Showing posts with label school. Show all posts
Showing posts with label school. Show all posts

Saturday, January 12, 2013

Police: Pearland 11-year-old threatened to bring gun to school

SkyEye 13 HD was over the scene at Rogers Middle School in Pearland where police say an 11-year-old threatened to bring a gun to school. SkyEye 13 HD was over the scene at Rogers Middle School in Pearland where police say an 11-year-old threatened to bring a gun to school.

  PEARLAND, TX (KTRK) -- A Pearland middle school student is facing charges for allegedly threatening to bring a gun to school.

Pearland police say on Wednesday evening, they received a report that a Rogers Middle School student had threatened to bring a gun to school Thursday. According to the person who made the report, the student made the threat because he had a 'bad day' on Wednesday.

Police interviewed other witnesses and then contacted the Brazoria County District Attorney's Office. Charges of 'Terroristic Threat' were filed against the suspect.

The 11-year-old was not allowed to attend school Thursday. He was detained by police and taken to the Brazoria County Juvenile Detention Facility in Angleton.
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pearland, local

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Texans pride especially strong at one local school

HOUSTON (KTRK) -- Houston is covered in a sea of red and blue as Mayor Annise Parker declared today "Go Texans Day".

All over town, expect to see people sporting their Texans gear in anticipation of the team's big playoff match-up with New England this weekend. Team spirit is especially high at a school that has very close ties to the man who will be calling the plays on Sunday.

St. Pius is proud to claim Texans Head Coach Gary Kubiak as one of its alums. He played football and graduated from there in 1979.

On campus today, students traded the usual school uniforms at St. Pius for Texans jerseys, Texans T-shirts and the like, just as fans across the city are.

The students are all dressed to show their Houston Texans pride, and pride in a person who once walked the same halls.

Students also created and hung signs declaring their support for the St. Pius alum.

"I think it's just big that we continue to support him," said St. Pius student Kohl Stewart. "It makes it fun that he's one of us and his name is everywhere and he's the face of the franchise."

"To feel like that man went here, it just makes the Texans pride that much more here," added student Jourdan Alvarez.

"It's amazing, especially since he's such a hard worker and everything he's done is incredible," said student Brianna Santiago.

Don't forget to catch our 'Houston Texans: Road to the Ring' special Friday at 7pm on ABC13, as the Texans try to take another major step to their first Super Bowl.
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houston texans, nfl, local, elissa rivas

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Friday, December 21, 2012

HISD police arrest student with gun at Sterling High School

HOUSTON (KTRK) -- A 14-year-old male student was arrested Wednesday after being found in possession of a loaded handgun at Sterling High School.

The arrest was made at 10:48am, roughly 10 minutes after campus-based Houston Independent School District police officers received a tip from the Houston Police Department that the student may have a gun.

Houston police were investigating an allegation that the student used the weapon to threaten an individual off campus on Tuesday afternoon. The HISD police officers took the student into custody without incident and confiscated the weapon after searching him.

The student told HISD police he was carrying the weapon to protect himself from gang members in the neighborhood surrounding the school.

Sterling High School parents are being informed about the incident by phone today, officials say, but we spoke with at least one mother at the school who hadn't heard.

"I'm a little upset because I haven't gotten a call or anything as yet," she said. "Now that I'm here, I'm hearing all this."

"This is my fourth year here, I'm a senior. Nothing like this ever happened before," a student told Eyewitness News.

The student is a juvenile and his name is not being released. Appropriate disciplinary action is being taken, and the incident has been referred to the Harris County District Attorney's Office for criminal prosecution.

(Copyright ©2012 KTRK-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.) Get more Local »


local, adela uchida

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One of two teens accused of graffiti threats at Kingwood High School appears in court

KINGWOOD, TX (KTRK) -- One of two Kingwood High School students faced a judge today on graffiti charges. The 18-year-olds were arrested after racist messages and threatening graffiti were found at the high school.

These are two separate cases of graffiti in the bathrooms at the high school, each disturbing in their own way and both ending in felony charges against students.

