (37), 4:59:43Sabrina Schwartz, 4010, 1325, 240,

30-34 (33), 4:54:57Charles Smith, 4728, 3102, 536, 40-

44 (40), 5:06:21Jennifer Vargas, 6293, 2380, 420,

30-34 (34), 5:45:07Jennifer Wilson, 4218, 1415, 293,

35-39 (35), 5:04:03

NeedvilleNancy Deleon, 5191, 1852, 118, 50-

54 (54), 5:19:13Luis Perez, 4939, 3216, 475, 30-34

(31), 5:13:48

RichmondPatricia Acopa, 402, 56, 13, 35-39

(36), 3:18:03Edward Agbemafie, 4397, 2913,

471, 35-39 (38), 5:06:01Gara Amirov, 1558, 1181, 194, 30-

34 (32), 4:03:19Yolanda Aquino, 4666, 1595, 188,

45-49 (49), 5:06:50Mae Aquino-Sta. Ana, 7036, 2738,

209, 50-54 (53), 6:24:20Tamsin Ayre, 5073, 1794, 315, 30-

34 (31), 5:22:48Jeremy Berkman, 4046, 2704, 441,

35-39 (36), 5:07:48Justin Breitigam, 746, 609, 128, 35-

39 (38), 3:30:21Roger Buchanan, 5756, 3614, 295,

55-59 (59), 5:34:48Jim Buckwalter, 3120, 2157, 160,

55-59 (57), 4:24:48Gina Buti, 1328, 303, 13, 50-54 (54),

3:48:07Wanda Buxton, 1676, 411, 19, 50-54

(51), 3:57:40Nicole Byrd, 5159, 1838, 320, 30-34

(34), 5:23:16Bor-Jiun Chen, 5965, 2236, 254, 45-

49 (45), 5:51:10Chin-Hsing Chen, 4373, 2897, 320,

50-54 (52), 4:51:47Yong Collins, 2081, 561, 3, 60-64

(60), 4:10:31Norman Corrales, 5871, 3679, 529,

30-34 (31), 5:27:31Carlos Cortinas, 5740, 3606, 404,

50-54 (53), 5:35:17Andrew Cox, 2765, 1947, 136, 55-59

(59), 4:25:45Miguel Delgado, 6492, 4023, 634,

35-39 (38), 6:00:00Sarah Dvorak, 1342, 310, 57, 30-34

(33), 3:48:06Michael Feaga, 1216, 939, 148, 30-

34 (31), 3:46:17James Forkner, 2413, 1726, 180, 25-

29 (25), 4:18:24Darren Freeze, 3517, 2383, 419, 40-

44 (43), 4:50:55Joe Gonzalez, 1490, 1134, 112, 50-

54 (51), 3:51:24Francisco Gonzalez, 5532, 3507,

392, 50-54 (50), 5:36:35McKenzie Grimm, 4160, 1390,

228, 25-29 (29), 5:04:03Kylee Guderian, 5968, 2238, 390,

30-34 (30), 5:47:18Zoraida Guillo, 5605, 2067, 136, 50-

54 (54), 5:28:16Sabira Henry, 3549, 1151, 208, 30-

34 (33), 4:52:23Hermes Hinojosa, 2968, 2069, 361,

40-44 (43), 4:23:15Theodros Hizkias, 671, 553, 97, 40-

44 (42), 3:30:03Kim Johnson, 6919, 2678, 204, 50-

54 (50), 6:32:49Ray Jones, 5638, 3556, 611, 40-44

(41), 5:27:35Nick Joseph, 6252, 3887, 555, 30-34

(34), 5:46:39Bhavesh Kapoor, 4504, 2978, 485,

35-39 (37), 4:56:51Brian King, 95, 74, 11, 35-39 (35),

2:56:42Gautam Kini, 6257, 3890, 619, 35-

39 (34), 5:47:29Thai Le, 793, 640, 61, 50-54 (51),

3:35:16Veronica Lizama, 6277, 2374, 475,

35-39 (37), 37, 6:02:47Alfredo Marcial, 6295, 3914, 622,

35-39 (35), 6:02:49Patrick McCordic, 4883, 3183, 468,

30-34 (30), 5:11:52Christopher Meyer, 4674, 3073,

451, 30-34 (33), 5:04:21Michael Miller, 3044, 2111, 367, 40-

44 (41), 4:30:54Sherry Neff, 5946, 2227, 449, 35-39

(39), 5:30:40Teresa Ngo, 3055, 936, 195, 35-39

(37), 4:23:19Phi Nguyen, 2351, 1691, 270, 30-34

(34), 4:10:12Philong Nguyen, 3985, 2666, 398,

30-34 (30), 4:42:20Thomas Nguyen, 3679, 2477, 408,

35-39 (38), 4:36:19My Nguyen-Nhan, 6539, 2491, 94,

55-59 (57), 6:09:36Lesley Ann Ocampo, 5253, 1884,

388, 35-39 (35), 5:34:56Liafis Ogboye, 6134, 3832, 549, 30-

34 (32), 5:46:46Janica Owen, 5784, 2150, 433, 35-

39 (39), 5:38:58Austin Parker, 131, 106, 23, 30-34

(31), 2:59:59Vishal Patel, 6148, 3842, 616, 35-39

(36), 5:40:53James Pinchback, 6799, 4178, 589,

45-49 (49), 6:19:46Teri Pinchback, 5711, 2120, 140,

SEE RACE, PaGE 7

Local runners at Chevron Houston Marathon

BY DAVID [email protected]

Less than a week after trading for a new outfielder, the Astros shipped another to Chicago. On Monday, the club announced it had traded Dexter Fowler to the Chicago Cubs for third baseman Luis Valbuena and right-handed pitcher Dan Straily.

On Wednesday, the Astros traded for Braves catcher Evan Gattis and will play the powerful back-stop in left field. That forced the Astros to un-load another starter to make room for the new acquisi-tion.

Fowler, 28, was acquired from the Colo-rado Rockies last winter for right-hander Jordan Lyles and outfielder Brandon Barnes. The outfielder hit .276/.375/.399 in 116 games with eight home runs and 11 steals.

The outfielder only had one year left before hitting free agen-cy and was in his last year of arbitration. On Friday, the club and Fowler’s representatives ex-changed figures for a potential arbitration hearing, with Fowler submitting $10.8 million and the Astros submitting $8.5 million.

Valbuena, 29, hit .249/.341/.435 with 33 doubles, 16 home runs and 51 RBIs in 149 games for the Cubs last season. He played both third base and second base last season, posting a .969 fielding pct.at third base, which ranked fifth in the National League.

Valbuena, a left-handed hitter, has played in parts of seven Ma-jor League seasons with Seattle (2008), Cleveland (2009-11) and Chicago (2012-14), appearing in 576 games over that time frame.

He avoided arbitration and signed a one-year, $4.2 million contract for the 2015 season with Chicago on Friday.

Straily, 26, split his 2014 sea-son between the Cubs and Oak-land Athletics, making 14 Major League appearances, including eight starts.

He spent the majority of his season at the Triple A level, post-ing a 7-8 record and a 4.42 ERA (58ER/118IP) with 128 strikeouts in 20 starts.

A 10-game winner for Oak-land in 2013, Straily was one of three players sent to Chicago in the Jeff Samardzija and Jason Hammel trade last summer.

With the move, outfielder George Springer will take over center field for the Astros.

Astros trade Fowler to Cubs

DexterFowler

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Monday, January 19, 2015 SPORTS ForT BEnd HEraLd 7

TUESDAY, JANUARY 20, 2015Don’t live in the past; it will only drag you down. Make the most of your potential and disregard what others may think of your ideas. You will have the last laugh if you follow your instincts and pursue your dreams. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -- Maintain your momentum and don’t wait for others or give them a chance to catch up. You will get what you want as long as you are diligent and refuse to be sidetracked. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) -- There is something secretive going on behind the scenes. You should dig deep and examine the circumstances carefully. Don’t depend on second-hand information.ARIES (March 21-April 19) -- You will be solicited by a charitable or benevolent organization. Rise to the occasion and give back to those who are down on their luck. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -- A significant change is apparent. Consider making a move if it will bring you greater career opportunities or incentives. Clear your mind and focus on increasing your cash flow. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -- Your decisions will be easy if you follow your heart and intuition. Positive and exciting results will occur if you invest more time in travel or your education. CANCER (June 21-July 22) -- An unexpected financial gain will come to you through a loan repayment or windfall. If you’re persistent, you can implement a profitable deal, once you eliminate a roadblock. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Love is moving in a positive direction. Don’t get hung up on minor mishaps. Put your energy into a meaningful rela-tionship, and don’t obsess about what others do or say. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- Be relentless. You can best your adver-saries if you use a unique strategy. Your headlong advancement will be hard to beat and even more difficult to stop. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) -- An opportunity to launch a gangbusters idea will bring financial rewards. Expect to face a trying time at home. If you keep your emotions in check, you will ride out the storm. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -- Before you head off in a new direc-tion, make sure you have all your facts and figures in place. It will be

hard to change course once you have started your journey. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -- Some deceitful deals will be offered to you. Make sure everything you are involved in is on the straight and narrow. Extra cash will come your way through an unexpected gift, investment or win.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- If the standard approach isn’t getting you what you want, try something out of the ordinary. You will make a good impression on someone able to influ-ence your chances of success.

