Published: December 29, 2006 04:55 pm
Local personalities of 2006
Residents who made headlines, or just made us
proud By Jeff
Walker Features Editor
San Marcos — Some of them
made news headlines. Some inspired us. Some of them made us
laugh.
But we found all of the people listed below
particularly interesting; as such, the following is a list of
the Daily Record’s top 10 local personalities of
2006.
Boko
Boko, the official mascot at
Texas State University, found himself as one of nine mascots
duking it out for the title of National Mascot Champion this
year.
Fur flew on Feb. 5 and 6 at the United Spirit
Association Cheerleading and Dance National Championship in
Las Vegas. And Boko was up against some fierce competition.
UCLA sent three solemn-looking bears, the University of Oregon
also had three mascots and Sam Houston State University sent
Sammy and Airkat, both orange animals known as
Bearkats.
With a little hard work, Boko danced and
cheered his way to victory. Formerly known as the “Sensation
of the Southland,” he is now using the title “Sensation of the
Nation.”
After graduation Boko would like to continue
as a mascot. He has even been offered a full-time job with a
professional hockey team but turned it down in favor of
finishing school.
Jackie Breedlove
When
it comes to music ministry, few do it with more compassion
than Jackie Breedlove. The one-time pianist for the First
Baptist Church in Wimberley and First Christian Church in San
Marcos retired earlier this year.
“I feel strongly that
God is telling me it’s time,” Breedlove said in March. “But
I’ll probably be miserable for a while.”
Jackie’s
mother signed her up for piano lessons at the age of six. She
grew up as an only child in Almeda, a small rural community
south of Houston. She was so short that they had to put an
extension on the pedals.
“I was a music teacher’s
nightmare,” Jackie said. “I put notes in places where there
weren’t any written.”
She was forced by her mother to
practice an hour before school and an hour after. She says her
crying fits would persuade her father to plead with her mom to
allow Jackie to quit practicing. But her mother never let up —
something that Jackie is grateful for now.
After all,
Breedlove’s been playing in churches since she was 16. That
smiling face from behind the keyboard is still missed every
Sunday, but rest assured — Jackie’s enjoying the extra time
with her grandchildren.
Lorraine
Burleson
Lorraine Burleson has developed a strong
following around town by helping others — children in
particular.
Burleson worked several years for the
George Gervin Youth Center based in San Antonio. She was also
involved in the ROOTS (Rearing Our Own To Succeed) tutorial
program, a program she helped start when local students
weren’t getting enough help with their homework outside of
school. She now works as the Unit Director for the South
Central Texas Boys and Girls Club.
“I especially enjoy
finding avenues to help the children. The young people are our
most valued commodity, if we don’t put investment in their
lives, what do we have to look forward to?”
Earlier
this year, Burleson completed the Lay Ministry Program in
Austin, which allows her to preach in surrounding communities
and at Jackson Chapel United Methodist Church.
But
perhaps Burleson’s greatest accomplishment has been caring for
her hearing-impaired great-granddaughter. While she still
takes speech classes and faces many challenges, now
14-year-old Jasmine is an A and B student, having never heard
a word until she was seven.
Elizabeth
Crook
Elizabeth Crook, who graduated from San Marcos
High School in 1977, released her third novel, “The Night
Journal,” early this year. She once again received critical
praise from most major Texas publications, but when she spoke
to Daily Record columnist Bibb Underwood, she showed her drive
and an obsessive devotion to her projects.
In “The
Night Journal,” her story threads its way through three
generations of women from the 1890s to present day. It seems
to define one of her pressing questions that surfaced during
the interview. Are we today, a diluted version of our
ancestors? Were they made of better stuff than we? Did their
hardships and conditions mold and flavor lives with more depth
and character than we attain today?
No matter how long
we have to wait for the next Elizabeth Crook novel, she’s
constantly making San Marcos proud.
Washington
Garcia
He played for presidents as a child, wooed a
Juilliard panel as a teenager and even had a grand piano flown
from Quito to the coastal city of Salinas for a one-night-only
Washington Garcia performance. But the Ecuadorian piano
extraordinaire’s latest stop is San Marcos, where he’s an
assistant professor of piano at Texas State University.
