georgetown view magazine/ february 2014
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F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4
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c o n t e n t s
32
38
F E AT U R E SAll ABoUt
cAlm, cool, And fAst | 32Fast speeds help motorcycle racer slow down and focus
GEt tinG to Know
GRowinG up sepARAte | 38Paulette Taylor remembers Georgetown before and after desegregation
d E pA R T m E N T SHistoRic ViEw
stoRies fRom fRontlines | 11Collecting veterans’ untold stories
GiVinG
wRApped in love | 16Volunteers make blankets for cancer patients
cREAtE
ARt ResonAtinG with life | 19After a rough start, artist’s career shines
ViEw FRom tHE top
outfittinG the community with love | 24Bargain hunters can score big at Assistance League Thrift Shop
mUsinGs FoR moms
A little help fRom my fRiends | 28Friends together, mothers together
A closER looK
mounthAven | 48Author’s book explores his family’s home and past
RisinG stARs
wAtchmAn on the wAll | 54College student takes time off to lobby Texas Legislature
nAtURAl ViEw
floRAl fAntAsies | 56Exhibits bloom at annual garden club show
A stonE’s tHRow
plAyGRound foR All | 60Kids of all abilities find fun at a Round Rock play park
in tHE KitcHEn
the motheR sAuces | 65Master basic sauces to bring flair to foods
wHAt mAt tERs is…
soup exchAnGe | 70Neighborly exchange about more than just food
E x T R A SGReetinGs | 6
ExtRA ViEw
findinG “you” in the mix | 44How to live a holistic life
GolFER’s coRnER
leARn fRom the Best | 63Tips from Pro Bill Easterly
GeoRGetown live | 67
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4 F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 G E O R G E T O W N v i e w
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puBlisheRBill SkiNNERbill@gtownview.com
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Georgetown View is a View magazine, inc. publication. Copyright © 2013. All rights reserved. Georgetown View is published monthly and individually mailed free of charge to over 31,000 homes and businesses in the Georgetown zip codes. mail may be sent to View magazine, p.O. Box 2281, Georgetown, Tx 78627. For advertising rates or editorial correspondence, call Bill at 512-775-6313 or visit www.gtownview.com.
Cover photo by Dustin Smith
mEG mORiNGeditoR’s note
On a recent evening I came home to find a big package, addressed to me, on my front porch. “What in the world?” I thought, puzzling over the unfamiliar return address. “Has someone sent me a gift?”
I took the package inside, shrugged out of my coat, and carefully opened the box, which turned out to be from my 100-year-old Aunt Polly. What lay inside was a gift indeed: dozens of old family photos—sepia-toned portraits from the 1800s, color-tinted poses of children during the 1940s, ruffle-edged Polaroids of family reunions from the sixties. My family history, at least on my dad’s side, in a box.
Except that most of the photographs had no information written on the back. I peered at a handsome yet stern man from the Civil War era that, I thought, had cheekbones suspiciously like mine. Who
were you? What was your life like? What did I inherit from you? Questions bubbled in my mind. I may never know the answers.
For Georgetown residents who have such questions about Georgetown’s—and Williamson County’s—past, answers aren’t as hard to find. In this issue, we recognize Black History Month by delving into stories that reveal the past and how that past has shaped who we are now. If you don’t know longtime resident Paulette Taylor already, you’re going to know her after reading Alicea Jones’s Getting to Know feature on Paulette’s memories of growing up during desegregation in Georgetown. And after reading Karen Pollard’s Create article on sculptor Chesial John, we hope you’ll be inspired to learn more about Dr. James Lee Dickey, the first African-American doctor in the county, and the museum to honor him currently underway in Taylor.
The box my aunt sent spurred me to dig into a box of my dad’s things that I’d stored away years ago. In it I found a quaint, faded Valentine he’d given my mother in elementary school. It’s bittersweet, finding that token of my past preserved in a present from which both of them are absent. History is like that old Valentine, I think, precious in what it reveals—and in what we learn from it.
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H i S T O R i C V i E W
ByCHRiSTiNE SWiTzERphotos By Rudy ximenez
Afew of the men can count eighteen bat-tles stars. Lawrence “Peanut” Warren, who served on USS
Enterprise (CV-6) in the South Pacific during World War II, can. Others are like Elwin Hudson, who flew fourteen missions in a B-29 bomber. After being shot down over the Indian Ocean, Edwin and survivors among his crew spent two days adrift before being rescued. A.C. Bible served for fifty-eight months—nearly five years—in seven major campaigns in Europe during the war; others like him logged as many as 300 days in constant combat, and some endured three or four years without leave.
“Very, very few people today have any idea what went on in World War II or [in] any war for
that matter,” says Martin Parker, a veteran who served on USS Kitty Hawk (AKV-1) and who today seeks to capture as many stories of fellow veterans as he can. “Sixteen million men and women served in WWII, and 450,000 died for their country. This boggles the mind of people today. At this time of life, these WWII veterans are becoming very scarce. If they have never revealed their service…, they need to unload their hidden stories before it is too late.”
With the assistance of his wife, Francinn, Martin seeks to record and publish as many of these “hidden stories” as possible. He has published two collections of WWII veteran stories, Freedom Ain’t Free, with 246 stories, and A Legacy of Heroism, with 72 stories, the latter in association with Crestview Baptist Church. Martin
has also helped publish indi-vidual veteran stories in the Austin American-Statesman, Weatherford Democrat, and Taylor Daily Press. He has assisted, as well, with the WWII Comes to Williamson County exhibit at the Williamson County Museum.
Stories from FrontlinesVeteran captures memories of fellow WWII vets
Francinn and Martin Parker
1 2 F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 G E O R G E T O W N v i e w
STORiES FROm FRONTliNES from page 11
The story collecting started in 2006, when Martin was “shooting the breeze” with fellow veterans and began to listen to some of their stories. “What I [heard] was unbelievable,” explains Martin. “Walter ‘Boxy’ Elam, now deceased, told us of his nine battle stars, four [earned] in Europe and five in the South Pacific. I had no idea Boxy was involved in so much. [Then] Lawrence ‘Peanut’ Warren said, ‘I was in eighteen battles and have proof of it.’ Gene Wilkins [re-sponded], ‘I was not in nine or eighteen battles, but I flew many a flight over “the Hump” as a pilot of B-24s.’”
Martin could not ignore these stories waiting to be collected and shared much less the hun-dreds of other stories that he knew were carried in the hearts and minds of men who served. As he began to collect stories, though, he encountered some difficulty in locating WWII veter-ans. To solve this problem, Mar-tin turned to local churches, like the Brethren Church in Taylor, and to American Legion Halls, tracking down names and ad-dresses. Even after he began to locate veterans, though, he had to do a little more work to encourage them to share.
“[The] most surprising thing [has been] how difficult [it is] to get the sto-ries out of hardened combat veterans,” explains Martin, who with Francinn
created a list of twenty-two questions to prompt veterans when they have no idea how to begin telling their stories. “Most veterans are timid and reserved about their service, so they don’t want to appear as heroes.” Despite this re-luctance, Martin persists, confident that
the stories he collects are important, both for the generation that shares and for those to come. “It [is] my experi-ence,” he notes, “that combat veterans [will] tell their experiences to another veteran or to their grandchildren, if to no one else.”
Discover more about World War II through the
World War II Comes to Williamson County exhibit
on display until March of 2015 at the Williamson
County Museum at 716 S. Austin Ave.
Visit www.museum.wilco.org or call
512-943-1670 for more information.
Martin Parker with his portrait at age 17.
Martin Parker shared stories from one of his books.
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G i V i N G V i E W
Snip, snip, snip!
The sound of scissors cutting fabric mingles with the laughter and banter shared by four
people gathered in a local coffee shop. Each person is in charge of measuring, cutting, and tying one end of the cheerful no-sew blanket that lies on the small table before them. The Blanket Brigade—as they’ve affectionately dubbed themselves—has crafted three blankets already, with plans to finish a fourth fifty-by-sixty-inch blanket by the end of the
evening. For Robin
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complications of cancer treatment on Valentine’s Day in 1997.
“When James first went through chemo, he was always freez-ing and had to carry a blanket,” recalls Darvina Emmerich, James’s widow and founder of the Pittsburgh-based nonprofit. “And I quickly found that there were other patients experiencing the same symptoms.” Years later, she began Wrapped in Love to make blankets for cancer patients.
