AUGUST 26 2018

Page 1

SUNDAY IN DENTON Coupons & savings of

$305

LOW

HIGH

Guest conductor steps up with Bach Society / Arts & Community, 2D

77 98

Exhibit celebrates architect who got his start here Business, 1D

Sunny and hot Weather, 2A

(not in all areas)

Marquez back with Broncos after injury scare Sports, 1B

Sunday, August 26, 2018 || Denton, Texas || Vol. 115, No. 24 || DentonRC.com

30 pages, 4 sections || $2.00

Texas-sized lecture is history-making

It’s not certified as a world record yet, but UNT prof taught for 26 1/2 hours straight

A

ndrew Torget hit his first major obstacle in the ninth hour of his lecture on Texas history. His throat was starting to swell up and it was getting hard for him to speak. He still had at least 15 hours to go. My first obstacle came much earlier and to a much lesser degree. I had run out of coffee and still had at least 22 hours to go. Torget and I were both in the University of North Texas Lyceum on Friday and Saturday to set records, he in a more official way than I. The UNT history professor likely set the

Caitlyn Jones COMMENTARY Guinness World Record for the world’s longest history lesson, talking through the origin story of the Lone Star state for 26 hours and 33 minutes. “During that first and second block, it hit me just how long I would be up here,” he said. “But after that, I settled down and got into a rhythm.” Torget will have to wait until official See HISTORY on 11A

Jake King/DRC

University of North Texas professor Andrew Torget talks in front of a class Friday at the UNT Lyceum, several hours into his attempt to set a world record for longest history lecture.

Applications and aspirations

What the chief selection process conveys about what kind of city Denton hopes to become

War hero’s political career led to Congress, presidential nomination

Candidates’ Files

There are the six finalists for Denton police chief. Their current job titles and years of experience are included.

By Nancy Benac

Floyd Mitchell

Frank Dixon

Associated Press

Position: Assistant police chief

Position: Police chief

Department: Austin Police Department

Department: Temple Police Department

Years in law enforcement: 23

Years in law enforcement: 28

Mark Schauer

Patrick L. Gallagher

McCain dies at 81

Position: Deputy (assistant) police chief

Position: Assistant police chief

Department: Virginia Beach (Va.) Police Department

Department: Corpus Christi Police Department

Years in law enforcement: 28

Years in law enforcement: 36

WASHINGTON — Sen. John McCain, who faced down his captors in a Vietnam prisoner of war camp with jutjawed defiance and later turned his rebellious streak into a 35-year political career that took him to Congress and the ReMcCain publican presidential nomination, died Saturday after battling brain cancer for more than a year. He was 81. McCain, with his irascible grin and See MCCAIN on 11A

Cleveland Spruill

Christy Martinez Position: Assistant police chief

Position: Police chief

Department: Grand Prairie Police Department

Department: Huntersville (N.C.) Police Department

Years in law enforcement: 17

Years in law enforcement: 31

Jason Lee/DRC

By Dalton LaFerney

View candidates’ applications / DentonRC.com

Staff Writer dalton.laferney@dentonrc.com

Virtually everybody who applied to be Denton’s new police chief mentioned how they would engage community members in policing the city. Community policing is not a new concept, and it refers to authorities showing an active effort to listen to the needs of the people who live and work in a city. All six of the people who are on the shortlist for the job included community-focused policing in their application materials. But they went a little further than most of the other applicants: They mentioned community policing with respect to Denton’s high-growth projections. It’s one thing for an applicant to write the word “community” in their cover letters or resumes. It’s another thing entirely for an applicant to come from a city that has experienced similar population or econom-

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ic growth while in a leadership role at a police department. Frank Dixon, an assistant police chief from Austin, talked about “decreasing the negative impacts of growth.” He wrote in an opening paragraph about the nuances of a rapid change. “I have seen first-hand how Austin changed due to explosive growth and development,” Dixon said. “I’ve learned that growth is a double-edged sword which creates culture change, prosperity, and opportunities for its citizens while it also escalates demands on city services, creates increases in homeless population, and causes loss of affordable housing.” Christy Martinez, an assistant police chief from Grand Prairie, said the police department has to work with resources See FINALISTS on 13A

Support local journalism. Call 940-566-6836 to subscribe. Got a news tip or breaking news to report? Email drc@dentonrc.com, call 940-566-6860, or find us on Facebook and Twitter at @dentonrc.

List narrowed down based on work in comparable cities

City Council, staff look to repair past damages By Dalton LaFerney Staff Writer dalton.laferney@dentonrc.com

One man called himself a “law enforcement practitioner,” offering his Ph.D.-level policing expertise to Denton. Another listed his experience as the assistant pastor of a church as a reason he should be chosen. There was also the police chief from Illinois who said he landed his current job after “the last police chief was arrested for DUI and weapons charges after being involved in a car crash in Wisconsin.” Roughly 111 people sent their cover letters

The delivery of citizen input on city business matters was up for discussion Saturday among Denton City Council members. Earlier this summer, an outside consultant recommended the city make certain cuts to its recycling programs. Mayor Chris Watts said he received numerous messages from residents worried about the cuts. But no action has been taken on the matter. The recommendations were made in a work session between council and city staff. Some of the public concern, Watts said, stemmed from a blog post council member Keely Briggs made about

See APPLICANTS on 13A

See COUNCIL on 13A

By Dalton LaFerney Staff Writer dalton.laferney@dentonrc.com

ALSO INSIDE

Fair puts discerning young judges to the test Local news, 4A

ARTS & COMMUNITY 2D BUSINESS 1D CLASSIFIED 2C COMICS & PUZZLES 6C-7C DEAR ABBY 7C

OBITUARIES OPINION REAL ESTATE SPORTS WEATHER

13A 12A 1C 1B 2A


2A

Sunday, August 26, 2018

Denton Record-Chronicle

WEATHER NBC 5’S DENTON 3-DAY OUTLOOK It was just a year ago this week that the Great American Solar Eclipse swept across the continental United States from coast to coast. Unfortunately, the eclipse didn’t reach totality here in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, and you had to travel to see it. But our luck will be better in six years. On April DRC file photo 8, 2024, another total solar A man gazes at the solar eclipse will sweep across the country. But instead of coast to eclipse Aug. 21, 2017, on the coast, it will travel from border Square. to border: from Del Rio to Waco, right across DFW, then northeast to Indianapolis and Cleveland.

NBC 5 meteorologists (from left): Samantha Davies, Brian James, David Finfrock, Grant Johnston, Rick Mitchell and Keisha Burns.

TODAY

MONDAY

TUESDAY

High 98 Winds S/SE at 10 to 15 mph

Sunny and hot

Mostly sunny and hot

Overnight low: 77

High 98, low 77

High 97, low 76

Sunny and hot

SOLAR & LUNAR

Rain

Showers T-Storms Snow

Flurries

Ice Forecasts and maps provided by AccuWeather, Inc. Š2018 3-day outlook provided by KXAS-TV

Grupo 18 de Marzo Alcoholicos Anonimos meets from 7 to 8:30 p.m. at 100 W. Oak St. Call 940-231-9759. Heroin Anonymous Denton meets at 11 a.m. at Solutions of North Texas’ Wilshire Hall, 2216 N. Bolivar St. Visit www.sontx.org or call 940898-6202. Shalom Today group of Alcoholics Anonymous meets at 9 a.m., 11 a.m., 6 p.m. and 8 p.m. at 3730 E. McKinney St., Suite 107. Call 940-383-8252. Show Me group of Alcoholics Anonymous meets at 9 a.m., 11 a.m. and 8 p.m. at 1622 W. University Drive, Suite 104. Call 940-566-9989.

Train crash in East Fort Worth sends 11 others to hospital

CLUB MEETINGS

Watershed manager to speak to Denia group Denton’s watershed protection and industrial pretreatment manager David Hunter will give an update on the department’s role in a revamped program for inspecting gas wells in the city during a presentation Monday night. The talk is hosted by the Denia Area Community Group and is scheduled to begin at

The winning Powerball numbers drawn Saturday: 20-25-54-57-63 Powerball: 8 The winning Pick 3 numbers drawn Saturday by the Texas Lottery, in order: Morning: 5-4-3 Day: 1-3-5 Evening: 0-6-8 Night: 0-2-4

7 p.m. Monday at Denia Recreation Center, 1111 Parvin St. The talk will include information on public access to gas well reports as well as information on the city’s real-time water quality monitoring system. Hunter has worked for the city in environmental and water resource management since 2000. He is also a meteorologist and oceanographer for the U.S. Navy Reserve. — Staff report

The winning Daily 4 numbers drawn Saturday by the Texas Lottery, in order: Morning: 3-3-2-9 Day: 8-7-7-4 Evening: 1-1-1-4 Night: 5-7-7-7 The winning Cash Five numbers drawn Saturday by the Texas Lottery: 1-11-25-27-34 No ticket matched all six numbers drawn Friday night for the twice-weekly Mega Millions game, lottery officials said. The jackpot was worth an estimated $118 million. Tuesday night’s jackpot will be worth an estimated $134 million. The winning Mega Millions numbers drawn Friday: 1-6-13-18-49 Mega Ball: 8 Megaplier: 2

REACH US Breaking News . . . . . 940-566-6860 Executive Editor Sean McCrory . . . . . . 940-566-6879 sean.mccrory@dentonrc.com City Editor Mark Finley . . . . . . . . 940-566-6884 mfinley@dentonrc.com News Editor Mariel Tam-Ray . . . . . 940-566-6883 mtam@dentonrc.com Features Editor Lucinda Breeding . . . . 940-566-6877 cbreeding@dentonrc.com

Woman says boyfriend pushed her out of car Staff Writer zaira.perez@dentonrc.com

LOTTERY No ticket matched all six numbers drawn Saturday night for the twice-weekly Lotto Texas game, state lottery officials said. The jackpot was worth an estimated $5.75 million. Wednesday night’s jackpot will be worth an estimated $6 million. The winning Lotto Texas numbers drawn Saturday by the Texas Lottery: 3-10-23-32-36-48

By Samantha J. Gross and Marc Ramirez

By Zaira Perez

IN DENTON

Sports Larry McBride . . . . . . 940-566-6913 lmcbride@dentonrc.com Photography Jeff Woo . . . . . . . . . . 940-566-6893 jwoo@dentonrc.com Circulation . . . . . . . . 940-566-6836 Classified . . . . . . . . . 940-387-7755 Email us at drc@dentonrc.com

A 30-year-old man was arrested around 3 p.m. Friday near the intersection of Westminster Street and Londonderry Lane after his girlfriend told police he pushed her out of the car and hit her after an argument, said Denton police spokesman Bryan Cose. A witness called 911 after seeing a woman grabbing her belongings from the side of the road, Cose said. The 36-year-old woman told police she and her boyfriend were arguing over a text message she received while he was driving. Cose said the boyfriend stopped driving at one point and dragged the woman out of the car by her hair. The two then got back in the car and continued driving to Denton, where they stopped again. The man claimed the woman punched him and said he never touched her when he kicked her out of the vehicle, according to Cose. After interviewing both of them and seeing the woman had injuries consistent with her story, police arrested the man on a charge of assault causing bodily injury.

Other reports

800 block of Sun Valley Drive — Police responded to a welfare concern call about “a lot of bloodâ€? in the alley behind a residence around 8 p.m. Friday, according to a police report. The caller said they could sort out the situation when officers arrived. Officers reported that the two men involved appeared intoxicated, Cose said. They noticed a knife and a bag of marijuana with the caller, a 52-year-old man, and broken glass sur-

rounding the second man. Cose said the men said they cut each other to see if the glass was sharp. The second man said the blood on his arm and clothes was from a “playfulâ€? bite from the 52-year-old and that it wasn’t assault. The 52-year-old was arrested and charged with possession of marijuana, and the second man has a warrant out for his arrest for a charge of assault causing bodily injury. East Sherman Drive and Loop 288 — A caller said the driver of a pickup was trying to throw a passenger out of the moving truck around 5 p.m. Friday, according to a police report. The 26-year-old victim said the incident began at a residence at the 300 block of Texas Street, Cose said. A man and woman he knew from previous contract work arrived in a white pickup. The victim admitted to throwing equipment from the back of the truck because the driver attempted to drive off while the victim was at the rear of the truck, according to Cose. Cose said the driver stepped out of the vehicle at one point to meet the victim at the back of the truck and the woman hopped into the driver’s seat and drove off, dragging the men behind the truck. No one was arrested but a report was taken.

Roundup

From 7 a.m. Friday to 7 a.m. Saturday, the Denton Police Department handled 176 service and officer-initiated calls and made 19 arrests. Denton County Crime Stoppers will pay a reward of up to $1,000 for information leading to an arrest in these or other crimes. Callers will remain anonymous. Call 1-800-388TIPS (8477). Reach the Denton police narcotics tip line at 940-565-5801.

The Dallas Morning News

A fiery collision between a dump truck and a Trinity Railway Express train killed two people in the semi Saturday and injured several people on the train, two of them critically. The crash was reported about noon in the 12500 block of Calloway Cemetery Road in far East Fort Worth, an area between north Arlington and Euless. The truck was struck by the westbound train and burst into flames, killing two people inside, according to Fort Worth fire spokesman Mike Drivdahl. Their names have not been released. Dallas Area Rapid Transit spokesman Morgan Lyons said the crossing arms were down when the crash happened. “Our trains do not take more than a few seconds to get through an intersection,� Lyons told WFAA-TV (Channel 8). “There is nothing — nothing — on the other side of that intersection that is worth risking your life.� The DART spokesman added that the TRE can travel at speeds up to 79 mph in that area. DORANSKI AGENCY (940) 387 6289 2000 DENISON ST #A DENTON

Firefighters from Fort Worth, Euless and Arlington were called to the scene, and several ambulances were dispatched. Eleven people on the train were hospitalized, including two who were in critical condition and three others with serious but not life-threatening injuries, authorities said. The collision blew out windows on the passenger cars and damaged the front of the locomotive, which came to a stop about a half-mile from the intersection. Paramedics checked out half of the 50 people aboard the train, some of them with bumps and bruises. TRE passengers were taken off the train and bused to a nearby strip club to use the restroom and cool off before a shuttle arrived to take them to Fort Worth. Passenger Tirone Gray, of Pleasant Grove, said he was sitting next to the locomotive and felt “everything� at the point of impact. “There was dust and rocks came in; the windows were busted,� said Gray, 39. “My original thought was that the train was going to roll.�

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CORRECTIONS & CLARIFICATIONS The Denton Record-Chronicle promptly corrects errors of fact. If you believe we have made an error, call the newsroom at 940-566-6860. If you have a question or comment about coverage, email Executive Editor Sean McCrory at sean.mccrory@dentonrc.com or call him at 940-566-6879.

Sunrise today ................................... 6:59 a.m. Sunset tonight ................................. 8:01 p.m. Moonset today ................................ 7:00 a.m. Moonrise Sunday ............................ 8:27 p.m.

2 in dump truck killed in collision with TRE

MONDAY

BRIEFLY

NATIONAL DATA

Stationary front

Cold front

SUPPORT GROUPS

Add your event to our online calendar at DentonRC.com/calendar; email drc@dentonrc.com; or mail to Page 2 Calendar, Denton Record-Chronicle, P.O. Box 369, Denton, TX 76202.

7 a.m. today Year ago 631.06 633.75 519.15 522.30 531.91 535.36 616.87 617.88 829.61 835.39

Warm front

EVENTS

Conservative Toastmasters meets at 7 p.m. at Denton Regional Medical Center’s Educational Building, 3535-A I-35E. Email lebbo@miaincusa. com or mzerger@earthlink.net. Denton County Amateur Radio Association meets from 7 to 9 p.m. on the fourth Monday of each month at the Denton County Emergency Services building, 9060 Teasley Lane.

Ray Roberts Lake Lewisville Lake Grapevine Lake Lake Texoma Lake Bridgeport

Yesterday Today Tomorrow City Hi Lo Prec Hi Lo For Hi Lo For Albuquerque 86 62 -- 85 64 pc 87 63 s Amarillo 95 69 -- 96 71 pc 99 72 s Atlanta 85 66 -- 89 70 s 90 72 s Austin 101 76 -- 99 75 s 99 76 s Chicago 86 64 0.06 91 77 t 91 78 pc Denver 91 61 -- 90 64 pc 91 54 pc Detroit 78 70 0.20 89 73 pc 91 74 pc El Paso 93 74 -- 95 74 s 95 73 s Honolulu 85 74 0.40 86 78 sh 85 76 sh Houston 96 75 -- 93 77 t 92 77 t Kansas City, Mo 92 76 -- 94 76 pc 93 74 pc Las Vegas 103 82 -- 103 79 s 101 75 s Los Angeles 82 67 -- 82 64 pc 81 67 pc Mpls/St. Paul 82 65 -- 84 73 t 88 65 t New Orleans 91 76 0.04 90 77 t 89 77 t New York 80 68 -- 83 73 s 88 76 s Orlando 91 76 0.01 90 75 t 90 75 t Philadelphia 81 63 -- 86 72 s 92 76 s Phoenix 100 79 -- 102 81 c 104 77 s Portland 71 52 -- 68 59 c 77 54 s San Francisco 70 55 -- 69 57 pc 69 59 pc Tulsa 96 77 -- 96 78 pc 95 78 s Washington, DC 82 67 -- 89 75 s 93 77 s

TODAY

Denton Celtic Dancers meets from 5 to 7 p.m. at Green Space Arts Collective, 529 Malone St. Beginners’ class starts at 6 p.m. $1 per session, free for students. Call 940-321-0012 or visit www.dentoncelticdancers.org.

LAKE LEVELS

Gray bands indicate high temperature zones for the day.

CALENDAR

CLUB MEETINGS

High Low 95 77 PRECIPITATION 24 hours (ending 5 p.m.) 0.00� Month to date - 4.78� Normal - 1.59� Year to date - 21.29� A year ago - 27.78�

Forecast for noon, Sunday, Aug. 26, 2018

SOURCE: David Finfrock, KXAS-TV (NBC5)

8 a.m. to 1 p.m. — Carter BloodCare community blood drive in the gym of Singing Oaks Church of Christ, 101 Cardinal Drive. Walk-ins are welcome, or schedule an appointment at ww2.greatpartners.org/donor/ schedules/drive_schedule/95125. 10 a.m. to noon — Organic Fall Gardening, a free class at Clear Creek Natural Heritage Center, 3310 Collins Road. Rachel Weaver leads a hands-on workshop on how to plan, plant and maintain a successful fall organic garden. Visit www.clearcreekdenton.com or call 940-349-8152. 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. — Denton Animal Shelter Benefit Brunch at Andy’s Bar, 122 N. Locust St. Silent auction, raffles, dog treat sales and games benefiting the Denton Animal Support Foundation. Donations will be collected, including towels, small blankets, plain clay cat litter, newspapers, sturdy washable dog toys, wand-type cat toys, washable plastic ball cat toys, natural dog and cat treats, and quality canned and dry cat and dog food.

Denton

DE-1714

SOLAR ECLIPSE

ALMANAC

Dr. Marcus Villarreal

(940) 566-3232 www.dentonchiro.com

Dr. Melissa Noell

We’re Here to HELP You!

DE-1973


LOCAL/STATE

Denton Record-Chronicle

3A

Sunday, August 26, 2018

INDICTMENTS police ●● Terry Lazette, 57, intoxication assault, Denton police ●● Xavier Anderson, 18, aggravated assault against public servant, Denton police ●● April Kean, 45, assault against peace officer, harassment by persons in certain correctional facilities, evading arrest, Denton police ●● Spenser McDade, 31, possession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver, Denton police ●● Lauren Mcauley, 33, criminal mischief, Denton police ●● Richard Milligan, 69, possession of a controlled substance, Denton police ●● Hosie Thomas, 62, theft, Denton police ●● Michael Bailey, 33, possession of a controlled substance, Denton County Sheriff’s Office ●● Christopher Hermann, 33, possession of a controlled substance, Denton County Sheriff’s Office ●● Shannon Koehler, 18, possession of a controlled substance, Denton County Sheriff’s Office ●● Allana Keck, 34, possession of a controlled substance, Denton County Sheriff’s Office

●● Phillip Barr, 39, possession of a controlled substance, Denton County Sheriff’s Office ●● John Clute, 53, possession of a controlled substance, Denton County Sheriff’s Office ●● Virginia Clute, 48, possession of a controlled substance, Denton County Sheriff’s Office ●● Michael Decker, 19, two counts of possession of a controlled substance, Denton County Sheriff’s Office ●● Edgar Espinosa, 25, possession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver, Denton County Sheriff’s Office ●● Elizabeth Rodriguez, 21, possession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver, Denton County Sheriff’s Office ●● Nickolas Smith, 38, possession of marijuana, possession of a controlled substance, Denton County Sheriff’s Office ●● Linares Castellano, 37, theft, Flower Mound police ●● Larry Love, 18, evading arrest, Flower Mound police ●● Dylan Mullenix, 21, possession of a controlled substance, Flower Mound police

●● Vincent Tran, 19, possession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver, possession of marijuana, Flower Mound police ●● Michael Tyson, 28, theft, Flower Mound police ●● Shaquisha Palmer, 28, aggravated assault, The Colony police ●● Natasia Estelle, 19, theft, credit card abuse, The Colony police ●● Jeffrey Ford, 28, theft, The Colony police ●● James Ford, 30, theft, The Colony police ●● Rodolfo Gonzalez, 20, possession of a controlled substance, The Colony police ●● Ryan Irving, 33, credit card abuse, theft, possession of a controlled substance, The Colony police ●● Shaun Keefe, 39, possession of a controlled substance, fraudulent use or possession of identifying information, The Colony police ●● Ryan Teachout, 29, two counts of delivery of a controlled substance, The Colony police ●● Zachary Ball, 34, possession of

a controlled substance with intent to deliver, Frisco police ●● Jason Wilkins, 27, theft, Roanoke police ●● Johnny Garcia, 56, unlawful possession of firearm, Texas Parks and Wildlife Department ●● Collin Bryant, 23, evading arrest, possession of a controlled substance, Texas Department of Public Safety ●● Francisco Resendiz-Garcia, 24, evading arrest, Texas Department of Public Safety ●● Joshua Lindquist, 20, tampering with or fabricating physical evidence, Trophy Club police ●● Brittany Bryson, 19, possession of a controlled substance, University of North Texas police ●● Michael Mendoza, 49, driving while intoxicated, Flower Mound police ●● James Baum, 38, driving while intoxicated, Frisco police ●● Bradley Hayes, 51, driving while intoxicated, Lewisville Police Department

• Ho y t i r g ru e n t T e sty • In

Texas reforms offer lessons for Okla. OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Lawmakers in Texas say their efforts to reduce prison sizes and costs offer lessons for Oklahoma, where corrections officials are seeking hundreds of millions of dollars to build new ones. Texas built $2 billion in prisons to house 103,000 new inmates between 1989 and 1996, but a state budget crunch and proposals to build even more prisons helped launch bipartisan criminal justice reform measures in 2007. Those have allowed the state to close eight prison facilities in the past seven years and dramatically reduce its incarceration costs. “There are things you can do that will alleviate the strain on the prison population, that will save the state money, improve outcomes across the board and Republican Party voters or conservative voters are generally in favor of those reforms,” said Doug Smith, a senior policy analyst with the left-leaning Texas Criminal Justice Coalition. Rather than spend more

a controlled substance, Lewisville police ●● Aryan Caviness, 22, possession of a controlled substance, Lewisville police ●● Nicholas Garberich, 25, possession of a controlled substance, Lewisville police ●● Joseph Martinez II, 27, possession of a controlled substance, Lewisville police ●● Jose Orio, 49, possession of a controlled substance, Lewisville police ●● Edgar Velez, 27, possession of a controlled substance, unlawful possession of firearm, possession of marijuana, Lewisville police ●● Jeffrey Walker, 38, theft, Lewisville police ●● Kyle Loomis, 29, theft, Lewisville police; two counts of theft, Lake Dallas police ●● Xavier Elkins, 17, credit card abuse, Corinth police ●● Robert Walker, 20, credit card abuse, Corinth police ●● Richard Smith, 31, possession of

st

The following people were indicted by a Denton County grand jury on Thursday at the Denton County Courts Building. Listed are those indicted, their age (on date of indictment), charges and the law enforcement agency that made the arrest: ●● Gregory Brice, 38, aggravated assault, Denton police ●● Sean Smith, 31, burglary of a habitation, Denton police ●● Dominique Faniel, 28, possession of a controlled substance, Carrollton police ●● Jordan Henry, 18, possession of a controlled substance, Carrollton police ●● Megan Janeway Sanders, 35, fraudulent use or possession of identifying information, Carrollton police ●● Joseph Laing, 20, possession of a controlled substance, Carrollton police ●● Britany Simmons, 19, possession of a controlled substance, Carrollton police ●● Alfred Taylor, 43, evading arrest, Carrollton police ●● Joshua Taylor, 20, possession of a controlled substance, Carrollton

It’s How We Run Our Practice. It’s Who We Are.

www.dentonhearing.com

Sue Ogrocki/AP file photo

An inmate watches television in his bunk in a unit of the John Lilley Correctional Center in Boley, Okla., in 2010. than $500 million on new prisons, Texas spent half that on treatment and diversion programs. Thousands of beds were created in treatment facilities, where inmates could be sent as an alternative to prisons, The Oklahoman reported. Oklahoma has attempted

to follow the lead of the Republican-controlled Texas Legislature. In 2012, Oklahoma’s Republican governor, Mary Fallin, signed into law a justice reinvestment bill, but adequate funding for rehabilitation programs never arrived from the GOP-controlled Legislature.

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4A

Sunday, August 26, 2018

LOCAL/STATE

Denton Record-Chronicle

Young judges test skills at fair By Zaira Perez Staff Writer zaira.perez@dentonrc.com

It was nearly silent Saturday morning at the North Texas Fairgrounds livestock pavilion, except for the livestock inside. One goat called out continuously and another animal from the other side of the barn responded. About 50 kids roamed around the pavilion to rank the animals during the North Texas Fair and Rodeo’s livestock judging contest. Meanwhile, other families were preparing for the junior lamb show that began later in the morning. The fair and rodeo hosts a variety of livestock contests throughout its annual nine-day run, which wrapped up Saturday. The livestock judging competition has taken place for about 10 years now. “We’ve come a long way since [the first year],” said Ryan Pieniazek, the superintendent for the judging contest, who is an agriculture science teacher at Krum High School. Students ages 8 to 18 are allowed to participate, as long as they are enrolled in a Texas school and belong to 4-H or FFA. The contestants were judged as individuals in junior and senior divisions, and in teams of three or four. Participants had to judge seven classes of animals — market hogs, breeding does, Santa Gertrudis heifers, market steers, Dorper ewes, prospect goats and Red Angus heifers — with four animals in each class. The animals were all from local breeders. The animals in each class were given a number between 1 and 4. The contestants’ job was to rank the animals in the order they would buy first, based on attributes such as structural correctness, finish and eye appeal. The youths’ rankings were then compared to a judging committee’s official rankings to see which contestants made the decisions closest to the official rankings.

Police: Man shot women drivers out of hatred By Kristine Phillips The Washington Post

Courtesy photos/Al Key, North Texas Fair and Rodeo

Daryl Real, a volunteer coach with Denton County 4-H, talks about scoring animals during the junior livestock judging competition Saturday in the livestock pavilion at the North Texas Fair and Rodeo.

“[The kids] are learning to develop decisionmaking skills, time management, how to defend their choice and teamwork.” — Ryan Pieniazek, superintendent for the judging contest While judging the animals, competitors were not allowed to talk to each other, touch the animals or use electronic devices. Teams were stationed at each set of animals for about 10 minutes to fill out their scorecards before moving on to the next group of livestock. “[The kids] are learning to develop decision-making skills, time management, how to defend their choice and teamwork,” Pieniazek said. In the junior division — ages 13 and younger — Stock-

Michael Schertz, a volunteer with Krum FFA, helps students with their scoring during the junior livestock judging competition Saturday at the North Texas Fair and Rodeo. ton James of Denton County came in first place, with Creed Vine of Wise County in second place and Brodie Childs of Wise County in third. Skylor Schertz of Krum won the senior division, for teens 14 and older. Clint Demmit of Wise

County was second, and Mason Pape of Denton County was third. Denton County 4-H No. 1 took first place in the junior and senior team rankings. ZAIRA PEREZ can be reached at 940-566-6889.

NOTICE OF 2018 TAX YEAR PROPOSED PROPERTY TAX RATE FOR TOWN OF DOUBLE OAK A tax rate of $0.232400 per $100 valuation has been proposed by the governing body of TOWN OF DOUBLE OAK. This rate exceeds the lower of the effective or rollback tax rate, and state law requires that two public hearings be held by the governing body before adopting the proposed tax rate. The governing body of TOWN OF DOUBLE OAK proposes to use revenue attributable to the tax rate increase for the purpose of maintenance and operations. PROPOSED TAX RATE PRECEDING YEAR’S TAX RATE EFFECTIVE TAX RATE ROLLBACK TAX RATE

David Bailey

Flor Barajas

$0.232400 per $100 $0.232400 per $100 $0.219997 per $100 $0.237596 per $100

The effective tax rate is the total tax rate needed to raise the same amount of property tax revenue for TOWN OF DOUBLE OAK from the same properties in both the 2017 tax year and the 2018 tax year.

Ra’shaun Carthorn

The rollback tax rate is the highest tax rate that TOWN OF DOUBLE OAK may adopt before voters are entitled to petition for an election to limit the rate that may be approved to the rollback rate. YOUR TAXES OWED UNDER ANY OF THE ABOVE RATES CAN BE CALCULATED AS FOLLOWS: property tax amount = (rate) x (taxable value of your property) / 100

De’Metrius Duirden

For assistance or detailed information about tax calculations, please contact: Michelle French Denton County Tax Assessor-Collector 1505 E McKinney Street Denton, TX 76209 940-349-3500 property.tax@dentoncounty.com tax.dentoncounty.com

Alfina Harris

You are urged to attend and express your views at the following public hearings on proposed tax rate: First Hearing: 09/04/2018 7:00 PM at 320 Waketon Road, Double Oak, TX 75077 Second Hearing: 09/17/2018 7:00 PM at 320 Waketon Road, Double Oak, TX 75077

DE-4478

Linda Jarrow

Nicholas Dagostino hated female drivers, authorities say, so much so that he shot them while they were driving. Police in Texas linked Dagostino to two recent shootings in which women said they were shot in the arm. Both incidents happened in broad daylight, within a few miles of each other in the Katy area of Harris County, west of Houston. And both involved a suspect — Dagostino — who claimed he shot the women in self-defense, according to criminal complaints. But social media ramblings indicate that Dagostino “held a very dim view of women,” believed female drivers are “incompetent” and that their sole purpose “is to give birth to male children,” investigators wrote in court documents. Dagostino, 29, is facing two felony charges of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon. His defense attorney, Kenneth Mingledorff, said that statements police made about Dagostino’s hatred against women are merely assumptions. “There’s a lot being said. Nobody knows that for a fact,” Mingledorff told The Washington Post on Saturday. “I’ve seen no evidence of that at all. A lot of assumptions are being made, and we’ll work through all that.” He added that his client needs psychological help, though he did not elaborate. “We’re very sorry for the people involved,” Mingle-

dorff said, referring to the injured women. “[Dagostino’s] family wants them to know that they’re concerned about them and we’re going to do what we can to make sure that this never happens again.” The most recent shooting happened on July 10, at a carwash in Katy. The victim told police that she was pulling into the carwash when she heard a noise and saw that her driver’s-side window was cracked. She assumed it had been hit by a rock, but she later saw blood dripping down her arm, court records say. Surveillance footage showed a green Ford Explorer, possibly a 1996 to 2000 model, next to the woman’s car when she was shot. Police later found the vehicle’s owner, Dagostino, who lived nearby. He told police that he shot the woman because she swerved into his lane, and that he did so in self-defense, court records say. Investigators learned of another shooting that happened a few months earlier, on March 7, at a gas station just three miles away from the carwash. The victim told police she was leaving a gas station when she heard a loud noise and felt pain in her right arm. Then, she told police, she saw a man in a dark green older-model SUV looking at her as he drove by, as if he was checking to see if he had shot her, court records say. Dagostino admitted to police that he also shot the woman at the gas station because she struck his vehicle and swerved into his lane, court records say.

Denton State Supported Living Center Employees of the Quarter Congratulations to each of these employees who have given so much of themselves to the special individuals who live at Denton State Supported Living Center. These people, chosen by their peers and supervisors, work long hours and contribute much of their own energy, talent and time to enrich the lives of persons with intellectual disabilities who live at Denton State Supported Living Center. For your exemplary work and your caring spirit, we salute you and are very glad to have you as an integral part of our team at Denton State Supported Living Center.

- The Administrative Staff & Families of Denton State Supported Living Center

David Kamau

Karen Mayfield

Sara O’Bryan

Christopher Richard

John Velasquez

Joshua Winslow

If you want to join this team of caring individuals and enrich the lives of some very special people, call the Denton State Supported Living Center (940) 591-3368


STATE

Denton Record-Chronicle

Sunday, August 26, 2018

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Cities hit by Harvey still struggling but finding normalcy Texas is making strong progress after hurricane By Juan A. Lozano Associated Press

HOUSTON — Although many Texas families are still struggling to recover from Hurricane Harvey a year after it caused widespread damage and flooding along the Gulf Coast and in and around Houston, daily life has mostly returned to normal in many of the hardest-hit communities. In the Houston area, where more than 150,000 homes were flooded, the mountains of debris that lined streets for months after Harvey are gone. Rockport, where the storm made landfall, had rebuilt enough by this summer to welcome back the tourists who fuel the local economy. In Port Arthur, where few buildings escaped Harvey unscathed or were insured against flooding, many are living in trailers as they rebuild their homes one room at a time and finding hope in small victories. While it could take a decade to fully recover from Harvey, which came ashore Aug. 25, 2017, as a Category 4 storm, officials say Texas has already made great strides. However, they acknowledge that federal recovery funding has been slow in coming for some residents and that many are feeling frustrated and forgotten. Parts of Houston, which is

Gerald Herbert/AP file photo

Paul England Jr., right, helps Michael Brown move bedroom furniture floating in his flooded home in the aftermath of Tropical Storm Harvey, in Port Arthur. Many families across Texas are still struggling a year after Hurricane Harvey’s destructive winds and biblical rainfall. about 50 miles from the coast, remained flooded for weeks after Harvey, which caused an estimated $125 billion in damage in Texas and killed 68 people, including 36 in the Houston area. But Marvin Odum, who is overseeing the recovery efforts in the nation’s fourth-largest city, said it’s been “fairly amazing” how quickly Houston got back to business. Houston has received a total of

BRIEFLY ACROSS THE STATE Raymondville

Man charged in death of priest buried in Texas Authorities say a man has been charged in the death of a retired Roman Catholic priest whose body was found buried in a remote area of far South Texas after he went missing earlier this month. The Texas Rangers confirmed Friday that the body found Aug. 17 in Willacy County was that of 71-year-old William “Bill” Costello, a retired Massachusetts parish priest. He’d last been seen Aug. 1 on South Padre Island. The Valley Morning Star in Harlingen reports that 27-yearold Juan Carlos Baez Escobedo was arrested Wednesday in the slaying. He remained jailed Saturday on $2 million bond on a murder charge. Jail records didn’t list an attorney for him. The Catholic Diocese in Fall River, Massachusetts, said Costello came to Texas more than three years ago.

Austin

Officials believe man killed girlfriend, self Authorities believe a man fatally shot his girlfriend and then killed himself in front of their home near Austin. The Travis County Sheriff’s Office said Saturday that 26-year-old Omar Garcia apparently killed 23-year-old Nancy Garcia before killing himself. Their bodies were discovered Friday morning after a passing Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z

motorist saw Omar Garcia’s body lying next to a vehicle and called 911. When deputies arrived they found Nancy Garcia dead in the driver’s seat of the vehicle. A pistol was lying next to Omar Garcia. The sheriff’s office said Omar Garcia was recently arrested for assault/family violence and Nancy Garcia was the victim.

Chicago

Cities vying for 2020 Democratic convention The three cities vying to host the 2020 Democratic convention are courting party leaders and activists at their summer meeting in Chicago. Houston, Miami and Milwaukee are the finalists. A selection committee has been visiting the potential sites. A decision is expected early next year. Miami gave people attending the Democratic National Committee meeting a taste of Chicago’s waterfront offerings by renting out a boat docked at Navy Pier for its party. Milwaukee’s gathering featured an appearance by onetime Milwaukee Bucks basketball star Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. The city has suggested the Bucks’ new arena as the convention’s venue. Gospel singer Yolanda Adams highlighted Houston’s party. Houston also scattered promotions throughout the DNC’s meeting hotel, including Texas-shaped decals on the carpet and bar tabletops. —The Associated Press

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$4.3 billion in Federal Emergency Management Agency individual assistance funding, payouts from the National Flood Insurance Program and Small Business Administration, or SBA, loans. Across Texas, $14.7 billion has been awarded to residents through FEMA, flood insurance and SBA loans, said Nim Kidd, chief of the Texas Division of Emergency Management. The state is expected to get another

$10 billion in federal funding for housing and infrastructure needs. Odum said he’s mindful that the recovery is far from over and that the process can be very slow. He also worries that people will forget about “those pockets of the city that are still heavily devastated from the storm.” Harvey’s 130 mph winds destroyed 30 percent of the buildings in coastal Rockport, laying waste to hotels, restaurants and

affordable housing used by the workers who kept the tourism community’s service industry humming, said Mayor Pat Rios. With a lack of housing, many workers left, which has meant some restaurants can no longer stay open seven days a week and the local Walmart can’t stay open 24 hours a day. But the city is open for business, and this summer it has welcomed “volunteer tourists” who

work a few days on rebuilding efforts and then spend the rest of their time vacationing, Rios said. “We know we’re going to rebuild, and we’ll be better and stronger than we were before,” Rios said. Recovering from a storm like Harvey is a long process, but now that people see it’s going to take time, “they realize how far we’ve actually come,” said Pete Phillips, senior director for community development and revitalization at the Texas General Land Office, which is in charge of the state’s long-term recovery action plan. Harvey damaged up to 85 percent of the structures in Port Arthur, a coastal city of about 55,000 people near the Louisiana border. While Port Arthur has replaced flooded garbage and police vehicles and restored city services, many residents are still living in FEMA trailers or tents on their property as they rebuild their homes, said Port Arthur Mayor Derrick Freeman. “Folks are doing what they can with what they have ... getting one bathroom up and going, one bedroom, getting a mattress for your kids. It’s the small victories that people are looking to right now,” he said. Freeman said he’s hoping that a $1 million check he recently got for federal aid from Hurricane Ike in 2008 doesn’t signify how long it will take to get Harvey recovery aid. “It’s going to be a long process. But our folks are hardworking, blue collar, strong, resilient people. We’re going to be OK,” he said.


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Sunday, August 26, 2018

Denton Record-Chronicle

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NATIONAL

Denton Record-Chronicle

7A

Sunday, August 26, 2018

Hawaii emerges from threat as storm veers away By Audrey Mcavoy and Caleb Jones Associated Press

HONOLULU — Hawaii emerged Saturday from the threat of a potentially devastating hurricane after historic amounts of rain forced evacuations on some islands but damage appeared less than feared. Tropical Storm Lane, once known as Hurricane Lane, began to break apart as it veered west into the open Pacific, leaving behind sighs of relief and plenty of cleanup, especially on the Big Island where rainfall totals approached 4 feet. No storm-related deaths have been reported, though Big Island authorities said they plucked families from floodwaters and landslides closed roads.

The National Weather Service canceled all storm warnings for the state, several hours after shopkeepers in Honolulu’s tourist-heavy areas already started taking down plywood meant to protect windows if the storm made it that far. Preliminary figures from the weather service show that Lane dropped the fourth-highest amount of rain for a hurricane to hit the United States since 1950. Hurricane Harvey, which devastated Texas a year ago, topped the list. The storm’s outer bands dumped as much as 45 inches on the mostly rural Big Island, measurements showed. The main town of Hilo, population 43,000, was flooded Friday with waist-high water.

Authorities rescued 39 people from floodwaters Friday and Saturday, all in the eastern part of the Big Island where the rain concentrated, Hawaii County Civil Defense spokeswoman Kelly Wooten said. Teams were assessing damage, she said, but continued to focus on recovery efforts because it was still raining. Big Island Book Buyers in Hilo opened as normal Saturday morning after owner Mary Bicknell saw a bit of sunshine and blue sky. “Everybody is in pretty good spirits. It’s kind of nice,” she said of her customers before adding everyone was “hoping and praying it’s over.” One of the island’s volcanoes is erupting, and the rain could

still cause whiteout conditions on some active lava fields when it hits the molten rock and boils off as steam. About 200 miles and several islands to the northwest, tourists wandered Waikiki Beach and took leisurely swims as shopkeepers prepared to reopen. Hotels began putting deck chairs back alongside pools. Dozens of surfers were in the Pacific, looking to ride small waves. The breeze was light. Winds were also calmer on Maui, which had seen about 12 inches of rain and wind gusts up to 50 mph. On Saturday, winds were about 11 mph. Like the Big Island, Maui experienced flooding and landslides. Lane first approached the islands earlier this week as a Cat-

egory 5 hurricane, meaning it was likely to cause catastrophic damage with winds of 157 mph or above. But upper-level winds known as shear swiftly tore the storm apart. As flooding hit the Big Island, winds fanned brush fires that had broken out in dry areas of Maui and Oahu. Some residents in a shelter on Maui had to flee flames, and another fire forced people from their homes. Flames burned nine homes in the historic coastal town of Lahaina and forced 600 people to evacuate, Maui County spokeswoman Lynn Araki-Regan said. Some have returned, but many have not because much of the area lacks power, Araki-Regan said.

Those outages meant the water provider on Maui’s west side was unable to pump, so officials at the Maui Electric utility urged conservation — particularly important because firefighters need supplies to put out the remaining flames. The central Pacific gets fewer hurricanes than other regions, with only about four or five named storms a year. Hawaii rarely gets hit. The last major storm to hit was Iniki in 1992. Others have come close in recent years. “It’s great that it didn’t get us,” Nick Palumbo II, who lives and owns a surf shop on the island of Lanai, said of Lane. He worried, however, that the near-miss would give residents a false sense of security.

Mayo, Fla., changing name Grow Your Money – Spend Life Wisely RATES AS HIGH AS PERFORMANCE to ‘Miracle Whip’ as a joke * forts to get residents to remove mayonnaise from their homes. The town’s elected officials say they will let residents in on the joke after a few days, but not before street signs and the name on the water tower have been switched out. The town located halfway between Tallahassee and Gainesville is getting between $15,000 and $25,000 for the name change, and the money will be used for city beautification measures. In an interview with The Associated Press, Mayo’s mayor ran with the concept, insisting it would be a good idea to make the name change permanent. “We aren’t going to be boring Mayo anymore. We are going to be Miracle Whip!” Ann Murphy said. “I definitely think this will put us on the map.” Town clerk Linda Cone con-

firmed the name change is a prank and conceded that in a town so small it probably won’t take long for residents to figure it out. “Everybody knows everybody. It’s been kind of difficult to keep everything under wraps,” Cone said. The mayor said City Council members secretly discussed the deal with Miracle Whip during a closed session because secrecy was needed to achieve the surprise that Miracle Whip wants to capture. However, a closed session would seem to violate Florida’s Sunshine Law requiring meetings to be held publicly except under limited conditions, open-government advocate Barbara Petersen said. The town got its original name from a Confederate colonel, James Mayo, and it is the county seat of Lafayette County.

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BRIEFLY ACROSS THE NATION Oklahoma City

State awards medical marijuana licenses More than 1,600 people and businesses applied for Oklahoma medical marijuana licenses on the first day that applications were made available. The online application system went live at 10 a.m. Saturday at www.OMMA.ok.gov for all potential medical marijuana patients, growers, dispensaries, processors and caregivers. Oklahoma State Department of Health spokesman Tony Sellars said that by Saturday evening, the agency had received 1,054 patient, 634 business and three caregiver applications. Officials awarded 23 licenses to patients Saturday to test the approval process and will resume approving applications Monday, Sellars said. Sellars added that the state collected $1.5 million in application fees on Saturday. He said the application process has been running smoothly except for a minor glitch Saturday morning for some Yahoo and iCloud email users. Some applicants using those email services may not be receiving a courtesy confirmation email, though Sellars said the company that provided the application system was working to resolve the issue. By afternoon, Sellars said, the complaints had stopped.

Chapel Hill, N.C.

7 arrested in protest over Confederate statue Seven people were arrested Saturday at a rally calling for a century-old Confederate statue at the University of North Carolina to be returned after it was yanked down five days ago. About a dozen people carrying Confederate flags were met by dozens of protesters that don’t want the memorial known as “Silent Sam” to return to the campus in Chapel Hill. Television footage and videos posted to social media showed several punches thrown and at least one man handcuffed after he tried to burn a Confederate flag taken from another man’s hands. — The Associated Press

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By Mike Schneider and Josh Replogle Associated Press ORLANDO, Fla. — Mayo, Florida is holding the mayo, at least for a few days. The mayor of this tiny town of less than 1,500 residents, located where Florida’s Panhandle morphs into a peninsula, is announcing Saturday that the city is switching its name to “Miracle Whip.” But it’s a joke. The name change started as a secret, tongue-in-cheek marketing proposal for the Kraft Heinz-owned mayonnaise-alternative. Videographers for Miracle Whip on Saturday wanted to capture the shock of residents when they hear that the name of their town is being changed to a corporate brand. Representatives of the condiment planned to spend the next few days filming their jocular ef-


8A

NATIONAL

Sunday, August 26, 2018

N.M. lab contractor agrees to pay taxes SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) — A management group that will soon take over Los Alamos National Laboratory will pay gross receipts taxes, easing concerns that millions of dollars in revenue could evaporate if the group was deemed to have nonprofit status. A representative of Triad National Security LLC confirmed this week state officials responded to a recent inquiry saying they believed the tax would apply to Triad, The Santa Fe New Mexican reports. Nonprofits generally are exempt from gross receipts taxes on most of their business transactions. The tax makes up a major source of revenue that the state collects and shares with local governments. Triad is led by nonprofits — Texas A&M system, the University of California and the Ohio-based Battelle Memorial Institute. Scott Sudduth, assistant vice chancellor with the Office of Federal Relations for the Texas A&M University system, addressed the tax issue Wednesday during a meeting of community members. “I know how important tax issues are to the community,” Sudduth told the audience. Los Alamos County officials had previously said they could lose around $21 million annually and the state $23 million if Triad had nonprofit status. Triad will take over in November and will begin paying the tax, Sudduth said. Various Triad representatives said that the Los Alamos meeting was called to hear community concerns and develop a community commitment plan.

Denton Record-Chronicle

NOT REAL NEWS:

A look at what didn’t happen this week By The Associated Press

A roundup of some of the most popular but completely untrue headlines of the week. None of these stories is legit, even though they were shared widely on social media. The Associated Press checked these out. Here are the real facts: Not real: “Mitt Romney: ‘Trump has some very serious emotional problems, he must resign before we...’ The facts: Mitt Romney did not say Trump should resign over sexual harassment allegations despite what an article circulating online suggests. The article, published on a website made to mimic a regional newspaper, claims Romney, who is

stop and the land issue is resolved,” Donald Trump The facts: President Donald Trump did not say that he would send troops to South Africa and keep them there “until the killings stop and the land issue is resolved,” despite reports circulating online. The reports, which appear to have originated on a South African satire site, are now being shared more widely on Facebook. The false information follows a tweet by Trump on Wednesday saying his administration would look into seizures of white-owned farms and the “large scale killing of farmers.” Trump tweeted after Fox News host Tucker Carlson

running for a U.S. Senate seat in Utah, made the comments during an appearance on CNN’s “AC360,” an apparent reference to Anderson Cooper 360. Romney is quoted as saying: “I think you’ve got a president who has some very serious emotional problems.” But Romney didn’t make the comments, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders did during an appearance on Cooper’s show in December. Shimrit Sheetrit, public relations director for the show, said that “Mitt Romney hasn’t been on our show in many months.” ■■ Not real: “I am sending troops to South Africa, and they will not leave until the killings

claimed South Africa President Cyril Ramaphosa had already started “seizing the land from his own citizens without compensation because they are the wrong skin color.” An AP Fact Check found the number of murders on farms is down from 2001-2002 when police recorded 140 farm killings. South Africa has been looking into land expropriation and redistribution to black farmers as a way of righting the injustices of apartheid. No legislation has been put forward and there have been no government seizures of agricultural land. ■■ Not real: WestJet not giving out free coupons

The facts: WestJet Airlines is not giving out two free tickets to celebrate its birthday despite an offer circulating on social media. The scam asks users to fill out a survey to receive a pair of 332 remaining tickets. Afterward, users are asked to share the ad and type “Thanks for tickets #Westjet!” in the comments field. It then says users can click the “Claim Now” button to enter their personal details. The advertisement “is not a legitimate offer,” WestJet spokeswoman Morgan Bell told The Associated Press in an email. Bell said more information about dealing with scams is available on the airline’s advisory page.

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Sunday, August 26, 2018

Money, loyalty: A look inside Trump-Cohen rift By Jonathan Lemire Associated Press

NEW YORK — For Michael Cohen and Donald Trump, it’s always been about money and loyalty. Those were guiding principles for Cohen when he served as more than just a lawyer for Trump during the developer’s rise from celebrity to president-elect. Cohen brokered deals for the Trump Organization, profited handsomely from a side venture into New York City’s real estate and taxi industries and worked to make unflattering stories about Trump disappear. Money and loyalty also drove Cohen to make guilty pleas this past week in a spinoff from the swirling investigations battering the Trump White House. Feeling abandoned by Trump and in dire financial straits, the man who once famously declared that he would “take a bullet” for Trump now is pledging loyalty to his own family and actively seeking to cooperate with special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation. The unraveling of their relationship was laid bare Tuesday when Cohen pleaded guilty to eight criminal charges and said in federal court that he broke campaign finance laws as part of a cover-up operation that Trump had directed. In the days after Cohen’s guilty plea, two close associates — the magazine boss who helped him squash bad stories and the top financial man at the president’s business — have been granted immunity for their cooperation. These moves could have a ripple effect on the legal fortunes of Cohen and, perhaps,

Seth Wenig/AP file photo

Michael Cohen leaves federal court in New York on April 26. President Donald Trump’s former personal lawyer secretly recorded Trump discussing payments to a former Playboy model who said she had an affair with him, The New York Times reported July 20. Trump. For years, Cohen was a fixture in Trump’s orbit. Working alongside Trump and Trump’s three adult children — Don Jr., Ivanka, Eric — in Trump Tower, Cohen took on a number of roles for the developer, including emissary for projects in foreign capitals and enforcer of Trump’s will. At times a bully for a family-run business, Cohen was known for his hot temper as he strongarmed city workers, reluctant business partners and reporters. He was there in the lobby of Trump Tower in June 2015 when his boss descended an escalator and changed history

by declaring his candidacy for president. But Cohen’s place in Trump’s political life ended up being peripheral. Cohen did become a reliable surrogate on cable TV — he created a viral moment by repeating “Says who?” when told Trump was down in the polls — and founded the candidate’s faith-based organization. But Cohen was never given a prominent spot in the campaign. And despite telling confidants that he thought he had a shot at White House chief of staff after the election, Cohen was never given a West Wing job. He remained in New York when Trump moved to Wash-

ington. Cohen found ways to profit from the arrangement, making millions from corporations by selling access to Trump, but felt adrift and isolated from Trump, according to two people familiar with his thinking who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss private conversations. But early one April morning, more than three dozen federal agents raided Cohen’s home, office and hotel room. A chief focus for investigators was Cohen’s role in making payments during Trump’s campaign to women who claimed they had sex with Trump, and

whether campaign finance laws were violated. In the fall of 2016, weeks before the election, Cohen had set up a limited liability company in Delaware to hide the deal he made to silence the pornographic film actress Stormy Daniels about an affair she said she had with Trump. Worry grew within the White House about what had been seized. That April day, Trump berated the raid as “an attack on all we stand for.” But then, in a “Fox & Friends” interview, Trump began to dramatically play down his relationship with Cohen. “I have nothing to do with his business,” Trump said, asserting that Cohen was just one of many lawyers and was responsible for “a tiny, tiny fraction” of Trump’s legal work. A dispute soon broke out between Cohen and Trump over who would pay the former fixer’s mounting legal bills. Holed up in a Park Avenue hotel after his apartment flooded, Cohen began to worry about his financial future, according to the two people. By all appearances, Cohen’s lifestyle was lavish. He bought a $6.7 million Manhattan apartment last fall, though the sale didn’t close until April and no one could move in until the summer. With bills piling up for his team of expensive lawyers, the suddenly unemployed Cohen began to tell confidants that he was worried about his job prospects and ability to support his family. Meanwhile, the broadsides from the White House kept coming. Trump and Cohen had long stopped speaking, but word

would get back to the lawyer that the president was belittling him. The president’s attorney and frequent attack dog Rudy Giuliani went from calling Cohen “an honest, honorable lawyer” in May to deriding him as a “pathological liar” in July. Cohen began wondering to friends whether loyalty with Trump had become a one-way street, the people said. Eager to hit back and attempt to regain some hold on the story, Cohen hired Lanny Davis, a former Bill Clinton attorney, to be his public relations lawyer. Davis began striking back at the White House and lobbed a clear warning shot at the president when he released a secret recording of a conversation in which Trump appears to have knowledge about hush-money payments to former Playboy model Karen McDougal, who also alleged an affair with the developer. Cohen was embraced by the cable news networks as an irresistible foil to Trump. Some on the left styled him as a star of the resistance. Cohen’s camp made some effort to play into the role, reaching out to Watergate whistleblower John Dean and, after Cohen’s plea, establishing an online fundraising tool that seemed to predominantly receive backing from liberals. Cohen, who could get about four years to five years in prison, is due to be sentenced Dec. 12. Davis has strongly telegraphed that Cohen is willing to cooperate with Mueller’s investigation. But a deal has yet to be struck and there are doubts about what Cohen can prove or whether the special counsel would want to rely on an untrustworthy witness.

Musk’s credibility takes hit By Tom Krisher AP Auto Writer

Noah Berger/AP file photo

Tesla CEO Elon Musk speaks with members of the media at the company’s headquarters in Palo Alto, Calif., in 2015. much they could sink into a private company. The episode drew attention from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, which reportedly is investigating Tesla for possible manipulation of the stock price. At least two lawsuits seeking class-action status also have been filed alleging Musk broke securities laws by making it sound like financing for the buyout was lined up. James Cox, a Duke University professor who specializes in corporate governance and securities law, said regulations prohibit companies from making misleading statements that influence the markets. “The fact that he’s now backing off so quickly, within a matter of weeks, indicates the insincerity in which the first statement was made,” Cox said. While Musk disclosed the possible buy-back on Aug. 7, he didn’t reveal all contingencies including that the Saudi fund had to investigate, said Peter Henning, a Wayne State University law professor and former SEC attorney. “I think his most recent statement shows that this wasn’t thought through,” Henning said. “That’s going to be a concern for the SEC because that’s how investors can be misled, with incomplete information.” The SEC also is likely to look at Musk’s disclosure to some investors before others, which also is prohibited if there’s reason to believe the investors might trade stock based on the information, Cox said. Calling the whole thing off, though, might also be a defense for Musk, Henning said. “He could say I was just testing the waters. I was just thinking out loud, so I didn’t mean to mislead anyone on this.”

Normally, if a company was mulling a plan to go private, the CEO would notify the board and a process would be put in place to evaluate the move, Henning says. Lawyers would be involved and it would be disclosed in a filing with the SEC. Cox predicts that Tesla will settle with the SEC, pay a penalty and agree not to violate securities laws in the future. On top of all this drama, last week Musk disclosed in an interview with The New York Times that he was stressed out from trying to meet long-delayed production targets for the Model 3 mass-market electric car. He said he was working 120 hours a week and had to take Ambien to sleep.

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DETROIT — First it was the shocking tweet that funding was secured and Tesla may go private, then a statement that the money wasn’t locked down after all. Two weeks later it’s never mind, the whole deal is off. Welcome to the disarray of Elon Musk, the impulsive genius and architect of cutting-edge car, rocket and solar panel companies built nearly from scratch. Chaos, though, comes with a price. Experts say it all could wind up with Tesla exposed to a fine for misleading investors. And even though Musk has almost legendary status, the episode could further erode his credibility with stakeholders who have endured multiple broken promises and years of losses as a public company. “Prior to the go-private episode, his credibility was in question, although investors still had overall confidence in the guy,” Erik Gordon, a business and law professor at the University of Michigan, said Saturday. “This whole go-private episode has taken his credibility close to zero.” The bizarre story began Aug. 7 when Musk, while driving to the airport, tweeted he was considering taking the company private and that funding had been secured for the deal. Investors would be paid $420 per share, a 23 percent premium over the Aug. 6 closing price. No other details were given, but Tesla’s stock shot up 11 percent that day. At $420, buying all Tesla shares would cost around $72 billion. Then, in a blog post six days later, Musk wrote the money wasn’t locked down, revealing that Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund was the source of the cash but was still doing due diligence. Musk said the Tesla board and some big investors had been told he was considering taking the company private before he tweeted that information. He said he tweeted the disclosure so everyone could have the information. Musk, who owns 20 percent of Tesla, also said he expected only a third of shareholders to sell, meaning the deal would be valued around $24 billion. Late Friday came a statement from Musk saying that after talking to investors, the plan to go private would be scrubbed. Big institutional investors told him they had limits on how

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Sunday, August 26, 2018

Denton Record-Chronicle

Democrats OK limiting leaders’ role in picking nominee By Bill Barrow and Sara Burnett Associated Press

CHICAGO — After two years of sometimes ugly public fighting, Democratic Party leaders on Saturday voted to limit their own high-profile roles in choosing presidential nominees, giving even more weight to the outcome of state primaries and caucuses. The debate over the influence of party insiders known as superdelegates was evidence of the fallout from the 2016 fight between eventual nominee Hillary Clinton and Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders. His supporters accused the national party of tipping the scales in Clinton’s favor. The change, which affects

the hundreds of Democratic National Committee members, elected officials and party elders who attend presidential conventions as automatic delegates, was seen as a victory for the party chairman, Tom Perez. It comes with the November election nearing, when GOP control of Congress is at stake, and a potentially bruising nominating battle shaping up for 2020, when President Donald Trump is up for re-election. “We should never ever confuse unity and unanimity,” Perez said after the vote. “Today, demonstrated the values of the Democratic Party.” Under the new rules for 2020, superdelegates still will be automatic delegates to the

party’s convention. But they will not have a vote on the first presidential ballot if the convention remains contested, which is a distinct possibility given the number of Democrats considering running. Superdelegates would get to vote on any subsequent rounds of voting, though the Democratic nomination has been settled on the first ballot of every convention since the 1970s, when the modern system of primaries and caucuses was established. The change was approved by acclamation. The key procedural vote before that showed the overhaul had 329.5 “yes” votes to 106.5 votes in opposition. The approval drew a standing ovation from progressive

activists, many of them among the Sanders supporters who had cited superdelegates as the personification of establishment favoritism toward Clinton. “This is a great day for America and for the party,” said Jeff Weaver, Sanders’ 2016 campaign manager. “When you have a system subject to gaming, there is incentive to game it. To the extent the system can’t be gamed, you have more credibility with voters.” In a written statement, Sanders called the move “an important step forward in making the Democratic Party more open, democratic and responsive to the input of ordinary Americans.” Perez said settling the issue means the party can focus exclu-

sively on the November election, when Democrats are aiming to reclaim majorities on Capitol Hill and regain power in statehouses around the country. Beyond changing the rules for superdelegates, the overhaul is intended to make vote-counting at presidential preference caucuses more transparent and make it easier for voters other than longtime registered Democrats to participate in caucuses and primaries. That could affect states such as Iowa, which might have to develop paper ballots for caucus sites instead of its usual method of sorting into groups and counting heads. New York, meanwhile, would be pressured to relax its party registration

deadline, which in 2016 fell six months before the primary, leaving many independents who wanted to back Sanders no option to vote. But it was the superdelegate matter that met fierce opposition from some party leaders, including two former national heads, Donna Brazile and Don Fowler, both longtime allies of Hillary Clinton and former President Bill Clinton. Fowler, Brazile and other opponents cast the efforts as punishing rank-and-file party leaders incorrectly perceived as party bosses trying to override the will of voters. Even Perez noted that superdelegates have never overturned the cumulative results of primaries.

Burning Man stresses importance of consent RENO, Nev. (AP) — The #MeToo movement is making its way to Burning Man. Event organizers are reminding attendees that just because the counter-culture festival in the Nevada desert is known for occasional nudity and kinky landmarks like the “Orgy Dome,” it doesn’t mean it’s a free-for-all when it comes to touching or nonconsensual sex, the Reno Gazette Journal reported. This year’s event started this weekend. While the festival doesn’t have official guidelines, it does have a set of informal rules. Tex Allen, a 13-year Burner, doubts many newcomers to the playa are reading those. The festival’s on-site Sexual Assault Services department receives five to 20 reports of alleged sexual assault each year, said Burning Man spokesman Jim Graham. Many of those reports involve leering or grabbing, which aren’t considered sexual assault under Nevada law.

A few reports each year require involvement from law enforcement. Last year, two people were arrested on suspicion of sexual assault without substantial bodily harm. No arrests related to sexual assault or rape were made the year before. Despite the low arrests, Donna Rae Watson, director of the Bureau of Erotic Discourse, a large camp at Burning Man that teaches people about sex, still hears stories of harassment at the festival from dozens of people each year. “Scandalous costumes and nudity might be considered inviting. (Others) automatically think consent is implied, but implied consent doesn’t exist,” she said. The organization is doing more to educate participants about consent, what it means and what it applies to. Watson said her group was founded in 2005 after a woman was sexually assaulted at the festival the previous year.

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Denton Record-Chronicle From Page 1A

Sunday, August 26, 2018

Want to catch up on the highlights from Andrew Torget’s class? Luckily, Caitlyn Jones took notes. Read her massive Twitter thread at twitter.com/CjonesDRC.

History evidence from volunteer witnesses is sent off to the Guinness people, but UNT Libraries officials say he set the record when he hit 24 hours at 9 a.m. Saturday. His record attempt also managed to raise more than $12,000 in donations for the university’s Portal to Texas History digital archive. In the audience, I was composing the world’s longest Twitter thread from Torget’s lecture. I just didn’t have the foresight to tell Guinness. I had taken a history class with Torget when I was a student at UNT but could never snag a spot in his Texas history class. The 30 or so students seated in an area called the “snake pit” were luckier than I was. At least 10 of them had to stay awake for Torget’s attempt to count. A few dozed off and got disqualified, but most hung on. Witnesses also had to see them asking questions and engaging the professor. “Once it gets past midnight, the signals in your brain tell you to sleep but you have to tune them out,” senior Jose Huichapa said. A long-distance runner, Torget understands stamina and has been prepping for this challenge for a year. He boiled his 14-week class down to 1,600 PowerPoint slides and 500 pages of notes. He said he cut caffeine out of his diet six months ago and tries to keep his vocal cords hydrated. His wife, a speech pathologist, acted as his

coach while his two kids served as his inspiration. Once the lecture got rolling, Torget managed to hit everything from the Karankawa Indians to Quanah Parker, the colonies to cotton, the comebacks of Santa Anna to the rise of Ku Klux Klan. Torget spent his biggest chunk of time dedicated to the mythic period of the Texas Revolution, detailing each day of the Siege of the Alamo. He was able was to demystify the Republic of Texas for people like me, whose sense of state pride is deeply rooted in its independence. “Everywhere I’ve lived, and I’ve lived a lot of places, there’s a moment in history that people who live there strongly identify with,” he said during the lecture. “That moment in Texas is the Republic of Texas. What I find incredible is that people don’t really know what happened.” Around noon Friday, Toget took off his shoes and started pacing the stage in green-toed socks. At 10 that night, he rubbed his eyes briefly. When a 3 a.m. break came around, I caught a glimpse of exhaustion cross his face as he bit into a piece of fruit and stared into the distance. It mirrored my own weariness. If Torget’s throat did start to hurt, there was no indication when he got

Photos by Jake King/DRC

More than 30 students made it all the way through professor Andrew Torget’s possibly record-breaking history lesson, according to UNT Libraries. up to teach. His voice never wavered, floating clearly across the space with an ever-present hint of enthusiasm. Torget made it to the start of the 1940s. Just as Franklin D. Roosevelt was about to start his third term as president, Torget put down his clicker

and stated simply, “I think I’m done for the day.” He was met with a standing ovation. Somehow, we had all made it, not because we wrote down names and dates, but because someone told us a tale.

“I was into the story,” he said. “I could spend time getting into whatever historical moment we were in and pull through. That’s what kept me going.” CAITLYN JONES can be reached at 940-566-6862 and via Twitter at @CjonesDRC.

From Page 1A

McCain fighter-pilot moxie, was a fearless and outspoken voice on policy and politics to the end, unswerving in his defense of democratic values and unflinching in his criticism of his fellow Republican, President Donald Trump. He was elected to the Senate from Arizona six times but twice thwarted in seeking the presidency. An upstart presidential bid in 2000 didn’t last long. Eight years later, he fought back from the brink of defeat to win the GOP nomination, only to be overpowered by Democrat Barack Obama. McCain chose a little-known Alaska governor as his running mate in that race, and turned Sarah Palin into a national political figure. After losing to Obama in an electoral landslide, McCain returned to the Senate determined not to be defined by a failed presidential campaign in which his reputation as a maverick had faded. In the politics of the moment and in national political debate over the decades, McCain energetically advanced his ideas and punched back hard at critics — Trump not least among them. The scion of a decorated military family, McCain embraced his role as chairman of the Armed Services Committee, pushing for aggressive U.S. military intervention overseas and eager to contribute to “defeating the forces of radical Islam that want to destroy America.” Asked how he wanted to be remembered, McCain said simply: “That I made a major contribution to the defense of the nation.” One dramatic vote he cast in the twilight of his career in 2017 will not soon be forgotten, either: As the decisive “no” on Senate GOP legislation to repeal the Affordable Care Act, McCain became the unlikely savior of Obama’s trademark legislative achievement. Taking a long look back in his valedictory memoir, The Restless Wave, McCain wrote of the world he inhabited: “I hate to leave it. But I don’t have a complaint. Not one. It’s been quite a ride. I’ve known great passions, seen amazing wonders, fought in a war, and helped make a peace. ... I made a small place for myself in the story of America and the history of my times.” Throughout his long tenure in Congress, McCain played his role with trademark verve, at one hearing dismissing a protester by calling out, “Get out of here, you lowlife scum.” But it was just as notable when he held his sharp tongue, in service of a party or political gain. Most remarkably, he stuck by Trump as the party’s 2016 presidential nominee even when Trump questioned his status as a war hero by saying: “I like people who weren’t captured.” McCain declared the comment offensive to veterans, but urged the men “put it behind us and

11A

Dallas Morning News file photo

John McCain and his wife are cheered on by supporters in Dallas after winning the Texas Republican Party’s nomination in the 2008 primaries. move forward.” His breaking point with Trump was the release a month before the election of a lewd audio in which Trump said he could kiss and grab women. McCain withdrew his support and said he’d write in “some good conservative Republican who’s qualified to be president.” By the time McCain cast his vote against the GOP health bill, six months into Trump’s presidency, the two men were openly at odds. Trump railed against McCain publicly over the vote, and McCain remarked that he no longer listened to what Trump had to say because “there’s no point in it.” By then, McCain had disclosed his brain cancer diagnosis and returned to Arizona to seek treatment. His vote to kill the GOP’s years long Obamacare repeal drive — an issue McCain himself had campaigned on — came not long after the diagnosis, a surprising capstone to his legislative career. In his final months, McCain did not go quietly, frequently jabbing at Trump and his policies from the remove of his Hidden Valley family retreat in Arizona. He opposed the president’s nominee for CIA director because of her past role in overseeing torture, scolded Trump for alienating U.S. allies at an international summit, labeled the administration’s zero-tolerance immigration policy “an affront to the decency of the American people” and denounced the Trump-Putin summit in Helsinki as a “tragic mistake” in which the president put on “one of the most disgraceful performances by an American president in memory.” On Aug. 13, Trump signed into law a $716 billion defense policy bill named in honor of

the senator. Trump signed the John S. McCain National Defense Authorization Act in a ceremony at a military base in New York — without one mention of McCain. John Sidney McCain III was born in 1936 in the Panana Canal zone, where his father was stationed in the military. He followed his father and grandfather, the Navy’s first father-and-son set of four-star admirals, to the Naval Academy, where he enrolled in what he described a “four-year course of insubordination and rebellion.” His family yawned at the performance. A predilection for what McCain described as “quick tempers, adventurous spirits, and love for the country’s uniform” was encoded in his family DNA. On October 1967, McCain was on his 23rd bombing round over North Vietnam when he was shot out of the sky and taken prisoner. Year upon year of solitary confinement, deprivation, beatings and other acts of torture left McCain so despairing that at one point he weakly attempted suicide. But he also later wrote that his captors had spared him the worst of the abuse inflicted on POWs because his father was a famous admiral. “I knew that my father’s identity was directly related to my survival,” he wrote in one of his books. When McCain’s Vietnamese captors offered him early release as a propaganda ploy, McCain refused to play along, insisting that those captured first should be the first set free. In his darkest hour in Vietnam, McCain’s will had been broken and he signed a confession that said, “I am a black criminal and I have performed deeds of an air pirate.” Even then, though, McCain

AP file photo

In September 1973, John McCain is greeted by President Richard Nixon in Washington after McCain spent more than five years in a Vietnamese prisoner of war camp, known as the “Hanoi Hilton,” before his release in March 1973. refused to make an audio recording of his confession and used stilted written language to signal he had signed it under duress. And, to the end of his captivity, he continued to exasperate his captors with his defiance. Throughout, McCain played to the bleachers, shouting obscenities at guards to bolster the spirits of fellow captives. Appointed by the POWs to act as camp entertainment officer, chaplain and communications chief, McCain imparted comic relief, literary tutorials, news of the day, even religious sustenance. Bud Day, a former cellmate

and Medal of Honor winner, said McCain’s POW experience “took some great iron and turned him into steel.” McCain returned home from his years as a POW on crutches and never regained full mobility in his arms and leg. He once said he’d “never known a prisoner of war who felt he could fully explain the experience to anyone who had not shared it.” Still he described the time as formative and “a bit of a turning point in me appreciating the value of serving a cause greater than your self-interest.” But it did not tame his wild side, and his first marriage, to

Carol Shepp, was a casualty of what he called “my greatest moral failing.” The marriage to Shepp, who had been in a crippling car accident while McCain was imprisoned, ended amiably. McCain admitted the breakup was caused by “my own selfishness and immaturity.” One month after his divorce, McCain in 1981 married Cindy Hensley, the daughter of a wealthy beer distributor in Arizona. In one day, McCain signed his Navy discharge papers and flew west with his new wife to a new life. By 1982, he’d been elected to the House and four years later to an open Senate seat. He and Cindy had four children, to add to three from his first marriage. Their youngest was adopted from Bangladesh. McCain cultivated a conservative voting record and a reputation as a tightwad with taxpayer dollars. But just months into his Senate career, he made what he called “the worst mistake” of his life. He participated in two meetings with bank regulators on behalf of Charles Keating, a friend, campaign contributor and savings and loan financier later convicted of securities fraud. As the industry collapsed, McCain was tagged as one of the Keating Five — senators who, to varying degrees, were accused of trying to get regulators to ease up on Keating. McCain was cited by the Senate Ethics Committee for “poor judgment.” To have his honor questioned, he said, was in some ways worse than the torture he endured in Vietnam. In the 1990s, McCain shouldered another wrenching issue, the long effort to account for American soldiers still missing from the war and to normalize relations with Vietnam. “People don’t remember how ugly the POW-MIA issue was,” former Democratic Sen. Bob Kerrey, a fellow Vietnam veteran, later recalled in crediting McCain for standing up to significant opposition. “I heard people scream in his face, holding him responsible for the deaths of POWs.” Over three decades in the Senate, McCain became a standard-bearer for reforming campaign donations. He denounced pork-barrel spending for legislators’ pet projects and cultivated a reputation as a deficit hawk and an independent voice. His experience as a POW made him a leading voice against the use of torture. He achieved his biggest legislative successes when making alliances with Democrats. McCain never softened on his opposition to the U.S. use of torture, even in the recalibrations of the post-9/11 world. When the Senate in 2014 released a report on the CIA’s harsh interrogation techniques at secret overseas facilities after the 9/11 attacks, McCain said the issue wasn’t “about our enemies. It’s about us. It’s about who we were, who we are and who we aspire to be. It’s about how we represent ourselves to the world.”


12A

Sunday, August 26, 2018

OPINION

Denton Record-Chronicle

Does Cruz or O’Rourke have longer coattails?

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Founded from weekly newspapers the Denton Chronicle, established in 1882, and the Denton Record, established in 1897. Published daily as the Denton Record-Chronicle since August 3, 1903.

EDITORIAL BOARD Bill Patterson Publisher and CEO Sean McCrory Executive Editor Mark Finley City Editor Mariel Tam-Ray News Editor Bob Bland Community Member

PAST PUBLISHERS William C. “Will” Edwards 1903-1927 Robert J. “Bob” Edwards 1927-1945 Riley Cross 1945-1970 Vivian Cross 1970-1986 Fred Patterson 1986-1999

Editorials published in the Denton Record-Chronicle are determined by the editorial board. Questions and suggestions should be directed to: Denton Record-Chronicle 3555 Duchess Drive, Denton, TX 76205 Phone: 940-566-6800 Email: drc@dentonrc.com

Editorial: Our View

Smatresk: UNT’s culture changing

T

here’s an air of accomplishment carried by the breeze along the 1500 block of Chestnut Street. Coming out of the summer break, University of North Texas President Neal Smatresk is motivated, as he is every fall, for the forward progress of a new academic year. But this year, he doesn’t have to look hard to witness that progress. Not far from the Hurley Administration Building, near the intersection of Avenue A and Eagle Drive, the Joe Greene residence hall is quickly going up, with an expected opening for fall 2019. Over on West Mulberry Street, the College of Visual Arts and Design is expanding to include additional classrooms, computer laboratories, teaching labs, study areas, seminar rooms, art galleries, student exhibition spaces and critique areas. And across Interstate 35E, Apogee Stadium is sporting new turf while a new track and field and soccer complex is constructed on the Eagle Point site south of the existing Warranch Tennis Complex. A day before the start of the fall semester, Smatresk has good reason to be excited for what the new academic year holds. In addition to 13 active construction projects on campus, the new semester will field the largest freshman class in UNT’s history — immediately following the university’s largest graduating class of 9,344. At the same time, several programs at the university are making national lists, with the communication design and fashion programs being ranked among the nation’s best. But what has Smatresk most excited is the culture change he now sees taking hold, four years after he first began planting the seeds. The UNT president this past week addressed the Denton Record-Chronicle‘s Editorial Board, sharing many of the university endeavors he will highlight during his annual State of the University address on Sept. 13. UNT is now embracing its status as the most creative university in Texas, Smatresk says. Toward that end, a new kind of thinking is encouraged that focuses on where industries and the economy are going. “What does the profession need?” Smatresk says is the key question now being asked within the varying colleges at UNT. “What are the needs of the employers? The needs of the students?” This forward-thinking mindset then guides how UNT is adapting to better position itself for the creative economy, including branding and marketing. It also impacts research programs, digital hires, analytics and computer science. The end result, Smatresk says, is a core of people passionate about innovation and future opportunities. Yes, there is much to be excited about at UNT — a new semester beginning amid historic growth and unprecedented opportunity. We look forward, as always, to the bustle on campus and being witness to the dividends brought forward through a changing culture.

This day in history: August 26 Today is Sunday, Aug. 26, the 238th day of 2018. There are 127 days left in the year. On August 26, 1957, the Soviet Union announced it successfully had tested an intercontinental ballistic missile. In 55 B.C., Roman forces under Julius Caesar invaded Britain, with only limited success. In 1883, the island volcano Krakatoa began cataclysmic eruptions, leading to a massive explosion the following day. In 1910, Thomas Edison demonstrated for reporters an improved version of his Kinetophone, a device for showing a movie with synchronized sound. In 1920, the 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, guaranteeing American women’s right to vote, was certified in effect by Secretary of State Bainbridge Colby.

In 1944, French Gen. Charles de Gaulle braved the threat of German snipers as he led a victory march in Paris, which had just been liberated by the Allies from Nazi occupation. In 1958, Alaskans went to the polls to overwhelmingly vote in favor of statehood. In 1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson was nominated for a term of office in his own right at the Democratic National Convention in Atlantic City, New Jersey. In 1968, the Democratic National Convention opened in Chicago; the four-day event that resulted in the nomination of Hubert H. Humphrey for president was marked by a bloody police crackdown on antiwar protesters in the streets. — The Associated Press

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North Texas has erred in dropping fiber arts T he following is my opinion based on what information has been made publicly available, after consultation with professor Amie Adelman, program coordinator of fibers, and other faculty and students, past and present: As a recently retired member of the faculty at the University of North Texas’ College of Visual Arts and Design, I was saddened, disappointed and a little angry with the decision to discontinue the Studio Art Department’s concentration in fibers. And after reading the memo from the dean and communicating with Adelman, I can’t help but believe that this decision had little, if anything, to do with space availability alone. The space was there for fibers for over 60 years, so why is it that suddenly there is no room for this internationally respected program? In the present design of the new and old art buildings, some program areas have more space than they ever did before, so I assume it is a matter of someone establishing priorities that determined that fibers was not deserving of a place in the college. I can imagine three scenarios for this determination. The first is that the upper administration of the university directed the dean to get rid of a program in order to save money or because the required space would be allocated to other programs, determining that fibers was less significant than other areas of study and research. Since enrollment in fibers was fairly strong, the number of internships the faculty had established, and the record of the number of graduates from fibers who attained employment in the field (emphasized as important to the university) was inspiring, I can only think that the male-dominated positions of power at the university could not comprehend the value of fibers. Even if this were the case, that the university administration insisted on cuts in space or spending, it is the duty of the dean to impress upon the administration how important each of the programs in the college are, and how each area supports and enhances the performance of all the others. I saw no evidence that this was a long struggle that included the faculty, students and alumni and that the dean “went to the mat” for fibers. The second possible scenario, in my opinion, was that there was an attitude within the college’s administration that fibers was not as deserving of support as the other programs in the College of Visual Arts and Design. It does seem curious that the

Harlan Butt

only area chosen for elimination is “one that clearly holds an important and influential role in history across cultures and the lives of women.” To say this is “heartbreaking” smacks of insincerity when it is prefaced with the act of closing it down without discussion, debate and a chance for fibers to make its case for continuation. The “extensive analysis and painstaking deliberation” seems to have been conducted in secrecy and without consulting the parties most affected by the decision. The third scenario, and possibly the most likely in my opinion, is that there was a massive miscalculation in the planning process for the new building and the use of the existing one. I mentioned earlier that the decision to eliminate the fibers program had little or nothing to do with space availability, but since there were committees working for over two years on space planning, why would it become public only now that the space wasn’t available for one program? Were there cost overruns? Were there programs demanding additional space? Were there areas that were originally promised space elsewhere that were later included into the new building? Were the other buildings on campus that were assumed to be available to the CVAD taken away at the last minute? If this is the case, I have to say that someone needs to take responsibility for this travesty, especially since faculty and students, the reputation of the CVAD and the university will suffer because of this massive blunder. Perhaps I am old-fashioned, but in my opinion, the buck stops with the dean. He could have shown better leadership in protecting our college and the reputation that has been established over many decades, long before he was hired. In fact, each of these scenarios reflects back on the performance of Dean Greg Watts, and if this act of eliminating the fibers program is due to his lack of courage in representing the college to the upper administration, ignorance of the importance not only of fibers as a program but its integration into the overall creative and scholastic goals of the CVAD, a bias against an area whose origins can be traced back to women-centered craft practices, or a colossal error in strategic planning, professor Watts needs to admit his failure and step down as dean of the College of Visual Arts and Design so that someone more capable can take his place and avoid further damage to our programming, the college and the university. HARLAN W. BUTT is an emeritus professor and former regents professor at the College of Visual Arts and Design at the University of North Texas.

Letters to the editor US is democracy-flavored

Fascism is a term used mostly by leftists against opponents. We hear it lately when so-called antifascists take to the streets against Trump supporters. Mussolini originated the term, and it sort of means a strongman leader plus nationalism, militarism and political violence. Antifascism was first applied by communists to Italy, Spain and Germany when Bolshevism was being beaten there. Examples include Mussolini’s Italy, Franco’s Spain and Nazi Germany, but somehow not North Korea, China, Cuba or Stalinist Russia, which are leftists’ darlings. The earliest might have been Napoleon’s France. Or imperial Rome. Or most of the monarchies of history, so the term really isn’t helpful. The U.S. currently doesn’t fit the pattern well, even though it’s militaristic and nationalistic, because it’s democracy-flavored but controlled by special interests. The U.S. hasn’t quite developed widespread political violence, but it seemingly could, and there could be a civil war followed by either Bolshevism or fascism, depending on who prevails. The individual may not perceive much difference. Dr. Stuart Crane, of decades ago, considered both left and right to be totalitar-

JOIN THE CONVERSATION For consideration, letters and guest essays must be original and include the writer’s name, address and telephone number for verification. Letters should be no more than 250 words and guest essays no more than 500 words. Unless arranged in advance, writers will be limited to one published letter or essay per month. All submissions may be edited for clarity, length, taste and libel. Email them to drc@dentonrc.com or mail them to: Letters to the editor, P.O. Box 369, Denton, TX 76202.

ian and opposed to individual liberty. Ross Melton Jr., Denton

Pop quiz

Pop quiz: A world leader declares himself above the law and threatens another country with fire and fury. Is it a) North Korea or b) the United States? Hint: It is the one who made his money off of casinos, paid hush money to the porn star with whom he cheated on his third trophy wife, yet is somehow loved by Christians because his skin isn’t brown. Weldon Williams, Denton

et us gather together, fellow political buffs, and speculate. You in? A new poll says Republican Ted Cruz and Democrat Beto O’Rourke are just four percentage points apart in the race for U.S. Senate. It follows a slew of polls with single-digit differences between the incumbent and the challenger — an accumulation of flashing yellow lights that has some Republicans spooked and some Democrats dreaming. The Texas Tribune’s Abby Livingston wrote up the details of the new NBC News/ Marist Poll, and the Trib’s Alex Samuels recently caught a netful of Texas polls and asked some experts what they all mean. But this isn’t about the polls. This is about what a close race might mean. Texas is set to ditch its straight-ticket voting option in 2020, but it will still be available to voters this November. In the state’s 10 biggest counties, nearly two-thirds of voters cast their ballots by pulling a party lever instead of working their way down the ballot, race by race. That means a close race at the top of the ballot — the so-called marquee race that voters are paying attention to — could produce a different coattail effect than a landslide would. It’s the “rising tide lifts all boats” idea. If one party gets a landslide in a place, like Texas, with straight-party voting, down-ballot candidates can benefit from their marquee candidate’s performances. But even when the top candidates fall short — if their losses are narrow enough — they can make it rain for the candidates downstream. That happens, to some extent, even in elections when there’s no straight-ticket voting; the parties of many past presidents have suffered losses in midterm elections like this one because voters wanted to send a message to the fellow in the White House. And gubernatorial races at the top can have a trickle-down. In 1998, George W. Bush buried Democrat Garry Mauro, with 68 percent of the vote to Mauro’s 31 percent. That left at least two statewide Democratic candidates — John Sharp and Paul Hobby — wondering what might have been. Sharp finished 68,731 votes — out of 3.7 million votes cast — behind Rick Perry in the race for lieutenant governor. Hobby’s miss in his bid for comptroller was even smaller; just 20,223 separated him from the winner, Carole Keeton Rylander. What if Bush hadn’t provided that big cushion? Four years earlier, Bush defeated incumbent Ann Richards by fewer than eight percentage points. Democrats won the next five statewide races on the ballot. Republicans have dominated Texas politics ever since, often by big margins. But the polling in this year’s U.S. Senate race encourages speculation. Even if Republicans continue their winning streak, a fivepoint win could play differently down-ballot than a more typical 20-point win. A Republican congressman in a swing district — Will Hurd of Helotes — or in a district that’s hotly contested — a group that includes Pete Sessions of Dallas, John Culberson of Houston and, perhaps, John Carter of Georgetown — could be jeopardized by the thin air cover from the Senate race. Hurd’s is a true swing district, winnable by candidates from either party. Notably, he’s alone among Republicans in the Texas congressional delegation in putting some daylight between himself and the Trump administration. He was also half of that Facebook buddy flick with O’Rourke last year, when the two livestreamed a cross-country road trip, talking about politics. If the Senate race one notch above him on the ballot is tight, all of that could be important insulation against Democrat Gina Ortiz Jones and Libertarian Ruben Corvalan. Sessions and Culberson are in different territory, defending historically safe Republican districts against vigorous challenges from well-financed Democrats. Sessions’ opponents are Democrat Colin Allred and Libertarian Melina Baker; Culberson will face Democrat Lizzie Pannill Fletcher in November. The outcomes depend on many variables: who turns out voters, whose ads are more effective, Trump’s popularity and so on. The race above them is another of those. Democrats want O’Rourke to win the top race, of course — they’re Democrats. But if he loses, they at least want a close race. That could create some wins for candidates lower on the ballot — and give political speculators something to talk about. ROSS RAMSEY is executive editor and co-founder of The Texas Tribune. The Texas Tribune is a nonpartisan, nonprofit media organization that informs Texans — and engages with them — about public policy, politics, government and statewide issues.

Ross Ramsey


LOCAL

Denton Record-Chronicle

Sunday, August 26, 2018

13A

From Page 1A

Council the work session, and from subsequent posts on social media about it from newly elected council member Deb Armintor. “Part of my job is to engage citizens about what is coming up and what is being proposed,” Briggs said. “I didn’t see any issue with it, and it frustrates me that you did.” “I’m with you,” Armintor said to Briggs. The exchange was part of a broader discourse during a City Council retreat about team building and leadership. City leaders have a retreat every year in an effort to overcome their differences and meet the goals they have for Denton. Armintor already has garnered a reputation among the council and city staff for taking complaints from community members and zealously seeking answers of city staff in emails. She is active on social media, engaging citizens directly about issues that she thinks need solving. Watts said he doesn’t have a problem with council members being close with residents. But he asked that council members refrain from calling out other members in their social media posts. Officials also brought up how council members relay public

Keely Briggs, center, addresses a criticism made of her by Mayor Chris Watts on Saturday during the City Council’s annual retreat, held at Serve Denton. Dalton LaFerney/DRC

complaints of city services to city staff. Todd Hileman, the Denton city manager, talked about how city leaders are working with staff to be more confident when they give presentations or prepare agenda for council meetings or work sessions. A major obstacle to building confidence,

From Page 1A

Hileman said, is when a council member receives a complaint from a citizen, and then the council member turns around and demands answers from city staff. “It’s up to you to partner with me to create that environment [of confidence],” Hileman said.

From Page 1A

Finalists

Applicants

like economic development, housing, zoning and other officials as they chart Denton’s path forward. Virginia Beach Deputy Police Chief Patrick Gallagher said he has experience with addressing the “conditions that lead to criminality and social disorder.” Corpus Christi Assistant Police Chief Mark Schauer wrote about a survey he launched that gathered input from people concerning their quality of life in his community. Cleveland Spruill is currently working for Huntersville, North Carolina, a community that is projecting “robust growth” through 2030. As Denton’s population swells and new developments sprout, it is clear that city officials are looking to hire a police chief who will help usher Denton into its new identity. “We’re starting to find ourselves,” City Manager Todd Hileman said. “That’s where having developed skills in a large organization helps us. What do we want to look like in the future?” The community will be part of the interview process. There will be a public reception for residents and business leaders to meet each of the finalists this week. The reception will be from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Thursday at the Public Safety Training Center, 719 E. Hickory St. Hileman said he and city officials will watch how each of the finalists interacts with people. He also said city officials will seek feedback from people on how they feel about each of the finalists. That feedback will factor into who Hileman ultimately hires, he said. Schauer was not initially included among the six finalists. Hileman said the city chose about eight finalists but an-

nounced only six. When Kevin Kolbye, the assistant chief in Arlington, told Denton officials that he was dropping out of consideration for personal reasons, it gave Hileman and his colleagues a chance to bring in another qualified applicant. A key aspect of building Denton’s future, Hileman said, is developing long-term relationships with groups of people who are traditionally underserved by the police. Gallagher made the strongest case for minority relations. He talked about how he implemented an LGBTQ liaison for his department. He also mentioned how his department has tried to educate Hispanic and Latino people in his community on how they should expect to be treated by the police. He also conveyed his experience working with the mentally ill, the homeless and immigrants. In his cover letter, Temple Police Chief Floyd Mitchell took a more authoritative approach to community relations. He said if he were hired, he would emphasize to the department that working with the public is “paramount to manage today’s instant social climate.” Most of the final six joined the vast majority of the candidates overall in writing about their experience with reorganizing police departments. Hileman said he didn’t really care about that. He focused more on the candidates’ reputations for working with the police they manage rather than ordering them around. “There are a lot of ideas right now in the police department,” he said. “We want somebody who will listen to them.” DALTON LAFERNEY can be reached at 940-566-6882 and via Twitter at @daltonlaferney.

and resumes for the open position of police chief in to Denton City Manager Todd Hileman. The average career span of all the applicants is 26 years in law enforcement. Many are police chiefs, many are from Texas and fewer than five are women. Hileman and his hiring consultant narrowed the field down to an initial 25 candidates. They interviewed all of them, he said, before slicing it down to about eight, announcing last week the top six, who will be interviewed before the end of August. The Denton Record-Chronicle analyzed all 111 of the applicants’ materials, finding a few trends among the rejects that help contextualize what city officials are looking for as they pick a new police chief. The most glaring observation was the city was not interested in hiring officers who work for college police departments, grade-school campuses or corporate security teams. At least a dozen candidates were either currently employed by an institution, such as Texas State University or Wilmer-Hutchins High School in Dallas ISD. One applicant said he was chief of the security force at the Bell Helicopter campus in Fort Worth. Others were in security consulting work. Most every one of these types were turned away. Some came with heroic stories, such as one New Jersey man who wrote about his work in the aftermath of 9/11, helping to evacuate areas surrounding New York City. Another applicant was Andre Anderson, who served as an interim police chief in Ferguson, Missouri, after the U.S. Department of Justice found the department policed the community with a culture of racism following the police-

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The culture of confidence inside City Hall was already damaged before Armintor arrived. Without going into much detail, several members of council and staff said as much. Rick Robinson, the consultant running Saturday’s team-building exercises, ob-

served how apparent that was, based on the topics the council members and city staff talked about. “It’s going to be a while before this ship gets moving the way we all want it to,” Hileman said. Armintor has been unapol-

“It was more at looking at folks who had experience in similarsized or larger departments.” — Todd Hileman, Denton city manager shooting of Michael Brown, resulting in several resignations in the agency’s leadership. By and large, candidates whose primary experience was in statewide or federal law enforcement were rejected. That includes Clair Barnes, a Texas Ranger based in Denton County. One applicant is with the U.S. Secret Service; he wrote about how he helped with escorting first lady Laura Bush to the New Orleans area after Hurricane Katrina. There were several candidates with long careers with the FBI, U.S. Homeland Security and the Drug Enforcement Agency. “It was more at looking at folks who had experience in similar-sized or larger departments,” Hileman said. “If they had experience with state or federal, that didn’t really factor in too much.” Dozens of applicants either work or at one time worked for the Dallas Police Department. And most of those folks were turned away. There were also three people from Irving Police Department who applied and did not make it into the final six. Many applicants mentioned the size of the police budgets they are used to managing, and that played virtually no factor

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as the pool was narrowed, Hileman said. Others talked about how they helped roll out police body camera programs — something Denton already has. Some

ogetic in who she represents in town. She has been open about working to uplift the most underrepresented groups of people in Denton. She is also unabashed about admitting her own mistakes, saying that sometimes her approach has been misguided due to the learning curve of understanding how to run a city. Briggs shared in some of this criticism. After Hileman addressed the issue of emails being forwarded via council members from citizens, Briggs said she does her best to make it clear that the complaints she has received are not hers and that she is generally interested in finding an answer to public questions. “Because those emails are forwarded, it doesn’t necessarily mean I take that position” of what’s in the complainant’s email, she said. Armintor nodded in agreement. Council member Gerard Hudspeth was less sympathetic of Armintor’s perceived missteps. “I struggle with learning curves,” he said. “I believe that if you don’t know, don’t say anything. Because once you say it, it’s out there. I don’t say things unless I am certain.” DALTON LAFERNEY can be reached at 940-566-6882 and via Twitter at @daltonlaferney. mentioned their experience with restructuring their staffs and policies. “It was more about the depth of their experience,” Hileman said. “We were really looking for candidates who have developed a reputation for being really progressive in those areas.” DALTON LAFERNEY can be reached at 940-566-6882 and via Twitter at @daltonlaferney.

OBITUARIES Felix Wilfred Henry Jr., Felix Wilfred Henry Jr., 82 ,of Denton passed away August 20, 2018. He was born in Pawtucket, RI on September 12, 1935. He served in the US Army. Cremation arrangements are pending contact of his two sons, Michael and Brien Henry. He is also survived by his wife Joyce LaFond-Henry, two sisters, Phyllis Fuoroli and Annie Irons of RI.

Margaret Cogdell Margaret Ann Cogdell, 76 of Argyle passed away Friday, August 24, 2018 at Presbyterian Hospital in Denton. She was born in Denton on February 22, 1942 to Raymond Erwin and Ameliet Riney Erwin. She attended Denton Public Schools and graduated from Denton High School in 1960. She married Gerald D. Cogdell in Ardmore Oklahoma in 1958. She was a homemaker. Funeral Services will be 2:00 P.M., Monday, August 27, 2018 in the Chapel of DeBerry Funeral Directors with Rev. Buddy Owens officiating, visitation will be from 1:00 p.m. to 2:00 P.M. prior to the service. Burial will follow at Roselawn Memorial Park in Denton. She is survived by her husband Gerald D. Cogdell of Argyle, brother, Ray Erwin of Denton and several nieces and nephews, and step-mother Doris Erwin of St. Louis, MO. She was preceded in death by a son Jerry Glenn Cogdell, her parents Raymond and Ameliet Riney Erwin.


14A

Sunday, August 26, 2018

INTERNATIONAL

Denton Record-Chronicle

Pope in Ireland decries abuse cover-up, meets with victims Tepid reception, protests awaited Pope Francis By Nicole Winfield and Maria Grazia Murru Associated Press

DUBLIN — Pope Francis faced a lukewarm reception and scattered protests Saturday on his trip to Ireland, with even his vow to rid the church of the “scourge” of sexual abuse and his outrage at those “repugnant crimes” dismissed as a disappointment by some of Ireland’s wounded victims. But others who met with him in private left heartened that he would respond to their plight, including two of the thousands of children who were forcibly put up for adoption for the shame of having been born to unwed mothers. They said Francis described the corruption and cover-up in the church as “caca” — translated by the Vatican translator for the English speakers as “filth as one sees in the toilet.” The abuse scandal — which has exploded anew in the U.S. but has convulsed Ireland since the 1990s with revelations of unfathomable violence and humiliation against women and children — took center stage on the first day of Francis’ two-day trip. The visit was originally intended to celebrate Catholic families. Francis responded to the outcry by vowing to end sex abuse and cover-up during a speech to Irish government authorities at Dublin Castle. “The failure of ecclesiastical authorities — bishops, religious superiors, priests and others — to adequately address these repugnant crimes has rightly given rise to outrage, and remains a source of pain and shame for the Catholic community,” he told them. “I myself share these sentiments.” He cited measures taken by his predecessor, Pope Benedict XVI, to respond to the crisis. But while Benedict is credited with cracking down on abusers,

Peter Morrison/AP

Pope Francis walks upon his arrival at the presidential residence in Dublin, Ireland, on Saturday. He is on a two-day visit to Ireland.

“The failure of the ecclesiastical authorities — bishops, religious superiors, priests and others — to adequately address these repugnant crimes has rightly given rise to outrage, and remains a source of pain and shame for the Catholic community.” — Pope Francis

he never acknowledged the Vatican’s role in fueling a culture of cover-up or sanctioned bishops for failing to protect their flocks from predator priests. Francis followed his promise with a 90-minute meeting with eight survivors of both clerical and institutional abuse and prayed quietly before a candle lit for victims in Dublin’s cathedral. But neither his words nor the meeting with victims is likely to assuage demands for heads to roll. “Disappointing, nothing new,” was the reaction from Irish abuse survivor Marie Collins, a former member of Francis’ sex abuse advisory panel who quit last year in frustration. She later took part in Francis’ meeting with seven other abuse

survivors, including two priests and a public official. Colm O’Gorman, who is leading a solidarity rally on Sunday in Dublin for abuse victims, said Francis’ remarks about sharing the shame felt by Catholics were an “insult to faithful Catholics, who have no reason to feel shame because of the crimes of the Vatican and the institutional church.” The reception that Francis received in Dublin contrasted sharply with the raucous, rock star welcome that greeted St. John Paul II in 1979 in the first-ever papal visit here. No one from the public was at the airport or the roads nearby when Francis arrived Saturday and the streets near a churchrun homeless shelter that Fran-

cis visited were practically empty despite barricades designed to hold back crowds. At one protest, people tossed baby shoes to remind the pope of the poor treatment the Catholic Church doled out to the children of unwed mothers. Crowds did throng Francis’ popemobile route and gathered outside Dublin’s cathedral, basking in the sunny weather, and a stadium was nearly full for his evening vigil to close out the church’s family rally. And two of the Irish adoptees said they were heartened Francis said he would address their concerns at Mass on Sunday. They are asking him to publicly state that their mothers had done nothing wrong and to encourage reconciliation between all unwed mothers, many of them now aged, who were forced by society and the church to give up their children. Paul Redmond, who was born in a home and given up for adoption at 17 days, urged the pope to publicly call on the six orders of Catholic nuns who ran the homes to accept responsibility for the traumas they caused,

issue an apology, and pay for the costs of inquiries. “The pope did apologize to all of us for what happened in the homes,” he said. The coalition of survivors of mother and baby homes estimates 100,000 single mothers were forcibly separated from their babies and that 6,000 babies died at the homes. Deeply Catholic Ireland has had one of the world’s worst records of clergy sex abuse and crimes that were revealed to its 4.8 million people over the past decade by government-mandated inquiries. The reviews concluded that thousands of children were raped or molested by priests or physically abused in church-run schools — and Irish bishops worked for years to hide those crimes. After the Irish church enacted tough new reforms to fight abuse, it had been looking to the first visit by a pope in 39 years to show a different, more caring church. More than 37,000 people, most of them young Catholics, signed up to attend a Vatican-sponsored World Meeting of Families that ends Sunday in Dublin, more than twice the

R

number of a rally in Philadelphia three years ago. Francis urged the Irish to recognize that for all its failings, the Catholic Church educated and cared for generations of Irish children in times of famine and great poverty. Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar concurred, saying the church stepped in to care for Irish children when the state did not. But in his speech at Dublin Castle, he said both church and state had a history of “sorrow and shame,” and he urged the pope to ensure that victims of sex abuse find “justice and truth and healing.” Varadkar cited the recent Pennsylvania grand jury report, which found 300 priests had abused more than 1,000 children over 70 years in six dioceses, in urging Francis to “ensure that from words flow actions.” “In recent weeks, we have all listened to heart-breaking stories from Pennsylvania of brutal crimes perpetrated by people within the Catholic Church, and then obscured to protect the institution at the expense of innocent victims,” Varadkar said. “It’s a story all too tragically familiar here in Ireland.”

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SPORTS

SECTION B Sunday, August 26, 2018 DentonRC.com/sports

UNT, TWU close weekend with victories / 4B

As Ohio State opener nears, talk is not about football By Mitch Stacy

College football

Associated Press

COLUMBUS, Ohio — A week before Ohio State’s season opener, few in Columbus have been able to focus on football. Not many are talking about the new starting quarterback or how to best use the two elite running backs. Instead, the discussion has been about domestic violence, misplaced loyalty, lying and how much a football coach at a major university is expected to know about the personal lives of his assistants. It has been a preseason unlike any other in Columbus. On Aug. 1, two days before practice opened, coach Urban Meyer was put on paid leave and the university began an investigation into his handling of domestic violence allegations against receivers coach Zach Smith from his

Ohio State

now ex-wife. That situation came to a head Wednesday night. After nearly 11 hours of discussions, the board of trustees handed down a three-game suspension for Meyer. A two-week investigation concluded the superstar coach needed to be punished for tolerating Smith’s bad behavior for so long. Smith is the grandson of former Ohio State coach and Meyer mentor Earle Bruce. After Wednesday’s news conference, Meyer was criticized for his response to a question about Zach Smith’s ex-wife, Courtney. On Friday, Meyer issued a statement apologizing directly to her. Meyer, who is 73-8 in six seasons at Ohio State, will be off the sideline until the Sept. 22 game at Ohio Stadium

against Tulane. The 54-year-old coach, however, will be allowed to run practice after Sept. 1. The national debate about off-field issues is not likely to wane by then. “The fact that Urban is not there still becomes a major part of it, so I don’t know that Ohio State gets to directly say, ‘Hey, the suspension has been handed down, there was a press conference, now let’s talk solely about football.’ I don’t think that’s going to happen,” said Austin Ward, who has covered Ohio State football since 2012 and writes for the website Lettermen Row. “He’s such a commanding presence, and now this thing could bleed out into the first couple weeks of the season where it still becomes a topic that you just cannot ignore.” See OHIO STATE on 4B

Paul Vernon/AP

Ohio State football coach Urban Meyer, right, answers questions as athletic director Gene Smith listens during a news conference Wednesday in Columbus, Ohio.

Dodged bullet

‘Man on a mission’ DeChambeau builds 4-shot lead with 9 birdies at Northern Trust By Doug Ferguson AP Golf Writer

PARAMUS, N.J. — Bryson DeChambeau described himself as a “man on a mission,” and he sure played like one Saturday in The Northern Trust.

Pro golf The Northern Trust

Jake King/DRC

Denton senior defensive back Vincent Marquez (26) engages the offense during a scrimmage against Little Elm on Friday at Denton High School in Denton.

After injury scare, Denton’s Marquez returns to boost defensive unit By Brady Keane | Staff Writer | bkeane@dentonrc.com

As Denton prepared to host its spring football banquet, Vincent Marquez — a junior at the time — could only sit and watch as his teammates began to make plans for the Broncos 2018 season. Marquez, who started at linebacker and defensive end throughout Billy Miller’s first year as the team’s head coach, had been told just a few days prior to the banquet that his football career would be cut short due to an injury he endured while lifting weights. It was a devastating blow for Marquez, who was expected to be a key returning piece on the Broncos’ defense as a senior. When he began experiencing migraines after a strenuous squat workout in the weight room, he got an MRI and was told there appeared to be a malignant cyst in his upper neck that was potentially life-threatening and would make any athletic activity too dangerous to pursue. “They said if I got hit the wrong way, I could be paralyzed,” Marquez said. “I was shocked, and I was crying because I was coming up on my last year. My mom was crying too, and we decided to get a second opinion just to make sure that was it.” See MARQUEZ on 3B

Now it’s a matter of which mission he’s on. DeChambeau made four birdies in a five-hole stretch around the turn to pull away from a fading collection of stars, closed with two more birdies and had an 8-under 63 to build a four-shot lead over Keegan Bradley going into the final round of the opening FedEx Cup playoff event. A victory would assure DeChambeau one of the top seeds at East Lake to have a clear shot at the $10 million bonus for winning the FedEx Cup. “That would be something pretty special,” he said. And the timing would be ideal for his Ryder Cup hopes. DeChambeau narrowly missed qualifying for the U.S. team when he missed the cut at the PGA Championship, but a victory against one of the strongest fields of the year might be tough for Jim Furyk to ignore when he makes three of his captain’s picks a week from Tuesday. “I’ve just got to keep focusing on this tournament,” the 24-year-old Californian said. “If I can play well in the first leg of the FedEx Cup, I’ll hopefully show captain that I’m worthy.” He played the part on a day when everyone else around him went the other direction. DeChambeau and Adam Scott were the only players from the last 10 players to tee off who managed to break par, and Scott had to birdie three of his last four holes for a 70. He was six shots behind. Dustin Johnson, trailing by two shots after 36 holes despite two triple bogeys, added a double bogey to his week and shot 72 to fall nine shots behind. See GOLF on 4B

Giants nearly blow lead again, hold off Rangers for victory Rangers

By Michael Wagaman Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO — Less than 24 hours after blowing a six-run lead in an extra-innings loss, Mark Melancon prevented the San Francisco Giants from letting another big advantage slip away. The former closer did it on a day when the Giants celebrated their 2010 World Series championship, a team that had more than its fair share of tight finishes. Melancon got pinch-hitter Carlos Perez to fly out with the bases loaded in the ninth inning, preserving a 5-3 win against the Texas Rangers on Saturday. “It’s really incredible how similar the two games were but we found a way to get the last out today,” San Francisco manager Bruce Bochy said. “Torture was back.” Andrew Suarez pitched seven scoreless innings of three-hit ball to end a four-start winless drought. Brandon Crawford and Hunter Pence

San Francisco 5, Texas 3 MLB roundup / 3B

homered while Nick Hundley added two walks and scored. San Francisco began the Day 9 games behind Milwaukee for the second NL wild card. “It’s very important to continue to send that message of relentless attack,” Pence said. “Even where we are and as clouded as it may seem, you still never know. When there’s still a chance in this game of baseball, things can get hot in an instant.” Hours after Bochy confirmed that six-time All-Star catcher Buster Posey is headed for season-ending hip surgery, San Francisco did the bulk of its scoring in the first inning then held on behind Suarez and three relievers for a rare win at AT&T Park. See RANGERS on 3B

Ben Margot/AP

Texas Rangers’ Rougned Odor, right, celebrates with Shin-Soo Choo, center, and Elvis Andrus (1) after hitting a three-run home run off San Francisco Giants’ Hunter Strickland in the eighth inning Saturday in San Francisco.


2B

Sunday, August 26, 2018

Denton Record-Chronicle

ON THE AIR Today’s TV

College football

Rice beats Prairie View 31-28 HOUSTON — Emmanuel Esukpa had a career-high 173 yards rushing and a score and Jack Fox kicked a 23-yard field goal as time expired to help Rice beat Prairie View A&M 31-28 on Saturday night in the season opener for both teams. Esukpa came in with 74 carries for 317 yards rushing and three touchdowns in his career. Austin Walter added 11 carries for 83 yards and two scores for Rice, which finished with 310 yards rushing and nearly doubled Prairie View (20:21) in time of possession. Aston Walter, on third-and-4 from the 37, broke three tackles before being tripped up at the 11 to set up Fox’s winner.

PRO BASEBALL AL: Boston at Tampa Bay, noon, TBS AL: Houston at LA Angels, 3 p.m., AT&T Rangers at San Francisco, 3 p.m., FSSW AL: NY Yankees at Baltimore, 7 p.m., ESPN YOUTH BASEBALL Little League World Series: Teams TBD, 9 a.m., ESPN Little League World Series Championship, 2 p.m., Ch. 8 PRO BASKETBALL WNBA: Washington at Atlanta, 2 p.m., ESPN2 WNBA: Phoenix at Seattle, 4 p.m., ESPN2 PRO FOOTBALL NFL preseason: Cincinnati at Buffalo, 3 p.m., Ch. 4 NFL preseason: Arizona at Cowboys, 7 p.m., Ch. 5 HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL Phillips at Pickerington Central, 11:30 a.m., ESPN PRO GOLF D+D Real Czech Masters, 6 a.m., Golf PGA: The Northern Trust, 11 a.m., Golf PGA: The Northern Trust, 1 p.m., Ch. 11 Nationwide Hospital Championship, 1 p.m., Golf LPGA: CP Women’s Open, 3 p.m., Golf Boeing Classic, 6 p.m., Golf

MOTOR SPORTS F1 Belgian Grand Prix, 8 a.m., ESPN2 NASCAR Truck Series: Chevy Silverado 250, 1:30 p.m., FS1 PRO SOCCER Premier League: Watford vs. Crystal Palace, 7:30 a.m., NBCSN Bundesliga: Mainz 05 vs. Stuttgart, 8:30 a.m., FS1 Ligue 1: Bordeaux vs. AS Monaco, 9:55 a.m., beIN Premier League: Newcastle vs. Chelsea, 9:55 a.m., NBCSN Bundesliga: B. Dortmund vs. Leipzig, 11 a.m., Ch. 4 La Liga: Sevilla vs. Villarreal, 1 p.m., beIN La Liga: Girona vs. Real Madrid, 3:10 p.m., beIN MLS: D.C. at NY Red Bulls, 6 p.m., FS1 MLS: Seattle at Portland, 8:30 p.m., FS1 WOMEN’S COLLEGE SOCCER NCAA: Wisconsin at Kentucky, noon, SEC NCAA: Gonzaga at Oklahoma, 3 p.m., FSSW+ NCAA H: SMU at TCU, 6 p.m., FSSW+

Radio PRO BASEBALL Rangers at San Francisco, 3 p.m., KRLD-AM 1080 PRO FOOTBALL NFL preseason: Arizona at Cowboys, 7 p.m., KRLD-FM 105.3

Pro football

Watt back on field in Texans loss LOS ANGELES — Rookie John Kelly rushed for 64 yards and two touchdowns, and the Rams briefly debuted their new defensive stars in a 21-20 preseason victory over Watt and the Houston Texans on Saturday. Watt started and made a tackle roughly 10 1/2 months after he got hurt in the Texans’ fifth game last season. The chance to catch up with former defensive coordinator Wade Phillips was just a bonus on an exciting day for the veteran superstar. “I liked that I came off [the field] under my own power,” Watt said with a grin. “It’s football. It’s where I feel the most natural. It’s where I feel at home.” Houston’s first-team defense looked sharp, but the Rams’ backup offensive players put together enough points to win it. Watt and Jadeveon Clowney were long finished by the time Nick Rose missed a 57-yard field goal at the gun in the Texans’ first loss of the preseason.

Motor sports

Wickens breathing on own after wreck MADISON, Ill. — IndyCar driver Robert Wickens was breathing without medical assistance and began speaking with his family Saturday for the first time since his harrowing wreck at Pocono Raceway. Schmidt Peterson Motorsports made the announcement shortly before the start of the IndyCar race at Gateway Motorsports Park. The team is only fielding James Hinchcliffe’s car for Saturday night’s race, though a backup No. 6 car that Wickens had driven this season was parked outside the haulers. Many drivers, crew members and fans were wearing “RW6” hats and T-shirts as they signed a “Get Well” sign in the paddock, and cars were carrying stickers that read “Better Stronger Faster.”

Pro tennis

25-second countdown to debut at Open Any discussion of the serve clocks that will make their Grand Slam debut during the U.S. Open’s main draw starting Monday, and could become a regular part of tennis as soon as next year, inevitably turns to Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic. They are two of the greatest players in history — and two of the slowest between points. For one thing, Djokovic’s incessant bouncing of the ball before a service toss delays things. So do Nadal’s habitual mannerisms: the touching of the nose, the tucking of the hair, the grabbing at the shorts, and on it goes. And while neither was a big fan of introducing digital readouts on court to show the 25-second countdown before each first serve, the two men with a combined 30 Grand Slam singles titles seem ready to accept that they must abide by a change intended to add uniformity to their sport. “I just need to go faster,” Nadal said, matter-of-factly. Djokovic’s take: “I’m pretty comfortable with it.”

Pro basketball

NBA 2K League has New York champ NEW YORK — The NBA 2K League’s first season ended with a video game version of a real NBA rivalry: Knicks against Heat. In the future perhaps it’s Knicks against London. “We expect this to be a global league,” NBA 2K League managing director Brendan Donohue said Saturday. “That is on our game plan, though when that happens it’s not definitive. But that is our goal.” The season on the screens turned out like it never has on the hardwood. Knicks Gaming, so far down the standings that they had to win a tournament late in the season as the No. 15 seed just to earn the eighth and final playoff spot, then knocked off the top-seeded Blazers to start a postseason roll that culminated with a sweep of the best-of-three series with Heat Check Gaming to win $300,000. — The Associated Press

TRANSACTIONS

BASKETBALL

BASEBALL AMERICAN LEAGUE NEW YORK YANKEES — Recalled RHP Luis Cessa from Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL) as their 26th man. TEXAS RANGERS — Placed INF Hanser Alberto on the 10-day DL. Purchased the contract of C Carlos Perez from Round Rock (PCL). Recalled RHP Nick Gardewine from Round Rock and placed him on the 60-day DL. NATIONAL LEAGUE Pittsburgh Pirates — Recalled RHP Nick Kingham from Indianapolis (IL). Optioned RHP Clay Holmes to Indianapolis. Reinstated RHP A.J. Schugel from the 60-day DL and outrighted him to Indianapolis. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION CHICAGO DOGS — Signed RHP Ben Allison. CLEBURNE RAILROADERS — Traded OF Trevor Sealey to the St. Paul for cash and a player to be named. Traded OF K.C. Huth to the Gary for future considerations. Signed INF Dustin Williams. FARGO-MOORHEAD REDHAWKS — Signed C Chris Coste and INF Jake Vieth. GARY SOUTHSHORE RAILCATS — Released OF Sonny Cortez. Signed C Jeffrey Sneed and 1B Kevin Riley. KANSAS CITY T-BONES — Signed OF Danny Hayes. ST. PAUL SAINTS — Signed OF Alex Boxwell. WICHITA WINGNUTS — Signed RHP Steve Pastora. CAN-AM LEAGUE NEW JERSEY JACKALS — Signed RHP Cody Strayer. QUEBEC CAPITALES — Signed RHPs Bobby Blevins and Arik Sikula and OF David Salgueiro. ROCKLAND BOULDERS — Signed RHPs Max Biedrzycki and Lee Sosa. TROIS-RIVIERES AIGLES — Signed RHP Matt Rusch. FRONTIER LEAGUE EVANSVILLE OTTERS — Sold the contract of RHP Alex Phillips to the Minnesota Twins. NORMAL CORNBELTERS — Signed RHP Chance Simpson. WASHINGTON WILD THINGS — Signed INF Dom Iero. FOOTBALL NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE CLEVELAND BROWNS — Activated WR Josh Gordon from the active-NFI list. DETROIT LIONS — Waived-injured S Stefan McClure. TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS — Placed WR Sergio Bailey II on injured reserve. Waived WR Jake Lampman. WASHINGTON REDSKINS — Signed DL Jojo Wicker. Waived DB Darius Hillary. HOCKEY NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE LOS ANGELES KINGS — Signed F Drake Rymsha to a three-year entry-level contract. COLLEGE IDAHO STATE — Placed athletic director Jeff Tingey on administrative leave by the school.

‌WNBA Playoffs

‌SOCCER Major League Soccer EASTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA Atlanta United FC 16 4 6 54 55 30 New York 15 6 4 49 48 26 New York City FC 14 6 6 48 49 34 Columbus 11 8 7 40 33 33 Philadelphia 11 11 3 36 35 39 Montreal 10 14 3 33 34 45 New England 7 10 8 29 38 41 D.C. United 7 9 6 27 39 39 Toronto FC 7 12 6 27 43 46 Chicago 6 15 6 24 37 52 Orlando City 7 16 2 23 38 59 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA FC Dallas 13 5 7 46 40 31 Los Angeles FC 12 7 7 43 50 40 Sporting Kansas City 12 6 6 42 45 30 Real Salt Lake 11 10 5 38 36 44 LA Galaxy 10 9 8 38 49 48 Portland 10 6 7 37 35 34 Seattle 10 9 5 35 31 26 Vancouver 9 9 7 34 40 49 Minnesota United 9 14 2 29 38 50 Houston 7 11 7 28 41 37 Colorado 6 13 6 24 31 42 San Jose 3 13 8 17 34 44 NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie. FRIDAY’S LATE RESULT Los Angeles FC 1, LA Galaxy 1, tie SATURDAY’S RESULTS Philadelphia 1, New England 0 Toronto FC 3, Montreal 1 Minnesota United at Sporting Kansas City, late Real Salt Lake at Colorado, late Vancouver at San Jose, late TODAY’S GAMES D.C. United at New York, 6 p.m. Seattle at Portland, 8:30 p.m.

FIRST ROUND TUESDAY Phoenix 101, Dallas 83 Los Angeles 75, Minnesota 68 SECOND ROUND THURSDAY Washington 96, Los Angeles 64 Phoenix 96, Connecticut 86 SEMIFINALS (X-IF NECESSARY) (BEST-OF-5) SEATTLE VS. PHOENIX Today: Phoenix at Seattle, 4 p.m. Tuesday: Phoenix at Seattle, 9 p.m. Friday: Seattle at Phoenix, 9 p.m. x-Sept. 2: Seattle at Phoenix, TBA x-Sept. 4: Phoenix at Seattle, TBA ATLANTA VS. WASHINGTON Today: Washington at Atlanta, 2 p.m. Tuesday: Washington at Atlanta, 7 p.m. Friday: Atlanta at Washington, 7 p.m. x-Sept. 2: Atlanta at Washington, TBA x-Sept. 4: Washington at Atlanta, TBA

‌BASEBALL American League EAST DIVISION W L Pct GB Boston 90 41 .687 — New York 82 47 .636 7 Tampa Bay 69 61 .531 20½ Toronto 60 69 .465 29 Baltimore 37 93 .285 52½ CENTRAL DIVISION W L Pct GB Cleveland 73 56 .566 — Minnesota 61 68 .473 12 Detroit 53 77 .408 20½ Chicago 50 79 .388 23 Kansas City 40 90 .308 33½ WEST DIVISION W L Pct GB Houston 78 50 .609 — Oakland 78 52 .600 1 Seattle 73 56 .566 5½ Los Angeles 63 66 .488 15½ Texas 58 73 .443 21½ SATURDAY’S RESULTS N.Y. Yankees 10, Baltimore 3, 1st game San Francisco 5, Texas 3 Toronto 8, Philadelphia 6 Chicago White Sox 6, Detroit 1 Tampa Bay 5, Boston 1 N.Y. Yankees 5, Baltimore 1, 2nd game Oakland 6, Minnesota 2 Kansas City 7, Cleveland 1 Seattle at Arizona, late Houston at L.A. Angels, late TODAY’S GAMES Philadelphia (Velasquez 8-9) at Toronto (Estrada 7-9), 12:07 p.m. Boston (Eovaldi 5-5) at Tampa Bay (Snell 15-5), 12:10 p.m. Chicago White Sox (Kopech 0-0) at Detroit (Zimmermann 6-5), 12:10 p.m. Oakland (Bassitt 2-3) at Minnesota (Berrios 11-8), 1:10 p.m. Cleveland (Bieber 7-2) at Kansas City (Lopez 0-3), 1:15 p.m. Texas (Gallardo 7-2) at San Francisco (Holland 6-8), 3:05 p.m. Houston (Valdez 1-0) at L.A. Angels (Pena 1-3), 3:07 p.m. Seattle (Leake 8-7) at Arizona (Greinke 12-8), 3:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Severino 16-6) at Baltimore (Cashner 4-11), 7:05 p.m.

‌National League EAST DIVISION W L Pct GB Atlanta 72 57 .558 — Philadelphia 69 60 .535 3 Washington 64 66 .492 8½ New York 58 71 .450 14 Miami 53 78 .405 20 CENTRAL DIVISION W L Pct GB Chicago 75 53 .586 — St. Louis 72 58 .554 4 Milwaukee 72 59 .550 4½ Pittsburgh 64 66 .492 12 Cincinnati 56 74 .431 20 WEST DIVISION W L Pct GB Arizona 71 57 .555 — Colorado 71 58 .550 ½ Los Angeles 68 61 .527 3½ San Francisco 64 67 .489 8½ San Diego 50 81 .382 22½ SATURDAY’S RESULTS Chicago Cubs 10, Cincinnati 6 N.Y. Mets 3, Washington 0 San Francisco 5, Texas 3 Toronto 8, Philadelphia 6 Miami 3, Atlanta 1 Pittsburgh 9, Milwaukee 1 Colorado 9, St. Louis 1 Seattle at Arizona, 8:10 p.m. San Diego at L.A. Dodgers, late TODAY’S GAMES Philadelphia (Velasquez 8-9) at Toronto (Estrada 7-9), 12:07 p.m. Atlanta (Gausman 8-9) at Miami (Lopez 2-3), 12:10 p.m.

Washington (Rodriguez 1-1) at N.Y. Mets (Matz 5-10), 12:10 p.m. Pittsburgh (Archer 4-6) at Milwaukee (Anderson 8-7), 1:10 p.m. Cincinnati (Bailey 1-11) at Chicago Cubs (Hendricks 9-10), 1:20 p.m. St. Louis (Gomber 3-0) at Colorado (Anderson 6-6), 2:10 p.m. Texas (Gallardo 7-2) at San Francisco (Holland 6-8), 3:05 p.m. San Diego (Erlin 3-3) at L.A. Dodgers (Ryu 3-1), 3:10 p.m. Seattle (Leake 8-7) at Arizona (Greinke 12-8), 3:10 p.m.

FOOTBALL NFL Preseason THURSDAY’S RESULT Cleveland 5, Philadelphia 0 FRIDAY’S RESULTS Carolina 25, New England 14 Denver 29, Washington 17 N.Y. Giants 22, N.Y. Jets 16 Minnesota 21, Seattle 20 Detroit 33, Tampa Bay 30 Oakland 13, Green Bay 6 SATURDAY’S RESULTS Chicago 27, Kansas City 20 Pittsburgh 16, Tennessee 6 L.A. Rams 21, Houston 20 Indianapolis 23, San Francisco 17 Jacksonville 17, Atlanta 6 Baltimore 27, Miami 10 New Orleans at L.A. Chargers, late TODAY’S GAMES Cincinnati at Buffalo, 3 p.m. Arizona at Dallas, 7 p.m.

GOLF ‌PGA Tour-Northern Trust SATURDAY AT RIDGEWOOD COUNTRY CLUB PARAMUS, N.J. PURSE: $9 MILLION YARDAGE: 7,385; PAR: 71 THIRD ROUND Bryson DeChambeau 68-66-63 — 197 Keegan Bradley 70-69-62 — 201 Cameron Smith 69-68-65 — 202 Tony Finau 69-67-66 — 202 Billy Horschel 69-69-65 — 203 Adam Scott 69-64-70 — 203 Jordan Spieth 70-70-64 — 204 Beau Hossler 67-71-66 — 204 Chez Reavie 71-66-67 — 204 Patrick Cantlay 69-67-68 — 204 Phil Mickelson 68-68-68 — 204 Adam Hadwin 71-65-68 — 204 Brooks Koepka 67-65-72 — 204 Aaron Wise 70-68-67 — 205 Nick Watney 69-68-68 — 205 Louis Oosthuizen 71-66-68 — 205 Jason Day 71-66-68 — 205 Justin Thomas 69-67-69 — 205 Jamie Lovemark 66-66-73 — 205 Charley Hoffman 69-70-67 — 206 Scott Stallings 70-69-67 — 206 Sam Ryder 69-69-68 — 206 Webb Simpson 71-66-69 — 206 Kevin Tway 66-69-71 — 206 Dustin Johnson 67-67-72 — 206 Kyle Stanley 71-70-66 — 207 Hideki Matsuyama 67-73-67 — 207 Patrick Reed 69-71-67 — 207 Luke List 70-69-68 — 207 Daniel Berger 69-70-68 — 207 Brian Stuard 68-71-68 — 207 Peter Uihlein 68-68-71 — 207 Ryan Palmer 68-67-72 — 207 Jhonattan Vegas 67-68-72 — 207 Sean O’Hair 66-69-72 — 207 Kevin Na 67-75-66 — 208 Bronson Burgoon 68-73-67 — 208 Sung Kang 69-72-67 — 208 Gary Woodland 72-68-68 — 208 Kevin Streelman 69-69-70 — 208 Tommy Fleetwood 67-68-73 — 208 Byeong Hun An 71-71-67 — 209 Jimmy Walker 69-72-68 — 209 Paul Casey 67-73-69 — 209 Ted Potter, Jr. 71-69-69 — 209 Whee Kim 72-68-69 — 209 Bubba Watson 71-67-71 — 209 Harold Varner III 69-68-72 — 209 Tiger Woods 71-71-68 — 210 Austin Cook 68-74-68 — 210 Pat Perez 73-68-69 — 210 Scott Piercy 67-72-71 — 210 Brandon Harkins 73-69-69 — 211 Chesson Hadley 72-69-70 — 211 Brian Harman 72-69-70 — 211 Zach Johnson 72-68-71 — 211 Emiliano Grillo 69-70-72 — 211 Seamus Power 71-71-70 — 212 Marc Leishman 73-69-70 — 212 Ian Poulter 69-73-70 — 212 Matt Kuchar 72-69-71 — 212 Danny Lee 67-73-72 — 212 Brian Gay 71-68-73 — 212 Tyrrell Hatton 69-70-73 — 212 Sam Saunders 68-70-74 — 212 Martin Laird 70-72-71 — 213 Alex Cejka 67-74-72 — 213 Jason Kokrak 71-69-73 — 213 Patton Kizzire 70-70-73 — 213 Kevin Kisner 69-69-75 — 213 J.J. Spaun 70-71-73 — 214

‌LPGA-CP Women’s ‌ Canadian Open SATURDAY AT WASCANA CC SASKATCHEWAN PURSE: $2,250,000 YARDAGE: 6,675; PAR: 71 THIRD ROUND A-DENOTES AMATEUR Brooke M. Henderson 66-66-70 — 202 Nasa Hataoka 64-70-69 — 203 Angel Yin 65-67-71 — 203 Sung Hyun Park 70-64-70 — 204 Su Oh 70-66-69 — 205 Austin Ernst 66-69-70 — 205 Minjee Lee 66-73-67 — 206 Lydia Ko 66-72-68 — 206 Jennifer Song 71-66-69 — 206 Mariah Stackhouse 66-69-71 — 206 Amy Yang 66-65-75 — 206 Mirim Lee 69-72-66 — 207 Bronte Law 69-69-69 — 207 Jin Young Ko 69-69-69 — 207 Anna Nordqvist 70-66-71 — 207 Maria Torres 68-66-73 — 207 Ariya Jutanugarn 64-70-73 — 207 Thidapa Suwannapura 69-69-70 — 208 Jaye Marie Green 69-68-71 — 208 Shanshan Feng 70-68-71 — 209 Jenny Shin 69-68-72 — 209 Lindy Duncan 68-69-72 — 209 Lee-Anne Pace 71-71-68 — 210 Sei Young Kim 68-73-69 — 210 Ally McDonald 69-70-71 — 210

‌MOTOR SPORTS NASCAR XFINITY‌ Johnsonville 180 SATURDAY AT ROAD AMERICA ELKHART LAKE, WIS. LAP LENGTH: 4.048 MILES (START POSITION IN PARENTHESES) 1. (11) Justin Allgaier, Chevrolet, 45 laps, 0 rating, 48 points. 2. (1) Matt Tifft, Chevrolet, 45, 0, 54. 3. (12) Daniel Hemric, Chevrolet, 45, 0, 44. 4. (2) Cole Custer, Ford, 45, 0, 41. 5. (17) Elliott Sadler, Chevrolet, 45, 0, 40. 6. (4) Justin Marks, Chevrolet, 45, 0, 43. 7. (16) Ross Chastain, Chevrolet, 45, 0, 32. 8. (3) James Davison, Toyota, 45, 0, 29. 9. (9) Brandon Jones, Toyota, 45, 0, 28. 10. (13) Andy Lally, Chevrolet, 45, 0, 32. 11. (18) Kaz Grala, Ford, 45, 0, 26. 12. (19) Michael Annett, Chevrolet, 45, 0, 25. 13. (14) Jeremy Clements, Chevrolet, 45, 0, 30. 14. (26) Katherine Legge, Chevrolet, 45, 0, 23. 15. (31) Garrett Smithley, Chevrolet, 45, 0, 22. 16. (27) Alex Labbe, Chevrolet, 45, 0, 21. 17. (28) Ryan Ellis, Chevrolet, 45, 0, 20. 18. (22) Brian Henderson, Chevrolet, 45, 0, 19. 19. (30) Joey Gase, Chevrolet, 45, 0, 18. 20. (23) Bill Elliott, Chevrolet, 45, 0, 17. 21. (37) Spencer Boyd, Chevrolet, 45, 0, 16. 22. (36) Chad Finchum, Chevrolet, 45, 0, 15. 23. (5) Christopher Bell, Toyota, 45, 0, 30. 24. (6) Brendan Gaughan, Chevrolet, 45, 0, 21. 25. (7) Ryan Truex, Chevrolet, 45, 0, 20. 26. (20) Ryan Sieg, Chevrolet, 45, 0, 11.

‌IndyCar Bommarito ‌ Automotive Group 500 Lineup FRIDAY’S QUALIFYING; RACE SATURDAY AT GATEWAY MOTORSPORTS PARK MADISON, ILL. (WITH QUALIFYING POSITION, CAR NUMBER IN PARENTHESES, DRIVER AND ENGINE. FIELD SET BY ENTRANT POINTS AFTER QUALIFICATIONS WERE RAINED OUT). 1. (9) Scott Dixon, Honda 2. (27) Alexander Rossi, Honda 3. (1) Josef Newgarden, Chevrolet 4. (12) Will Power, Chevrolet 5. (28) Ryan Hunter-Reay, Honda 6. (22) Simon Pagenaud, Chevrolet 7. (15) Graham Rahal, Honda 8. (5) James Hinchcliffe, Honda 9. (18) Sebastien Bourdais, Honda 10. (98) Marco Andretti, Honda 11. (20) Ed Carpenter, Chevrolet 12. (10) Ed Jones, Honda 13. (30) Takuma Sato, Honda 14. (21) Spencer Pigot, Chevrolet 15. (14) Tony Kanaan, Chevrolet 16. (26) Zach Veach, Honda 17. (23) Charlie Kimball, Chevrolet 18. (4) Matheus Leist, Chevrolet 19. (88) Gabby Chaves, Chevrolet 20. (59) Max Chilton, Chevrolet 21. (19) Pietro Fittipaldi, Honda

UPCOMING LOCAL SCHEDULE TODAY

No events scheduled

MONDAY COLLEGE SOCCER UNT at Santa Clara, 9:30 p.m.

TUESDAY HIGH SCHOOL VOLLEYBALL Birdville at Ryan, TBD Argyle at Melissa, 6 p.m. Braswell at Aubrey, 6 p.m.

Wichita Falls Rider at Guyer, 6 p.m. Callisburg at Krum, 6 p.m. Richardson at Lake Dallas, 6 p.m. Blue Ridge at Pilot Point, 6 p.m. Gunter at Sanger, 6 p.m. Irving Nimitz at Denton, 6:30 p.m. Bowie at Ponder, 7 p.m. THESA at Calvary, 8 p.m. COLLEGE VOLLEYBALL UNT at Baylor, 6 p.m.

THURSDAY HIGH SCHOOL VOLLEYBALL Krum, Calvary at Nocona’s Buckle Up For Lane tournament, TBD MIDDLE SCHOOL VOLLEYBALL Navo at Little Elm Strickland at Harpool Lake Dallas at Myers McMath at Crownover Rodriguez at Calhoun COLLEGE SOCCER UNT at Weber State, 9 p.m.

Michel Euler/AP file photo

Serena Williams returns a shot to Krystyna Pliskova during their first-round match at the French Open in Paris on May 29.

Despite ban on catsuit, Williams OK with Open By Brian Mahoney Associated Press

NEW YORK — Serena Williams isn’t worried about a dress code at the French Open.

Pro tennis French Open

Her skin-tight black catsuit won’t be welcome, but Williams already had put it back in the closet. She no longer needs a fulllength outfit for health reasons and won’t be wearing it again at the U.S. Open. Besides, for someone with Williams’ style, going back to the same look would be a fashion faux pas. “When it comes to fashion, you don’t want to be a repeat offender,” she said Saturday. Williams downplayed concerns that were caused this week when the French Tennis Federation president said in Tennis Magazine that the outfit Williams wore this year in Paris would no longer be accepted. “One must respect the game and the place,” Bernard Giudicelli said. Williams said she had a strong relationship with the federation and had spoken with Giudicelli on Friday. “I think that obviously the Grand Slams have a right to do what they want to do,” she said. “I feel like if and when, or if they know that some things are for health reasons, then there’s no way that they wouldn’t be OK with it. So I think it’s fine.” Williams wasn’t just trying to make a fashion statement when she wore the outfit that she called her “Wakanda-inspired catsuit,” referring to the fictional nation in the film Black Panther. The full-length leggings were for health reasons. In what was her first Grand Slam tournament since giving birth to her daughter last Sept. 1, they were a precaution after her health scare related to blood clots. Williams said Saturday she no longer needs to wear them because she found that compression tights also work to keep her blood circulating. She wore tights at Wimbledon, when she made it to the final. Though Williams shrugged it off, the French Open decision drew strong reaction from inside and outside of tennis. Billie Jean King wrote on Twitter that ”the policing of women’s bodies must end” while former U.S. star Andy Roddick tweeted that the decision was “so dumb and shortsighted it hurts,” adding that “Sometimes it’d be nice if the sport got out of its own way.” The catsuit controversy briefly overshadowed Williams’ return to the final Grand Slam tournament of the season. Serena is the No. 17 seed and could play sister Venus in the third round. Top-ranked Simona Halep could be an opponent in the fourth round. Serena said she hadn’t even looked at what opponents she could face as she hopes to win a 24th Grand Slam singles title, and seventh in New York. She’s one of the favorites, despite some struggles since returning to tour.


Denton Record-Chronicle

3B

Sunday, August 26, 2018

Denton wins 2 matches at Camillo Tournament Staff report

ARGYLE — Denton defeated Sanger 25-21, 28-26 and the Flower Mound JV 25-12, 25-23 at the Sawyer Camillo Tournament on Saturday, while dropping a 25-17, 24-26, 25-12 decision to Frisco Lebanon Trail. Leah Stolfus (seven kills, four solo blocks), Maria Martin (15 digs) and Sydney Soto (nine kills) stood out in the Sanger win. Soto also had nine kills against Lebanon Trail, with Martin adding 16 digs and Thomas getting eight kills, nine assists and 10 digs in the loss. Thomas (seven kills), Martin (12 digs), Payton Roberts (seven assists) and Sophie Audirsch (seven assists) were the top players in the win over the Flower Mound JV. The Lady Broncos finished 5-1 at the tournament and are 20-4 overall.

Guyer wins two

AUSTIN — Denton Guyer defeated Round Rock 25-9, 2025, 25-15 and A&M Consolidated 25-14, 24-26, 25-20 and lost to Weatherford 19-25, 22-25 on Saturday at Volleypalooza. Standing out for Guyer (21-7 overall) were Jordyn Williams (four aces, 25 kills, five blocks, 27 digs), Rachel Tullos (three aces, 28 kills, 13 blocks, 32 digs) and

High school volleyball Roundup

Maggie Walsh (14 kills, 31 digs).

Aubrey d. Denton Braswell

ARGYLE — The Lady Chaps finished the Sawyer Camillo Tournament on Saturday by beating Denton Braswell 25-21, 28-26. However, Aubrey also fell to Liberty Christian 2515, 25-16 and Ponder 25-20, 1725, 25-21. Kaia Saylor (15 digs, seven kills), Shelby Wilkins (14 assists, five digs), Laney Roos (nine digs) and Wylie Dyer (eight kills) were among the top players against Braswell. Saylor (eight kills,), Roos (11 digs), Wilkins (seven assists) and Gracie Bell (six assists) stood out in the loss to Liberty Christian. It was Saylor who had 14 kills and 13 digs against Ponder, while Roos and Cidnee Howard had 11 and 10 digs, respectively. Aubrey (13-12) will take on Braswell in Aubrey on Tuesday, and then travel to Ponder on Friday.

Pilot Point d. Tom Bean, Denison, Anna

WHITESBORO — The Lady Bearcats dropped Tom Bean 2518, 25-7, Denison 25-21, 25-18

and Anna 25-17, 14-25, 25-16 on Saturday at the Whitesboro Tournament. Shelby Malone (seven kills, four digs, three aces, two blocks) led the way against Tom Bean, with other stand outs being Kimberly Burns (six kills, two blocks) and Tori Jones (three kills, two digs, two blocks). Malone had six kills and three digs against Denison, with Brooke Lane (eight digs) and Kassy Gann (three kills, six digs) also among the top performers in that match. It was Malone who had 16 kills, nine digs, one ace and three blocks versus Anna, while Jones (six kills, four digs, two blocks), Burns (nine kills, one dig, one ace, three blocks) and Gann (six kills, 10 digs) also stood out in that win.

Pilot Point d. Abilene

KRUM — The Lady Bearcats defeated Abilene 25-20, 2125, 25-18, 20-25, 15-12 during a three-team match on Friday at Krum. Pilot Point also lost to Krum, 25-11, 25-10, 25-13. Standing out in the Krum loss were Lane (18 digs), Rendy Garrett (eight digs), Malone (four kills, 14 digs), Burns (six kills, two digs), Gann (one kill, four digs) and Jones (four kills, one dig).

Yankees split doubleheader By The Associated Press

BALTIMORE — Miguel Andujar homered and had four RBIs, J.A. Happ pitched six sharp innings to win his fifth straight start with the Yankees and New York beat the Baltimore Orioles 10-3 on Saturday in the opener of a split doubleheader. Happ (15-6) allowed two runs and five hits with nine strikeouts.

Yankees 5, Orioles 1

BALTIMORE — Sonny Gray made the most of a foray into the starting rotation by taking a three-hitter into the seventh inning, and the New York Yankees beat the Baltimore Orioles Saturday night for a doubleheader sweep. Miguel Andujar had two hits to raise his batting average to .300.

Cubs 10, Reds 6

CHICAGO — Daniel Murphy and Kyle Schwarber each hit a two-run homer, Javier Baez added a solo shot and the Chicago Cubs beat the Cincinnati Reds on Saturday for their fourth straight win. Reds starter Luis Castillo (711) allowed five runs on five hits in 3 1/3 innings.

Mets 3, Nationals 0

NEW YORK — Bryce Harp-

er and the Washington Nationals were shut out for the third game in a row as Zack Wheeler and the New York Mets posted a 3-0 victory Saturday. Wheeler (9-6) gave up six hits and set a career-best winning streak.

Blue Jays 8, Phillies 6

TORONTO — Aledmys Diaz hit a go-ahead three-run double in the eighth inning and the Toronto Blue Jays rallied to beat Philadelphia on Saturday. Rhys Hoskins had three RBIs and Roman Quinn had two hits and two RBIs for the Phillies, who began the day three games behind Atlanta in the NL East and two games out in the wild-card race.

White Sox 6, Tigers 1

DETROIT — Lucas Giolito pitched seven sharp innings in his third straight quality start, and the Chicago White Sox beat the Detroit Tigers on Saturday. Ryan Carpenter (1-2) gave up six runs and nine hits in 4 1/3 innings.

Rays 5, Red Sox 1

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Kevin Kiermaier tripled to key a two-run sixth inning, Tommy Pham homered and the Tampa Bay Rays won their seventh straight game by beating the

major league-leading Boston Red Sox on Saturday night. J.D. Martinez had two doubles in four at-bats for the Red Sox, who have lost five of seven.

Marlins 3, Braves 1

MIAMI — Brian Anderson hit a pinch-hit, two-run home run to help the Miami Marlins beat the Atlanta Braves on Saturday night. Braves starter Anibal Sanchez (6-5) exited with right hamstring tightness after 5 2/3 innings and 98 pitches. Sanchez allowed four hits and one run.

Pirates 9, Brewers 1

MILWAUKEE — Adam Frazier hit a three-run homer and Jameson Taillon pitched six strong innings as the Pittsburgh Pirates defeated the Milwaukee Brewers on Saturday. Christian Yelich homered in the third to put the Brewers in front 1-0.

Athletics 6, Twins 2

MINNEAPOLIS — Jonathan Lucroy homered and drove in four runs, Mike Fiers pitched effectively into the sixth inning, and Oakland beat the Minnesota Twins on Saturday night. Fiers (10-6) allowed one run and five hits in 5 2/3 innings, striking out seven and walking two.

UNT sports information

Twelve kills from North Texas freshman Rhett Robinson (14) helped crown the Mean Green the North Texas Invitational champions on Saturday.

Mean Green finishes tournament with win

From UNT sports information

Led by 12 kills each from freshman Rhett Robinson and sophomore Valerie Valerian, the North Texas volleyball team defeated Kent State, 3-0 (25-17, 25-17, 25-14) on Saturday afternoon.

North Texas volleyball The Mean Green were crowned the North Texas Invitational champions, finishing 3-0 without losing a set. Teakell joined Robinson and Valerian in double-digits with 11 kills, including two in a 7-1 run after the teams were knotted at 4-4 early in the first set. She added three more down the stretch, including one to bring up set point, which UNT (3-0) earned on one of Valerian’s three aces. After hitting .226 as a team in the opening frame, the Mean

From Page 1B

Rangers Suarez (5-9) struck out five and walked three to win for the first time since July 29. The lefthander induced 12 groundouts and two double plays. “This whole week I looked at old video just to see what could get me going again,” Suarez said. “Once I know I’m getting a lot of groundballs I know that’s when I’m in my game.” The Giants have the fourthbest winning percentage in the NL at home but had lost 10 of the previous 13 at their waterfront ballpark before edging the Rangers. Rougned Odor homered and had three hits for Texas. “The difference is we didn’t get the big hit when we needed to there late,” Rangers manager Jeff Banister said. “We felt good

Marquez

Jeff Woo/DRC file photo

Denton junior linebacker Vincent Marquez (26) sacks Wichita Falls sophomore quarterback Zach Williams (17) at Bronco Field, Oct. 12, 2017, in Denton. rounding the upcoming season completely altered, Marquez gave the injury time to heal and returned to the weight room and practice field with a new perspective. As one of the team’s more respected players, simply having Marquez back in the picture was a boost for the Broncos before summer began. “It just felt great,” Marquez said. “The biggest smile lit up on

my face. The first thing I did was just ask, ‘I know you’re a doctor and all, but are you sure?’ I needed to be positive it was true. He laughed and said, ‘Yes, this is it.’ The first day of practice as a senior was awesome.” After going 3-7 in Miller’s first season at the helm of the program, a strong senior class — that now again includes Marquez — is a big reason the Bron-

Standings North Texas (3-0) Kent State (2-1) Northeastern (2-1) Nicholls (1-3) Grambling (0-3)

UNT 3, Kent State 0

From Page 1B

Fortunately for Marquez, a subsequent visit to a different doctor revealed a much less serious problem. There was a severe strain in his trapezius muscle, which was the cause of the swelling, neck pain and headaches that forced Marquez off the field in the first place. After consulting with a handful of other radiologists, doctors were able to rule out the presence of a cyst and said Marquez would be able to return to the field — and continue life as normal — after resting and allowing the strain to properly heal. “It worked out and we’re really happy for Vincent,” Denton coach Billy Miller said. “You don’t want to see any kid go through that. With what he was putting in effort-wise and what they were asking him to give up, we were ecstatic when he came back and had a clean bill of health. That was the biggest thing for us. “He had something that shook him a little bit and now he’s going to be able to look back on that for the rest of his life and say, ‘I was prepared for this, and now I have a second chance.’” With his perspective sur-

2018 NORTH TEXAS INVITATIONAL

cos are optimistic about their chances for a breakout season this year. Denton returns eight starters on the defensive side of the ball and will have the benefit of being able to move things around at the second level because of Marquez’s ability to play more than one position. “The thing about Vincent is he’s smart and he’s very coach-

All-Tournament Team Karley York, S, North Texas (MVP) Barbara Teakell, OH, North Texas Valerie Valerian, OH, North Texas Kathryn Ellison, OH, Kent State Danie Tyson, MH, Kent State Samantha Shupe, S, Northeastern Taylor Reiter, MB, Northeastern

Green posted a .423 attack percentage in the second set, committing just two errors on 26 attempts with 13 kills. Valerian found her stroke in the final set, tallying seven kills in the frame and contributing three points to a 12-2 run to end the match. Karley York, who finished with 37 assists and a teamhigh four block assists, teamed up for three blocks in the streak. York was named the tournament MVP after averaging

12.67 assists per set and tallying six block assists and a pair of aces. Valerian and Teakell joined York on the all-tournament team, combining for 68 kills and nine aces across the three matches.

about our situation once we got some baserunners there in the last inning. We were unable to come up with the big hit.”

TWU wins pair of matches at tourney

Trainer’s room

Rangers: IF Hanser Alberto was placed on the disabled list with a right hamstring strain, an injury he suffered Friday in his first game after being called up to take Bartolo Colon’s roster spot. Carlos Perez was called up from Triple-A Round Rock. RHP Nick Gardewine was placed on the 60-day DL with a right forearm strain.

Up next

Rangers RHP Yovani Gallardo (7-2, 6.06 ERA) has six wins in 10 career starts against the Giants. San Francisco LHP Derek Holland (6-8, 3.75), who won 62 games over eight seasons with Texas, makes his third career appearance against his former club. able,” Miller said. “You add that to his athletic ability and his stature and you’ve got a pretty good high school football player. We’ve got very high expectations for him and he’s been there in the starting rotation for a full year now. He knows several different positions and really opens up a whole wealth of possibilities for everything we’re going to do.” The Broncos will open the season at 7 p.m. Friday at home against Lake Dallas looking to get off to a fast start for the second straight year. Denton defeated the Falcons 20-15 in the opener last year and took down Sanger in Week 2 before struggling with injuries and depth as the season progressed. With his own injury scare in the past, Marquez is ready to hit the ground running as the Broncos look to return to the playoffs this season. “That whole experience woke me up and made me grateful just for the two legs I have to walk and run,” Marquez said. “It helped me realize what I have and that I shouldn’t take it for granted. I’m healthy, and that’s all that matters. Now I just want to lead this team to be as successful as we can be.” BRADY KEANE can be reached at 940-566-6869 and via Twitter @BradyKeane.

