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Santa Fe High School senior Oswaldo Garcia discusses being accepted to Dartmouth College as a QuestBridge National Match Scholar, his love for romance languages, how the college prep elective AVID helped prepare him for the college admission and scholarship process, his ambition to think big and take risks, his favorite Disney characters, his favorite moment from high school, and the influence of his sister and French teacher in his education journey.
Apodaca, the son of former New Mexico governor Jerry Apodaca, grew up in Santa Fe, playing football for Santa Fe High School before being diagnosed with cancer at the age of 17. Apodaca continued his football career at Southern Methodist University and the University of New Mexico, where he graduated in 1986 with a B.A. in broadcast management. After graduating, Apodaca joined CBS, eventually becoming a senior executive for the network's Entertainment, Sports, and Olympics division. This would be the start of a 30-year career in media which included two years at America Online, eight years as a Vice President at Univision, and 6 years at Entravision CommunicationsSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The Democratic National Convention kicked off with an emotional evening and Texans among the featured speakers.A jury found that the parents of the accused gunman in the 2018 Santa Fe High School shooting were not responsible for his actions.Highway lanes are shrinking in Austin. It’s part of national trend – but what does it mean […] The post ‘The Stadium' reconsiders the role of our modern arenas appeared first on KUT & KUTX Studios -- Podcasts.
Stories we're following this morning at Progress Texas: Last night's opening night of the Democratic National Convention was full of highlights, including Texas abortion rights activist Amanda Zurawski: https://www.nytimes.com/live/2024/08/19/us/dnc-harris-trump-election ...Harris County Lina Hidalgo sang the praises of both President Biden and Vice President Harris: https://www.houstonchronicle.com/politics/texas/article/lina-hidalgo-kamala-harris-19664933.php Could Texas flip blue this year? While it's long seemed unthinkable, the topic keeps coming up: https://www.statesman.com/story/news/politics/elections/2024/08/18/kamala-harris-tim-walz-democratic-nominees-affect-texas-2024-elections/74722944007/ The civil trial targeting the parents of the shooter in the Santa Fe High School mass killing has found them not liable for their son's actions: https://www.houstonchronicle.com/news/houston-texas/crime/article/santafe-shooter-parents-not-liable-19665393.php A Wallethub study finds Texas #49 of the 50 U.S. states ranked by equality for women - even without weighing in reproductive restrictions: https://www.click2houston.com/news/local/2024/08/19/texas-ranked-among-worst-states-in-the-us-for-womens-equality-report-says/ ...While a Twinkl study finds that most people believe our public school teachers are both overworked and underpaid: https://www.expressnews.com/news/education/article/texas-teacher-school-workload-education-salary-19663364.php Progress Texas will set up our official HQ during TribFests' Open Congress on Saturday Septmeber 7 at Hideout Coffee at 7th and Congress! We'll be live all day recording for the podcast, hanging out with progressive activists including YOU, and moving our stylish merch. Come see us - it's free! https://festival.texastribune.org/event/651560b0-5404-4ea0-b75e-8725c648826d/websitePage:64071bfd-7c25-49f7-a1ca-90f3fa6ff376 See Progress Texas' analysis of Project 2025, and what it will mean for Texas should it be enacted: https://progresstexas.org/blog/project-2025-vs-progress-2025 ...And a complete guide to Project 2025 from Media Matters: https://www.mediamatters.org/heritage-foundation/guide-project-2025-extreme-right-wing-agenda-next-republican-administration The deadline to register for the November election is October 7. Are you registered? Are you sure? ALL Texas voters should confirm their registration, right now: https://govotetexas.org/ Thanks for listening! Find our web store and other ways to support our important work this election year at https://progresstexas.org.
Stories we're following this morning at Progress Texas: In a narrow vote, a committee of the Harris County Democratic Party picked former Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner as their nominee to replace the late Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee in the U.S. House: https://www.texastribune.org/2024/08/13/turner-jackson-lee-november-ballot-houston/ Harris County DA Kim Ogg's "big announcement" is that a joint investigation between her office and the Texas Rangers of suspected election fraud in 2022 has turned up nothing: https://www.houstonchronicle.com/politics/houston/article/ogg-corruption-election-texas-harris-no-fraud-19653715.php That droning, two-hour Donald Trump/Elon Musk borefest earlier this week may have violated federal campaign finance laws: https://thehill.com/homenews/campaign/4826806-end-citizens-united-fec-complaint-trump-musk-interview/ El Paso slaps a huge delinquency charge onto an almost-half-million-dollar debt it's owed by Donald Trump over a 2019 rally he held there: https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-politics/trump-rally-el-paso-payment-b2595353.html The civil trial regarding the responsibility of the parents of the shooter in the 2018 Santa Fe High School massacre continues in Galveston: https://www.nytimes.com/2024/08/14/us/shooting-parents-santa-fe-texas-trial.html As college kids head back to their campuses for the fall, the task of voting from outside their home counties is difficult and requires advance planning: https://www.texastribune.org/2024/08/14/vote-by-mail-texas-2024-election/ Progress Texas will set up our official HQ during TribFests' Open Congress on Saturday Septmeber 7 at Hideout Coffee at 7th and Congress! We'll be live all day recording for the podcast, hanging out with progressive activists including YOU, and moving our stylish merch. Come see us - it's free! https://festival.texastribune.org/event/651560b0-5404-4ea0-b75e-8725c648826d/websitePage:64071bfd-7c25-49f7-a1ca-90f3fa6ff376 See Progress Texas' analysis of Project 2025, and what it will mean for Texas should it be enacted: https://progresstexas.org/blog/project-2025-vs-progress-2025 ...And a complete guide to Project 2025 from Media Matters: https://www.mediamatters.org/heritage-foundation/guide-project-2025-extreme-right-wing-agenda-next-republican-administration The deadline to register for the November election is October 7. Are you registered? Are you sure? ALL Texas voters should confirm their registration, right now: https://govotetexas.org/ Thanks for listening! Find our web store and other ways to support our important work this election year at https://progresstexas.org.