Since the organization deliv-ered its first batch of blankets to a cancer center in 2011, its mem-bers nationwide have made and donated about 4,000 new quilted, crocheted, knitted, and no-sew fleece blankets.
“For many of these people, the blankets are the first gift they’ll receive as a cancer patient,” says Robin, who has started a chapter of Wrapped in Love in Central Texas. “They can’t believe that strangers are thinking of them and taking the time to make something especially for them—no strings attached.”
Because sewing expertise isn’t required when crafting cut-and-tie fleece blankets, almost anyone can participate in the no-sew
ByRACHEl
BROWNlOWphotos
By nAdiA moRAles
Wrapped in Love Handmade blankets for cancer patients
blanket-making groups. Partici-pating in such a group is an ideal service activity for businesses, school groups, church groups, and service organizations. Robin hopes organizations and oth-ers will form their own Blanket Brigades so that Wrapped in Love will continue to grow and involve even more volunteers.
“Anyone is welcome to join one of our established groups or form their own,” says Robin, who leads a floating no-sew blanket-making group in the greater-Georgetown area.
“Before [starting Wrapped in Love], I didn’t know that I could contribute to so many people in such a way,” says Robin, who’s currently planning her next delivery of twelve blankets to the Georgetown Cancer Cen-ter. “Wrapped in Love not only touches the people who receive the blankets, but it also touches the people who make them. It really takes you out of your mind and into your heart.”
For those interested in donating new, handmade blankets, participating in a
blanket-making day, or joining or forming a new Wrapped in Love group, visit www.
wrappedinlovefoundation.org/.
Robin Emmerich; Vice President of the Wrapped in Love board
F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 G E O R G E T O W N v i e w 1 7
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C R E A T E
BykAREN pOllARdphotos By dustin smith
How had it happened? Chesiel John, a talent-ed artist and honors graduate of Parsons School of Design, was
homeless in New York City.“I took a difficult path,” Chesiel
says, “but it’s not a sad story.” She knows in her heart that all the hardships and grief she’s faced have enriched her life and her art.
the hARd pAthBorn in Trinidad, Chesiel moved
to New York with her family when she was fourteen. She’s always been creative. “My mom put a brush in my hand when I was a baby,” she says. Her mom had a creative side, too, though her dream of being a singer remained unfulfilled. But she never pushed her own desires onto her daugh-ters. Chesiel says, “She allowed
Art Resonating with LifeRough road enriches one artist’s talenttook two jobs and managed to find them a one-bedroom apart-ment so they could move out.
Chesiel went back to Parsons in 2000 with a renewed commitment to finish her degree. She also began reading about musicians—their lives and philosophies. Many of her portfolio illustrations were of jazz musicians—pen and ink drawings that were whimsical, yet edgy. Her illustration style turned out to be just what Verve Records was looking for, and she landed a project with them illustrating singer Nina Simone’s upcoming CD. During those two years, she also produced editorial illustra-tions for magazines. She gradu-ated with honors in 2002, contin-ued to teach, got published as an editorial illustrator, entered juried shows, and began working with art dealers to show her work.
me to choose my own creative path.” One of Chesiel’s dearest memories is their Saturday ritual when she was in high school. “My mother would take Satur-days, only for me, to purchase art materials.” Sadly, her mom died in 1994, when Chesiel was just seventeen.
Chesiel continued to pursue her creative dreams as she began studying illustration at Parsons School of Design in 1995. But her grades suffered because of her grief, and during her sophomore year she was advised to take some time off or drop out. She opted to take two years off. Grief caused rifts within the entire fam-ily, and the tension grew as Che-siel and her two sisters endured their father’s overzealous rules. The girls finally reached a break-ing point. Chesiel’s oldest sister
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ART RESONATiNG WiTH liFE from page 19 stumBlinG AlonG the wAy
Then tragedy struck again. A dear friend died, and grief consumed Chesiel. Over the next few years, she struggled with her art and her person-al life, and when a romantic relationship fell apart, Che-siel found herself pregnant and homeless.
That’s when she met members of the Sisters of Life and the Missionaries of Charity. They helped Chesiel many times over, providing food, shelter, and spiritual guidance. “The Missionaries of Charity and Sisters of Life are my heroes,” Chesiel says.
After her son was born, she thought he needed his father in his life, so she rekindled that relationship. But it was not to last, and for a second time she was pregnant and homeless.
With help once again from those two Christian organizations, Chesiel and her two babies survived. She even managed to produce some freelance illustrations during that time.
Then the Sisters of Life found a family who volunteered to sponsor Chesiel and her kids in their Austin home, so Chesiel stepped out in faith and moved to Texas. Eight months later, she found
a place of her own.
BAcK on A pRomisinG pAthToday, Chesiel continues creating
freelance illustrations, works on com-missioned pieces, cleans houses to pay the bills, and spends as much time as possible with her kids. Even when she’s exhausted, she works on her art. “You have to show up,” Chesiel says of being an artist. “It’s like a seed planted within you that continues to grow, and if you keep going, you get to see it blossom.”
She has expanded her creative en-deavors in the last few years to include 3D sculptures, created from both old and discarded items. She strives to speak of history and humanity in her pieces and to bring awareness of the world—the past and the future.
One such piece evolved out of a trip to Taylor, where she discovered the Dr. James Lee Dickey House—the future Dickey Museum. Dr. Dickey was the first African-American doctor in Williamson County and a great hu-manitarian. Chesiel cre-ated a sculpture to honor the man and his work, incorporating items that would have been tools of his trade in the early to mid-1900s—a cracked
leather medicine bag, medicine bottles, an old first aid kit. The memorial will be displayed when the museum opens.
Another project, shown at Zilker Botanical Garden last year, is her Per-cussion of Thought—ten rusty barrels, reminiscent of drums she’d seen in Trinidad, built from scrap metal. Each barrel is encircled by chains holding “ornamental charms”—bottle caps, a vintage frame, bells, records—memen-tos of times gone by, reminders of the tracks we leave behind.
Chesiel considers her life blessed. She hopes one day “to be a professor, to be somewhere talking to kids or people about recycling or anything that has to do with humanitarian change.” And she’ll continue to use her art “as a way to speak.”
For more information go towww.tmofo.org.
Art work dedicated to the memory of Dr. James Lee Dickey
Chesiel John
Chesiel’s art
F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 G E O R G E T O W N v i e w 2 1
After the perfect man has proposed, what next?The Georgetown Bridal Show offers one-stop shopping for your wedding day. Over 60 Central Texas vendors will be in attendance. Admission is free for brides and their guests. The first 250 brides at the show will receive a VIP bridal bag.
Brides who pre-register are automatically entered in the honeymoon giveaway. Brides can like the Georgetown Bridal Show Facebook page for the chance to win prizes prior to the show. Additionally, over $5,000 in prizes will be given away during the show.
Free wedding planning seminars will be held during the show on topics such as DIY Wedding Flowers, Wedding Photography Do’s & Do Not’s, and Setting a Realistic Budget. There will also be a fashion show featuring the latest in bridal fashions.
Presented by Georgetown Chamber of Commerce with help from title sponsor Wilco Wedding Association, the Show is made possible through the following sponsors: View Magazine Inc, Georgetown Jewelry, Vacations in Paradise, CJ’s Catering, Sleep Number, and many other sponsors. For more information, contact Allison McKee at the Georgetown Chamber of Commerce. 512-930-3535/events@georgetownchamber.org.
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Shoppers never know what they might come across when they walk into the Georgetown As-sistance League’s upscale
thrift shop at 900 N. Austin Ave. Operated like a boutique, but with thrift shop prices, the store is a treasure trove of finds for savvy bargain hunters.
High-end clothing and house-hold items such as Brighton handbags, Tiffany jewelry, and P. Buckley Moss prints have graced the shelves and been offered for sale at a fraction of the original price.
“We have one jacket now—the original price tag is still on it—and I’ll tell you, it [was originally] hundreds of dollars,” says Jo Hat-ley, the Georgetown Assistance League’s vice president of mem-bership.
ByRACHEl
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Outfitting the Community with LoveThrift store treasures benefit many
“We don’t get first dibs, though,” she chuckles, explaining that since the shop operates as a non-profit, rules are in place to prevent cherry-picking by Assistance League volunteers. “We may want it. We may lust over it,” says Jo. “But we can’t buy it… It really wouldn’t support our mission if customers thought we were tak-ing all of the goodies from them.”