COPYRIGHT 2015 United Feature Syndicate, Inc.

THE BORN LOSER ® By Art and Chip Sansom

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Patricia Shaffer, 741, 136, 32, 35-39 (37), 3:31:19

Jonathan Tydlacks, 1004, 792, 129, 30-34 (34), 3:38:01

www.fbherald.com/sports

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9 X 15THE HONORABLE ROBERT D. HEBERT

“ESD 7 ENGLISH”#930

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410 GENERALHELP

410 GENERALHELP

���������WATER UTILITY CO.

ACCEPTING APPLICA-TIONS for EXCAVATION

CREW ASSISTANTprior experience in water/ wastewater utility industry preferred; knowledge of proper trench excavation

safety practices; goodmechanical ability; small equipment troubleshoot-

ing/repair. Opening in Richmond/Katy area.

Full- time. Must pass drug screen & background

check. Benefits.Call Eddie Trail @

281-902-0974 or e-mail [email protected]

TRADITIONSCHEVROLETLooking for a

Porter/Car Wash & anOil Change Technician

Apply in person at843 Main St.,

East Bernard. Askfor John Kotycinski

410 GENERALHELP

��������KENNEL WORKER

F/T or P/T Dependable Variable Hrs Must Work Holidays & Weekends

Apply In Person281-342-7946

LABORERw/ some heavy

equip. experienceMon. – Sat.

BenefitsSend Resume:

[email protected] fax

HEAVY EQUIPMENTOPERATORMon – SatBenefits

Send Resume:[email protected]

979-793-4431 fax

��������KW INDUSTRIES

Is Now Hiring Welders& Welder Trainees.Must Be Drug Free,Apply In Person At:909 Industrial Blvd

Sugar Land, TX 77478

ENTRY LEVELQuality Control

Must Be Drug FreeApply in Person At:909 Industrial Blvd

Sugar Land, TX 77478

425 MEDICALMDS NEEDED:

Experience Required.Bilingual Preferred.Immediate Opening.Apply in Person at

Richmond Health CareCenter: 705 Jackson,

Richmond, TX.

NOW HIRING FORCommercial Residential

Electrical Helpers281-932-1247 or [email protected]

Small Manufacturing Company in RichmondFull-time position M-F 8-5 in Quality Control.EXPERIENCE A MUSTwith some type of QC.

Send resume to:susan@3hmanufa

cturing.com

425 MEDICALS.P.J.S.T. NURSING

Home-NeedvilleAccepting Applications

Part-time LVN(10:00 - 6:00)

CNAs (All Shifts)LVN or RN

(10:00pm - 6:00am)Part-time LVN or RN

(2:00pm - 10:00pm)Apply in person

Between 8am & 5pm8611 Main St.

Needville, TX 77461Fax: 979-793-3150

500 WANTTO BUY

I WANT TO BUY ABaby Changing Table

in good conditionPlease Call:

281-635-0207

600 MISC.FOR SALE

For Sale: 2 Cemetery Spaces at Davis

Greenlawn. Sect K,Lot 237, Spaces

2 & 4. $3,500 each.Call 254-893-7905

610 FURN. &APPL.

CHERRY WOODArmoire/TV

Entertainment Center. Great Condition.

See photo, send [email protected]

625 PETS2 DUMPED/

RESCUED PUPPIES (approx. 6 mo old)need forever loving

home. Male, med sz.Female, small. Happy & healthy, neutered & spayed with all shots.

Please call 713-858-7885

9 CLASSIFIEDS MONDAY, JANUARY 19, 2015 FORT BEND HERALD

SUBSCRIBE TODAY! Want to sell or buy a home? Call 281-342-4474 and place your ad.

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NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ESTABLISHINGFORT BEND COUNTY EMERGENCY SERVICES DISTRICT NO. 7

NOTICE IS GIVEN that the Commissioners Court of Fort Bend County, Texas, will conduct a hearing on Tuesday, February 10, 2015 at 1 p.m. in Commissioners Courtroom, 401 Jackson St., 2nd Floor, Richmond, Texas, on the PETITION FOR AN EMERGENCY SERVICES DISTRICT seeking to create FORT BEND COUNTY EMERGENCY SERVICES DISTRICT. 7 , in Precinct 1.

The District is to be created and to operate under Article III, Section 48-eof the Texas Constitution, as proposed by S.J.R. No. 27, Acts of the 70th Legislature, Regular Session, 1987, and adopted by the Voters at an election held November 3, 1987. The designated boundaries of the proposed District, are described below.

Each person who has an interest in the creation of the FORT BEND COUNTY EMERGENCY SERVICES DISTRICT NO. 7 may attend the public hearing and present grounds for or against the creation of the District.

Submitted byLaura Richard Fort Bend County Clerk

BOUNDARIES OF THE PROPOSED FORT BEND COUNTY EMERGENCY SERVICES DISTRICT NO. 7

Being a description of a tract of land comprised of approximately 2,795-acres and defining the boundary of Pecan Grove Emergency Services District(E.S.D.) located in Fort Bend County, Texas; said 2,795-acre tract being more particularly described as follows:

BEGINNING at a point located in the intersection of the east right-of-way line of Pitts Road with the north right-of-way line of the G.H. & S.A. Railroad, being the southeast corner of said tract herein described;

THENCE in a Southwesterly direction, with the northerly right-of-way line of said G.H. & S.A. Railroad and with the southerly line of said tract herein described, a distance of approximately 595 feet to a point of curvature of a curve to the left;

THENCE continuing Southwesterly, with the northerly right-of-way line of said G.H. & S.A. Railroad, with the southerly line of said tract herein described and with the arc of said curve to the left, an arc length of approximately 700 feet to the south most southwest corner of said tract herein described, being the southeast corner of a called 25.806-acre tract of land conveyed to C.M. Carver,

Trustee by deed recorded under volume 970, page 49 of the Fort Bend County Deed Records (F.B.C.D.R.) and being the southwest corner of a called 2.560-acre tract of land conveyed to Rosalio Zelaya and Lucinda Zelaya by virtue of deed recorded under Fort Bend County Clerk's File (F.B.C.C.F.) No. 2007146673 of the Official Public Records of Real Property of Fort Bend County (O.P.R.R.P.F.B.C.), Texas;

THENCE in a Northerly direction, departing said northerly right-of-way line of said G.H. & S.A. Railroad, with a westerly line of said tract herein described and with the easterly line of the following tracts of land:

Said 25.806-acre tract conveyed to C.M. Carver, Trustee by deed recorded under Volume 970, Page 49 of the F.B.C.D.R.; a called 2.00067-acre tract of land conveyed to the City of Richmond, Texas by deed recorded under F.B.C.C.F. No. 2006103734; a called 7.0095-acre tract of land conveyed to James C. Smith and wife, Sheryl Ann Smith by deed recorded under F.B.C.C.F. No. 9886477, Tracts 1 and 2 (each called 7.000 acres) of land conveyed to Frank's Nursery, LLC by deed recorded under F.B.C.C.F. No. 2012027616; the remainder of a called 28.431-acre tract of land conveyed to Quazi's Sims, Inc. by deed recorded under F.B.C.C.F. No. 9625539, the plat of Shadow Grove Estates, a subdivision of record recorded under Slide No. 1992-A of theO.P.R.R.P.F.B.C., Texas;

With the westerly lines of the following tracts of land:

Said 2.560-acre tract of land conveyed to Rosalio Zelaya and Lucinda Zelaya by deed recorded under F.B.C.C.F. No. 2007146673; a called 29.045-acre tract of land conveyed to Dos Bros, LLC by deed recorded under F.B.C.C.F. No 2006100712; a called 21.9980- acre tract of land conveyed to. Wilfred Brasseur and wife, Judy Bresseur by deed recorded under F.B.C.C.F. Ne. 9744169; the remainder of a called 11.580-acre tract of land conveyed to Catherine W. Dalrymple by deed recorded under F.B.C.C.F. No. 2006033076; a distance of approximately 2,520 feet to the northwest corner of said Shadow Grove Estates and being an interior angle point of said herein described tract;

