WEST FORT BEND



















6 FEATURE STORY
Naana Danquah Jefferson said increasing funding for Lupus Foundation of America- Texas Gulf Coast will further the impact the nonprofit has on the lives of Lupus Warriors.
10 TALK OF THE TOWN
Claire Rogers is awarded the Bert E. Bleil Heritage Award, and six ‘amazing cowboys’ are inducted into Black Cowboy Museum Hall of Fame.
18 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
The Art League of Fort Bend announces its 2023 Spring Show Art Show winners and Kay Hand won the Fran Knueppel award.
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It’s been more than a decade since Naana Danquah Jefferson participated in her first lupus awareness walk, and she’s walked almost every year since, but on those occasions when she couldn’t be there, she asked someone to go in her stead.
In whatever way she could, she wanted her intentions shared. At times, she even coordinated separate walks.
“The number of people affected by lupus — ” she began before pausing. “ It’s a cruel disease and you never know who could be affected by it.”
It’s an illness often described as a mystery, right along with being malicious. It doesn’t have a cure, there are four different forms of lupus (systemic, cutaneous, drug-induced and neonatal), and a diagnosis doesn’t come quickly or without challenges.
This is why Danquah Jefferson is working to increase awareness about the autoimmune disease that has been statistically shown to affect more women than men. Although men, teenagers and children develop lupus, it mostly strikes women of childbearing age. Ninety percent of people with lupus are women, and most develop it between 15 and 44 years old.
Lupus is a long-term disease that causes inflammation and pain, usually affecting the skin and joints. Because it can affect multiple parts of the body, lupus can cause a variety of symptoms and, as a result, can be misdiagnosed.
“That’s what happened to my mom,” Danquah Jefferson said. “And sometimes people, who don’t know better, complain about their joints hurting or being fatigued (and listen to) other people who say: ‘You’re being lazy’ or ‘Just get more sleep.’”
Typical lupus symptoms include headaches, pain or swelling in the joints, chest pain when breathing deeply, extreme fatigue, hair loss and mouth or nose sores. A butterfly-shaped rash on the cheeks or nose and swelling in the hands, feet or around the eyes are also known symptoms.
Although already devoted to expanding lupus awareness because of her mother, those annual lupus awareness walks were the gateway to Danquah Jefferson ultimately joining the Lupus Foundation of America- Texas Gulf Coast board of directors.
And nearly six months into her position, she has her mind trained on spreading the foundation’s message of encouraging people to listen to their bodies and its purpose of being “an advocate for those seeking adequate medical care.”
According to the National Resource Center on Lupus, the disease is two to three times more prevalent among African American, Hispanic/Latina, Asian American, Native American, Alaska Native, Native Hawaiian and other Pacific Islander women than among White women.
Recent research indicates that lupus affects 1 in 537 young African American women.
Unfortunately, lupus is still unknown to people because it “doesn’t get the same level of attention as other more (recognized) diseases,” Danquah Jefferson said.
In a 2019 awareness survey, the foundation found that 63% of Americans surveyed never heard of lupus or knew little or nothing about the disease or its symptoms beyond the name.
It’s an illness imbued with nuances, so it’s overlooked, misdiagnosed and rarely discussed.
In that same 2019 awareness survey, 61% of participants believed an accurate diagnosis of lupus took six months or less.
According to the findings in “Understanding Delay in Diagnosis, Access to Care, and Satisfaction with Care in Lupus: Findings from a Cross-Sectional Online Survey in the United States,” it takes around six years for a person to be correctly diagnosed after first noticing their symptoms.
Additionally, 63 % of the surveyed people reported being incorrectly diagnosed, and 55 percent of them reported seeing four or more healthcare providers before being correctly diagnosed.
But Danquah Jefferson and the rest of the Lupus Foundation of America-Texas Gulf Coast board seek to change that.
“We have a great CEO, Anne Marie (Blacketer), who has this energy, passion and drive to go the extra mile for this to be a successful organization and for the lupus warriors. You’ll never hear her not talk about our warriors.”
Seeing someone so passionate about the work and intent of the foundation is energizing for Danquah Jefferson, who joined the board in late November 2022. And although she was already keen on lupus awareness and support, serving as a director “has been eye-opening and rewarding,” she said.
“I look forward to learning more and becoming more involved.”
While increasing awareness of the foundation and the disease it’s fighting is crucial, deepening the foundation’s financial support is paramount to continue providing education and support services for people affected by lupus, Danquah Jefferson said.
“Without the funds, we can’t provide support for lupus warriors, and it’s incumbent upon us as directors to spread the word and push to bring in the financial resources to continue supporting those dealing with lupus.”
Those warriors, she insisted, are people who aren’t “just fighting to survive, but to thrive, too.”
“And they are thriving,” she emphasized.
Increasing lupus awareness and funding is crucial to supporting lupus warriorsNaana Danquah Jefferson
Danquah Jefferson shares a memory from a fundraising event she once attended and was in awe of “how much money they were raising.”
“I almost cried,” she said. “Because I was thinking, how? How do we get this (level of financial support)?”
The motivation and willingness of the Lupus Foundation of America are already evident, Danquah Jefferson said, but “with increased financial support we can do more.”
Donation options for the Texas Gulf Coast Chapter, which serves the Greater Houston area, including Fort Bend County, are available online at www.lupus.org/ texasgulfcoast.
Danquah Jefferson, who lives in Rosenberg with her family, said she recently participated in a community health and wellness event at a Fort Bend church that was “an opportunity to pass out information and talk, in layman’s terms, to people who have never heard of lupus.”
“We were sharing how many people it affects, how it can be connected to other illnesses and
what could happen if you don’t get a handle on it in most cases.”
This kind of outreach is just the tip of the spear that the foundation is using to fight against lupus.
“We were getting the information into the hands of those who may not know. Since it primarily affects women, we’re calling on husbands, fathers and brothers — we need everyone — to come on board to help raise awareness.”
Lupus is still shrouded in enigma, but efforts like that of the Lupus Foundation of America are finding answers through research, Danquah Jefferson said.
The Lupus Foundation of America-Texas Gulf Coast chapter raises money to support lupus warriors and national research through the Lupus Foundation of America’s National Research program, Bringing Down The Barriers.
“There are still so many questions surrounding it, and for us to find the answers, we need the funding, and to get that funding need everyone,” she said.
“It will take everyone supporting to move the needle.”
Claire Rogers was rewarded for unwaning support of Fort Bend County as the 2023 recipient of the Bert E. Bleil Heritage Award inside the Fort Bend Museum on March 30.
The Bleil Award has been presented annually by the Fort Bend County Historical Commission since 2009 to a person or organization for exceptional efforts and achievements in developing and promoting heritage tourism, promoting an awareness of and appreciation for historical preservation, the identification and protection of historic sites and features, and the preservation of historical and cultural resources in Fort Bend County.
The award is named for Bleil, the former Chair of the Fort Bend County Historical Commission, who first envisioned this method of acknowledging exceptional achievements in historic and cultural preservation.
Rogers stood gratefully as she accepted the honor from Research and Markers Committee member Ana Alicia Acosta.
“Bert was so passionate about the history of our county that it needed to be celebrated and remembered,” Rogers said at the podium during her acceptance speech. “I appreciate this honor. It’s been a pleasure to work, play and live in this community and I count it as a great privilege to meet and work along with some many people.”
Rogers has worn many hats in her 20-plus year career of sharing the stories that make up Fort Bend County’s history with the public.
After earning a master’s degree in social work from the University of Houston, she moved to Richmond in 1988 with her husband, Ron, where they raised their two children.
Claire volunteered at Lamar Consolidated ISD and taught community Bible study.
Claire and Ron joined what was then called the Fort Bend County Museum Association.
She began volunteering at the museum and was hired as its education coordinator in 2002.
Claire became the museum manager in 2009 and served as the executive director of the Fort Bend County Museum Association, now known as the Fort Bend History Association to reflect its wide range of offerings, from 2014 to 2022.
She has also served in several leadership roles with the Fort Bend County Historical Commission since 2009 and currently serves as its secretary.
Claire was born in Port-au-Prince, Haiti where her father, Octave, worked as a manager with the Haitian American Sugar Company and her mother, Scottie, taught ESL classes.
The family moved several times between Haiti, Dominican Republic, and Louisiana while her father pursued his career in the sugar industry.
She attributes her life-long interest in making history accessible to the public with two people: her father, who instilled in his children the importance of learning about the people in the different communities where they lived, and her eighth-grade history teacher, who made American history come alive.
Claire also began developing a keen sense of how to share history with others when she received the eighth-grade social studies prize for her depiction in clay of the three branches of US government.