Stories we're following this morning at Progress Texas: Texas progressives should continue to heed warnings issued by both President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris from Texas stages lately about Project 2025, despite Donald Trump's distancing and the Heritage Foundation's claims that they're winding it down: https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2024/07/30/project-2025-director-paul-dans-leaves-heritage-foundation/ ...The planning phase is ending, but the preparations for implementation are full steam ahead: https://www.npr.org/2024/07/30/g-s1-14455/project-2025-trump-heritage ...Those planners feature a rogue's gallery of white supremacist activists, including one who was recently ousted from a position at UT Austin over his racist writing: https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/investigations/2024/07/29/project-2025-racist-writing/74567007007/ National GOP money and attention is pouring into the campaign of Mayra Flores - they see her run against incumbent Vicente Gonzalez as a likely flip: https://www.texastribune.org/2024/07/29/mayra-flores-young-gun-south-texas-hd-15/ A lawsuit brought by the Texas prisoner who inspired the movie "Bernie" over hot conditions in state prisons is being considered in an Austin courtroom: https://apnews.com/article/texas-prison-heat-temperature-air-conditioning-lawsuit-c5018d8d960f6ecb4c99367d444b8339 ...A Texas Newsroom probe finds that several prisoners who have died in custody exhibited extraordinarily high body temperatures: https://www.kut.org/crime-justice/2024-07-29/investigation-texas-prison-heat-inmate-deaths-ac-autopsy-lawsuit Another trial is underway in Galveston, that concerning a lawsuit against the parents of the 2018 Santa Fe High School mass shooter: https://apnews.com/article/school-shooting-texas-santa-fe-civil-trial-96e3cac9ef54c02fa9a6ddfaa32b1732 The deadline to register for the November election is October 7. Are you registered? Are you sure? ALL Texas voters should confirm their registration, right now: https://govotetexas.org/ See Progress Texas' analysis of Project 2025, and what it will mean for Texas should it be enacted: https://progresstexas.org/blog/project-2025-vs-progress-2025 ...And a complete guide to Project 2025 from Media Matters: https://www.mediamatters.org/heritage-foundation/guide-project-2025-extreme-right-wing-agenda-next-republican-administration Thanks for listening! Find our web store and other ways to support our important work this election year at https://progresstexas.org.
A Galveston County judge has pushed back the start of a trial in a civil lawsuit against the parents of the accused gunman in the Santa Fe High School shooting, which left eight students and two teachers dead in 2018.Houston has a new acting police chief in the wake of the abrupt retirement of Chief […] The post Historic church site in South Texas recognized as stop on Underground Railroad appeared first on KUT & KUTX Studios -- Podcasts.
On Tuesday's show: The trial of the Santa Fe High School shooter has been delayed again as Dimitrios Pagourtzis has been recommitted to a state hospital for mental health treatment. His capital murder trial remains on hold nearly six years after the 2018 shooting that killed ten and left 13 others injured. Also this hour: We revisit a 2018 conversation with historian Jon Meacham about his book The Soul of America, which examines some particularly trying times in our nation's history when presidents and ordinary citizens came together to overcome fear and hate. Plus, Dr. Jim Allison, a Nobel Prize-winning cancer researcher at MD Anderson, has been named to the 2024 class of The National Inventors Hall of Fame for his efforts developing immunotherapy as a cancer treatment. We hear from him and from a man whose cancer was treated with immunotherapy. And this weekend, the Houston Symphony is celebrating the centennial of George Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue with a concert featuring the iconic composition and other famous Gershwin tunes.
Ciara Trahan from Texas State softball looks ahead to this weekend's Austin Regional in the NCAA Tournament and why it's a dream come true (2:50), how her interest in softball came from her mom (5:00), the challenging part of being recruited (5:55), this year's mental struggle coming off last year's award-winning season (9:10), the impact of being at Santa Fe High School during the school shooting in 2018 (14:20), and in what ways she leans on her family (16:30).
Santa Fe High School world language teacher Isabelle Teraoka is joined by three of her students – junior Lia Liebanos and sophomores Oswaldo Garcia and Ana Sophia Gutierrez – to discuss the joys of learning French, the benefits of being bilingual, the beauty of the language and the impact of French culture in music, art, architecture and fashion.
Rhonda began to thrive when she helped form the “March for Our Live” with the Santa Fe High School students. The march was held 30 days after the shooting and became a national movement. Rhonda realized that she had a built-in support system with the town of Santa Fe. She focused on gun violence protection and getting Kimberly's Bill passed in the Senate. Rhonda began lobbying for gun owners to get background checks, education in gun safety, and practice safe gun storage. She was invited to give a speech to Congress to lobby for Kimberly's Bill, which would be passed by Congress in 2022. Rhonda believes that her daughter's life did not end with her death. She continues to advocate against gun violence and owns a gun violence prevention office staffed by survivors like herself.