THENCE in a Westerly direction, with the south line of a called 16.152-acre tract of land conveyed to Eustice Avon Hail II by deed recorded under volume 1971, page 1446 of the F.B.C.D.R., with the north line of said Shadow Grove Estates and with a southerly line of said tract herein described, a distance of approximately 1,420 feet to a southwest corner of said herein described tract, being located in the east right-of-way line of F.M. Road 359, A.K.A (Mason Road);

THENCE in a Northerly direction with the east right of way line of said Mason Road and with the westerly line of said tract herein described the following courses and distances:

Northerly, a distance of approximately 775 feet to an angle point;

Northerly, a distance of approximately 1,330 feet to an angle point;

Northerly, a distance of approximately 315 feet to an angle point,

Northerly, a distance of approximately 1,295 feet to an angle point,

Northerly, a distance of approximately 965 feet to an angle point,

Northerly, a distance of approximately 3,825 feet to an angle point,

THENCE Northerly, a distance of approximately 4,790 feet to an angle point located in said east right-of-way line of said Mason Road at its intersection with the southeasterly right-of-way line of Farmer Road, for an interior angle point of said tract herein described;

THENCE in a westerly direction, with a southerly line of said tract herein described, over and across said Farmer Road right-of-way a distance of approximately 135 feet to an angle point of said tract herein described, being located in the northwesterly right-of-way line of said Farmer Road and the easterly right-of-way line of said Mason Road, said point being the southwest corner of Grove, Section 6, a subdivision of record recorded under Slide No. 631-A of the Plat Records of Fort Bend County (P.R.F.B.C.), Texas, of the O.P.R.R.P.F.B.C.;

THENCE continuing Northerly, departing the northwesterly right-of-way line of said Farmer Road, with the east right-of-way line of said Mason Road, with the westerly line of said Grove, Section 6 and with the westerly line of said herein described tract, a distance of approximately 1,135 feet to an angle point of said tract herein described, being the northwest corner of said Grove, Section 6;

THENCE in a Northeasterly direction, with the north line of said Grove, Section 6 and with a southerly line of said tract herein described, a distance of approximately 285 feet to the northeast corner of said Grove, Section 6;

THENCE in a Southerly direction, with a west line of said Grove, Section 6 and with the westerly line of said tract herein described, a distance of approximately 40 feet to a point for the northern most northwest corner of Grove, Section 7, a subdivision of record recorded under Slide No. 632-A of the P.R.F.B.C., Texas, being an interior angle point of said tract herein described;

THENCE in a Northeasterly direction, with a southerly line of said tract herein described and with the northerly line of said Grove, Section 7, a distance of approximately 570 feet to an angle point in the northerly line of said Grove, Section 7, being an angle point in a southerly line of said tract herein described;

THENCE in a Northeasterly direction, with a southerly line of said tract herein described and with the northerly line of said Grove, Section 7, a distance of approximately 95 feet to an angle point in the northerly line of said Grove, Section 7, being an angle point in a southerly line of said tract herein described, located in the westerly right-of-way line of said Farmer Road;

THENCE in a Northerly direction, with the westerly line of said herein described tract and the westerly right-of-way line of said Farmer Road, a distance of approximately 255 feet to a point for the beginning of a curve to the right, located in the westerly line of said tract herein described;

THENCE in a Northeasterly direction with the arc of said curve to the right, with the westerly right-of-way line of said Farmer Road and with the westerly line of said tract herein described, an arc length of approximately 340 feet to a point for corner of said herein described tract and the end of said curve;

THENCE in a Northeasterly direction, with the westerly right-of-way line of said Farmer Road and with the westerly line of said tract herein described, a distance of approximately 120 feet to an angle point of said herein described tract;

THENCE Easterly, with a southerly line of said tract herein described and with the westerly right-of-way line of said Farmer Road, a distance of approximately 465 feet to a point for the beginning of a curve to the left;

THENCE in a Northeasterly direction, with the westerly right-of-way line of said Farmer Road and with the westerly line of said herein described tract, with the arc of said curve to the left an arc length of approximately 190 feet to an angle point of said tract herein described and the end of said curve;

THENCE Northerly, with the westerly right-of-way line of said Farmer Road and with the westerly line of said tract herein described, a distance of approximately 2,540 feet to a point located in the intersecting southeasterly right-of-way line of said Mason Road, for an angle point of said tract herein described;

THENCE Northerly, with the westerly line of said tract herein described, departing said westerly line of Farmer Road and over and across said Mason Road a distance of approximately 245 feet to an angle point of said tract herein described, located in the westerly right-of-way line of said Mason Road and being the beginning of a curve to the right;

THENCE in a Northeasterly direction, with the westerly line of said tract herein described and with the westerly right-of-way line of said Mason Road, with the arc of said curve to the right an arc length of approximately 1,345 feet to an angle point of said tract herein described and end of said curve, being the beginning of a curve to the left;

THENCE in a Northeasterly direction, with the westerly line of said tract herein described and with the westerly right-of-way line of said Mason Road, with the arc of said curve to the left an arc length of approximately 1,160 feet to an angle point in the westerly line of said tract herein described;

THENCE in a generally Northerly direction with the westerly line of said tract herein described and the westerly right-of-way line of said Mason Road the following courses and distances:

Northerly, a distance of approximately 235 feet to an angle point;

Northwesterly, a distance of approximately 85 feet to an angle point;

Northerly, a distance of approximately 405 feet to an angle point;

Northeasterly, a distance of approximately 60 feet to an angle point,

THENCE Northerly, with the westerly right-of-way line of said Mason Road and with the westerly line of said tract herein described, a distance of approximately 980 feet to the northwest corner of said tract herein described, located in the south right-of-way line of Morton Road;

THENCE Easterly, with the northerly line of said tract herein described and with the southerly right-of-way line of said Morton Road, a distance of approximately 3,300 feet to an angle point of said tract herein described;

THENCE Easterly, with the northerly line of said tract herein described and with the southerly right-of-way line of said Morton Road, a distance of approximately 3,475 feet to the northeast corner of said tract herein described, located in the westerly right-of-way line of Harlem Road;

THENCE Southerly, with the westerly right-of-way line of said Harlem Road and with an easterly line of said tract herein described, a distance of approximately 2,740 feet to a southerly northeast corner of said herein described tract, located in the southerly right-of-way line of the Grand Parkway;

THENCE Northwesterly, with the southerly right-of-way line of said Grand Parkway, a distance of approximately 45 feet to an angle point of said tract herein described, being located at the beginning of a curve to the left;

THENCE in a Northwesterly direction, with the southerly right-of-way line of said Grand Parkway, with a northerly line of said tract herein described and with the arc of said curve to the left, an arc length of approximately 1,265 feet to an angle point of said herein described tract and the end of said curve;

THENCE Westerly, with a northerly line of said tract herein described and with the southerly right-of-way line of said Grand Parkway, a distance of approximately 660 feet to an angle point of said herein described tract;

THENCE Westerly, with a northerly line of said herein described tract and with the southerly right-of-way line of said Grand Parkway, a distance of approximately 1,690 feet to the northeast corner of Waterside Estates, Section 6, a subdivision of record recorded under Slide No. 2068-B of the P.R.F.B.C., Texas, of the O.P.R.R.P.F.B.C. and for an interior angle point of said tract herein described;

THENCE Southerly, with the easterly line of said Waterside Estates, Section 6, with the easterly line of Waterside Estates, Section 3, a subdivision of record recorded under Slide No. 1951-B of the P.R.F.B.C., with the easterly line of Waterside Estates, Section 4, a subdivision of record recorded under Slide No. 2069-B of the P.R.F.B.C., with the east line of Waterside Estates, Section 9, a subdivision of record recorded under Slide No. 2421-A of the P.R.F.B.C., with the east line of a called 7-1/2-acre tract of land conveyed to Ike McDonald and Kizzie McDonald by virtue of deed recorded under volume 224, page 449 of the F.B.C.D.R., with the east line of a called 10.64-acre tract of land conveyed to Richard L. Leiker and wife, Catherine A. Leiker by virtue of deed recorded under volume 2492, page 723 of the F.B.C.D.R., all of the O.P.R.R.P.F.B.C., Texas and with an easterly line of said tract herein described, a distance of approximately 6,655 feet to an angle point of said tract herein described;

THENCE Westerly, with a southerly line of said herein described tract, with a southerly line of said 10.64-acre tract, with a southerly line of a called 10.986-acre tract of land conveyed to Chad Lawrence Workman and Stephanie L. Workman by virtue of deed recorded under F.B.C.C.F. No. 2008104879, with the southerly line of a called 1.409-acre tract of land conveyed to Margie Payne Watkins and husband, Isiah Watkins by virtue of deed recorded under volume 1122, page 286 of the F.B.C.D.R., with the southerly line of Grove, Section 8, a subdivision of record recorded under Slide No. 832-A of the P.R.F.B.C., all of the O.P.R.R.P.F.B.C., Texas, a distance of approximately 2,660 feet to an interior angle point of said tract herein described;

THENCE Southerly, with an easterly line of said tract herein described and with the easterly line of said Grove, Section 8, with the easterly line of Grove, Section 7, a subdivision of record recorded under Slide No. 632-A of the P.R.F.B.C., with the easterly line of Grove, Section 6, a subdivision of record

recorded under Slide No. 631-A of the P.R.F.B.C. and with the easterly line of Grove, Section 11, a subdivision of record recorded under Slide No. 1015-A of the P.R.F.B.C., all of the O.P.R.R.P.F.B.C., Texas, a distance of approximately 2,940 feet to an interior angle point of said tract herein described, being the Northwest corner of Pecan Grove Plantation, Section 12, a subdivision of record recorded under slide No. 1051-A of the P.R.F.B.C., O.P.R.R.P.F.B.C., Texas;

THENCE Easterly, with a southerly line of said tract herein described, with the north line of said Pecan Grove Plantation, Section 12, with the north line of Pecan Grove Plantation, Section 22, a subdivision of record recorded under Slide No. 1247-B of the P.R.F.B.C., of the O.P.R.R.P.F.B.C., Texas, a distance of approximately 2,670 feet to the northeast corner of said Pecan Grove Plantation, Section 22 and for a southeast corner of said tract herein described;

THENCE Southerly, with an easterly line of said tract herein described, with the east line of said Pecan Grove Plantation, Section 22, with the east line of Pecan Grove Plantation, Section 16, a subdivision of record recorded under Slide No. 1096-B of the P.R.F.B.C., with the east line of Pecan Grove Plantation, Section 8, a subdivision of record recorded under Slide No. 643-A of the P.R.F.B.C., all of the O.P.R.R.P.F.B.C., Texas, a distance of approximately 2,980 feet to an interior angle point of said herein described tract, located in the north line of Pecan Grove Plantation, Section 5, a subdivision of record recorded under Slide No. 639-A of the P.R.F.B.C., O.P.R.R.P.F.B.C., Texas;

THENCE Easterly, with a southerly line of said tract herein described and with the northerly line of said Pecan Grove Plantation, Section 5, a distance of approximately 1,705 feet to the northeast corner of said Pecan Grove Plantation, Section 5, being a southeast corner of said herein described tract;

THENCE Southerly, with the east line of said Pecan Grove Plantation, Section 5 and with an easterly line of said tract herein described, a distance of approximately 140 feet to an interior angle point of said herein described tract, located in the north right-of-way line of Plantation Drive;

THENCE Easterly, with a southerly line of said herein described tract and with the north right- of-way line of said Plantation Drive, a distance of approximately 1,880 feet to a southeasterly corner of said tract herein described, located in the west right-of-way line of said Harlem Road;

THENCE Southerly, with the westerly right-of-way line of said Harlem Road, with an easterly line of said herein described tract and with an east line of Plantation Crossing Subdivision, recorded under Slide No. 2047-A of the P.R.F.B.C., of the O.P.R.R.P.F.B.C., Texas, a distance of approximately 590 feet to the southeast corner of said Plantation Crossing Subdivision, being a southeast corner of said tract herein described;

THENCE Westerly, with the southerly line of said Plantation Crossing Subdivision and with a southerly line of said herein described tract, a distance of approximately 1,890 feet to an interior angle point of said tract herein described, located in the east line of said Pecan Grove Plantation, Section 5;

THENCE Southerly, with the east line of said Pecan Grove Plantation, Section 5, with the east line of Pecan Grove Plantation, Section 4, a subdivision of record recorded under Slide No. 439-A of the P.R.F.B.C., of the O.P.R.R.P.F.B.C., Texas and with an easterly line of said tract herein described, a distance of approximately 1,885 feet to a southeast corner of said herein described tract, being a southeasterly corner of said Pecan Grove, Section 4;

THENCE Westerly, with a southerly line of said herein described tract and with a southerly line of said Pecan Grove Plantation, Section 4, a distance of approximately 705 feet to an interior angle point of said tract herein described;

THENCE Southerly, with an easterly line of said herein described tract,with an easterly line of said Pecan Grove Plantation, Section 4, with an east line of Grove, Section 9, a subdivision of record recorded under Slide No. 629-B of the P.R.F.B.C., with the east line of Grove, Section 3, a subdivision of record recorded under Slide No. 389-B of the P.R.F.B.C., with the east line of Grove, Section 4, a subdivision of record recorded under slide No. 501-A of the P.R.F.B.C. and with the east line of Grove, Section 5, a subdivision of record recorded under Slide No. 554-A of the P.R.F.B.C., all of the O.P.R.R.P.F.B.C., Texas, a distance of approximately 4,590 feet to the southeast corner of said Grove, Section 5, for a southeast corner of said tract herein described;

THENCE Westerly, with a southerly line of said herein described tract, with a southerly line of said Grove, Section 5, with the south line of Plantation Meadows Subdivision, recorded under volume 751, page 182 of the F.B.C.D.R. and with the south line of a called 39.8846-acre tract of land conveyed to Frank L. Beard and wife, Deborah A. Beard by virtue of deed recorded under volume 2166, page 1939 of the F.B.C.D.R., all of the O.P.R.R.P.F.B.C., Texas, a distance of approximately 3,720 feet to the southwest corner of said 39.8846-acre tract, located in the east right-of-way line of said Pitts Road, for an interior angle point of said tract herein described;

THENCE Southerly, with the east right-of-way line of said Pitts Road and an easterly line of said tract herein described, a distance of approximately 3,200 feet to the POINT OF BEGINNING and containing approximately 2,795 acres of land.

THENCE in a Northerly direction with the east right of way line of said Mason Road and with the westerly line of said tract herein described the following courses and distances:

Northerly, a distance of approximately 775 feet to an angle point;

Northerly, a distance of approximately 1,330 feet to an angle point;

Northerly, a distance of approximately 315 feet to an angle point,

Northerly, a distance of approximately 1,295 feet to an angle point,

Northerly, a distance of approximately 965 feet to an angle point,

Northerly, a distance of approximately 3,825 feet to an angle point,

THENCE Northerly, a distance of approximately 4,790 feet to an angle point located in said east right-of-way line of said Mason Road at its intersection with the southeasterly right-of-way line of Farmer Road, for an interior angle point of said tract herein described;

THENCE in a westerly direction, with a southerly line of said tract herein described, over and across said Farmer Road right-of-way a distance of approximately 135 feet to an angle point of said tract herein described, being located in the northwesterly right-of-way line of said Farmer Road and the easterly right-of-way line of said Mason Road, said point being the southwest corner of Grove, Section 6, a subdivision of record recorded under Slide No. 631-A of the Plat Records of Fort Bend County (P.R.F.B.C.), Texas, of the O.P.R.R.P.F.B.C.;

THENCE continuing Northerly, departing the northwesterly right-of-way line of said Farmer Road, with the east right-of-way line of said Mason Road, with the westerly line of said Grove, Section 6 and with the westerly line of said herein described tract, a distance of approximately 1,135 feet to an angle point of said tract herein described, being the northwest corner of said Grove, Section 6;

THENCE in a Northeasterly direction, with the north line of said Grove, Section 6 and with a southerly line of said tract herein described, a distance of approximately 285 feet to the northeast corner of said Grove, Section 6;

THENCE in a Southerly direction, with a west line of said Grove, Section 6 and with the westerly line of said tract herein described, a distance of approximately 40 feet to a point for the northern most northwest corner of Grove, Section 7, a subdivision of record recorded under Slide No. 632-A of the P.R.F.B.C., Texas, being an interior angle point of said tract herein described;

THENCE in a Northwesterly direction, with the southerly right-of-way line of said Grand Parkway, with a northerly line of said tract herein described and with the arc of said curve to the left, an arc length of approximately 1,265 feet to an angle point of said herein described tract and the end of said curve;

THENCE Westerly, with a northerly line of said tract herein described and with the southerly right-of-way line of said Grand Parkway, a distance of approximately 660 feet to an angle point of said herein described tract;

THENCE Westerly, with a northerly line of said herein described tract and with the southerly right-of-way line of said Grand Parkway, a distance of approximately 1,690 feet to the northeast corner of Waterside Estates, Section 6, a subdivision of record recorded under Slide No. 2068-B of the P.R.F.B.C., Texas, of the O.P.R.R.P.F.B.C. and for an interior angle point of said tract herein described;

