We can absolutely tear them down. I think on that encouraging note, i for anyone had a question that we werent able get to. We got were gonna have to wrap things up, but i want to thank all of you for coming in. Please help me. Thank megan kimple. Thank all. Have a great day. Thankas i mentioned, my name ise flores. I serve as chancellor for the alamo colleges district here in san. I was born in the rio. Most importantly, my father was born in san felipe and served, graduated from san felipe. A high school was a city in del rio and. Hes his past. But my mother graduated from Del Rio High School and were fortunate. Weve served and have lived here in san antonio for for many and in my audience, i have in the audience i have my wife, Marta Martinez flores, and my daughter mia. But you all are here to hear from Jesse Esparza. And so i want to provide an introduction. Dr. Hassells Jesse Esparza, who is an associate professor and interim chair of the of history at Texas Southern in houston.
Brewery down the street. And that to me is like vision for the future is like we, we built these things over the course of a decade. We can absolutely tear them down. I think on that encouraging note, i for anyone had a question that we werent able get to. We got were gonna have to wrap things up, but i want to thank all of you for coming in. Plelp. Thank megan kimple. Thank all. Have a great day. Thankas i mentioned, my name ise flores. I serve as chancellor for the alamo colleges district here in san. I was born in the rio. Most importantly, my father was born in san felipe and served, graduated from san felipe. A high school was a city in del rio and. Hes his past. But my mother graduated from Del Rio High School and were fortunate. Weve served and have lived here in san antonio for for many and in my audience, i have in the audience i have my wife, Marta Martinez flores, and my daughter mia. But you all are here to hear from jesse esparza. And so i want to provide an introduction.
Now like three storey apartment complexes where people live and walk around and go to the brewery down the street. And that to me is like vision for the future is like we, we built these things over the course of a decade. We can absolutely tear them down. I think on that encouraging note, i for anyone had a question that we werent able get to. We got were gonna have to wrap things up, but i want to thank all of you for coming in. Please help me. Thank megan kimple. Thank all. Have a great day. Thankas i mentioned, my name ise flores. I serve as chancellor for the alamo colleges district here in san. I was born in the rio. Most importantly, my father was born in san felipe and served, graduated from san felipe. A high school was a city in del rio and. Hes his past. But my mother graduated from Del Rio High School and were fortunate. Weve served and have lived here in san antonio for for many and in my audience, i have in the audience i have my wife, Marta Martinez flores, and my daught
Updated 22 February 33 images Advertisement
Sunday is traditionally a quiet day for Chuck Pryor s Houston funeral home, but on this Sunday in February, almost a year after the global pandemic reached Texas, the phone was still ringing.
Pryor took the call: COVID-19 had taken yet another American life one of more than 500,000 lost to the pandemic so far and another grieving family required the services of the exhausted funeral director and his staff.
2 Feb 2021. Houston, United States. Reuters/Callaghan O Hare Chuck Pryor wheels the casket of Dwight Morgan, 52, who died from complications from COVID-19, to the plot where he will be buried at Earthman Resthaven Cemetery.