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BEST FISHING IN TEXAS

FOOTBALL IS BACK! WITH GABRIEL PRUETT

See Section B

SPORTS NEWS & OPINION

OUTDOORS WEEKLY Capt. Chuck Uzzle Page 5B

Dickie Colburn Page 1B

JOE KAZMAR

Page 4B

County Record Vol. 53 No. 22

The Community Newspaper of Orange, Texas

Week of Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Ruben Stringer gone but not forgotten Penny Leleux

For The Record

The Orange County community and State of Texas lost a major agricultural asset with the passing of Ruben Stringer last week on Monday, Aug. 12. He will be sorely missed in Hamshire-Fannett next week when school starts as he has been teaching there since 1998. There are two things of which there is no doubt; Ruben Stringer passed away Monday, Aug. 12. He was a major figure in the local agricultural and resource conservation community.

School bus safety Staff Report For The Record

More than a million children and teens depend on buses to get them safely to and from the more than 9,000 Texas schools every day. They also depend on motorists to know the law and drive safely around school buses. The Texas Department of Public Safety reminds all drivers to watch out for children walking to school or waiting for school buses and to obey all traffic laws related to school buses. Drivers also need to slow down and pay attention in school zones. Children may not be looking for oncoming traffic when they step into the roadway, so drivers must remain alert. “Although school buses are the safest form of transportation for students, the most dangerous time of the journey is when children are entering and exiting the bus,” said Col. Thomas A. Davis, Jr., director of the DPS. “When a school bus is loading or unloading students, the law requires that drivers stop on most roadways.”

H • SHERLOCK BREAUX Page...................... 4A • Obituaries Page.......................7A •Dicky Colburn Fishing...................1B • CHURCH NEWS Page......................7B • CLASSIFIED ADS Page......................8B

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Stringer loved agriculture and Stringer loved teaching about agriculture. He taught thousands of students for over half

a century. He not only taught the students; he taught the teachers. Stringer has also been a strong force in water and soil conservation education. Besides teaching, Stringer was also the technical assistant for the Lower SabineNeches Soil and Water Conservation District #446 since 1986. “Education is Ruben’s middle name,” said friend and co-worker Pat Hudson. “He’s probably still teaching.” Stringer’s love for the land began in the ninth grade when he enrolled in agriculture and joined the Future Farmers of America (FFA) in Jasper. He immediately started working with hands-on projects that included plants and animals. He excelled at showing steers, and in judging and leadership

School orientations begin this week Penny Leleux

For The Record

Little Cypress Intermediate will hold Meet the Teacher for all students on Aug. 21 from 4 to 5:30 p.m. Little Cypress Elementary, Mauriceville Elementary, Mauriceville Middle, and Little Cypress Junior High will hold their Orientations and Meet the Teacher events on Aug. 22. Mauriceville Middle School parents can pick up their students’ schedules at 3 p.m. on August 22, and students and parents will follow a short bell period to meet all of the students’ teachers from 3:30 to 5 p.m. Mauriceville Elementary will host a combined Meet the Teacher and Parent Orientation from 5 to 6 p.m. on Thursday Aug. 22. The event begins with a brief welcome at 5 p.m.

in the MMS gym. Rosters will be posted at 5 p.m. near each grade level. At that time, parents and students will be released to go to their new teachers classrooms.There will be three sessions of Meet the Teacher and Parent Orientation to accommodate parents with multiple students. The first session will begin at 5:05 p.m., the second session at 5:30 p.m., and the final session at 5:55 p.m. Little Cypress Elementary will combine the annual Meet the Teacher and Parent Orientation from 5 to 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 22. Information on the Title Program will be presented in the cafeteria beginning at 5 p.m. Parents of students in the PLUS Program are invited to attend an informational meeting held in the SCHOOL Page 3A

contests. Twice he was on state winning teams. Also, that freshman year, he was selected to raise a demonstration acre of corn. Furnished with seed and a ton of fertilizer, Stringer produced a yield 700 percent higher than normal in that community, and under drought conditions. Needless to say, he was hooked. After graduation from Jas-

per High School in 1952, he enrolled in Sam Houston State University. Stringer attended classes and worked 40 hours a week in a grocery store. He received the Lowry Award for “Outstanding Agricultural Student” in 1957. In just five years, he graduated with a master’s degree in Agricultural Education. Answering Uncle Sam’s call, he served the country for six

years in the armed service and reserves before beginning his teaching career. In 1958 he began teaching at Mauriceville High School, 10 years before they merged with Little Cypress. Stringer taught there for 35 years. He took a brief break from teaching, and then returned to the classroom REUBEN STRINGER Page 3A

Billy Burrow to retire after 41 years Debby Schamber For The Record

After 41 years in the banking business, Billy Burrow is retiring and a reception to celebrate his accomplishments is being held. The reception will be from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. August 29 at Community Bank of Texas located at 3300 Edgar Brown Drive. Although, he won’t be punching time clock, he will still work as Advisory Director. In his new position, he will talk to business owners to see if the bank can help meet their banking needs for loans and deposit servic- Billy Burow, after 41 years in the banking industry, will retire. A es. Burrow will also attend reception is from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. August 29 at Community Bank quarterly meetings and of Texas located at 3300 Edgar Brown Drive. RECORD PHOTO: Debby Schamber maintain his status as a stockholder in the bank. before going to Orange Bank ment he was the senior vice “This will keep me in the for five years. He would work president and commercial loop,” Burrow said. with Carlos Vacek three lender at Community Bank. The 1967 Lutcher Stark During his career in banktimes during his career. High School graduate began Burrow would become an ing, the most challenging his banking career in 1972 at integral part of opening the thing was the, “regulations, the First National Bank of bank First Bank and Trust, regulations and more reguOrange. The bank was part which later became South- lations,” he said. of a buy-out in 1973 and beTrust and Wachovia, in Orcame First City Bank. He reange, where he remained for BILLY BURROW Page 3A mained there for 22 years five years. Before his retire-

Essie Bellfield among march for freedom about 40 people said Bellfield. The other passengers were from Pt. Arthur and Beaumont. “We had about seven whites and a priest with us,” she said. “When you see those pictures of that crowd, we were in that crowd,” said Bellfield. “I was there so the man could speak.” She said she was sitting near Lincoln’s feet. “There were a lot of people in that march; a lot of people.” She said she was there for voters rights and civil rights. “Things were happening and are still happening in the south. Birmingham was horrible at that time. People could not go out and vote.” She spoke of three men buried in shallow graves, killed because they were trying to register people to vote in Mississippi. She was referring to James Chaney who was black and Andrew Goodman and

Penny Leleux

For The Record

Near the end of August in 1963, three residents from Orange climbed on a bus headed to Washington D.C. It wasn’t just any bus trip. It was a trip into history. They were participants in the civil rights March on BELLFIELD Washington lead by Martin Luther King Jr. on Aug. 28. It was the day King gave his memorable “I have a dream” speech. This year marks the 50th anniversary of that historical event. “I’m the only one left from Orange,” said former Orange mayor Essie Bellfield. James Zay Roberts and Velma Jeter where the other two people from Orange on that bus. The bus was filled with

Martin Luther King, Jr. helped to organize the 1963 March on Washington, where he delivered his “I Have a Dream” speech. Essie Bellfield of Orange was among the marchers.

BELLFIELD Page 3A

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