THENCE Southerly, with the easterly line of said Waterside Estates, Section 6, with the easterly line of Waterside Estates, Section 3, a subdivision of record recorded under Slide No. 1951-B of the P.R.F.B.C., with the easterly line of Waterside Estates, Section 4, a subdivision of record recorded under Slide No. 2069-B of the P.R.F.B.C., with the east line of Waterside Estates, Section 9, a subdivision of record recorded under Slide No. 2421-A of the P.R.F.B.C., with the east line of a called 7-1/2-acre tract of land conveyed to Ike McDonald and Kizzie McDonald by virtue of deed recorded under volume 224, page 449 of the F.B.C.D.R., with the east line of a called 10.64-acre tract of land conveyed to Richard L. Leiker and wife, Catherine A. Leiker by virtue of deed recorded under volume 2492, page 723 of the F.B.C.D.R., all of the O.P.R.R.P.F.B.C., Texas and with an easterly line of said tract herein described, a distance of approximately 6,655 feet to an angle point of said tract herein described;

THENCE Westerly, with a southerly line of said herein described tract, with a southerly line of said 10.64-acre tract, with a southerly line of a called 10.986-acre tract of land conveyed to Chad Lawrence Workman and Stephanie L. Workman by virtue of deed recorded under F.B.C.C.F. No. 2008104879, with the southerly line of a called 1.409-acre tract of land conveyed to Margie Payne Watkins and husband, Isiah Watkins by virtue of deed recorded under volume 1122, page 286 of the F.B.C.D.R., with the southerly line of Grove, Section 8, a subdivision of record recorded under Slide No. 832-A of the P.R.F.B.C., all of the O.P.R.R.P.F.B.C., Texas, a distance of approximately 2,660 feet to an interior angle point of said tract herein described;

THENCE Southerly, with an easterly line of said tract herein described and with the easterly line of said Grove, Section 8, with the easterly line of Grove, Section 7, a subdivision of record recorded under Slide No. 632-A of the P.R.F.B.C., with the easterly line of Grove, Section 6, a subdivision of record

Page 10: FBJSL spring fling event set - eType Servicesarchives.etypeservices.com/Fortbend1/Magazine75129/... · 2015. 8. 3. · Doyle Edmonds, Martha Brown, Janell Burkhart, Benita Carranza,

9 X 15THE HONORABLE ROBERT D. HEBERT

“ESD 7 SPANISH”#930

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705 UNFURNAPART.

PUBLISHERS NOTICE:

All Real estate adver-tising in this newspaper is subject to the Fair Housing Act which makes it illegal to ad-vertise “any prefer-ence, limitation or dis-crimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national ori-gin, or an intention, to make any such prefer-ence, limitation or dis-crimination.”Familial status includes children under the age of 18 living with parents or legal custodians, pregnant women and people securing cus-tody of children under 18.This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real es-tate which is in viola-tion of the law. Our readers are hereby in-formed that all dwell-

705 UNFURNAPART.

ings advertised in this newspaper are avail-able on an equal op-portunity basis. To complain of discrimina-tion call HUD toll-free at 1-800-669-9777. The toll-free telephone number for the hearing impaired is 1-800-927-9275.

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Manpreet Sarna, MD, PA is closed effective January 10, 2015.Patients have been given no-tifications to collect their medical records. In case they need to collect their records after this date, please call Dr Mao's office at 281-265-8800 or Dr Yu's office at 281-565- 8188.

930 LEGALNOTICES

NOTICE TO CREDITORSNotice is hereby given that original Letters Testamentary for the Estate of JOHNNY FAILLA, Deceased, were is-sued on January 12, 2015, Cause No. 14-CPR-027307, pending in the County Court at Law No. 2, Fort Bend County, Texas, to: LORI ANN POW-ERS.All persons having claims against this Estate which is currently being administered are required to present them to the undersigned within the time and in the manner prescribed by law.c/o: Jerry W. BussellAttorney at Law12926 Dairy Ashford, Ste.100Sugar Land, Texas 77478DATED the 14 day of January, 2015.BY/s/: JERRY W. BUSSELLAttorney for Lori Ann PowersState Bar No.: 0350850012926 Dairy Ashford, Suite 100Sugar Land, TX. 77478Tel. No.: (281) 240-6090Fax No.: (281) 240-2479E-mail: [email protected]

930 LEGALNOTICES

NOTICE TO CREDITORSNotice is hereby given that original Letters Testamentary for the Estate of Bethyl Rae Scarborough Wright , were or-dered issued on January 12, 2015 and were in fact issued on or about January 12, 2015 in Cause No. 14-CPR-027235, pending in the Fort Bend County Court at Law No. 4, Fort Bend County, Texas, to: Robert W. DelperdangAll persons having claims against this Estate which is currently being administered are required to present them to the undersigned within the time and in the manner prescribed by law.c/o: Robert W. Delperdang5710 Everhart Manor Ln.,Katy, TX. 77494DATED the 16th day of Janu-ary, 2015.Respectfully submitted,BY/s/: WARREN J. FIELDSWarren J. FieldsTBA # 069813005410 Franz Road, Ste. 100Katy, TX 77493(281) 496-3030(281) 496-3033(fax)[email protected] FOR ROBERT W. DELPERDANG

NOTICE TO CREDITORSNotice is hereby given that original Letters Testamentary for the Estate of Blondell Ra-sor, Deceased, were issued on December 1, 2014 in Cause No. 14-CPR-027254, pending in the County Court No. 1 of Fort Bend County, Texas to Travis King, as Independent Executor of said Estate. All persons having claims against this Estate are required to pre-sent them to said Executor at 203 E. 23rd St., Houston, Texas 77008 within the time and manner prescribed by Law.Dated the 12th day of January, 2015./s/ Travis KingIndependent Executor of the Estate of Blondell Rasor, De-ceased

930 LEGALNOTICES

AVISO DE AUDIENCIA PÚBLICA PARA ESTABLECER EL DISTRITO NO. 7 DE SERVICIOS DE EMERGENCIA DEL CONDADO DE FORT BEND

Se da aviso que la Corte de Comisionados del Condado de Fort Bend, Texas, llevará a cabo una audiencia el martes 10 de febrero de 2015 a la una de la tarde en la Sala de Corte de Comisionados del Condado de Fort Bend, 401 Jackson St., 2nd Floor, Richmond, Texas, acerca de la PETICIÓN PARA UN DISTRITO DE SERVICIOS DE EMERGENCIA que busca crear el DISTRITO 7 DE SERVICIOS DE EMERGENCIA PARA EL CONDADO DE FORT BEND, en el precinto núm. 1.

El Distrito será y administrado deacuerdo con los términos de Sección 48-e Artículo III de la Constitución de Texas como fue propuesto en S.J.R. Núm. 27, Actas de la 70 Legislatura y adoptada por los votante en la elección que se llevóa cabo el 3 de noviembre de 1987. Más adelante se describen los límites designados para el Distrito propuesto.

Cada persona interesada en la creación de Distrito de Servicios de Emergencia Núm. 7, en el Condado de Fort Bend puede asistir a una audiencia pública para presentar razones a favor o en contra de la creación del Distrito.

Presentado porLaura Richard Secretaria del Condado de Fort Bend

LÍMITES DESIGNADOS PARA EL DISTRITO NO. 7 PROPUESTO DE SERVICIOS DE EMERGENCIA DEL CONDADO DE FORT BEND

Ser una descripción de una extensión de tierra compuesta por aproximadamente 2,795 hectáreas y definir que el límite de Pecan Grove emergencia servicios distrito (E.S.D.) ubicado en el Condado de Fort Bend, Texas; dijo ser 2,795 acres más particularmente descrito como sigue:

EMPEZADO en un punto situado en la intersección de la línea de paso este de Pitts Road con la línea norte de derecho de la G.H. & del ferrocarril S.A., siendo la esquina suroriental del tracto dijo descrito;

DESDE allí en dirección suroeste, con la línea norte derecho de G.H. ydel ferrocarril S.A. y con la línea sur de dicha zona descrita, una distancia de aproximadamente 595 pies a un punto de curvatura de una curva a la izquierda;

