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There are days I can’t decide if email is a blessing or a curse but there’s no contest when it comes to mail in my inbox from my grandkids. My youngest grandchildren, twin boys who will be 13 this summer have their own email accounts now and one or both will send me commentary about their activities or funny emojis and gifs.
Read moreDear Editor, Agents of change,
There are two agents of change. The first is voting power, and the second is buying power.
Read moreAs East Texas residents return to clean up their homes and businesses after extensive flooding earlier this month, the Texas Department of State Health Services urged residents and business owners to exercise caution. Among the recommendations:
Read moreTwo descendants of Micajah Byrd, an 1820 Early Texan of Austin’s Old Three Hundred, each received a Daughters of the Republic of Texas Medallion April 5, with a brief ceremony at the Navasota Oakland Cemetery Chapel.
Read moreFriends and citizens of Readersville, this story is about another one of the misadventures from my youth. You might recall from a previous article that my family and I lived on a college campus when my dad was teaching there. This was during the mid- 70s and life was good. My big thing after I got home from school was to either go exploring on my bike with some other kids or to spend some time in what I called the “jungle.”
Read moreApril was a busy month for tornadoes across the United States with 373 recorded, bringing the total for the year to 549, the Austin American-Statesman reported. That is nearly double the average at this point in the year, the National Weather Service says.
Read moreThis edition of the Navasota Examiner is a special one for me — it marks my 10th anniversary as a contributing writer. My very first Examiner ‘byline’ appeared April 30, 2014, above a news article about a Navasota city council meeting. Before that, it had been 49 years since I had a byline in any newspaper and that was the Reagan High School Statesman.
Read moreWith a long struggling livelihood, today, the nearing two century school historical site of the Chappell Hill Male and Female Institute and Soule University, features a public-school building now housing the Chappell Hill Historical Society Museum, sponsored by the Chappell Hill Historical Society.
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