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Tag: Texas

  • Prescott’s Cowboys overcome Mahomes’ fourth-down magic in 31-28 Thanksgiving win over Chiefs

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    ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — Dak Prescott and the Dallas Cowboys still face long odds in trying to rally for a spot in the playoffs.

    They won’t be short on confidence with a win over last season’s Super Bowl runner-up just four days after beating the defending champs.

    Prescott threw for two touchdowns, Malik Davis sprinted 43 yards for a score and the Cowboys overcame two fourth down TD throws from Patrick Mahomes in a 31-28 Thanksgiving Day victory over the Kansas City Chiefs on Thursday.

    CeeDee Lamb scored the first Dallas touchdown and finished with 112 yards on seven catches after drops plagued the star receiver in a 24-21 victory over reigning Super Bowl champion Philadelphia.

    The Cowboys (6-5-1) have won three straight and dropped the defending AFC champion Chiefs (6-6) back to .500 in a matchup of playoff-chasing teams.

    Dallas is 3-0 since 24-year-old defensive end Marshawn Kneeland was found dead of an apparent suicide during the club’s open week. The Cowboys came back from the emotion-filled break with a 33-16 victory over the Las Vegas Raiders.

    “On top of where we put ourselves right before these games and just the place that we’re in, having to get these wins against two elite teams,” Prescott said. “I mean, two teams that played in the Super Bowl last year. Last year’s last year, but you’re talking about two organizations that obviously know how to win and we just beat them both in two great games.

    “On top of everything that we’ve been through.”

    Mahomes had four touchdown passes in his first professional game at the home of the Cowboys, where he played three times for Texas Tech not far from his East Texas roots.

    “They’re the same desperation that we are and they play better over four quarters than we did,” said Mahomes, who threw for 261 yards and was sacked three times, twice by Jadeveon Clowney. “So even though we have good plays here and there, we have be more consistent at the end of the day.”

    Travis Kelce caught Mahomes’ first fourth-down TD toss on a 2-yarder, and Rashee Rice’s second scoring catch came on fourth-and-3 early in the fourth quarter.

    Kansas City was down 10 when Mahomes was almost tripped in the backfield by Quinnen Williams but kept his feet and found Xavier Worthy wide-open down the field for 42 yards, setting up a 10-yard scoring toss to Hollywood Brown with 3:27 remaining.

    Prescott and company didn’t give Mahomes another chance.

    After two pass interference penalties gave Dallas first downs, Prescott hit George Pickens for 13 yards and a clinching first down at the two-minute warning. Prescott knelt three times after that.

    The Chiefs had five pass interference penalties, one that was declined, and another defensive holding that gave Dallas a first down. Kansas City finished with 10 penalties for 119 yards.

    “Bottom line is we’re having too many penalties, and we have to make sure to take care of that,” Chiefs coach Andy Reid said. “No excuses with it. We’re going to clean it up.”

    Rice had eight catches for 92 yards, his first score coming on a 27-yard catch-and-run on the sideline two plays after Prescott was intercepted by Jaylen Watson on the first Dallas possession.

    Davis had just three carries, but his long run gave Dallas its first lead at 17-14 late in the second quarter. Lead running back Javonte Williams scored on a 3-yard catch early in the fourth quarter, and Pickens’ catch on a 2-point conversion put Dallas back in front 28-21.

    The Cowboys were 10th in the NFC entering the game, same as the Chiefs in the AFC coming off nine consecutive AFC West titles. The schedule doesn’t get much easier, although two of the next four opponents — all playoff teams from a year ago — aren’t in the postseason picture at the moment.

    “We’ve got to continue with the same mentality,” Lamb said. “Obviously it’s been a short week. Now we get a little time to rest, a regular week so to speak. We get our bodies back, relax, build, grow, get better and on to next week.”

    Injuries

    Chiefs: The Chiefs lost two offensive linemen to injuries after beginning the game without RG Trey Smith, who was inactive because of an ankle injury. RT Jawaan Taylor injured an elbow, and rookie LT Josh Simmons went out with a wrist injury. … S Bryan Cook injured an ankle in the first half.

    Cowboys: CB Caelen Carson, who had started the previous two games, was inactive after being listed as questionable. He was added to the injury report during the week. … CB DaRon Bland injured a foot in the second half.

    Up next

    Chiefs: Play host to Houston in prime time on Dec. 7.

    Cowboys: Visit Detroit next Thursday night.

    ___

    AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/nfl

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  • Fuzzy Zoeller, two-time major champion haunted by racist joke about Tiger Woods, dies at 74

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    Fuzzy Zoeller, a two-time major champion and one of golf’s most gregarious characters whose career was tainted by a racially insensitive joke about Tiger Woods, has died, according to a longtime colleague. He was 74.

    A cause of death was not immediately available. Brian Naugle, the tournament director of the Insperity Invitational in Houston, said Zoeller’s daughter called him Thursday with the news.

    Zoeller was the last player to win the Masters on his first attempt, a three-man playoff in 1979. He famously waved a white towel at Winged Foot in 1984 when he thought Greg Norman had beat him, only to defeat Norman in an 18-hole playoff the next day.

    But it was the 1997 Masters that changed his popularity.

    Woods was on his way to a watershed moment in golf with the most dominant victory in Augusta National history. Zoeller had finished his round and had a drink in hand under the oak tree by the clubhouse when he was stopped by CNN and asked for his thoughts on the 21-year-old Woods on his way to the most dominant win ever at Augusta National.

    “That little boy is driving well and he’s putting well. He’s doing everything it takes to win. So, you know what you guys do when he gets in here? You pat him on the back and say congratulations and enjoy it and tell him not serve fried chicken next year. Got it?,” Zoeller said.

    He smiled and snapped his fingers, and as he was walking away he turned and said, “Or collard greens or whatever the hell they serve.”

    That moment haunted him the rest of his career.

    Zoeller apologized. Woods was traveling and it took two weeks for him to comment as the controversy festered. Zoeller later said he received death threats for years after that moment.

    Writing for Golf Digest in 2008, he said it was “the worst thing I’ve gone through in my entire life.”

    “If people wanted me to feel the same hurt I projected on others, I’m here to tell you they got their way,” Zoeller wrote. “I’ve cried many times. I’ve apologized countless times for words said in jest that just aren’t a reflection of who I am. I have hundreds of friends, including people of color, who will attest to that.

    “Still, I’ve come to terms with the fact that this incident will never, ever go away.”

    It marred a career filled with two famous major titles, eight other PGA Tour titles and a Senior PGA Championship among his two PGA Tour Champions titles.

    More than winning was how he went about it. Zoeller played fast and still had an easygoing nature to the way he approach the game, often whistling between shots.

    He made his Masters debut in 1979 and got into a three-way playoff when Ed Sneed bogeyed the last three holes. Zoeller defeated Sneed and Tom Watson with a birdie on the second playoff hole, flinging his putter high in the air.

    “I’ve never been to heaven, and thinking back on my life, I probably won’t get a chance to go,” Zoeller once said. “I guess winning the Masters is as close as I’m going to get.”

    Zoeller was locked in a duel with Norman at Winged Foot in the 1984, playing in the group behind and watching Norman make putt after putt. So when he saw Norman make a 40-footer on the 18th, he assumed it was for birdie and began waving a white towel in a moment of sportsmanship.

    Only later did he realize it was for par, and Zoeller made par to force a playoff. Zoeller beat him by eight shots in the 18-hole playoff (67-75). Zoeller’s lone regret was giving the towel to a kid after he finished in regulation.

    “If you happen to see a grungy white towel hanging around, get it for me, will you?” he once said.

    He was born Frank Urban Zoeller Jr. in New Albany, Indiana. Zoeller said his father was known only as “Fuzzy” and he was given the same name. He played at a junior college in Florida before joining the powerful Houston golf team before turning pro.

    His wife, Diane, died in 2021. Zoeller has three children, including daughter Gretchen, with whom he used to play in the PNC Championship. Zoeller was awarded the Bob Jones Award by the USGA in 1985, the organization’s highest honor given for distinguished sportsmanship.

    ___

    AP golf: https://apnews.com/hub/golf

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  • What a federal ban on THC-infused drinks and snacks could mean for the hemp industry

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    MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — The production lines at Indeed Brewing moved quickly, the cans filling not with beer, but with THC-infused seltzer. The product, which features the compound that gets cannabis users high, has been a lifeline at Indeed and other craft breweries as alcohol sales have fallen in recent years.

    But that boom looks set to come to a crashing halt. Buried in the bill that ended the federal government shutdown this month was a provision to ban those drinks, along with other impairing beverages and snacks made from hemp, which have proliferated across the country in recent years. Now the $24 billion hemp industry is scrambling to save itself before the provision takes effect in November 2026.

    “It’s a big deal,” said Ryan Bandy, Indeed’s chief business officer. “It would be a mess for our breweries, for our industry, and obviously for a lot of people who like these things.”

    Here’s what to know about the looming ban on impairing products derived from hemp.

    Congress opened the door in 2018

    Marijuana and hemp are the same species. Marijuana is cultivated for high levels of THC in its flowers. Low-THC hemp is grown for its sturdy fibers, food or wellness products. “Rope, not dope” was long the motto of farmers who supported legalizing hemp.

    After states began legalizing marijuana for adult use over a decade ago, hemp advocates saw an opening at the federal level. As part of the 2018 farm bill, Congress legalized the cultivation of industrial hemp to give farmers, including in Republican Sen. Mitch McConnell’s home state of Kentucky, a new cash crop.

    But the way that law defined hemp — as having less than 0.3% of a specific type of THC, called delta-9 — opened a huge loophole. Beverages or bags of snacks could meet that threshold and still contain more than enough THC to get people high. Businesses could further exploit the law by extracting a non-impairing compound, called CBD, and chemically changing it into other types of impairing THC, such as delta-8 or delta-10.

    The result? Vape oil, gummy candies, chips, cookies, sodas and other unregulated, untested products laden with hemp-derived THC spread around the country. In many places, they have been available at gas stations or convenience stores, even to teens. In legal marijuana states, they undercut heavily taxed and regulated products. In others, they evaded the prohibition on recreational use of weed.

    Some states, including Indiana, have reported spikes in calls to poison-control centers for pediatric exposure to THC.

    A patchwork of state regulations

    Dozens of states have since taken steps to regulate or ban impairing hemp products. In October, Democratic California Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a bill banning the sale of intoxicating hemp products outside the state’s legal marijuana system.

    Texas, which has a massive hemp market, is moving to regulate sales of impairing hemp, such as by restricting them to those over 21. In Nebraska, lawmakers have instead considered a bill to criminalize the sale and possession of products containing hemp-based THC.

    Washington state adopted a program to regulate hemp growing. But the number of licensed growers has cratered since the state banned intoxicating hemp products outside of the regulated cannabis market in 2023. Five years ago, there were 220, said Trecia Ehrlich, cannabis program manager with the state agriculture department. This year, there were 42, and with a federal ban looming, she expects that number to drop by about half next year.

    Minnesota made infused beverages and foods legal in 2022 for people 21 and older. The products, which must be derived from legally certified hemp, have become so popular that Target is now offering THC drinks at some of its stores in the state.

    They’ve also been a boon to liquor stores and to small Minneapolis brewers like Indeed, where THC drinks make up close to one-quarter of the business, Bandy said. At Bauhaus Brew Labs, a few blocks away, THC drinks account for 26% of their revenues from distributed products and 11% of revenues at the brewery’s taproom.

    A powerful senator moves to close the loophole

    None of that was what McConnell intended when he helped craft the 2018 farm bill. He finally closed the loophole by inserting a federal hemp THC ban in the measure to end the 43-day federal government shutdown, approved by the Senate on Nov. 10.

    “It will keep these dangerous products out of the hands of children, while preserving the hemp industry for farmers,” McConnell said. “Industrial hemp and CBD will remain legal for industrial applications.”

    Some in the legal marijuana industry celebrated, as the ban would end what they consider unfair competition.

    They were joined by prohibitionists. “There’s really no good argument for allowing these dangerous products to be sold in our country,” said Kevin Sabet, president and CEO of Smart Approaches to Marijuana.

    But the ban doesn’t take effect for a year. That has given the industry hope that there is still time to pass regulations that will improve the hemp THC industry — such as by banning synthetically derived THC, requiring age restrictions on sales, and prohibiting marketing to children — rather than eradicate it.

    “We are very hopeful that cooler heads will prevail,” said Jonathan Miller, general counsel of the industry group U.S. Hemp Roundtable. “If they really thought there was a health emergency, there would be no year-long period.”

    The federal ban would jeopardize more than 300,000 jobs while costing states $1.5 billion in lost tax money, the group says.

    Drew Hurst, president and chief operating officer at Bauhaus Brew Labs, has no doubt his company would be among the casualties.

    “If this goes through as written currently, I don’t see a way at all that Bauhaus could stay in business,” Hurst said.

    What comes next?

    A number of lawmakers say they will push for regulation of the hemp THC industry. Kentucky’s second senator, Republican Rand Paul, introduced an amendment to strip McConnell’s hemp language from the crucial government-funding bill, but it failed on a lopsided 76-24 vote.

    Minnesota’s Democratic U.S. senators, Amy Klobuchar and Tina Smith, are among those strategizing to save the industry. Klobuchar noted at a recent news conference that the ban was inserted into the unrelated shutdown bill without a hearing. She suggested the federal government could allow states to develop their own regulatory frameworks, or that Minnesota’s strict regulations could be used as a national model.

    Kevin Hilliard, co-founder of Insight Brewing in Minneapolis, said the hemp industry needs a solution before planting time next spring.

    “If a farmer has uncertainty, they’re not going to plant,” Hilliard said.

    ___

    Johnson reported from Seattle. AP congressional reporter Kevin Freking contributed from Washington, D.C.

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  • College Freshman Is Deported Flying Home for Thanksgiving Surprise, Despite Court Order

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    Concord, N.H. (AP) — A college freshman trying to fly from Boston to Texas to surprise her family for Thanksgiving was instead deported to Honduras in violation of a court order, according to her attorney.

    Any Lucia Lopez Belloza, 19, had already passed through security at Boston Logan International Airport on Nov. 20 when she was told there was an issue with her boarding pass, said attorney Todd Pomerleau. The Babson College student was then detained by immigration officials and within two days, sent to Texas and then Honduras, the country she left at age 7.

    “She’s absolutely heartbroken,” Pomerleau said. “Her college dream has just been shattered.”

    According to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, an immigration judge ordered Lopez Belloza deported in 2015. Pomerleau said she wasn’t aware of any removal order, however, and the only record he’s found indicates her case was closed in 2017.

    “They’re holding her responsible for something they claim happened a decade ago that she’s completely unaware of and not showing any of the proof,” the lawyer said.

    The day after Lopez Belloza was arrested, a federal judge issued an emergency order prohibiting the government from moving her out of Massachusetts or the United States for at least 72 hours. ICE did not respond to an email Friday from The Associated Press seeking comment about violating that order. Babson College also did not respond to an email seeking comment.

    Lopez Belloza, who is staying with her grandparents in Honduras, told The Boston Globe she had been looking forward to telling her parents and younger sisters about her first semester studying business.

    “That was my dream,” she said. “I’m losing everything.”

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – Nov. 2025

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  • College football rankings start juggling act at 6-7, while top 5 remain the same

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    The College Football Playoff rankings placed the spotlight on, where else this year, “6-7″ — flip-flopping Oregon and Ole Miss in those spots while keeping their top five teams the same in Tuesday night’s reveal.

    Oregon’s impressive victory over Southern California in one of last week’s few games between ranked teams accounted for the biggest change, moving the Ducks ahead of Mississippi, which didn’t play.

    The other meaningful shift was Miami’s move to No. 12, in a switch with Utah after the Utes gave up 472 yards rushing in a tight win over Kansas State.

    There are two more rankings to be revealed — next Tuesday, then Dec. 7 when the final top 25 will set the bracket for the 12-team playoff to start Dec. 19,

    Pitt’s return to the rankings — at No. 22 — after falling out for a week impacts the meaning of its key Atlantic Coast Conference game this week against the Hurricanes, who need a win and some help to make the conference title game but still have hopes of grabbing one of the playoff’s seven at-large berths.

    “Miami is a team that it really appears is starting to look like the Miami team that started 5-0,” said Hunter Yurachek, the chair of the selection committee.

    Following the Buckeyes for the fourth time in four rankings were fellow undefeated teams Indiana and Texas A&M. Georgia stayed at No. 4, followed by Texas Tech. After Oregon and Mississippi came Oklahoma, Notre Dame, Alabama and BYU at No. 11 and first team out on this week’s proverbial bubble.

    Ohio State and Indiana will play in what should be a 1 vs. 2 Big Ten title game if both win rivalry showdowns on the road over Thanksgiving weekend. Ohio State’s task is more difficult — against Michigan, which moved up three spots to No. 15. Indiana plays Purdue.

    No. 10 Alabama plays at Auburn with a spot in the Southeastern Conference title game on the line. The Tide’s opponent would be Texas A&M if the Aggies win at No. 16 Texas.

    Notre Dame and Miami were compared this week

    After some confusion last week about the weight given to Miami’s opening-week win over Notre Dame, Yurachek said those teams were, indeed, close enough in the rankings this week to be compared head-to-head. But still, that victory was not enough to push the Hurricanes past Notre Dame.

    “We compare a number of things when looking at teams closely ranked together,” Yurachek said. “We’ve got some teams ranked between Miami and Notre Dame, such as Alabama and BYU, who we’re also comparing Miami to.”

    Could Kiffin’s job status impact Ole Miss?

    Among the factors the committee can consider is the availability of players and coaches, which has potential to bring Ole Miss coach Lane Kiffin’s job status into play.

    Word from Oxford is that a decision will come on Kiffin’s potential move to LSU or Florida after this week’s game against Mississippi State. An Ole Miss team without one of the most sought-after coaches in the game wouldn’t seem as good as one with him.

    Still, Yurachek wouldn’t tip his hand on how that evaluation might go.

    “We’ll take care of that when it happens,” Yurachek said. “We don’t look ahead. The loss of player, loss of a key coach, is in the principles of how we rank teams, but we don’t have a data point for how we look at Ole Miss without their coach.”

    Ducks move to ‘where they need to be’

    After Oregon’s 42-27 win over USC, coach Dan Lanning said his team deserves credit for the schedule it plays — which included a tough conference game during a week in which many in the SEC were going against non-ranked, double-digit underdogs.

    The committee agreed.

    “We’ve been waiting for them to have that signature win to really put them where they need to be,” Yurachek said.

    Conference watch

    ACC — No. 18 Virginia and No. 21 SMU are the favorites to reach the title game, which means one of them has an inside edge to be in the playoff. The Hurricanes are likely in an at-large showdown with the likes of BYU, Vanderbilt and maybe Alabama.

    Big 12 — BYU is angling for another crack at Texas Tech in the title game. Hard to see the Cougars getting there, losing to the Red Raiders again and still making the playoff.

    Big Ten — Ohio State, Indiana and Oregon are locks. Michigan’s move up three to No. 15 gives the Wolverines a chance at an at-large bid (or maybe the conference title) with a win this week over the Buckeyes.

    SEC — Texas A&M, Georgia, Mississippi and Oklahoma should all be in. Alabama can’t really afford a third loss, but what if that loss comes in the SEC title game? The Tide makes it by beating Auburn. Vanderbilt would strengthen its case with a win at No. 19 Tennessee this week.

    Group of 5 — No. 24 Tulane of the American is still the only team from a non-power conference in the rankings. One problem. BetMGM Sportsbook has North Texas as the favorite to win the league title. That, in turn, could bring someone like James Madison back into the conversation.

    Projected first-round playoff matchups

    No. 12 Tulane at No. 5 Texas Tech: Could the Red Raiders, a deep-pocketed disruptor in the college football space, also turn into one of the sport’s powerhouses?

    No. 11 Miami at No. 6 Oregon: The Mario Cristobal Bowl — Hurricanes coach left Ducks suddenly in 2021 to return home.

    No. 10 Alabama at No. 7 Mississippi: Kiffin, the old offensive coordinator at Alabama, is 0-4 vs. Tide with Ole Miss.

    No. 9 Notre Dame at No. 8 Oklahoma: Notre Dame’s first televised game was a 27-21 win over OU in 1952.

    ___

    Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here and here (AP News mobile app). AP college football: https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-football-poll and https://apnews.com/hub/college-football

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  • 36 Hours in San Antonio, Texas: Things to Do and See

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    Stroll a 15-mile riverside promenade, eat street-style tacos and dance to Tejano and cumbia music in this big Texan city with a small-town feel.

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    Samuel Rocha IV and Stacy Sodolak

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  • NC State can’t stop Texas in final Maui game. What we learned from the loss

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    N.C. State’s Ven-Allen Lubin slams in two during the second half of the Wolfpack’s 114-66 win over North Carolina Central at Lenovo Center on Monday, Nov. 3, 2025, in Raleigh, N.C.

    N.C. State’s Ven-Allen Lubin slams in two during the second half of the Wolfpack’s 114-66 win over North Carolina Central at Lenovo Center on Monday, Nov. 3, 2025, in Raleigh, N.C.

    The News & Observer

    Texas is not known for its long ball, but that’s what it used to defeat N.C. State in the fifth-place matchup to close the Maui Invitational on Wednesday night.

    The Wolfpack fell to the Longhorns, 102-97, to go 1-2 in the Thanksgiving week tournament in Hawaii.

    “Just not good enough on any facet. I didn’t have us prepared like we needed to, and just very disappointing game today and, quite frankly, just an incredibly disappointing week for us,” head coach Will Wade said. “This is not our standard. This is not what we strive to be. This was [an] extremely, extremely disappointing week.”

    N.C. State (5-2) jumped out to a five-point lead in the first half thanks to an effective defensive effort. Texas, however, made 9 of 11 shot attempts during an eight-minute stretch to build a 15-point lead. Of those nine baskets, four were 3-pointers.

    The Longhorns (6-2) led by 10 at the break, scoring on 8 of 13 attempts from downtown. They were led by Jordan Pope, who had 17 points in the opening period and made 5 of 7 attempts from downtown. It was his seventh double-figure game of the season.

    It took a little time for Texas to find its stride once again from the arc in the second half, but once it did, the Longhorns seemed unstoppable. They effectively broke double teams to find an open man and made great shots in transition. Texas went on a 10-0 run, which included three consecutive 3-point field goals, midway through the second half, which the Wolfpack was unable to overcome.

    Texas shot 41 of 134 (30.6%) from 3 in its first six games. It finished 16-32 (50%), for its most efficient 3-point shooting and most 3-point field goals in a game this season.

    N.C. State scored 60 points in the second half, its offense flowing far better than it did in the first half.

    The Wolfpack can attribute the success — and its comeback attempt — to its effort on both ends of the floor. It was more aggressive on defense, though sometimes too aggressive, and the team moved the ball with more purpose and didn’t take as many contested one-on-one shots. It had 10 assists on 20 made field goals, compared to four assists on 14 baskets in the first half.

    Alyn Breed made a layup with eight minutes to go and gave N.C. State a 71-70 lead.

    Unfortunately the team couldn’t build on that, with Texas’ 3-point shooting (and its own foul trouble) too much to overcome.

    “I apologize to our fans. We had the most fans here,” Wade said. “People sacrificed. People paid hard-earned money to watch us play, and they should be pissed. That’s why we’ve got passionate fans. That’s why we’ve got great fans. They’re upset, and they should be. This isn’t how we should be playing. This isn’t the standard which we play at.”

    N.C. State received positive contributions from several players, including Paul McNeil and Ven-Allen Lubin.

    McNeil provided a surge of energy to open the game. McNeil scored a pair of baskets, including a layup that ended a 3 ½-minute scoring drought and stretch of five missed shots. McNeil also pulled down two rebounds and one steal in his first 13 minutes of play.

    The North Carolina native hit a 3-pointer at the end of the shot clock, cutting N.C. State’s deficit to 10 points at halftime. He added another 3, on a pass from Darrion Williams, with 15 minutes remaining in the game to make it 54-53. McNeil finished with 20 points and a trio of 3-pointers.

    Lubin provided the Wolfpack with another big performance. He scored a season-high 23 points, one shy of his career high, and pulled down nine boards. He hit a layup and free throw to tie the game at 64. Lubin scored in double figures all three days of the tournament, including one double-double.

    Quadir Copeland also led the team with 28 points, four rebounds and six assists.

    One positive was the Wolfpack’s aggression off the glass. This area was always going to be a challenge for N.C. State, which was still out-rebounded 31-28, but it was facing one of the best rebounding teams in the country.

    Texas entered the game ranked No. 9 in the nation for total rebounds per game (45.9) and No. 14 in defensive rebounds per game (31.1), but was held under its average.

    Pope led the Longhorns with 28 points, including seven baskets from long range, and added four assists.

    “This is a disappointing feeling. We let a lot of people down,” Copeland said. “We had so many fans here. Apologize to the guys that came here and supported us. We had so many people here. We let them down. We let ourselves down. We let the staff down. We’re going to be better from this.”

    Cutting off easy baskets

    Wolfpack coach Will Wade’s ideal half-court defensive set is one that keeps the ball in the midrange and beyond.

    “The ball doesn’t touch the paint. You keep the ball out of the paint, you force a non-paint shot, you contest the non-paint shot, and you’ve got a better chance to rebound,” Wade said before leaving for Hawaii. “I mean, that’s simplistic.”

    N.C. State, which has averaged 26.7 opponent paint points per game, did a better job shutting down the interior against Texas. The defense collapsed the paint and held Texas to six points inside the lane through the first 13 minutes of play. At halftime, the Longhorns had scored 10 points in the paint.

    The Wolfpack ultimately held the Longhorns to 20 points in the lane, while scoring 44 of its own.

    This has been a liability at times. N.C. State allowed Alabama-Birmingham to score 44 in the second game of the season. It gave up 40 points to Seton Hall in the first game of the tournament. It allowed just 14 to Boise State on Wednesday.

    If the Pack can more consistently limit paint touches, it has the chance to be effective. Texas had merely had an uncharacteristically strong 3-point performance, overshadowing N.C. State’s efficiency inside.

    Foul issues take center stage

    Foul trouble plagued the Wolfpack in its final game of the Maui Invitational, with N.C. State picking up 10 fouls in the first half.

    Of those fouls, six took place in the first nine minutes of play. At the break, Williams, Quadir Copeland, Breed and Tre Holloman all had two fouls.

    N.C. State continued to pick up foul calls in the second half. With 12 minutes remaining in the game, the Wolfpack’s senior quartet and freshman Musa Sagnia had at least three fouls each.

    The Longhorns were in the bonus for the final 12 ½ minutes of the game.

    Holloman fouled out with 2 ½ minutes left in the game, while Breed and Williams also fouled out late in the contest. This was the second game in a row that Williams and Holloman fouled out.

    N.C. State has to figure out how to play cleaner defense, because it can’t afford to have some of its most senior players sitting on the bench.

    Free throws

    N.C. State was relatively efficient from the free throw line in Maui, but some of its misses came at inopportune times. The most notable? Williams’ two misses after a Texas technical foul.

    Matas Vokietaitis was called for a foul after Lubin made a layup, giving the Wolfpack an and-1 opportunity. The Texas big man spiked the ball in frustration after the call, hitting an official in the face. He was assessed a technical foul. Williams, who had missed only two free throws the entire season, went 0 for 2 on his trip to the line. Lubin, however, made the and-1 to tie the game at 64.

    McNeil also missed an and-1 opportunity early in the game, while Copeland went 1 of 2 on a trip to the line in the first half. Then, the senior missed the front end of a 1-and-1 with two minutes left.

    The Wolfpack finished 20-28 (71.4%) on free throws, and in a five-point game, it could have used a few more.

    N.C. State shot 34 of 45 (75.5%) from the free throw line in the first two games. It averages 77.1% this season.

    This story was originally published November 27, 2025 at 12:14 AM.

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  • Texas parents can use $10K school vouchers at private pre-Ks in 2026, state says

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    Max Villalobos, 3, paints while attending pre-K at The Morris Foundation Child Development Center on Tuesday, Sept. 24, 2024. Fort Worth ISD and PreK Today partnered this school year to provide pre-K to Fort Worth ISD students at community-based Head Start centers.

    Max Villalobos, 3, paints while attending pre-K at The Morris Foundation Child Development Center on Tuesday, Sept. 24, 2024. Fort Worth ISD and PreK Today partnered this school year to provide pre-K to Fort Worth ISD students at community-based Head Start centers.

    amccoy@star-telegram.com

    Parents of qualifying children in Texas will be able to receive the state’s standard school voucher of about $10,000 to attend private preschools, a major win for families and child care providers.

    The Texas Comptroller’s office released final rules this week on the framework for the $1 billion private school voucher program, dubbed the Education Freedom Accounts or Education Savings Accounts.

    The program will provide public dollars to families who want to send their children to private schools based on income levels, a lottery system and priority groups, including students with disabilities. Families can apply starting in February and use the vouchers in the 2026-27 school year.

    The initial guidance released in August appeared to only offer $2,000 to families of pre-K students, unless parents enrolled their children in a program accredited by the Texas Private School Accreditation Commission.

    Experts say most private pre-K providers receive accreditations through other agencies and organizations. The final rules clarify that other accrediting entities will be recognized, including the National Association for the Education of Young Children, the American Montessori Society and Texas Rising Star — the state’s quality rating and improvement system for child care programs managed by the Texas Workforce Commission.

    In a Tuesday announcement, Acting Texas Comptroller Kelly Hancock said certain pre-K students who currently qualify for free, state-sponsored pre-K can receive the standard $10,000 voucher. In Texas, this refers to 3- and 4-year-olds who are from low-income households, are experiencing homelessness, are unable to speak or comprehend English, or have a parent who is an active-duty military member.

    The clarification is considered a win for private preschool and child-care providers, who have voiced financial concerns to lawmakers over the loss of enrollment of 3- and 4-year-olds to free programs offered by public school districts.

    “These administrative rules, like the program itself, put Texas parents in the driver’s seat,” Hancock said. “We are executing the letter of the law as passed by the Legislature, and we’re doing it with families and students at the center of every decision. Education freedom accounts are about opening doors, expanding opportunities and giving each Texas child the chance to succeed in the environment that fits them best.”

    Catherine Davis, director of policy for Fort Worth-based Child Care Associates, said she was thrilled about the clarification, which she said will provide parents with more educational options for their children. The child care and development nonprofit operates more than a dozen centers in the Tarrant County area.

    “The goal of the (Texas Education Freedom Accounts) program has always been to empower parents to decide on the best educational setting for their child,” Davis said. “And, for many parents of our youngest learners, that is often a high-quality early learning provider in their community.

    “We’re thrilled that the Comptroller has clarified that prekindergarten and kindergarten-aged children who wish to enroll in a high-quality child care program will be eligible to receive the full ESA amount, rather than be capped at $2,000 as previously stipulated in the original rules, and are proud to have worked alongside many child care providers to advocate for this change.”

    Davis also noted the $10,000 vouchers will help children who are the on the state’s lengthy waiting list for child care scholarships that now exceeds 95,000.

    “It is important to note, however, that the new rules do clarify that an (Education Savings Account) can only be used for the hours of the prekindergarten day, meaning families will likely be required to use a different payment source for before- and after-care, as well as summer hours,” Davis said.

    Child Care Associates is reviewing the new rules and plans to help child care providers understand the law and its requirements, she added.

    Tim Kaminski, president of the Texas Licensed Child Care Association, echoed Davis’ sentiments, noting he was grateful that Hancock listened to the concerns voiced by his organization and other child care advocates after the release of the proposed rules. Kaminski and other private, licensed child care providers provided public testimony to the Texas Comptroller in September, he said.

    “TLCCA looks forward to working with families and providers to help them navigate the enrollment process of the ESA program over the next several weeks. We appreciate Comptroller Kelly Hancock’s response to the needs of Texas families and Texas child care providers,” Kaminski said.

    This story was originally published November 26, 2025 at 1:28 PM.

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    Lina Ruiz

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Lina Ruiz covers early childhood education in Tarrant County and North Texas for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. A University of Florida graduate, she previously wrote about local government in South Florida for TCPalm and Treasure Coast Newspapers.

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  • Thanksgiving travel: Here’s when AAA says Texas highways will be busiest

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    There’s just no way to avoid busy roads during the holidays.

    Whether it’s traffic into an airport or traffic on Interstate 35, many Texans are heading home to spend Thanksgiving with their loved ones.

    Roadside assistance organization AAA released its Thanksgiving travel forecast this week, and an estimated 5.8 million Texans will venture out on the roads from Nov. 25 until Dec. 1 — and 90% of those travelers will be road tripping.

    Though every year is bound to be busy, this year is predicted to be the busiest it has been since Thanksgiving 2019, before the pandemic, when 5.6 million Texans traveled.

    So here’s what to expect if you’re road tripping in Texas. Have a safe holiday weekend!

    Busiest travel days during Thanksgiving weekend on the highway

    AAA predicts 5.3 million Texans will travel by car from Nov. 25 until Dec. 1. Tuesday, Nov. 25, and Wednesday, Nov. 26, are expected to be the busiest afternoons, while Sunday, Nov. 30, will also hold heavy return traffic.

    According to the nationwide forecast, these are the best and worst times to drive over the travel period:

    Wednesday, Nov. 26

    • Best: Before 11 a.m. 
    • Worst: Between 11 a.m. and 8 p.m. 

    Thursday, Nov. 27

    • Minimal traffic expected.

    Friday, Nov. 28

    • Best: Before 11 a.m. 
    • Worst: Between 1 p.m. and 7 p.m. 

    Saturday, Nov. 29

    • Best: Before 10 a.m. 
    • Worst: From 1 p.m. to 8 p.m. 

    Sunday, Nov. 30

    • Best: Before 11 a.m. 
    • Worst: Between 11 a.m. and 8 p.m. 

    Monday, Dec. 1

    • Best: After 8 p.m.
    • Worst: Between noon and 8 p.m. 

    This story was originally published November 26, 2025 at 12:18 PM.

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    Ella Gonzales

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Ella Gonzales is a service journalism reporter for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. She is part of a team of local journalists who answer reader questions and write about life in North Texas. Ella mainly writes about local restaurants and where to find good deals around town.

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  • Muslim groups, other leaders demand Abbott rescind CAIR’s ‘terrorist’ designation: ‘Defamatory’

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    A group of Muslim and interfaith leaders are urging Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, a Republican, to reverse his proclamation designating the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) as a “foreign terrorist organization.”

    Texas’s designation is state-level only. It does not carry the legal force of a federal Foreign Terrorist Organization (FTO) listing, which only the U.S. State Department can issue. Abbott’s proclamation, therefore, does not trigger federal terrorism penalties or authorities.

    The leaders of several Muslim groups held a news conference on Tuesday to denounce the governor’s proclamation, which also labeled CAIR as a “a transnational criminal organization.”

    The groups called on the governor to retract his labeling of the civil rights group, calling it defamatory, destructive and dangerous, according to Fox 4.

    MUSLIM CIVIL RIGHTS GROUP CAIR SUES TEXAS OVER ABBOTT’S ‘TERRORIST’ DESIGNATION

    Muslim and interfaith leaders are urging Texas Gov. Greg Abbott to reverse his proclamation designating CAIR as a terrorist organization. (Brandon Bell/Getty Images)

    This comes after CAIR filed a lawsuit against Texas over the governor’s declaration, arguing that it violates both the U.S. Constitution and state law.

    CAIR argues the order violates its First Amendment rights and due-process protections, and that Texas overstepped its authority because terrorism designations fall under federal, not state, jurisdiction.

    “The governor is attempting to punish the nation’s largest Muslim civil rights and advocacy organization simply because he disagrees with its protected First Amendment rights to criticize a foreign state that is conducting genocide. This is not only contrary to the United States Constitution, but finds no support in any Texas law,” Mustaffa Carroll, the executive director for CAIR Dallas Fort Worth, said at the news conference on Tuesday.

    “You know that CAIR has condemned Hamas attacks. You know that CAIR has spent 31 years fighting terrorism and bigotry. You know that the terrorism boogeyman you invoke is nothing more than a tired, formulated playbook to stoke fear of Muslims,” Marium Uddin of the Muslim Legal Defense Fund said on Tuesday.

    Texas Gov. Greg Abbott in front of microphone

    CAIR filed a lawsuit against Texas over the governor’s declaration, arguing that it violates both the U.S. Constitution and state law. (Ron Jenkins/Getty Images)

    Leaders from other faiths, including Jewish voices, also spoke out against Abbott’s label.

    “We stand steadfast in solidarity with our comrades in CAIR and in unwavering support in their lawsuit against Abbott’s false and unconstitutional proclamation,” Jewish Voice for Peace’s Deborah Armintor said.

    State Rep. Terry Meza, a Democrat, added that the governor’s words “are not just wrong, they’re dangerous. Making comments like this is dangerous to our Muslim community.”

    TEXAS GOV ABBOTT DECLARES CAIR, MUSLIM BROTHERHOOD AS TERRORIST GROUPS, PREVENTING LAND PURCHASES

    Texas Gov. Greg Abbott arrives at press conference

    The Muslim groups called on the governor to retract his labeling of CAIR, calling it defamatory, destructive and dangerous. (Antranik Tavitian/Reuters)

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    The lawsuit is ongoing, and it remains unclear whether a court will uphold Abbott’s order or strike it down as exceeding state authority.

    The governor’s decree bars CAIR from buying land in the Lone Star State under a new statute aimed at curbing purchases tied to “foreign adversaries.”

    Abbott’s order also extended the “terrorist” label to the Muslim Brotherhood, despite the federal government never classifying either group that way.

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  • Texas Summer Camp Owners Prepare for More Mental Health Issues Among Youth After July Floods

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    Texas officials are requiring youth camps to have weather alert systems, mandated emergency preparedness plans, and various communication methods to help children and their families feel safe when they return this summer. But one thing is still missing from the state plan that some camp leaders say would ensure complete safety at all camps — initiatives to address the mental health of those returning to a place of tragedy.

    After the devastating July 4 Hill Country floods that killed at least 137 people, including 27 campers and counselors at Camp Mystic, those who are expected to return to Texas camps this summer could be dealing with the fear of the water, extreme emotions during weather events, consistent nightmares, and more.

    One of the primary challenges in addressing the mental health needs of campers, staff and their families is that they are spread out across the state, only coming together during the summer. Resources have been poured into Texas Hill Country for flood victims, but for campers and their families who might live miles away, this does little to help.

    Camp owners say this is why camps should be better prepared for their return.

    “I am in 100% support of engaging in the physical safety, but I think it has distracted a little bit from the importance of focusing on other aspects of wellness,” Brandon G. Briery, chief program officer at Centerpoint-based Camp Camp, said.

    State lawmakers over the summer passed House Bill 1 and Senate Bill 1 requiring camps to address various safety measures including emergency preparedness plans and communication systems, but they gave no guidance to camps on how to serve the mental health needs of campers and staff.

    Keli Rabon, a Houston mother whose sons survived the flood at Camp Junta, told lawmakers three weeks after the Hill Country flood during a committee hearing in Kerrville, that for her family the storm wasn’t over. She said her son scans every room for higher ground, checks the weather constantly and battles nightmares of water dripping from the ceiling, and she has been struggling to find the mental health resources to help him.

    “I have asked the camp. I have asked FEMA. The answer is the same: ‘Sorry, we don’t know what to tell you. You are in Houston,’” Rabon said demanding that mental health care be a central, funded part of the state’s disaster response. “… I shouldn’t have to rely on a Facebook group of volunteers to find trauma care for my children.”

    Sens. Pete Flores of Pleasanton and Charles Perry of Lubbock, who were committee chair and vice chair of the flood investigation committee and authors and co-sponsors of SB 1 and HB 1, did not respond to interview requests about mental health resources. Gov. Greg Abbott ’s office forwarded questions about mental health resources for camps to Texas Health and Human Services, which did not provide information by the story’s publication.

    Even before the flood, the mental wellness of campers and staff had been a growing concern for camp leaders. As youth mental health has declined across Texas and the country over the past six years, camp directors have reported multiple campers coming in with signs of anxiety and other mental illnesses, and staff — usually college students and young adults — with signs of depression and other more severe mental health problems.

    Briery, whose six-year term on the state’s Youth Camp Program Advisory Committee ended in August, said he and several others had been advocating for the state’s camp licensing board to consider adding higher-level training requirements for staff to address mental health concerns. He said a work group had been created around the topic and was supposed to convene after the summer camp season ended, but the July 4 flood put those plans on hold — right when it was needed most.

    “While the physical safety of our camp community is what’s on everyone’s top of mind right now after the events of July, we have to look at the entire person’s safety, and that includes mental wellness,” Briery said.

    When news about the tragedy at Camp Mystic reached Laity Lodge Youth Camp in Leakey, it was like the world had been turned upside down. Laity staff members mourned the deaths as if they were their own while they answered the anxiety-riddled questions of their young campers. The portion of the East Frio River that butts up against them — a source of joy for so many of them before it was shuttered for the rest of the summer — became a grim reminder of the tragedy that unfolded just 36 miles away.

    “When I think of the summer, it is split into two parts. Pre-flood and post-flood, because everything felt so different. There was this heaviness afterwards,” said Blayze Sykes, the camp supervisor for Laity Lodge.

    Kaplow said each year, more Texas children are becoming survivors of natural disasters, creating a generation of weather anxiety-filled youth.

    A study of the Greater Houston area from 2019 to 2023 found that successive weather disasters and events had an effect on emergency department visits for depression and anxiety. It found distinct seasonal patterns, with specific periods, consistently showing higher demand for mental health services.

    Weather-related mental illness can be complex to diagnose in children at first glance because their actions mirror ADHD symptoms, Kaplow said. Children affected with weather-related trauma may be hypervigilant, which might appear as though they are easily distracted.

    Other signs can range from a student exhausted at their desk in the classroom to obvious signs of crying or becoming aggressive toward other peers.

    “It’s not enough to intervene in the immediate aftermath. We want to make sure people recognize that this will be a long-term effort to help kids heal,” said Kaplow.

    While camp can’t be the replacement for professional mental health treatment, studies have found that well-structured mental health programs at camps can counter struggles regarding depression, anxiety, feelings of hopelessness, and difficulty forming positive peer relationships in young people.

    “The time is now. Suppose there were ever a time to give attention to mental well-being at camp, to create an environment where it thrives. In that case, it’s now,” said Cary Hendricks, executive director of Laity Lodge Camping Programs.


    One approach to integrating mental health into camps

    Families seeking to disconnect their children from technology have long turned to summer camps to help them immerse in nature. Mental health experts have also promoted the benefits of nature-focused camps for children’s emotional well-being.

    But, what happens when the outdoors becomes the reason for grief?

    “We know, and frankly, take it for granted that so many camps are in the outdoors and therefore have that kind of restorative benefit for campers and staff. The events of July 4 reminded us that those elements are also hazardous and destructive,” said Laurie Pearson, the senior director of innovation and learning for the American Camp Association.

    Camps across Texas are wrestling with trying to maintain the summer-camp feel of the past for campers and staff who are now very aware of the dangers that surround them.

    “I know we have already had campers signed up who have experienced very traumatic things, so that is where we are focused on. What can we do?” said Meg Clark, owner of Camp Waldemar.

    Pearson said the CampWell program, a skills-based training course on building resilience, teaches staffers and campers how to regulate their emotions, like fear and anxiety, using methods such as breathing exercises, activities, conversation, and other non-medical means.

    Camps who go through CampWell training try to create a safe, supported and connected environment among staff who can then model and teach relevant skills to campers. This in-person program evaluates a camp’s culture, including its training and screening processes and programs, to ensure it promotes mental and physical well-being.

    Fifteen camps in Texas began implementing the CampWell program earlier this year. Little did these camp directors know how necessary this training would be for staff later that summer, when the flood required them not only to deal with their own emotions but also to address the emotions of hundreds of young campers who had a slew of questions about what happened. Those who went through the training said it helped them by teaching them emotional regulation techniques like breathing exercises and confidence building.

    Sykes said in the months after the flood, the CampWell program has helped Laity’s staff build their own community of support.

    “Looking back at it, the greatest resource we had was each other,” Sykes, staff manager at Laity Bird Lodge campgrounds, said.

    Hendricks said lawmakers have the opportunity to lay the foundation for a better future for youth mental health, and it should start with youth summer camps.

    “The same way that the state requires us to do proper lifeguard training and food services, what if mental health were equally as important, and what if camps were required to do some mental well-being training? We would love to see that future,” he said.

    Jessica Shuran Yu contributed reporting.

    This story was originally published by The Texas Tribune and distributed through a partnership with The Associated Press.

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – Nov. 2025

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  • New limits for a rent algorithm that prosecutors say let landlords drive up prices

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    Landlords could no longer rely on rent-pricing software to quietly track each other’s moves and push rents higher using confidential data, under a settlement between RealPage Inc. and federal prosecutors to end what critics said was illegal “algorithmic collusion.”

    The deal announced Monday by the Department of Justice follows a yearlong federal antitrust lawsuit, launched during the Biden administration, against the Texas-based software company. RealPage would not have to pay any damages or admit any wrongdoing. The settlement must still be approved by a judge.

    RealPage software provides daily recommendations to help landlords and their employees nationwide price their available apartments. The landlords do not have to follow the suggestions, but critics argue that because the software has access to a vast trove of confidential data, it helps RealPage’s clients charge the highest possible rent.

    “RealPage was replacing competition with coordination, and renters paid the price,” said DOJ antitrust chief Gail Slater, who emphasized that the settlement avoided a costly, time-consuming trial.

    Under the terms of the proposed settlement, RealPage can no longer use that real-time data to determine price recommendations. Instead, the only nonpublic data that can be used to train the software’s algorithm must be at least one year old.

    “What does this mean for you and your family?” Slater said in a video statement. “It means more real competition in local housing markets. It means rents set by the market, not by a secret algorithm.”

    RealPage attorney Stephen Weissman said the company is pleased the DOJ worked with them to settle the matter.

    “There has been a great deal of misinformation about how RealPage’s software works and the value it provides for both housing providers and renters,” Weissman said in a statement. “We believe that RealPage’s historical use of aggregated and anonymized nonpublic data, which include rents that are typically lower than advertised rents, has led to lower rents, less vacancies, and more procompetitive effects.”

    However, the deal was slammed by some observers as a missed opportunity to clamp down on alleged algorithmic price-fixing throughout the economy.

    “This case really was the tip of the spear,” said Lee Hepner, senior legal counsel for the American Economic Liberties Project, whose group advocates for government action against business concentration.

    He said the settlement is rife with loopholes and he believes RealPages can keep influencing the rental market even if they can only use public, rather than private, data. He also decried how RealPages does not have to pay any damages, unlike many companies that have paid millions in penalties over their use of the software.

    Over the past few months, more than two dozen property management companies have reached various settlements over their use of RealPage, including Greystar, the nation’s largest landlord, which agreed to pay $50 million to settle a class action lawsuit, and $7 million to settle a separate lawsuit filed by nine states.

    The governors of California and New York signed laws last month to crack down on rent-setting software, and a growing list of cities, including Philadelphia and Seattle, have passed ordinances against the practice.

    Ten states — California, Colorado, Connecticut, Illinois, Massachusetts, Minnesota, North Carolina, Oregon, Tennessee and Washington — had joined the DOJ’s antitrust lawsuit. Those states were not part of Monday’s settlement, meaning they can continue to pursue the case in court.

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  • Female competitor crowned ‘World’s Strongest Woman’ after transgender controversy overshadows event

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    The original winner of the 2025 World’s Strongest Woman competition in Arlington, Texas, was stripped of the title after allegations that the athlete is transgender came to light.

    Andrea Thompson, the 2018 winner, stepped down from the podium at the event over the weekend after Jammie Booker won the title.

    Thompson came in second place by just one point to Booker in the open women’s category (no weight requirement). A YouTube video from what appears to be Booker’s own channel, dating back to 2017, shows Booker claiming to be “trans.”

    CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM 

    Andrea Thompson (left) finished second to an alleged transgender athlete at the 2025 World’s Strongest Woman competition. (Laurence Shahlaei)

    A video showed Thompson stepping off the podium appearing to say, “This is bulls—.”

    According to Strongman Archives, Booker had not competed in women’s events prior to this past June. It is unclear whether Booker had previously competed as a man.

    After backlash over the previous 48 hours, Official Strongman announced that Booker would be “disqualified,” admitting it was unaware of allegations that Booker was born male. The ruling now gives Thompson her second victory in the competition.

    “Had we been aware, or had this been declared at any point before or during the competition, this athlete would not have been permitted to compete in the Woman’s Open category. We are clear – competitors can only compete in the category for the biological sex recorded at birth,” Official Strongman said in an announcement Tuesday. “Official Strongman is inclusive and proud to run events which do not discriminate against athletes based on personal characteristics. Any athlete is welcome. But it is our responsibility to ensure fairness and ensure athletes are assigned to men or women’s categories based on whether they are recorded as male or female at birth.”

    Thompson shared a post from her coach, Laurence Shahlaei, congratulating her on “winning” the event. Shahlaei made the post on Monday, one day after the event. Shahlaei told Fox News Digital just prior to Strongman’s announcement that he had been told Thompson would be crowned the champion and that an official announcement would be made.

    “This win hasn’t come without controversy, but I want to make it very clear that while I support and applaud people for being who they want to be, sport is sport and the women’s classes exist for a reason,” Shahlaei wrote.

    barbell, weightlifting

    Jammie Booker is on record in having competed in just three Official Strongman events, winning two. (iStock)

    TWO-TIME US OPEN CHAMPION BRYSON DECHAMBEAU CONTINUES FINE-TUNING EVERY EDGE OF HIS GAME

    Thompson finished third in 2019 and second in 2022 at the same competition. She won the Masters World’s Strongest Woman event, reserved for women 40 years or older. 

    Booker has competed in three events this year, winning the first back in June and coming in second in the North America’s Strongest Woman. On Sept. 14, Booker began a GoFundMe for help get money to compete in the competition.

    “After taking 1st in the Rainier Classic regional (and getting my pro card) and 2nd at the North America’s Strongest Woman competition, I have qualified for the next level of competition at the Official Strongman Games and I have a good chance of reaching the podium at this event as well,” Booker wrote.

    “Now comes the difficult task of funding the trip. Registration fees are $285, the flight to Texas will be around $350, and the hotel fees for the 3 day competition and pre competition rules meeting will be $900. I simply cannot afford this on my shoestring planet fitness trainer budget. Winning this competition will open huge doors for my career both as an athlete and as a trainer.”

    Strongman said it has attempted to reach out to Booker, “but a response has not been received.” On Monday, Booker posted a video to Instagram thanking numerous people for their assistance in what was originally a victory.

    Image of powerlifting weights

    A stack of weights in the warm-up room at a weightlifting event. (Kevin Langley/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

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    Booker’s TikTok biography reads that Booker, 28, is the “Worlds Strongest Lesbian.” In a post from January, Booker wrote, “no im not a man.”

    Booker’s first post on Instagram is a photo posing at a Planet Fitness on July 31, 2022.

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  • Inflation causes dip in Tarrant child care aid despite $100M state investment

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    Three-year-olds play at stations while attending pre-K at The Morris Foundation Child Development Center on Sept. 24, 2024.

    Three-year-olds play at stations while attending pre-K at The Morris Foundation Child Development Center on Sept. 24, 2024.

    amccoy@star-telegram.com

    Local and statewide child care advocates celebrated earlier this year a $100 million investment toward child care scholarships that were anticipated to lift children and their families off of the state’s lengthy waitlist. But inflation has soured the hopes of expanding state scholarships, including in Tarrant County.

    Texas lawmakers earmarked $100 million toward child care services and scholarships over the next two years, in hopes of serving about 10,000 children awaiting financial assistance who are on a waitlist that now exceeds 95,000. But a rise in the cost of care has absorbed the funding source that child care advocates viewed as a highlight of the 2025 regular legislative session, which concluded this summer. The scholarships help qualifying parents go to work while their child receives care and early childhood education.

    In Tarrant County, there will be a decrease of about 450 child care scholarships compared to last fiscal year because of the increase in the cost of care, even with the additional state investment, according to Fort Worth-based Child Care Associates. The nonprofit distributes state scholarships to local families as a contractor of the local workforce development board.

    Kara Waddell, CEO and president of Child Care Associates, said the rising cost of care impacts families of all income levels, precluding many parents from affording the care that allows them to go to work.

    “We know Texas families were hopeful that this additional funding would enable us to offer additional child care scholarships for those on the scholarship waitlist. Child Care Associates knows how much both families and child care operators need Texas to expand scholarships,” Waddell said. “In actuality, what we experienced was a significant increase in child care expenses statewide, and the additional state investments prevented scholarship loss while keeping up with real cost increase of about 9% in Texas last year alone.”

    The Texas Workforce Commission, which manages the state’s child care scholarship program, sets its scholarship payment rates at or above what 75% of child care providers in a region charge based on a market rate survey. In a child care and early learning newsletter from the Texas Workforce Commission released in August, officials noted that its most recent market rate survey showed an increase in the cost of care by 9% in the 75th percentile. The overall projected cost of care jumped by 12.7%.

    “Ultimately, we’re grateful to the legislature making this initial investment happen. It is a critical first step. We also hope that they will not only continue to use unexpended TANF funds for child care access, but also consider new funding and revenue options to ensure hard-working Texas families access the quality child care that they need,” Waddell added.

    By the numbers

    The additional $100 million in child care scholarships for Texas children over the next two years is coming from unused TANF funding, or the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program.

    The Texas Workforce Commission originally projected $1 million to serve about 106 children per day in the 2026 fiscal year before the legislative session began in January, according to state officials. The state agency now projects $1 million to serve about 99 children per day.

    Of the annual $50 million, there is $3 million set aside for child care quality improvement. This means $47 million is dedicated specifically to child care scholarships. The scholarship funding is estimated to serve 4,653 children daily this fiscal year — a decrease of 329 children from the state agency’s original estimate.

    The agency’s full budget for child care services is estimated to support about an average of 148,000 children daily this fiscal year. There was an average of almost 149,000 children being served daily through the state’s scholarship program in fiscal year 2025.

    “The projection of 10,000 children was not an overall increase to the total number served; it only reflects how much an additional $100 million was estimated to serve,” Texas Workforce Commission officials told the Star-Telegram in a statement.

    Texans Care for Children, an Austin-based child advocacy organization, released a policy brief earlier this month on the $100 million child care investment, saying the funds were needed “just to keep up with rising payment rates.”

    “Without the $100 million lawmakers provided, Texas would be serving thousands fewer eligible families in the coming biennium. But if Texas wants to avoid backsliding — and start serving more of the tens of thousands still on the waitlist — lawmakers will need to take steps to address the rising costs of child care and find more substantial, longer-term funding solutions,” the policy brief states.

    David Feigen, director of early learning policy for the organization, said it was “disappointing” that the funding didn’t translate to an increase in the number of scholarships, but it was also a relief that thousands of working parents were spared from losing child care.

    “Thanks to this investment, today there are parents walking in the door to work at restaurants, hospitals, and grocery stores while their kids are thriving in child care classrooms — creating memorable art projects and listening attentively as their teachers read them children’s books,” Feigen said. “There’s a lot of focus on partisan disagreements these days, but in this case Republicans and Democrats in the Legislature worked together to help Texas parents get affordable, high-quality child care so they can go to work.”

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    Lina Ruiz

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Lina Ruiz covers early childhood education in Tarrant County and North Texas for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. A University of Florida graduate, she previously wrote about local government in South Florida for TCPalm and Treasure Coast Newspapers.

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  • In Texas case, it’s politics vs. race at the Supreme Court, with control of Congress at stake

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    The Texas redistricting case now before the Supreme Court turns on a question that often divides judges: Were the voting districts drawn based on politics, or race?

    The answer, likely to come in a few days, could shift five congressional seats and tip political control of the House of Representatives after next year’s midterm elections.

    Justice Samuel A. Alito, who oversees appeals from Texas, put a temporary hold on a judicial ruling that branded the newly drawn Texas voting map a “racial gerrymander.”

    The state’s lawyers asked for a decision by Monday, noting that candidates have a Dec. 8 deadline to file for election.

    They said the judges violated the so-called Purcell principle by making major changes in the election map “midway through the candidate filing period,” and that alone calls for blocking it.

    Texas Republicans have reason to be confident the court’s conservative majority will side with them.

    “We start with a presumption that the legislature acted in good faith,” Alito wrote for a 6-3 majority last year in a South Carolina case.

    That state’s Republican lawmakers had moved tens of thousands of Black voters in or out of newly drawn congressional districts and said they did so not because of their race but because they were likely to vote as Democrats.

    In 2019, the conservatives upheld partisan gerrymandering by a 5-4 vote, ruling that drawing election districts is a “political question” left to states and their lawmakers, not judges.

    All the justices — conservative and liberal — say drawing districts based on the race of the voters violates the Constitution and its ban on racial discrimination. But the conservatives say it’s hard to separate race from politics.

    They also looked poised to restrict the reach of the Voting Rights Act in a pending case from Louisiana.

    For decades, the civil rights law has sometimes required states to draw one or more districts that would give Black or Latino voters a fair chance to “elect representatives of their choice.”

    The Trump administration joined in support of Louisiana’s Republicans in October and claimed the voting rights law has been “deployed as a form of electoral race-based affirmative action” that should be ended.

    If so, election law experts warned that Republican-led states across the South could erase the districts of more than a dozen Black Democrats who serve in Congress.

    The Texas mid-decade redistricting case did not look to trigger a major legal clash because the partisan motives were so obvious.

    In July, President Trump called for Texas Republicans to redraw the state map of 38 congressional districts in order to flip five seats to oust Democrats and replace them with Republicans.

    At stake was control of the closely divided House after the 2026 midterm elections.

    Gov. Greg Abbott agreed, and by the end of August, he signed into law a map with redrawn districts in and around Houston, Dallas, Fort Worth and San Antonio.

    But last week federal judges, in a 2-1 decision, blocked the new map from taking effect, ruling that it appeared to be unconstitutional.

    “The public perception of this case is that it’s about politics,” wrote U.S. District Judge Jeffrey V. Brown in the opening of a 160-page opinion. “To be sure, politics played a role” but “substantial evidence shows that Texas racially gerrymandered the 2025 map.”

    He said the strongest evidence came from Harmeet Dhillon, the Trump administration’s top civil rights lawyer at the Justice Department. She had sent Abbott a letter on July 7 threatening legal action if the state did not dismantle four “coalition districts.”

    This term, which was unfamiliar to many, referred to districts where no racial or ethnic group had a majority. In one Houston district that was targeted, 45% of the eligible voters were Black and 25% were Latino. In a nearby district, 38% of voters were Black and 30% were Latino.

    She said the Trump administration views these as “unconstitutional racial gerrymanders,” citing a recent ruling by the conservative 5th Circuit Court.

    The Texas governor then cited these “constitutional concerns raised by the U.S. Department of Justice” when he called for the special session of the Legislature to redraw the state map.

    Voting rights advocates saw a violation.

    “They said their aim was to get rid of the coalition districts. And to do so, they had to draw new districts along racial lines,” said Chad Dunn, a Texas attorney and legal director of UCLA’s Voting Rights Project.

    Brown, a Trump appointee from Galveston, wrote that Dhillon was “clearly wrong” in believing these coalition districts were unconstitutional, and he said the state was wrong to rely on her advice as basis for redrawing its election map.

    He was joined by a second district judge in putting the new map on hold and requiring the state to use the 2021 map that had been drawn by the same Texas Republicans.

    The third judge on the panel was Jerry Smith, a Reagan appointee on the 5th Circuit Court, and he issued an angry 104-page dissent. Much of it was devoted to attacking Brown and liberals such as 95-year-old investor and philanthropist George Soros and California Gov. Gavin Newsom.

    “In 37 years as a federal judge, I’ve served on hundreds of three-judge panels. This is the most blatant exercise of judicial activism that I have ever witnessed,” Smith wrote. “The main winners from Judge Brown’s opinion are George Soros and Gavin Newsom. The obvious losers are the People of Texas.”

    The “obvious reason for the 2025 redistricting, of course, is partisan gain,” Smith wrote, adding that “Judge Brown commits grave error in concluding that the Texas Legislature is more bigoted than political.”

    Most federal cases go before a district judge, and they may be appealed first to a U.S. appeals court and then the Supreme Court.
    Election-related cases are different. A three-judge panel weighs the facts and issues a ruling, which then goes directly to the Supreme Court to be affirmed or reversed.

    Late Friday, Texas attorneys filed an emergency appeal and asked the justices to put on hold the decision by Brown.

    The first paragraph of their 40-page appeal noted that Texas is not alone in pursuing a political advantage by redrawing its election maps.

    “California is working to add more Democratic seats to its congressional delegation to offset the new Texas districts, despite Democrats already controlling 43 out of 52 of California’s congressional seats,” they said.

    They argued that the “last-minute disruption to state election procedures — and resulting candidate and voter confusion —demonstrates” the need to block the lower court ruling.

    Election law experts question that claim. “This is a problem of Texas’ own making,” said Justin Levitt, a professor at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles.

    The state opted for a fast-track, mid-decade redistricting at the behest of Trump.

    On Monday, Dunn, the Texas voting rights attorney, responded to the state’s appeal and told the justices they should deny it.

    “The election is over a year away. No one will be confused by using the map that has governed Texas’ congressional elections for the past four years,” he said.

    “The governor of Texas called a special session to dismantle districts on account of their racial composition,” he said, and the judges heard clear and detailed evidence that lawmakers did just that.

    In recent election disputes, however, the court’s conservatives have frequently invoked the Purcell principle to free states from new judicial rulings that came too close to the election.

    Granting a stay would allow Texas to use its new GOP friendly map for the 2026 election.

    The justices may then choose to hear arguments on the legal questions early next year.

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    David G. Savage

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  • Top GOP senator urges Olympic officials to swiftly enact ‘decisive policy’ banning men from women’s sports

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    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

    Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, urged the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to cement its ban on biological males competing in women’s sports in a letter on Monday.

    The IOC is set to enact a new policy that will prohibit transgender female athletes from competing against biological women, according to multiple reports. The policy is reportedly set to cover those with differences of sex development (DSD).

    CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM

    Sen. John Cornyn. R-Texas, speaks during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on Capitol Hill on Nov. 19, 2025 in Washington, DC. (Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)

    “Reports indicate the working group is moving towards a complete ban on biological males competing in female events, but that decision is not yet confirmed,” Cornyn wrote in a letter to IOC president Kirsty Coventry. “I urge the IOC to move swiftly toward a clear and decisive policy that protects fair and safe competition for women and prohibits biological males from competing in female categories.”

    Cornyn underscored the need for resolution to ensure the integrity of women’s sports with the 2026 Winter Olympics approaching and the 2028 Summer Olympics around the corner.

    “With the Winter Games rapidly approaching in February and preparation well underway for the 2028 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, timely action is essential,” Cornyn added. “As the IOC continues its deliberations, this issue has become a global policy concern and a question of athletic integrity.

    Kirsty Coventry laughs

    Kirsty Coventry laughs during a press conference after she was elected as the new IOC president at the International Olympic Committee 144th session in Costa Navarino, western Greece, Thursday, March 20, 2025.  (AP Photo/Thanassis Stavrakis)

    NFL’S FIRST TRANSGENDER CHEERLEADER MAKES CLAIM ABOUT PANTHERS DEPARTURE: ‘I WAS CUT BECAUSE I’M TRANS’

    “In the United States, President Trump honored his unwavering commitment to women and girls with the issuance of Executive Order 1420: Keeping Men Out of Women’s Sports. His action reaffirmed the longstanding belief that women’s sports must be preserved for biological females.

    “I applaud your commitment to addressing this issue and respectfully urge the International Olympic Committee to finalize the ban on biological males competing in female sports, without delay. Thank you for your attention and dedication to protecting women’s athletics.”

    The new policy is reportedly expected to be announced in February just ahead of the Winter Olympics.

    Coventry called for “protecting” the women’s category in June and there was “overwhelming support” from IOC members to do the same.

    “We understand that there’ll be differences depending on the sport … but it was very clear from the members that we have to protect the female category, first and foremost to ensure fairness,” Coventry said at the time.

    Olympic rings in Italy

    A general view of the Olympic rings in front of the Olympia delle Tofane ski run during Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games – 1 Year To Go event on February 06, 2025 in Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy. (Francesco Scaccianoce/Getty Images)

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    “But we need to do that with a scientific approach and the inclusion of the international federations who have already done a lot of work in this area.”

    Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.

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  • How to Watch Arizona State vs Texas: Live Stream Maui Invitational NCAA College Basketball, TV Channel

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    The Arizona State Sun Devils (4-1) and Texas Longhorns (4-1) wrap up the first day of play at the Maui Invitational when they square off at the Lahaina Civic Center on Monday night.

    How to Watch Arizona State vs Texas

    • When: Monday, November 24, 2025
    • Time: 11:30 PM ET
    • TV Channel: ESPN2
    • Live Stream: Fubo (try for free)

    Arizona State arrives at the Maui Invitational off back-to-back wins, including an 83-76 road win over Hawaii on Thursday night. Toledo transfer Bryce Ford led the Sun Devils with 20 points as ASU took control of the game in the second half after trailing at the break. Pepperdine transfer Moe Odum added 15 points and six assists, and University of the Cumberlands transfer Anthony Johnson came off the bench to toss in 16 points.

    Texas has won four straight since losing to then-No. 6 Duke to open the season, running past visiting Rider 99-65 on Tuesday night. Xavier transfer Dailyn Swain scored 26 points in 26 minutes, while Purdue transfer Camden Heide and Florida Atlantic transfer Matas Vokietaitis each dropped 20 points. The Longhorns held the Broncs to just 33.9% shooting in the victory. 

    The winner faces the winner of the earlier game between Washington State and host Chaminade on Tuesday night, with the losers of the two matchups playing in a consolation semifinal. Texas leads the all-time series with Arizona State 4-1, with the last meeting an 87-85 victory in the second round of the 2014 NCAA tournament in Milwaukee.

    This is a great college basketball matchup that you will not want to miss; make sure to tune in and catch all the action.

    Live stream Arizona State vs Texas on Fubo: Start your subscription now!

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  • Tornado hits Houston area, damaging over 100 homes, no injuries reported

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    More than 100 homes have been damaged after a tornado touched down in a residential area outside Houston, authorities in Texas said Monday.

    No injuries were reported.

    Photos and drone video posted on Facebook by the Harris County Precinct 3 constable showed roofs with shingles ripped off. Some debris blocked roads.

    The damage affected the Memorial Northwest neighborhood, according to the office of Mark Herman, the constable.

    The Houston Fire Department dispatched five members of its saw team to cut up and remove toppled trees, spokesperson Rustin Rawlings said.

    The National Weather Service issued a tornado watch for southeastern Texas, including Houston, until 1 a.m. Tuesday. It also issued a severe thunderstorm warning for parts of southeastern Texas.

    While the National Weather Service will have to survey the area to officially assign a rating for the strength of the Harris County tornado, atmospheric parameters were certainly in place for a tornadic setup. 

    The Houston and Harris County area was dealing with unusually warm and humid conditions for this time of year, with temperatures in the upper 70s and lower 80s for much of the afternoon, and dew points as high as the low 70s, meaning it was very muggy.

    Those are two of the primary ingredients needed to produce severe weather, and the other is a lifting mechanism, which came in the form of both a warm front and a cold front moving through the state. All things combined prompted a tornado watch for the afternoon and into the overnight hours for Southeast Texas, which led to several tornado warnings and severe thunderstorm warnings throughout the day.

    Conditions are expected to improve over the next few days, followed by the return of rain and storms this weekend.

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  • One of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre’s Last Survivors, Viola Ford Fletcher, Dies Age 111

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    DALLAS (AP) — Viola Ford Fletcher, who as one of the last survivors of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre in Oklahoma spent her later years seeking justice for the deadly attack by a white mob on the thriving Black community where she lived as a child, has died. She was 111.

    Her grandson Ike Howard said Monday that she died surrounded by family at a Tulsa hospital. Sustained by a strong faith, she raised three children, worked as a welder in a shipyard during World War II and spent decades caring for families as a housekeeper.

    Tulsa Mayor Monroe Nichols said the city was mourning her loss. “Mother Fletcher endured more than anyone should, yet she spent her life lighting a path forward with purpose,” he said in a statement.

    She was 7 years old when the two-day attack began on Tulsa’s Greenwood district on May 31, 1921, after a local newspaper published a sensationalized report about a Black man accused of assaulting a white woman. As a white mob grew outside the courthouse, Black Tulsans with guns who hoped to prevent the man’s lynching began showing up. White residents responded with overwhelming force. Hundreds of people were killed and homes were burned and looted, leaving over 30 city blocks decimated in the prosperous community known as Black Wall Street.

    “I could never forget the charred remains of our once-thriving community, the smoke billowing in the air, and the terror-stricken faces of my neighbors,” she wrote in her 2023 memoir, “Don’t Let Them Bury My Story.”

    As her family left in a horse-drawn buggy, her eyes burned from the smoke and ash, she wrote. She described seeing piles of bodies in the streets and watching as a white man shot a Black man in the head, then fired toward her family.

    She told The Associated Press in an interview the year her memoir was published that fear of reprisals influenced her years of near-silence about the massacre. She wrote the book with Howard, her grandson, who said he had to persuade her to tell her story.

    “We don’t want history to repeat itself so we do need to educate people about what happened and try to get people to understand why you need to be made whole, why you need to be repaired,” Howard told the AP in 2024. “The generational wealth that was lost, the home, all the belongings, everything was lost in one night.”

    “For as long as we remain in this lifetime, we will continue to shine a light on one of the darkest days in American history,” Fletcher and Randle said in a statement at the time. Van Ellis had died a year earlier, at the age of 102.

    The city has been looking for ways to help descendants of the massacre’s victims without giving direct cash payments. Some of the last living survivors, including Fletcher, received donations from groups but have not received any payments from the city or state.

    Fletcher, born in Oklahoma on May 10, 1914, spent most of her early years in Greenwood. It was an oasis for Black people during segregation, she wrote in her memoir. Her family had a nice home, she said, and the community had everything from doctors to grocery stores to restaurants and banks.

    Forced to flee during the massacre, her family became nomadic, living out of a tent as they worked in the fields as sharecroppers. She didn’t finish school beyond the fourth grade.

    At the age of 16, she returned to Tulsa, where she got a job cleaning and creating window displays in a department store, she wrote in her memoir. She then met Robert Fletcher, and they married and moved to California. During World War II, she worked in a Los Angeles shipyard as a welder, she wrote.

    She eventually left her husband, who was physically abusive, and gave birth to their son, Robert Ford Fletcher, she wrote. Longing to be closer to her family, she returned to Oklahoma and settled north of Tulsa in Bartlesville.

    Fletcher wrote that her faith and the close-knit Black community gave her the support she needed to raise her children. She had another son, James Edward Ford, and a daughter, Debra Stein Ford, from other relationships.

    She worked for decades as a housekeeper, doing everything in those homes from cooking to cleaning to caring for children, Howard said. She worked until she was 85.

    She eventually returned to Tulsa to live. Howard said his grandmother hoped the move would help in her fight for justice.

    Howard said the reaction his grandmother got when she started speaking out was therapeutic for her.

    “This whole process has been helpful,” Howard said.

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – Nov. 2025

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  • Arlington-area ‘Christmas wonderland’ restaurant coming to an end

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    This is the farewell Christmas season for Campo Verde Mexican Bar & Grill, and it’s time.

    A series of ill-advised changes drained much of the holiday spirit from a restaurant that has been an Arlington and North Texas tradition since 1983. So it’s time to say goodbye before it changes to a different restaurant Dec. 24.

    The sprawling restaurant at 2918 W. Pioneer Parkway is still covered in Christmas lights and elaborate decorations across seven rooms. It remains an attraction, an entire restaurant devoted to drawing up to 300,000 customers for its holiday decorations.

    The rooms and halls are lined with LED lights, gift wrap and holiday displays, although some of the old-fashioned lights were updated in recent years. The toy train click-clacks around the ceiling, if only occasionally.

    It’s still an impressive sight, although the new white interior paint covered over some of the 1980s warmth. Campo Verde now looks as much Chip-and-Joanna than candy-canes-and-Santa Claus.

    The dining room at Campo Verde Mexican Bar & Grill is still heavily decorated for Christmas, as seen Nov. 20, 2025.
    The dining room at Campo Verde Mexican Bar & Grill is still heavily decorated for Christmas, as seen Nov. 20, 2025. Bud Kennedy bud@star-telegram.com

    Much has been written about the changes, often in scathing online reviews. Longtime customers sometimes ignore that the restaurant was already in sharp decline the last three years since it was sold by the late founder, James “Smiley” Williams.

    When it comes to the food, the same advice applies as in the last couple of years:

    Keep it simple.

    The cheeseburger and the grilled chicken sandwich are chargrilled and just as reliable as ever. With fries, they’re less than $20 each and suitable choices for lunch or dinner.

    There’s a basic cheeseburger with fries on the kids’ menu for $12, along with a queso dog or a cheese quesadilla.

    Chicken tortilla soup ($8) was dark and rich, spiced with hearty chiles. It’s actually one of the better restaurant versions.

    The menu also offers flashy desserts such as a RumChata liqueur cheesecake or Biscoff tres leches.

    If you detour into the Tex-Mex, you’re on your own.

    A chicken enchilada dinner at Campo Verde Mexican Bar & Grill with chicken tortilla soup, right, as seen Nov. 20, 2025.
    A chicken enchilada dinner at Campo Verde Mexican Bar & Grill with chicken tortilla soup, right, as seen Nov. 20, 2025. Bud Kennedy bud@star-telegram.com

    Tacos seem like a safe choice. Chicken enchiladas, on the other hand, came with a good stewed chicken, but the green sauce had an unexpected flavor. as if it were more cilantro than tomatillo or poblano.

    This is not new.

    It’s been three years since we were able to enjoy the original Campo Verde menu of basic Tex-Mex dishes and game specialties. That’s what Williams created when he opened Campo Verde restaurants after managing Fort Worth-based Dos Gringos, a forerunner of Mercado Juarez Cafe.

    Campo Verde is still a good Christmas adventure for kids.

    It’s just not as good as it used to be. So, next year it’ll be something else.

    Campo Verde is open for lunch and dinner daily except Mondays through Dec. 24; thecampoverde.com.

    Bud Kennedy’s Eats Beat

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Bud Kennedy is celebrating his 40th year writing about restaurants in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. He has written the “Eats Beat” dining column in print since 1985 and online since 1992 — that’s more than 3,000 columns about Texas cafes, barbecue, burgers and where to eat.
    Support my work with a digital subscription

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    Bud Kennedy

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