Texas
‘Found A Way’: Texas A&M’s Win Was Anything But Pretty
The Texas A&M Aggies scraped out a win over the Bowling Green Falcons Saturday evening at Kyle Field, and while it was anything but pretty, it was a win.
That was the overwhelming feeling coursing through the locker room afterward.
“The positive is we won the game,” Aggies coach Mike Elko said when asked what he took away from the contest. “We did the things that we needed to do.”
What did that look like?
Marcel Reed, filling in for a still-hampered Conner Weigman, threw for two touchdowns and led the Aggies in rushing yards. Theo Melin Ohrstrom and Jahdae Walker reeled in a score each and the Maroon & White’s defense staved off the Falcons in the fourth quarter, save for one late field goal.
“When you get into those moments and those situations and it feels like it’s spiraling out of control, you see a lot of teams not find ways to win that football game,” Elko said. “Credit to our guys that we found a way to win it.”
In essence, the Aggies looked fine. They came through when it mattered and ended up in the left column. But they didn’t feel fine. Far from it, actually.
“I thought there were just times in the middle of the game where we didn’t operate the way we needed to,” Elko explained. “Some of that was on Marcel; some of that was on other people.”
Indeed it was. Texas A&M was just 6-15 on third down on the evening, lost a fumble and gave up nearly 50 yards of penalties. Add in three red zone field goals and one from the 25-yard line, and you have a team with self-inflicted wounds.
“You put three touchdowns in there, you put two touchdowns in there, and it kind of changes the makeup of the game,” Elko said. “We couldn’t finish drives … so, many levels of frustration.”
What Elko expressed matched how the players felt as well. Sure, they got to celebrate a win, but they didn’t glean the momentum from it that they could have.
Again, it just didn’t feel good.
“We’re going to go back and watch the tape,” Aggies defensive lineman Nic Scourton said, “see what we got to improve on. Fix some things. Get some guys glued in.”
“It just got a little loose at the end,” Aggies offensive lineman Ar’maj Reed-Adams added. “We just got to do better, finish.”
The Aggies have a test ahead of them. With a trip to Arlington in the cards against an Arkansas Razorbacks squad fresh off a victory of its own, finding momentum might prove to be difficult.
After that, a highly-ranked Missouri Tigers squad will come to play in Kyle Field. That could be even harder. Yet, through it all, the Aggies know they need to remain poised, and remain themselves.
They also need to finish drives. And if that goes well, they’ll put themselves in a much better place.
It might not be pretty, but a win’s a win.
If you ever think you’ve got this game, you don’t.” Elko said. “That’s human nature sometimes … you want to relax, (but) … you can’t do that. If you do that, you’re going to put yourself at risk.”
Texas
North Texas prepares for major World Cup operations
North Texas FIFA World Cup organizers say this week will bring the first visible signs of activity.
“Tomorrow is a very big day for us,” organizer Monica Paul said. “The move-in for the International Broadcast Center for the World Cup begins. So, they will start moving in a lot of trucks, a lot of building out will take place.”
“I feel like we’re ready for this,” organizer Dan Hunt said. “I mean, this city has been built for this.”
Thousands of media arriving soon
Organizers say that by mid-May, 3,500 broadcasters, media, and staff are expected to arrive at the Kay Bailey Hutchison Convention Center.
Transportation planning will involve coordination across multiple cities and agencies, as millions of fans are expected to move across the region once the tournament begins.
“A large stakeholder group has been taking shape to put this transportation plan together,” Paul said. “Our last mobility plan is due to FIFA at the end of March.”
Security effort spans all levels
Safety and security will involve local, state, and federal partners.
“We are working with the White House Task Force for the World Cup,” Paul said. “It was set up specifically to be our federal government liaison with the host cities to address any concerns.”
Organizers say they want to ensure international visitors feel welcome.
Fan festival to anchor celebrations
For fans without tickets, Fair Park will host the FIFA Fan Festival, a large-scale viewing and entertainment experience during the tournament. The full schedule is expected to be released next month.
“With the good fortune we have here, Dallas Stadium will have nine matches which is over 700,000 tickets,” Hunt said. “Fan fest down in Fair Park should do double that. Almost 1.5 million visitors.”
“What I’m excited about is our Fan Fest is estimated to be free to the public and that excites me because everyone who does not have a ticket can also benefit from the energy of celebrating the World Cup,” organizer Nina Vaca said.
Long‑term goals beyond the tournament
With a projected $2.1 billion economic impact, organizers say the broader goal is to grow the game of soccer in North Texas long after the final match.
Texas
Texas Democrats demand AG investigation into X for alleged child sex content
The X logo on the X app formerly known as Twitter is seen in this photo illustration on 01 November, 2023 in Warsaw, Poland. (Photo by Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto via Getty Images)
AUSTIN – Texas Democrat leaders are demanding that state Attorney General Ken Paxton investigate X, formerly Twitter, and the built-in chatbot Grok for alleged child sex abuse content being generated on the site.
The joint letter from the House leaders says sexualized material is being created at a rate that should trigger a Texas law that would require age verification to use the site.
Texas Democrats request X investigation
What we know:
The Monday letter, signed by 43 House Democrats, references reporting that claims investigators have observed around 7,750 sexualized images being generated per hour and at least one nonconsensual image per minute on X.
They note that Grok has been documented generating sexualized or “nudified” images of minors as well.
According to the House Democrats, other regulators, including those in Europe, have already launched their own queries into the social media site and chatbot. Additionally, they say, the National Center on Sexual Exploitation has called on the DOJ and Federal Trade Commission to investigate X and Grok over the same concerns.
The letter says Texas has already established a standard for sites operating as they claim X does: House Bill 1181, enacted in 2023, requires websites where more than one-third of content is sexual material harmful to minors to use age-verification methods to ensure users are over 18.
Proposed investigation requirements
The letter asks Paxton to look into the following:
- Open a formal investigation into whether X, xAI, Grok, or related tools accessible in Texas are being used to create or distribute unlawful sexually explicit deepfakes, nonconsensual intimate imagery, and any AI-generated child sexual exploitation material, and whether platform design choices are facilitating that conduct.
- Investigate whether X is in compliance with Texas age verification requirements under HB 1181, including whether minors can access sexually explicit material or AI tools that generate sexual imagery without reasonable age verification.
- Issue a public enforcement and reporting pathway for victims and parents in Texas, including instructions to preserve evidence, how reports will be routed for rapid investigation when minors are involved, and a point of contact for legislative coordination.
- Provide written guidance to platforms operating in Texas on compliance expectations, including meaningful age gating for sexually explicit material, prompt removal pathways for victims, and cooperation with law enforcement.
What we don’t know:
Paxton has not yet issued a public response to the letter, or announced an investigation into the matter.
What parents and users should know
If you encounter sexualized images of minors or other abusive material online, report it immediately. In the United States, you can contact the FBI tip line or seek help from the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children.
Do not download, share, screenshot or interact with the content in any way. Even viewing or forwarding illegal material can expose you to serious legal risk.
Parents should also talk with children and teens about AI image tools and social media prompts. Many of these images are created through casual requests that do not feel dangerous at first. Teaching kids to report content, close the app and tell a trusted adult can stop harm from spreading further.
The Source: Information in this article comes from the Texas House Democratic Caucus and previous reporting by Fox News.
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