As a nonprofit organization—one of 121 Assistance League chapters nationwide—the thrift shop funnels help to those in need in Georgetown and surround-ing communities. Its signature program, Operation School Bell, involves purchasing new school clothing and shoes each year for elementary students from low-income families.
In addition to operating their shop, the Georgetown Assistance
League hosts the “Books, Bells and Brunch” fundraiser each February, which features talks by local authors, brunch, a silent auction, and a thrift shop fashion show put on by Assistance League volunteers.
This year, the fundraiser has been moved from the Georgetown Recreation Center to the Sun City ballroom, which will allow the group more space, accommodate far more people, and provide a larger stage for the fashion show.
“The fashion show will be cloth-ing exclusively from the shop,” says Judy Swain, public relations manager of Georgetown’s As-sistance League. “Our gals always model every year, and then people come and buy our clothes. It’s kind of humorous, actually. Sometimes when our models get off the stage, there will be people
The Georgetown Assistance League’s annual “Books,
Bells and Brunch” fundraiser takes place on February 24.
Tickets cost $20 each and are available at the thrift shop.
F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 G E O R G E T O W N v i e w 2 5
walking right behind them, saying, ‘I want that jacket! I want those shoes!’”
Since the items are always one-of-a-kind—or at least one-of-a-kind for the thrift shop—the Assistance League operates sales from its February fashion show as they would in the store: on a first-come, first-served basis.
“So far, the ladies have always been ladies,” Jo jokes. “We haven’t had a brawl yet.”
“People are always surprised by what you can get at the shop,” says Judy, who has personally found several choice items, including a beautiful sweater and jacket. “We’re lucky; we get lots of nice donations,” including many well-known brands for both men and women.
“We also get help from merchants in
Visit Assistance League of Georgetown’s new, expanded location at 900 N. Austin Avenue, Ste. 313. Donations of household items, clothing, and jewelry are accepted any time the shop is open. For more information, go to www.algeorgetownarea.org or call 512-864-2542.
the community who donate their time and expertise,” Joanne Harrah, Assistance League president, says. “For example, several jewelers repair or appraise items for us, free of charge. Other merchants donate everything from furniture to clothing.”
And as for the regular volunteers, Judy says, “We wouldn’t be here unless we loved it. … We all could be doing any number of things, but we all choose to do this.” The Assistance League’s mission to serve unmet community needs, she adds, “is something we care about deeply.”
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How Materialistic Naturalism Undermines any Notions of Reason and Rationality.The Atheist’s Distressing Dilemma:
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Alicea Jones is a professional writer and speaker encouraging mothers to nurture the whole woman so that they can achieve all they are designed to be. She is currently working on Free To Mother, a book to help moms live courageously. www.freetomother.com
A Little Help from My Friends Why having friends makes moms stronger
“idon’t know where I would be without my friends,” exclaimed a mother as we sat pool-side while our kids took
swimming lessons. Her comment sent my imagination roaming as I tried to envision how my life would play out without friends.
My friends listen to me. They’re interested in my thoughts about parenting. Whether they agree or not, they care about what
concerns me. They tell me what they think. They’re like boomerangs. They catch my concerns about mothering and send them back to me—much lighter
m U S i N G S F O R m O m S
ByAliCEA JONES
than when I sent them out.For moms, friends are especially
important because they help us to stand strong as we make our way on the shifting stepping stones of motherhood. True friends love us without makeup, thin or lugging a few extra pounds, happy or sad. They find value in us in ways that have nothing to do with how we look or how we mother. Friends help us to be better than we are. They brainstorm with us as we try to figure out what’s best for our kids and our families. They show us the buried treasures we hold within and make us want to culti-vate our talents. They encourage us when we fail and love us all the more for being human.
Friends understand that some-
times moms just need to talk—to let loose the feverish thoughts that would otherwise burn holes in our brains. Friends give us a flameproof place to set down our words—a place for them to cool.
I’m undeservedly blessed with a few good friends from the various places I’ve lived. But I’m uniquely grateful for those in Georgetown. We have carpooled and scouted out bargains from HEB and Wolf Ranch for one another. My friends have brought me meals when I was sick and picked up my child from school when I couldn’t. We sacrifice for each other but don’t consider it a sacrifice at all. Two are better than one, because they have a good return for their work. If one falls down, her friend can help her up.
As important as friendships are, we don’t always make the time to cultivate them. I am sometimes guilty of this neglect and can’t cast the first stone. But I am con-vinced that I am a better mother
F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 G E O R G E T O W N v i e w 2 9
when I make time for friends. I am bet-ter because I have the camaraderie of others on this journey.
Life gets hectic, no doubt. We’re too busy, too sick, or too shy to invite a friend over; the house is a wreck, and the dog has fleas. But I guarantee that if we put these concerns aside and take time to pursue and cultivate friendships as if our lives depended upon them, we would be all the better for it.
Here are a few ideas for making time for friends despite our hectic lives:
1. set up A weeKly plAy dAte. If you’re taking the little ones to play at the park anyway, why not use this time to stay connected with friends? You can catch up as you watch the kids.
2. tAKe AdvAntAGe of mom’s dAy out. Some churches have a moth-er’s day out program where you can leave the kids and take a few hours to have coffee with a friend or do whatever it is you enjoy doing together.
3. mops. The Mothers of Preschoolers organization offers time for moms to get together over breakfast, make crafts, and listen to speakers. Attending is a way to reconnect with friends as you learn together. Check out www.mopsgeorgetown.com.
Life gets hectic, no doubt. We’re too busy, too sick, or too shy to invite a friend over;
the house is a wreck, and the dog has fleas. But I guarantee that if we put these concerns aside and take time to pursue and cultivate friendships as if our
lives depended upon them, we would be all
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On those crazy days, just know that yourState Farm® agent has your back. With their expert help and the backing of a great team, they’ll have you back on the road and driving happy in no time. Like a good neighbor, State Farm is there.® CALL FOR A QUOTE 24/7.
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The rider—protected by a leather suit, thick motorcycle boots, and knee pads—pulled his Suzuki GSXR 1000 up to
the starting line. He flipped down the clear shield on his full-face helmet, then shrugged his neck and shoulders to loosen up. Just before the signal, he revved the engine to an earsplitting 13,000 rpm.
Five seconds later, he was fly-ing at over 100 miles per hour. He leaned sideways into the first turn, dragging his knee, mov-ing full throttle over skid-marked pavement.
“Can I make it?” he asked him-self.
Danny Kelsey, the current Central Motorcycle Roadracing Association champion, made that turn and many others to set a new record at Hallett Motor Racing Cir-cuit in Oklahoma last summer.
Racing motorcycles made Danny the man he is today. “My parents made me work hard to continue racing, and everything I learned then has carried over to my everyday life. I work very hard to be the best at everything I set my mind to,” Danny says.
the fiRst tRophyDanny’s been riding and racing
motorcycles since he was eight.
One day, he spotted his dad’s old motocross trophies, almost hidden away on a shelf. “I saw those little motorcycle dudes and insisted on knowing what the trophies were for. My dad said he used to race motorcycles,” Danny remembers. This answer sparked the passion that’s driven Danny ever since. “I had to have a motorcycle. I begged and begged.”
Danny grins. “I think my dad did a little begging for me, too, to be honest.” His mom finally said “yes” to motorcycles after Danny was diagnosed with Attention Deficit Disorder in first grade. “Let’s just say I didn’t get many gold stars,” Danny says of his trouble making good grades. The doctor encouraged his mom to get him involved in team sports to give him focus. But that approach didn’t help. “I wasn’t doing as well as I should in school. I was also taking Ritalin on a regular basis, which, in my opinion, made me a different person. I became very lazy, and I didn’t get excited about anything,” Danny explains. Then his parents surprised him with a Kawasaki KX60.
