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Lady Hawks rout Hidalgo 5-0 in home opener

HARLINGEN — The Harlingen South Lady Hawks showed some offensive firepower and rock-solid defense as they downed Hidalgo 5-0 in their home opener Tuesday night at Boggus Stadium.

Emily Velazquez, Klarisa Rodriguez and Amber Ray all scored before the half as the Lady Hawks put the finishing touches on their final game before opening the District 32-6A schedule Tuesday against Brownsville Veterans.

“We played well tonight,” said Harlingen South head coach Omar Pedroza. “It’s just one of those games before district where you hope that nobody gets hurt. You try to play everybody and you get that final last look at the team before district starts.

“Our district is really tough and the main deal is that everybody is pretty much healthy, and you play this last game before district hoping nobody gets hurt.”

Full story at RGVSports.com

Santa Rosa beats up on Lyford

SANTA ROSA — The Lyford Bulldogs tried to hang around against 32-3A rival Santa Rosa, but it didn’t last long.

Leading by only five after a quarter, the Warriors shook off a slow start and opened the second quarter on a 15-0 run, and never looked back as they cruised by the Bulldogs 77-41 Tuesday night in Santa Rosa.

Like Lyford, Santa Rosa came out sluggish to start the game, but its defense helped change the tempo and held Lyford without a field goal in the second quarter.

“I think we came out a little lackadaisical, but I just told my team to pick it up and start doing things right,” said Warriors’ head coach Johnny Cipriano. “We were able to speed the game up, cause turnovers and get some layups — that always helps you get some rhythm.”

The change in tempo helped junior guard Leo Lara get into the game to the tune of 17 second-quarter points, including a trio of three-point shots. He finished the game with 20 points to lead all scorers.

See full story at RGVSports.com

Couple come face-to-face with a bobcat in their yard

HARLINGEN — It was a relaxing Sunday morning, and Phyllis and Keith Ostrander were spending it like they always do, sipping coffee and reading the newspaper before heading to church.

And then they came face-to-face with one cool cat.

The bobcat, which the Ostranders estimated weighed about 20 pounds, walked along the top of the wall of their Cottonwood subdivision yard, just 10 to 15 feet away from the surprised couple.

“I am a native and I have never seen anything like that” said Phyllis, who is 81.

Keith was a quick thinker, though, grabbing his camera and getting a photo of the visitor, who looked like he or she was posing for it.

For the rest of this story and many other EXTRAS, go to our premium site, www.MyValleyStar.com.

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THE BOBCAT

The bobcat is a medium-sized, reddish brown cat about the size of a chow dog.

Length of the adult is about 3 feet, 6 inches.

Weight is 12 to 20 pounds, occasionally up to 36 pounds in old, fat males.

Bobcats are highly adaptable felines and throughout most of their range in Texas have shown a marked ability to cope with the inroads of human settlement.

The bobcat’s food consists mainly of small mammals and birds. Among the mammals found in bobcat stomachs, wood rats, ground squirrels, mice and rabbits supply the bulk of the diet.

Occasionally deer are killed and eaten, but most of the deer meat found in bobcat stomachs has been carrion.

The bobcat also preys upon domestic sheep, goats and poultry. The predatory damage is not great, except in rare instances.

The bobcat is the only native Texas cat which is important as a fur animal.

Source: W.B. Davis, Professor Emeritus, Texas A&M University. Revised by Texas Parks and Wildlife Department.

La Feria schools want to upgrade

C.E. Vail Elementary School in La Feria would get a new gym and receive upgrades to the building if the bond issue is approved.

LA FERIA — Voters will decide whether the school district will borrow up to $14 million for school improvements.

The school board has decided unanimously to send a bond issue to a vote May 7.

Officials want to use the money to upgrade the 60-year-old C.E. Vail Elementary School and make other improvements.

“It’s something that is very important and it’s needed for our students and it’s based on what we feel is needed to enhance instruction in a good learning environment,” Superintendent Rey Villarreal said.