DESDE allí continuar suroeste, con la línea norte derecho de G.H. y del ferrocarril S.A., con la línea hacia el sur de tracto descrito y con el arco de curva a la izquierda, una longitud de arco de aproximadamente 700 pies hasta el

sur más suroeste de tracto descritos, siendo la esquina sureste de un llamado 25.806 acres de tierra transportada al C.M. Carver, Fideicomisario por escritura grabó bajo volumen 970, página 49 del Condado de Fort Bend registros de escritura (F.B.C.D.R.) y siendo la esquina suroeste de un llamada 2.560 acres de tierra transmitida a Rosalio Zelaya y Lucinda Zelaya en virtud de la escritura en el archivo de Fort Bend County Clerk (F.B.C.C.F.) No. 2007146673 de los registros públicos oficiales de inmuebles del Condado de Fort Bend (O.P.R.R.P.F.B.C.), Texas;

DESDE allí hacia el norte, salida dicho línea derecho al norte de G.H. & ferrocarril S.A., con una línea del oeste de dicho tracto descrito y con la línea oriental de las siguientes extensiones de tierra:

En 25.806 acres transmitida a C.M. Carver, fideicomisario por escritura registrada bajo volumen 970, página 49 de la F.B.C.D.R.; un llamado 2.00067 acres de tierra transportada a la ciudad de Richmond, Texas por acción registrado en F.B.C.C.F. No. 2006103734; un llamado 7.0095 acres de tierra transportada a James C. Smith y esposa, Sheryl Ann Smith por escritura registrada bajo F.B.C.C.F. No. 9886477, tramos 1 y 2 (cada uno llamado 7.000 acres) de tierra transmitida a vivero Frank, LLC por escritura registrada bajo F.B.C.C.F. No. 2012027616; el resto deun llamado 28.431-acres de tierra transportada a Sims, Inc. de Quazi por escritura registrada bajo F.B.C.C.F. No. 9625539, el plat de sombra Grove Estates, una subdivisión del disco grabado bajo diapositiva Nº 1992-una de las O.P.R.R.P.F.B.C., Texas;

Con las líneas del oeste de las siguientes extensiones de tierra:

En 2.560 -acres de tierra a Rosalio Zelaya y Lucinda Zelaya por acta de F. B.C. C. F. NO 2007146673; un llamado 29.045-acres de tierra a Dos Bros, LLC por acta en F. B. C. C. F. N 2006100712; un llamado 21.9980-acres de tierra a. Wilfred Brasseur y su esposa, Judy Bresseur por acta en F. B. C. C. F. Ne. 9744169; El resto de la llamada 11.580-acres de tierra a Catherine W. Dalrymple por acta de F. C. C. F. NO 2006033076; una distancia de aproximadamente 2,520 pies a la esquina noroeste de la misma sombra Grove Estates y un ángulo interior punto de dicho tracto descritos;

DESDE allí en dirección oeste, con la línea sur de un llamado 16.152-acres de tierra transmitida a Eustice Avon Hail II por escritura registrada bajo volumen 1971, página 1446 de la F.B.C.D.R., con la línea norte de dicha sombra Grove Estates y con una línea hacia el sur de dicho tracto descrito, una distancia de aproximadamente 1,420 pies a una esquina del sudoeste dijo tracto descrito en este documento, localizándose en la línea de este derecho de F.M. Road 359, A.K.A (Mason Road);

DESDE allí hacia el norte con la línea de este derecho de vía de dijo Mason Road y con la línea del oeste de dicho tracto en el presente documentodescribe los siguientes cursos y distancias:

Norte, una distancia de aproximadamente 775 pies a un punto de ángulo;Norte, una distancia de aproximadamente 1,330 pies a un punto de

ángulo;Norte, una distancia de aproximadamente 315 pies a un punto de ángulo;Norte, una distancia de aproximadamente 1,295 pies a un punto de

ángulo;Norte, una distancia de aproximadamente 965 pies a un punto de ángulo;Norte, una distancia de aproximadamente 3,825 pies a un punto de

ángulo;

DESDE allí al norte, a una distancia de aproximadamente 4,790 pies a un ángulo punto situado en el territorio de dicho oriente del derecho de vía de Mason Road en su intersección con el sureste del derecho de vía Farmer Road,para un ángulo interior de dicho tracto punto aquí descritos;

DESDE allí en dirección oeste, con una línea hacia el sur de dicho tracto descritos, sobre y a través de dicho derecho de paso de Farmer Road una distancia de aproximadamente 135 pies a un punto de ángulo del tracto dijo descrito, localizándose en la línea noroeste derecho de dicha Farmer Road y la línea de este derecho de dicha Mason Road, dicho punto siendo la esquina suroeste de Grove, Sección 6, una subdivisión del disco grabado bajo diapositiva Nº 631-A de la Plat registros de Fort Bend County (P.R.F.B.C.), Texas, de la O.P.R.R.P.F.B.C.;

DESDE allí continuar norte, partiendo la línea noroeste derecho de Farmer Road, con la línea de este derecho de Mason Road, con la línea del oeste de Grove, sección 6 y con la línea del oeste del adjunto describe tracto, una distancia de aproximadamente 1,135 pies a un punto de ángulo del tracto dijo descrito, siendo la esquina noroeste de Grove dicho, Sección 6;

DESDE allí en dirección noreste, con la línea norte de Grove, sección 6 y con una línea hacia el sur de dicho tracto descrito, una distancia de aproximadamente 285 pies hacia la esquina noreste de dicho Grove, sección 6

DESDE allí en dirección sur, con una línea oeste de Grove, sección 6 y con la línea del oeste de dicho tracto descrito, una distancia de aproximadamente 40 pies a un punto para el norte más extremo noroeste de Grove, sección 7, una subdivisión del récord registrado en diapositiva nº 632-Ade la P.R.F.B.C., Texas, siendo un punto de ángulo interior de dicho tracto descrito;

DESDE allí en dirección noreste, con una línea hacia el sur de dicho tracto descrito y con la línea norte de dicha Grove, sección 7, una distancia de aproximadamente 570 pies a un ángulo de punto en la línea norte de dicha Grove, sección 7, siendo un punto de ángulo en una línea hacia el sur de dicho tracto descrito;

DESDE allí en dirección noreste, con una línea hacia el sur de dicho tracto descrito y con la línea norte de dicha Grove, sección 7, una distancia de aproximadamente 95 pies a un punto de ángulo en la línea norte de dicha Grove, sección 7, siendo un punto de ángulo en una línea hacia el sur de dicho tracto descrito, situado en la línea de derecho del oeste de Farmer Road;

DESDE allí hacia el norte, con la línea del oeste del adjunto dijo tracto descrito y la línea de derecho del oeste de dicho Farmer Road, una distancia de aproximadamente 255 pies a un punto para el comienzo de una curva a la derecha, ubicado en la línea del oeste del tracto dijo descrito;

DESDE allí en dirección noreste con el arco de dicha curva a la derecha, con el paso del viento del oeste línea de Farmer Road y con la línea del oeste de dicho tracto descrito, una longitud de arco de aproximadamente 340 pies a un punto de esquina de dicho tracto descrita en el presente y el final de dicha curva;

DESDE allí en dirección noreste, con el paso del viento del oeste línea de dicho Farmer Road y con la línea del oeste de dicho tracto descrito, una distancia de aproximadamente 120 pies a un punto de ángulo de dicho tracto descrito en este documento;

DESDE allí hacia el este, con una línea hacia el sur de dicho tracto descrito y con la línea oeste derecho de Farmer Road, una distancia de aproximadamente 465 pies a un punto para el comienzo de una curva a la izquierda;

DESDE allí en dirección noreste, con la línea oeste derecho de Farmer Road y con la línea del oeste de dicho tracto descrito en este documento, con el arco de dicha curva a la izquierda una longitud de arco de aproximadamente 190 pies a un punto de ángulo de dicho tracto descrito y el final de dicha curva;

DESDE allí norte, con la línea oeste derecho de Farmer Road y con la línea del oeste de dicho tracto descrito, una distancia de aproximadamente 2,540 pies a un punto situado en la intersección línea de derecho del sureste deMason Road, para un punto de ángulo de dicho tracto descrito;

DESDE allí al norte, con el oeste de dicho tracto línea aquí descritos, dicho oeste partiendo de Farmer Road y a través de dice Mason Road una distancia de aproximadamente 245 pies en un ángulo de tracto dijo aquí descritos, que se encuentra en el oeste del derecho de vía de Mason Road y, también, al comienzo de una curva a la derecha;

DESDE allí en dirección noreste, con la línea del oeste del tracto dijo descrito y con la línea oeste derecho de Mason Road, con el arco de dicha curva a la derecha una longitud de arco de 1,345 pies a un punto de ángulo de dicho tracto descritos y al final de dicha curva, siendo el principio de una curva a la izquierda;

DESDE allí en dirección noreste, con la línea del oeste del tracto dichodescrito y con la línea oeste derecho de dicha Mason Road, con el arco de dicha curva a la izquierda una longitud de arco de aproximadamente 1,160 pies a un ángulo del punto en la línea del oeste de dicho tracto descrito;

