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At Least 11 Texans Dead After Winter Storm

At Least 11 Texans Dead After Winter Storm

At least 11 people have died in Texas, nearly half of them children, after Winter Storm Fern swept the state last week, the Texas Standard reported. Among those killed were three young brothers who fell through ice on a private pond near Bonham, about 60 miles northeast of Texas. In the Dallas suburb of Frisco, two teens died after a sledding accident. They were riding on a sled being pulled by a vehicle. Several unhoused people died of exposure in Austin, Houston and Fort Worth, according to reports. Nationally, the storm has killed at least 50 people. Nearly five years after Winter Storm Uri overwhelmed the state’s power grid and left millions without electricity, officials with the Electric Reliability Council of Texas noted the grid held, though localized outages were reported, especially in East Texas, where at one point more than 91,000 customers were without power. Those outages were largely due to ice accumulation and downed lines. The storm forced nearly 2,400 flight cancellations at airports in Dallas, Houston and Austin.

L-R: Dr. Marlene Zipperlen, Shirley Wilson, Monalisa Matthews, Cynthia Berry, Letitia Estep, Dr. Chelleye Crow, Phyllis Macmillan, Dr. Michele Cox at DKG Society International Beta Nu Chapter Executive Board meeting on January 31, 2026, Marlin, TX. Photo

DKG: An International Society for Key Women Educators

“Nine years after women won the right to vote in the United States of America, Delta Kappa Gamma (DKG) Society was founded to fill the needs of women in the educational profession. At that time, women teachers were offered few leadership positions, promoted rarely, fired easily, and paid less than male colleagues.” Dr. Annie Webb Blanton, a university professor and a former Texas Superintendent of Education, dreamed of and planned for an organization in which women teachers could support one another and recognize themselves as leaders in their chosen profession. She and 11 other women educators, representing different disciplines and under assumed names for fear of losing their jobs, founded the Society on May 11, 1929.

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