School officials say one student drew a picture of a gun and wrote threats on bathroom walls at Kingwood High School. That student was in court to hear the charge against him -- a 3rd degree felony of exhibition of a firearm -- for the threatening graffiti police believe he drew on the walls of a Kingwood High School bathroom.

Derick Richard Montelongo, a senior at Kingwood High, is behind bars on a $250,000 bond. If he is released, he will have to wear a GPS monitor and have no contact with the officer that prosecutors say he threatened at the high school.

Last Wednesday, prosecutors say Montelongo drew a picture of a gun pointing to a stick figure with the name Officer West, saying kill Officer West and "shoot everyone at 3:07."

Assistant District Attorney Mary McFaden said, "Any type of threat in this day and age, whether or not officer or civilian, we take any complainant as serious as another."

In a separate incident just two days later on December 14, student Trent McKay Skinner was arrested for a similar offense. Police believe he scrawled neo-Nazi symbols on bathroom walls and referred to the Aryan Brotherhood of Texas. Skinner is charged with graffiti on school property.

Kingwood High School put a note out to parents saying the Montelongo situation was taken care of immediately and involved no real weapons.

"Last week, two boys' restrooms were defaced with graffiti that was offensive and threatening. The graffiti in one of the restrooms included a drawing of a gun and a message against police and the school. Acting immediately, we were able to quickly identify the student involved and conduct a search to determine that this was a case of vandalism with no actual weapons involved. We then worked with Humble ISD Police and the Harris County District Attorney's Office to ensure that the incident was appropriately addressed. That investigation resulted today in the arrest of two students, who each face a charge related to defacing school property with graffiti. Our school will not tolerate vandalism, graffiti, threatening or offensive messages. Thank you for your support of a safe and positive school environment."

In both cases, surveillance video showed the suspects going into the restrooms, and police discovered drawings of the graffiti on the students.

(Copyright ©2012 KTRK-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.) Get more Local »


local, elissa rivas

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Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Man struck by lightning while working on school roof in NW Harris County

  HOUSTON (KTRK) -- A man was hospitalized Sunday morning after being struck by lightning while working on a roof in northwest Harris County.

It happened at Primrose School of Barker-Cypress in the 16500 block of Dundee Road.

According to the Harris County Sheriff's Office, the construction crew was trying to come down from the roof when the weather quickly worsened. The 30-year-old victim was on his way down when a bolt of lightning struck him and knocked him unconscious.

The foreman performed CPR until deputies arrived and took over. An ambulance then arrived and took over for the deputies, taking him to North Cypress Medical Center in critical but stable condition.

Deputies said he was breathing on his own and was later transported to Memorial Hermann Hospital for continued treatment.

Officials tell us it is difficult to tell how a lightning strike has affected a person's body until around 24 hours after the incident.

We will continue following this story and will update you on Eyewitness News and abc13.com when new information is available.

A few minutes after the incident on the roof, another bolt of lightning struck a home on Ellendale Court, also in northwest Harris County.

The lightning stripped the bark from a pine tree.

Homeowners say an electrical surge went through the house, knocking out the power. Sparks started flying out of the oven and the house filled up with smoke, they said, but no one was hurt.

(Copyright ©2012 KTRK-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.) Get more Local »


local

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Saturday, October 6, 2012

New school lunches: Controversy or no big deal?

HOUSTON (KTRK) -- Could a food fight over getting more fruits and veggies on your kids' lunch plates be a futile battle? This fall, the federal government has new rules for your kids lunch at school. The goal is more nutritious food and healthier kids.

But across the country, youngsters are complaining that the new rules leave them hungry.

This fall, our kids' lunch trays came packed with politics. The federal government implemented new rules, pushed at least in part by the First Lady and designed to get our kids to eat healthier. Forcing things like fruits and veggies onto the plates and questioning the value of pizza and chicken nuggets.

It sounds well-intentioned, but it's caused a huge uproar. And when you look closer, you may wonder why.

For as long as kids have gone to school, school lunch has had a bad rap.

"I usually get the pizza," said student Shanese Smalls.

But this year it's not just kids complaining. New rules from the federal government and promoted by Michelle Obama somehow squeezed politics into the lunch box.

