Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 110, No. 290, Ed. 1 Monday, May 19, 2014 Page: 2 of 8
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2A
Monday, May 19, 2014
Denton Record-Chronicle
WEATHER
CALENDAR
BLOTTER
JS NBC 5’S DENTON 3-DAY OUTLOOK
ALMANAC
Two arrested after police
find narcotics in residence
A concerned resident’s call
about a runaway led to a pair of
arrests Saturday night.
Officers were dispatched to
a residence in the 3700 block of
Pockrus Page Road in refer-
ence to a local runaway staying
with her boyfriend, according
to a police report. A trio of offi-
cers went to the location and
spoke with the owner of the
property.
During the investigation,
drug paraphernalia was found
in plain view, the report stated.
According to the report, officers
found 4.9 grams of narcotics in
the residence and two arrests
were made.
TODAY
NBC 5 meteorolo-
gists (from left):
Rick Mitchell,
Remeisha Shade,
Lindsay Riley,
David Finfrock,
Samantha Davies,
Grant Johnston.
TODAY
TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY
High
Low
EVENTS
Denton
83
62
11a.m. — 11th annual Monsi-
gnor King Open golf tournament,
benefiting the Monsignor King
Outreach Center, at Oakmont
Country Club, 1200 Clubhouse Drive
in Corinth. Lunch at 11 a.m., shotgun
start at 12:30 p.m. Format is four-
person scramble. Entry fee is $100
per golfer, or $380 for a four-
person team. To register, call Janell
at 940-390-4012.Visit www.king
outreachcenter.com.
7 to 8 p.m. — Romance in the
Stacks Book Club at North
Branch Library, 3020 N. Locust St.
This month, discuss books by
Allison Brennan. Free. Call 940-349-
8796 or email kimberly.wells@
cityofdenton.com.
Warm and
windy
PRECIPITATION
24 hours (ending 5 p.m.)
Month to date -1.93” Normal - 2.96'
Year to date - 6.68'
0.00'
A year ago -13.23'
LAKE LEVELS
High 84
Winds south at 15 to 30 mph
Overnight low: 62
Warm and
windy
High 86, low 67
Warm and
breezy
High 86, low 68
7 a.m. today
624.17
514.33
524.69
608.84
813.93
Year ago
628.22
517.02
529.49
613.32
819.13
Ray Roberts Lake
Lewisville Lake
Grapevine Lake
Lake Texoma
Lake Bridgeport
Forecast for noon, Monday, May 19,2014
NATIONAL DATA
Gray bands indicate high temperature zones for the day.
Yesterday Today Tomorrow
Hi Lo Prec Hi Lo For Hi Lo For
88 57 s 86 57 s
97 54 s 100 58 pc
62 56 0.11 77 59 s 82 63 s
86 66 sh 87 69 pc
70 57 s 81 59 pc
82 50 s 78 49 pc
68 52 pc 74 60 t
96 70 s 94 69 pc
87 72 pc 86 73 pc
84 63 Trace 85 69 pc 87 69 pc
81 63 pc 86 66 pc
88 71 s 83 66 pc
71 60 pc 69 56 pc
64 59 t 79 58 pc
85 67 s 86 69 s
67 51 0.01 72 55 s 76 59 pc
84 62
66 50 0.01 73 53 s 78 57 pc
100 73
60 53 0.53 68 53 c 68 52 pc
62 52 pc 64 51 pc
76 47 Trace 85 65 pc 88 70 pc
75 54 s 78 60 pc
'//
.///A//
/
70s
L
50
60s
Seattle
•/.
City
//
/
V
T
Albuquerque 89 57
Amarillo
Atlanta
Austin
Chicago
Denver
Detroit
El Paso
Honolulu
Houston
Kansas City, Mo 71 43
Las Vegas
Los Angeles
Mpls/St. Paul 71 49
New Orleans 82 62
New York
Orlando
Philadelphia
Phoenix
Portland
San Francisco 67 57
Tulsa
Washington, DC 69 53
x
// V///.
J Portland
v A‘ 50s
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87 55
CLUB MEETINGS
//
Rapid City
o
70s
Chess Night at 6 p.m. at North
Branch Library, 3020 N. Locust St.
Players of all ages and skill levels
welcome. Free. Call 940-349-8752.
Conservative Toastmasters
meets at 7 p.m. at Denton Regional
Medical Center's Educational Build-
ing, 3535-A I-35E. Email lebbo@
miaincusa.com or mzerger@earth
link.net.
Denton Senior Center exercise
classes are from 11 to 11:40 a.m. at
509 N. Bell Ave. Those age 50 and
older are invited. No advance sign-
up required. Call 940-349-8720 or
940-566-5242.
Denton Toastmasters public
speaking club meets from 7 to 8:30
p.m. at Lake Forest Good Samaritan,
3901 Montecito Drive, in the activity
building. Call 940-458-4669.
North Texas Toastmasters
public speaking club meets from
noon to 1 p.m. in Room 324 of
Chestnut Flail on the UNT campus.
Visit http://420.toastmasters
clubs.org or call Navin Singh at
940-595-1151.
iuffalo
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jaukee
Boise
85 53
69 47
83 48
67 39
97 61
87 73
Detroit
o
Casper
V!
jveland
Sailt Lake
/ ////!/
/ ////
Other reports
1900 block of Colorado
Boulevard — Officers were dis-
° Des Moines
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Omahac
CityD
H
York
Pittsburgh
Indianapolis
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Denver
80s
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lint
70s
Wichita o
patched to a call about an intox-
icated person. The subject was
arrested on a public intoxication
charge, and during the search, a
meth pipe was located in the
man’s left pocket, according to a
police report. He was charged
with possession of drug para-
phernalia.
Louisville
Richmond
Ian
90s
irancisco
is
Santa Fe
o
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Albuquerque
rmphis
'egas
Raleigl
Los
95 79
Oklahoma
geles
° Littl
itlantc
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74 63
Rock
Birmingham
Denton o
° Phoenix
'Charleston
Shreveporto
Dayton Lakes
pop. 93
°Jackson
IQs.
51 Paso
80s
Austin Q
87 65 pc 85 65 pc
100s
o*
Hermosillo
ew
.Orlabdo
Houston
leans
Chihuahua
97 74 s 94 69 s
100s
Is
80s
— Bj Lewis
50s
wv Cold front Stationary front
Warm front----Trough
80s
[Miami
60s
90s 0
Monterrey
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
940-565-5801
Is
Durango
\jVlazatlan
70s
SOLAR & LUNAR
80s
Sunrise today........
Sunset tonight ......
Moonset today......
Moonrise Tuesday
6:26 a.m.
8:24 p.m.
11:21 a.m.
1:04 a.m.
® AccuWeather.com
90s
Rain T-Storms Snow
Ice
Forecasts and maps provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2014
3-day outlook provided by KXAS-TV
□ □
////
100s
SUPPORT GROUPS
Back to Basics Al-Anon, for
family and friends dealing with the
effects of someone's drinking,
meets at 7 p.m. at First Presbyteri-
an Church of Denton, 1114 W. Uni-
versity Drive. Call 940-368-3605 or
310-291-8243.
Compulsive Eaters Anonymous
meets at 7:30 p.m. Call 940-395-
3334.
Denton County Gamblers
Anonymous chapter meets from
10 to U a.m. in Room 214 at First
United Methodist Church of Denton,
201S. Locust St. Call Waunita at
940-390-9419.
Drug Addicts Anonymous (Faith
in Action Group of Denton) meets at
8 p.m. at Solutions of North Texas'
Wilshire Flail, 2216 N. Bolivar St.
Visit www.sontx.org, www.sober
dorm.org or call 940-898-6202.
Memory Loss Support Group,
for family members of people with
Alzheimer's or dementia, meets at
6:30 p.m. on the first and third
Mondays of the month in the sec-
ond-floor meeting room at Dog-
wood Estates, 2820 Wind River
Lane. Call Jane Hale at 940-231-
2989.
NAMI Family Support Group
and Recovery International
Support Group meet from 7 to
8:30 p.m. in Room 202 at Cross-
roads Bible Church, 8101FM407 in
Double Oak. Sponsored by National
Alliance on Mental Illness Denton
County. Visit http://namidenton
.org, email generalinfo@nami
denton.org or call 469-248-8789.
Narcotics Anonymous meets at
7:30 p.m. at St. Andrew Presbyteri-
an Church, 300 W. Oak St.
Serenity Al-Anon, for family and
friends dealing with the effects of
someone's drinking, meets at noon
at First United Methodist Church,
201S. Locust St.
Shalom Today group of Alco-
holics Anonymous meets at
noon, 6 p.m. and 8 p.m. for dis-
cussion at 5011W. University Drive.
Call 940-383-8252.
Show Me group of Alcoholics
Anonymous meets at 9 a.m.,
noon, 6 p.m. and 8 p.m. at 1622 W.
University Drive, Suite 104. Call
940-566-9989.
2-Step Memory Cafe, a gather-
ing for people with memory loss
and their care partners, meets at 5
p.m. on the third Monday of the
month at Zera Coffee Co., 420 E.
McKinney St. Sponsored by Step-
ping Stones. Call Geri Sams at
940-566-0902.
Unity group of Alcoholics
Anonymous meets from 6 to 7
p.m. at First Baptist Church of
Denton, 1100 Malone St. Call 940-
239-9238.
Way Out group of Alcoholics
Anonymous meets at 7 p.m. at
First Presbyterian Church, 1114 W.
University Drive. Call 940-367-7722
or 940-231-6267.
Cabinet post may be boost for Castro
BRIEFLY
ACROSS THE STATE
Texarkana
2 killed at ranch were
shot several times
youngest council member.
As mayor, Castro spearhead-
ed a voter-approved preschool
program; set up a walk-in center
for high school students seeking
guidance on college; and initiat-
ed revitalization of some of San
Antonio’s most downtrodden
neighborhoods.
Castro also worked on San
Antonio’s “Promise Zone” pro-
gram. That federal government
initiative aims to revitalize high-
poverty communities by increas-
ing economic activity, improving
educational opportunities and
leveraging private capital.
HUD plays a key role in the
“Promise Zone” initiative and
San Antonio was among the first
cities that received a grant for the
program from the administra-
tion.
By Emily Schmall
Associated Press
FORT WORTH - President
Barack Obama’s expected nom-
ination of San Antonio Mayor
Julian Castro as secretary of
Housing and Urban Develop-
ment could test the 39-year-old’s
ability to navigate Washington
ahead of 2016 elections, Texas
Democrats say.
Since giving the 2012 keynote
address at the Democratic Na-
tional Convention, Castro’s star
has been on the rise, with his
name often included among pos-
sible vice presidential contend-
Autopsy results indicate a
man and a woman found fatally
shot at a Northeast Texas ranch
had multiple wounds.
The Texarkana Gazette re-
ported Sunday that no charges
had been filed over the Oct. 28
gunfire. The Bowie County
Sheriff’s Office has said a resi-
dent reported he shot two peo-
ple trying to break into his home
at the Prissy Chrissy Ranch.
The bodies of 19-year-old
Timber Rena Taylor and 35-
year-old Johnathon Lee Hill
were on the ranch grounds.
Hill’s autopsy report states he
was shot twice in the head and
once in the back. Taylor was shot
in the abdomen, plus she had a
bullet wound in her right hand
and another wound to her head.
Prosecutors await evidence
lab results before the case goes
to a grand jury.
■
Susan Walsh/AP file photo
San Antonio Mayor Julian Castro testifies last year on Capitol
Hill in Washington before the House Judiciary Committee.
President Barack Obama’s expected nomination of Castro as
secretary of Housing and Urban Development could test the
39-year-old’s ability to navigate Washington ahead of 2016
elections, Texas Democrats say.
ers.
“This is an important step for
Julian,” Henry Cisneros, a HUD
secretary under President Bill
Clinton and a former mayor of
San Antonio, told The Associat-
ed Press. “If indeed he has the ca-
pability to be what we all thinkhe
can be,” Cisneros said, he can
prove it by performing well at the
helm of the federal housing
agency.
Job performance aside, Cas-
tro’s background could be his
main selling point.
He and his twin brother, U.S.
Rep. Joaquin Castro, D-Texas,
grew up on the west side of San
Antonio in a working-class Mex-
ican-American neighborhood.
They were raised by their single
mother, a prominent Latino
rights activist in the 1960s and
1970s, and their grandmother,
who crossed the border from
Mexico as a child.
If Julian Castro is nominated
to preside over HUD and con-
Newt Gingrich, a former con-
gressman from Georgia, said
Sunday on CNN’s State of the
Union that Castro would be “a
good political pick for the presi-
dent, it is a smart pick.” But Ging-
rich noted that it likely signals
the conservative state won’t be
turning blue anytime soon.
Obama’s anticipated nomi-
nation of Castro as secretary of
HUD also could be a symbolic
passing of the baton.
In many ways, the two men’s
stories mirror one another’s:
Both are minorities raised by sin-
gle mothers, attended Harvard
Law School and saw their politi-
cal careers ascend rapidly after
giving lauded keynote speeches
at Democratic National Conven-
tions.
firmed by the Senate, he would
become one of the highest-rank-
ing Hispanic officials in the Oba-
ma administration.
“That says a lot. He carries
with him the hopes and dreams
and prayers of the entire Latino
population,” said U.S. Rep. Pete
Gallego, D-Texas.
Gallego also thinks a Castro
nomination would galvanize a
grassroots effort in Texas to turn
the historically Republican-
dominated state into a place
where Democrats can compete.
While neither Castro brother
speaks Spanish fluently, both be-
came well-versed in politics at an
early age when their mother, Ro-
sie, took them to political rallies
and meetings.
“She literally taught them in
her lap,” said Cisneros, who has
known Rosie Castro since meet-
ing her in kindergarten.
With the housing market’s
lackluster recovery, if Julian Cas-
tro is named housing secretary, it
will matter where he came from,
Cisneros says.
“This is a poor city, so it means
a lot that a person who’s going to
be in public service is living the
reality. He has never strayed far
from his roots,” Cisneros said.
Castro earned an undergrad-
uate degree at Stanford Universi-
ty and a law degree at Harvard
before returning to San Antonio
to become, at age 26, the city’s
Houston
Police say 2 men slain
in home, no arrests
Houston police said two men
were found shot to death at a
home in a drugs and missing
cash investigation.
Police on Sunday did not im-
mediately provide additional de-
tails on the victims or the search
for several armed suspects.
Police said the gunfire hap-
pened around midnight Satur-
day. Authorities did not imme-
diately say how much cash was
stolen or what drugs allegedly
were confiscated at the scene.
Further details were not im-
Anthropologist who identified mass graves dies
mediately available.
— The Associated Press
Battle of Little Bighorn in 1876
and King Tutankhamun.
In 1978, his expertise was on
display when he spoke before
the House Select Committee on
Assassinations about various as-
pects of the death of President
Kennedy. Less than a decade lat-
er, he was part of an internation-
al forensic team that identified
the remains of Mengele, who
conducted horrific experiments
on prisoners at the Auschwitz
concentration camp during
World War II.
In 2006, Snow testified
against Saddam Hussein, who
was on trial for genocide. Four-
teen years earlier, Snow had
been part of a team organized by
the groups Physicians for Hu-
man Rights and Middle East
Rights Watch who investigated
the killings.
“Bones don’t forget,” Snow
once told the AP. “They’re there
and they have a story to tell.”
Snow traveled the world
helping to give a voice to the
voiceless.
“I find it challenging,” he said.
“It is fascinating work. I feel we
are doing a little bit of good. It’s
not the role of forensic science to
put the bad guys in jail, but to
evenhandedly collect the evi-
dence.”
a mass grave in the northern
Iraqi town of Koreme, which
was destroyed in 1988.
Closer to home, Snow, who
was a professor at the University
of Oklahoma, assisted in identi-
fying victims of the 1995 Okla-
homa City bombing and worked
with the Tulsa Race Riot Com-
mission to create a comprehen-
sive account of the deadly 1921
racial clash that laid ruin to the
city’s black business district.
Jerry Snow said her husband
will be remembered most for his
great sense of humor and dedi-
cation to basic rights.
“That was his driving force in
his life — human rights,” she
said.
By Kristi Eaton
Associated Press
OKLAHOMA CITY -
Clyde Snow, a forensic anthro-
pologist who worked on cases
ranging from the assassination
of President John R Kennedy to
mass graves in Argentina, has
died. He was 86.
Snow’s wife, Jerry Snow, told
The Associated Press her hus-
band died Friday morning at
Norman Regional Hospital in
Norman, Okla. Jerry Snow said
her husband had lung cancer
and emphysema.
Among Snow’s subjects were
Nazi fugitive Josef Mengele, vic-
tims of the Oklahoma City
bombing and serial killer John
Wayne Gacy. He also examined
mass grave sites in countries
such as Argentina, Bolivia, Peru
and Croatia, and often helped
build criminal cases against gov-
ernment leaders who carried out
Denton
Record-Chronicle
Published daily by Denton Publishing Co.
a subsidiary of
A.H. Belo Corporation
NYSE symbol: AHC
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TUESDAY
314 E. Hickory St., Denton, TX 76201
(UPS PS 154000)
E-mail: drc@dentonrc.com
EVENTS
11a.m. to noon — No Paint-
brushes Allowed for ages 3-5 at
North Branch Library, 3020 N.
Locust St. Preschoolers will paint
with spaghetti. Free. Call 940-349-
8752 to register.
4 p.m. — It’s a Girl Thing Book
Club for girls ages 10-14 and their
female relative or friend, at South
Branch Library, 3228 Teasley Lane.
This month, discuss The Heist
Society by Ally Carter. Call 940-
349-8752 or email
rebecca.ivey@cityofdenton.com.
6:30 to 7:30 p.m. — Family
Game Night at Emily Fowler
Central Library, 502 Oakland St.
Free. Call 940-349-8752.
HOW TO REACH US
Classified...
Circulation.
940-387-7755
940-566-6836
Bom Jan. 7, 1928, in Texas,
Snow became interested in the
human body through his physi-
cian father. After joining the
Federal Aviation Administra-
tion in Oklahoma City in 1960,
Snow helped develop a comput-
er program to investigate plane
crashes.
Snow investigated the deaths
of many historical figures, in-
cluding soldiers who died at the
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Cobb, Dawn. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 110, No. 290, Ed. 1 Monday, May 19, 2014, newspaper, May 19, 2014; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1132396/m1/2/: accessed June 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .