He knew assistant coach Aaron Feis, who died shielding
students from gunfire.
«He (Beigel) was a hero in shielding
students from the gunfire.
He believed football coach Aaron Feis, who died protecting
students from gunfire, could have stopped the shooting if he was armed.
Feis was an assistant football coach at Stoneman Douglas who died during the shooting, reportedly while shielding
students from gunfire.
A beloved assistant football coach and lifelong Stoneman Douglas Eagle who always put the kids first — up until his final moments when he shielded
students from gunfire — Aaron Feis was remembered as a hero by the 1,000 - plus people who attended his funeral Thursday morning.
Knudson, who graduated from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High in 2005, was a neighbor of Aaron Feis, the coach who died shielding
students from gunfire in the Feb. 14 massacre.
The beloved assistant football coach and lifelong Stoneman Douglas Eagle always put the kids first — up until his final moments when he shielded
students from gunfire.
Not exact matches
Roig - Debellis was just one classroom away
from the
gunfire, and she locked her own
students in a 4x3 bathroom, urging them to be quiet while «the good guys came to help them
from the bad guys.»
Tallahassee, Florida (CNN)
From Arizona to Washington,
students walked out of schools in support of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School
students a week after their classmates were silenced by
gunfire.
Several Twitter users identifying themselves as Douglas
students offered similar accounts, saying Feis was wounded while trying to protect people
from the
gunfire.
PARKLAND, Fla. — In a matter of minutes, thousands of
students at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School went
from thinking they were part of a fire drill to hiding inside closets and bathrooms to escape
gunfire.
Carol Jones, 63, a retired sixth - grade language arts teacher
from Westglades Middle School, was going to support her former
students — some of them organizers of the march and some of them killed by
gunfire.
And given the chance to face the lawmakers and others who can make their lives safer, high school
students who a week ago were running
from gunfire pointedly demanded change Wednesday night
from Washington and the National Rifle Association.