Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 112, No. 361, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 28, 2016 Page: 2 of 27
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2A
Thursday, My 28, 2016
Denton Record-Chronicle
CALENDAR
MARKET
SUMMARY
WEATHER
O nfccdfwjcom/
TODAY
NBC 5’S DENTON 3-DAY OUTLOOK
ALMANAC
NBC 5 meteorolo-
gists (from left):
Samantha Davies,
Grant Johnston,
David Finfrock,
Rick Mitchell and
Remeisha Shade.
▼ Dow Jones: Down 1.58
points to close at 18,472.17
A Nasdaq: Up 29.76 points
to close at 5,139.81
▼ S&P 500: Down 2.60
points to close at 2,166.58
EVENTS
TODAY
SATURDAY
FRIDAY
High
Low
Denton
92
74
9:30 a.m. — Crafters’ Comer at
Emily Fowler Central Library, 502
Oakland St. Work on projects and learn
new techniques. Free. Call 940-349-
8752 or visit www.dentonlibrary.com.
10 a.m. and 11 a.m. — Story Time at
South Branch Library, 3228 Teasley
Lane. Stories, songs, puppets and more
for children ages 1-5 and their caregiv-
ers. Free. Call 940-349-8752.
2 to 4 p.m. — Coding Club for ages
8-17 at North Branch Library, 3020 N.
Locust St. Learn how to code and
collaborate on projects at this primarily
self-directed, weekly gathering. All skill
levels and coding languages welcome.
Free. Call 940-349-8752 or visit
www.dentonlibrary.com.
3:30 to 4:30 p.m. — “Lost in Space
for ages 5-8 at South Branch Library,
3228 Teasley Lane. Learn about satel-
lites from Kubos, a company that sends
nano-satellites into space, and create
your own crater. Free. Call 940-349-
8752 or visit www.dentonlibrary.com.
4 p.m. — “On Your Mark, Get Set...
Read!” for ages 5 and older at Emily
Fowler Central Library, 502 Oakland St.
Denton Community Theatre actors
present an interactive program to
promote reading. Free. Call 940-349-
8752 or visit www.dentonlibrary.com.
4 to 5:30 p.m. — Exploring Western
Philosophy at North Branch Library,
3020 N. Locust St. Explore the founda-
tions of Western thought from its
earliest beginnings in an interactive
class with Eva H. Cadwallader, profes-
sor emerita. Free. Call 940-349-8752 or
visit www.dentonlibrary.com.
6 to 9 p.m. — “Portraiture: Begin-
ning Digital Photography Work-
shop” at the Patterson-Appleton Arts
Center, 400 E. Hickory St. Bring a digital
camera for a portraiture class taught by
photographer Shaina Sheaff. Part of the
Greater Denton Arts Council's workshop
series. Fee is $50, or $45 for GDAC
members. Call 940-382-2787 or visit
www.dentonarts.com.
7 to 8 p.m. — “Remote Resources:
America’s GenealogyBank” at Emily
Fowler Central Library, 502 Oakland St.
Learn how to search more than a billion
genealogy records from 1690 to the
present through America's Genealo-
gyBank, which can be accessed from
home with a Denton Public Library card.
Free. To register, call 940-349-8752 or
visit www.dentonlibrary.com.
8 to 9 p.m. — Thursday Night
Music: Stark and the Move(e) Session
(jazz-flamenco fusion) at UNT on the
Square, 109 N. Elm St. Free. Call 940-
369-8257 or visit http://unton
thesquare.unt.edu.
7 p.m. — Denton Comedy Festival
preshow at Killer's Tacos, 424 Bryan
St. Featuring Joe Coffee, Bret Crow and
Seth Chavez. $5 for a Thursday pass;
$13 for a three-day pass. Festival
package available. Visit www.
dentoncomedyfestival.com.
LY
PRECIPITATION
24 hours (ending 5 p.m.)
