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Harris Co. leads nation in Black maternal death rates, report shows

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HARRIS COUNTY, Texas (KTRK) — While Houston is home to the largest medical complex in the world, data in a recent report on maternal and infant health published by the Harris County Public Health indicates the region has led the country in Black maternal death rates since 2016.

The report lists a number of factors that may contribute to disproportionately poor health outcomes for Black mothers and their children.

Black women are at greater risk for conditions such as hypertension, diabetes, and heart problems, which are known to complicate pregnancy. The discrepancies are partially attributed to historical inequities such as lack of access to nutritious food.

The report also found that Black women who graduated college are 60 times more likely to die during childbirth than white and Hispanic women without high school diplomas.

In 2022, Dionna Jacobs lost her second son, Hendrix, during childbirth.

She told ABC13 that when she and her partner arrived at the hospital, she was “screaming to the top of (her) lungs.”

She said she knew something was wrong, explaining that the pain was not comparable to what she experienced delivering her first child.

“(Staff) would be like ‘Oh, it’s probably just your first baby. Oh, she’s a young mom,’ and I would have to keep saying, ‘No, this is my second baby. No, I’ve actually delivered here before. This is actually my second time delivering at this hospital,'” Jacobs said, adding that her cries for help initially went unanswered by hospital staff.

“When a woman comes into an emergency room screaming, there should be an immediate call to action,” she said.

Jacobs said her partner eventually dug a wheelchair out of a hospital closet himself.

“I definitely think that they just saw a young Black girl and assumed I was being overdramatic of my pain,” she said. “Something in my body was like, ‘You just have to push him out yourself cause clearly nobody here is going to attempt to get him out.'”

She continued, “I beared down, I pushed him out by myself, he landed on the table, nobody caught him. They didn’t catch his neck, didn’t do anything. They just let him lay there.”

She told ABC13 that her pleas to tend to her son were waved off, and one nurse reportedly told her, “Oh no, girl, he’s already gone.”

She said her son’s body was not moved from the table until a Black nurse walked into the room and swaddled him.

“Another African American woman saw me struggling,” she said.

Doctors initially suspected Jacobs’ placenta had ruptured. She says she felt like it was her fault, that her body had failed, and declined an autopsy. She would later learn her placenta was in tact.

“I did not want them to touch my son,” she cried.

To this day, Jacobs still doesn’t know why Hendrix died. But data shows because she is Black in Harris County, he was two to three times more likely to during or before delivery than a white child.

“We are definitely disproportionately disadvantaged. Unfortunately, in this county, we are three to four times more likely to die from childbirth than white women,” Kay Matthews, founder of Shades of Blue, said.

Matthews lost her daughter, Troya, and nearly lost her own life, giving birth 11 years ago. She said she was sent home with discharge papers, her street clothes, and postpartum depression.

“I was given no resources,” she explained.

Her nonprofit now serves more than 3,000 women and family members each year, offering wraparound support services ranging from no-cost psychiatry to clothing.

“It’s making sure that no one has to feel what I feel,” she explained. “Every time I’m doing this, I’m showing up to this building. I assure you that Troya mattered.”

For more updates on this story, follow Shannon Ryan on FacebookX and Instagram.

Actress Maggie Smith, known for ‘Harry Potter,’ ‘Downton Abbey,’ has died

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LONDON — Maggie Smith, the masterful, scene-stealing actor who won an Oscar for The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie in 1969 and gained new fans in the 21st century as the Dowager Countess of Grantham in Downton Abbey and Professor Minerva McGonagall in the Harry Potter films, died Friday. She was 89.

Smith’s sons, Chris Larkin and Toby Stephens, said in a statement that she died early Friday in a London hospital.

“She leaves two sons and five loving grandchildren who are devastated by the loss of their extraordinary mother and grandmother,” they said in a statement issued through publicist Clair Dobbs.

Smith was frequently rated as the preeminent British female performer of a generation that included Vanessa Redgrave and Judi Dench. She had a clutch of Academy Award nominations and a shelf full of acting trophies.

She remained in demand even in her later years, despite lamenting that “when you get into the granny era, you’re lucky to get anything.”