“It’s approximately $14 million in bonds. We approved that amount but it may not be that big.”

Because of the money market right now, the district qualifies for that much, he said. But if inter-est rates change it could be less.

The bond package would raise property taxes by 7.14 cents per $100 of appraised value.

For the rest of this story and many other EXTRAS, go to our premium site, www.MyValleyStar.com.

Subscribe to it for only $6.99 per month or purchase a print subscription and receive the online version free, which includes an electronic version of the full newspaper and extra photo galleries, links and other information you can’t find any-where else.

Fun N Sun park residents host fundraiser for San Benito Boys & Girls Club

SAN BENITO — There weren’t a whole lot of “yeehas” yesterday after-noon, but everyone was dressed like a cowboy or cowgirl for a good cause.

The annual Western Days fundraiser for the San Benito Boys and Girls Club took place at the Fun N Sun RV Resort.

“The event is awesome,” said Tony Silvestro, park manager. “The planning put into this and the amount of people that put this together is phenomenal.”

Park residents rode into the event in their golf carts, on bikes and even in cars looking as though they were from the Wild West.

Those not wearing their western wear were thrown in jail.

Last year the event raised $3,400 for the Boys and Girls Club. Organizers were shooting for more this year.

For the rest of this story and many other EXTRAS, go to our premium site, www.MyValleyStar.com.

Subscribe to it for only $6.99 per month or purchase a print subscription and receive the online version free, which includes an electronic version of the full newspaper and extra photo galleries, links and other information you can’t find anywhere else.

La Feria schools want to upgrade

C.E. Vail Elementary School in La Feria would get a new gym and receive upgrades to the building if the bond issue is approved.

LA FERIA — Voters will decide whether the school district will borrow up to $14 million for school improvements.

The school board has decided unanimously to send a bond issue to a vote May 7.

Officials want to use the money to upgrade the 60-year-old C.E. Vail Elementary School and make other improvements.

“It’s something that is very important and it’s needed for our students and it’s based on what we feel is needed to enhance instruction in a good learning environment,” Superintendent Rey Villarreal said.

“It’s approximately $14 million in bonds. We approved that amount but it may not be that big.”

Because of the money market right now, the district qualifies for that much, he said. But if interest rates change it could be less.

The bond package would raise property taxes by 7.14 cents per $100 of appraised value.

Villarreal said the bonds fall under the Instructional Facilities Allotment program.

The state program provides assistance to school districts in making debt service payments on qualifying bonds or lease-purchase agreements. Bond or lease-purchase proceeds must be used for the construction or renovation of an instructional facility.

“The bond will primarily be used to upgrade C.E. Vail Elementary,” Villarreal said. “It will also be used to build an Agriculture barn at the high school.”

C.E. Vail would get a new gym and receive upgrades to the building. Parking lots also need attention in the district, he said.

“That facility needs some serious upgrades,” Villareal said. “We’re going to try and be frugal as much as we can and stretch the funds.”

The bond issue would increase the district’s $1.30 property tax rate by 7 cents. That means the owner of a home valued at $65,000 would pay about $45 more.

“I’m very confident that it’s going to pass because it’s a good thing and it’s going to meet the needs for C.E. Vail,” said Gloria Casas, a school board trustee. “The community will be very happy that the majority of this bond will be to improve C.E. Vail.”

However, not everyone is excited about the bond in La Feria.

A local educator, Yosef Mughrabi, who has children attending the district, says he’s organizing a stand against the bond package and he’s going to pass out printed information for the public to read why he and others are opposed.

“The reason myself and a lot of other community members appose this bond is because we feel the superintendent and the school board haven’t got us involved in the decsion making,” Mughrabi said.

He and others want a public forum to gather information about the bond issue and what the money will be used for.

Mughrabi said Harlingen passes school bonds all the time because the community trusts the superintendent and the school board.

He said before Harlingen’s last school bond package passed, the district had 29 public meetings educating the community about the bonds and how the money would be used.

