Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 114, No. 37, Ed. 1 Friday, September 8, 2017 Page: 2 of 21
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2A
Friday, September 8, 2017
Denton Record-Chronicle
WEATHER
CALENDAR
MARKET
SUMMARY
3 a
TODAY
NBC 5’S DENTON 3-DAY OUTLOOK
ALMANAC
NBC 5 meteorolo-
gists (from left):
Samantha Davies,
Brian James,
David Finfrock,
Grant Johnston,
Rick Mitchell and
Keisha Burns.
TODAY
SATURDAY
SUNDAY
High
Low
▼ Dow Jones: Down 22.86
points to close at 21,784.78
A Nasdaq: Up 4.55 points to
close at 6,397.87
▼ S&P 500: Down 0.44
points to close at 2,465.10
EVENTS
Denton
83
50
9:30 to 11:30 a.m. — Finish It Fridays
at North Branch Library, 3020 N. Locust
St. Bring a craft project for this come-
and-go program and visit with other
crafters.
1 p.m. — Guest artist clinic with
drummer Jim Riley in the Recital Hall
at the UNT Music Building, at Avenue
C and Chestnut Street. $5 for non-
members of the percussion club. Call
940-565-2791 or visit www.music
.unt.edu.
2 to 3:30 p.m. — “A Fresh Start to a
Healthier You,” a series of free
workshops on healthy eating, money-
saving techniques and food safety, at
Emily Fowler Central Library, 502
Oakland St. Presented by Denton
County’s Texas A&M AgriLife Extension
Office. Must register for series of four
classes on Sept. 8,15,22 and 29. Call
940-349-8752 or visit library.cityof
denton.com.
8 p.m. — “A Tribute to William
Shakespeare,” a faculty recital by
Molly Fillmore and Friends, in Voertman
Hall at the UNT Music Building, at
Avenue C and Chestnut Street. Free.
Call 940-565-2791 or visit
www.music.unt.edu.
PRECIPITATION
24 hours (ending 5 p.m.)
Month to date - 0.00” Normal - 0.79”
Year to date - 27.81” A year ago - 35.06”
Sunny and
warm
0.00”
LAKE LEVELS
High 86
Winds southeast at 5
Overnight low: 56
Sunny and warm
Sunny and warm
7 a.m. today
632.82
522.26
535.17
617.35
835.09
Year ago
632.36
521.79
535.25
615.96
836.44
LOTTERY
Ray Roberts Lake
Lewisville Lake
Grapevine Lake
Lake Texoma
Lake Bridgeport
High 87, low 59
High 87, low 61
Forecast for noon, Friday, Sept. 8,2017
The winning Texas Two Step num-
bers drawn Thursday by the Texas
Lottery:
NATIONAL DATA
Gray bands indicate high temperature zones for the day.
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The winning Cash Five numbers
drawn Thursday by the Texas
Lottery:
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Atlanta
Austin
Chicago
Denver
Detroit
El Paso
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Los Angeles
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New Orleans 80 71 --
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72/61
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The winning Daily 4 numbers
drawn Thursday by the Texas
Lottery, in order:
Morning: 0-3-4-6
Day: 4-0-0-0
Evening: 6-7-6-4
Night: 6-7-6-1
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EVENTS
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7 a.m. to sellout — Denton County
Farmers Market on Carroll Boulevard
at Mulberry Street. Visit
www.dentonfarmersmarket.com.
8 a.m. — Denton County LOSS Team
Race for Hope at South Lakes Park,
556 Hobson Lane. 5K race and 1-mile
walk in honor of suicide prevention
month. $25 for early 5K registration,
$30 on the day of the race. $15 to
register for the 1-mile walk. Free for
children 10 and younger. To register,
visit http://bit.ly/2xyMCJi.
8 a.m. to 8 p.m. — Sanger Sellabra-
tion presented by the Sanger Area
Chamber of Commerce in downtown
Sanger. Event includes vendors, food
trucks, kids’ zone, car show, talent
show, art show and library book sale.
Little Mr. and Miss Sanger Pageant at
1130 a.m. Live music by Ernesto’s
Mariachi Band at 4 p.m., Anthem of
New Life Church at 5 p.m. and Bubba
Harper & the 24/7 Band at 6:30 p.m.
Free admission. Visit http://sangertexas
.com/sanger-sellabration-2017.
8:30 a.m. — Denton Heart Walk at
C.H. Collins Athletic Complex, 1500
Long Road. Noncompetitive 5K walk
raises money for the American Heart
Association. To register, visit
www.heartwalk.org.
9 a.m. to 1 p.m. — Denton Communi-
ty Market at the Denton County
Historical Park, on Mulberry Street near
Carroll Boulevard. Visit http://denton
market.org.
9 a.m. to 3 p.m. — Arts & Autos
Extravaganza presented by the
Denton Main Street Association, around
the Courthouse on the Square, 110 W.
Hickory St. Classic and custom cars,
trucks and motorcycles on display. Free
admission. $5-$10 entry fee for the
Chalk Fest contest; free for ages 6 and
younger. $30 to register a vehicle. For
registration forms and more informa-
tion, visit www.dentonmainstreet.org.
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BRIEFLY
SOLAR & LUNAR
Stationary
front
70s
ACROSS THE STATE
Sunrise today ...
Sunset tonight .
Moonset today .
Moonrise Friday
7:07 a.m.
7:44 p.m.
9:23 a.m.
9:32 p.m.
# AccuWeather.com
Dallas
Judge lifts order blocking
removal of Lee statue
Rain Showers T-Storms Snow Flurries
U_Y
Ice
^ Forecasts and maps provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2017
3-day outlook provided by KXAS-TV
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A judge has lifted a restrain-
ing order clearing the way for
Dallas to remove a statue of
Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee.
Court documents show U.S.
District Judge Sidney Fitzwater
ruled Thursday that Dallas resi-
dent Hiram Patterson and the
Sons of Confederate Veterans
had not proven that the removal
violated their ffee-speech rights
or that the city had not provided
due process in approving its re-
moval.
The Dallas City Council had
voted almost unanimously
Wednesday to remove the statue
immediately.
A harness had been placed
around the statue, when Pat-
terson requested a temporary
restraining order and a chance
to argue his case against re-
moval.
A city spokesman said the
city is pleased with the ruling
and will move forward with re-
moving the statue, though no
time frame has been set.
— The Associated Press
Police still investigating aggravated robberies
Denton police are trying to
determine whether the same
suspect was involved in three ag-
gravated robberies between 1:16
a.m. Tuesday and 12:38 a.m.
Wednesday.
In two robberies at local con-
venience stores Tuesday, witness-
es described the suspect as ablack
man wearing a white doth over
his face, a red jacket and dark
pants, according to Denton police
spokesman Shane Kizer. The
man brandished ablack handgun
in both incidents, he said.
The third robbery occurred at
12:38 a.m. Wednesday at the Su-
per 8 motel in the 600 block of
South Interstate 35E. That sus-
pect also brandished a handgun
and demanded money, but po-
lice have not confirmed whether
the suspect description in that
case is similar to the description
in the two other robberies.
No one was injured in the
three incidents, police said.
About 1:16 a.m. Tuesday, po-
a 28-year-old woman’s mother’s
house Wednesday after he went
to the home to pick up his prop-
erty, according to a police report.
The report did not specify the
relationship between the man
and 28-year-old woman, who
was listed as the victim in the re-
port. The man was accompa-
nied by his sister when he ar-
rived, police said.
Police said the suspect “got
angry” before he left the house
and punched the window. The
extent of the damage is unclear.
No arrests were made.
3400 block of East Uni-
versity Drive — Denton police
contacted Child Protective Ser-
vices Wednesday after a woman
said her husband spanked their
2-year-old son and left a bruise.
She said her husband also
left imprints of his fingers on the
child’s leg, according to the po-
lice report.
Police responded to a call
from the woman’s coworker
about 3:30 p.m. The coworker
reported the incident after the
woman showed her a pictures of
her son’s bruise from the spank-
ing, the report said.
No arrests were made.
Blotter
bee said a man walked into a 7-
Eleven convenience store in the
1200 block of South Loop 288,
brandished a handgun and or-
dered the clerk to empty the
cash register.
He got away with about
$300, police said.
At 11:09 that night, police re-
sponded to an aggravated rob-
bery at the Comer Stop conve-
nience store, about 6 miles away
in the 3200 block of North Elm
Street. Police said a man came
into the store and brandished a
gun before he got away with
about $200, according to a po-
lice report.
When a man robbed the Su-
per 8 motel, he got away with
about $225, police said.
No arrests have been made.
Roundup
From 7 a.m. Tuesday to 7
a.m. Wednesday:
■ Area police booked 31 peo-
ple into Denton County Jail.
■ Denton police handled 151
calls for service and made 8 ar-
rests.
■ Denton firefighters re-
sponded to 28 medical calls, two
vehicle crashes and one downed
power line.
— Julian Gill
Denton County Crime Stoppers will
pay a reward of up to $1000 for
information leading to an arrest in
these or other crimes. Callers will
remain anonymous. Call
1-800-388-TIPS (8477). Reach the
Denton police narcotics tip line at
940-565-580L
Add your event to our online calen-
dar at DentonRC.com/calendar;
email drc@dentonrc.com; fax to
940-566-6888; or mail to Page 2
Calendar, Denton Record-Chronicle,
P.O. Box 369, Denton, TX 76202.
Other reports
1800 block of Jason Drive
— A man punched a window in
CORRECTIONS
BRIEFLY
IN DENTON
Decision on downtown
NCTC campus delayed
North Central Texas College
regents again postponed a deci-
sion about redeveloping the old
Denton
building into a downtown cam-
pus during a meeting Thursday.
In June, the college an-
nounced plans to transform the
building at 314 E. Hickory St into
a new campus for downtown
Denton. Since then, no plans have
been finalized between the cur-
rent building owner — The Mar-
tino Group — and NCTC.
On Thursday morning, re-
gents met in a special-call meet-
ing at the main campus in
Gainesville. The agenda includ-
ed discussion and possible ap-
proval of a predevelopment
agreement with Links Construc-
tion, a sister company to Marti-
On page 1A Thursday, a
story about Serve Denton in-
correctly stated what nonprofits
will move into the new office.
Giving Hope and Health Ser-
vices of North Texas will keep
their offices at the Wheeler
House.
On page 3 of Denton
Time on Thursday, the year
that Andres Martin composed
Concierto para Contrabajo y
Orquesta was incorrect. Mar-
tin composed the piece —
which was performed by the
winning bassist at the Bradet-
ich Foundation International
Double Bass Solo Competition
- in 2012.
TWU chancellor releases campus community Tuesday
statement on DACA
no Group. It was the second con-
secutive meeting regents post-
poned action that would move
the project forward.
During the regent’s meeting
in August, the board discussed a
pre-construction
with Links Construction that
would cost $537,934. They ta-
bled the decision so that the re-
gent subcommittees on build-
ings and finance could consider
the proposal more closely
The regents will meet again
at 6 p.m. Monday, Sept. 18, in
Gainesville.
The person lives in The Colo-
ny and was diagnosed with the
more serious form, West Nile
neuroinvasive disease.
The more serious form of the
illness invades the nervous sys-
tem and can lead to paralysis
and death, although most peo-
ple who are infected with the
West Nile vims develop no
symptoms or such mild symp-
toms that they do not feel ill.
West Nile fever is a less seri-
ous form of the illness, although
the symptoms can last a long
time, according to health offi-
cials. Symptoms can include a
headache, fatigue, skin rash,
swollen lymph glands and eye
pain along with fever.
For more information on
how to limit exposure, visit the
county health department’s
website.
night and posted online Thurs-
day.
“First and foremost, I want
our students and the entire uni-
Carine Feyten, president
and chancellor of Texas Wom-
an’s University, publicly re- versity community to know that
leased a statement Thursday Texas Woman’s University re-
morning offering support and
resources for students who at-
agreement
Record-Chronicle
mains committed to serve its
students, regardless of national
origin,” her statement said.
‘While it is our responsibility to
follow the law, we are working
with national higher education
organizations and our congres-
sional representatives to ensure
tend TWU through the De-
ferred Action of Childhood Ar-
rivals program.
The federal program allows
people who were brought into
the country illegally as children
to attend college and work for that all of our students have the
opportunity to complete their
education.”
two-year periods. Tuesday, At-
torney General Jeff Sessions an-
nounced the Trump administra-
tion’s plans to discontinue the was working to bring immigra-
tion educational experts and im-
migration service organizations
to campus for information with
The Colony
County’s 7th case of
West Nile reported
County health officials an-
nounced the seventh person to
be diagnosed with West Nile vi-
ms this year.
/t....."".......
She also said the university
Denton
Record-Chronicle
program.
In Feyten’s statement, she ex-
plains she was in Houston Tues-
day welcoming students, faculty students who are impacted by
and staff back to campus after the program change.
Hurricane Harvey.
Her note was sent to the
Published daily by Denton Publishing Co.
a subsidiary of
— Staff reports
A.H. Belo Corporation
NYSE symbol: AHC
www.ahbelo.com
dA
MEAT &
PRODUCE
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daily and noon on Sunday.
Monthly subscription rates:
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Denton Record-Chronicle is published
daily by Denton Publishing Company,
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Periodicals Postage paid at Denton, TX.
Postmaster, send address changes to:
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Parks, Scott K. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 114, No. 37, Ed. 1 Friday, September 8, 2017, newspaper, September 8, 2017; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1131392/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .