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Opinion

Left-handers and Aggies…

The Good Book’s Chapter 6 of Matthew provides challenging specifics on living the good life, but  verse three seems most daunting. It concerns the importance of maintaining a chasm between the works of the left and right hands, perhaps as far as the east is from the west.

In essence, God knows, and that’s what counts. As my old mother would often say, “Don’t go around ‘showing out’.”

Woodson News: "Another BIG week!"

Annual Garage Sale, State bound Athletes, Academics, and a National Land Team! Where do we even begin?!

Three tracksters are headed to state! Baylee Gray will be pole vaulting! Nico Romo will be running the 800-meter run! And, Ella Sullivan is headed to state in two events! Ella will be running the 3200-meter run and the 1600-meter run! Good luck the weekend of May 4!

What remains when the man is gone?

What becomes of our achievements after we are gone from this world? We labor to achieve prestige, power, position, and prosperity... but to what end? What remains when we depart from this life and enter eternity? As I reflected this past week on things I have seen and done, I had a profound realization. All that remains of a legacy is how the man impacted the people around him.

Eclipse in our rearview mirror...

Enough already. The eclipse of April 8 has been smothered with coverage by both mass and social media. Americans — some who flail at things that go “bump” in the night — yearned for even more darkness! They carved out time from busy schedules and squeezed funds from their budgets to make their way to a slice of the globe where the solar eclipse darkened the day for some four minutes — give or take a few seconds.

Woodson News: "Blowing on through..."

The first round of STAAR testing is over. Grades 7,8,9, and 10 are complete for ELAR.

This week the younger kids test in English and reading. Get rest, eat a good breakfast and test well.
Planting some seeds in the garden this week and a few more tomatoes. How does your garden grow?

Regional track is this weekend! Congratulations to Ella Sullivan, Julianna Miller, Alyssia Perez, and Baylee Gray! And, to Nico Romo and Britton Bellah! All headed to regional! Way to go!
District golf and district tennis is coming up!

A break in the light...

What separates us from the light? Early this week, it was an eclipse. A strange phenomenon where the moon passes between the Earth and the sun in the middle of the day. None of this is news to us in North Texas. What appears noteworthy is the sheer attraction the event garnered. I have a relative in Northern Arkansas who lives in an unpopulated county. He reported an estimated two million people who passed through his community to watch the eclipse. People visited from places like Asia and Europe to catch a glimpse of the passing moon.

Woodson News: "What a week!"

Well, it thundered in February, which is supposed to predict a freeze in April, but I planted my tomato plants anyway. Fingers crossed.

I bought my plants at the FFA plant sale that was a sell out last Thursday! Uh oh, I’m feeling punny.
STAAR test is this Thursday for ALL seventh through 10th graders. Get some rest on Wednesday! Eat a good breakfast. Be on time to school and ACE that English STAAR!

The tennis kids did well in their meet last week!

A Resurrection Day Reflection

We recently celebrated the holiest week of the year on the Christian calendar. In my house, we do not pursue Easter bunnies and egg hunts like other groups do. Our celebration remains very personal and, generally, very reflective. We enjoy a household Bible story, collective prayer and worship at our local church, and we almost always partake in communion with our immediate family.

Leave it to the Aggies...

Texas A&M University — a major educational institution respected throughout the world — emerged unscathed from a litany of “Aggie jokes” that were shared for decades, though not so much now.

They were, of course — exactly that — jokes. Actually, they likely enhanced a storied heritage, but they made some Aggies M-A-D.

My Uncle Mort’s keen eye on Texas A&M literature fell on its Department of Agricultural Leadership, Education and Communications. He figures “ALEC” would better fit on business cards, and that graduates could be called “Smart-ALECs.”

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