She was at the helm of the Fort Bend History Association in April of 2018 when a small fire broke out at the Fort Bend Museum.
Although the fire was quickly contained, there was smoke dam-
age throughout the museum.
Claire helped guide the museum through a $2 million capital fundraising campaign, which allowed the museum, and the stories it tells, to be expanded and reimagined.
The museum reopened to visitors in July 2021 with a greater emphasis on the diverse people whose stories represent the history of the County.
The new museum’s versatility allows it to host community events, like the Bleil Award presentation, and to showcase community art exhibits.
Claire said she is especially proud of the mosaic river at the entrance of the new museum which includes elements of design telling the stories of the different groups that have moved here and the events which make up our shared history.
Among her many awards and achievements, Claire was previously recognized as commissioner of the year by the Fort Bend County Historical Commission in 2012, received the “Community Builder Award” from the Morton Masonic Lodge in 2016, and was presented with the Central Fort Bend Chamber of Commerce’s “Legacy Impact Award” in 2022.
She has been active in the Texas Association of Museums, the Southeast Texas Association of Museums, and the American Alliance of Museums.
She served on the Richmond Historic District Commission from 2014 to 2022, has been a board member on the Sugar Land Heritage Foundation and Museum, and has recently been invited to serve on the advisory board of the Fulshear History Association.
Rogers joins Robert Crosser, Virginia Scarborough, Willie Ann McColloch, Billie and Jack Wendy, Michael R. Moore, Chuck Kelly, Sadie Williams, Bruce Grethen, Renee Butler, Franklin R. Schodek, John William Walker, Wolfram M. Von-Maszewski, Bob and Marcia Vogelsang, Vickie Lymm Tonn, Rene Lamb and Bettye J. Anhaiser as awardees.
6 inducted into Black Cowboy Museum Hall of Fame
Story and Photos by SCOTT REESE WILLEY | swilley@fbherald.com
Harold Miller started riding bucking broncos when he was a teenager.
Now 66, Miller can vividly remember the last time he climbed on the back of a snorting, thrashing horse and held on for 8 very long seconds.
It was last weekend.
“I ride every weekend, and I don’t have plans to stop anytime soon,” said Miller, one of six people inducted into the Black Cow-
boy Museum Hall of Fame on Friday.
Also inducted into the hall of fame were David Solomon, Gary Richards, Calvin Greeley Jr., Jeff Cook, and Sherman Richardson.
They were each awarded a shiny silver buckle.
The ceremony and banquet were held at the Rosenberg Civic Center.
Attendees came dressed in their finest cowboy boots and Stetsons.
Tables were adorned with decorative boots filled with bouquets of flowers.
Barbecue was served.
The convention hall featured saddles, historical blurbs and photos of some of the best Black cowboys in history.
The inductees spent the first 30 minutes or so introducing themselves to guests and regaling listeners with their stories of long nights, mean bulls and feisty broncos.
Miller, who enjoyed sharing humorous tales of woe and wonder, was shoeing horses until midnight Thursday — his full-time job — at his ranch in South Carolina and then made the 17-hour drive to Rosenberg.
“I could have ridden tonight and maybe won a lot of money, but I wouldn’t miss this for the world,” said Miller, who is ranked third in the world in bareback riding.
“I could have won up to $1,500 but I wanted the buckle. The buckle was more important than the money.”
Larry Callies, founder of the Black Cowboy Museum in Rosenberg, said the buckles are a token honor in recognition of what the inductees have contributed to professional rodeo and the American way of life.
“For many, many years, Black cowboys were mostly ignored or forgotten,” Callies explained. “The white cowboys got all the glory, won all the buckles and saddles and made all the headlines. But Black cowboys also won buckles and saddles, yet they went unrecognized. We’re trying to right that wrong.”
Next year’s Hall of Fame ceremony will be bigger and include three of the most successful Black cowboys ever, Callies said.
Yet, this year’s inductees will be hard to top, said Harold Cash, who served as the master of ceremonies for the event.
“Some of the people we are going to recognize tonight are among the best cowboys and the best rodeo riders ever,” said Cash, a 2010 Hall of Fame inductee of the Multicultural Western Heritage Museum, who knew many of Friday night’s inductees personally.
Not all inductees have to be Black cowboys or even professional rodeo riders. Some provide livestock for rodeos or supported Black cowboys in other ways.