His list of accomplishments is thicker than a phone
book, but here’s the highlights: By the time he was 14, Garcia
had been invited to perform for the former president of Chile.
He earned a bachelors degree at age 18, a masters degree from
Johns Hopkins University at 20 and finished his doctorate
degree at age 25, the youngest ever for a Latin American
student there.
His goals for San Marcos are as lofty
as his track record.
“I want to recruit and maintain
quality students that would take the name Texas State
University all over the world,” Garcia said. “I want to
prepare them so that they can represent us on the concert
platform at the highest level.”
Nathali
Hernandez
It’s not just that Nathali Hernandez, recent
San Marcos High School graduate, was offered an internship at
the Capitol in Washington D.C. this summer. It’s that the
Brown University student wants to take what she learned and
give back to her hometown.
Focusing a lot of her
efforts on the issue of education during her internship,
Hernandez would love to be able to come right back to San
Marcos and share her story and show other high school students
that the same resources exist for them that existed for
her.
“I’m the first in my family to go to college, and
my parents didn’t know how to help me there,” Hernandez said.
“I really want to go back to create an organization that makes
this information readily available to students back
home.”
Jerry and Jim Kimmel
The San
Marcos Springs have flowed for over 10 million years, ut Jim
and Jerry Kimmel did something for the river that’s been long
over due — they made it a published entity.
“The San
Marcos: A River’s Story” is a beautifully put together
guidebook to a waterway that is brimming with plants, wildlife
and an abundance of history. Jerry’s photographs capture the
beauty of the river while Jim keeps readers in tune with the
complexities and the culture of it.
But really, they
just want you to love the river as much as they
do.
“The real purpose of this book is to get people to
love the river,” Jim said. “It’s to give them enough
information and inspiration about it for them to say, ‘this is
a real special place.’ The technical history is not necessary
to do that. The stories are necessary to do that.”
Betty Porter
Though she’s fairly new to
the community — she came to San Marcos for a little peace and
quiet — Betty Porter brings with her a lifetime of world
travels and good stories to share.
She’s traveled
through Europe, Australia, New Guinea and South Africa. Her
poetry has been published in seven books. She’s been
commissioned to paint and sculpt several pieces for private
collectors, most notably Lady Bird Johnson.
She also
offers some sage advice for local artists.
Now
primarily a writer, Porter notes in her art technique book
“Creativity in Art:” “I am not interested in art as a means of
making a living, but as a means of living a
life.”
Sparky and
Thomasine
Sparks
Sparky and his wife Thomasine Sparks aren’t
afraid of going to prison — they go every few
weeks.
But it’s what they do for the prisoners that’s
so touching.
The couple has devoted the past five years
of their lives to Kairos, a world-wide prison ministry that
spreads love and understanding to inmates.
Every other
week or so, at least one of the two is en route to prisons in
Huntsville, Palestine or Gatesville to spend time with
prisoners — some new to the Kairos program, and some that
they’ve kept up with for years. The Greek word Kairos refers
to “God’s special time,” as opposed to conventional linear
time.
For the inmates they meet, they offer home
cooking, an open ear, plenty of prayers and all the hugs they
could ever hope for.
“Some of them have never had a
hug, or haven’t had one in a long time,” Sparky said. “We’re
not here to change (their) life in any way, unless they want
to. We’re there to tell you that God loves you and we do too,
and he can forgive you whatever you’ve
done.”
Priscilla Speed
It’s pretty easy
to tell that Gospel music was a first love for Priscilla
Speed.
When she released her CD “Led By the Spirit,”
early this fall, Speed fulfilled a lifelong dream of hers.
Hearing her talk about the recording process and the
excitement in her voice, we couldn’t help but get excited
too.
“Led by the Spirit” was recorded in Nashville at a
friend’s studio. The session almost didn’t happen when Speed
fell ill — she and her husband almost turned around halfway to
Tennessee.
“I had so many problems, but it was if I was
being told this was the time to do it,” Speed said. “Putting
your hands in the Lord’s will is sometimes just the way to do
it.”
The CD, available at Hastings in San Marcos,
features a duet with longtime Nashville star Tommy Cash on
“Softly and Tenderly.” In turn, Speed included Cash’s “I Want
to Live my Life for Jesus” on her Gospel album.
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