Month to date - 4.31” Normal - 2.15”
Year to date - 30.47” A year ago - 29.12'
30% chance of
p.m. storms
1.49'
LAKE LEVELS
High 94
Winds southeast at 5
Overnight low: 74
20% chance of
p.m. storms
High 96, low 75
Partly cloudy and
hot
7 a.m. today
632.58
522.28
536.20
618.34
836.11
Year ago
638.40
529.17
554.96
634.29
835.82
LOTTERY
Ray Roberts Lake
Lewisville Lake
Grapevine Lake
Lake Texoma
Lake Bridgeport
High 97, low 76
Forecast for noon, Thursday, July 28,2016
No ticket matched all six num
bers drawn Wednesday night for
the twice-weekly Lotto Texas game,
state lottery officials said.
The jackpot was worth an
estimated $6.25 million. Saturday
night's jackpot will be worth an
estimated $6.5 million.
The winning Lotto Texas num-
bers drawn Wednesday by the
Texas Lottery:
NATIONAL DATA
Gray bands indicate high temperature zones for the day.
ittle
^ ~ V >
Jssssiy
82/59
70s Y7
80s
Yesterday Today Tomorrow
Hi Lo Prec Hi Lo For Hi Lo For
60s -85/61
YT^CY
City
80s
Y
Albuquerque 93 68
Amarillo
Atlanta
Austin
Chicago
Denver
Detroit
El Paso
Honolulu
Houston
Kansas City, Mo 89 66
Las Vegas
Los Angeles
Mpls/St. Paul 80 75 0.48 76 60 pc 79 61 s
New Orleans 86 77 0.70 93 79 pc 91 79 t
91 75
96 77
93 77
111 91
86 59
95 70 pc 96 69 pc
92 67 0.06 96 69 pc 94 68 pc
91 74
y3
S
Portland
93/64
Minne<
76/60
is
70s
91 73 pc 90 73 pc
91 72 4.18 93 75 t 96 75 pc
81 66 t 77 65 pc
93 59 t 86 61 pc
85 67 pc 83 65 t
96 74 0.15 98 73 pc 99 75 pc
86 74
Y^
:y
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90s
vY^YVY. YJY. Yf^
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88 68
27-37-38-40-49-54
Y
70s
91 60
91 68
80s New York
alt Lake Ci
Y
■1
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The winning Powerball numbers
drawn Wednesday:
10-47-50-65-68
Powerball: 24
San Francisco
75/5r
-Yr
86 73 s 85 75 pc
84 76 0.24 93 77 t 94 76 t
Y
Y
100s
Y
Y
S 3/5
8 '
jington
Y
Y
S
s
‘S'
87 67 t 82 65 pc
114 92 s 112 91 t
87 68 s 88 68 s
T
S'
YG Y
os
114 91
a*
WY, YTYjB
m
87 68
Phofcflk
The winning Cash Five numbers
drawn Wednesday by the Texas
Lottery:
110s
100s
*11
Y
y Atlanta
91/73
New York
Orlando
Philadelphia
Phoenix
Portland
San Francisco 72 55
90 73 pc 80 69 t
97 76 pc 96 76 pc
92 74 s 82 70 t
7-13-20-35-36
El Pa
*98/73 *
Y
Y
70s
*
vYJyjyJy
Y 'Y
90s
—u
N 7
The winning Pick 3 numbers
drawn Wednesday by the Texas
Lottery, in order:
osillo
7 k -He
113 91 pc 112 89 t
93 64 s 91 61 s
75 56 pc 75 58 pc
93 72 t 89 73 t
92 75 t 85 73 t
/79
1
101/81
Y
^93^7^ Y tyY ^"Y
'SSSS'
^Y^Y^
■ Chihuahua
89/63
Is
Morning: 5-0-9
Day: 1-1-1
Evening: 3-7-2
Night: 2-4-6
Cold front
iami
91/80
>^'y'y
^yJyJyJy
SS'S
Y,Y
a P?iz Y^YX
\S 70s
Tulsa
92 74
Washington, DC 95 81
■
100s
80s
Warm front
1 Monterrey
94/70
SOLAR & LUNAR
Stationary
front
The winning Daily 4 numbers
drawn Wednesday by the Texas
Lottery, in order:
T
Sunrise today ....