SpeakersPamela Moore, MA, LPCC, currently serves as a Licensed Professional Clinical Counselor and Director of the State Bar of New Mexico's Professional Programs Group where she educates the legal community on positive health and well-being and assists in providing resources and services to any legal professional struggling with mental, emotional or behavioral issues. Ms. Moore served as an advisory member to the National Commission on Lawyer Assistance Programs in 2019 and 2020 and is a current member of the Institute for Well Being In Law. Ms. Moore's professional career includes a BS in Industrial Engineering, Masters Certificate in Human Resources Management, Masters in Counseling, license as a Professional Clinical Counselor, and she is on track to become a Professional Certified Coach by the end of 2022. She has over 10 years of study and experience in self-care and is passionate about assisting, guiding and supporting those that seek to get curious about their life and invite change. Justice David K. Thomson took the oath of office on February 4, 2019, following his selection by the nonpartisan Judicial Nominating Commission and his appointment by the Governor to the New Mexico Supreme Court. Since 2015, Justice Thomson had been serving Santa Fe, Rio Arriba, and Los Alamos Counties as a state trial judge in the First Judicial District.Justice Thomson was born and raised in Santa Fe, New Mexico, and is a graduate of Santa Fe High School. He has an undergraduate degree in Economics and Government from Wesleyan University in Middletown Connecticut. He worked for United States Senator Jeff Bingaman before attending the University of Denver Sturm College of Law and graduating in 1998. After receiving his law degree, Justice Thomson served as term law clerk for United States District Judge Bruce D. Black, District of New Mexico. In 1999 following his clerkship he joined the Office of the New Mexico Attorney General as a litigation attorney, eventually serving until 2010 as Deputy Attorney General. Prior to taking the bench in 2015, Justice Thomson was a sole practitioner admitted to appear in state and federal courts including the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals and the United States Supreme Court.By New Mexico Supreme Court appointment, Justice Thomson has served on the Uniform Jury Instruction-Civil Committee as chair since January 2016, the Performance Measures Subcommittee of the Chief Judges Council since October 2017, and the Guardianship Reform Implementation Steering Committee since March 2018. Justice Thomson graduated from the National Judicial College in 2010. He teaches legal education courses to judges and attorneys on a number of topics including trial practice, civility, judicial ethics, evidence, and administrative appeals. Justice Thomson is a member of the Executive Committee of the American Bar Association Judicial Division and the American Bar Association Appellate Judges Conference and is the state delegate to the Judicial Division of the American Bar Association.Judge Shammara H. Henderson was appointed to the New Mexico Court of Appeals in February 2020 by Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham, and won her election in November of 2020, becoming the first Black appellate judge and Black woman to hold statewide office in New Mexico. Judge Henderson clerked for Justice Charles W. Daniels at the N.M. Supreme Court. She then joined the Second Judicial District Attorney's Office. Afterward, she became the Associate General Counsel for the Office of Governor. Later, she joined the United States Attorney's Office for the District of New Mexico, where she successfully litigated criminal and civil cases and appealed criminal cases. Judge Henderson then co-founded her own law firm Henderson & Grohman, which later joined Freedman, Boyd, et al., where she represented clients in criminal, civil, and administrative matters in both state and federal courts at the trial and appellate level. Judge Henderson has also been an adjunct professor at UNM School of Law since 2019. Her hobbies include yoga, barre, roller skating, hiking, and reading.Judge David Murphy graduated from the University of New Mexico School of Law in 2008. In his career as an attorney, he worked for the Public Defender's Office, District Attorney's Office and Attorney General's Office. He was appointed by Governor Lujan Grisham to the Metropolitan Court in 2019, and to the District Court in 2022. He currently serves in the Second Judicial District Court's Criminal Division, where he also presides over the Veterans Court program. Judge Murphy is a member of the Supreme Court's Equity & Justice Commission, and works as Adjunct Faculty for the Law School's Evidence & Trial Practice class. Outside of work, you can find David riding his bike in the bosque, or walking his corgi, Buster, with his husband Damien.Disclaimer:Thank you for listening! This episode was produced by the State Bar of New Mexico's Well-Being Committee and the New Mexico Lawyer Assistance Program. All editing and sound mixing was done by BlueSky eLearn. Intro music is by Gil Flores. The views of the presenters are that of their own and are not endorsed by the State Bar of New Mexico. The content is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment or legal advice. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition.
Rhonda moved away from Wasilla, Alaska after high school to join the military. She hoped to use her military savings to attend college. Rhonda was on active duty during 9/11 and only three hours from Washington DC. She married 20 and had children shortly after. Her marriage did not last and she moved to Galveston, Texas for joint custody of her children. Rhonda became a bus driver for the Santa Fe, Texas School District. Her daughter Kimberly attended Santa Fe High School. On May 18, 2018, Rhonda was at work during the Santa Fe High School shooting and learned hours later that her own daughter had been killed.
On May 18th, 2018 a student at Santa Fe High School executed 10 people and wounded 13 others. Amongst the 10 people murdered were two educators and eight students. The shooting took roughly half an hour before the killer was arrested. Acclaimed filmmaker Charlie Minn explores all facets of this unknown mass shooting. The movie closely examines the students that were directly affected and what they are doing today. Three years later, the lack of transparency surrounding this tragedy remains intact. "The only way to get to the bottom of this thing is to do your own independent research and talk to as many people as possible." said Minn, who once worked as a producer for the hit television crime show "America's Most Wanted." Minn has also sold movies to LionsGate, Investigation Discovery and Gravitas Ventures. "My movies represent innocent people who have been murdered. The Santa Fe mass shooting would certainly fall under that." said Minn.
On May 18th, 2018 a student at Santa Fe High School executed 10 people and wounded 13 others. Amongst the 10 people murdered were two educators and eight students. The shooting took roughly half an hour before the killer was arrested. Acclaimed filmmaker Charlie Minn explores all facets of this unknown mass shooting. The movie closely examines the students that were directly affected and what they are doing today. Three years later, the lack of transparency surrounding this tragedy remains intact. "The only way to get to the bottom of this thing is to do your own independent research and talk to as many people as possible." said Minn, who once worked as a producer for the hit television crime show "America's Most Wanted." Minn has also sold movies to LionsGate, Investigation Discovery and Gravitas Ventures. "My movies represent innocent people who have been murdered. The Santa Fe mass shooting would certainly fall under that." said Minn.
On May 18th, 2018 a student at Santa Fe High School executed 10 people and wounded 13 others.Amongst the 10 people murdered were two educators and eight students. The shooting took roughly half an hour before the killer was arrested. Acclaimed filmmaker Charlie Minn explores all facets of this unknown mass shooting. The movie closely examines the students that were directly affected and what they are doing today. Three years later, the lack of transparency surrounding this tragedy remains intact."The only way to get to the bottom of this thing is to do your own independent research and talk to as many people as possible." said Minn, who once worked as a producer for the hit television crime show "America's Most Wanted." Minn has also sold movies to LionsGate, Investigation Discovery and Gravitas Ventures."My movies represent innocent people who have been murdered. The Santa Fe mass shooting would certainly fall under that." said Minn.
In this episode of Varsity Under The Sun, Ainslie Lee, the Gainesville Sun high school sports reporter, talks with Santa Fe High School volleyball duo Miya Thomas and Jalyn Stout. The three talk about Santa Fe's state championship last season and how hard the team is working to repeat as champions. Also Miya and Jalyn talk about club volleyball locally, as well as their college recruiting process. Take a listen and subscribe.
Following this week's shooting in Uvalde, Andy speaks with a mother who knows the pain parents of the victims are experiencing. Rhonda Hart lost her 14-year-old daughter, Kimberly, in the 2018 Santa Fe High School shooting in Texas, and talks about how she continues to fight for gun reform despite the uphill battle. Joining the conversation is reporter Jennifer Mascia and former firearms executive Ryan Busse, who explain why politicians won't act on gun reform despite widespread bipartisan consensus among citizens. Plus, Andy processes the tragedy with Last Day host Stephanie Wittels Wachs, who dedicated an entire season to understanding America's relationship with guns and shares how she talked with her 2nd grader about the shooting. Keep up with Andy on Twitter @ASlavitt. Follow Ryan Busse @ryandbusse, Rhonda Hart @KimsMom3, and Jennifer Mascia @JenniferMascia on Twitter. Joining Lemonada Premium is a great way to support our show and get bonus content. Subscribe today at bit.ly/lemonadapremium. Support the show by checking out our sponsors! America's psychiatric emergency systems are struggling to assist those in dire need of help. The Kennedy-Satcher Center for Mental Health Equity, a subsidiary of the Satcher Health Leadership at Morehouse School of Medicine, is partnering with Beacon Health Options to establish critical guidelines for dismantling inequity through its new research and policy initiative. You can join the movement too by attending their upcoming virtual summit. Go to kennedysatcher.org to register today. Beacon Health Options has also published a new white paper online called Reimagining Behavioral Health Crisis Systems of Care. Download it today at beaconlens.com/white-papers. Click this link for a list of current sponsors and discount codes for this show and all Lemonada shows: https://lemonadamedia.com/sponsors/ Check out these resources from today's episode: Read Jennifer's article, “The Buffalo and Uvalde Gunmen Bought Their Rifles Legally at 18”: https://www.thetrace.org/2022/05/uvalde-mass-shooting-ar15-age-restriction/ Order Ryan's book, “Gunfight: My Battle Against the Industry that Radicalized America”: https://www.publicaffairsbooks.com/titles/ryan-busse/gunfight/9781541768734/ Find vaccines, masks, testing, treatments, and other resources in your community: https://www.covid.gov/ Order Andy's book, “Preventable: The Inside Story of How Leadership Failures, Politics, and Selfishness Doomed the U.S. Coronavirus Response”: https://us.macmillan.com/books/9781250770165 Stay up to date with us on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram at @LemonadaMedia. For additional resources, information, and a transcript of the episode, visit lemonadamedia.com/show/inthebubble. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
After the 2018 Santa Fe High School shooting, new laws took affect aimed at making schools safer. Why did they fail in Uvalde? We’ll have the latest on the killing of 19 kids and 2 teachers at Robb Elementary and the growing sense of frustration over previous efforts at addressing school shootings in Texas, and […]
On Thursday's show: Since 2018, homicides involving a gun have been on the rise here, according to Harris County's Institute for Forensic Science. In the wake of the horrifying school shooting in Uvalde, and ahead of this weekend's NRA national meeting in Houston, we discuss the implications of gun violence in the area and what to do about it with Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo. We also discuss how gun laws in Texas haven't changed since a similar tragedy at Santa Fe High School. Also this hour: A new survey reveals what Houston area Muslims say life is like for them in the Bayou City. And, in this month's installment of The Bigger Picture, we explore what the new “folk horror” film Men may be trying to say about masculinity.
Town Square with Ernie Manouse airs at 3 p.m. CT. Tune in on 88.7FM, listen online or subscribe to the podcast. Join the discussion at 888-486-9677, questions@townsquaretalk.org or @townsquaretalk. Today's episode allows us to talk to about the healing processes involved in dealing with the mass shooting in Uvalde, Texas. We seek to form connections— to reach out to others— to know we are not alone. To help sort through all of this from a psychological perspective is Dr. Jeff Temple, Director of the Center for Violence Prevention at UTMB, who served on Governor Abbott's school safety committee after the Santa Fe High School shooting in the Houston area in 2018. We then hear from Tony Monalto, President of Stand with Parkland: The National Association of Families for Safe Schools, whose daughter, Gina Rose Montalto, was a victim of the mass shooting at the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, on February 14, 2018. And, John Martinez shares his deep, heartfelt feelings about his aunt, Irma Garcia, a fourth grade teacher at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde who was also among those killed by the mass shooter on Tuesday. But first, Congresswoman Sylvia Garcia takes time to lend her voice to this discussion to passionately express her sentiments and concern for Congress to take immediate action toward gun violence in America. Town Square with Ernie Manouse is a gathering space for the community to come together and discuss the day's most important and pressing issues. Audio from today's show will be available after 5 p.m. CT. We also offer a free podcast here, on iTunes, and other apps.
Town Square with Ernie Manouse airs at 3 p.m. CT. Tune in on 88.7FM, listen online or subscribe to the podcast. Join the discussion at 888-486-9677, questions@townsquaretalk.org or @townsquaretalk. There's been another school shooting – and this one is close to home. Around 11:45 am today, a shooting was reported at a YES Prep charter school campus in southwest Houston. Here's what we know so far: A former student of the school – an unidentified 25-year-old man, armed with a rifle – injured one staff member before surrendering to law enforcement, according to police. The staff member was rushed to a hospital in the Texas Medical Center in serious condition and is undergoing surgery. Today, we're discussing the the phenomenon of school shootings and the trauma it leads to. How do we process this as a community, and as parents? And how do we keep students safe and help them to feel safe again? Experts in psychology and school violence are here to discuss, and we get the latest on today's shooting from a reporter who was on the scene. Guests: Dr. Jeff Temple Director of the Center for Violence Prevention and psychologist at UTMB He also served on Governor Abbott's school safety committee after the Santa Fe High School shooting in the Houston area in 2018. Kenneth S. Trump President of National School Safety and Security Services Author of "Practical School Security: Basic Guidelines for Safe and Secure Schools" and "Proactive School Security and Emergency Preparedness Planning" Matt Deitsch March for Our Lives cofounder Human rights activist Policy advisor on guns for the 2020 Sanders campaign His siblings are survivors of the Marjorie Stoneman Douglas High School shooting in Parkland, Florida in 2018. A federal judge ruled that law enforcement and school officials had no legal duty to protect students during the shooting. Lucio Vasquez Reporter, Houston Public Media Town Square with Ernie Manouse is a gathering space for the community to come together and discuss the day's most important and pressing issues. Audio from today's show will be available after 5 p.m. CT. We also offer a free podcast here, on iTunes, and other apps.
Hello! We're back after a long break, and almost in time for the start of school. Cat stuff is at about 25:35 Sources include Podcasts: https://open.spotify.com/episode/2vIUBeobftR1J6aYPqAPEP?si=b51c4955340d454c https://open.spotify.com/episode/4C64dr5mf8HZniIKhEFFCu?si=e17ff290591c438d https://open.spotify.com/episode/6ETdxBjOgUZq9NWekk49ar?si=da2d0f2edaa34a24 https://open.spotify.com/episode/7JTbgcS8A9KQ60rVfpiMnt?si=851228ed529f48c7 https://open.spotify.com/episode/4C64dr5mf8HZniIKhEFFCu?si=f5ac8d0264334700 Other sources: https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/kinkel/ https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/2018/local/school-shootings-database/?utm_term=.db5c4be36de1 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thurston_High_School_shooting https://web.archive.org/web/20030216052313/http://www.crimelibrary.com/serial_killers/weird/kids1/kinkel_2.html https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/kinkel/kip/writings.html https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/kinkel/kip/cron.html https://www.cnn.com/2018/05/18/us/dimitrios-pagourtzis-santa-fe-suspect/index.html https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Santa_Fe_High_School_shooting https://cattime.com/cat-facts/health/16381-summer-safety-cats-heatwave https://www.humanesociety.org/resources/keep-pets-safe-heat
On Wednesday's Houston Matters: Electricity is back for all but about 80,000 CenterPoint Energy customers in the Houston metro area, but, as we largely escaped the worst of Nicholas, some communities south and east of us saw a little more damage. We check in with Brazoria County Judge Matt Sebesta about storm surge damage and flooding in Surfside Beach. Also this hour: We break down the latest news in our weekly political roundup. Then, today the Inspiration4 crew is scheduled to launch into space, becoming the first-ever all-civilian orbital flight around the earth. Launching with them will be several experiments designed to study their health -- experiments developed by a Houston-based research effort called TRISH, the Translational Research Institute for Space Health. We talk with one of their scientists about what the project will be studying and how it might benefit life back on the ground. And a documentary that's screening this week tells the stories of students who survived the 2018 school shooting at Santa Fe High School. We talk with Charlie Minn, director of The Kids of Santa Fe: The Largest Unknown Mass Shooting.
ICYMI: Head Football Coach Jared Allen of Santa Fe High School joined Steve Russell on Sport Scene to discuss the kickoff of their Fall season.
Sport Scene Rewind: On Wednesday show, Steve Russell was joined by PFF Sports Analyst Brad Spielberger, Gators Volleyball head coach Mary Wise, Santa Fe High School football coach Jared Allen, and University of Florida Athletic Director Scott Stricklin.
Newberry football coach, Edward Johnson, joins Steve Russell to discuss his team ahead of Friday's season kickoff against Santa Fe High School.
This episode is also available as a blog post: http://realcrime.net/2021/02/25/santa-fe-high-school-shooter-to-remain-in-psych-facility-for-another-year/ (Source) https://wwmt.com/news/nation-world/accused-texas-school-shooter-to-remain-at-state-hospital Twitter: https://twitter.com/trenchreynolds or https://twitter.com/RealCrimeNet Merch: https://www.mooshuandme.com/collections/realcrime-net Support the show: https://anchor.fm/realcrimestories/support --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/realcrimestories/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/realcrimestories/support
The Santa Fe School Shooting was the second-worst school shooting of 2018-- and yet it's been largely forgotten. Out here at SAS, today I interview Leila Butler, a conservative activist who survived the 2018 Santa Fe High School shooting. But unlike most young people at the time, Leila took a stand for the 2nd Amendment in the face of national cries for gun control. The Santa Fe shooting especially stands out because the situation and the students did not FIT the MSM narrative (hence why it wasn't covered).
Nikolete Nikravan went to UHCL, graduated with her BA in Math and her 7-12 Math Certification in May of 2019. She won New Teacher of The Year for Santa Fe High School last school year, and was featured on the news for delivering gift bags to all 97 of her students during covid/distance learning. Currently, Nikolete is a math teacher at Santa Fe HS, coaches girls basketball, and is in school to get her masters in Educational Leadership.
Active Shooter: The Podcast is partnered with the Oracl3 Network.No Notoriety Campaign: www.nonotoriety.comDon't Name Them Campaign: www.dontnamethem.comResearched, Produced, and Written by Kat MorrisProofed by Mari Cole from For the Victim PodcastNarrated by JT Hosack from the True Crime Lab PodcastDisclaimer by Lanie Hobbs from the True Crime Fan Club PodcastPromo by: Victimology https://www.spreaker.com/show/victimologyThe Oracl3 Network. Look Deeper.#oracl3network #lookdeeper #podcastnetwork
What is the new "norm" as kids return to school? How safe are schools anyways? Special interview with former Santa Fe High School student, Mateo Flores and his mother, Keala Speakes. May 18, 2020 marked the 2 year anniversary of the 3rd deadliest high school shooting in US history. No justice for the victims - the shooter and killer.....still not behind bars. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/natal/support
In one of the final TETA interviews, Haley Rae Tucker, from Santa Fe High School, was kind enough to tell a piece of her story in the Techland booth. @minorwisdompod minorwisdompod@gmail.com
Leading into the 86th Texas Legislative Session, much attention was given to the topics of mental health and safety in schools. Recent tragedies, including the Santa Fe High School shooting, emphasized the need to explore how to best support students, their teachers, and our schools as a whole. Senate Bill 11 (SB11), a major focus of this session, aimed to address safe and supportive schools, with mental health being just one component of this legislation. This week we are joined by Tracey Spinner, Director of Comprehensive Health Services and Mental Health for Austin Independent School District (AISD), and Shannon Hoffman, Policy Program Specialist for the Hogg Foundation for Mental Health, to discuss SB11, and the challenges of and strategies for balancing mental health and safety in schools. Related links: Episode 42: Mental Health in Schools http://hogg.utexas.edu/podcast-mental-health-schools Episode 22: Restorative Discipline in Schools http://hogg.utexas.edu/into-the-fold-episode-22-restorative-discipline-in-schools Healthy Educators for Healthy Kids http://hogg.utexas.edu/what-we-do/success-stories/student-mental-health Finding Common Ground on School Safety http://hogg.utexas.edu/school-safety What We Can Do for Our Kids Following the Santa Fe Shooting http://hogg.utexas.edu/santa-fe-shooting Mental health in schools is at a tipping point. Here is what needs to happen. http://hogg.utexas.edu/mental-health-in-schools
Part 4: For some students who have had to return to Santa Fe High School, going back hasn’t been easy. Walking through the doors of the school serves as a constant reminder of the lives lost, their friends and classmates no longer there.
Part 1: A student gunman entered Santa Fe High School on May 18, 2018. He killed 10 people and wounded 13 others, casting this small Texas town into the national spotlight for all the wrong reasons.
It’s been a year since a student gunman walked into Santa Fe High School and killed 10 people and wounded 13 others. Santa Fe: Life After the Shooting goes back to this small Texas community and shares the stories of the people affected – the first responders and survivors, the families heartbroken with loss – who are left searching for answers and forced to move forward with no easy solution.
Justin Timberlake follows through on his word to take care of a Santa Fe High School shooting victim, There are still some limited tickets to get into the Astros Fan Fest this weekend
In this episode the boys address the tragic shooting at Santa Fe High School in Santa Fe, Texas, that claimed the lives of 8 students and 2 teachers, and wounded 13 others. As the NRA continues to double down on it's anti-gun control stance, the boys ask the question: "what will it take?" for people to wake up and find even the smallest amount of empathy for fellow human beings who are literally being slaughtered. The boys reminisce on some of the mass shootings in recent history and lambast the more ridiculous reactions to them as they fight to keep the conversation of a better humanity in the forefront of the public mind. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/podsaveusall/support
Crime reporters see and hear difficult things. I sat down with Scott Reeder, host of Suspect Convictions, to discuss the murder of Jennifer Lewis, the Little Tikes daycare shooting, and his recent interviews with those whose lives have been changed by the the Santa Fe High School shooting. Support the show.
This week The Daily Signal's Kelsey Harkness talks to us about her interview with Santa Fe High School students on the one month anniversary of the shooting. Also, Heritage expert Amy Swearer helps to explain some of the policy issues around our nations school safety crisis. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
From 5.20.18: Author and security expert Andy Brown talks with Tom about Friday’s attack on Santa Fe High School in Texas. Plus, using AR15s or AR10s for home defense and hunting, and Ohio's FASTER school safety program. Tom Gresham's Gun Talk®, 7.1.18 Hour 1
This week we recap the biggest news and happenings around the world of barbecue, including a big pitmaster departures at Franklin Barbecue and La Barbecue. We also talk about the latest word on upcoming BBQ joints opening in the near future such as The Switch, Blood Bros., Micklethwait, and more. A quick word on our recent Doubleback BBQ pop up as well as a final thank you to everyone who helped make the Santa Fe High School benefit the success it was. Tune in every week to hear more stories and interviews!
Which Texans draft pick was sidelined with a foot injury? Robert and Brian have the good and bad news from Minicamp, There was a special visit from the Santa Fe High School football team and we've got player reaction. What kind of a person is Andre Hal in the Texans locker room? You'll hear from Johnathan Joseph, Bernardrick McKinney and Christian Covington after hearing the news of Hal's Cancer Diagnosis. Robert has an exclusive 1-on-1 with Safety Treston Decoud, who explains what Andre Hal and Tyrann Mathieu mean to him in his development as a player. Email LockedonTexans@Mail.com for Questions or Comments. Follow us on Twitter @LockedonTexans, @HSTPodcast and @HouseofHouston Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Which Texans draft pick was sidelined with a foot injury? Robert and Brian have the good and bad news from Minicamp, There was a special visit from the Santa Fe High School football team and we've got player reaction. What kind of a person is Andre Hal in the Texans locker room? You'll hear from Johnathan Joseph, Bernardrick McKinney and Christian Covington after hearing the news of Hal's Cancer Diagnosis. Robert has an exclusive 1-on-1 with Safety Treston Decoud, who explains what Andre Hal and Tyrann Mathieu mean to him in his development as a player. Email LockedonTexans@Mail.com for Questions or Comments. Follow us on Twitter @LockedonTexans, @HSTPodcast and @HouseofHouston Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Jesse and Brittany discuss Teacher Appreciation Week and give some recognition to their favorite teachers, listener voicemails and emails related to ghosts and school shootings, the school shooting at Santa Fe High School, the recent New York Times piece on Jordan Peterson, and a discussion of masculinity. Support the show with CRYPTOCURRENCY – https://dollemore.com/support-show-w-crypto/ Join... The post #408 – “Teacher Appreciation!, Ghost Stories, Santa Fe School Shooting, Jordan Peterson, and Masculinity.” appeared first on I Doubt It Podcast.
Terrible shooting at Santa Fe High School in Texas. A stunning statement from James Clapper. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comFollow Clay & Buck on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/clayandbuckSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
We open today with news of another school shooting this time outside of Houston. Harris County Sherriff Ed Gonzalez Harris County said there “could be 8 to 10 fatalities” from the shooting Friday morning at Santa Fe High School, about 30 miles (48 kilometers) southeast of Houston. Then we are joined by author and prophecy expert Bill Salus to break down the latest prophetic events in the Middle east and Israel. We discuss a number of topics like what is the future of Jerusalem? What will happen between Russia - Iran - Israel & America? How will these end times events play out? Simply Clean Foods - promo code - simply clean
Reflecting on this morning's shooting at Santa Fe High School in TX.Even in Our Darkness: A Story of Beauty in a Broken Life - Jack Deer, formerly an associate professor of Old Testament at Dallas Theological Seminary, is a writer and lecturer who speaks on friendship with God and on the gifts of the Holy Spirit ... He is the author of the bestsellling book "Suprised by the Power of the Spirit".John and Kathy go to the phones: Reflecting on this morning's shooting at Santa Fe High School in TX, what do we have to address to solve school shootings? here is something wrong with our country. What is it?See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Coach Philbrick talks 1995 Edmond Santa Fe football, how to overcome adversity, and making where you're at the "big-time." Introduction: Hey everyone and welcome to the All-Star Leader Podcast, where together we learn about leadership from the best and brightest, and keep it fun by connecting it to our passion for sports! I'm your host Daniel Hare, and today is an extra special episode. We're joined today by my high school football coach Blair Philbrick. Coach Philbrick led the Santa Fe High School Wolves to an 11-2 record and the state semi-finals in 1995, before moving on to coach at several other high schools. He then jumped back to the college level at the University of Tulsa and University of Pittsburgh. In 2012 he left athletics for private business where he has served as a corporate executive coach and a sales director. This is Coach Blair Philbrick. Hey Coach thank you so much for joining us! Interview Questions: Let's start off by talking about the really important stuff: 1995 Santa Fe High School football. What jumps into your mind when you reflect on that season? Was kind of a Remember the Titans type season Still just a brand new school and this was his first head job, so not being sure if he was ready to be a head coach We had a little chip on our shoulder after dividing Edmond into three high schools and wanting to establish who we were When did you know we had something special, and what was it that made that team special? University of Tulsa team camp; really bonded After week one when we lost our starting tailback Ben Satterfield for the season, and how the team responded to that adversity; lost two other key players soon after Even as we were winning, it seemed like we faced significant adversity nearly every week particularly with devastating injuries. What do you remember about that and how did you approach getting us through it? Great coaching staff that was always positive Rory Laisle's injury (severed pancreas) was life/death; lost John Hoeh to a knee injury as well Important to prepare for the adversity, so when it comes it isn't surprising There was a level of naivety he had that we were going to keep going and nothing could happen to us that would cap our potential Awesome to have Rory come back to kick extra points in the playoffs (Daniel: that youth/inexperience/naivety from coach was never felt by the players – we were bought in and assumed he knew what he was doing because it sure looked like he believed it!) He credits the coaching staff which he really relied on; great collaboration and ownership for each coach to coach their own position (Daniel: also faced adversity late in the year when taking our first loss after nine straight wins to open the season) Treated that final regular season game week as a special one; charter bus, etc.; and got it handed to us! Maybe the best lesson prior to the playoffs First playoff game was crazy; significant weather change from 2:30pm (65 F) and then at kickoff it was a blizzard. Got down 10-0 at half before rallying in the second half to win 20-10. We blocked what seemed like a ridiculous number of extra points and field goals; one in particular which essentially led to a come-from-behind first round playoff game. How did we do that?! We blocked eleven kicks that year Had made special teams a priority; given equal time in practice Bryan Houck had a knack for it Season ended with semi-final loss to Lawton McArthur Coach learned a lesson about not overcoaching and changing up what was working Feels responsible (Daniel: If you're a coach, hopefully this conversation reminds you of the impact you have on young people and the great work you're doing.) Okay let's back up a bit and give our audience some context. Tell us a bit about how/where you grew up, and how you got into football and coaching? Fortunate to grow up in a great home; father retired Air Force pilot who taught him well Knew early on that he wanted to be a coach Played five sports in Altus, OK before football/track at Southwestern Oklahoma State University. Taught high school science Raised a family (kids are 27 and 24) Had a Forest Gump life; lots of amazing experiences with amazing people Faith/family has been key You went from coaching in college to coaching in high school, then back to college. Talk to us about the major differences and what you enjoyed most about each. The difference between college and high school is the skill level The transitions back and forth weren't too difficult Players at each level wanted the same things, and the coaches were faced with many of the same things The “big-time” is where you're at (i.e. don't worry about what level you're at). (Daniel: how to do this) – Be the hardest worker and trust that the future/career will take care of itself Enjoyed building relationships with players at all levels; guys who have gone on to the NFL will tell him their favorite time in football was high school. You had the opportunity to work closely with Millennials and Gen-Zers. We know what's written and said about them, but I'm wondering what your first-hand experience has been. Didn't see a change in players from one generation to the next Always great energy Most of what has happened is parenting has changed – kids have been great Be positive/relatable, and learn about your people on a personal level Special questions from former Santa Fe players! Bobby Soltani – The ability to adapt to change is something great leaders tend to have in common. How did your approach to coaching or your coaching style change over the years? Adapt and understand what is important to your organization/players Know your team and have the willingness to want to get to know them Watch other leaders and observe how they adapt to change. (Daniel: did you ever have to change up your coaching style as the game changed) – Defining moment when he recognized the power running game was no longer the most effective strategy and had to adapt. Bryan Dearing – What advice or stories do you tell athletes who are not starters yet but could be? How do you help them reach that goal? One day Bryan asked coach to take him home from practice one day, and he used the opportunity to ask coach what he needs to do in order to play Coach said you have to prepare for a moment that may never come; and then one week later an injury created an opportunity for Bryan to start, which he did the rest of the year (at 5'7”, 140 lbs.) Jake Turner – What would you tell parents who are concerned about their children's safety playing football? Wish we could evolve football to a place with equipment/tech that would make the game safer But players are faster, bigger and stronger, and the physics of the collisions are tough to overcome He advocates middle school as the earliest to start playing, and to learn the fundamentals; until then play flag football Still one of the greatest games and greatest teachers of life / teamwork / family / brotherhood Five rapid fire questions: Name one trait or characteristic you want to see in a colleague. Enthusiasm/passion What habit has been key to your success? Persistence; empathy/emotional intelligence Most important app or productivity tool? Powerpoint/Outlook calendar A resource recommendation (book/podcast/etc.) Bob Beaudine books: The Power of Who (guest on Episode 014) Drive by Daniel Pink The Bible One sentence of advice for our audience of leaders? Never give up. Stay hungry and humble. With God all things are possible Thank Yous/Acknowledgements: Antioch Live/Clear Day Media Group – music More here. Jonathan Davis – production Clint Musslewhite – voice over