Smith drily summarized her later roles as “a gallery of grotesques,” including Professor McGonagall. Asked why she took the role, she quipped: “Harry Potter is my pension.”

Richard Eyre, who directed Smith in a television production of Suddenly Last Summer, said she was “intellectually the smartest actress I’ve ever worked with. You have to get up very, very early in the morning to outwit Maggie Smith.”

Jean Brodie, in which she played a dangerously charismatic Edinburgh schoolteacher, brought her the Academy Award for Best Actress and a British Academy Film Award (BAFTA) in 1969.

Smith added a Supporting Actress Oscar for California Suite in 1978, Golden Globes for California Suite and Room with a View, and BAFTAs for Lead Actress in A Private Function in 1984, A Room with a View in 1986, and The Lonely Passion of Judith Hearne in 1988.

She also received Academy Award nominations as a Supporting Actress for OthelloTravels with My AuntRoom with a View, and Gosford Park, as well as a BAFTA award for Supporting Actress in Tea with Mussolini. On stage, she won a Tony Award in 1990 for Lettice and Lovage.

Her work in 2012 garnered three Golden Globe nominations for the globally successful Downton Abbey TV series and the films The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel and Quartet.

Smith had a reputation for being difficult and sometimes upstaging others.

Richard Burton remarked that Smith didn’t just take over a scene in The VIPs with him: “She commits grand larceny.” However, the director Peter Hall found that Smith wasn’t “remotely difficult unless she’s among idiots. She’s very hard on herself, and I don’t think she sees any reason why she shouldn’t be hard on other people, too.”

Smith conceded that she could be impatient at times.

“It’s true I don’t tolerate fools, but then they don’t tolerate me, so I am spiky,” Smith said. “Maybe that’s why I’m quite good at playing spiky elderly ladies.”

Critic Frank Rich, in a New York Times review of Lettice and Lovage, praised Smith as “the stylized classicist who can italicize a line as prosaic as ‘Have you no marmalade?’ until it sounds like a freshly minted epigram by Coward or Wilde.”

Smith famously drew laughs from a prosaic line—”This haddock is disgusting”—in a 1964 revival of Noel Coward’s Hay Fever.

“But unfortunately, the critics mentioned it, and after that, it never got a laugh,” she recalled. “The moment you say something is funny, it’s gossamer. It’s gone, really.”

Margaret Natalie Smith was born in Ilford, on the eastern edge of London, on Dec. 28, 1934. She summed up her life briefly: “One went to school, one wanted to act, one started to act, one’s still acting.”

Her father was assigned to wartime duty in Oxford in 1939, where her theater studies at the Oxford Playhouse School led to a busy apprenticeship.

“I did so many things, you know, round the universities there. … If you were kind of clever enough and I suppose quick enough, you could almost do weekly rep because all the colleges were doing different productions at different times,” she said in a BBC interview.

She took Maggie as her stage name because another Margaret Smith was active in the theater.

Laurence Olivier spotted her talent, invited her to be part of his original National Theatre company, and cast her as his co-star in a 1965 film adaptation of Othello.

Smith said two directors, Ingmar Bergman and William Gaskill, both in National Theatre productions, were important influences.

Alan Bennett, preparing to film the monologue A Bed Among the Lentils, said he was wary of Smith’s reputation for becoming bored. As the actor Jeremy Brett put it, “She starts divinely and then goes off, rather like a cheese.”

“So the fact that we only just had enough time to do it was an absolute blessing really because she was so fresh and just so into it,” said Bennett, who also wrote a starring role for Smith in The Lady in the Van.

However extravagant she may have been on stage or before the cameras, Smith was known to be intensely private.

Simon Callow, who acted with her in A Room with a View, said he ruined their first meeting by spouting compliments.

“I blurted out various kinds of rubbish about her, and she kind of withdrew. She doesn’t like that sort of thing very much at all,” Callow said in a film portrait of the actress. “She never wanted to talk about acting. Acting was something she was terrified to talk about because if she did, it would disappear.”

Smith was made a Dame Commander of the British Empire, the equivalent of a knight, in 1990.

She married fellow actor Robert Stephens in 1967. They had two sons, Christopher and Toby, and divorced in 1975. The same year, she married the writer Beverley Cross, who died in 1998.