DESDE allí hacia el norte generalmente con la línea del oeste del dichotracto descrito y la línea de derecho del oeste de Mason Road los cursos y las distancias siguientes:

Norte, una distancia de aproximadamente 235 pies a un punto de ángulo;

Noroeste, una distancia de aproximadamente 85 pies a un punto de ángulo;

Norte, una distancia de aproximadamente 405 pies a un punto de ángulo;

Noroeste, una distancia de aproximadamente 60 pies a un punto de ángulo;

DESDE allí al norte del oeste, con derecho de paso por línea de dice Mason Road, y los del oeste de dicho tracto línea aquí descritos, a una distancia de unos 980 pies de la esquina noroeste de tracto dijo aquí descritos, que se encuentra en el sur del derecho de vía línea de Morton Road;

DESDE allí al sudeste, con el norte de dicho tracto línea aquí descritos y con el sur del derecho de vía de Morton Road, a una distancia de aproximadamente 3,300 pies a un punto de ángulo de tracto dijo aquí descritos;

DESDE allí hacia el este, con la línea norte de dicha zona descrita y con la línea sur derecho de dice Morton Road, una distancia de aproximadamente 3,475 pies hacia la esquina noreste de dicho tracto descritos, situado en la línea del derecho de vía del oeste de Harlem Road;

DESDE allí sureste, con el paso del viento del oeste línea de dijo Harlem Road y con una línea hacia el este de dicho tracto descrito, una distancia de aproximadamente 2,740 pies a una esquina noreste al sur de dicho tracto

descrito en este documento, ubicado en la línea de paso al sur de la Grand Parkway;

DESDE allí, Noroeste, sur con el derecho de paso de línea de dice GrandParkway, a una distancia de aproximadamente 45 pies a un punto de ángulo de tracto dice aquí descritos, se encuentra en el inicio de una curva a la izquierda;

DESDE allí en dirección noroeste, con la línea sur derecho de Grand Parkway, con una línea al norte de dicho tracto descrito y con el arco de dicha curva a la izquierda, una longitud de arco de aproximadamente 1,265 pies a un punto de ángulo de dicho tracto descrita en el presente y el final de dicha curva;

DESDE allí del oeste, con una línea al norte de dicho tracto descrito y con la línea sur derecho de dicho Grand Parkway, una distancia de aproximadamente 660 pies a un punto de ángulo de dicho tracto descrito;

DESDE allí, del oeste, con un norte línea de dicho tracto descritos al sur y con el derecho de paso de línea de dicho Grand Parkway, a una distancia de aproximadamente 1,690 pies de la esquina noreste de Waterside Estates, en la Sección 6, una subdivisión de disco grabado en Diapositiva No. 2068-B del R.P.F.B.C., Texas, de la O.P.R.R.P.F.C. y de un ángulo interior de tracto dijo aquí descritos.

DESDE allí, al sur, con la línea oriental de Waterside Estates, Sección 6, con la línea oriental de fincas, en la Sección 3, una subdivisión de disco grabado en Diapositiva No. 1951-B del R.P.F.A.C., con la línea oriental de Waterside Fincas, Sección 4, subdivisión de disco grabado en Diapositiva No. 2069-B del R.P.F.A.C., con el este, la línea de Waterside Fincas, Sección 9, subdivisión de disco grabado en Diapositiva No. 2421-A del P.R.F.A.C., con el este, la línea de la llamada 7-1/ 2-acres de tierra a Ike McDonald y Kizzie McDonald en virtud del acta de volumen 224, página 449 de la F.B.C.D.R., con el este, la línea de la llamada 10.64 -acres de tierra a Richard L. Leiker y esposa, Catherine A. Leiker en virtud del acta de 2492, página 723 de la F.A.C.D.R. , todos los O.P.R.R.P.F. A.C., Texas y con una línea oriental de dicho tracto aquí descritos, a unadistancia de aproximadamente 6,655 pies a un punto de ángulo de tracto dijo aquí descritos;

DESDE allí, oeste , con una línea hacia el sur de dice adjunto tracto descrito, con una línea hacia el sur de dicho 10.64-acres, con una línea hacia el sur de un llamado 10.986 acres de tierra transportada a Chad Lawrence Workman y Stephanie L. Workman en virtud de escritura grabó bajo F.B.C.C.F. No. 2008104879, con la línea del sur de un llamado 1.409 acres de tierra transportada a Margie Payne Watkins y esposo, Isiah Watkins en virtud de la escritura registrada bajo volumen 1122, página 286 de la F.B.C.D.R., con la línea sur de Grove, sección 8, una subdivisión del disco grabado bajo diapositiva Nº 832-A de la P.R.F.B.C., todos los O.P.R.R.P.F.B.C., Texas, una distancia de aproximadamente 2,660 pies a un punto del ángulo interior del tracto dijo descrito;

DESDE allí, sur con una línea hacia el este de dicho tracto descrito y con la línea oriental de dicho Grove, sección 8, con la línea oriental de Grove, sección 7, una subdivisión del disco grabado bajo diapositiva nº 632-A de la P.R.F.B.C., con la línea oriental de Grove, sección 6, una subdivisión del disco grabado bajo diapositiva Nº 631-A de la P.R.F.B.C. y con la línea oriental de Grove, Sección 11, una subdivisión del disco grabado bajo diapositiva Nº 1015-Ade la P.R.F.B.C., todos los O.P.R.R.P.F.B.C., Texas, una distancia de aproximadamente 2,940 pies a un punto del ángulo interior del tracto dijo descrito, siendo la esquina noroeste de Pecan Grove Plantation, sección 12, una subdivisión del récord registrado en diapositiva Nº 1051 - A de la P.R.F.B.C., O.P.R.R.P.F.B.C., Texas;

DESDE allí este, con una línea hacia el sur de dicho tracto aquí descrito, con la línea norte de dicha Pecan Grove Plantation, sección 12, con la línea norte de Pecan Grove Plantation, sección 22, una subdivisión del disco grabado bajo diapositiva nº 1247-B de la P.R.F.B.C., la O.P.R.R.P.F.B.C., Texas, unadistancia de aproximadamente 2,670 pies hacia la esquina noreste de dicho Pecan Grove Plantation, Sección 22 y para un sureste esquina de tracto descrito;

DESDE allí sureste, con una línea hacia el este de dicho tracto descrito, con la línea este de dicho Pecan Grove Plantation, sección 22, con la línea este de Pecan Grove Plantation, sección 16, una subdivisión del récord registrado en diapositiva Nº 1096-B de la P.R.F.B.C., con la línea este de Pecan Grove Plantation, sección 8, una subdivisión del disco grabado bajo diapositiva no. 643-A de la P.R.F.B.C., todos los O.P.R.R.P.F.B.C., Texas, una distancia de aproximadamente 2,980 pies a un punto de ángulo interior de dicho tracto descrito en este documento, situado en la línea norte de Pecan Grove Plantation, sección 5, una subdivisión del disco grabado bajo diapositiva nº 639-A de la P.R.F.B.C., O.P.R.R.P.F.B.C., Texas;

DESDE allí este, con una línea hacia el sur de dicho tracto descrito y con la línea norte de dicha Pecan Grove Plantation, sección 5, una distancia de aproximadamente 1,705 pies hacia la esquina noreste de dicho Pecan Grove Plantation, sección 5, una esquina sudeste de dicho tracto descrito en este documento;

DESDE allí al sur, con la línea este de dice Pecan Grove Plantation, sección 5 y con una línea hacia el este de dice tracto descrito, una distancia de aproximadamente 140 pies a un punto de ángulo interior de dijo tracto descrito en este documento, situado en la línea de paso norte de Plantation Drive;

DESDE allí este, con una línea hacia el sur de dicho tracto descrita en el presente y con el norte línea derecho de paso de dicha Plantation Drive, una distancia de aproximadamente 1,880 pies a una esquina sureste del tracto dijo descritos, ubicado en la vía oeste línea de dice de Harlem Road;

DESDE allí al sur, con el paso del viento del oeste línea de dicha carretera de Harlem, con una línea hacia el este de dijo tracto descrito en el presente y con una línea este de Plantation Crossing Subdivision, grabado bajo la diapositiva Nº 2047-A de la P.R.F.B.C., de la O.P.R.R.P.F.B.C., Texas, una distancia de aproximadamente 590 pies a la esquina sureste del dijo PlantationCrossing Subdivision, siendo una esquina sureste del tracto dijo descrito;

DESDE allí, al oeste, con la línea sur de dice Plantation Crossing Subdivision y con una línea hacia el sur de dicho adjunto tracto descrito, una distancia de aproximadamente 1,890 pies a un punto del ángulo interior del tracto dijo descrito, situado en la línea del este de dicho Pecan Grove Plantation, sección 5;

DESDE allí al sur, con la línea este de dicho Pecan Grove Plantation, sección 5, con la línea este de Pecan Grove Plantation, sección 4, una subdivisión del récord registrado en diapositiva Nº 439-A de la P.R.F.B.C., la O.P.R.R.P.F.B.C., Texas y con una línea hacia el este de dicho tracto descrito, una distancia de aproximadamente 1,885 pies hasta una esquina sureste de dicho tracto descrito en este documento, un rincón del sureste de dicho Pecan Grove, sección 4;

DESDE allí al oeste, con una línea hacia el sur de dijo tracto descrito en el presente y con una línea hacia el sur de dicho Pecan Grove Plantation, sección 4, una distancia de aproximadamente 705 pies a un punto de ángulo interior de dicho tracto descrito;

DESDE allí al sur, con una línea oriental de dicho tracto aquí descritos, con la línea oriental de dicho Pecan Grove Plantation, Sección 4, con una línea de Grove, en la Sección 9, una subdivisión del disco grabado en Diapositiva No. 629-B del R.P.F.A.C., con el este, la línea de Grove, en la Sección 3, subdivisión de disco grabado en Diapositiva No. 389-B de la P.R.F.A.C., con el este, la línea de Grove, en la Sección 4, una subdivisión del disco grabado en diapositiva No. 501-A del P.R.F.C. y con el este, la línea de Grove, en la Sección 5, una subdivisión del disco grabado en Diapositiva No. 554-A del P.R.F.A.C. , todas las O.P.R.R.P.F.B.C. , Texas, una distancia de aproximadamente 4,590 pies en la esquina sureste de dicho Grove, en la Sección 5, para una esquina sureste de dicho tracto descrito;

DESDE allí al oeste, con una línea hacia el sur de dicho adjunto tracto descrito, con una línea hacia el sur de dicho Grove, sección 5, con la línea sur de plantación Meadows Subdivision, registrado bajo volumen 751, página 182 de la F.B.C.D.R. y con la línea sur de un llamado 39.8846 acres de tierra transportada a Frank L. Beard y esposa, Deborah A. Beard en virtud de la escritura registrada bajo volumen 2166, página de 1939 de la F.B.C.D.R., todos los O.P.R.R.P.F.B.C., Texas, una distancia de aproximadamente 3,720 pies hacia la esquina suroeste de dicha 39.8846-acres, ubicado en la línea de este derecho de dicha Pitts Road, para un punto de ángulo interior de dicho tracto descrito;

DESDE allí al sur oriente, con el derecho de paso línea de dice Pitts Roady una línea oriental de dicho tracto aquí descritos, a una distancia de aproximadamente 3,200 pies hasta el punto de inicio y con aproximadamente 2,795-acres hectáreas de tierra.

DESDE allí hacia el norte con la línea de este derecho de vía de dijo Mason Road y con la línea del oeste de dicho tracto en el presente documentodescribe los siguientes cursos y distancias:

Norte, una distancia de aproximadamente 775 pies a un punto de ángulo;Norte, una distancia de aproximadamente 1,330 pies a un punto de

ángulo;Norte, una distancia de aproximadamente 315 pies a un punto de ángulo;Norte, una distancia de aproximadamente 1,295 pies a un punto de

ángulo;Norte, una distancia de aproximadamente 965 pies a un punto de ángulo;Norte, una distancia de aproximadamente 3,825 pies a un punto de

ángulo;

DESDE allí al norte, a una distancia de aproximadamente 4,790 pies a un ángulo punto situado en el territorio de dicho oriente del derecho de vía de Mason Road en su intersección con el sureste del derecho de vía Farmer Road,para un ángulo interior de dicho tracto punto aquí descritos;

DESDE allí en dirección oeste, con una línea hacia el sur de dicho tracto descritos, sobre y a través de dicho derecho de paso de Farmer Road una distancia de aproximadamente 135 pies a un punto de ángulo del tracto dijo descrito, localizándose en la línea noroeste derecho de dicha Farmer Road y la línea de este derecho de dicha Mason Road, dicho punto siendo la esquina suroeste de Grove, Sección 6, una subdivisión del disco grabado bajo diapositiva Nº 631-A de la Plat registros de Fort Bend County (P.R.F.B.C.), Texas, de la O.P.R.R.P.F.B.C.;

DESDE allí continuar norte, partiendo la línea noroeste derecho de Farmer Road, con la línea de este derecho de Mason Road, con la línea del oeste de Grove, sección 6 y con la línea del oeste del adjunto describe tracto, una distancia de aproximadamente 1,135 pies a un punto de ángulo del tracto dijo descrito, siendo la esquina noroeste de Grove dicho, Sección 6;

DESDE allí en dirección noreste, con la línea norte de Grove, sección 6 y con una línea hacia el sur de dicho tracto descrito, una distancia de aproximadamente 285 pies hacia la esquina noreste de dicho Grove, sección 6

DESDE allí en dirección sur, con una línea oeste de Grove, sección 6 y con la línea del oeste de dicho tracto descrito, una distancia de aproximadamente 40 pies a un punto para el norte más extremo noroeste de Grove, sección 7, una subdivisión del récord registrado en diapositiva nº 632-Ade la P.R.F.B.C., Texas, siendo un punto de ángulo interior de dicho tracto descrito;

descrito en este documento, ubicado en la línea de paso al sur de la Grand Parkway;

DESDE allí, Noroeste, sur con el derecho de paso de línea de dice GrandParkway, a una distancia de aproximadamente 45 pies a un punto de ángulo de tracto dice aquí descritos, se encuentra en el inicio de una curva a la izquierda;

DESDE allí en dirección noroeste, con la línea sur derecho de Grand Parkway, con una línea al norte de dicho tracto descrito y con el arco de dicha curva a la izquierda, una longitud de arco de aproximadamente 1,265 pies a un punto de ángulo de dicho tracto descrita en el presente y el final de dicha curva;

DESDE allí del oeste, con una línea al norte de dicho tracto descrito y con la línea sur derecho de dicho Grand Parkway, una distancia de aproximadamente 660 pies a un punto de ángulo de dicho tracto descrito;

DESDE allí, del oeste, con un norte línea de dicho tracto descritos al sur y con el derecho de paso de línea de dicho Grand Parkway, a una distancia de aproximadamente 1,690 pies de la esquina noreste de Waterside Estates, en la Sección 6, una subdivisión de disco grabado en Diapositiva No. 2068-B del R.P.F.B.C., Texas, de la O.P.R.R.P.F.C. y de un ángulo interior de tracto dijo aquí descritos.

DESDE allí, al sur, con la línea oriental de Waterside Estates, Sección 6, con la línea oriental de fincas, en la Sección 3, una subdivisión de disco grabado en Diapositiva No. 1951-B del R.P.F.A.C., con la línea oriental de Waterside Fincas, Sección 4, subdivisión de disco grabado en Diapositiva No. 2069-B del R.P.F.A.C., con el este, la línea de Waterside Fincas, Sección 9, subdivisión de disco grabado en Diapositiva No. 2421-A del P.R.F.A.C., con el este, la línea de la llamada 7-1/ 2-acres de tierra a Ike McDonald y Kizzie McDonald en virtud del acta de volumen 224, página 449 de la F.B.C.D.R., con el este, la línea de la llamada 10.64 -acres de tierra a Richard L. Leiker y esposa, Catherine A. Leiker en virtud del acta de 2492, página 723 de la F.A.C.D.R. , todos los O.P.R.R.P.F. A.C., Texas y con una línea oriental de dicho tracto aquí descritos, a unadistancia de aproximadamente 6,655 pies a un punto de ángulo de tracto dijo aquí descritos;

DESDE allí, oeste , con una línea hacia el sur de dice adjunto tracto descrito, con una línea hacia el sur de dicho 10.64-acres, con una línea hacia el sur de un llamado 10.986 acres de tierra transportada a Chad Lawrence Workman y Stephanie L. Workman en virtud de escritura grabó bajo F.B.C.C.F. No. 2008104879, con la línea del sur de un llamado 1.409 acres de tierra transportada a Margie Payne Watkins y esposo, Isiah Watkins en virtud de la escritura registrada bajo volumen 1122, página 286 de la F.B.C.D.R., con la línea sur de Grove, sección 8, una subdivisión del disco grabado bajo diapositiva Nº 832-A de la P.R.F.B.C., todos los O.P.R.R.P.F.B.C., Texas, una distancia de

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