Edmund Samora, program director at the Black Cowboy Museum, thanked the Fort Bend County Commissioners Court and the Rosenberg City Council for their ongoing support of the museum. He also thanked the Black Cowboy Museum board of directors for their hard work in putting together the ceremony. Samora also applauded the inductees who took time out of their busy schedules to attend the ceremony.
“Thank you for being such amazing cowboys,” he said.
Recognized were:
Jeff Cook was born in Richmond. At the early age of 9 years old, he rode rough stock. He loved horses, dogs, and cowboying his whole life. He is a member of the Southwestern National Cowboys Association, in which he was an all-around champion in the late 1980s. Also being a member of the Cowboys Professional Rodeo Association.
Gary Richard was born in April 1962 in Houston. In 2000, Gary decided to finally join the PBR at the age of 38. Gary would go on to immediately make PBR history by being the oldest bull rider at 39 to win a Premier Series Event. He qualified for back-to-back seasons for the World Finals in 2001 and 2002. Gary held an 18-
year record for the oldest World Finals Qualifier.
Harold Miller is from Seneca S.C. In 1975 at the of 18, Harold went to a rodeo in his hometown of Seneca after a friend told him about riding bulls. With no rodeo experience, Harold stepped down over the back of a bull and hung on. Harold is a three-time IFR qualifier in bareback riding, most recently qualifying for IFR49 this past January in Oklahoma, at the age of 66.
Sherman Richardson started competing in rodeos in 1948 at the of age 18. In 1949, he joined Southwest Colored Cowboy Association. That year, he won the first buckle for All Around Cowboy. In 1955, Sherman joined the Pro Rodeo Association. From 1955 through 1959, he competed at Madison Square Garden in New York.
Calvin Greely Jr. was born Feb. 5, 1935, in El Campo. Calvin began riding horses with his dad in the pastures at the age of 3 years old. He won his first roping competition at the age of 14. He trained and mentored two world calf roping champions — Joe Beaver and Fred Whitfield.
David Solomon started riding bulls when he was 16 years old. He joined the Black Rodeo Cowboys Association. In 1983, he won the championship. After that, he joined the Senior Pro Rodeo Association and won seven buckles. In 2022, he was inducted into the South Central Texas Hall of Fame.
Almost eight years after it was founded, Emergency Service District No. 6 broke ground on what will one day be the site of a two-story fire station on SH 36 in Pleak.
“Fire Chief Jordan Blegen and this board of ESD commissioners have worked tirelessly on this project to get where we are today, so this has been a long time coming,” district Secretary Meaghan Terrell told those gathered at the ground-breaking ceremony in March.
ESD No. 6 commissioners, architects, engineers, contractors and firefighters joined in the festive occasion.
“It’s been a long day coming,” agreed Pleak Fire Chief Jordan Blegen.
He said the fire station is greatly needed in the ever-growing community and will be “a benefit to future generations as well.”
“We look forward to the next 12 months of hard work to make sure this is what the community deserves,” he said.
Pleak Mayor Larry Bittner said he, too, was pleased to see work begin on the much-needed fire station.
The service district was created in 2015 when a majority of Pleak residents voted to impose a tax of .10 cents per $100 of property value to provide funding for the emergency service district.
Taxes collected over the years have gone to purchase equipment and supplies.
Presently, Pleak firefighters share a small station house owned by the city of Pleak.
The new fire station will be about 13,400 square feet and cost an estimated $3.2 million. It will have office space for fire and EDS, kitchen, common area, sleeping quarters on the first and second floor and four bays to hold fire trucks and other equipment.
Construction on the facility itself could start within the next few weeks. Construction is expected to end in the
spring of 2024.
The design/build project is a joint venture with Christensen Build Group and PGAL, an architecture firm.
Austin Shaw with Christensen Building Group said he was excited to be working with ESD No. 6 and PGAL on the project.
Paul Bonnett with PGAL promised the service district would be pleased with the final product.
He said the station will be designed with materials to complement the local subdivisions.
Fort Bend County Precinct 4 Commissioner Dexter McCoy assured the ESD No. 6 board that his office would support them as much as possible.
McCoy said he has passed by the site many times over the past two years and was excited to see contractors finally moving earth.
“I’m just thrilled to be able to partner with y’all in whatever way to make sure y’all have all the support you need to be successful,” he said.
“Thank you for all you’re doing.”
For more information on the service district, go online to www. FBCESD6.org.
Esther Adriane Mathews Gray spent her life aiding those less fortunate. Now, many within the community reminisce about her selfless contributions following her death.
Gray, 47, passed away April 5, 2023, surrounded by family and friends after a five-year battle with cancer.
Her outreach made Gray a beloved figure within the community as the founder of the Lunches of Love nonprofit organization.
LoL began as a ministry of First United Methodist Church Rosenberg during Christmas break in 2009. The organization grew into a fruitful relationship with Lamar Consolidated ISD, where they helped feed more than 4,000 children across 18 LCISD schools and three Fort Bend ISD schools.
Lunches of Love fed those who qualified for the state’s free lunch program by offering low-income families a free sack lunch during extended school holidays and weekends.
LCISD Supt. Roosevelt Nivens called Gray the ultimate embodiment of a caring person who put others’ needs ahead of herself.
“She saw a need in this community and worked hard to provide a solution,” Nivens said. “Lunches of Love is not just a project of love; it is the legacy of her love for the children of this community. While we are saddened by her passing, we know that her passion for people will continue through the Lunches of Love program and the new elementary school built in her honor.”
Her philanthropy led the LCISD Board of Trustees to name an incoming elementa- ry campus after Gray during the April 26, 2022 board meeting.
The estimated completion of the Gray Elementary School at 7222 Powerline Road in Richmond is scheduled for July.
Alex Hunt, LCISD Board of Trustees President, said there were few more deserving of the recognition.
“Her record as a pillar of service and humility in the Lamar CISD community is unquestionable,” Hunt said. “It is our hope that the many young men and women who enter those doors are inspired to be of service to others just as she was in this community.”
Fort Bend County Commissioner Pct. 1 Vincent Morales expressed his condolences on behalf of the county commissioners.
“I am heartbroken to hear of the passing of Adriane Gray,” Morales said. “She did so much for the Fort Bend community. Her work with Lunches of Love will live on in the lives of young people in our schools and community for years to come. We were all blessed to know her and are better people because of her.”
Esther Adriane Mathews Gray was born in Richmond, Texas on June 4, 1975, and graduated from Lamar Consolidated High School in 1993. After attending Blinn College in Brenham, she received her Interior Design degree from Houston Community College and formed her own design company. She married Christopher Bryan Gray in 2002, and they became partners in both marriage and careers. Adriane won many design awards for her beautifully planned homes. In addition, she served as Nursery Director for her church, First United Methodist Rosenberg, for 19 years.
Adriane was a charismatic, loving, and giving person with the biggest heart and the biggest smile. She never met a stranger and wanted everyone to live big, love big, and always trust in God. Adriane’s passion in life was her vision of Lunches of Love which she created in 2009 to help end childhood hunger in Fort Bend County. Adriane spent the next 14 years leading and volunteering all of her time to make a difference in as many children’s and families’ lives as possible. Her motto, “Together we can end childhood hunger, one step at a time” was what she lived by each day. Adriane touched many lives in her short time. Each life that she impacted also held a special place in her heart.
Adriane was also instrumental in securing the purchase of Rosenberg’s original Lane Bowling Alley for Lunches of Love’s permanent home, and it became a landmark of color and happiness under her guidance and love.
Adriane is preceded in death by her father, James Hadley Mathews, her aunts and uncles Sona and Tommy Sue Foerster, and Richard and Fredia Mathews. She is survived by her husband, Chris Gray, her mother Jeannette Foerster Mathews, her sister Elizabeth Fairfield and husband David, and three nieces Emma, Ellen, and Eden Fairfield, plus numerous cousins, family friends and
The 2023 Auto Fest was held March 25 at the LCISD natatorium in Rosenberg. Proceeds from the vehicle entry benefit LCISD automotive classes.
four
body was
good shape when he purchased it but he had to have some work done on the engine, suspension and exhaust. It’s the first time he’s ever entered the vehicle in a car show. Ken Carritue, who owns and operates Yesterday’s Car Care, helped with the restoration and joined Tealer at the car show.
Dr. McCrea has been creating healthy, beautiful smiles in Richmond/Rosenberg since 1994. Dr. McCrea and Dr. Vo are both graduates of and current Professors at the Herman Hospital based General Practice Residency Program for UTDS Houston. Their goal is to work with each patient to produce the best possible outcome based on that patient’s individual needs and desires.