Associated Press writer Robert Barr contributed biographical material to this obituary before his death in 2018.

Tracking Helene: At least 9 dead, millions without power; system downgraded to tropical storm

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ATLANTA – At least nine people have died from Hurricane Helene, which weakened to a tropical storm Friday as it moved inland through Georgia.

Helene continues to weaken as it progresses further inland. As of 5 a.m., the storm was about 40 miles (65 kilometers) east of Macon and 100 miles (165 kilometers) southeast of Atlanta, moving north at 30 mph (48 kph), according to the National Hurricane Center in Miami.

The storm swept across Florida, Georgia, and into North Carolina, leaving at least nine dead and millions without power across the Southeast. Significant flooding has been reported, with more rain expected Friday as Helene moves toward Tennessee.

The storm made landfall Thursday night in Florida’s Big Bend region as a Category 4 hurricane. Forecasters had warned that the massive system could create a “nightmare” storm surge, bringing dangerous winds and rain to much of the southeastern U.S.

In a 4 a.m. update, the National Hurricane Center reported the storm was about 100 miles from Augusta and 40 miles from Macon, moving at about 30 mph.

Warnings and Forecasts

Hurricane warnings and tropical storm warnings remain in effect through early Friday morning. The storm is expected to continue slowing and weakening throughout the day, turning northwest to move through Georgia toward the Tennessee-North Carolina border.

Death Toll Rises to 9

At least nine people have died as Hurricane Helene battered the South. In Charlotte, North Carolina, one person was killed and another injured when a tree fell on a house, according to the Mecklenburg EMS Agency. Four people were killed in Georgia overnight as the storm advanced.

In south Georgia, two people died when a possible tornado struck a mobile home on Thursday night, according to Wheeler County Sheriff Randy Rigdon. Wheeler County is located about 70 miles (113 kilometers) southeast of Macon. Two more people died in Laurens County, central Georgia, local officials reported.

Forecasters had warned of severe tornadoes, and the National Weather Service issued 12 tornado warnings for parts of Georgia between 1 p.m. and 11 p.m. Thursday.

Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp expressed his condolences, urging residents to remain vigilant: “We are saddened to learn of the loss of two lives in Wheeler County this evening… We urge all Georgians to brace for further impact from Helene, remain vigilant, and pray for all those affected.”

In Florida, one person died in Dixie County in the Big Bend region when a tree fell on a home, and another was killed on Interstate 4 near Tampa when a sign fell on a car, according to Gov. Ron DeSantis.

DeSantis cautioned that more fatalities may be discovered: “When we wake up in the morning, chances are there will be more fatalities,” he said, adding that another press conference will be held Friday morning.

Millions Without Power Across Four States

More than four million people across the South are waking up without power Friday morning in the wake of Hurricane Helene.

In Florida, more than 1.1 million customers are without power, while South Carolina has 1.3 million affected. Georgia has over 1 million customers without power, and North Carolina has another 600,000 in the dark.

Helene’s Landfall in Perry, Florida

The National Hurricane Center reported that Helene made landfall at 11:10 p.m. EDT near the mouth of the Aucilla River in Florida’s Big Bend region. The storm had maximum sustained winds of 140 mph (225 kph).

Helene triggered hurricane and flash flood warnings stretching beyond the coast into northern Georgia and western North Carolina. Before landfall, nearly 900,000 homes and businesses in Florida had already lost power. The governors of Florida, Georgia, Alabama, the Carolinas, and Virginia all declared states of emergency in response to the storm.

This marks the first Category 4 hurricane to make landfall in Florida’s Big Bend region since at least 1859.

Helene now a Cat. 3 hurricane ahead of Florida landfall

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September 26, 2 p.m.

Hurricane Helene is now a major category 3 wind storm with 120 mph winds. It is accelerating toward Florida’s Big Bend and will move quickly through Georgia overnight. Due to this unprecedented combination of strength and forward speed in this part of the country, the storm surge will be catastrophic and possibly record-setting. New hurricane model data also indicates hurricane-force wind gusts of 80-100 mph will be common across much of the eastern half of Georgia. Sustained wind speeds will be significantly lower, but the gusts will do significant damage to trees, buildings, and power infrastructure from Florida to Georgia and possible into the western Carolinas, too.

September 26, 10 a.m.

Helene becomes a Category 2 hurricane is expected to intensify to a Cat 3 Hurricane at landfall near Apalachicola this evening. Helene is a large hurricane with a large portion of the southeast US likely to see impacts such as life-threatening flooding, damaging winds, power outages and isolated tornadoes. There can be up to 15-20 feet of storm surge flooding for much of the Big Bend of Florida.

Tropical Storm Isaac has formed in the North Atlantic and will move east without impacts to land.

September 25, 4 p.m.

Helene is still a Category 1 hurricane as it moves into the southern Gulf of Mexico. It is now expected to become an even stronger hurricane… becoming a Cat 4 with 130 mph winds by Thursday afternoon. Landfall expected in the Big Bend region of Florida Thursday evening. Helene is on track to remain a hurricane as it moves north through Georgia… weakening to a tropical storm in northern Georgia.

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September 25, 10 a.m.

Helene becomes a hurricane. Helene has been upgraded to a Category 1 hurricane with 80 mph max sustained winds as it makes its way into the southeastern Gulf. Helene is expected to intensify into a major hurricane before making landfall in the Big Bend region of Florida Thursday evening. Life threatening storm surge, damaging winds, and flooding rains are anticipated across parts of Florida with hurricane force wind gusts possible all the way north into Atlanta, Georgia.

September 25, 7 a.m.

Helene remains a strong Tropical Storm Helene as it brushes the coast of the Yucatan Peninsula. It is expected to move north into the southeastern Gulf Wednesday nearing hurricane strength. It looks to most likely make landfall in the Big Bend or Panhandle area of Florida Thursday as a major category 3 or higher hurricane. No impacts are expected for Texas.

Fort Bend Co. Judge KP George indicted a week after incriminating messages revealed

FORT BEND COUNTY, Texas (KTRK) — Fort Bend County Judge KP George, who’s at the center of a criminal investigation over an alleged election scheme, has been indicted.

The video above is from a previous report.

ABC13 learned of the indictment Thursday afternoon through court documents, which accuse the county judge of using a fake Facebook account under the name “Antonio Scalywag” with the “intent to injure a candidate or influence the result of an election.”

The latest findings come after a lengthy search warrant last week revealed incriminating text messages between George and Precinct 3 Commissioner candidate Taral Patel.

READ MORE: New warrant suggests Fort Bend County Judge KP George knew about staffer’s alleged wrongdoing

The search warrant alleges that the second-term Democrat was involved in a scheme to influence his re-election in 2022. He claimed he was the target of racist social media posts that investigators believe he knew his then-chief of staff, Patel, created to work in his favor.

Patel has been charged with online impersonation but remains a candidate for Fort Bend County Commissioner Precinct 3.

Investigators believe Patel created fake Facebook accounts and then posted racist comments targeting George to garner sympathy. Some of those comments ended up in a collage that Patel created on social media. The warrant says investigators found text messages from Patel to George that said, “I am posting the image now.”

Immediately after the screenshot was a message from Patel that read, “Let me know if you approve, I’ll share this post,” the warrant reads.

The warrant also said George then responded with the following request: “Also add, this heinous act doesn’t represent Fort Bend County we are that most diverse and inclusive county, our diversity is our strength.”

In his latest statement, George, before his indictment, said he has “faith in the legal process” and trusts that his “name will be cleared.”

See the previous statement from KP George:

“From the outset, I have been fully cooperating with the authorities. I’ve complied with them and provided the requested items. On the advice of my attorney, I neither can comment nor answer any specific questions at this time. I will continue to perform my duties as the County Judge which citizens of Fort Bend County overwhelmingly elected me to do. My focus remains on serving the residents of Fort Bend County to the best of my ability. I have 100% faith in the legal process and trust that once all the facts are reviewed, my name will be cleared.”

New York City Mayor Eric Adams indicted in federal corruption investigation

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NEW YORK — New York Mayor Eric Adams has been indicted by a federal grand jury on charges that remain sealed, according to sources familiar with the matter.