Danny’s father took him to a race the very next weekend, where he won first place. “I can’t say much because there were only two [of us] in the class, but I got that trophy, so I’m going with
ByCAROl HUTCHiSON
A l l A B O U T
motorcycle racer powers
past Add with a strong
work ethic
Br
Ian
J n
ELso
n
If you’re interested in learning more about Danny’s racing career, please go to RPSraceteam.com or follow him on Facebook or Twitter. View an on-board video of Danny racing at Hallett Motor Racing Circuit at www.youtube.com/watch?v=GpT3b61ry2M
3 4 F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 G E O R G E T O W N v i e w
it,” Danny says. The racing continued under one condi-tion: that he earn at least Bs in school. From then on, Danny brought home As. “Racing motorcycles preoccupied my mind and gave me focus. That was a priority for me: Do well in school, and I get to have fun riding. That’s all I needed to overcome my inability to focus. School was much easier after I understood what I had to do to keep racing,” Danny says.
Danny raced motocross, on enclosed off-road dirt tracks, until 2005. He rode professional arena cross and outdoor motocross. But traveling every weekend burned him out by the time he was twenty.
the switch to RoAd RAcinGIn 2006, just for fun, Danny rode a
friend’s motorcycle on a paved track. He rented a leather suit for protection and entered the C class, the least com-petitive level. “I was riding a Honda CBR 600. I was going so fast that they actu-ally pulled me off. They said, ‘Listen, you need to ride in the A class because you’re scaring people going by so fast,’” Danny remembers. He achieved lap times that first weekend that some rac-ers struggle ever to reach. That’s when he met his trainer, Marcus McBain. Marcus worked with Danny in the off season to help him perfect his road racing skills. Danny won three races the first weekend.
Danny now races superbikes—a Su-zuki GSX R1000 and 750. “They’re the same as a sport bike or crotch rocket,” Danny explains. A race runs from six to eight laps around a track and covers from 1.7 to 2.8 miles.
In the straightaways Danny hits speeds between 180 and 190 miles per hour, but turns require the most concentration and skill. “I’ll come into turns, both wheels sliding, think-ing ‘I don’t know if I’m going to make it!’ That’s what it takes to win. You’ve got to absolutely push your limit, and you’ve got to know where your limit is,” Danny explains.
“Have I crashed? Oh, yeah, abso-lutely!” He points to a white leather suit scarred with black marks. “If it’s a low side wreck, it feels like sliding on ice. It doesn’t feel great, but it’s bearable.” When the bike flips and the rider goes tumbling, it’s called a high side. “High sides are no fun. They hurt,” Danny says. Once, while moving at approxi-mately 130 miles per hour, he hit a wa-ter patch. “The bike flipped about eight times. It went from a $12,000 bike to a $1,000 pile of junk in three seconds,” Danny remembers. But the leather suit, back protector, chest guard, and helmet did their job. He walked away with only a nasty bruise.
suppoRt And woRK ethic“Kayla has been with me from day
one,” Danny says of his wife, whom he
met in eighth grade. “I thought I was the coolest
person in the world dating this racer!” Kayla remembers. Her job as a medic eases her mind as she watches Danny race. “I think, for me, being a medic, that if he got hurt, I could help him. I have a little less stress about it than the other wives,” Kayla says. But she puts the possibility of injury out of her mind. She’s there to cheer him on. “I joke with
him and say, ‘More gas, less brakes!’ He knows what he’s doing, and he’s awe-some at it.”
Setting track records and winning races both require extreme focus. “Kayla does a great job of keeping me focused,” Danny says. “She does what-ever she has to do to make sure I don’t have a lapse in judgment [while] going over 180 miles per hour.” During one race weekend, for instance, Kayla got the happy news that she was pregnant but couldn’t tell Danny for two days. “It killed me!” she recalls. “Although it was good news, I didn’t want thoughts to go through his head that he couldn’t push his limit because I was pregnant.”
Along with racing motorcycles, Dan-ny sells commercial building equipment and owns and manages rental property. “If someone asked me to name some-thing about Danny, ‘motorcycles’ would be right up there, but ‘responsible,’ ‘car-ing,’ and ‘loving’ would be there, too,” Kayla says. “Racing isn’t who he is, but it’s what he does.”
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F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 G E O R G E T O W N v i e w 3 5
Senior Adult DanceMarch 28th 6-9 pm
At the Georgetown Community Center(445 E. Morrow)
$5 per person at the door � For ages 55+
Music by Oldies Music DJ. Playing Big Band,Classic Country, Doo Wop and the 40’s – the 70’s.
Refreshments will be provided.
RSVP’s to 512-930-1367 or robert.staton@georgetown.orgby March 24 are appreciated
Be sure to check out our other Senior Adult Programs. We offer trips, classes, pickleball leagues and more! We also offer Senior Adult Memberships! parks.georgetown.org
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E N R O L L M E N T
A Georgetown
woman’s journey
through school
during segregation
and desegregation
GrowinG UpS e p a r a t e
F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 G E O R G E T O W N v i e w 3 9
G E T T i N G T O k N O W
ByAliCEA JONESphotos By dustin smith
GrowinG UpS e p a r a t ed
ora held Paulette’s hand as they walked along Timber Street, dodging potholes along the curbless
street. Dust and gravel churned up by passing cars settled onto their newly polished oxfords. Dora was in the second grade and counseled Paulette, a first grader, about being on time. She also told her about Ms. Wilson, “one of the strictest teachers in the school.” Paulette unconsciously toyed with the bow her mother had placed on top of her head. She tried to divert her thoughts from school by studying the familiar, old but well-kept homes that dotted her neighborhood.
It was 1952, and Paulette Taylor was on her way to Carver, the designated school for African American students. It was here that Paulette would mature and learn firsthand the effects of racial segregation.
old cARveR schoolCarver sat on a bluff on Timber
Street (now Martin Luther King Street). It housed 175 students from first to twelfth grade. The school consisted of several small rooms on two floors. The first floor was for the elemen-
tary grades, and the second floor housed the older students. Because of limited space, each classroom contained students from two grades. Dora guided Paulette to the first-grade side of their classroom and then claimed a desk on the second-grade side. Paulette was relieved to recognize some of the kids from the neigh-borhood and from Sunday school; the butterflies in her stomach lessened somewhat.
Paulette was excited to receive her first textbooks even though they were worn and outdated. The lined cards on the inside of the front cover were filled with the names of previous students. Paulette and her classmates giggled as they tried to pronounce the names they found there. In the years ahead, they would recognize some of the names as residents from the neighborhood on the other side of the railroad tracks.
Paulette loved school and the social life she had developed by the time she became a teenager. On the weekends, she and Dora went to see the picture show at the Palace Theater. First, they’d stop at Peaslee’s Cafe for a ten-cent piece of sausage. Then they’d visit the restroom at the service station down the street because
blacks weren’t allowed to use the facilities in the theater. After the picture show, they’d go to the courthouse on the Square to ride the elevator. They’d get a sip of cold water from the colored water fountain before making the trip home. “I always wondered if white water tasted different from colored water,” Paulette says.
Each basketball season, the high school students from Carver were bused to Georgetown High to use the gym for practice and for their games. Paulette admired the shiny floors, the rows of bleach-ers, and the bathrooms that had many private stalls. She felt like a second-class citizen and won-dered why there was such a glar-ing difference between her school and the white kids’ school.
homecominGBy the time Paulette was a
junior, her discontent had grown. Preparations for homecoming heightened it further. “For home-coming, Georgetown High School would send us a big box of worn football shoes and helmets,” she says. The Carver team spent the weekends patching the shoes with tape and polishing them. They also painted the chipped helmets blue.
Alicea Jones is an award-winning writer and the author of Genuinely Georgetown. She resides in Georgetown, Texas. www.Genuinely Georgetown.com.
4 0 F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 G E O R G E T O W N v i e w
“I think that the
‘impractical liberal
arts’ are some of the
most practical to train
intellectual agility and
provoke [for] change.
That’s what education
is about, right?”
It had been ten years since the Supreme Court unanimously decided in Brown v. Board of Education that segregating school children by race was unlawful. Yet nothing seemed to have changed for Paulette and her classmates. “We were tired of hand-me-down shoes and helmets and books,” Paulette says. She had decided on a ca-reer as a secretary and wanted to learn how to type to ensure her admittance into secretarial school. However, Carver had only one typewriter, and it was in the principal’s office.
“Parents began to come together,” Paulette says. Encouraged by their parents and Harvey Miller, a com-munity activist, Paulette and a group of students attempted to enroll at the high school and the other Georgetown schools. The students received moral support from a group of community members, including some Southwest-ern University professors and their spouses. Paulette and her classmates would have been the first black stu-dents to integrate Georgetown schools. Additionally, Congress had passed the Civil Rights Act in 1964, which gave them hope. “When we got to George-town High, we were told we couldn’t go there, so I finished my senior year at
Carver. Harvey Miller filed a denial of admittance lawsuit,” Paulette says.
off to colleGePaulette went to Prairie View A&M,
a predominantly black college. Her home economics teacher at Carver had taken Paulette and her class on a field trip there, so she felt comfortable on campus. Additionally, Paulette’s Aunt Minnie had attended Prairie View and was the first in her family to graduate from college.
Paulette hunted and pecked while the other students zoomed through their typing assignments. She spent hours teaching herself how to type and became the teacher’s assistant. “I was only going to go for two years for sec-retarial science,” Paulette says. How-ever, every January, her family scraped together enough money for her to finish another year. She graduated with a four-year business education degree.
Her first job out of college was for the newly-launched Head Start pro-gram, where she became head teacher and taught children of various racial backgrounds. Paulette learned that she had a passion for helping children and excelled at teaching those with emo-tional and learning challenges.
After Paulette had taught four years at Head Start, Jack Frost, the district superintendent and Frost Elementary School’s namesake, offered Paulette a position as a special education teacher with the Georgetown Independent School District. The position required additional certification, so Paulette enrolled at the University of Texas and earned her teaching credentials. Paulette eventually obtained a mas-ter’s degree in human services from St. Edward’s University in 1987. She retired in 2002 from GISD after thirty-one years of service. She also ran the after-school program at the Willie Hall Center for sixteen years, providing tutoring ser-vices to neighborhood children.
Paulette Taylor has received many awards, including the State Achievement Award for teachers and two Elementary Teacher of the Year awards from GISD. If you visit Carver Elementary School, you’ll find a monument in her honor.
Today, Paulette can live anywhere she chooses. But she chooses to live in the same Georgetown neighborhood where she walked to the old Carver School. This community, now integrated, reminds her that the best schools and the best societies are those that include everyone.
For additional information about desegregation in Georgetown, check out the following online resources:
Oral histories by Paulette Taylor and Harvey Miller are available at www.files.georgetown.org/files/2009/03/harvey-miller-1-transcript.pdf
Remembering Desegregation: Online Interviews can be found at www.mainstreet.georgetown.org/remembering-desegregation-interviews-now-online/
Local History Page: Georgetown Library www.library.georgetown.org/services-you-may-need/local-history-resources-2/
(Left) Paulette standing in front of the former “white” high school.
(Above) Paulette’s high school graduation photo.
F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 G E O R G E T O W N v i e w 4 1
4 2 F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 G E O R G E T O W N v i e w
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4 4 F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 G E O R G E T O W N v i e w
Finding “You” in the MixTaking a step towards a holistic life
Travis Bundrick has seen it time and time again. As director of the Williamson Baptist Association—a non-
profit organization ministering to the needs of area churches and providing leadership devel-opment—Travis has witnessed hardworking men and women who are exhausted by life as they strive to meet the expectations of their bosses, spouses, friends, and even strangers. He points out an underlying problem with juggling all these relationships at once.
“As Americans, we tend to have a financial life, a job life, and a family life. We divide these parts of our lives into departments. But when we do that, we fail to real-ize that every part is interrelated with every other part. So we have a false understanding that ‘If I could be good at my career, I’m going to have a life of significance and purpose,’ and yet that doesn’t normally happen,” says Travis.
The solution to this problem lies at the heart of the WBA’s Trimer-
E x T R A V i E W
ByTiFFANY R.
WHiTE
gent Leadership System. Devel-oped by former WBA director Clint Anderson, the program begins by looking at life holistically. Es-sentially, it means taking those separate lives and stirring them together in such a way that there’s no longer a work-self or home-self—just yourself.
Learning to live a holistic life isn’t about taking a few easy steps toward a quick fix. Participants begin by looking deeply into themselves and asking tough questions that may have some uncomfortable answers: “What are my core values? What is my belief system? What are my strengths and weaknesses?” Then, participants use their answers to establish a personal vision and mission statement through which
they can filter all decisions.The result can be an existence
in which a person doesn’t franti-cally react to external pressures and motivations but rather lives calmly and proactively, meeting everyday tasks, roles, and chal-lenges with a self-knowledge that fosters success.
“Here’s the neat thing about success: It’s not just more money or a bigger house. It’s inner contentment, peace, significance, meaning, and the notion that ‘I’m steering the ship,’” explains Travis. “It’s not selfish, and God is saying—in our opinion—‘Way to go. I’ve been wondering how long it was going to take you to quit trying to live up to other people’s expectations and just be who I created you to be.’”
For more information about the WBa or their leadership development programs, visit www.wbatexas.org.
F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 G E O R G E T O W N v i e w 4 5
512.943.07002000 Railroad, Georgetownwww.caringplacetx.org
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A C l O S E R l O O k
ByEmilY
TREAdWAYphotos By
Rudy ximenez
MounthavenLocal author explores family history in latest novel
“mounthaven is a seductress,” says local author Bernard Peyton Cham-
berlain, Jr.When Peyton (as he prefers to
be called) speaks, the cadence of his words is leisurely yet precise. His is a voice that calls to mind mint juleps. With a kick. It’s a seductive, mesmerizing voice, and his writing is very much the same. Peyton chooses words for their sounds, not for their shortcuts to the action sequences.
Peyton is a literary, rather than a commercial, writer. He’s had several careers in his lifetime,
from teacher to radio operator, but he’s always had an interest in writing. He wrote stories for his high school magazine. After a stint in the army, he returned to civilian life to complete his col-lege degree. He decided to try a creative writing course because he needed an A in any course that semester to bring up his grade point average.
“I won an honorable men-tion in the At-
lantic Monthly collegiate writing contest the year that I took that course. That got me thinking, ‘By
golly, if you can do that, maybe you are potentially a writer.’ So I started writing from that point on.”
It took him ten years to com-plete his first novel, Phoenix Flower, which is now the first
You can get Mounthaven at Amazon: www.amazon.com search for Mounthaven.
F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 G E O R G E T O W N v i e w 4 9
book of a trilogy about a Cold War es-pionage agent. “I taught myself [while] writing that book [about] how to handle a novel, how to construct it, put it together.”
It doesn’t take him ten years to finish his novels anymore; Peyton has finished more books than he has currently published. His fifth and most recently published novel is Mounthaven, a gen-erational tale of one Virginia family’s struggle to restore their former position in society after the Civil War, and the house, Mounthaven, is used to that end.
Peyton knows from firsthand experi-ence about the seductive charm and decadence of Mounthaven. Mounthav-en, though a work of fiction, is actually the story of Peyton’s family. In his other books, Peyton has allowed the char-acters to do the storytelling, to tell him what they will or will not do, but “the people [in Mounthaven] have already done what they’re doing; I’m just re-porting it and trying to understand it… So [Phoenix Flower and Mounthaven] are different pieces of work. One is kind of waiting to see what’s going to happen, and the other is making sense out of what has already been done.”
He had several reasons for choosing the novel’s subject matter, but they pri-marily come down to family. “Nobody in my family [now] knows anything about my family [then]. The second reason was my father.” Peyton had a contentious relationship with his father, and part of the book is his attempt to understand his father and what made him tick.
While Peyton knew a lot about the history and people of the house in which he grew up, he didn’t always know the motivation behind the actual characters; he admits that what he didn’t know, he tried to figure out. Sadly, Peyton doesn’t believe all the characters of Mounthaven, if they were alive to read the novel, would be happy with how they are portrayed.
Reviews of Mounthaven are very good. Perhaps the reviewers, like so many others, were enticed by the house. Or possibly they were drawn in by Peyton’s writing and storytelling. “I want to write stories that will stand the test of time. I don’t care if people forget my name, but I want my work to survive.”
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F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 G E O R G E T O W N v i e w 5 1
Promoting exceptional oral health through impeccable care
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Dental Implants Periodontal Services Flexible Financing Options Whitening Services – In Office/Take Home Cosmetic Services
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PHO
0114
RW
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INTRODUCTORY OFFER
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Alternative To Botox, Fillers or Surgical Facelift
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• Neck & jowls• Cheeks• Tightens enlarged pores• Exclusive PHOENIX System using ELASTIN INFUSION THERAPY -This gives an estimated replacement of 2 years of lost elastin in minutes
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5 2 F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 G E O R G E T O W N v i e w
Central Texas Weight Loss CenterMedically Supervised Weight Loss Program * Accepting New Patients * Call For Appointment Now
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Yard Builders partners with In Triumph to fight for the over 40,000 teens a year that are never selected for adoption. Yard Builders donates a percentage of their profits to help provide a family to those who never found their home.
5 4 F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 G E O R G E T O W N v i e w
R i S i N G S TA R S
For Nathan Exley, a se-mester off from college didn’t involve the usual hiatus-inducing activi-ties: traveling, a quest for
self-discovery, or the need for an extended period of hibernation. Instead, the twenty-year-old spent last spring in Austin, guarding the freedoms of Texas families during the 83rd Regular Legislative Ses-sion.
Nathan participated in the Texas Home School Coalition’s Watch-men program. Working with five other home school graduates, Nathan lobbied the Texas Leg-
islature on behalf of homeschooling families and for the parental rights of all Texans. “It was an opportunity I couldn’t pass up. It’s a once-in-a-lifetime chance to go down there and lobby and
do it with some really fantastic friends,” says Nathan.
Last January 5th, Nathan and his fellow Watchmen—having been trained in Texas’ legislative process—surveyed the approach-ing 83rd Session. A legislative onslaught loomed before them: approximately 9,700 bills to scour for those involving parental rights, vast arrays of legal procedures and maneuvers, as well as scores of clamoring special interest groups. Most important was the daunting task of informing and trying to persuade 181 lawmakers to vote certain ways on various bills.
But the Watchmen weren’t focused just on reaching out to lawmakers. As publicity manager and head of public relations for the Watchmen, Nathan sounded the call to the public on impor-tant pieces of legislation. From arranging press conferences and rallying news media to initiating
ByTiFFANY R.
WHiTEphotos By chRistinA hAstinGs
photoGRAphy
Watchman on the WallA young man fights for Texas families
and directing a town hall meeting, Nathan ensured that the lawmak-ers’ constituents and the general public were informed on potential bills affecting Texas parents. He stayed on mission, never forget-ting his motivation for coming to Austin.
“I enjoy politics, and I feel obli-gated to [lobby] because my abil-ity to parent freely in the future is being threatened,” Nathan says.
During the 83rd Session, the THSC Watchmen tracked more than 125 bills pertaining to pa-rental rights. While many bills strengthened the legal bonds be-tween parents and their children, Nathan and his friends stood ada-mantly against bills that sought to strip away parental rights. One such bill, Senate Bill 303, designed to address the rights of patients making end-of-life deci-sions, would have given doctors permission to place DNR (Do Not Resuscitate) orders in a child’s medical records when death is imminent, without parental consent and against the parents’ wishes.
The Watchmen—at times
read nathan’s blog at www.beekeeperontheloose.wordpress.com/
tag/thsc-watchmen/
F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 G E O R G E T O W N v i e w 5 5
mistaken for legislative interns—rallied enough legislative support to defeat a total of twelve bills, including S.B. 303. Nathan didn’t let the thrill of victory cause him to slip into a trap of selfish pride. Yes, he was one of the young-est lobbyists at the Capitol wielding a mighty sword of influence, but he didn’t see himself as powerful.
Instead, Nathan explains, “I really saw myself as blessed. THSC is a very influential organization; there are a lot of home school families supporting it. The community behind us is what gave us the power and influence that we had. We weren’t going in on our own power. We were going in there with God’s grace.”
As Nathan heads back to Texas A&M University to finish his double major in rangeland ecology and geographical in-formation services, he takes with him a 140-day adventure few college students get to experience. But would he venture back to the Capitol and lobby for the rights of families again?
“Politics is hairy, but I learned that it’s so much easier to influence legislation than I thought. I could probably go back and do it again whenever I need to. And that—I think—is priceless because now I have the tools I need to be an active citizen in government,” Nathan says.
What is that “Something Special” that takes a space from ordinary to WOW? It’s all about the finishing touches! Here are 10 to consider for your home:
1 Find an old, distressed door and install at your pantry. Or try barn door hardware.
2 Use occasional punches of vibrant color in a neutral palette.
3 Gorgeous window treatments!
4 Upholster one chair or ottoman in a dramatic fabric with ample trimmings.
5 An architectural piece over the fireplace rather than standard framed art.
6 If your space is traditional, add a contemporary art piece. If contemporary is your style, add an antique to the mix.
7 Unique chandeliers will totally transform a room!
8 Paint treatments bring metallics into the space or create a warm feel of suede.
9 An upholstered headboard provides a feeling of luxury and comfort.
10 Paint a dining room sideboard an unexpected color, such as turquoise, and replace the old drawer pulls with unique or antique pulls.
Go to www.facebook.com/kinseyinteriorsinc to see photo albums of rooms with these finishing touches!
512-930-2677www.facebook.com/
KinseyInteriorsInc
Gigi’s Interior10
Time to learn a healthier style of living – we have over 400 flavors available – AND CUSTOM MADE FLAVORS – along with kits and experienced personnel to help you start a new life. It is time to STOP SMOKING by START VAPING.
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5 6 F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 G E O R G E T O W N v i e w
Floral FantasiesCreativity flourishes at the Garden Club flower show
The day before the 2011 Georgetown Garden Club Flower Show, peo-ple bustled in and out of the Georgetown Com-
munity Center carrying boxes full of seemingly unrelated objects, such as bright orange sticks, glass bowls, and leaf sprigs.
“The show in 2011 was called ‘In the Abstract,’” says George-town Garden Club President San-dra Miller. “The design portion of the show included four separate categories within the ‘Abstract’ theme that contestants could choose from, each with its own set of rules.”
Sandra and other GGC members had arrived earlier that morning to set up a host of tables for the show. Sandra continued to run about, setting out display jars and filling them with water. Her aunt, a ninety-year-old woman who has been creating designs for a num-ber of years, arrived with her own box of unique assortments.
Sandra’s aunt and the other artisans carefully assembled the various items on their designated tables, creating arrangements that fell in the categories of Abstract
Creative, Stretch, Angu-lar, or Creative Line Design.
N A T U R A l V i E W
BymikAElA
CAiNphotos
couRtesy of GeoRGetown GARden cluB
Contestants returned the fol-lowing morning to place the more delicate pieces of their arrange-ments, such as the flowers or cattails. They had to fight through crowds of contestants arriving to set up for the horticultural divi-sions, the much larger competi-tion in the show. The horticultural contestants needed the entire middle area of the room to display their prized specimens of various plants, from cabbages to roses.
“It’s a madhouse the morning of the judging,” Sandra says. “Some contestants show designs and horticulture. They’re bringing in irises, roses, getting them all set up and finishing up their designs in time to get out before the judges come in.”
By 10:00, the contestants hoped
that every flower and fern was in place, because they were shooed out as the judges entered. For an hour and a half, the judges care-fully evaluated each arrangement and horticulture specimen.
“A lot of people from the public who come are surprised at what designs win,” Sandra says. “It’s not always the ‘prettiest’ design that wins, because each entry has to meet all the criteria within its category.”
Since the first show in April 1945, The club has held a show almost annually in conjunction with Arbor Day. Catch this year’s show on April 23 at 10 a.m. in Georgetown Community Center, San Gabriel Park, 445 East Mor-row. It is open to the public for free from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.
For more information about the show or the club, visit
www.georgetowngardenclub.org.
F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 G E O R G E T O W N v i e w 5 7
512-930-2677www.facebook.com/KinseyInteriorsInc
Professional Services Include:• Design&ColorConsulting• HunterDouglasDealer• CustomWindowTreatments• RemodelSpecializinginKitchen&Baths• Accessorizing&Staging
Let us help you get ready for the New Year!
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Proceeds BenefitThe Georgetown Project
Attire: Boots & Bling
Open Your Heart...Ignite a Spark!
