 Catch up and get ahead with the edge for the week of February 29th. Super Tuesday, March 1st is a big deal. We'll see Democrats and Republicans make presidential preference choices in 11 states, including Texas. More presidential delegates are up for grabs March 1st than any other single day in the primary. Already in early voting, 48,638 Democrats and 57,290 Republicans have cast ballots, according to the Bear County elections office. If you plan to vote on Tuesday, make sure to check out our nonpartisan bilingual voter guide with information about the dozens of races on the ballot. And then, make sure you get a free ride from Via Metro Transit on Election Day. Just show your voter registration card and hop on board, then go vote! In his State of District 8 speech, Councilman Ron Nuremberg mapped out his ideas for the city's future. He got the most enthusiastic applause when he called for a conversation and a vote on Commuter Rail in San Antonio. According to our neighbors, they want to vote on a better transportation future. We need a rail debate. We need a rail vote and we need it next May. Panelists at the event took part in a lively conversation about transportation that included views on bicycle and pedestrian mobility, highways, mass transit, and the Greenway Trail system. And Nuremberg reiterated his support for a land bridge in Hardberger Park where the meeting was held. What's a land bridge? Check out now CASTSA's video of land bridges around the world and what hours might look like. To join the two parts with a land bridge, and it's the master plan, a land bridge is something that looks like a natural feature when you start, but underneath it is an underpinning of steel gurres. And then on top of that, you have your earth and your trees and your flowers and your grass. It's wide enough so that the animals will go back and forth across it. It will be something that there's nothing like it in the State of Texas, in fact the close. You can learn a lot from our recent webcast of a presentation by Dr. Iris Carlton-Lenay on African-American social welfare pioneers. Thanks to underwriting support from the UTSA College of Public Policy, you can replay this Dean's Distinguished Lecture anytime for free. Dr. Carlton-Lenay's talk touched on the important contributions of some famous people and some who were ordinary people who made extraordinary differences in other people's lives. This is Ann May Keenan. Ms. Keenan was what was called a genes teacher. What she was, she was a black supervisor of the public schools in the county in which I grew up. So that means that she supervised all the colored schools and all the teachers in those black schools. And I wrote about her because we don't write enough about ordinary people, although she was anything but ordinary. But we let too much of our history just go, and many of us are very old people. So we talk about it, but we never write about it. And if we don't write about it, then we lose it. Thanks for watching The Edge. See you next time.