Seth Cross

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Seth Cross

Seth Cross

@CoachSethCross

Varsity Assistant Basketball - Track Coach at Hendrickson High School | Stephen F. Austin alum | Blues-Funk-Jazz music aficionado | Sports Nerd

Pflugerville, TX Katılım Haziran 2011
1.1K Takip Edilen450 Takipçiler
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Josh Eberley 🇨🇦
Josh Eberley 🇨🇦@JoshEberley·
I say this as a teacher, if your kid is reading books, throw a party. Yell how proud you are from the roof tops. Kids don’t read anymore and lord, that’s a problem when AI is filling in every blank.
Polymarket Hoops@PolymarketHoops

San Antonio libraries have launched a “Read Like Wemby” campaign, featuring Victor Wembanyama’s favorite fantasy and sci-fi books, per @MirinFader. Children can read books that their favorite player reads. Since the launch, nearly 160 books have been checked out or put on hold. That’s awesome 🙏

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𐌁𐌉Ᏽ 𐌕𐌉𐌌𐌉
You reduce crime by eliminating poverty. The reason so called nice neighborhoods have lower crime rates is because people’s basic needs are being met. It is not because of police, alarm systems, or neighborhood associations. Poverty creates crime.
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𐌁𐌉Ᏽ 𐌕𐌉𐌌𐌉
Bees are responsible for pollinating about one in three bites of the food we eat. They are far more important to humans than any AI tool or data center.
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Seth Cross retweetledi
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Nahuel Lanzón
Nahuel Lanzón@nahuelzn·
🇨🇻 El plantel de Cabo Verde está haciendo un tour isla por isla para despedir a la gente antes del Mundial. Muchos jugadores nacieron en Europa y no conocen todas las islas. Así los recibieron hoy en la municipalidad de la Isla de Sal, con baile y todo! Merecidisimo.
Nahuel Lanzón@nahuelzn

🇨🇻 ¡CABO VERDE ANUNCIÓ SUS CONVOCADOS PARA EL MUNDIAL! Bubista confirmó los 26 Tiburones Azules que tendrán el honor de representar al país en su debut mundialista. En este hilo, mas allá del análisis del plantel, les cuento la historia de esta selección, que bien vale la pena!

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104.3 The Score
104.3 The Score@thescorechicago·
"I've found peace in talking about my wife as opposed to talking about the struggle that she endured for two years." Michael Smith shared a powerful remembrance of his wife, Sarah, who passed away after a brave battle with glioblastoma.
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Sama Hoole
Sama Hoole@SamaHoole·
In 1870, if you took a spade to the ground in Iowa, or Nebraska, or eastern Kansas, you could push it in to the haft and not hit anything that wasn't soil. Six feet of topsoil. Black, friable, alive. The richest agricultural earth on the planet, by a margin so absurd that European visitors with farming backgrounds went silent when they saw it turned over. Most arable land on Earth carries between one and eight inches of topsoil. The Great Plains carried seventy-two. Nobody had ploughed it. Nobody had fertilised it. Nobody had irrigated it. It had been built, slowly and completely, by something else. Stand back from the spade. Stand back from the field. Stand back far enough to see the continent. A herd of bison, fifty miles wide, takes five days to pass the hillside you are standing on. Colonel Dodge recorded this in Arkansas in 1871, and he was not the only one. From the top of Pawnee Rock the herd ran to the horizon in every direction at once. The earth, observers wrote, trembled at three miles. Sixty million animals. The largest gathering of large mammals the planet has ever held. They had been doing this for ten thousand years. The grass grew tall because the bison grazed it hard and moved on. Their hooves broke the crust for seed. Their wallows held the rain. Their dung fed the microbes. Their carcasses fed them harder. The deep-rooted prairie grasses, big bluestem, switchgrass, Indian grass, drove their roots fifteen feet down, locking carbon into the soil at a depth no plough would ever reach. The bison built the six feet of black earth. The bison were why it existed. Then the hide market arrived. Five thousand bison a day, shot from train windows, left to rot. The U.S. government encouraged it openly, because starving the Plains nations was cheaper than fighting them. By 1889, of the sixty million, five hundred and forty-one remained. The plough followed within a decade. The grass was turned under. The hooves and the wallows and the dung had stopped. The soil, untethered from the system that built it, dried. In April 1935 it rose into the sky as a black wall a thousand miles wide and travelled to the Atlantic. Six feet of soil, built over ten millennia, blown into the sea in a generation. There is no putting the bison back at that scale. The cow is the closest analogue the continent has. Run her like a bison, on grass, on the move, in a tight mob. Watch what the land does.
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Chris Childers
Chris Childers@ChildersRadio·
The Big Ten and SEC have become so powerful that they are willing to reshape the entire ecosystem in their own l interest, even if it potentially harms the broader health of college sports. This is not necessarily a bad thing, but it is a likely reality of the times we live in. As a fan, do you think this is the right direction for college sports? Drop a comment to explain your vote.
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