5 8 F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 G E O R G E T O W N v i e w
512-868-6400 | 1102 S. Austin Ave, Ste 103 | Georgetown | www.AshChiroWellness.com
Part of Ash Chiropractic & Wellness
Are you ready to lose that unwanted, unhealthy extra weight? If so, we’ve got the solution for you! Visit Ash Weight Loss Center and learn more about the Ideal Weight Loss Method and how it can be “the last diet you’ll ever need”! Lose 3-7 lbs. per week!Attend a FREE weight loss workshop!Tues, Feb 11th at 6:30 p.m Bring your valentine for a special discount.Call 512-943-8649 to reserve a spot.
Ash Chiropractic & Wellness also offers:• Detoxification Programs • Hormonal Balancing• Spinal Decompression • Massage Therapy
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Please check your PROOF CAREFULLY for accuracy (address, phone, website, coupons, expiration dates, etc.) as Ad Pagescannot be held responsible for any error not marked. Indicate any changes and return this proof AS SOON AS POSSIBLE.
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This ad is the property of Ad Pages Magazine. Colors displayed on your proof will not match the final printed ad exactly, color variations WILL OCCUR. FLO0713KK01A
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6 0 F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 G E O R G E T O W N v i e w
large, brightly colored balls line the entrance to one of Williamson County’s most interesting play parks, the Play for
All Abilities Park in Round Rock. The park opened its double-gated doors in 2011 to provide a “safe, fun place to play and develop new skills for children of all abilities,” according to the city of Round Rock’s web site. And the park does just that.
“This park was really well thought out,” Sofie Coronado, a special education teacher at Forbes Middle School, says. “Ev-ery aspect of the park, from the texture on the walls to the sand on the ground, has a purpose.”
A S T O N E ’ S T H R O W
BymikAElA
CAiNphotos By
AndReA hunteR
During the summer, Sofie helps lead field trips to the park during a day camp for children with dis-abilities. The children range from first through twelfth grade and love the independence and fun they experience there.
“The beauty of this park is that people don’t look different here,” Sofie says. “In a normal park set-ting, an autistic child might play by themselves in the wood chips, which other kids might think is weird. Here, a special area of the park is covered in sand, which all children like to play in, so that autistic child doesn’t seem out of place. It’s more accepting.”
The 51,000 square feet of the fully outdoor and fully fenced park includes wheelchair-accessible swings, sturdy playground equip-ment with ramps, a stage com-plete with musical instruments, a nature exploration path, and a village-scape.
The village-scape features businesses such as a Wag-a-Bag and H-E-B, as well as a home, school, firehouse, and library, all lining a circular street complete with working stop lights. Children cruise around by bike, tricycle, scooter, or wheelchair. Inside the buildings, children find fun, educational visuals and props suited both for special needs and typically developing children.
A task force of more than thirty people—including many parents of special needs children and pro-fessionals from varying medical, educational, and design disci-plines—designed the park.
“The park is unifying the com-munity by bridging the gaps be-tween typical and special needs,” Sofie says. “I come here with my own kids, and they love it. My son Joseph, who is five, never notices folks with disabilities. They’re just kids playing—that’s how he sees it.”
Playground for AllPark fosters fun for all abilities
play for all abilities park is located at 151 north a.W. Grimes Blvd. in round rock. For more information about the park, visit www.roundrocktexas.gov/home/index.asp?page=1453.
F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 G E O R G E T O W N v i e w 6 1
6 2 F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 G E O R G E T O W N v i e w
John’s Golf CartsNICE CARTS - NICE PRICES - NICE PEOPLE
Buy - Sell - TradeWe Service & Repair All BrandsFRee GeoRGeToWn pickup & deliveRy
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5,000 sq ft. Golf Store for Men, Women & JuniorsCustom Fitting • Expert Club Repair & Restoration
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Wolf Ranch Shopping Centerat the corner ofIH 35 & Hwy 29, Exit 261
512.863.4573www.GolfRanchShop.com
F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 G E O R G E T O W N v i e w 6 3
G O l F E R ’ S C O R N E R
One of the reasons some players miss a lot of short putts is because they are not sure of their
stroke path.Many will use the arc stroke for
longer putts. This is when the put-ter goes slightly from the inside on the backswing and slightly on the inside at completion of the forward stroke. Although I think the arc stroke is fine for longer putts, I would not recommend it for a short putt.
The best way to make a short range putt much easier is to keep the putter on a straight-back and straight-through path.
There needs to be no cocking of the wrist and no hinging. Keep those wrists quiet. A slight cup-ping of the left wrist at address is ok, but be sure that angle is retained throughout the entire stroke.
ByBill EASTERlY
Make ThoseShort Putts
Find Bill Easterly through The Golf Ranch1019 W. University #310 (Wolf Ranch)
512-863-4573
The elbows and arms are to move the club, and remember the handle of the club never tilts during the stroke. The hands and the handle of the putter go back together and complete the stroke together.
Remember not to get the shoulders involved in a short putt of this length. If you get the shoulders involved, it becomes too big of a movement for a short putt.
The important thing with this putt is finding the sweetspot of the putter. On this straight-back-straight-through move, it will make it much easier.
One of my students wanted me to address this prob-lem because they kept missing those five foot putts. This drill helped them, so give it a try and I think it may help you too.
the pRoWith 30 years ex-perience in golfing, Bill eAsteRly has spent 17 years as a pro player from the US to Australia, winning the Gulf Coast Invitational twice, and three times on the Sr Cir-cuit. Bill has spent 10 years helping others enjoy the sport. Here, he gives you priceless tips – free – every month – to improve youR game.
6 4 F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 G E O R G E T O W N v i e w
Give the Gift of Time Off!Let us make you the herothis Valentine’s Day.
512.222.7209 www.gogreencleantx.com
No Mess = Less Stress,let us clean your house.
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Lauren VenableTortoise and the Hair
Haircuts ~ colorPerms ~ Wax
One aLL OVer cOLOr Or 14 fOiL highLight,
haircut, deep cOnditiOn & brOw wax fOr $75
114 Golden oaks Georgetown903.658.4569512.863.4827
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F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 G E O R G E T O W N v i e w 6 5
i N T H E k i T C H E N
ByNikki ElkJER
The Mother SaucesMaster the fundamentals of sauces
For questions or comments or to inquire about culinary services, please email Chef Nikki at chefnikkielkjer@gmail.com or visit facebook.com/GatheringWIthChefNikki.
When it comes to classic culinary arts, there are five basic sauces every cook should know in order to add moistness, flavor, and richness to any plate. Just as salt and pepper add
taste to a dish, a spoonful of the right sauce creates a
Basic tomato sauce Tomato puree plus stock, which becomes the base of Creole, Spanish, and Portuguese sauces. Use it for pizza and pasta; add some ground Italian sausage, olives, or mushrooms if you like.
Ingredients:½ cup extra virgin olive oil1 yellow onion, diced small5 garlic cloves, minced2 Tbsp fresh thyme, chopped2 Tbsp fresh oregano, chopped2 dried bay leaves2 cans whole peeled tomatoes½ cup beef stockSaltpepper
finishing touch that never disappoints. The possibili-ties for variations are infinite, since the sauces are all based on only a few simple formulas. The five basic liquids for sauces are milk, white stock, brown stock, tomato puree, and clarified butter. From these, our leading sauces are brought to life.
Preparation:1. Heat olive oil in a large saucepan over medium heat. 2. Add onion and garlic, and sauté until soft and
caramelized.3. Add fresh herbs.4. Crush the tomatoes by hand and add them to
the saucepan, reserving the liquid. Sauté about 5 minutes.
5. Add the reserved tomato liquid, beef stock, and bay leaves; simmer on low heat for 30 minutes until thick.
6. Season with salt and pepper. Be sure to remove bay leaves prior to serving.
6 6 F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 G E O R G E T O W N v i e w
espagnole sauceA brown sauce made with a brown stock, to which a brown roux and mirepoix (a sautéed mixture of diced vegetables and herbs) are added; finished with a tomato puree, and used as the base of bordelaise, chasseur, chateaubriand, and demi-glace. Chasseur sauce has the addition of mushrooms, shallots, white wine, and tomatoes. Bordelaise sauce uses red wine and shallots.
Ingredients:5 cups beef stock4 Tbsp butter, unsalted4 Tbsp all-purpose flour, sifted2 cups yellow onion, rough chopped1 cup celery, roughly chopped1 cup carrots, roughly chopped1 cup tomato paste or tomato puree
Béchamel sauceA white sauce made by combining hot milk with a roux (a cooked mixture of flour and fat), widely used for egg, vegetable, and gratin dishes. The trick here is to make sure your milk is hot when it’s added to the butter and flour (roux).