Dr. McCrea has been creating healthy, beautiful smiles in Richmond/Rosenberg since 1994. Dr. McCrea and Dr. George are both graduates of and current Professors at the Herman Hospital based General Practice Residency Program for UTDS Houston. Their goal is to work with each patient to produce the best possible outcome based on that patient’s individual needs and desires.
The Art in the Bend Festival held in historic downtown Richmond included activities like a pooch parade and dog show, arts and crafts booths, and the always-popular Motor Madness car show.
Children raced to gather Easter eggs at Seabourne Creek Nature Park. The city of Rosenberg’s annual hunt drew hundreds of kids and their parents. Families also took photos with the Easter bunny and played games. More than 11,000 eggs were filled with treats or toys. Of those, 100 golden eggs were hidden. The golden eggs could be redeemed for larger toys after the hunt. Another 1,000 eggs contained coupons for a free Whataburger. After the hunt, children were invited to take photos with the Easter bunny.
Fort Bend County Libraries will launch a new online “Living Sustainably Club” on May 15, from 6 to 7 p.m. The topic for the month will be “Texas Superstar Plants,” presented by Fort Bend County Master Gardener Suma Mudan.
FBCL’s Living Sustainably Club programs will be live-streamed through Webex so that participants can participate virtually and interact with others in real-time. This monthly club is an online one by choice — a conscious effort to minimize the carbon footprint by reducing the use of fossil fuels.
Guest speakers will share information on various topics that focus on discussing, educating, and demonstrating how everyone — from individuals to businesses — can live sustainably within a budget.
For the inaugural meeting, Suma Mudan will talk about Texas Superstars® — plants that provide superior performance under Texas’s tough growing conditions. Learn about growing Superstar perennials, annuals, semi-tropical plants, trees, and edible plants, and get ideas on incorporating them into garden designs.
Plants are designated Texas Superstars by the Texas Superstar Executive Board, which is made up of seven AgriLife Research and AgriLife Extension horticulturalists, after years of field trials around the state. According to AgriLife Extension horticulturists, to be designated a Texas Superstar, a plant must not only be beautiful but must also perform well for consumers and growers throughout the state. Texas Superstars must be easy to propagate, which should ensure the plants are widely available throughout Texas and reasonably priced. Texas Superstar is a
registered trademark owned by AgriLife Research, a state agency that is part of the Texas A&M University System.
Free and open to the public, the Living Sustainably Club will meet online on the third Wednesday of every month. Different topics will be presented each month.
Registration is required; a link to the Webex teleconference will be emailed to all who register. To register online at the library’s website (www.fortbend.lib. tx.us), click on “Classes & Events,” select “Virtual Programs,” and find the program on the date indicated. Participants may also register by calling FBCL’s Communications Office at 281-633-4734.
Garden Club of Richmond experienced a change of scenery when they attended their monthly meeting as guests of Kathryn Joseph in the saloon room of Joseph’s Cafe and Coffee Shop.
Roberta Terrell, hostess, and her co-hostesses Donna Kay Tucker, Sandy McGee, Evalyn Moore, and Carolyn Pope offered a clever western-themed buffet of Cowboy Caviar Tex Mex Dip, Chicken salad canapes, Cactus canapes, Campfire Cheese Ball, Pecan Sandies, and Chocolate Chip Cow Patties.
The program by Jamie and Adam Busch, owners of Family De-
GARDENING
Continued on page 21
At Greatwood Veterinary Hospital, we are dedicated to providing excellent and compassionate care for your furry, family friends. We offer full veterinary services in our new, spacious 6,500 square foot facility. Our experienced and caring veterinarians and staff strive to provide the best quality care available for your pets, with an emphasis on client education and an understanding of your pet’s specific needs. We would like to be partners with you in ensuring your pet’s good health and well-being. In addition to full medical, surgical, and dental veterinary care, we also offer boarding, grooming, and cremation services. Greatwood Veterinary Hospital has been providing affordable and quality veterinary care to the Fort Bend area for over 15 years. It is our hope that we can meet all your animal’s health care needs with our warm, friendly, and knowledgeable services.
To make an appointment for your pet or for more information, please call us at (281) 342-7770 or visit us at 401 Crabb River Road in Richmond.
Fort Bend County Libraries presents special reading challenges during the summer to encourage reading among children from birth and up, as well as teens and adults.