A Youtube video from complaining Kansas high schoolers has more than 800,000 hits. It was a star on Fox and The Today Show, even ABC World News. Conservative Republican Iowa Congressman Steve King wants the new lunch rules repealed calling them "subsistence diets" pushed by "a nanny state."

So just how are the feds torturing our kids at lunch?

"We can't force a child to take a fruit or vegetable, but certainly we want them to," said Darin Crawford with Cy Fair ISD Food Service

Yes, Crawford tells us, the new rules say to get the regular lunch price at America's schools a student has to put half a cup of fruit or vegetables on their plate.

Ted Oberg: Against the rules.
(Then putting apple on a tray.)
Oberg: Compliant.
Darin Crawford: Correct.
Oberg: It doesn't seem like that big of a deal.
Crawford: Correct.

They don't have to eat it, they just have to put it on their plate.

The new rules do limit calories. A middle school lunch can only have 750 calories. Remember critics call that a subsistence diet.

"If a child took all of that, it's about 760 calories total," said Crawford.

That's a pretty full plate and it's the same number of calories in a McDonalds' quarter pounder with cheese, small fries and a Diet Coke. The difference under the new rules is where the calories come from.

Ted Oberg: So to be full at the end of lunch, you've gotta eat everything on your plate.
Darin Crawford: That is what it was designed to be, and that is what we recommend.

"The same thing that's going on in our own homes, it's on the national news," said school lunch blogger Bettina Siegel.

Siegel is a Houston blogger who's attracted national attention for her posts on school lunches. For her, the real issue in the new rules is neither the politics nor the calorie maximums, but getting kids used to eating healthy at school.

"People don't eat vegetables," said one Lamar high schooler eating ice cream.

And Siegel says teenagers used to pizza and chicken nuggets just may not get it.

"For those kids who are coming in now, they won't know any other kind of lunch. And I think that's the test. We need to see how those kids do with this new school lunch. The kids who for 10 years have been eating something else are not really a good measure," she said.

If hungry kids want more of anything, they can simply pay more for it. Kids have to take healthier food; they don't have to eat it and that does create the potential for more waste at schools.

Both HISD and Cy Fair ISD say they haven't seen a lot more waste. But look at some of the strategies: Cy Fair's own research shows kids don't eat whole fruit apples or bananas, so they switched to these apple chips and sliced fruit.

(Copyright ©2012 KTRK-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.) Get more In Focus »


in focus, ted oberg

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Thursday, September 27, 2012

Spring ISD school dismissed early due to power outage

School is out early for students at one Spring ISD middle school after a power outage this morning. School is out early for students at one Spring ISD middle school after a power outage this morning.

  HOUSTON (KTRK) -- Some middle school students have a shortened school day today due to a power outage.

According to a Spring ISD spokesperson, Dueitt Middle School released students early due to the outage. A fire alarm went off this morning before school started. It was prompted by smoke from air conditioning equipment that overheated due to the failure of the a nearby transformer.

Staff and students who were already at school were evacuated and students who were arriving at school were kept outside the building.

Centerpoint is working on the problem and hope to have it resolved by the end of the day.

(Copyright ©2012 KTRK-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.) Get more Local »


local

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Mom: School let my son, 8, walk home alone

HOUSTON (KTRK) -- A mother wants to know how her son, an eight-year-old who's been abducted by a family member before, was allowed to walk home alone without her knowledge.

On Tuesday afternoon, he walked from Highland Heights Elementary to his home on Homer Street. It's a distance of a nearly one-mile distance.

The school says the incident still under review but it's possible the little simply didn't follow instructions. But his mother contends that an eight-year-old who is new to the neighborhood shouldn't have been allowed to walk off.

Eight-year-old Christon Duncantel can give detailed directions home from school. They're directions his mother didn't even know he knew -- directions she wishes he never used.

"My child's life was compromised," Sheritta Hudson said.

Hudson planned on picking up the 3rd grader after his tutorial at Highland Heights Elementary Tuesday afternoon, but well before it was over, there was a knock at the door.