Sunset tonight ..
Moonset today..
Moonrise Friday
6:39 a.m.
8:31 p.m.
3:43 p.m.
2:43 a.m.
® AccuWeather.com
Rain Showers T-Storms Snow Flurries
_J Y >
Ice
v ^ Forecasts and maps provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016
3-day outlook provided by KXAS-TV
~~
~a
\ \ \
39 E9
Morning: 7-9-5-7
Day: 2-4-5-4
Evening: 5-5-0-1
Night: 1-1-7-4
)a6. ,
\6 a A\ L
\ \ \
^7
BLOTTER
No ticket matched all six num-
bers drawn Tuesday night for the
twice-weekly Mega Millions game,
lottery officials said.
The jackpot was worth an
estimated $15 million. Friday night's
jackpot will be worth an estimated
$20 million.
The winning Mega Millions
numbers drawn Tuesday:
1-4-31-36-54
Mega Ball: 9
Megaplier: 3
Woman reports being
forced into prostitution
A welfare check led Denton
police to a possible prostitution
victim Tuesday, according to a
police report.
A Denton officer was dis-
patched to a welfare concern re-
lated to a woman who was being
forced to prostitute herself.
The 18-year-old is reported
to have approached someone at
a hotel for help.
When the officer arrived and
spoke to the victim, she said a
couple had been forcing her to
prostitute for the past several
days.
service and officer-initiated calls
for the agencies they serve, and
36 people were booked into
Denton County Jail.
■ Denton police handled 217
service and officer-initiated calls
and posted 14 reports online.
into a wall because she would
not sell cigarettes to her. No oth-
er details were available in the
police report.
1400 block of Lindsey
Street — Denton police re-
sponded to a theft call Tuesday
when a 37-year-old man report-
ed that some items were stolen
from his driveway.
Roundup
From 7 a.m. Tuesday to 7
a.m. Wednesday:
■ Denton County Sheriff’s
Office dispatchers handled 908
The woman requested a po-
lice report and transport to Fred
Moore Park.
She denied medical atten-
tion, and no suspect information
was reported.
Other reports
3600 block of South In-
terstate 35E — Denton police
were called to a fight Tuesday
when a 23-year-old woman re-
ported that an angry customer
grabbed her hair and threw her
— Bj Lewis
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
BRIEFLY
IN DENTON
Youth program raises
money for charity
CLUB MEETINGS
Denton Rotary Club meets at noon at
El Chaparral Grille, 324 E. McKinney St.
Visit www.dentonrotary.com.
The Denton Quilt Guild meets at 7
p.m. on the third Thursday of each
month, at the Patterson-Appleton Arts
Center, 400 E. Hickory St. Non-mem-
bers may attend twice as guests. A
social time with snacks and drinks
begins at 6:30 p.m. Visit www.
dentonquiltguild.org.
Party bridge from 12:30 to 4 p.m. at
the Denton Senior Center, 509 N. Bell
Ave. Call 940-349-8280 or visit
www.dentonseniorcenter.com.
Trinity Forks Chapter of the Native
Plant Society of Texas meets at 6:30
p.m. on the fourth Thursday of the
month, January through June and
August through October, at TWU's Ann
Stuart Science Complex. Visit http://
npsot.org/TrinityForks.
A program sponsored by the
Denton Police Department school
resource officers that has improved
the lives of a number of area youth
in the past seven years has also
helped raise more than $500 this
year for charity, according to a
Denton police news release.
The program, designed to
help young people make better
choices through education, men-
torship and building self-confi-
dence, has served about 250 boys.
Participants have transformed
from marginal students with poor
attendance to high school gradu-
ates who have been accepted into
college or the military. In 2015, the
program had its first female stu-
dents participate.
As a part of the program, each
group of students performs a fun-
draiser each year.
Since 2009, the boys have
raised and donated more than
Sanger church accepting of Pokemania
said he had a run-in with some-
one who claimed to represent
the church and that it was
against the game for its demonic
elements. The Denton Record-
Chronicle attempted to reach
out to church officials for a story
that ran Sunday, but because of
an oversight, their response was
overlooked and was not includ-
ed in the story.
The Rev. Reginald T. Logan
Sr. sought to set the record
straight Wednesday on how his
church and members viewed
the game.
“Galilee has a great, wonder-
ful relationship with the city of
Sanger,” Logan said of the
church, which was established
in 1909. A new church building
was constructed in 1998.
‘We wanted to make sure we
maintain that relationship and
wanted to let people know we
love them.”
Logan noted he had first en-
countered the game a few weeks
ago. At the time he was working
to restore power at the church
following an outage. He saw
some people in the parking lot a
little bit before midnight, and
when he spoke to them, they
happily explained the Pokemon
Go game to him.
Logan has since read up on
the game. He noted some of the
church members were dis-
turbed by the increase in traffic
as players seek out digital good-
ies from the church being a Pok-
eStop, which are places in Poke-
mon Go that allow you to collect
items in the game.
After reading up on the game
for himself, Logan welcomes it.
“It provides an opportunity for
people to find some sights they
didn’t even know existed,” he said.
The church gained a histor-
ical marker from the state in
2009, and Logan believes that is
a reason the church is a PokeS-
By Bj Lewis
Staff Writer
blewis @ dentonrc.com
The search for Pokemon is
still keeping players on the go
since the release of the smart-
phone application.
Pokemon Go is a mobile
game that allows players to cap-
ture, train and battle virtual Po-
kemon creatures who appear
through the real world. It turns
some familiar community loca-
tions like Sanger’s Galilee Missi-
onary Baptist Church into hot-
beds of activity.
While some more sensitive
locations have requested players
avoid looking for the evasive
creatures on their property, offi-
cials from Galilee Missionary
Baptist Church want people to
know that gamers are welcome
there.
top.
The pastor noted the Aug. 7
homecoming event at the
church, saying it would be a
good opportunity for players to
come out for a meal and worship
service.
“It’s something for grown-
ups and kids alike to do together,
and it’s given people an opportu-
nity to go out and walk,” he said.
“As long as the Galilee [Mission-
ary] Baptist Church is a site for
Pokemon, I told my people not
to say anything, let them drive
through. If [members] do any-
thing, invite [players] to
church.”
BJ LEWIS can be reached at
940-566-6875 and via Twitter
at @BjLewisDRC.
SUPPORT GROUPS
AbleDisabled meets from 2 to 4 p.m.
at Denton Community Health Clinic, 525
S. Locust St.
Group helps the disabled, mentally ill or
homeless with issues or refers them to
the right sources for help, and offers
peer-to-peer support. Email denton-
abledisabled@gmail.com.
Alzheimer’s support group meets
from 6 to 7 p.m. on the first Thursday of
the month at Denton Rehabilitation and
Nursing Center, 2229 N. Carroll Blvd.
Free. Contact Christina Jones at 682-
936-6453 or christina.jones@accolade
hospice.com.
Argyle Al-Anon meets from 6 to 7
p.m. at Cross Timbers Community
Church, JJI9 S. U.S. Highway 377 in
Argyle.
Denton County African American
Cancer Support Group meets at 6
p.m. on the first Thursday of the month
at Martin Luther King Jr. Recreation
Center, 1300 Wilson St. Call Catherine
Bell at 940-382-9360.
Narcotics Anonymous meets at 7:30
p.m. at St. Andrew Presbyterian Church,
300 W. Oak St.
$3,000 to the Texas Scottish Rite
Hospital for Children in Dallas.
This year the high school boys
conducted a fimdraiser that
raised $547 and decided to make
a donation to the hospital and to a
ftind that will help support the
families of Dallas officers who
were recently killed.
Previously, a Sanger resident
BRIEFLY
PET OF THE WEEK
— Bj Lewis
ACROSS THE STATE
found 20 immigrants nearby.
La Grulla
Border Patrol agents save
nearly 40 immigrants
Law enforcement officers
have saved nearly 40 immi-
grants from the blistering South
Texas heat but found another
man dead.
