Texas
Mysterious meteorite shakes Texas neighborhoods
A mysterious object crashed into Texas this week, shaking neighborhoods close to McAllen within the southern a part of the state close to its border with Mexico. Officers imagine the item was a meteorite, however do not but know the place it landed.
The Alton Police Division, about 11 miles from McAllen, stated they obtained a number of calls from residents who heard what gave the impression of an explosion after 5 p.m. on Wednesday. The division stated they heard different neighboring cities obtained related reviews.
Pictures and movies taken within the space displaying what gave the impression to be a meteor streak by means of the sky have been shared on Twitter. Different home security videos present the earth shake and a loud increase happen when the meteor apparently landed.
Nationwide Climate Service Brownsville stated the device they used to measure lighting, the Geostationary Lightning Mapper, detected a sign at 5:23 p.m. – with no storms within the space. The pictures captured by the mapper look like a potential meteorite, the company stated, including that the photographs might present the meteorite’s entry into the environment.
Hidalgo County Sheriff Eddie Guerra said federal companies advised him that Houston Air Site visitors Management obtained reviews from two aircrafts a few meteorite noticed west of McAllen.
“The place the precise level of impression is unknown,” Guerra stated. “No reviews of any harm in that space has been obtained.”
Meteorites are meteors from house that enter the Earth’s environment and hit the bottom, based on NASA. About annually, an asteroid the scale of a automobile enters Earth’s environment, however they deplete earlier than reaching the floor, creating a formidable fireball that streaks by means of the sky, NASA says.
Extra probably, mud and sand-sized particles enter Earth from house. The truth is, it’s estimated that greater than 100 tons do every day. About each 2,000 years a meteor the scale of a soccer area hits Earth, inflicting important harm.
Rocks from house which are smaller than 82 ft will probably deplete within the environment and will not trigger harm to Earth.
CBS Information has reached out to a number of legislation enforcement companies within the space and is awaiting response.
Texas
Texas education officials to vote on use of Bible in public school curriculum
Texas education officials are expected to hold a vote on Monday on the use of Bible readings in the public school curriculum for kindergarten through fifth grade English and language arts classes.
The board listened to hours of testimonies from those for and against “Bluebonnet learning”, a new curriculum that will affect millions of the state’s elementary public school students.
Those in favor of a Bible-infused curriculum argue that the holy book contextualizes material about famous artworks or texts like Leonardo da Vinci’s mural painting The Last Supper and Dr Martin Luther King’s Letter from Birmingham Jail.
Specifically, as the New York Times notes, The Last Supper would be taught to fifth-grade students through an account of the final meal shared by Jesus and his 12 disciples. The lesson would also involve several verses from the Gospel of Matthew.
In the instance of King’s Letter from Birmingham Jail, King uses biblical characters in his letter to clergymen around the south. Advocates for this curriculum argue that students would need biblical context to comprehend the letter.
The Texas Freedom Network, a watchdog organization which advocates for religious freedom, individual liberties and public education, opposes the curriculum on the grounds that it is biased towards one religion, Christianity.
Carisa Lopez, deputy director of Texas Freedom Network, spoke out against the curriculum during a hearing in September, saying: “Teaching about the influence of religion in history and culture is an important part of a well-rounded education, but you can’t turn public schools into Sunday schools. This is fundamentally a question of respect for religious freedom. Public schools can’t favor one particular religion and promote religious beliefs many students and their families simply don’t share.”
The Texas chapter of the American Federation of Teachers, the second largest teacher’s union in the country, said in a statement ahead of the vote that it believed this curriculum “violate[s] the separation of church and state and the academic freedom of our classroom” and “the sanctity of the teaching profession”.
David R Brockman, a Christian theologian and religious studies scholar who reviewed the curriculum, told the Times that while he has “long been an advocate of teaching about religion in public schools”, he believes lessons should be factual, balanced and not promote one religion over another. He emphasized to the outlet that the Texas curriculum did not adhere to those tenets.
While the curriculum would not be mandatory if approved by the board, schools would be financially incentivized to adopt the new religious-leaning curriculum, receiving roughly $60 per student from the state.
The US constitution prevents public schools from promoting or advancing any particular religion, but states like Texas are part of a growing trend of conservative Christian ideology in public school classrooms.
Oklahoma’s state superintendent, Ryan Walters, announced earlier this year that all schools were required to teach the Bible and the Ten Commandments. Around the same time, Louisiana became the first state to require the Ten Commandments to be displayed in every public school classroom.
Texas was also notably the first state to allow public schools to hire religious chaplains as school counselors.
This movement will likely see support from the upcoming administration of the president-elect, Donald Trump, who in addition to calling for the shuttering of the federal department of education, has vowed to bring prayer back in schools.
If approved, districts could begin using the curriculum by August 2025.
Texas
Marcel Reed, Texas A&M Aggies ‘Not Concerned’ After Win over New Mexico State
After Marcel Reed was officially named the Texas A&M Aggies’ starting quarterback for the remainder of the season following a second-half meltdown against South Carolina, the freshman got another chance at a full game with Conner Weigman backing him up.
The result? A blowout victory at home over New Mexico State.
“I think we came out strong,” Reed said following the contest. “We executed where we were supposed to.”
On the evening, Reed finished with 268 yards, a pair of touchdowns, and an interception. Both Weigman and Aggies third-stringer Miles O’Neil got playing time in the second half as Texas A&M used the game to fine-tune some of its game plan.
Ironically, a 35-point margin of victory wasn’t enough to cover the spread, and all things considered, wasn’t as high as it could have been. Reed was the first to acknowledge that.
“I got sloppy in the second quarter,” he said. “I should have thrown that pick out of bounds, but you have to live with it.”
Between finding Moose Muhammad III and handling business enough to keep New Mexico State at bay, Reed played to his strengths — including a few he’s worked on over the past few weeks.
“Being able to read the defense,” Reed said of what he’s improved on. “Being a vocal leader and being able to command the offense.”
As the Aggies look ahead to their two-week conference stretch, Reed will play a big role in their success and will have to continue to step up in order to keep them tied atop the SEC.
What was on display on Saturday, however, wasn’t anything that worried him, or Mike Elko.
That was perhaps the biggest positive.
“No,” Elko said when asked if he was concerned at the win.” You go into this game wanting to handle business. You do what you have to do.”
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Texas
Despite season lows, Texas’ Jahdae Barron affirms teams’ commitment to Quinn Ewers
The Texas Longhorns squeaked out a somewhat uncomfortable win in Fayetteville over the weekend, even if starting quarterback Quinn Ewers threw for a season-low 176 on 20 out of 32 passes, including two touchdowns. And despite the commendable, albeit at times slow, performance on Ewers’ part, the college football hyper online insist on busting his chops.
Luckily, the team stands firmly behind Ewers.
That much was evidence in starting defensive back Jahdae Barron’s recent comments on Ewers.
Texas DB Jahdae Barron said he went into offensive huddle to hug Quinn Ewers after the fourth-down run: “He has a lot of haters, he has a lot of love. But I love that dude all the way to the fullest. That’s a warrior move.”
— Brian Davis (@byBDavis) November 16, 2024
Emphasis on the love part, at least from Ewers’ teammates, it seems.
Texas head coach Steve Sarkisian backed up his quarterback in his post-game comments.
“Thought he played pretty efficiently,” Sarkisian said, according to Sports Illustrated. “They were going to play it in a manner, in a style, where they were going to try to keep the ball in front of them and make us work the ball down the field. … And what a play for him there on the fourth down to kind of seal the game. So I was proud of him for that.”
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