"All of sudden, I hear my grandmother yelling and my son was at the door and he's crying and puffy and red and I asked. 'How did you get home?' I asked him and he said he said I walked," Hudson said.

He walked almost a mile by himself around corners, down narrow streets and mostly with no sidewalks.

"It was a dangerous way," Hudson said.

Christon says the teacher told him he wasn't signed up for tutoring and that he needed to wait outside for his mother.

"I didn't know what to do," he said.

So the young boy just left and no one noticed.

"It raised no flag to say, hey there's a child walking," Hudson said.

Add it to what happened on August 8.

"My child was previously kidnapped," Hudson said.

And it makes Hudson even more anxious. HPD confirms they responded to reports that non-custodial family members took Christon without Hudson's knowledge. She says the incident is part of her son's file at school.

In response HISD says first administrators are reviewing what happened. That they were not made aware of any special circumstances before Tuesday and that they will continue the review to ensure proper protocol was followed.

They're not quite the answers Hudson was looking for. She remains nervous.

"So many things could have happened before he showed up at the door," Hudson said.

After we talked to the district, the mother says the assistant principal called her and told her the boy is now on the tutorial roster and that they've made special notes on his enrollment forms about his transportation and who is and isn't allowed to pick him up.

(Copyright ©2012 KTRK-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.) Get more Local »


local, jessica willey

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Spring middle school teacher pleads guilty to sexually assaulting student

Andre Levelle Thomas, 32, is charged with aggravated sexual assault of a child. Andre Levelle Thomas, 32, is charged with aggravated sexual assault of a child.

  HOUSTON (KTRK) -- A Spring ISD teacher has pleaded guilty to sexually assaulting a student.

Andre Thomas was a teacher at Roberson Middle School, when he raped a 13-year-old girl in his classroom in August of last year. On Tuesday, Thomas made a plea agreement and was sentenced to 180 days in jail and ten years probation.

A statement by the victim was made in court Tuesday. In it, she said she had to pretend Thomas was a good teacher, when he was really a horrible teacher, but she said she is a survivor.

(Copyright ©2012 KTRK-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.) Get more Local »


spring, local

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Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Barbers Hill school board to discuss getting rid of paddling

  HOUSTON (KTRK) -- Tonight, the Barbers Hill school board will discuss getting rid of corporal punishment after a boy was brutally paddled.

Christina Douty says she gave permission for teachers at Barbers Hill Middle School to administer corporal punishment to her son. But when he came home with welts on his rear for making bad grades, she changed her mind.

She now says corporal punishment should be abolished statewide. The school district says district policies were followed in Douty's case.

Tonight's meeting starts at 6:30pm.

(Copyright ©2012 KTRK-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.) Get more Local »


local

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Sunday, September 23, 2012

Robbers hit bank, dump car in school parking lot

Surveillance photos of a masked, armed bank robber at Amegy Bank in the 400 block of North Sam Houston Parkway at Imperial Valley Surveillance photos of a masked, armed bank robber at Amegy Bank in the 400 block of North Sam Houston Parkway at Imperial Valley

  HOUSTON (KTRK) -- Bank robbery suspects dumped their getaway car in a school parking lot Saturday after terrorizing tellers and customers in north Houston.

According to officials, the robbery happened around 12:45pm at Amegy Bank in the 400 block of North Sam Houston Parkway at Imperial Valley.

We're told it was a takeover-style robbery. One suspect entered the bank wearing a ski mask and carrying a pistol. He pointed his weapon at tellers in the bank and demanded that everyone get down.

He took an undisclosed amount of cash and ran outside where at least two other suspects were waiting for him in a white Dodge Neon with paper plates.

The suspects reportedly dumped the getaway vehicle in the parking lot of Jose De Santiago Early Childhood Pre-Kindergarten Center at 1420 Aldine Meadows Road.

A security guard across the street told us he saw the suspects park, jump out of the getaway car and get into another vehicle.

Officers say this is the fourth bank robbery in a one-mile radius within the past couple days.

The armed suspect was described as a Hispanic male wearing a gray hoodie, blue shorts and a dark ski mask. He carried a red tote bag during the robbery.

Crime Stoppers is offering up to $5,000 for information leading to the charging and arrest of these robbers. If you have information about this case, please call the Crime Stoppers tip line at 713-222-TIPS or the Houston office of the FBI at 713-693-5000.

(Copyright ©2012 KTRK-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.) Get more Local »


local

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Thursday, September 13, 2012

Thieves steal Bellaire High School FFA students' new livestock trailer

HOUSTON (KTRK) -- Just days before a group of Bellaire High School students were supposed to travel to a big statewide competition and show off their animals, someone stole their expensive livestock trailer and a few other things.

Several of the Bellaire FFA students still plan to compete against others across the state this weekend, but now they have to find another way to get their 11 cattle there. Thieves ripped off their brand new trailer and loaded it up with hay and feed before letting all the cattle out of the fence.

Dusty is preparing for a little scrub down. He's one of six cattle left wandering a busy road after thieves stole thousands of dollars worth of equipment and feed from the Bellaire FFA barn.

"He definitely could have died, if there was a car and they weren't paying attention," student Courtney Gonzalez said.

Less than three weeks ago, the Bellaire FFA acquired a 20-foot aluminum livestock trailer, it still had paper plates on it. It was parked near the barn. Then sometime between Sunday night and Monday morning, thieves broke onto the property, hooked up the trailer and then loaded it with student hay and feed.

"They snapped the lock off the storage container here, opened it up, and from that point, they just helped themselves to the feed and the hay that was in here," Bellaire High School ag teacher Mark Peak said.

They had to immediately restock the hay and feed for the animals to consume. What's even more disappointing, is that whoever stole the trailer, is in the same line of work as the FFA students.

"The bond, the brotherhood has been violated. And that's kind of the most disappointing thing in my mind. Whoever took the trailer, had to be in the industry," Peak said.

A police report had been filed and between the trailer, hay and feed the students are looking at a $16,000 loss. They hope someone recognizes the trailer and calls authorities.

"We're doing this for good and it's not like we deserve to get this stolen from us," Gonzalez said.

They do have insurance. However, the trailer won't be replaced before this weekend, so they are checking with other organizations to see if they can borrow one for the Washington County fair in Brenham this weekend.

(Copyright ©2012 KTRK-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.) Get more Local »


bellaire, local, erik barajas

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Case of TB connected to Bellaire High School

  HOUSTON (KTRK) -- Officials are making parents aware of a case of tuberculosis at Bellaire High School.

Principal Michael McDonough sent a letter to parents stating that the City of Houston Health Department informed him that an individual at the school is being evaluated and treated for a suspected case of TB. That individual is said to be recovering and feeling much better. School officials are not releasing any information about the individual.

Tuberculosis is a bacterial infection that can be contagious if it becomes an active disease. However health experts say it is a difficult disease to catch because it is only spread through the air and the environmental conditions need to be just right. Casual contact is generally not sufficient for transmission of the TB bacteria.

Principal McDonough wrote, "At this time, we have not identified any other person on our campus with symptoms of TB. We are taking this situation seriously and will be working closely with the Houston Health Department to identify any student or staff that should be tested for TB infection. Determination of who needs testing is based on the type of exposure a student or staff has had to the sick individual."

Parents will be notified by letter next week by letter if their child is recommended for testing.

Houston Health Department officials will be on campus on Thursday, September 13 at 6pm in the science conference center to give a presentation to parents about tuberculosis and answer questions.

Additional information about tuberculosis can be found at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention website.

(Copyright ©2012 KTRK-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.) Get more Local »


local

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Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Houston Schools Support 2007 Goal of Success for McReynolds Middle School

HISD reaches out to high school dropouts

  HOUSTON (KTRK) -- Houston Independent School District officials and volunteers knocked on the doors of hundreds of high school dropouts Saturday in hopes of encouraging them to return to class.

It's called the Grads Within Reach Walk, and the program is in its ninth year.

According to HISD, the dropout rate was 11.8 percent last year. That was down from 12.6 percent the year before.

Officials and volunteers visited students from 23 of the district's high schools, hoping to get them back in school.

