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MAGAZINE<br />

“Before I Lay it Down” with the Relationship Coach, Mark Spivey, Jr. Page 4<br />

<strong>Prairie</strong> <strong>View</strong><br />

It’s Not Just a College, It’s a Texas Culture!<br />

Summer 2015 FREE prairieviewmagazine.com<br />

Oprah picks <strong>Prairie</strong> <strong>View</strong><br />

Native CYNTHIA BOND for<br />

Book Club 2.0 and the<br />

New York Times Bestselling<br />

Author of “RUBY” Sits Down<br />

for a Quaint Interview with<br />

<strong>Prairie</strong> <strong>View</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong><br />

Photo Credit: Oprah.com<br />

Inside Page 6<br />

A June To Remember:<br />

Two Perspectives on a<br />

Month We Won’t Soon<br />

Forget!<br />

Inside Page 3 & 4<br />

Writers: Christiana Charleston & “Coach” Mark Spivey<br />

59 Years and $59 in “Total”<br />

Rent Payments Later, Waller<br />

ISD Officials Say “Adios PV<br />

Training School!”<br />

Where to Now?<br />

Inside Page 8<br />

The Ad-Hoc Committee to Keep Grade School Education in <strong>Prairie</strong> <strong>View</strong> will meet on<br />

Monday, July 6, 2015 at 6:00p.m. at the <strong>Prairie</strong> <strong>View</strong> City Hall. The Public is Invited.


Page 2 June/July 2015 prairieviewmagazine.com<br />

JUNE 2015<br />

J<br />

une 2015 was indeed a month to<br />

remember. So much so, I had to<br />

invite two of my favorite writers<br />

on the planet to share their<br />

thoughts on it. This issue also has<br />

within it an interview with <strong>Prairie</strong><br />

<strong>View</strong>’s own Cynthia Bond, author of<br />

the New York Times bestselling book,<br />

Ruby. I have never<br />

read a more powerful,<br />

and emotionally<br />

draining<br />

book of humor<br />

and sad realities.<br />

Bond gets three<br />

thumbs up. Hopefully,<br />

she’s coming<br />

to <strong>Prairie</strong> <strong>View</strong> in<br />

October. More<br />

details on that<br />

later.<br />

If there is another<br />

writer that<br />

compares to Bond,<br />

it has to be the<br />

relationship coach<br />

himself, Mark Anthony<br />

Spivey, Jr.!<br />

“Coach” Spivey’s<br />

“Before I Lay It Down” column has<br />

appeared in several newspapers over<br />

the past year and like Bond, Spivey<br />

has roots in <strong>Prairie</strong> <strong>View</strong>. If I had<br />

heeded much of his advice when I<br />

was married, I might still be married.<br />

Well maybe not.<br />

Nevertheless, Spivey’s “tutorials” are<br />

not for Bible thumpers, people out of<br />

touch with reality, or people out of<br />

touch with their significant others…<br />

well maybe they are.<br />

My up and coming writer is Christiana<br />

Charleston. I am convinced that<br />

while children may not do what you<br />

tell them, they will definitely do what<br />

you do. On her Blog, “Friendly Black<br />

Hottie”, Christiana has strong opinions<br />

on lots of things, but especially<br />

her Afro-American heritage and gender.<br />

She was teaching herself Swahili<br />

by DeWayne Charleston, Publisher<br />

Do you have a passion for music and a flair<br />

for the dynamic? Have you had at least some<br />

high school band or band experience? If you<br />

answered yes to any of these questions, then<br />

The Marching Storm Summer Band Camp is<br />

for you! Tap into your unique musical talent<br />

by joining the award winning Marching<br />

Storm August 5 through August 22 for marching<br />

training, performance training and drill<br />

work.<br />

The deadline to apply is July<br />

31. Scholarships are available, so apply<br />

early. All instrumentalists are welcome to<br />

at the age of eight, and was riding a<br />

16 1/2 hand barrel horse by the age<br />

of ten. Don’t let that light skin fool<br />

you. DeWayne did you really just type<br />

that?<br />

Now get this. Yesterday, I got an<br />

offer from someone who offered to<br />

write for <strong>Prairie</strong> <strong>View</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong>. I had<br />

been praying for<br />

someone, especially<br />

a female,<br />

who could write<br />

on the level of<br />

Jones, Charleston<br />

(Christiana) and<br />

Spivey.<br />

This person has<br />

done as much for<br />

the political advancement<br />

of<br />

African-<br />

Americans in<br />

Waller County as<br />

anyone. She mentored<br />

virtually<br />

every Black<br />

leader in the <strong>Prairie</strong><br />

<strong>View</strong> community<br />

during the<br />

eighties and nineties; most notably<br />

among them Jarvis Stewart, who is<br />

among the most powerful lobbyist on<br />

Washington’s K-Street. She is an attorney<br />

and pastor, who we all know<br />

and love. As a toddler, she no doubt<br />

played in the same sandbox with Cynthia<br />

Bond as they are roughly the<br />

same age and grew up less than a<br />

mile apart.<br />

If Valda Combs does join our team<br />

of writers, I will have assembled<br />

America’s best! At which point I can<br />

go ahead and move to Germany. I’m<br />

just kidding. Waller County can’t run<br />

me off that easy.<br />

And by the way, how about POTUS’s<br />

rendition of Amazing Grace? I know<br />

He saved me.<br />

The Marching Storm Accepting Aps for Summer Band Camp<br />

apply. * The Marching Storm is especially<br />

looking for wind instrumentalists.<br />

For more information about The Marching<br />

Storm, visit the Storm’s Facebook page to<br />

see Storm performances including halftime<br />

shows, parades, festivals and of course, the<br />

Marching Storm’s recent first place performance<br />

at the Battle of the Bands battles.<br />

Visit http://www.jotform.us/<br />

form/51657680134154 to submit an application.<br />

See you this summer!


prairieviewmagazine.com June/July 2015 Page 3<br />

All That Was Wrong With June<br />

By Christiana Charleston<br />

S<br />

o much has happened this June,<br />

that it’s easy to forget about the<br />

McKinney pool party. You with<br />

me? Okay. So this party happens<br />

where all of the kids present were, in fact<br />

invited. An "incident" ensued between<br />

two grown women and a child; a result of<br />

the teens being harassed with racist remarks<br />

like, "Go back to Section 8 housing!"<br />

What got lost in the news cycle was the fact<br />

that one of the “grownups” actually thought<br />

it was okay to fight a child. Really now!<br />

Let’s talk about how one of the officers<br />

handled the young lady. I would love to hear<br />

this man try the "I feared for my life" excuse.<br />

She was 14! ...and no more than a hundred<br />

pounds and it was clear she was unarmed, I<br />

mean, being half naked and all!<br />

His actions were filled with the undertones<br />

of sexual violence. There is NO EX-<br />

CUSE for any 200 plus pound male police<br />

officer to slam an underaged, unarmed, unnon-threatening<br />

girl, onto a concrete slab,<br />

dig their knee into their back, and then shift<br />

their weight on top of them, as a means of<br />

control. Enough!<br />

And what about the guy who was not so<br />

incognito, who apparently decided he was a<br />

police officer. Don’t they have laws against<br />

impersonating the men in blue. He went out<br />

of his way to protect the officer from a<br />

group of unarmed children that were<br />

merely trying to protect a harmless juvenile.<br />

If you saw that video from this past June<br />

you would have seen: First; partygoers attempting<br />

to gather their belongings to leave,<br />

but not being allowed to do so. Second; a<br />

grown man allowing another grown man to<br />

assault two young women; one was thrown<br />

onto the sidewalk, and then another (girl)<br />

who came to her aide.<br />

And then just as we thought the Mckinney<br />

juvenile assault would end, we saw two<br />

additional young unarmed teens, who were<br />

attempting to come to the aid of a female on<br />

the ground, have a gun pulled on them. We<br />

expect young men to provide such protection.<br />

Don’t we?<br />

Then, holy cow!!!...a white teen filming<br />

the entire thing was ignored by the officers.<br />

Seeing he was white, perhaps they thought<br />

he was with CNN. Give me a break!<br />

Later in an interview with Buzzfeed<br />

News that white ‘videographer’ said the<br />

only people being forced to the ground were<br />

"Black, Mexican, and Arabic" and that it was<br />

as if he were "invisible to them (the officers)".<br />

And let’s not forget the fact that the<br />

(assaulting) officer was only suspended<br />

‘after’ the video went viral. Which in more<br />

practical terms means-all of the other officers<br />

present, chose to remain silent. Oh the<br />

problems this modern social media present<br />

to rogue peace officers! Now that’s an oxymoron.<br />

Move over Texas. Now about this<br />

woman Rachel Dolezal. She isn’t the ally she<br />

thinks she is<br />

If you don't know who Rachel Dolezal is,<br />

or should I say was, she is a poster child for<br />

June 2015. The (former) president of the<br />

Spokane, Washington chapter of the NAACP<br />

was “outed” by her biological parents as a<br />

white woman passing for black for the past<br />

10 years.<br />

After gathering more information than I<br />

felt I ever needed on racial identification,<br />

I've come to the conclusion that Rachel<br />

Dolezal is NOT an ally.<br />

There are black women in today's workforce<br />

that are skipped over for jobs, reprimanded,<br />

and even fired for wearing their<br />

natural hair, dreads, even braids. “We” are<br />

literally punished for wearing our hair the<br />

way it grows.<br />

Huh, there are black people that will be<br />

denied jobs just for the color of their skin<br />

….and this woman decides to be black for<br />

fun! It could have been a black woman sitting<br />

as President of that NAACP chapter. She<br />

may have took that job from someone more<br />

deserving and more qualified; someone who<br />

had ‘always been colored’.<br />

She invaded “safe spaces” meant for<br />

black people to escape white supremacy<br />

and used that to observe black people as if<br />

we are animals, and she the scientist on a<br />

safari.<br />

This woman, before she went ‘natural’,<br />

sued Howard University, alleging she was<br />

discriminated against because she was<br />

‘white’. Who’s on first? Who’s on second?<br />

And who’s on third? People you can’t make<br />

this stuff up!<br />

She could have used her position to<br />

speak on white passing privilege, which she<br />

no doubt benefited from while she was<br />

"undercover", but she instead decided to<br />

speak on the how black people are treated<br />

in society, as if she truly could ever understand.<br />

I don’t think so.<br />

She had a black man come speak to her<br />

students and said that he was her father. In<br />

reality he was just a father figure. One of<br />

her female students made a statement on<br />

twitter saying that she seemed to prefer<br />

black male students, over black female students.<br />

Ezra, her younger brother, has come forward,<br />

"It's kind of a slap in the face to African-Americans<br />

because she doesn't know<br />

what it's like to be black." Ezra’s biological<br />

mother was white and father half-black<br />

"She's only been African-American when it<br />

benefited her. She hasn't been through all<br />

the struggles. She's only been African-<br />

American the last few years."<br />

Now I do believe Ms. Dolezal has done<br />

really good work fighting against racism and<br />

police brutality ... but she went about it the<br />

wrong way. Ezra adds, “She said she was<br />

born black. I grew up black and I know what<br />

it's like growing up as an African-American<br />

in this world.”<br />

This woman is living black face. She portrays<br />

herself as a living caricature of what<br />

she believes blackness is. Her being black is<br />

her fetish with black culture. She loves black<br />

hair, black men, and white privilege.


Page 4 June/July 2015 prairieviewmagazine.com<br />

“Before I Lay It Down” June Has Been One Hell of A Month!<br />

I<br />

t was the summer of 1964 and down a winding<br />

country rode in small town America, a big<br />

family reunion was taking place. Cowboys in<br />

pickup trucks and dually cabs were parked<br />

under majestic oak trees while young women and<br />

little girls pranced around in pigtails, denim shorts,<br />

and homemade t-shirts; some still drying with the<br />

scent of Elmer’s Glue sprinkled with glitter, rhinestones,<br />

and ribbons. The young men seemingly paid<br />

more attention to their bare midriffs than the shirts<br />

themselves. The aroma of wild hog and fresh deer<br />

meat seasoned the sky as they cooked slowly in an<br />

earthen pit flamed by hickory and charcoal. The<br />

adult women, some a little tipsy, squabbled over<br />

what went where while managing to cover picnic<br />

tables in checkered-boarded cloth.<br />

Playing dominoes on top of an old, wooden wine<br />

barrel were four elderly white men. A couple of<br />

them were related; second cousins by marriage. The<br />

other two were just neighborhood locals invited to<br />

the gathering. The ground was littered with cigarette<br />

butts and snuff juice as crickets and grasshoppers<br />

tried to find a way to maneuver around the aim<br />

of these uninvited “spitters” who invaded their territory.<br />

The smell of gasoline rose in the air after being<br />

doused on the mounds of fire ants that became<br />

quite agitated and more vicious as the day went on.<br />

It was yo typical, country good-ole-boy event.<br />

“C’mon over here and let grandpa show you how<br />

I’s gonna whup these boys’ asses in dominoes!” said<br />

one of the men to his 7-year old grandson. “You’s<br />

‘bout to learn from the best!” The kid shuffled his<br />

way up to the barrel, not really wanting to sit with a<br />

bunch of ole geezers who liked to talk shit. “What’s<br />

taking you so long, Johnnie, can you count?”<br />

shouted the boy’s grandpa to one of his younger<br />

opponents across the way. “I’ll pass”, he grudgingly<br />

exclaimed while turning to spit tobacco juice on a<br />

white cat. “You betcho sweet ass you’ll pass!”<br />

shouted grandpa’s partner. “Domino!!!” he yells,<br />

smashing a “big-six” on the table. “We just<br />

whupped y’alls asses worse than we did those niggahs<br />

at their church-house last night!” “Where’s my<br />

gun so I can putchall out of yo misery?” The entire<br />

table burst into laughter, not realizing the future impact<br />

their statements would have on a seven year old<br />

kid raised in a racist South.<br />

“Make a joyful noise unto the Lawdddd, all ye<br />

lands. Serve the Lawddd with gladdddnesss….” It<br />

was a bright Sunday morning at church that day;<br />

“Pastor” had weathered the program preliminaries of<br />

the choir singing, the deacons praying, and the offering<br />

being taken and now it’s his time to deliver the<br />

Word. His congregation was a mixture of conservative<br />

seniors and a rising teen population bent on being<br />

a conscious part of societal change. The year<br />

was 1965 and the ink had barely dried on LBJ’s signature<br />

landmark legislation of the Voting Rights<br />

Act. It was a bold follow up on the Civil Rights Act<br />

signed a year earlier in 1964. ”We claim VICTORY<br />

today, for all Americans” he blurted out, trying his<br />

best to stay politically correct since he had a sprinkling<br />

of white people in his African-American congregation.<br />

“God has been good to ALL of us”.<br />

“We are not done doing God’s work, however;<br />

there is an “element” among us that has creeped into<br />

our churches. And, God is not pleased.” The crescendo<br />

from the organ died down as the church deacons,<br />

seated on the front rows, steadied themselves<br />

for what was about to be delivered by the pastor. At<br />

a business meeting a couple of nights earlier, several<br />

of them met with the him to discuss a growing<br />

“problem”. “Pastah”, exclaimed the senior 80-year<br />

old deacon, “we’s got a problem that you need to<br />

fix.” Born in 1865 and being the son of former<br />

slaves, this old deacon has experienced the evils of<br />

racism, discrimination, and lynchings firsthand to<br />

the extent that he was totally numb at the very mention<br />

of them. But what he was about to say next,<br />

would send shockwaves and prejudices throughout<br />

the church for years to come:<br />

“We are starting to have too many “sissies” in our<br />

church. We got “them” directing our choirs and we<br />

got mens sleeping with mens”! “This has to stop!”<br />

“It’s mostly these young folk; they coming around<br />

here dressing funny, got they hair all permed out and<br />

slicked back trying to look like white folk! You better<br />

take care of it or we’s gon find ourselves another<br />

pastah! The other deacons nodded in approval as the<br />

pastor reassured them that he would “take care of<br />

it”…<br />

The Relationship Coach, Mark Spivey, Jr.<br />

“There is an “element” in this house that is against<br />

God and nature!” he continued; as the musician<br />

cranked up the Hammond organ to help usher the<br />

Holy Ghost in. “It has somehow reared its ugly<br />

head amongst the saints of God! “The spirit of homosexuality<br />

is here and it’s in some of y’all…”<br />

There was an eerie hush in the sanctuary, one reminiscent<br />

a funeral procession; but everybody was<br />

alive and breathing on this night. “God’s Kingdom<br />

does not allow “sissies and faggots” through its<br />

pearly gates! It was not so in the beginning when<br />

God created Adam, and it sho’s not now. Some of<br />

y’all are in the choir stand; some of y’all are in the<br />

pews. We know who you are. Channnnge yo lives,<br />

right now!” he said, reaching that Southern Baptist<br />

crescendo with a rythmatic attitude. “I rebuke you in<br />

the Name of Jesus! Turn it over to Him right now!<br />

If you can’t do that, then you can’t be a part of THIS<br />

church no mo!”<br />

As the pastor paused to catch his breath and wipe<br />

his sweaty brow, three young men rose and walked<br />

out the church. The month was June…<br />

June 2015 has been one hell of a month. The<br />

highlight of it should have been my birthday on the<br />

9 th , but it seems like other people wanted to take part<br />

in it. The month of June, that is. Now, before<br />

Coach Spivey was born, “Juneteenth” had been celebrated<br />

for 150 years. Therefore, I can’t slight the<br />

significance of this event in favor of my 56 th . I sho<br />

want to though, but I know better. Some things are<br />

a little more important. I did not, however, plan on<br />

being upstaged by the series of events that occurred<br />

this month.<br />

First, we had a white girl “passing” for black.<br />

That seems to be an oxymoron seeing how we<br />

(black folk) perfected that art of “passing” many<br />

moons ago. Our people did it to escape the horrors<br />

of racism, discrimination, and murder by our white<br />

skinned “brothers” from another mother. Now, we<br />

have little Miss Rachel Dolezhal attempting to do<br />

the “okey-doke” on black folk ala “The Imitation of<br />

Life”. Problem is, however, her own biological<br />

WHITE parents “dropped a dime” on her and alerted<br />

the authorities that she was/is white. Ain’t that some<br />

shiggity? Had this been the worse of what happened<br />

in June 2015, we all probably could have lived with<br />

this. But, knowwwwww. Rachel was upstaged by<br />

someone else in Charleston, South Carolina.<br />

Who in tha hell goes to a church service, participates<br />

in bible study, holds errrbody’s hands in<br />

prayer, then takes out a Glock and murders nine<br />

of them? I won’t even call that bastard’s name<br />

because I’m still a little swole behind that. I’m<br />

working on that, though. Remember the story I<br />

led in with at the top of the page about that little<br />

boy who sat and watched his grandpa play dominoes?<br />

What part of being there do you think he<br />

found most interesting? Was it the game itself<br />

or hearing his grand-daddddyyyyyyy brag about<br />

“whupping some niggahs at their church-house<br />

last night”? Could this have been the same kid<br />

who took those whuppings one step further by<br />

using a semi-automatic weapon instead of his<br />

fists on innocent black people five decades later?<br />

Chronologically, no. Theoretically yes. Hatred<br />

is passed down throughout generations, often<br />

embedded in the minds of adolescents. This one<br />

hurt. It hurt really bad.<br />

The Supreme Court had one hell of a June, too.<br />

They pissed off far left conservatives on one<br />

day; then they turned around and pissed off religious<br />

America the next. President Obama got<br />

credit AND blame from both sides. Ain’t that<br />

some ISH? How people gon get mad because<br />

errrbody and they momma has a chance to get medical<br />

insurance at an affordable rate? There’s more<br />

people covered by insurance now than ever befoe!<br />

Still, we have some idiots in Washington D.C. who<br />

would rather see their mommas die of curable diseases<br />

rather than let Uncle Sam offer them universal<br />

health-care. They’ve taken this Social Darwinism<br />

thang a little too far. “Survival of the fittest” is only<br />

for big businesses and wild animals. It’s not for<br />

human beings who can be helped by their government.<br />

If my kids saw that I was ailing and couldn’t<br />

help myself no mo, and they turned down an offer<br />

from the government (or anybody else) to help me,<br />

I’d beat they asses with my wheel-chair. “Obama<br />

Care” works for the people of the United States. Let<br />

it!<br />

Let’s talk about gay people. They can get married<br />

now and they’s happy as hell. Take it from a coach<br />

who’s been married two times for a total of 36 years.<br />

Don’t do it!!! Yo ass is gonna be miserable half the<br />

time. You’ll be petitioning the Supreme Court to<br />

throw out the ruling next week. Y’all jumping<br />

around and ISH like you just won the Lotto or Powerball.<br />

Just wait. Bwaaaaaahhhhhhh, I started<br />

laughing at my own damn self.<br />

I really don’t care who does what with their own<br />

bodies or business. I’m just trying to take care of<br />

and mind my own. I’m a preacher’s kid and church<br />

folk are starting to get under my skin. Do you recall<br />

what I wrote in my second little story above? Here’s<br />

why I wrote it:


prairieviewmagazine.com June/July 2015 Page 5<br />

Before I Lay It down Continued<br />

A lot of Christian folk would have been pissed off at<br />

Jesus had you lived during biblical times. He didn't hang<br />

out with people like you! He sat, spoke to, and dined<br />

with the disenfranchised, crooks, gangsters (tax collectors),<br />

whores and prostitutes, liars, disease-inflicted,<br />

crippled, and at one time ran all of the "righteous" people<br />

up out the church house. His kind, powerful, and<br />

encouraging words changed those people's lives even<br />

before He laid hands on them.<br />

I wonder what you guys would say if you saw me at<br />

lunch with a table full of gay people, hos, and prostitutes?<br />

Hell, I sit next to some of y'all at church every<br />

Sunday. Same damn thang!<br />

I retired this phrase a few months back, but now it's<br />

time for me to bring it back: SITCHO A.D.! If all gay<br />

people are going to hell, you are, too. You're supposed<br />

to have the "Holy Ghost Power" to change lives. Yo<br />

light should shine so bright that others should want to<br />

"follow" you, but y'all asses are so damn mean to anybody<br />

who doesn't agree with you. You drive people<br />

away.<br />

Here's some bible for you: "Beware of the shepherd<br />

who scatters the flock". The "flock/people" belongs to<br />

God. Not you. You're just the manager. God's the owner.<br />

God NEVER turns his people away. You may say that<br />

those "people" must first "turn from their evil ways and<br />

seek God's face". But, what if they don't know how.<br />

Stop assuming that everybody was raised in church.<br />

Stop giving people YO timetable on when they should<br />

change. Show some love, dammit!<br />

June has been one hell of a month, but guess what?<br />

The sun is still shining. If we can make it through this,<br />

July is next...<br />

PVAMU Nominated for Five HBCU Awards<br />

Dr. Amber Johnson and NFL Player Jerry Lovelocke Lead Nominations<br />

<strong>Prairie</strong> <strong>View</strong> A&M University is honored<br />

to be nominated for five HBCU<br />

awards, including HBCU of the Year,<br />

Business Program of the Year and Nursing<br />

Program of the Year. The awards,<br />

presented by Hampton University, celebrate<br />

the impact and influence of the nation’s<br />

105 historically black colleges and<br />

universities. The awards also serve as<br />

the culminating event for the HBCU Media<br />

Summit (July 9-11), which engages<br />

the national HBCU community in media<br />

literacy and development.<br />

“We are thrilled to be considered one of<br />

the best HBCU’s in the nation and we are<br />

equally as excited to have both<br />

our academic programs and our<br />

athletics program recognized as<br />

top quality,” said Yolanda Bevill,<br />

Executive Director of Marketing<br />

and Communications, <strong>Prairie</strong><br />

<strong>View</strong> A&M University.<br />

Finalists are selected based on<br />

their hard work, talent and commitment<br />

to scholarship from a<br />

demonstrated a level of diligence,<br />

determination, and dedication<br />

within their respective fields.<br />

Nominations are based on the<br />

2014-2015 academic year.<br />

<strong>Prairie</strong> <strong>View</strong> A&M University has been<br />

nominated for the following awards:<br />

PV Alum and Baltimore Ravens QB Lovelocke, pictured with Tampa Bay QB Jameis Winston<br />

Best Nursing Program- PVAMU College<br />

of Nursing<br />

The College of Nursing continues to<br />

stand out as a fervent exemplar in educating<br />

professional nurses for now and<br />

the future. Located in the Texas Medical<br />

Center, the College remains competitive<br />

in the quality and variety of programs<br />

offered inclusive with the advances of<br />

technology, smart classrooms, transforming<br />

laboratories, study and research<br />

rooms and mutual partnerships.<br />

Best Business Program- PVAMU College<br />

of Business<br />

Ranked as one of US News Best Business<br />

Schools in the country, the College<br />

of Business received a number one ranking<br />

for Best Online MBA by Affordable<br />

College Foundation and a number four<br />

ranking for Best Online Program for Masters<br />

of Business Administration by Get<br />

Educated.com. The College of Business<br />

provides a high quality, comprehensive<br />

business education to a diverse student<br />

population. All programs are accredited<br />

by The Association to Advance Collegiate<br />

Schools of Business, the highest standard<br />

of achievement for business schools offering<br />

undergraduate, masters, and doctoral<br />

degrees.<br />

Female Faculty of the Year – Dr. Amber<br />

Johnson, from the Department of<br />

Languages and Communications, was selected<br />

as one of the 2014 recipients of<br />

the NCA Golden Monograph Award for<br />

her scholarly monograph titled, “Antoine<br />

Dodson and the (Mis) Appropriation of<br />

the Homo Coon: An Intersectional Approach<br />

to the Performative Possibilities<br />

of Social Media”.<br />

Male Athlete of the Year – Jerry Lovelocke,<br />

signed with the Baltimore Ravens<br />

as a rookie free agent. Seeing gridiron<br />

action for 42 games at PVAMU, Lovelocke’s<br />

college career came to a close<br />

with at total of 7,359 yards, 54 TDs, and<br />

26 INTs. Lovelocke also rushed for 885<br />

yards and 24 TDs on 234 carries.<br />

HBCU of the Year- <strong>Prairie</strong> <strong>View</strong> A&M<br />

University.<br />

Accountability, diversity, and leadership<br />

are just a few values that describe<br />

PVAMU’s commitment to preparing<br />

scholars, achieving outcomes and its focus<br />

on expansion. Achievements during<br />

the 2014-15 academic school year include:<br />

Named Best Value by Money <strong>Magazine</strong><br />

Top 100 Minority Degree Producers<br />

by Diverse <strong>Magazine</strong><br />

Named Top 100 Bang for the Buck<br />

by Washington Monthly<br />

PVAMU President George C. Wright<br />

appointed to NCAA Board of Directors<br />

4 Gilman International Scholars<br />

2014 HBCU All-Star Priscilla Barbour<br />

appointed by White House Initiative<br />

on HBCUs<br />

President Obama Higher Ed Community<br />

Service Honor Roll<br />

The PVAMU Lady Panthers won their<br />

4 th consecutive SWAC title<br />

Grand Opening of the Confucius Institute<br />

at PVAMU.<br />

Award winning Faculty and Staff for<br />

Academic Excellence and Research in<br />

Education and Engineering, Fine Arts<br />

and Music, Community Involvement<br />

and Philanthropy.<br />

Groundbreakings for $60 million athletic<br />

facility, $20 million Recreation<br />

and Wellness Center, new state-of-theart-academic<br />

building, new retail and<br />

bowling center.


Page 6 June/July 2015 prairieviewmagazine.com<br />

Oprah Book Club Author, Cynthia Bond Sits<br />

Down with <strong>Prairie</strong> <strong>View</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> Publisher<br />

A few Sunday mornings ago, I received<br />

a call from a friend, informing<br />

me that a lady was on Oprah and was<br />

saying she was from <strong>Prairie</strong> <strong>View</strong>. A<br />

month earlier I had gotten the same<br />

information from a neighbor, Thomas<br />

Johnson, while visiting the Johnson<br />

family in Alta Vista.<br />

I contacted Random House Publishing<br />

and within days I was able to interview<br />

author, Cynthia Bond.<br />

Before that interview I read the book<br />

and set out to find many old neighbors<br />

who held fond memories of the Bond<br />

family. Among them the Boykins, and<br />

the “teenaged” Hill sisters, (Mary<br />

Catherine, Sonya, and Eleanor) who<br />

managed to not only babysit Cynthia<br />

and her sister Narissa, but also the<br />

toddler Stubblefield twins,.<br />

The author had been in a Miss <strong>Prairie</strong><br />

<strong>View</strong> Coronation at the age of five,<br />

and left with her relocating family.<br />

Bond lived on the same street as my<br />

family, and she was born in Hempstead,<br />

Texas. Seems everybody remembered<br />

the Bond family, and, with<br />

great affection.<br />

Cynthia Bond penned the New York<br />

Times bestselling novel, Ruby. I recently<br />

spoke with her about it and of<br />

her memories of her first hometown,<br />

<strong>Prairie</strong> <strong>View</strong>, Texas.<br />

Cynthia: Hi.<br />

DeWayne: Hello Cynthia. How are<br />

you?<br />

Cynthia: I'm good. How are you?<br />

DeWayne: I'm great. And I'm so<br />

excited to be speaking with you.<br />

Cynthia: Oh good, I'm so glad. It's<br />

great to talk to you. You know my<br />

Dad taught at <strong>Prairie</strong> <strong>View</strong> and my<br />

mom went to school there.<br />

DeWayne: Yes, now I know that. I<br />

have been speaking with some people<br />

that knew them. Hey, I purchased<br />

your book earlier this week,<br />

and I finished it this morning. I'm<br />

still trying to catch my breath!<br />

Cynthia: That's pretty cool that you<br />

were able to read it. Thank you so<br />

much.<br />

DeWayne: If it had had excerpts on<br />

my high school SAT, or if it had<br />

been required reading in my English<br />

literature classes, I'd have been<br />

a lot better student.<br />

Cynthia: That's so funny.<br />

DeWayne: So you were born in<br />

Hempstead.<br />

Cynthia: I was. I was born in<br />

Hempstead, Texas<br />

DeWayne: Where you delivered by<br />

Dr. Owens?<br />

Cynthia: You know I don't know. I<br />

will have to check with my mother.<br />

DeWayne: Cynthia, I spoke with<br />

several people in <strong>Prairie</strong> <strong>View</strong> who<br />

are quite familiar with your family.<br />

Ms. Amy Boykin shared with me<br />

how your dad would ride you in a<br />

basket on his bicycle to work.<br />

Cynthia: Yes. Yes. He had two baskets<br />

and he'd<br />

put my sister<br />

in the front,<br />

and me in the<br />

back. This is<br />

so exciting. Oh<br />

my God.<br />

DeWayne: She<br />

says your dad<br />

and her husband<br />

were<br />

good friends.<br />

Cynthia:<br />

Really!<br />

DeWayne: Another<br />

gentleman,<br />

Dr. Eddie<br />

Martin says<br />

that your dad mentored Nolan<br />

Ward. And that Mr. Ward even<br />

started talking and presenting himself<br />

just like him. Mr. Ward became<br />

a top aide to Texas Governor<br />

Mark White.<br />

Cynthia: That’s so cool.<br />

DeWayne: It took my dad, who’s<br />

87, a few minutes to remember<br />

your dad. When he finally recalled<br />

him, he said, “Oh yea, tall curly<br />

haired fella….They say he sho<br />

could flunk some students. They<br />

lived right up the street from us on<br />

campus.”<br />

The Bond family lived in a<br />

neighborhood called “Diaper<br />

Row”. Being it had lots of young<br />

families and clotheslines full of<br />

hung diapers.<br />

Cynthia: That’s funny.<br />

DeWayne: I see that your dad was<br />

over the Charles Gilpin Players.<br />

Cynthia: The what?<br />

DeWayne: The Charles Gilpin Players.<br />

The theatre troupe on campus.<br />

Cynthia: The Charles Gil...what?<br />

DeWayne: The Charles Gilpin Players.<br />

They’ve performed theatre all<br />

over the country....in<br />

fact all over the world. I<br />

found a picture of your<br />

dad in a 1965 yearbook<br />

standing with the group<br />

and he was listed as<br />

their advisor.<br />

Cynthia: Oh wow, I didn't<br />

know he was over<br />

the theatre department.<br />

DeWayne: Not just the<br />

theatre department. The<br />

Charles Gilpin Players.<br />

They're huge!<br />

Cynthia: That is so cool.<br />

DeWayne: Did you go to<br />

nursery school on campus?<br />

Cynthia: Well I went somewhere,<br />

but I'm not sure where.<br />

DeWayne: I bet you went to the<br />

nursery school on campus. The<br />

buildings are gone, but at least the<br />

trees are still there.<br />

Cynthia: This is so fascinating. I<br />

would like to put this on my website.<br />

These are some facts that I<br />

have not known about my life.<br />

DeWayne: Okay, now about the<br />

book! First thing; you had so many<br />

incredible sayings. Is all of that<br />

stuff in your head? Is it stories you<br />

heard, or just a gift of writing?<br />

Phrases like, “Boy I was almost<br />

your father, but the fella behind<br />

me, had exact change.”<br />

Cynthia: (lol) You know, much of<br />

the book and the process of writing<br />

it, whether I was walking into my<br />

office, or into a coffee shop, wherever<br />

I was, I would walk in and<br />

sort of sink into that world. It was<br />

like walking into, or stepping into a<br />

doorway. And I would live in that<br />

world. I would feel what others<br />

felt. I would see what others see.<br />

Sometimes the dialogue was such<br />

that I could hear it. The characters<br />

just came through me.<br />

DeWayne: Wow.<br />

Cynthia: It doesn’t mean my process<br />

was better than anyone else’s, it<br />

just means this is my way of writing.<br />

It may be because I spent<br />

years as a actress, studying characters.<br />

So I applied those tools as a<br />

writer. I would live that character<br />

and that experience.<br />

DeWayne: I'm sure you have heard<br />

this before, but reading your book<br />

is like sitting in a movie theatre.<br />

Cynthia: Oh?<br />

DeWayne: Yeah! In 3D!<br />

DeWayne: There were times when I<br />

was about to go to bed...and said to<br />

myself, I need to stop reading, because<br />

everything was too real, too<br />

emotional. Cynthia, you even animated<br />

nature. How could you<br />

make a tree talk...and it still be believable?<br />

Cynthia: (LOL) And, so, I wanna<br />

go back and say that I did do research<br />

for a lot of the dialogue between<br />

the men. I talked to my<br />

mother and I also talked to Manuel<br />

Holloway, who was actually my<br />

mother's boyfriend when she first<br />

started going to <strong>Prairie</strong> <strong>View</strong>. They<br />

had gone to high school together in<br />

Beaumont at Charlton Pollard. He<br />

helped me with how men talked.<br />

How they played dominoes. How<br />

important the game was. That dialogue<br />

I researched from books,<br />

from Zora Neale Hurston. That<br />

dialogue I really wanted to get that<br />

accurate. To make sure it was real.<br />

I also wanted it to be humorous.<br />

And so, about nature, I personally<br />

believe that nature is alive, and that<br />

there are lessons to be learned from<br />

nature. I remember reading Alice<br />

Walkers' The Color Purple and she<br />

introduced a scene that I had never<br />

thought of. And that is that God is<br />

always showing off for us.<br />

DeWayne: Oh yeah.<br />

Cynthia: That God had created the<br />

color purple so that we would marvel<br />

at it. It showed me the reciprocal<br />

relationship between humans<br />

and nature. And that nature needs<br />

us...it is the reflection of our human<br />

spirit. So Ruby connecting<br />

with nature is also connecting with<br />

hope and faith.<br />

DeWayne: Well it came through<br />

brilliantly, In fact that was a thread<br />

with which you kept bringing everything<br />

back.


prairieviewmagazine.com June/July 2015 Page 7<br />

DeWayne: You know Cynthia,<br />

every time I would read a passage,<br />

I'd get so excited and would run<br />

downstairs and share it with my<br />

niece, who spent a lot of time in<br />

Liberty. She'd get excited and inspired<br />

and we talked a lot about<br />

Ruby.<br />

Cynthia: She's from Liberty?<br />

DeWayne: Yes.<br />

Cynthia: Oh wow.<br />

DeWayne: I think your book should<br />

be required reading for every high<br />

school student in America. But let<br />

me ask you this. In the book there<br />

was passage were you capitalized<br />

the pronouns “he” as you were referring<br />

to God. Was that to say<br />

something about your spirituality,<br />

or your relationship to God?<br />

Cynthia: Do you remember who<br />

was talking, Was it Celia? Each<br />

character-I really tried to reflect<br />

“their” character or sense. I hope I<br />

don't offend, but to me, my spirituality<br />

is such that I believe that God<br />

is genderless. That God is all<br />

things. That God is this loving<br />

presence...man, woman, earth. I<br />

believe that God expresses himself<br />

in all things. And so if you look<br />

around the world you see him everywhere,<br />

unless you're lost.<br />

DeWayne: Okay, I get that. Now<br />

Cynthia you had a church scene. I<br />

think it was the funeral. I won’t say<br />

whose, so as not to be a spoiler.<br />

But it was so funny, I almost died<br />

laughing. You painted that scene<br />

so real. Have you ever been in a<br />

church like that?<br />

Cynthia: Yes, my sister and I would<br />

occasionally go to these churches,<br />

before we moved to Kansas, and<br />

even after we moved to Kansas,<br />

and (we’d) see people falling out<br />

and getting happy. And (since) it<br />

wasn’t a part of our day to day life,<br />

we were fascinated by this.<br />

We wondered at it, Because<br />

we didn’t have experience.<br />

DeWayne: Wow<br />

Cynthia: But my mother<br />

grew up in a holiness<br />

church and she talked<br />

about it our entire childhood.<br />

My mother told me<br />

a story about something<br />

her father said. You have<br />

to know that her father<br />

was born in 1856 he was a<br />

carpenter. And his father<br />

had been a slave owner, or<br />

whatever you want to call<br />

it. Not that anyone can<br />

own anyone. And his mother had<br />

been a slave...so he was very fair,<br />

very lht, could have passed for<br />

white, he was constantly taken for<br />

white. But he had this humor that<br />

was just funny...and my mother<br />

said they were at a funeral and at<br />

all of the funerals…these women<br />

would be wanting to get into the<br />

plot...fighting to get in the plot,<br />

people, four or five of them, would<br />

have to hold them back. It was so<br />

funny.<br />

DeWayne: When I read the scene, it<br />

was so funny I thought to myself,<br />

“I will pay Oprah and Harpo to be<br />

an extra in that scene!” If that<br />

scene plays out on the screen as it<br />

was written, it will be hilarious.<br />

Cynthia: That's so funny you say<br />

that. Well, my mother used to say,<br />

a funeral in her hometown was a<br />

social event, it was ‘thee’ thing. It<br />

was like going to the Academy<br />

Awards. People dressed up and all.<br />

And yes, Harpo Productions has<br />

optioned the rights to make the<br />

book a movie and I’ve been hired<br />

as a screenwriter. It’s interesting<br />

that you mentioned the funeral<br />

scene, because I have been trying<br />

to decide whether that scene will<br />

fit in or not. But after talking to<br />

you, I think that is a really, really,<br />

wonderful source of humor and I<br />

think we do need to have it in<br />

there. So thank you for talking<br />

about that. That actually helps me.<br />

DeWayne: Cool.<br />

DeWayne: Now let me ask you another<br />

question. What do your students<br />

in California think about this<br />

new chapter in your life?<br />

Cynthia: Well two things; when my<br />

book first came out, because where<br />

I have recently worked was a place<br />

called Paradigm Malibu, my students<br />

were very excited. I think<br />

that when your dreams come true,<br />

it helps everyone believe that theirs<br />

can come true...that everything’s<br />

possible.<br />

So I believe it accomplished that.<br />

DeWayne: And you had been sharing<br />

with them about reaching their<br />

dreams and keeping them (dreams)<br />

alive?<br />

Cynthia: Oh yes!<br />

DeWayne: In telling them that, did<br />

you know that one day you would<br />

be on the New York Times Bestseller<br />

list and on Oprah?<br />

Cynthia: I do believe<br />

you have to<br />

see what you<br />

want. You have<br />

to believe that it<br />

is possible. I<br />

believe you have<br />

to speak your<br />

vision out<br />

loud...and into<br />

existence. So<br />

there were two<br />

sides to that.<br />

There were<br />

times of great<br />

doubt when I<br />

was certain that<br />

no-one would<br />

read my work;<br />

that it was just horrible and that I<br />

would never get it right. And then<br />

there were times when I would<br />

have a wonderful teacher and I<br />

would develop faith. Luckily, even<br />

when I lost faith there were always<br />

people in my life that believed in<br />

me. And my mother was one of<br />

those people. She would say, “You<br />

have to finish this book. You will<br />

not live if you don't finish this<br />

book. You will die inside, if you do<br />

not finish this book.”<br />

Cynthia at Miss PV Coronation 1966<br />

DeWayne: Did you ever think you<br />

wouldn't finish it?<br />

Cynthia: Oh I was afraid it would<br />

never be in the world. I believe that<br />

any...well for me...I can't say for<br />

everyone, but I have spoken to<br />

many writers and they have told<br />

me that one of the things that happens<br />

is that you will always doubt.<br />

Doubt will never leave you. Even<br />

with all of the wonderful things<br />

that have happened. Even with all<br />

of the great experiences...even with<br />

Oprah saying she loves my book,<br />

when you sit down to write, it’s<br />

just you and the page. And there<br />

are many times when<br />

you feel (like), “Oh<br />

my gosh, I will never<br />

have another idea. I<br />

will never be able to<br />

write another word.”<br />

But what happens is<br />

the more you write,<br />

the faster you get out<br />

of that (mood), because<br />

you have the<br />

experience to know<br />

that is passes. But I<br />

also have always had a<br />

vision board.<br />

DeWayne: A vision board?.<br />

Cynthia: Yes a vision board. The<br />

vision board is something that I put<br />

my wildest dreams on. The dreams<br />

of my deepest, secret<br />

wishes.<br />

DeWayne: I'd like to<br />

see that.<br />

Cynthia: Well, what I<br />

did was make it my<br />

screensaver on my<br />

computer. So every<br />

time I log on to<br />

write, there it was.<br />

And what was on<br />

there was, Oprahs<br />

Book Club, New<br />

York Times Bestseller….<br />

DeWayne: Wow!<br />

Cynthia: Oprah Winfrey saying<br />

how much she loves the book...<br />

DeWayne: Wow!<br />

Cynthia: ….how it was a favorite<br />

book of hers.<br />

DeWayne: Okay, okay.<br />

Cynthia: I had Super Soul Sunday<br />

on there. I had all these things.<br />

DeWayne: You wrote all these<br />

things before they happened?<br />

Cynthia: Oh yeah, it was years before<br />

it happened.<br />

DeWayne: You are kidding me!<br />

Cynthia: No, I made that thing, long<br />

ago. I had a rainbow on there. It<br />

was a rainbow with my daughter<br />

and I, and a pot of gold at the end.<br />

I had my grandfather sitting behind<br />

me. Sojourner Truth is behind me.<br />

DeWayne: Oh wow. Can I get a picture<br />

of it?<br />

Cynthia: Yeah, but I'm a little embarrassed<br />

of it. They showed it on<br />

Oprah. Like how I wanted to be<br />

really fit…yeah I could take a picture<br />

of it for you.<br />

DeWayne: Wow. You know Cynthia<br />

I'm not much of a reader, but<br />

this was 425 of the best pages I<br />

have ever read. When I had about<br />

15 pages to go, I put it down because<br />

I didn't want it to end.<br />

Cynthia: Oh my God.<br />

DeWayne: So I thought, so this is<br />

what it’s like to be a Harry Potter<br />

fan! …Waiting for a sequel.<br />

Cynthia: (lol) Oh thank you.<br />

DeWayne: You know Cynthia, a lot<br />

of the most painful and emotional<br />

parts of the book were where you<br />

Mother, Zelema; Sister, Narissa; and Dad, Horace, at PVAMU Commencement<br />

were talking about child trafficking,<br />

sexual abuse, and matters of<br />

incest. I know you are very passionate<br />

about addressing these issues.<br />

What are you...or how are<br />

Photo Credit: Oprah.com<br />

you thinking this book can help<br />

you address these matters.<br />

Cynthia: Well I am also a social<br />

worker, and my mother and father<br />

were also activists. They were both<br />

very involved in civil rights. On<br />

campuses I watched them fight for<br />

justice and help so many students<br />

when police were coming after<br />

them. I watched them protest. It is<br />

part of my being, part of my marrow<br />

to fight for justice, and to fight<br />

for people who are oppressed. And<br />

the truth is that we are living in a<br />

day when there is modern day slavery.<br />

Slavery is more prevalent now<br />

than any time in our history. There<br />

are an estimated two million children<br />

who are actually slaves in this<br />

world. And a majority of those<br />

children are sold into sex trafficking<br />

and child labor, and they are<br />

abused regularly. They are locked<br />

in small rooms and some of them<br />

never leave. Some of them die<br />

there and because of this, I prayed<br />

that my novel can impact this in<br />

some way.<br />

DeWayne: It will. Thanks so much<br />

for your time Cynthia. We can’t<br />

wait for you to come home.<br />

Cynthia: (lol) Thank you Dewayne.<br />

This was so exciting.


Page 8 June/July 2015 prairieviewmagazine.com<br />

Imagine a Charter School in <strong>Prairie</strong> <strong>View</strong>,<br />

It’s Easy If You Try<br />

by Dewayne Charleston<br />

I was listening to John Lennon’s song, “Imagine”<br />

the other day. Now just put that tune in your head,<br />

while you are reading this article.<br />

Imagine a charter school located at the site of the<br />

present day, Jones Elementary. Imagine it being renamed<br />

The <strong>Prairie</strong> <strong>View</strong> Training School or <strong>Prairie</strong><br />

<strong>View</strong> High School. Imagine all the professors leaving<br />

their part-time professorships, and instead of heading<br />

to Lonestar College or Harris County Community<br />

college to teach a few classes, they simply walk over<br />

to <strong>Prairie</strong> <strong>View</strong> High School and lecture.<br />

Imagine a Madelyn Reed, or Frank Hawkins, teaching<br />

math, or a Don Sowell teaching business, or Frederick<br />

Roberts teaching leadership. Imagine an Agricultural<br />

curriculum that convinces kids to give up<br />

their pit bulls, and instead raise livestock for profit.<br />

Or imagine students learning percussion from Prof<br />

Jones, or voice lessons from Rosiland Holloway. What<br />

if they got a head start in Pre-Med from Too Sweet,<br />

or in Architecture, from his brother Marshall, both<br />

former students at the old <strong>Prairie</strong> <strong>View</strong> High School<br />

Imagine this charter school receiving kids from the<br />

Waller, Brookshire, and Hempstead school district,<br />

and those districts losing money along with their<br />

departing students. What if they came from Hearne<br />

and Calvert, and Dallas or Austin. What if the best<br />

athletes left Waller high School and came to a charter<br />

school in <strong>Prairie</strong> <strong>View</strong>? You might say that I’m a<br />

dreamer, but I say I’m not the only one.<br />

The last time Waller ISD officials passed a bond,<br />

they spent $49,000,000 dollars, and only $230,000 in<br />

the City of <strong>Prairie</strong> <strong>View</strong>. Yet we <strong>Prairie</strong> <strong>View</strong> residents<br />

funded the infrastructure of water and sewage<br />

lines right pass “their” country club and into an open<br />

pasture for the construction of an elementary school.<br />

It is now no longer a pasture. Hey but at least we finally<br />

got an air-conditioned gymnasium for our 50<br />

year old elementary school. No kidding, they built a<br />

$17,000,000 football stadium and all we got was a<br />

window unit for our gym.<br />

Now the district would like to walk away from their<br />

$1 a year lease rather than enter into a long term<br />

lease agreement and invest “our” tax dollars in our<br />

community. “But there are no families in <strong>Prairie</strong><br />

<strong>View</strong>”, they say. All the while, they have to two junior<br />

high schools, which are under capacity, in a city<br />

with a population of less than 2000. And what about<br />

busing? Why not ‘bus’ students into the <strong>Prairie</strong> <strong>View</strong><br />

zone for the next 50 years, like we were bused into<br />

Waller for 50 years. Oh, I get it, it’s about the money<br />

now. All the sudden everybody getting all conservative<br />

about the money.<br />

Tip. Buy stock in the law firm of Vinson and Elkins.<br />

They are about to get richer, because the district will<br />

spare no expense to use their firm to suppress “our”<br />

voting rights in furtherance of passing a bond that<br />

fundamentally excludes our community. Or better<br />

yet, become an informant for the FBI and take down<br />

some black leaders who would challenge the school<br />

district’s madness. Not only will you make a cool<br />

quarter of a million, but the City of Waller might even<br />

make you a councilman.<br />

Imagine there’s no prejudice, it’s easy if you try.<br />

Imagine all the people living life in peace. You<br />

might say I’m a dreamer, but I’m not the only one.<br />

I hope someday you will join us, and the “district”<br />

will be as one.<br />

June 2015 pictures of Jones Elementary show a building in poor condition with a bad paint job, funded by the district’s previous bond election. The upper left picture shows a basketball goal<br />

which still stands on a grass and dirt court, with mold and moss on it. The upper right picture shows a picture of the gymnasium which is virtually unchanged from 50 years ago…..It does however,<br />

now have a window air conditioning unit.


prairieviewmagazine.com June/July 2015 Page 9<br />

Panther Plaza Retail Center Coming Soon<br />

The Panther Plaza University<br />

Retail Center is coming<br />

soon to the campus of <strong>Prairie</strong><br />

<strong>View</strong> A&M University.<br />

The new retail center<br />

will feature dining outlets<br />

and a state of the art bowling<br />

facility. The Panther Plaza<br />

Retail Center has three(3)<br />

732 sqft. spaces and one(1)<br />

767sqft. leasing spaces<br />

available now for rent<br />

to retail businesses. Located<br />

just minutes from the heart<br />

of the PVAMU main campus,<br />

the new retail center allows<br />

retailers to access<br />

faculty, staff, and a diverse<br />

student population at<br />

the university. Space is<br />

available now. Bowling,<br />

shopping, dining and<br />

other businesses can grow<br />

and prosper at the new Panther<br />

Plaza Retail Center. For<br />

additional leasing information,<br />

contact Bridget E.<br />

Ross beross@pvamu.edu<br />

936-261-9242. For general<br />

information about the new<br />

Plaza, contact Evan Nathan<br />

elnathan@pvamu.edu<br />

936-261-1330<br />

Panther Athletics 2015-16<br />

Season Tickets Now On Sale<br />

Season tickets for the<br />

2015-16 <strong>Prairie</strong> <strong>View</strong> A&M<br />

athletics campaign are now<br />

on sale via PVPanthers.com<br />

at a discounted<br />

rate of nearly 15 percent.<br />

The revised packages<br />

offers a chance to experience<br />

50-plus PVAMU<br />

home or neutral site athletic<br />

events next season in addition<br />

to receiving an opportunity<br />

to participate in the<br />

department's newly created<br />

fundraising initiative.<br />

The Panther Pack ($300)<br />

includes admission to all<br />

home athletic contests for<br />

the year (general seating), a<br />

ticket to the Southwest<br />

State Fair Football Classic<br />

in Dallas, a complimentary<br />

<strong>Prairie</strong> <strong>View</strong> A&M athletics<br />

gift and tailgate access for<br />

home football games.<br />

Football fans that purchase<br />

the $150 Football<br />

Package will receive admission<br />

to all home football<br />

games and the Southwest<br />

State Fair Football<br />

Classic in Dallas while the<br />

$125 Basketball Package<br />

offers general admission to<br />

all home PVAMU men's<br />

and women's basketball<br />

contests. The baseball pack<br />

makes its debut next season<br />

for only $75; fans will receive<br />

general admission<br />

seating to every home baseball<br />

contest.<br />

Due to the construction of<br />

the university's football stadium,<br />

all home football<br />

games in 2015 will take<br />

place in nearby Waller,<br />

Texas at the Waller ISD<br />

Stadium.<br />

Starting in the fall of<br />

2015, the newly formed<br />

Athletic Director's Club<br />

makes its debut as the club<br />

will serve as the official<br />

fundraising arm of PVAMU<br />

Athletics. Its mission is to<br />

raise funds to support more<br />

than 350 Panther and Lady<br />

Panther student-athletes in<br />

competition on and off the<br />

field. More information<br />

about the club will be forthcoming<br />

as fans who join<br />

the club will receive an opportunity<br />

to purchase premium<br />

VIP floor seating at<br />

all basketball games and<br />

chair back seating at home<br />

baseball games.<br />

For more information and<br />

pricing on premium seating<br />

options for all home basketball<br />

and baseball games,<br />

please refer to the season<br />

ticket brochure.<br />

The option to purchase<br />

season tickets online is<br />

available through PVPanthers.com.<br />

For more information<br />

or to place your order<br />

for season tickets,<br />

please call (936) 261-9100.


Page 10 June/July 2015 prairieviewmagazine.com<br />

<strong>Prairie</strong> <strong>View</strong> Economic Development Corporation 4B Corporation Supports Local Businesses<br />

Call City Hall to Find Out How We May Be Able To Assist You. 936.936.3711<br />

Brookside Meadows<br />

NOW LEASING<br />

936.857-3385<br />

If you lived at Brookside Meadows, You’d Be Home By Now”


prairieviewmagazine.com June/July 2015 Page 11<br />

City’s Largest Apartment Complex Makes<br />

Big Changes With New Security Measures<br />

Brookside Meadows (off campus<br />

student housing) is now accepting<br />

rental applications for the upcoming<br />

summer and fall semesters. All applicants<br />

must be enrolled as full or<br />

part-time students at <strong>Prairie</strong> <strong>View</strong><br />

A&M University. Application packages<br />

are available on-line at<br />

www.brooksidemeadow.com or in<br />

the rental office at 45609 Chapman<br />

Lane (intersection of Richards Road<br />

and Chapman Lane). For more information<br />

please call 936-857-<br />

3385.<br />

Recent rental activity at Brookside<br />

Meadows has increased dramatically<br />

with the implementation of<br />

new security measures. These<br />

measures include the installation of<br />

high definition, surveillance cameras;<br />

more stringent enforcement of<br />

the community Rules and Regulations;<br />

monthly inspections of all living<br />

quarters; immediate eviction for<br />

drug related activities (“zero tolerance”),<br />

and increased vehicle patrols<br />

by local law enforcement agencies<br />

and private security guards.<br />

Each building is also equipped with<br />

an ADT security alarm and keyless<br />

deadbolt on the entry doors.<br />

The owners and management<br />

team of Brookside Meadows are<br />

continually working with the City of<br />

<strong>Prairie</strong> <strong>View</strong>, local law enforcement<br />

agencies and the university community<br />

to make the property a safe haven<br />

for students to live and learn.<br />

Brookside Meadows would like to<br />

remind current and future tenants<br />

that there are a great many things<br />

that tenants can do to ensure their<br />

own personal safety. The obvious<br />

involves such things as making certain<br />

that the ADT burglar alarms in<br />

each building are properly engaged,<br />

keeping windows and doors locked,<br />

contacting the management office,<br />

local police department or private<br />

security when witnessing suspicious<br />

behavior, and always being<br />

aware of your surroundings when<br />

entering or exiting your vehicle or<br />

dwelling.<br />

LEASING INFORMATION<br />

Application Fee: $25.00<br />

Deposit (per tenant): $500.00<br />

Monthly Rent:<br />

$475.00 for<br />

12 Month Leases<br />

$550.00 for<br />

10 Month Leases<br />

All units are fully furnished with all<br />

appliances including in-house<br />

washer and dryers, refrigerator,<br />

electric stove, washer/dryer, dishwasher<br />

and microwave. Every bedroom<br />

has a private bathroom and<br />

there is a guest bathroom in the<br />

common area.


prairieviewmagazine.com June/July 2015 Page 12<br />

Celebrating PV<br />

Hope AME Church which presently sits on University<br />

Drive was once home to St. Francis Assisi Episcopal<br />

Church. A double-dose of historical preservation.<br />

Sandwiched between history...Roderick (age 12)<br />

and Nylah (age 9) Gray have come home to<br />

attend “Camp on the Hill” this summer at PV!<br />

This sign was recovered and saved from destruction several months ago. Before it was<br />

dismantled, it had other faces, H.T. Jones Elementary, Waller Jr. High School, Waller Middle School,<br />

Etc. According to Ms. Barabara Martin, the sign was donated by the <strong>Prairie</strong> <strong>View</strong> H.S. Class of 1965.<br />

Photo courtesy of the Special Archives Collection of the John B. Coleman Library<br />

Lewter to Serve on Hampton Ministers Board<br />

Johnson-Phillip All Faiths<br />

Chapel Dean and Assistant Director<br />

of Student Engagement,<br />

Charles H. Lewter, IV, has been<br />

appointed to serve on the prestigious<br />

executive board for the<br />

Hampton University Ministers’<br />

Conference at Hampton University.<br />

This conference is the oldest<br />

ministers’ Conference among<br />

HBCU’s and attracts more than<br />

6000 attendees each year.<br />

The Ministers’ Conference began<br />

in 1914 when the Negro Organizational<br />

Society, the Conference<br />

for Education in the South,<br />

the Southern Education Board,<br />

and the Cooperative Education<br />

Board sought to address the growing<br />

concerns of the African-<br />

American church and its relationship<br />

to the community. With<br />

Hampton Institute carrying strong<br />

influence with each of these community<br />

organizations, it became<br />

the birth-place of the original Ministers’<br />

Conference, then known as<br />

The Conference of Negro Ministers<br />

of Tidewater, Va.<br />

The HU Ministers’ Conference<br />

and Choir Directors’ and Organists’<br />

Guild has welcomed famous<br />

individuals to the campus of<br />

Hampton University. Past attendees<br />

have included the Rev. Dr.<br />

Martin Luther King, Jr. in 1962;<br />

the Rev. Wyatt Tee Walker of<br />

Abyssinian Baptist Church in New<br />

York; the Rev. Jesse Jackson; the<br />

Rev. Al Sharpton; the Rev. T.D.<br />

Jakes; and in 2007, Barack<br />

Obama.<br />

Former PVAMU Student Who Made Run for Waller ISD<br />

Board Seat Wins St. Louis Board of Education Election<br />

Charli Cooksey recently won a spot on the<br />

St. Louis Board of Education. The district<br />

serves the entire St. Louis Metropolitan area<br />

of over 1,000,000 residents and includes the<br />

city of Ferguson, Missouri.<br />

Charli is a graduate of <strong>Prairie</strong> <strong>View</strong> A&M<br />

University and first ran for a spot on the<br />

Waller Independent School district school<br />

board while a student at <strong>Prairie</strong> <strong>View</strong>.<br />

Ms. Cooksey was a leader of the Ferguson<br />

protest and has undertaken a major role in the<br />

rebuilding of inner city St. Louis, through her<br />

efforts in education reform. Congratulations<br />

Charli.<br />

<strong>Prairie</strong> <strong>View</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> is published monthly, except during summer, by <strong>Prairie</strong><br />

<strong>View</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> LLC, located in <strong>Prairie</strong> <strong>View</strong>, Texas. We welcome correspondence<br />

from our readers, as well as paid advertisements and advertorials. Submissions will<br />

be accepted and printed at the sole discretion of the publisher.<br />

P.O. Box 2141 <strong>Prairie</strong> <strong>View</strong>, Texas 77446 email: Publisher@<strong>Prairie</strong><strong>View</strong><strong>Magazine</strong>.com<br />

And we know that all things work<br />

together for good to them that love God;<br />

for those who are the called according<br />

to His purpose. Romans 8:28

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