Adams now becomes the first mayor in New York City history to be indicted while in office. If he were to resign, he would be replaced by the city’s public advocate, Jumaane Williams, who would then schedule a special election.

A spokesman for the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York declined to comment.

Meanwhile, Adams responded to the indictment in both written and video statements on Wednesday night.

“I always knew that If I stood my ground for New Yorkers that I would be a target-and a target I became. If I am charged, I am innocent and I will fight this with every ounce of my strength and spirit,” he said.

NYC Mayor Eric Adams releases video addressing calls for resignation amid federal indictment.

New York Gov. Kathy Hochul has the power to remove Adams from office, although she did not immediately return a request for comment Wednesday night.

Adams, the police officer turned politician, along with members of his inner circle has spent nearly a year under the cloud of federal investigations.

His cell phones were seized and, in recent weeks, the residences of some of his closest confidants were searched by federal agents working on several related corruption probes.

The mayor two weeks ago, accepted the resignation of Edward Caban, his handpicked police commissioner, after the authorities issued a subpoena for his phones.

The mayor’s chief counsel, Lisa Zornberg, stepped down. This week, the schools chancellor, David Banks, announced plans to retire at the end of the year. Banks had also turned over his phone to federal authorities.

Banks’s younger brothers, Philip, the deputy mayor for public safety, and Terence, also had their phones seized. David Banks’s fiancée, Sheena Wright, the first deputy mayor, had her phone seized as well.

ALSO WATCH | ABC News’ Aaron Katersky on what comes next after Adams’ indictment

Aaron Katersky Senior investigative reporter for ABC News breaks down what happens next after Mayor Adams’ indictment.

Adams has said that, as a former police officer, he has always followed the rules. He has also said he has known of no “misdoings” within his administration.

He has repeatedly said he wasn’t aware of any wrongdoing, dismissing speculation that he would face charges as “rumors and innuendo,” and vowing as recently as Wednesday afternoon to stay in office.

“The people of this city elected me to fight for them, and I will stay and fight no matter what,” Adams said.

The federal investigations into his administration first emerged publicly on Nov. 2, 2023, when FBI agents conducted an early morning raid on the Brooklyn home of Adams’ chief fundraiser, Brianna Suggs.

At the time, Adams insisted he followed the law and said he would be “shocked” if anyone on his campaign had acted illegally. “I cannot tell you how much I start the day with telling my team we’ve got to follow the law,” he told reporters at the time.

Days later, FBI agents seized the mayor’s phones and iPad as he was leaving an event in Manhattan. The interaction was disclosed several days later by the mayor’s attorney.

Other investigations have focused on city contracts and enforcement of regulations governing bars and clubs.

Only the second African-American to lead the nation’s largest city, Adams had been hailed as the vanguard of a new generation of Democratic leader who could both support law enforcement and chart a progressive course coming out of a city-crushing pandemic.

He has led the city through a remarkable drop in violent crime after a COVID-era surge that led business leaders and residents to complaint that New York was collapsing toward the bad old days of the 1980s.

Adams is not expected to appear in court until next week, according to sources.

ABC News and the Associated Press have contributed to this report.

This is breaking news. This story will be updated as more information becomes available.

Punishment phase begins for former Houston police officer and now convicted murderer Gerald Goines

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HOUSTON, Texas (KTRK) — Former Houston police narcotics officer Gerald Goines will learn his sentencing soon for the 2019 murders of Rhogena Nicholas and Dennis Tuttle.

The two were killed five years ago in a botched police raid that happened because of Goines’ lies.

ABC13 is at the courthouse Thursday as the punishment phase begins for the former officer and now-convicted murderer.

PREVIOUS REPORT: Former HPD officer Gerald Goines, now a convicted murderer, enters penalty phase next

The most severe punishment Goines could face is life in prison with the possibility of parole. Legal analysts told ABC13 that’s likely what the state will ask for, but it’s up to the jury.

A new jail booking photo of Goines was taken overnight after the guilty verdict on Wednesday.

On Thursday, the state is introducing other “bad acts” they say Goines is responsible for, which they want the jury to know about before deciding his fate. Jurors weren’t allowed to hear this during the murder trial.

Who do we expect to hear from at this sentencing?

The court is set to hear from people who had convictions overturned in their criminal cases linked to Goines’ lies.

Frederick Jeffery spent six years in prison for drug possession. All his life, he’s struggled with drug addiction and says that made him an easy target when he was convicted back in 2018, solely based on testimony from Goines.

That conviction was overturned two years ago, and Jeffrey was released from prison.

READ MORE: Gerald Goines’ sentence could rest on testimony from those wrongly convicted before botched raid

Goines was the primary investigator for 441 criminal cases from 2008 to 2019.

Since the botched Harding Street raid in 2019, where Goines murdered Tuttle and Nicholas, more than 30 convictions have been overturned, per the district attorney’s office.

A gag order is in place until the punishment phase ends, so neither the state nor Goines’ attorneys have spoken since the verdict.

If the hearing doesn’t wrap by the end of Thursday, there will be a break until next Wednesday.

10th person dies from listeria outbreak linked to recalled Boar’s Head meat, CDC says

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NEW YORK — A death in New York has been linked with a listeria outbreak connected to recalled Boar’s Head deli meat, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Wednesday. A total of 59 people have been hospitalized with the outbreak strain of bacteria in 19 states, and 10 of them have died.

However, the agency noted that the actual number of cases is most likely higher because it can take up to 10 weeks for symptoms of listeria infection to begin, because some people who get ill recover without being tested for listeria and because it usually takes weeks to link an illness with an outbreak.

RELATED: 1st wrongful death lawsuit filed in Boar’s Head listeria outbreak

Boar’s Head has called the listeria outbreak a “dark moment in our company’s history” and said it would discontinue sales of its liverwurst after an investigation found that its production process was the root of the listeria contamination. The company is taking steps including closing the Virginia plant that produced meat tied to the outbreak and is implementing a companywide food safety program.

The plant in Jarratt, Virginia, has not been operational since July, when the liverwurst recall was first announced and then expanded to include all products made at the facility.

“We remain steadfast in our commitment to our customers and to the safety and quality of our products,” Boar’s Head said in a letter to consumers. “We are determined to learn from this experience and emerge stronger.”

RELATED: Boar’s Head expands recall to include 7M more pounds of deli meats tied to listeria outbreak

The CDC continues to advise consumers to check their kitchens for recalled products, which have “EST. 12612” or “P-12612” inside the USDA mark of inspection on labels and have sell-by dates into October 2024.

Listeria bacteria causes listeriosis, the third leading cause of death from foodborne illness in the United States. Symptoms can include fever, muscle aches and fatigue. An infection can also cause a stiff neck, a headache, confusion or seizures.

Fall front is here with dry air

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HOUSTON, Texas (KTRK) — Our first fall front has pushed through Southeast Texas, and that will deliver a healthy dose of dry air on Thursday.

Make sure you take advantage of this weather and get outside! We’ll have full on sunshine from sunrise to sunset Thursday, but temperatures will only rise into the mid to upper 80s!

How long will the dry air stick around?

This lovely dry air should hang around for the rest of September. We’ll still have highs in the low-to-mid 90s, but the mornings will be refreshing with crisp lows in the mid 60s. Late next week, humidity levels are expected to sharply rise as tropical moisture rolls back in to bring back chances for rain.

What are you tracking in the tropics?

We are tracking Hurricane Helene as it heads for a landfall in Florida’s Big Bend Thursday evening. Right now Helene is a Cat 2 hurricane but is expected to intensify into at least a Cat. 3 before landfall. Head to our daily Tropical Update page for the latest on what’s happening in the tropics.

¡Que Onda! Magazine Houston – edición 1308

Gracias por SEGUIRNOS, este artículo contiene la edición 1308 de la revista digital de HOUSTON de ¡Que Onda! Magazine Edición Numero 1308. Del 26 de septiembre al 9 de octubre del 2024. Fecha de Publicación: jueves, 26 de septiembre del 2024.

¡Que Onda! Magazine Houston – Issue No. 1308

Thank you for following us! The following file contains ¡Que Onda! Magazine Houston’s Digital – Issue No. 1308 published on Thursday, Sept. 26, 2024