(Copyright ©2012 KTRK-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.) Get more Local »


local

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Thursday, May 31, 2012

HISD hopes for uneventful last day of school

  Pooja LodhiaHOUSTON (KTRK) -- It's the last day of school at HISD. Students will spend the day wrapping up assignments and saying goodbye to teachers.

But the last day of school is usually also peak time for violence. That's why police and the community are working together to make sure summer begins on a safe note.

Local officials plan on monitoring campuses, walking through hallways and making sure kids get a safe start to summer.

It's called Project Safe Start and it's a partnership between police and local faith-based organizations. It started back in 1991 when school officials realized there was always a spike in violence during the end of the school year and into the summer.

So now, officials make it a point to be in schools talking to students, making sure they feel safe and making sure they know that there will be major consequences for violence even though school is almost over.

"We want our students to have a safe end of the school year and a great beginning of the summer," said Lt. Mattie Provost with the Houston Police Department. "We all know that things have changed from when we were in school. The nature of the violence has changed."

Five local schools are participating in Project Safe Start this year.

(Copyright ©2012 KTRK-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.) Get more Local »


houston isd, local

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Saturday, May 26, 2012

Medical legend present to see his grandson graduate med school

HOUSTON (KTRK) -- Among the graduation ceremonies this weekend was a special one. Two-hundred and sixteen students received their degrees in medicine from UT Health Medical School. And one famous Houstonian was there to see his grandson follow in his footsteps and become a doctor -- legendary heart surgeon Dr. Denton Cooley.

They are the grandsons of Dr. Cooley, one of the most famous heart surgeons in history, and Peter Kaldis and Charlie Fraser are medical students at UT Health Medical School.

"He's brilliant, he's very witty and he's very fun to be around," said Fraser.

Kaldis remembered how his grandfather's name would often come up in class.

"The surgeon would ask for the 'my scissors' and they'd go in and do a story about these scissors. These are called 'my scissors' because Dr. Cooley would ask for 'my scissors' and he designed these not knowing that I was his grandson," said Kaldis.

And when other med students would find out who they were.

"Most of them say it's pretty cool," said Fraser.

"I remember being little and looking in the Guinness Book of World Records and seeing there's my grandfather's name!" said granddaughter Laura Fraser.

Of the five Cooley children and 16 grandchildren, nine are in the medical field. His daughter, Dr. Weezie Davis, is an ophthalmologist and Peter's mother.

"I'd love to watch him operate, although I would get a little faint and I'd have to sit down from time to time. But he encouraged me, if he hadn't encouraged me to go to medical school I probably wouldn't had enough courage to do it," said Dr. Davis.

Dr. Cooley is a medical legend. He performed the first heart transplant in the U.S. in 1968. And the world's first total artificial heart surgery a year later.

"It brings back some real memories of those exciting days when cardiac transplantation was so unusual and had been done at only a few centers in the world," said Dr. Cooley.

Helen Cooley Fraser, Charlie's mother, remembers looking for something to take for "show and tell."

"I'm going to go into Daddy's study and find something really neat and I took the first artificial heart, which is now in the Smithsonian Institute, to show and tell at River Oaks Elementary," said Helen Cooley Fraser.

"What I don't think people realize is at the core of him he's just a regular fun guy, enjoyable, and pleasant to be around. And that made it easier for me to marry his daughter, I'll tell you that!" said Dr. Charles Fraser, who is a heart surgeon and Charlie's father..

"Nothing gives me more pleasure today than to have somebody 50 years old come up to me and say, 'Dr. Cooley, you saved my life,'" said Dr. Cooley.

He saved Marvin Odum, who spent four months on a ventilator. Other doctors said he wouldn't survive. But not Dr. Cooley.

"His presence, his attitude and his love was certainly a big factor in pulling me through," Odum said.

"I just wrote a memoir entitled '100,000 Hearts' and that's how many heart operations my associates and I had done when I finally stopped operating myself," Dr. Cooley said.

He was 87 when he stopped operating, but continues working as Surgeon in Chief at Texas Heart Institute, which he founded 50 years ago.

"I don't think there are many 92 year olds who are in their office right now like he is," said Charlie Fraser. "And it's because he truly loves what he does."

Dr. Cooley says his legacy is the hundreds of heart surgeons he trained, like Dr. Bud Frazier.

"Our institution is the length and shadow of Dr. Cooley. And I'm proud to be a part of that," Dr. Frazier said.

On Friday night, Dr. Cooley and his daughter passed the torch to his grandson, Dr. Peter Kaldis.

Dr. Kaldis will begin his residency at UT Health in pediatrics and family medicine. His cousin Charlie Fraser is about to begin his second year of medical school.

(Copyright ©2012 KTRK-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.) Get more HealthCheck »


healthcheck, christi myers

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Thursday, May 24, 2012

More teens going to court for school violations

HOUSTON (KTRK) -- School may be ending for the year, but the problems for thousands of students aren't.

Problems that were once solved with school discipline or Saturday detention are now routinely handled in court.

We examined 10 of our largest school districts and discovered ticketing students is getting more popular, even though parents and police officers say enough is enough.

Five nights a week, Houston's Municipal Court 12 packs them in.

"How old are you?" we asked Dontrell Theirry.

"Twelve," he said.

Kids are there to face a judge for school infractions.

"Some kids threw a firecracker on the floor so they could scare girls and stuff," teen Antonio Morales.

Violations they've already been punished at school for.

"A ticket and suspended," student Margarita Salas.

It's a courtroom full of adult-style discipline for school students, and it's far from the only one around.

Heaven Kimbrell was sent to court, charged with assault for a hair-pulling match at Lynn Lucas Middle School. Adrian Cuero was busted for disorderly conduct for having his computer volume up too loud in class.

"What did you learn from the whole exercise?" we asked Cuero.

"Nothing," he replied jokingly.

Cuero's brother, Yiovani Williams, caught a ticket for mouthing off to a teacher who wouldn't let him use the bathroom.

"I said this is bull," Williams said.

"What is this coming to?" State Sen. John Whitmire said.

Whitmire tried to cut school ticketing down last year, and he'll try again next year in Austin.

"You have to distinguish who you are afraid of versus who you are mad at. If you are afraid of some of the students, you remove them from class," Whitmire said.

HISD, the area's largest district, writes not surprisingly the most tickets, numbers their chief admits are too high.

"We're not there to be a disciplinarian person. We're there to uphold the law. The discipline process comes under the school administration," HISD Police Department Chief Jimmie Dotson said.

But according to a watchdog's report last year and our own review of this year's data, HISD's ticket writing increased two years in a row -- up 10 percent this school year.

In some districts, nearly twice as many tickets were written this year compared to last. In Harris County alone, we found 8,000 school-based tickets, and many of them were for what, in another time, would've been considered school discipline.

Hundreds of tickets were issued for using vulgar language in school. More than 1,100 tickets were for minor fights.

"They were criminalized for juvenile behavior," parent Racquel Williams said.

We found 10 tickets for an offensive gesture. We even found four kids ticketed for a noxious odor.

"Too much perfume will get you a ticket in many classes," Whitmire said.

"Anytime you have to issue ticket for any type of conduct behavior, it's too many," Dotson said. "Hopefully, that student won't come back and create another issue like that."

"Is there any proof that's happening?" we asked him.

"I don't know, I cannot say that," he said.

"Why not?"

"Well because I don't measure those things, Ted."

"But shouldn't you?"

"No, I shouldn't. My job is to make sure that we do the best we can on the front end to keep it safe."

Chief Dotson says he wants to work with teachers to get the ticket numbers down. These tickets, by the way, are not child's play. They become part of a student's criminal record, and if fines aren't paid when they become an adult, kids can be arrested.

(Copyright ©2012 KTRK-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.) Get more In Focus »


in focus, ted oberg

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Saturday, May 19, 2012

Mandarin Chinese the norm at Bellaire school

AP  HOUSTON -- Principal Bryan Bordelon tries to reassure parents taking a chance on his new school: Don't panic when you can't understand your 4-year-old's assignments.

Your child may even tell secrets in a language you don't understand, he says.

That's a good thing. It means the students are learning.

Bordelon is leading a new public elementary school in Bellaire that will immerse mostly English-speaking students in Mandarin Chinese, teaching them to read, write and speak a language with growing importance in the global business arena.

The Houston Independent School District campus, which will open in August, is one of the first schools in Texas to offer a Mandarin immersion program and is among a small but growing number nationwide.

"We want our children to be bi-literate and bi-fluent," Bordelon said. "We want them to go into our library, pick out Harry Potter in Chinese and be able to read it and enjoy it."

HISD's Mandarin Chinese Language Immersion Magnet School will open with pre-kindergarten through second-grade classes, starting the children young when their brains are better wired to learn languages.

The students will get half their instruction in Mandarin from native Mandarin-speaking teachers. Other teachers will reinforce the concepts in English. For example, students will learn in Mandarin how to solve a math problem, then will practice in English.

The school's approach, called a 50-50 immersion model, plus the uniqueness of Mandarin attracted Maggie Brown, who enrolled her two children for next year. Brown said she has seen firsthand that children need intense instruction to master a language; her eldest, a first-grader at HISD's Twain Elementary, learned perhaps 50 Spanish words in two years from weekly, hour-long classes.

"My kids are very excited," said Brown, who has been watching Mandarin videos with them.

About 160 students have enrolled in HISD's Mandarin school for next year, said Bordelon, who expects to add another 100 before classes begin. The school board voted last week to spend up to $440,000 to renovate the campus, at Gordon Elementary on Avenue B in Bellaire.

HISD board member Harvin Moore has been championing the idea of a Mandarin school since taking two education-related trips to China and visiting a program in San Diego, where Superintendent Terry Grier used to work.

"It's harder and harder to get into college and to get jobs," said Moore, who has enrolled his son, an incoming second-grader, in the Mandarin school. "To have a skill that's really unique and makes you smarter, that's a big advantage."

Bordelon, a 29-year-old in his first principal job, said he hopes eventually to expand the Mandarin school through eighth grade and to give high school students the option of taking college-level language and culture courses.

After spending almost all his childhood overseas, in Indonesia, Qatar and Venezuela, Bordelon has learned for himself how quickly language skills can dissipate without practice. He has lost the little Bahasa Indonesian he knew, held on to some French, and remains fairly proficient in Spanish and Mandarin.

Bordelon took his first Mandarin class at the University of Texas, attended a summer immersion program at Middlebury College in Vermont and lived in China for a year. He said he became convinced an elementary immersion school would work after recently visiting campuses in Utah, San Diego and Washington D.C.

"The kids have been in the environment for six months, and they are singing and reading and having conversations in Mandarin," Bordelon recalled. "They pick it up faster than you would believe. Toward the end of the school year, they're telling secrets in Chinese. It's fascinating to see."

HISD has one other elementary school, Kolter, that offers Mandarin, but it is not an immersion program. Students there get 45 minutes of instruction three times in a week in the language of their choice: Mandarin, Spanish or French.

The Stafford school district started a Mandarin and Vietnamese immersion program at its primary school last year, and it now serves roughly 80 students in kindergarten and first grade, said Principal Kim Yen Vu. About half the students are native Mandarin or Vietnamese speakers, and the others are native English speakers.

Nationwide, there are more than 70 Mandarin immersion programs in schools, according to the Center for Applied Linguistics in Washington. Spanish tops the list, with 239 programs, followed by French with 114.

(Copyright ©2012 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.) Get more Local »


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Friday, May 18, 2012

One person shot near Madison High School

See it on TV? Check here.   HOUSTON (KTRK) -- Houston police have provided more details about a shooting near Madison High School at Beran and Quention in southwest Houston.

The shooting happened just before 1pm Tuesday. Eyewitnesses say the victim was in a car with the suspects when he was shot and pushed out of the car. The suspects took off and the victim is being treated at the hospital.

Police have not said if the victim is a student. They did say a student ID, an iPad and cash were found nearby.

(Copyright ©2012 KTRK-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.)
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