company with more than 435 million users a vast is dedicated to helping people take control of their safety and privacy online. Learn more at a vast Dotcom you're listening to Texas public radio news on Norma Martinez Latino voters are seen Is a growing force in Texas politics and you study shows that a majority of Latinas are exposed to disinformation ahead of the 2022 midterms PPR's even been a fetus reports, new data shows that Latinos are being exposed to an inordinate amount of disinformation cording to research from the national Association of Latino elected and appointed officials or delay O but they know start turning increasingly to social media's no primary source for news of this increases their exposure to political and anti public help disinformation Dorian call is within LA O educational fund it is been a challenge to under two no only the extent of this misinformation right and how it's that it's influencing looking to community but just in general right how it played a role in this upcoming election certain more than 60% of Latinos report exposure to lies and to see about politics to combat disinformation than a lay O educational fund is announcing the launch of nifty ended leather that then the truth a campaign to combat disinformation that targets Latinos I mean that they not be this in San Antonio element colleges District leaders are at odds with faculty when it comes to whether the District should implement a new tenure policy the element colleges stopped offering tenure to new faculty in 2011. Chancellor Mike FLOTUS wants to replace annual contracts with multi-year contracts for faculty hired after tenure was paused. He says it's a quote best in class plan looking at the landscape of urban community colleges within the state of texas and also nationally it provides job security for 55% of our current faculty faculty members say they're worried that won't be enough to protect them against political attacks that target academic freedom, 18, was arrested in connection with a lockdown you Braunfels high school earlier this month, the new Braunfels police Department said on Facebook. A 15 year-old male student from the high school was charged with making a false report that's a state felony the high school locked down after police received a false tip of a person with a firearm on campus. The teen faces up to two years in jail and a 10000 $ fine if convicted 198 new coronavirus cases were reported Wednesday in bear County, the region's averaging 233 kids today the COVID risk level for the region is now in the Green low and improving category the COVID test positivity rate is still high 12.1 % which is a drop of about two percentage points in the last week 132 COVID patients are being treated in area hospitals. No, you covered related deaths were confirmed Wednesday and the San Antonio Metropolitan help District will host a COVID 19 vaccine pop-up clinic today at two 10 mill waiters way from 7 30 to 11 a.m. and COVID vaccines and boosters are available at area clinics and pharmacies it 64 degrees a high of 92. It'll be sunny and calm today. You're listening to Texas public radio and use normal nothingness. It's morning edition from NPR news, I'm Leyla father and I'm Rachel Martin. Good morning, Hurricane in trapped people with high water at flooded a fire station and tore the roof off the hospital and that knocked out power for millions of people before making landfall in Florida, one of the strongest storms ever to hit the US had winds that rapidly strengthen to nearly 150 miles an hour on the other side of the World. Another storm typhoon Noru went from a category one to a category 5 in just 6 hours before slamming into the Philippines so how did in a neuro get so strong so fast. Gabriel vaccine is a climate scientist at Princeton University and he joins us this morning. Thanks so much for being here. Thanks for having me. Can we say definitively that this fast-changing intensity that we saw with these storms in particular but others as well is an effective Climate change I think for these specific storms and for any specific storm we're not going to be able to say definitively that global warming was the main cause in fact is it's just going to be one of the factors that change the odds we are having growing confidence that global warming is changing the odds of hurricanes and typhoons do undergoing rapid intensification becoming Monster storms overnight. Can you explain those other factors I mean what is the science behind behind what makes these storm stronger well in order for storm to get much stronger. You need to have a fuel and fuel comes in the form of warm ocean but then you also need to have the