Border Patrol officials on
Wednesday announced two sep-
arate rescues of people believed
to be in the U.S. illegally. Super-
visory Agent Marlene Castro
says the 39 immigrants, located
Sunday and Monday, were not
hurt and all were being pro-
cessed.
The National Weather Ser-
vice says high temperatures on
both days topped 100 degrees.
Agents responded to a call
from the Hidalgo County Sheriff’s
Office about 19 immigrants aban-
doned by human smugglers. The
immigrants were located in La
Grulla and given water and
checked for medical issues.
Hours later agents working in
Brooks County, tracking immi-
grants on a ranch, located a man’s
body. Castro says agents then
Denton
Record-Chronicle
Published daily by Denton Publishing Co.
a subsidiary of
A.H. Belo Corporation
NYSE symbol: AHC
314 E. Hickory St., Denton, TX 76201
E-mail: drc@dentonrc.com
Longview
Police say 2 men found
shot to death at house
--_
Police say two men have been
found shot to death at an East
Texas house.
Longview police are trying to
determine who opened fire
Tuesday and why. Investigators
didn’t immediately say whether
anyone was being sought.
Detective Debra Stiles says a
relative discovered the bodies
and summoned police.
— The Associated Press
Shalom Today group of Alcoholics
Anonymous meets at 9 a.m., noon, 6
p.m. and 8 p.m. weekdays at 3730 E.
McKinney St., Suite J07. Call 940-383-
www.ahbelo.com
8252.
Show Me group of Alcoholics
Anonymous meets at 9 a.m., noon, 6
p.m., 8 p.m. and JO p.m. at J622 W.
University Drive, Suite J04. Call 940-
566-9989.
HOW TO REACH US
Classified...
Circulation.
940-387-7755
940-566-6836
A
If you missed delivery, call by 10 a.m.
daily and noon on Sunday.
Straight Up group of Alcoholics
Anonymous meets at 7:30 p.m. at First
Baptist Church of Ponder, JOJ FM156.
Group meets at 7 p.m. on the last
Thursday of the month. Call 254-485-
Monthly subscription rates:
• Print Only $11.95
• Print and E-Paper $12.55
Denton Record-Chronicle (ISSN 1053-
2080) is published daily by Denton
Publishing Company, 314 E. Hickory
Street, Denton, TX 76201.
J413.
Support groups for people dealing
with Parkinson's disease, stroke and
brain injuries, and amputations, meet
from 6 to 7 p.m. on the second Thurs-
day of each month at Select Rehabilita-
tion, 2620 Scripture St.
Co-sponsored by Texas Health Presby-
terian Hospital Denton. Call 940-297-
6500.
GOLDEN TRIANGLE 5
2201 South 1-35 East, Denton • (940) 387-2224
$2.00 • $1.50 Tuesdays
• Closed Captioning ■ Descriptive Video Service
www.silvercinemasinc.com
Courtesy photo
Sissy Sue, a 6-month-old pit bull mix, is energetic and will probably
need some training, which shouldn’t be too difficult since she seems
eager to please. She would probably be best in a home without young
children because of her high energy and may knock them down.
Sissy Sue is fully vetted, microchipped and ready to be adopted for $30.
If you are interested in Sissy Sue or any animal at the Linda McNatt
Animal Care and Adoption Center, email dentonanimalservices@ya-
hoo.com or call 940-349-7594. To see animals currently at the shelter,
click “Animal Services” in the “Departments and Services” menu at
www.cityofdenton.com.
J *
Carriers are independent contractors
and are not employees of the Denton
Publishing Co.
The Jungle Book (PG)
2:20,4:45,7:05,9:30
The Angry Birds Movie (PG)
2:25,4:40,7:00,9:20
RETAIL DISPLAY ADVERTISING &
PREPRINTED INSERTS
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,
314 E. Hickory St., Denton, TX 76201
Retail Advertising
940-566-6858
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7:20
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Me Before You (PG13)
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Parks, Scott K. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 112, No. 361, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 28, 2016, newspaper, July 28, 2016; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1127494/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .