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Dr. Hoyle is the current medical director, Clinical Operations. In 1980, Dr. Spencer R. Berthelsen, an internist and current chairman of the Board joined the group. Dr. William Seybold retired in 1979 and Dr. Mavis Kelsey retired in 1986. The Clinic they founded continued to increase its presence in the Houston service sector.
A sign indicating Meyerland Meyerland Plaza. Meyerland is a community in southwest Houston, Texas, outside of the 610 Loop and inside Beltway 8.The neighborhood is named after the Meyer family, who bought and owned 6,000 acres (24 km 2) of land in southwest Houston.
Location of River Oaks in the City of Houston. Located within the 610 Loop and between Downtown and Uptown, River Oaks spans 1,100 acres (450 ha).The community is located in a region bounded on the north by Buffalo Bayou, on the east by South Shepherd Drive, on the west by Willowick Road, and on the south by Westheimer Road.
The W. T. Carter Jr. House at 18 Courtlandt Place (NRHP-listed) was also designed by Birdsall Briscoe in 1912, and was the only home in Courtlandt Place built in the Prairie style. Briscoe collaborated with Olle J. Lorehn. [3] The house was built for W. T. "Bill" Carter Jr. (1887–1957) and Lillie Neuhaus Carter (1890–1966).
Ben H. Guill : Republican: May 6, 1950 – January 3, 1951 Elected to finish Worley's term. Lost re-election. Walter E. Rogers : Democratic: January 3, 1951 – January 3, 1967 82nd 83rd 84th 85th 86th 87th 88th 89th: Elected in 1950. Re-elected in 1952. Re-elected in 1954. Re-elected in 1956. Re-elected in 1958. Re-elected in 1960. Re-elected ...
This is the third mall to be built in Houston after Gulfgate Mall opened in 1956 and Meyerland Plaza in 1957, but the first fully air-conditioned mall in Houston. The area includes the Jewelry Exchange Center, a ten-story building. [ 1 ]
Carter Career Center. Howard P. Carter Career Center was a high school in the Fifth Ward area of Houston, Texas. The school, serving grades 6 through 12, was a part of the Houston Independent School District. [1] The school served as a vocational school and pregnant girls' school. Carter Career Center had many students who are single parents.
The MD Anderson Cancer Center bought the building in 1974. [6] MD Anderson paid $18.5 million for the Prudential Building, which is located on a 22.5-acre (9.1 ha) site. [7] In 2002 MD Anderson announced that it planned to demolish the building and replace it with a four-story medical campus. Area preservationists opposed the plan.