“We haven’t had one single public meeting,” Mughrabi said. “Me and other community members don’t want our taxes to go higher.”

Western Days

SAN BENITO — There weren’t a whole lot of “yeehas” yesterday afternoon, but everyone was dressed like a cowboy or cowgirl for a good cause.

The annual Western Days fundraiser for the San Benito Boys & Girls Club took place at the Fun N Sun RV Resort.

“The event is awesome,” said Tony Silvestro, park manager. “The planning put into this and the amount of people that put this together is phenomenal.”

Park residents rode into the event in their golf carts, on bikes and even in cars looking as though they were from the Wild West.

Those not wearing their western wear were thrown in jail.

Last year the event raised $3,400 for the Boys & Girls Club. Organizers were shooting for more this year.

“I think it’s a positive influence that we can have on our community in the South,” said Melody Kuehn, a park resident from South Dakota.

Kuehn said she was “arrested” twice at Western Days in the afternoon and had to pay double to get out the second time.

The all-day event had plenty of activities for the Winter Texans, including dancing, games and performances.

The event ended with a dinner and dance.

The park’s singles group organized the event. Western Days is an annual indoor activity that started prior to 1999.

The singles group meets regularly and is involved in other activities.

Their group is made up of park residents who have lost spouses, are divorced or never married.

Park residents Jacqueline Umholtz and Ken Blizzard were the deputy and sheriff for Western Days. They had already arrested close to 30 people at the event early in the afternoon.

All the money paid out for bail was part of the fundraiser.

Anne Montag from Montana made homemade jams and had them for sale to help the fundraiser.

“I’m having lots of fun,” Umholtz said.

Wild in the City

HARLINGEN — It was a relaxing Sunday morning, and Phyllis and Keith Ostrander were spending it like they always do, sipping coffee and reading the newspaper before heading to church.

And then they came face-to-face with one cool cat.

The bobcat, which the Ostranders estimated weighed about 20 pounds, walked along the top of the wall of their Cottonwood subdivision yard, just 10 to 15 feet away from the surprised couple.

“I am a native and I have never seen anything like that” said Phyllis, who is 81.

Keith was a quick thinker, though, grabbing his camera and getting a photo of the visitor, who looked like he or she was posing for it.

Phyllis, a lifelong resident of the Harlingen area, said the cat left and headed toward Ed Carey Drive. She said the surrounding neighborhood consists of woods, a farm and some new construction, and she’s convinced it could well be an area where bobcats reside.

As surprising as it might be in your back yard on a Harlingen Sunday morning, such a sighting reveals that bobcats — even in the city — aren’t all that rare, biologists say.

“If they’re living around the arroyo or that Thicket area, there are going to be cats coming through, and the same with coyotes,” said Jimmy Stout, urban biologist at Las Palomas Wildlife Management Area headquartered in Weslaco.

Yet, Stout said, there’s little reason to be overly concerned about being so close to feline nature, although it can be unnerving to discover your back yard can be like the wilds of Alaska.

“The only problems I can see for people is if they have chickens,” Stout said. “Pets should be OK. Small dogs could have a problem — it’s possible. But I don’t hear about that very often, so it’s not something to be terribly concerned about.”

It’s smaller prey, like rodents, rabbits and bugs that bobcats are after, Stout said.

And even though the Rio Grand Valley continues to urbanize, there’s still room for the wild things. The Rio Grande and the Arroyo Colorado are lifelines for animal movement.

“South Texas used to be solid brush,” Stout said. “The Valley doesn’t have a whole lot of that habitat left, but the habitat we do have is pretty active.”

Stout did note that the reason we still see bobcats within the city of Harlingen is that they’re adaptable when it comes to coping with people.

“Bobcats are a ‘generalist’ species, compared to a ‘specialist’ species like an ocelot,” Stout says, meaning that bobcats adapt better to a wider range of environments than their ocelot cousins.

Like the wilds of Harlingen.

