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Find or Refer a Contractor in Tyler

Where Do I Vote in Tyler Texas

November 1st, 2010
Voting in Tyler Texas

Where to Vote in Tyler Texas

All voting locations in Tyler Texas – Map

Grass Roots America We the People Endorsements 2010 – Click here

Q. Where do I vote in Tyler Texas?

A. Tyler polling places are usually listed in your local newspapers in the weeks before the election.

Call your County Clerk, County Elections Administrator, or political subdivision conducting the election in order to find your polling location or visit http://www.sos.state.tx.us for a possible link.

If you do not wish to call the Smith county clerk you can just show up at a voting center and they will tell you where to go.

I usually have no idea where to vote and just show up at the first place I hear you can vote.

I then am edumucated on where I should vote.

I am out here in precinct 52 and will be driving into town looking for political signs, banners, and American flags near school buildings and churches. That usually does the trick.

SECRETARY OF STATE

Elections Division
P.O. Box 12060
Austin, Texas 78711-2060
512.463.5650 or
1.800.252.VOTE (8683)
Fax 512.475.2811
TTY 7.1.1
www.sos.state.tx.us

FEDERAL ELECTION COMMISSION

999 E Street, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20463
1.800.424.9530
www.fec.gov

TEXAS REPUBLICAN PARTY
900 Congress Avenue, Suite 300
Austin, Texas 78701
512.477.9821
www.texasgop.org

TEXAS DEMOCRATIC PARTY
707 Rio Grande Street
Austin, Texas 78701
512.478.9800
www.txdemocrats.org

LIBERTARIAN PARTY OF TEXAS
P.O. Box 56426
Houston, Texas 77256-6426
1.800.422.1776
www.tx.lp.org

GREEN PARTY OF TEXAS
818 W. 31st Street
Houston, Texas 77018
713.866.6285
www.txgreens.org

Texas Church Arsonists Caught

February 21st, 2010
Texas arsonists mug shots

Texas arsonists mug shots

The arsonists were arrested late last night and this morning in San Antonio and Grand Saline. KLTV will be covering it live at 4:00 pm today. According to Crowley with the ATF, he said, “various techniques led members of a special task force to the men, including DNA evidence and phone tips.”

My questions revolve around if they turned out to be young highschoolers that are either satanists or think they are vampires. One news station said their last names are Jason Borque and Daniel Mcalister. Jason was a student at UT Tyler. Jason Borque Church Arsonist MugshotIf you know these guys feel free to comment below and fill us in. Is he a twilight fan, does he regularly where black trench coats, and other typical ridiculousness.

The ATF has reported that the other arsonists last name is Borque and was arrested in Northern Smith County. They said the sketches are unrelated to the men that were arrested. The sketches were men of interest at the time that could have some kind of link.

These are considered 1st degree felonies and could also be considered aggravated robberies. The ATF said that among some of the evidence they have is DNA evidence.

They may ask the judge to stack sentences. There is only one arrest warrant at this time which is the Dover Baptist Church warrant. They are confident that they will be arrested on other fires. They don’t believe the fire in Temple is related to the East Texas church fires.

According to NBC news one is from Lindale and the other guy is from Van Texas but after more news it appears more like Ben Wheeler Texas. So these guys were right in my backyard the whole time. I kind of suspected they might be from here considering how they were spreading the fires out around this location. They couldn’t resist to go after a couple of the churches in their own towns. If they were trying to throw police off I think it served more as an easy to find trail to their hideout.

Dates and locations of arsons:

  • 01-01-2010, 9:02 AM – Little Hope Baptist Church – Canton, TX;
  • 01-01-2010, 11:05 AM – Faith Baptist Church – Athens, TX;
  • 01-11-2010, 10:40 PM – Grace Community Church, Athens, TX;
  • 01-12-2010, 12:09 AM – Lake Athens Baptist Church, Athens, TX;
  • 01-16-2010, 6:30 PM – Tyland Baptist Church, Tyler, TX;
  • 01-17-2010, 6:33 PM – First Church of Christ Scientist, Tyler, TX;
  • 01-20-2010, 7:37 AM – Prairie Creek Fellowship, Lindale, TX;
  • 02-04-2010, 5:23 AM – Russell Memorial United Methodist Church, Wills Point, TX;
  • 02-08-2010, 8:47 PM – Dover Baptist Church, Tyler, TX;
  • 02-08-2010, 9:44 PM – Clear Springs Missionary Baptist Church, Lindale, TX.

In addition to the arsons at the above listed churches, there were attempted break-ins at the following churches:

  • 02-07-2010, 12:19 AM, Heritage Baptist Church, Tyler, TX;
  • 02-08-2010, 9:19 PM, Clearview Church, Tyler, TX;
  • 02-08-2010, 9:39 PM, Pine Brook Baptist Church, Tyler, TX.

The Doctors Wives Book Sale

January 12th, 2010

When I was in fifth and sixth grade my teachers would read aloud to the class, often times from books they had purchased at the Smith County Medical Society Alliance Book Fair. (Back then we called it simply the Doctors Wives’ Book Sale). They would attend once in the fall and once in the spring. I recall one teacher in particular who would come to class late on those days with a box or paper bag full of old books. Those days were exciting for us as students for a couple of reasons. First of all the teacher’s tardiness would allow us a few more precious moments of conversation, and secondly, when the teacher did arrive he would often dig through his stacks of purchases with us. In elementary school any departure from the routine is something to be savored.

Every so often our teacher would find a volume that captivated us. After a busy lunch spent on the playground or throwing a football, he would read aloud to us from one of these new finds. We began to day dream about our own trips to the book fair. We fantasized about digging up old copies of books he had read to us. “If only I could find my own copy of this or that author! I would be the envy of the class!”

Well, today I am a teacher myself; I still shop at the Tyler book fair and yes I still find myself on the lookout for some of the same books and authors recommended to me by my fifth and sixth grade teacher, Mr. Evans. My tastes have expanded over the years of course, but whatever the subject matter the “Doctors Wives’ Book Sale” has furnished my needs with some really wonderful reading at very little cost. On more than one occasion I have walked out with books of real value. Sometimes their value lay in the books obscurity, sometimes in its popularity.

As a young man on a trip to the book fair, I would buy in bulk. Anything remotely interesting would wind up coming home with me. Today however, lack of space and a touch of frugality have made me more selective. Unfortunately even my time is a constraint.
I still enjoy my visits to the book fair though. I still peruse the aisles hoping to find that stray copy of Booth Tarkington or Howard Pyle. I don’t often find much of the former that I don’t already have by the way. Over the course of my own teaching career I have introduced my students to some of these very same writers that my teachers introduce to me. In fact I’ve ended up passing out and replacing some of the books which became my favorites.

Today my personal library contains quite a number of titles that I picked up at the Doctors Wives Book Sale. This bi-annual event has become a local institution over the years. Having started in 1968 and 69 the Smith County Medical Society Alliance Book Fair (as it is now known) is celebrating its fortieth year. There have been fat years and there have been lean ones, but the show goes on like clockwork. Collectors show up every time to crowd into the little building or browse under the outdoor awning for bags of books.
The fair sells literature of all kinds, new, rare, and used books. Modern and classic fiction, history and biography religion and philosophy are all here. They even have a wide variety of textbooks, though they do tend to be older editions.

The Society Alliance Book Fair is a not for profit organization whose proceeds benefit health related scholarships and community projects.

Mr. Evans would not have been able to guess at the influence his choices of literature would have on us. Twenty plus years later we’re still enjoying the books he exposed us to, and we’re still attending the Doctors Wives’ Book Sale.

The fall session of the book fair will be held on November fifth, sixth and seventh. It is located on the loop behind Goodyear Tires and Bosworth and Associates insurance agency.

Whether you’re a teacher, a student, a parent, or anything in between, consider making this local Tyler event a tradition in your family. I can guarantee a lifetime of enriching reading and experiences.

Bethesda Health Clinic

January 9th, 2010

Bethesda Health Clinic has been invaluable to me. This clinic offers incredibly discounted medical service to people in Smith County who are working but are uninsured. They serve an average of 10,000 patients each year with basic out patient health services. They have expanded in their abilities and equipment to offer dental care, colonoscopy and endoscopy procedures, and have most recently begun a program for treating diabetics in which they maintain regular communication with the patients.