“All Together Now” is the theme for this year’s Summer Reading Challenge. Online registration for the 2023 Summer Reading Challenge, which takes place at all Fort Bend County Libraries (FBCL) locations, will begin on Monday, May 29, and continue through August 31. Library activities for children begin during the week of June 5 and continue through July 29.
Children from infancy through school age are invited to come to the library to read a lot of great books and join in some fun activities to kick off a great summer.
Younger children will enjoy the “Summer Reading Challenge for Children,” while students in grades 6-8 can participate in activities for older kids in the “Middle School Summer Challenge.” Teens in high school can participate with adults in the “YA/Adult Summer Reading Challenge” to win prizes.
There is no charge to join the Summer Reading Challenge, and it is open to everyone, regardless of the county of residence. Participants may register at any Fort Bend County library, or they may register online by going to the FBCL website (www.fortbend.lib.tx.us) and clicking on the “SRC Sign-Up” image, which will become available on May 29. When the online registration form has been completed, readers will then have their own online page on which to record their books and reading time.
Participants may also register and log books/reading time by downloading the free Beanstack Tracker app to their mobile de-
vices from the Apple App or Google Play stores. Fort Bend County Libraries and the Summer Reading Challenge will appear as options when the program starts on May 29.
Reading rewards can be redeemed beginning Monday, June 5. The last day to pick up awards is August 31. Prizes may be collected from any FBCL library.
The Summer Reading Challenge is sponsored by Fort Bend County Libraries, the Friends organizations that support the county library system, and by the Collaborative Summer Library Program, a consortium of states working together to provide high-quality children’s summer-reading program materials for public libraries.
Younger children are encouraged to read or listen to as many books as they can and they will earn rewards based on the total number of books they read or have read to them. For the first five books read, the child will receive a bookmark. The rewards continue with a certificate for 10 books, a color-changing wristband for 15 books, and a reading trophy for the first 20 books read. For every 20 books read, the participant’s name will also be written on a cut-out shape of a bee to be displayed in that branch library.
Drawings for puppets will take place weekly. The names of readers who complete the goal of reading 20 books or more will be entered into a drawing for gift cards -- donated by the Friends of the Library organizations -- from area stores. One winner from each library location will be selected in a drawing that will take place in early September.
Exciting free activities are planned, while area readers in grades 6-8 participate in the Middle School Summer Reading Challenge by logging online the time they spend reading.
Upon completion of 10 hours (600 minutes) of reading, readers will receive a mystery prize. After completing 20 hours (1200 minutes) of reading, they will receive a trophy. The names of participants who complete 20 or more hours of reading will be entered into a drawing for a $25-gift card – donated by the Friends of the Library — that will be awarded to one lucky reader at each branch library, in a drawing that will take place in early September.
Adults of all ages, including young adults in high school, may participate in the YA/Adult SRC by logging online the time they spend reading.
All YA and adult readers who complete the goal of reading for
1,000 minutes will earn a Stowaway Jotter Set, while supplies last. In addition, the names of participants who log at least 1,000 minutes of reading time will be entered into a drawing for a $25gift card – donated by the Friends of the Library — that will be awarded to one reader at each branch library in a drawing that will take place at the end of August.
An ultimate grand prize will be awarded to one reader from throughout the library system. Participants in the YA/Adult Summer Reading Challenge who complete the program by logging 1,000 minutes of reading time will be entered into a drawing for a 32 GB Fire HD 8 tablet with a red case, which will be awarded to one winner in the library system on August 31, which is also the last day to pick up awards.
For more information, see the Fort Bend County Libraries website (www.fortbend.lib.tx.us), or call the branch library nearest you or the library system’s Communications Office at 281-633-4734.
Cast Theatrical Company will host theatre summer camps for youth from 8 to 14 years old, starting June 26. The camps will provide children with the opportunity to experience the creative process offered by live theater through a Performance Camp and a Theatre Crafts Camp.
The theatre company also offers full and half-day options to accommodate most parents’ schedules.
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plus it is delivered to you three times every week.
sign Co. located in Richmond, gave background information on the inception of their business of family planning events, design, and a garden center of specialty plants. Moving here from California five years ago, the couple reevaluated their life choices after the loss of their mothers in a short period.
Both their mothers’ diverse approaches to design, casual comfy and proper fine dining, influence their shop. Other influences include Adam’s grandmother who maintained beautiful gardens and painted floral pictures. Jamie’s grandmother did her floral paintings on china dinnerware. One of Jamie’s favorite pieces is a pitcher graced with a California Poppy.
These inspirations influence their home décor choices bringing nature into the home—vintage mixing with modern. Many of their pieces have a story behind them. A grand millennial approach has brought back Ashley prints, florals mixed with plaids, bright colors, and gold filigreed mirrors. There is a renaissance of house plants in the home possibly stemming from more people working from home and having time to care for them. The couple puts together gift baskets and plants preparing them with special touches and flair.
Family Design Co. is open Tuesday through Saturday 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and opens every second and fourth Sunday in tandem with the Farmers Market in the back lot from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
After the program club president Courtney Raska opened the meeting by thanking Kathryn Joseph and the luncheon hostesses for their contributions. Nancie Rain and Roberta Terrell reported that 10,950 caladium bulbs were sold this year for the club’s fundraiser. Community service chairman, Barbara Benes, was thrilled to announce that the fundraiser’s success will allow all expenses to be covered on this year’s civic project to beautify the Moore Home garden paths lining the entrance sidewalk. In addition to
ing will be added to improve the Moore Home Anniversary Garden. Members who donated to the Spring Break Garden Project received thanks from the Fort Bend County Museum.
The Nominating Committee presented the slate of officers for 2023-2024 for a final vote. New officers will be Deidre Doggett, president, Susan Farris, vice president, Roz Kavanaugh, secretary, Justine Huselton, treasurer, and Claudia Wright, parliamentarian.
Two new members, Theresa Crowell and Stephanie Williams, were accepted for membership.
In the Performance Camp, participants will audition for, rehearse and perform a play.
The final day will feature an evening performance, and every child is guaranteed a role.
The Theatre Crafts camp will complement the Performance Camp by teaching participants how to create sets and props, as well as makeup techniques and technical skills (sound and lighting). All of the components will be featured in the Performance Camp play.
Camp sessions were designed so that participants can attend one or both camps and learn a different play and skill set (props, set and techniques).
Attendees will receive a CAST Kids On Stage T-shirt, a video link to the performance and candid footage from the entire week, and a memento they will create from their theatre experience to take home, and
two tickets for family members to use for the Friday evening performance.
For each session, campers may choose a half-day camp, or select both camps for the full day.
Mornings: Performance Camp 9 a.m. – noon
Participants will rehearse Monday through Friday, with a performance on the evening of the last day. Families will be invited to the Friday evening performance.
Afternoon: Theatre Crafts Camp 1 p.m. - 4 p.m.
Participants will learn how to make props, fashion costumes, paint set pieces, learn about tech (sound and lighting), and handle additional prep work for a theatre production.
Participants will also be able to take home a theatre prop made during camp. Campers will have the opportunity to attend the Performance Camp play with family and see their work featured onstage.
Session 1: June 26-30, 9 a.m. – 12 p.m. and 1 p.m. - 4. p.m. The registration deadline is June 9.
Session 2: July 10-14, 9 a.m. – 12 p.m. and 1 p.m. - 4. p.m. The registration deadline is June 30.
The camp cost $150 for one child, for a half day and $225 for one child for a full day. Fees for additional siblings are $100 for a half day and $175 for a full day.
For more information, visit www.casttheatrical.com/kids-onstage.
Join the Fort Bend Boys Choir for their Spring Concert on Friday, May 12. The concert begins at 7 p.m. at First United Methodist Church-Missouri City, 3900 Lexington Blvd. in Missouri City.
Music Magic, their music enrichment class of six and sevenyear-olds, will open the evening, followed by the Town-Training Choir. Next, the award-winning Tour Choir will perform, singing many of the songs featured during their upcoming summer performance tour to Minnesota. Tickets are $18 for adults and $5 for children 12 and under. You can purchase tickets at the door or through their website at fbbctx.org/product/spring-concert-tickets/.
This concert is a great way to herald in the spring season while showing your support of the Fort Bend Boys Choir of Texas, said choir officials.
“And if you know of any families with young boys, it is the perfect time to invite them to a choir concert so they can see what their sons could be a part of — a time-honored tradition that not only teaches music, but also life lessons such as leadership, self-confidence, etiquette and so much more,” said the organization in a statement to the public.
For more information about auditions, ticket information, or the choir itself call 281-240-3800, visit fbbctx.org, or follow the FBBCTX on Facebook, @FortBendBoysChoir.
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