10-28-20 Edition of the Fort Bend Star

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Will the Jaybird Monument be moved? - Page 6

WEDNESDAY • OCTOBER 28, 2020

Kulkarni, Nehls in pivotal final stretch of race for Washington

Fort Bend / Southwest • Volume 44 • No. 11

100th Anniversary of the 19th Amendment

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WOMEN’S RIGHT TO VOTE

Girl Power

By Stefan Modrich SMODRICH@FORTBENDSTAR.COM

The race to succeed retiring U.S. Rep. Pete Olson in Washington is among the most high-profile political battles in Fort Bend County history. With less than a week until Election Day on Nov. 3, many experts have regarded the District 22 race between Republican Troy Nehls and Democrat Sri Preston Kulkarni as a bellwether for which way Texas will vote in the presidential election. Both candidates were sent the same questions via email. Nehls, the outgoing Fort Bend County Sheriff, did not respond to attempts to reach him via email or phone call and when approached Monday outside Smart Financial Centre in Sugar Land, declined an interview. Kulkarni has 14 years of experience in the U.S. Foreign Service, working in Iraq and Russia. He said he had planned SEE DISTRICT 22 PAGE 9

A campaign worker, left, hands out literature as two women walk toward the voting booth Monday at Smart Financial Centre in Sugar Land. This year’s election marks the 100th anniversary of the ratification of the 19th Amendment, which prohibited states or the federal government from denying the right to vote on the basis of gender. (Photo by Stefan Modrich)

Fort Bend women reflect on centennial

Kulkarni

By Stefan Modrich SMODRICH@FORTBENDSTAR.COM

Pam Gaskin is nothing if not consistent. Gaskin, a realtor and longtime member of the League of Women Voters in Missouri City, has been a voting rights activist ever since she grew up in La Marque, just outside

Nehls

of Galveston. And in commemorating the 100th anniversary of the 19th Amendment, the passage of which gave some — but not all — women the right to vote in 1920, she believes it’s never been more important to have organizations that remind Americans about the significance of the efforts that went into supporting women’s right

to vote. “See, I like folks who do things consistently, and the League has been fighting consistently for the right to vote since the early 1900s,” Gaskin said. “And even though African-American women didn’t get the right to vote (upon the passage of the 19th Amendment) they continued to fight for that right. They signed on with

the Civil Rights movement. And even now, the League is a party to a lot of litigation going on now about ballots by mail. And it’s just a great organization.” True to her word, Gaskin makes regular appearances on Houston Public Media radio programs to answer frequently-asked questions about voter registration and how to be prepared at the

polls. And she demands the same consistency from her peers, her elected officials and even her school administrators. “I’m the rebel of the family,” Gaskin said. “I was always a rebel. I had a teacher — (my) uncle had

SEE CENTENNIAL PAGE 3

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By Stefan Modrich SMODRICH@FORTBENDSTAR.COM

Ensuring all eligible American citizens had the right to vote was a long struggle. Coalitions of men and women of many different racial and ethnic backgrounds formed to fight for what has long been considered to be among the

most important democratic and civic obligations any American citizen can perform. As it has been in so many ways throughout its history, Texas was at the forefront of the women’s suffrage movement in a key respect — it was the first southern state to ratify the 19th Amendment and the ninth overall when it did so on June 29, 1919.

In Fort Bend County, the first woman to register to vote was Bessie Urana of Guy, 16 miles south of Rosenberg in 1919. She was a 36-year-old mother of eight children. But it wasn’t until Aug. 18, 1920, nearly 100 years and two months ago, that Tennessee

SEE ACTIVISM PAGE 3

Nannie M. Lehmann served as Fort Bend County Clerk from 1931-1934. (Contributed photo)

Sugar Land youth awarded for entrepreneurship By Stefan Modrich SMODRICH@FORTBENDSTAR.COM

Sabrina Roesler has had to grow up quicker than most 9-year-olds. When she was a toddler, Roesler began to sell imaginary lemonade with her toy playset at home. The fourth grader from Sugar Land has since, through the help of the Lemonade Day program, already realized several of her business dreams, becoming a bona fide entrepreneur with an altruistic heart. “I really liked playing store,” she said. “My mom

and dad really wanted me to have a toy to play with. And that toy became my stand for selling lemonade.” After the death of her father due to brain cancer, Roesler strengthened her resolve to pursue her ambitious career goals and is always looking for ways to give back to her community. She hopes she can play a part in funding the research and prevention of the disease that killed her father. She donates a percentage of Fresh’n Juicy’s earnings to the Dr. Marnie Rose Foundation, a local brain cancer organization, and its primary fundraiser,

Sugar Land's Sabrina Roesler recently got a bike as a reward for her entrepreneurship. (Contributed photo)

The Run for the Rose. Roesler said she received a donation from a woman whose husband was in the fourth stage of brain cancer and posted on social media to direct her followers to support Fresh’n Juicy. “We know how it feels to (have a loved one) be in the last stage of brain cancer, so that touched our hearts,” she said. “Even though only one person is battling it, it feels like you’re battling it too (as a family).” On Oct. 9, Roesler was named the Lemonade Day Houston Youth Entrepreneur of the Year for her work with

her business, Fresh’n Juicy. “I was like, ‘No way, this is amazing,’” she said. “And my mom was very proud of me, too, and it was just a great feeling knowing all that we did to win the award.” Lemonade Day, a nonprofit designed to teach children about financial literacy and entrepreneurship, was founded in Houston in 2007. The free program has expanded to 84 communities in the U.S., Canada, Bermuda and South Africa and has assisted more than 1 million kids in the process of launching their own

SEE AWARDED PAGE 7


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