Ingredients:3 Tbsp butter, unsalted3 Tbsp all-purpose flour, sifted2 bay leaves2 cups milkSaltWhite pepper
Preparation:1. melt butter in a saucepan. in another saucepan, heat milk.2. Slowly stir in flour until blended to create a roux3. Add bay leaves.4. Gradually add hot milk, stirring constantly with a wire whisk.5. Reduce heat and continue to stir until sauce is smooth.6. Season with salt and white pepper. Be sure to remove bay
leaves prior to serving.7. To make a cheese sauce, add in 1½ cups shredded sharp
cheddar cheese at the very end.
hollandaise sauceA hot emulsified sauce based on egg yolks and clarified butter, which becomes the base of béarnaise, choron, and mousseline sauces. Famous for topping off Eggs Benedict, this sauce can be a two-person undertaking until mastered.
Ingredients:3 egg yolks, at room
temperature14 Tbsp butter, chilled, cut into quarter-inch cubes1 Tbsp fresh lemon juiceSaltWhite pepper
Preparation:1. place the egg yolks in a small mixing bowl.2. Bring water to a simmer in a stockpot.3. place the bowl over the simmering water and whisk the yolks
vigorously until they begin to thicken, about 3 to 4 minutes.4. Remove the egg bowl from the heat and whisk in 4
tablespoons of chilled butter.5. Add lemon juice and a dash of salt and white pepper.6. Return the bowl to the heat and continue to whisk, slowly
adding the remainder of the butter, 2 tablespoons at a time.7. Serve immediately. The sauce is no good after 4 hours
because the eggs are not fully cooked.
velouté sauceA blond sauce made with chicken, veal, or fish stock and thickened with a white roux. This sauce is similar to a béchamel, with stock used instead of hot milk.
Ingredients:3 Tbsp butter, unsalted3 Tbsp all-purpose flour, sifted2 bay leaves2 cups chicken stockSaltWhite pepper
Preparation:1. melt butter in a saucepan. 2. Slowly stir in flour until blended to create a roux.3. Add bay leaves.4. Gradually add stock, stirring constantly with a wire whisk.5. Reduce heat and continue to stir until sauce is smooth.6. Season with salt and white pepper. Be sure to remove bay
leaves prior to serving.7. Add white wine, chopped fresh tarragon, shallots, and chervil
at the end to make a Venetian sauce.
Fresh thyme sprigsFresh rosemary sprigs2 bay leavesSaltpepper
Preparation:1. melt butter in a large stockpot and slowly add sifted flour to
make a roux.2. Add beef stock.3. in a saucepan, sauté onion, celery, and carrot until brown,
about 8 minutes.4. Stir in the tomato paste or puree and cook for another 5
minutes.5. Add the sautéed vegetables to the stockpot. (if you’re making
chasseur or bordelaise sauce, add the wine now. The amount depends on your taste.)
6. Bring to a simmer and add fresh herbs.7. Simmer for about 30 minutes, skimming the top as needed to
remove film.8. Strain the sauce through a fine mesh strainer.
F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 G E O R G E T O W N v i e w 6 7
DALES ESSENHAUS3900 FM 972, WalburgDales-Essenhaus.comLive Music in the Biergarten startsin March!
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HARDTAILS BAR & GRILL1515 IH 35, Georgetown512-869-5454www.HardtailsBarandGrill.comSundays: Bloody Mary Buffett 10am-2pmMondays: Texas Hold ’em 6:30 & 9:15pmTuesdays: Free Pool Wednesdays: Karaoke w/ Robert Goodwin6 Texas Player’s Band7 Lee Person Band8 American Gypsy13 Bad Self Band14 Fusion & VALENTINE’S DAY PARTY15 Planet Texas20 Years Today Band21 Snakeboy Johnson Band22 Sugar Band Band27 Matt Cline Band28 Audio QueenAll bands start at 8pm
ToNy & LUIGIS1201 S. Churchwww.tonyandluigistx.com512-864-2687 Every Thursday evening, 6-9pm“Frankly Singing,” Frank Sinatra Tribute
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F E B R u a r yO p e n i n g D a t e s
subject to change
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Guiding Families in finding assisted living.Guiding Hands helps families find assisted living communities for seniors needing care in the Central Texas area. We meet with families in person to understand their needs and requirements and then are available to go with them to prospective communities so that they can see them first-hand with our representatives and ask the questions that are important to them. Guiding Hands will then assist families once their choice has been made to help ensure the move in process goes as smoothly as possible.
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Deanna Lueckenotte BA, LBSW, CALM, LNFA
7 0 F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 G E O R G E T O W N v i e w
i’m not sure when I started thinking of it as “soup exchange.” It began when my neighbor, know-ing I was working on deadline, knocked at my door and handed me servings of a pasta dish and a salad of jicama, mint, and melon. No soup
was involved. But this lunch treat began a practice of sharing that came to feature soup often—hence, soup exchange.
I live among estimable neighbors. They’re kind, interesting, ready to step up at the slightest need. But the neighbors next door have a particular place in my heart. Perhaps it’s because our kids have grown up together. Perhaps it’s because, in this intergenera-tional household, I find friendship and guidance, sym-pathy and advice. But I’m certain that soup exchange is part of it.
Since that first offering of pasta and salad, we’ve shared many samplings from our kitchens. When I make a pot of soup, especially if it’s a new or favor-ite recipe, I cart a few servings next door. Back to my door, a few days later, will come another kind of soup or some other tasty treat. Since soup exchange got underway, I’ve come home some days to find a bowl heaped with cherry tomatoes or a container of tiny, sweet jalapeño peppers, fresh from a gar-den that, under my neighbors’ care, laughed at the drought. Half loaves of warm banana bread, studded
with chocolate chips, have made their way from my kitchen to my neighbors’ door. Once, I found a crystal vase artfully arranged with fresh herbs—basil, rose-mary, chives, and oregano—on my doorstep. When I returned the vase, soup went with it. Cake cookies, which my teenaged son can devour without conse-quence, come my way; herbed bread goes the other. Ingredients, too, make the trip, when one household or the other is short an egg or a few tablespoons of Dijon mustard. At what point, I’ve sometimes won-dered, should we just merge our kitchens?
And so it has gone, for several years now. But no more. This generous household has grown, and my neighbors move this month into a larger house. I’m very happy for them. They need the space, and they’ll be only a few miles away. Still, I’ll miss the easy back-and-forth of shared daily life that we’ve had. The not-quite-thirty steps (yes, I’ve counted) from porch to porch are quickly traversed. I intend to make an effort to keep the exchange going, though now I’ll have to drive, with the soup du jour precariously positioned on the floorboard.
To my neighbors, thanks for the years of gracious side-by-side living. I’ll miss having you just steps away. And to the folks about to move in next door, welcome to our block of Georgetown! Know any good soup recipes?
Soup ExchangeA Valentine for neighbors
stoRy ByCYNTHiA
GUidiCiphoto
By cARol hutchison
W H A T m A T T E R S i S …
F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4 G E O R G E T O W N v i e w 7 1
512-869-84003010 Williams Dr. Ste.105(beside Laplaya)
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February 6, 2014 6:30-7:30pm
Love Potions:Using Herbal Aphrodisiacs to Spice Up Your Love LifeClinical Herbalist, Grace Bryce MH, CNHP,of Gracie’s Garden, LLC, will talk about several aphrodi-
siac herbs and how they work, just in time for Valentine’s Day. She will also have yummy samples to taste during the presentation. Held at Georgia’s Naturals.
February 11, 2014 6:30-7:30pm
Making fitness your lifestyle and incorporating it into your vacation travelsClaudia Verde CPT, will be talking about the origin of the Slow Food movement in Turin Italy and exploring
it’s newfound interest here in the United States, along with staying fit during your vacation. Held at Georgia’s Naturals.
February 15, 2014 10-11:30am
Got Pain?Susan Gatewood, ND, Biofeedback Specialist and Energy Medicine Practitioner. Exploration Into The Latest Technological Breakthroughs Using Light To Heal And Rejuvenate The Body. Demonstrations available during
the class. Held at Georgetown Chamber of Commerce - 100 Stadium Drive.Space is limited please call to reserve your seat.
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