At this time our nation is in uproar about solving the medical needs of our uninsured citizens. People are losing jobs. Meanwhile, the costs of health care have not gone down. People are worried that with the state of the economy it’s going to be even more difficult to be taken care of.  Tyler, TX is no exception to this. There is a huge need for the residents of Smith County to have health care. There are government run options for those in the poverty bracket, but what about the rest of us? And if we are in the poverty bracket, do we really want government run health services? It didn’t take living in Tyler very long to hear the answer. Bethesda offers the most reasonable solution I’ve seen or heard of to these needs.

I am a volunteer missionary living in Tyler. When I came down with the worst sore throat I’d ever had, some close friends and coworkers pointed me to Bethesda Health Clinic in downtown Tyler. I made a phone call to ask how to begin. The receptionist was kind and quick to help me figure out what I would need to bring in. I needed some basic identification documents and proof of employment. I went in to apply for the program and was pleasantly surprised. The waiting room did not look like most charitable health clinics I’ve been to. The furniture was nice. The walls were painted freshly with cheerful colors. There were attractive paintings instead of the usual depressing posters.

What made the biggest impression on me was how incredibly nice the workers were. From the receptionist to the doctors, I was blown away. They treated me like an equal instead of a beggar. They looked me in the eyes and smiled with genuine interest in my situation. The doctor discovered that I had strep throat and was able to give me an antibiotic for free from samples they had on hand. When I checked out I was amazed to find that the total cost for my visit was fifteen dollars.

The clinic was thought up by a physician in 1999 who shared her vision to the pastor of the First Baptist Church of Tyler. The pastor, Dr. Michael Massar, took the vision to his church staff and members and with in just a few years the clinic was up and running. They first opened their doors on September 6, 2003. After four months they had already treated 372 patients. Bethesda is run by a staff of 750 volunteers. There are 180 doctors, 140 nurses and hundreds more who help with the administrative, maintenance and clerical jobs. The patients are about 40 percent Hispanic, 40 percent Caucasian, 19 percent African American with jobs ranging from volunteer missionaries like me to jobs with the Tyler Independent School District. In short, this operation is nothing short of amazing.

Bethesda Health Clinic is setting an example of a better solution to our nation’s health care needs. People with good hearts who want to serve and pour out their lives for the less fortunate will always produce a better service than a government could offer.

General Information

Phone Number: 903-596-8353
For Charitable Contributions
903-596-8353 Ext. 109

Physical Address:

409 W. Ferguson
Tyler, TX 75702
Mailing Address:
P.O. Box 1999
Tyler, TX 75710
Fax Number: 903-596-9471

Zip Code and County For Tyler Texas

December 17th, 2009

The city of Tyler Texas in Smith County has many zip codes. It is the county seat of Smith County, and is home to a sizeable population of more than 100,000 people.

The two most significant Zip codes in Tyler cover the territory inside Loop 323:
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75701 – This Tyler zip code runs from the southern edge of Loop 323 all the way up near 5th street. It blankets the souther half of the city inside the Loop.

75702 – This zip code covers the northern half of Tyler inside the Loop. It runs from the north loop, covers the entire downtown region, and stops near 5th street.

There are six other zip codes that cover the outskirts of Tyler’s city limits and neighboring communities:

75703 – This zip code begins at the south Loop and covers the entire South Broadway region, extending as far south as Bullard and as far west as Noonday.

75707 – Begins at the Southeast corner of Loop 323, extending to New Chapel Hill and Lake Tyler.

75708 – Begins along the Northeast edge of Loop 323, extending all the way to Interstate 20.

75706 – This is the north of Tyler zip code. It begins at the North Loop, covers Tyler State Park, and continues over neighborhoods east of Lindale.

75704 – Begins at the NW edge of Loop 323, covering Tyler Pounds Regional Airport, and reaching past New Harmony, all the way to Interstate 20 near Hideaway Lake.

75709 – This smaller region begins at the Southwest edge of the Loop, covering the west of Tyler neighborhoods all the way to the northernmost parts of Lake Palestine.

For a detailed map of zip codes in Tyler, click here.