THE BOBCAT

The bobcat is a medium-sized, reddish brown cat about the size of a chow dog.

Length of the adult is about 3 feet, 6 inches.

Weight is 12 to 20 pounds, occasionally up to 36 pounds in old, fat males.

Bobcats are highly adaptable felines and throughout most of their range in Texas have shown a marked ability to cope with the inroads of human settlement.

The bobcat’s food consists mainly of small mammals and birds. Among the mammals found in bobcat stomachs, wood rats, ground squirrels, mice and rabbits supply the bulk of the diet.

Occasionally deer are killed and eaten, but most of the deer meat found in bobcat stomachs has been carrion.

The bobcat also preys upon domestic sheep, goats and poultry. The predatory damage is not great, except in rare instances.

The bobcat is the only native Texas cat which is important as a fur animal.

Source: W.B. Davis, Professor Emeritus, Texas A&M University. Revised by Texas Parks and Wildlife Department.

Arts center continues focusing on talent

SAN BENITO — The Narciso Martinez Cultural Arts Center begins its 2016 season focusing on bajo sexto artist Gilberto “Chore” Perez Jr. 

He will be accompanied by Juan Antonio Tapia on accordion during the Chicken Club monthly jam session.

“The bajo sexto is considered the primary companion instrument to the accordion in the conjunto ensemble,” said coordinator Soledad A. Núñez.

“It was Santiago Almeida, the bajo sexto player with Narciso Martinez, who firmly established the bajo sexto as this principal instrument.”

The Chicken Club is the name of a group of conjunto musicians who gather every month for informal jam sessions.

They will meet tomorrow from 6:45 to 8:45 p.m. at the Narciso Martinez Cultural Arts Center, 225 E. Stenger St.

The club is not an organization, for example, a nonprofit organization with by-laws or a formal structure.

The other rule is that those who attend Chicken Club gatherings must participate either by singing, playing an instrument or holding conversations with the guests.

The core value of the Chicken Club is to provide a space where people can share conversation and music among one another.

For nearly 24 years, the Narciso Martinez Cultural Arts Center has served as a liaison, advocate and promoter for local folk musicians and artists.

The center takes this opportunity to bring value to these musicians who keep the border tradition alive, educate the community, find venues for these musicians and further package the cultural offerings of the region for the continued development of cultural tourism.

The Chicken Club will host every third Thursday “Conjunto Nites at the Chicho” through the year.

A $5 donation is suggested at the door.

Arts center continues focusing on talent

SAN BENITO — The Narciso Martinez Cultural Arts Center begins its 2016 season focusing on bajo sexto artist Gilberto “Chore” Perez Jr. 

He will be accompanied by Juan Antonio Tapia on accordion during the Chicken Club monthly jam session.

“The bajo sexto is considered the primary companion instrument to the accordion in the conjunto ensemble,” said coordinator Soledad A. Núñez.

“It was Santiago Almeida, the bajo sexto player with Narciso Martinez, who firmly established the bajo sexto as this principal instrument.”

The Chicken Club is the name of a group of conjunto musicians who gather every month for informal jam sessions.

They will meet tomorrow from 6:45 to 8:45 p.m. at the Narciso Martinez Cultural Arts Center, 225 E. Stenger St.

The club is not an organization, for example, a nonprofit organization with by-laws or a formal structure.

The other rule is that those who attend Chicken Club gatherings must participate either by singing, playing an instrument or holding conversations with the guests.

The core value of the Chicken Club is to provide a space where people can share conversation and music among one another.

For nearly 24 years, the Narciso Martinez Cultural Arts Center has served as a liaison, advocate and promoter for local folk musicians and artists.

The center takes this opportunity to bring value to these musicians who keep the border tradition alive, educate the community, find venues for these musicians and further package the cultural offerings of the region for the continued development of cultural tourism.

The Chicken Club will host every third Thursday “Conjunto Nites at the Chicho” through the year.

A $5 donation is suggested at the door.