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    Shelby Hodge's Cancer Fight

    A cancer bump in the road for CultureMap's Shelby Hodge means M.D. Anderson is her new best friend

    Shelby Hodge
    shelby hodge
    Aug 8, 2013 | 6:35 am

    The world spins on a dime — a tired cliché perhaps, but little seems more fitting to describe the moment that my world turned upside down. Saturday, July 13 is a day that I will remember for the rest of my life. That mid-afternoon call from my colorectal surgeon, I knew, could not be good.

    When removing an internal hemorrhoid only several days before, he had said he noticed something small, dark and hard at the end of the hemorrhoid. Probably nothing, he said. But he thought a biopsy was in order.

    Scared? Not at that moment.

    My mother had died only three months earlier. My sister had been diagnosed with breast cancer in June. Surely, the family could endure no more. I forgot that bad things come in threes.

    Squamous cell carcinoma, the good doctor informed over my cellphone as my husband and I were on our way home from at outing to Costco. A skin cancer. And there is enough skin just inside the rectum to host such an unwanted guest. Great. The out-of-body experience was so real that I could see myself sitting in my car on my cellphone speaking to the doctor. I, of course, was several yards above looking down.

    Eventually, my feet reclaimed terra firma. My heart, on the other hand, was racing at Secretariat speed. Oh my God. What did this mean? How bad could it be?

    We called my husband's son, an MD with degrees from Harvard and the University of Virginia medical school. He went to work researching the subject. Sunday morning, when I awoke, I went straight to the computer and there was his email with a link to an M.D. Anderson study. Worst case scenario — colostomy.

    I am falling over the kitchen counter, sobbing, distraught beyond distraught. Vainly not even giving a thought to life or death. A colostomy, that was bad enough. Never mind that my nephew had undergone the surgery in his early twenties and is doing fine and just had a beautiful baby.

    Surely, the family could endure no more. I forgot that bad things come in threes.

    Moving on, a consultation with my colorectal surgeon revealed that the cancer had probably been caught early, no more than Stage 1, probably. That treatment would be the standard radiation and chemotherapy for a certain number of weeks, perhaps six to eight. I would have to wait until my tests at M.D. Anderson to determine the full course of treatment. Radiation/chemotherapy — those two words beat like an endless drum through my mind most of the day and all night.

    Radiation/chemotherapy! Radiation/chemotherapy! Who is going to ever sleep soundly with that unholy rhythm resounding through the blood stream?

    We've all seen the misery of the poisonous cures for cancer. Little is more frightening. I sobbed in fear. A non-deserving Christian, I prayed for strength. Each day, I feel as if I am falling deeper into Alice's rabbit hole.

    Preparing For The Fight

    In somewhat of a zombie state as far as this journey was concerned, I went about my work, had dinner with friends, had lunch with girlfriends, even had six close friends to our home for dinner. My husband and I had decided that we could let no one know until we knew the full consequences of the disease. We told my internist and two friends who could help us at M.D. Anderson. No one else.

    Today, I begin 25 days of high-dose radiation and chemotherapy.

    Things progressed. I had CT scans of my chest, abdomen and pelvic area. Praise God, no sign of trouble. No swollen lymph nodes. The M.D. Anderson surgeon, the oncologist and the radiation doctor conferred over my various test results. The prognosis is very good, they said.

    Stage 1 caught very early, no sign of recurrence. The radiation oncologist placed me in the 95 percentile for cure, my response, thank you Grandma Galila (my husband's late mother who was a tower of strength and a woman of deep faith) and God willing.

    And so, today, Thursday, Aug. 8, I begin 25 days of high-dose radiation and chemotherapy. Chemotherapy infusion for several hours each Monday and a chemo fanny pack to be worn five days a week. Radiation every day. Weekends off from radiation and chemo. If all goes well, I should be finished with this regimen Sept. 13. Give me two weeks to recover from the side effects and I'm back on the dance floor, pen in hand, ready to take you all into media immortality.

    Actually, today, I traded in my primal fear in exchange for boxing gloves as I face this challenge head on, even as much as I would rather hide under a blanket on the floor of my closet and make this go away.

    I am blessed with so many things — my loving husband who is my rock; my family; my loving friends; my access to M.D. Anderson; my doctors; health insurance; my family at CultureMap — I am beyond grateful for the bountiful blessings of my life.

    If you are so inclined, please do not send flowers or gifts to me. Send me your love and good vibes. Rather direct your generosity to M.D. Anderson or other medical entities of your choice. Please do not inquire about my well being either in person or via email.

    I need some privacy during this trying time. However, I will intermittently keep you posted on my progress.

    Shelby Hodge and Mayor Annise Parker power dressing at City Hall.

    unspecified
    news/society

    Golden Anniversary

    Encore-worthy evening raises $1.5M for Rice’s Shepherd School of Music

    Joel Luks
    Nov 14, 2025 | 11:31 am
    Rice University Shepherd School of Music 50th Anniversary gala
    Photo by Anthony Rathbun
    Miguel Harth-Bedoya, Sasha Cooke, and Pierre Jalbert.

    It’s not every day that a school of music pulls off a gala that rivals its own dynamic performances, but when Rice University’s Shepherd School of Music turned 50, it did so with the kind of polish, artistry, and well-tuned emotional prowess that only half a century of dreams and translations could inspire.

    Rice University Shepherd School of Music 50th Anniversary gala

    Photo by Anthony Rathbun

    Miguel Harth-Bedoya, Sasha Cooke, and Pierre Jalbert.

    On Saturday, November 8, the black-tie crowd arrived on a red carpet to Alice Pratt Brown Hall, kicking off an evening with a nod to history and momentum. With alumni flying in from across the country and a palpable current of reunion in the air, the event doubled as an electric homecoming and a rousing concert celebration.

    The kind where tuxes met tunes, and no one’s excitement was tempered.

    The evening began with a reception in the Grand Foyer, followed by a power-packed one-hour concert in Stude Concert Hall. Under the baton of Miguel Harth-Bedoya, the Shepherd School Symphony Orchestra wasted no time flexing its sonic muscle with Bernstein’s Overture to Candide, a new work by faculty composer Pierre Jalbert featuring Grammy-winning mezzo-soprano, Shepherd alumna Sasha Cooke (today a mega star in the classical music milieu), and Tchaikovsky’s Capriccio Italien.

    And because no musical adventure is complete without a dash of pop culture glory, they sent everyone off with a swashbuckling encore of John Williams’ Raiders March, a cheeky nod to the wild ride of the school’s last five decades.

    Matthew Loden, dean of the Shepherd School, kept the pace flowing with heartfelt reflections—and sometimes humorous — on the school’s journey and future. During his remarks, he honored Anne Duncan, the gala’s honoree, and unveiled a surprise: the Stude Concert Hall stage will now be named the Larry Rachleff Orchestra Stage, thanks to a gift from Dot and Rick Nelson. A meaningful 10-minute anniversary video offered a montage of nostalgia, humor, and familiar faces from across the Shepherd community, wrapping the concert in a bow of pride and sentiment.

    The gathering moved to the Brockman Hall for Opera, which underwent a bit of a Cinderella moment. What’s normally an acoustically intimate performance space became an opulent dining hall, its Versailles-inspired interiors dressed in gold and ivory, and bathed in light from five jaw-dropping chandeliers. Blooms of roses, ranunculus, tulips, and hydrangeas filled the tables as guests dined on lump crab salad, prime aged tenderloin, and poached pear with crème fraîche gelato, all paired with standout wines and capped with a champagne toast.

    Three surprise pop-up performances from Shepherd students punctuated the dinner, including a standout take on Glitter and Be Gay. Because what’s a gala without a little vocal pyrotechnics?

    Co-chaired by Isabel and Danny David and Anne and Albert Chao, with Shawn Stephens and Jim Jordan as underwriter chairs, the evening raised a high-note-worthy $1.5 million to support the school’s mission. With 340 seated for dinner and many more filling the concert hall, the anniversary proved to be more than a look back. It was a rousing leap forward worthy of a standing ovation.

    Celebrating the journey were Margaret Alkek Williams, James and Molly Crownover, Douglas and Cathryn Selman, Cece and Mack Fowler, Sara Morgan, Nancy Dunlap, Cindy and Tony Petrello, Lisa Rich and John McLaughlin, David Leebron and Y. Ping Sun and Mei Leebron, Winnie and Kevin Bonebrake, Chris and Kristy Bradshaw, Leigh and Reggie Smith, Caroline Baker Hurley, Ed and Deborah Koehler, Vicki West and Ralph Burch, Amy and Robert Dittmar, Frank and Cindy Liu, Chris and Heather Powers, James Gaffigan, Gary Ginstling, Sonja Kostich, Sarah Rothenberg, Alecia Lawyer, Khori Dastoor, and former deans Larry Livingston and Robert Yekovich. Plus one proud alum (yours truly), happily humming the Indiana Jones theme all the way home.

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