Up next

UNT heads south on Interstate 35 to Waco for a midweek matchup with No. 16 Baylor at 6 p.m. Tuesday.

From TWU sports information

Texas Woman’s University volleyball concluded the SpringHill Suites Invitational against the St. Edward’s University Hilltoppers and the Florida Institute of Technology Panthers where they won the pair of matches.

Texas Woman’s 3, St. Edward’s 2

Maggie Pyles and Katy Ranes continued their domination on the court as the two posted double-doubles against the Hilltoppers. Pyles’ double-double came from 15 kills and 16 digs while Ranes’ double-double came from a match-high 41 assists and 17 digs. Bailey French led in digs with a match-high of 37 digs. The Pioneers dropped the first set (25-17), but picked up momentum in the second set where they beat the Hilltoppers 25-24. When it all came down to the final set, the Pioneers topped the ‘Toppers with a 15-12 score winning the match 3-2.

Texas Woman’s 3, Florida Institute of Technology 0

Ranes dominated the floor with a match-high of 32 kills while French posted a matchhigh of 19 digs and Pyles posted a match-high 10 kills. The Pioneers laid out the tone in Set 1 with a 25-13 win over the Panthers. Set two was a more physical match, but TWU took it with a 25-21 win followed by a set three 25-17 win to seal the deal and call it an evening. French and Pyles were awarded All-Tournament Team for the SpringHill Suites Invitational. Texas Woman’s travels to the South Central Classic in Durant, Oklahoma next weekend where they will face off against Central Oklahoma, Southern Nazarene, East Central, and Southeastern Oklahoma State.


4B

Sunday, August 26, 2018

Denton Record-Chronicle

Allgaier takes Xfinity race at Road America By Genaro C. Armas Associated Press

ELKHART LAKE, Wis. — Race leader Justin Allgaier watched in the mirror as the two cars closest to his Chevrolet made contact, essentially bumping his two closest rivals out of contention. The coast was clear for Allgaier to sail to victory Saturday at Road America for his fourth win of the season. But Allgaier kept thinking about everything else that could go wrong. What if he didn’t hit his mark on a turn? What if his car ran over a debris on the track? What if he just ran out of fuel? “Ok, if I run out of gas I may not go back to the garage area,” Allgaier said in recounting his internal conversation. “I may just walk back home to Charlotte.” Instead, he’ll head back with his second victory in three weeks, both coming on road courses, after pulling away over the final five laps. Allgaier held a 5.4-second advantage over second-place Matt Tifft to take the tense race filled with bumps, scrapes and spin-outs around the 14-turn course. Daniel Hemric, Tifft’s teammate at Richard Childress Racing, was third. The victory erases the sting of a close call in 2011, when Allgaier led late in the race before running out of fuel during a yellow flag. This time, Allgaier was the beneficiary of late-race commotion. With three laps to go, second-place James Davison and third-place Justin Marks were jockeying for position trying desperately to catch Allgaier when their cars spun out around a tight left turn. Tifft blew past Davison and Marks. But no one could catch Allgaier, who started 11th. The victory allowed him to leapfrog Christopher Bell atop the series driver standings. “I never would have thought

Motor sports NASCAR XFINITY: Johnson 180

we could have a dream season like this one,” he said with a smile after wiping sweat off his forehead. “Two road courses ... would you believe that?” NASCAR Hall of Famer Bill Elliott finished 20th after coming out of retirement to take his first ride Xfinity ride around Road America. The 62-yearold Elliott started 23rd, then climbed up to 17th before spinning out and falling back. “It was a heck of a lot of fun,” Elliott said. The old-school driver would have loved the racing at the front of the field. It was an entertaining afternoon for NASCAR during an off week for the top-level Cup circuit. Most of the attention coming into the race fell on Road America rookies like Elliott. British racer Katherine Legge, who was driving in her second NASCAR race, finished 14th. IndyCar driver Conor Daly, who was making his NASCAR debut, finished 31st. A suspension issue forced his No. 6 Ford into the garage after 35 laps.

Coming back?

Elliott had his son, Cup driver Chase Elliott, spotting for him on Saturday. He may not have that job again if the elder Elliott returns to race again. “He didn’t say much. He didn’t help me enough,” he said with a smile. Bill Elliott said his goal this weekend was just to get used to the car again, drawing on the experience of decades on the track. For now, Road America may be the finish line. “I doubt it,” he said when asked if he would return. “This was a lot of fun, a good time. These guys are serious racers. I felt like I held my own pretty good ... It’s just hard to put it all together.”

Up next

The series moves to Darlington on Sept. 1.

Todd Brewer/For the DRC

A cowboy at the 90th Annual North Texas Fair & Rodeo Bull Blowout and Protection Bullfight Match gets friendly with a bull during his Friday performance.

3 cowboys get score at Bull Blowout Cowboy protection bullfighting teams make event look effortless By Todd Brewer For the Denton Record-Chronicle

The bull power was on full display Friday night at the North Texas Fair and Rodeo Bull Blowout with only three cowboys making the required eight seconds to get a score and only a single rider in the short round making it to eight. Jared Sheehan of Magnolia, Texas, was the overall winner on Night 2 with an aggregate score of 162 on two bulls. U.S. Army veteran Juan Alonzo of Keller posted an 80.5 for the second place finish followed by Honey Grove, Texas, bullrider Cody Hodges’ 49 for third. Cowboy protection bullfighting, held concurrently with bull riding, came next. Teams of two bullfighters are judged on their ability to keep the cowboy from harm after he dismounts or is thrown from the bull. The bullfighters must read a constantly evolving scenario and try and pre-position

Golf Brooks Koepka, the U.S. Open and PGA champion who shared the 36-hole lead, began his slide with a three-putt bogey from 12 feet on No. 5 and by missing a 4-foot birdie putt on the next hole. He went 13 holes in the middle of his round with three bogeys and 10 pars and had to settle for a 72. He was seven behind. Scott was one shot behind when he made two bogeys, then chopped up the par-3 11th for a double bogey. “I really switched off there for five holes and made a mess of things around the turn,” Scott said. “Might have shot myself out of the tournament. We’ll see how it goes tomorrow, but it’s going to be costly and make life difficult for me to win this thing now.” Bradley finished his round about an hour after the leaders teed off, making five birdies over his last seven holes for a 62.

He was leading at the time and figured he would be at least a few shots behind when the third round ended. He might not have expected DeChambeau to be the one he was chasing. “Just looking at who is at the top of the leaderboard, when I got to 10, I was like any birdie from here on out is really going to be big going into tomorrow,” Bradley said. Tony Finau (66) and Cameron Smith of Australian (65) were five shots behind, with Billy Horschel (65) and Scott another shot back. Jordan Spieth finally got his putter going and shot a 64, leaving him seven shots behind but in a tie for seventh, boosting his bid to return to the Tour Championship. Spieth, who hasn’t won this year, started the playoffs at No. 43. The top 30 after three playoff events go to East Lake for

From Page 1B

ing in over two decades. Hugh Freeze resigned at Mississippi last year after university officials found a “pattern of personal misconduct.” The team then limped to a 6-6 finish under Matt Luke. Steve Sarkisian was fired at USC during the 2015 season amid personal problems. The Spartans finished 8-6 under Clay Helton, who’s since led the team to seasons of 10-3 and 11-1. Kirk Herbstreit, an ESPN college football analyst and former Ohio State quarterback, said getting the season started in Columbus should help turn the conversation to the field. “I don’t know if I’ve ever seen a town impacted positively or negatively on a typical Saturday afternoon [over] the result of a football game, let alone when something like this happens to its program,” Herbstreit said. “So it’s kind of uncharted waters for the university and for that fan base. I think many of them are anxious for the ball to get up in the air.”

While Meyer does his time, 39-year-old co-offensive coordinator/quarterbacks coach Ryan Day, a second-year Ohio State assistant who has never before been a head coach, is running the show. In a normal year there would have been regular training-camp media access to Meyer, assistant coaches and players. They have all been off-limits for all of camp. Aside from a couple brief windows for sideline observation, the media have been kept at bay, which had the unintended consequence of keeping the spotlight harshly fixed on Meyer instead of football. Teams experiencing offseason turmoil have fared in various ways. After Ohio State coach Jim Tressel was fired in 2011 for lying to the NCAA about player violations, the Buckeyes, under interim coach Luke Fickell, slipped to 6-7. It was the team’s worst show-

North Texas Fair & Rodeo

themselves to be in the best spot they can be to take the bull away from the fallen cowboy. Communication is critical and knowing where to be and when to be there is a huge part of the success of a good bullfighting duo. The bullfighter’s job is to make themselves a more attractive target to the bull than the fallen bullfighter. This takes the bullfighters in close to the action and if necessary, to step in between the bull and the cowboy and take the shot from the bull. There usually is not enough time to make that choice consciously. Rather, it is a split-second decision that was made before the bullfighter ever stepped into the arena. Good teams make it look effortless when it’s anything but. Team Cavender’s Judd Napier of Waipahu, Hawaii, and Wyatt Mason of Casper, Wyoming, won cowboy protection bullfighting with their score of 194. Second place with a 187.5 was Team Jagoe Public, Weston Rutkowski from Haskell and Lucas Teodoro of Brazil. Placing third was Team First United, Ross Johnson of Hamilton and Beau Schueth from Emmet, Nebraska,

with their score of 186. Scores from all three performances will be averaged to determine the winner. On Thursday night, Barstow, Oklahoma bull rider Jake Gowdy added to his success at the North Texas rodeo by riding both bulls he’d drawn for an aggregate score of 163.5 to take the win. Gowdy covered his bull for an 84.5 in the first round and marked a 79 on his second to claim the top spot. Placing second with a two-bull score of 156.5 was Brazilian cowboy Alison Sousa. Kyle McDaniel had the high score of the night with an 87, but got bucked off his short-round bull and took third place. Fourth place went to another Brazilian bull rider, Maycon Moura, for his score of 72 in the long round. Bullfighters Weston Rutkowski and Beau Schueth, representing Team Jaego Public, won the first night with an aggregate score of 187. Placing second was Team Cavender’s, Judd Napier and Wyatt Mason, with a score of 186. Placing third was the North Texas Bingo team, Ely Sharkey and Kris Furr with a 185. Points from all three nights of competition will determine the winner of the custom trophy buckles from Squaw Creek Silver.

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING UNITED STATES HIGHWAY (US) 377 WIDENING From: South of Farm-to-Market (FM) 1171 to North of Crawford Road Town of Argyle and Town of Flower Mound, Denton County, Texas CSJ: 0081-03-047

From Page 1B

Ohio State

Rodeo

a shot at the $10 million prize. For players like Bradley and Horschel, making it to East Lake means getting into three of the majors and two World Golf Championships. And for DeChambeau, it’s simply the process of winning. “I’ve got a four-shot lead, and never really been in this spot before,” DeChambeau said. “But I’m excited because this is a new challenge for me, and I always like challenges.” Tiger Woods had his first bogey-free round of the year, but managed only three birdies for a 68. He was 13 shots behind. In scoring conditions, Woods has seven birdies in 54 holes. DeChambeau made that many in 12 holes Saturday. “That’s not going to get it done,” Woods said. “As soft as it is, these guys are making a boat load of birdies. And I just haven’t made any.”

The Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) in conjunction with Denton County, will hold a Public Hearing regarding the proposed improvements to United States Highway 377 (US 377) from south of Farm-to-Market (FM) 1171 in Flower Mound to north of Crawford Road in Argyle, Denton County, Texas. The Hearing will be held on Thursday, September 27, 2018 at Argyle Middle School located at 6601 Canyon Falls Drive, Argyle, Texas 76226. Displays will be available for viewing at 6 p.m. with the formal Hearing starting at 7 p.m. The purpose of the Public Hearing is to present the proposed project to the public and receive comments. The proposed project involves the full reconstruction of the existing two-lane rural roadway to a four-lane divided highway with sidewalk on 6.13 miles of US 377 from approximately 2,100 feet south of FM 1171 to approximately 2,900 feet north of Crawford Road. The proposed improvements would potentially require approximately 36.3 acres of new right-of-way (ROW) and 0.6-acre for permanent easement. The proposed typical section consists of a four-lane divided roadway (one 12-foot lane and one 14-foot lane in each direction) with a 19-foot raised median that would transition down to a six-foot median at intersections. The proposed project also consists of dedicated left-turn lanes, signalized intersections, and six-foot sidewalks on the east side of the roadway for the entire length of the project. The existing ROW varies and is typically 120 feet wide. The proposed ROW varies from 100 to 140 feet wide, including median and curb offsets. Although additional ROW is required, no residential or nonresidential structures would be displaced. Information concerning services and benefits available to affected property owners and information about the tentative schedule for ROW acquisition may be obtained from the Dallas District office. As part of this project, one property (Resource 18), determined as eligible for the National Register of Historic Places (NHRP) falls within the project limits. The proposed project would not pose adverse effects to this resource; however approximately 0.02 acres of ROW would be acquired from the parcel on which

the resource stands, thus constituting a direct effect. The direct effect to this resource constitutes a Section 4(f) de minimis use. Environmental documentation, maps showing the project location and design, and other information regarding the project are on file and available for inspection Monday through Friday between the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. at the TxDOT Dallas District Office located at 4777 East Highway 80, Mesquite, Texas 75150. This information will also be available for inspection at the Public Hearing. A copy of the approved schematic and of this hearing notice is available online at www.keepitmovingdallas. com under Public Hearings/Meetings. Written and verbal comments from the public regarding this project are requested and may be presented at the Public Hearing, or submitted in person or by mail to the TxDOT District Office, Attention Mr. Nelson Underwood, P.E., Project Manager, 4777 East Highway 80 Mesquite, Texas 75150. Written comments must be received or postmarked by Friday, October 12, 2018 to be included in the Public Hearing Summary. The Public Hearing will be conducted in English. Persons interested in attending the Hearing who have special communication or accommodation needs or need an interpreter, are encouraged to contact the TxDOT Dallas District Public Information Office at (214) 320-4480. Requests should be made at least two days prior to the Public Hearing. Every reasonable effort will be made to accommodate these needs. If you have general questions or concerns regarding the proposed project, you may contact Mr. Nelson Underwood, P.E. at (214) 320-6628 or by email at Nelson.Underwood@txdot.gov. The environmental review, consultation, and other actions required by applicable Federal environmental laws for this project are being, or have been, carried-out by TxDOT pursuant to 23 U.S.C. 327 and a Memorandum of Understanding dated December 16, 2014, and executed by FHWA and TxDOT.


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A CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING SECTION OF DENTON MEDIA COMPANY

SECTION C Sunday, August 26, 2018

Real Estate

Lots, Acreage, Residential, Mobile Homes, Commercial & Investments

Open house set at charming home By Kaycee Key Real Estate Editor

GREATER DENTON/WISE COUNTY ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS

Expensive mistakes that Denton homebuyers make

Chances are, if you’ve lived in Texas you’ve heard the saying, “I wasn’t born in Texas, but I got here as fast as I could.” Over the past decade, that spirit has come to life like never before, with unprecedented population growth. That has created strong demand for homes in Denton. That’s great news for homeowners who see their property values rise, but it can also make the Denton real estate market difficult to navigate, especially for first-time homebuyers. Greater Denton/ Wise County Association of Realtors shares some expensive mistakes buyers should avoid in Denton’s competitive real estate market.

Skipping the home inspection

Most home inspections cost a few hundred dollars, and as one among several expenses along the path to homeownership, it can be tempting to skip it. Don’t! While everything might look good around the property, you won’t see things like foundation problems, plumbing issues or roof damage that could cost thousands of dollars to fix. Not only will a home inspection ensure you avoid any major expenses down the road, it also identifies minor things that may need to be fixed, replaced or remodeled to make the home livable, which your Denton Realtor can help you consider when negotiating the final purchase price.

For the DRC/Al Key

2102 LAUREL, DENTON Description: 3/2/2 Price: $189,900 Contact: Laura Brewer of Ebby Halliday, Realtors at 940-367-0329

works every July 4th. There’s even a fun play set waiting in the back yard for the kids.

This property has been updated recently with a new roof, fence, hot water heater and much more. Younger children who live in this home may attend Borman Elementary School, while older kids can attend McMath Middle School and Denton High School. An open house will be held here today from 1 to 3 p.m. Stop by and see all the amenities this home has to offer.

A cozy fireplace highlights the spacious family room.

Open house planned at Ponder property 249 SARATOGA, PONDER Description: 4/2/2 Price: $209,900 Contact: Miogene Alexander of Century 21 Judge Fite Company at 940-390-2355

Offering too much

In a market like this one, it’s not uncommon for buyers to find themselves one among many making an offer on a home (called a “multiple offer” situation). That can inspire buyers to offer more than they intended for a property because they want to nab their dream home. In these situations, Denton Realtors urge careful consideration. Buyers financing a majority of their home purchase can face issues, since the bank may not appraise the property at the price that was offered and decline a loan. Longer term, Denton Realtors have found that clients who purchase properties above market value may find themselves owing more than the home is worth. Every market has its unique challenges, and the competitive Denton real estate market is no different. Equipped with this knowledge and the informed counsel of a Denton Realtor, buyers and sellers can sidestep costly mistakes and navigate the market with confidence. If you are interested in buying or selling a home in and around Denton and Wise Counties, visit GDWCAR.com.

Courtesy photos

By Kaycee Key Real Estate Editor

The kitchen boasts a large granite-topped island.

This lovely house is less than a year old and shows like a model home. The single-story beauty can be found at 249 Saratoga Drive in Ponder’s Remington Park addition. The immaculate house features four bedrooms, two baths, a two-car garage and

approximately 1,567 square feet of living space. The open floorplan provides the perfect space for entertaining. The inviting family room blends seamlessly into a dining area, which easily connects to the kitchen. Prepare your next gourmet meal in the island kitchen. The large island was designed to be the perfect place to both

prep and eat meals. Helpful amenities include granite countertops, a walk-in pantry and sleek black appliances. The tranquil master suite offers a tray ceiling, walk-in closet and a long vanity with two sinks. The home’s fourth bedroom is separate from the rest and could easily serve as a home office. Enjoy relaxing on the privacy-fenced back yard’s covered patio. A sprinkler system helps keep the lawn green and lush. This amazing home is conveniently located near a neighborhood sports court, park and playground. An open house will be held here today from 2 to 4 p.m.

OPEN TODAY ■■ 2102 Laurel Street, Denton, 1-3 p.m., Ebby Halliday, Realtors ■■ 704 Smith, Ponder, 3-5 p.m., Ebby Halliday, Realtors ■■ 1112 Chapel, Denton, 2-4 p.m., Ebby Halliday, Realtors ■■ 7020 Crenshaw, Denton, 2-4 p.m., Ebby Halliday, Realtors ■■ 2725 Crater Lake, Denton, 1-3 p.m., Ebby Halliday, Realtors ■■ 249 Saratoga Drive, Ponder, 2-4 p.m., Century 21 Judge Fite Company ■■ 2216 Jefferson Trail, Denton, 2-4 p.m., Real T Team ■■ 915 E. Sherman, Denton, 1-3 p.m., Keller Williams Realty ■■ 2404 Great Bear & 6713 Purbeck Trail, Denton, 1-3 p.m., Keller Williams Realty ■■ 8760 Hilltop & 220 Forest Trail, Arygle, 1-3 p.m., Keller Williams Realty ■■ 225 Hilltop, Justin, 2-4 p.m., Keller Williams Realty

GET IT IN THE CLASSIFIEDS

You never know what you might find in the Denton Record-Chronicle Classifieds. From a new car to a new home to a new job, the Classifieds deliver! Go to DentonRC.com/classifieds or call 940-566-6836 for home delivery!

DE-1668945-01

President Daphne Zollinger

This well-maintained home is conveniently situated near the University of North Texas. The single-story house is located at 2102 Laurel Street and offers three bedrooms, two baths, a two-car garage and approximately 1,364 square feet of living space. You’ll love entertaining guests in the spacious family room. A cathedral ceiling and cozy brick fireplace with a wood mantle are the focal points of this attractive room. The kitchen is truly a chef’s dream with its attractive layout and color scheme. A black-and-white tiled floor coordinates perfectly with the kitchen’s black appliances, white cabinets and gray countertops. A large pantry keeps groceries neatly stored out of sight. The adjoining dining area boasts the same charming floor. The master bedroom is a true haven with its tray ceiling and two closets. A large covered patio overlooks the privacy-fenced back yard. This is the perfect place to view Apogee Stadium’s fire-


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Rate & Credit Policies: Rate charges are determined at the time of placement. All ads accepted are subject to credit approval. Some classified categories require payment in advance. Credit application available upon request. Yearly classified agreements are available to qualified individuals/businesses. The Denton Record-Chronicle reserves the right to correctly classify and edit all copy or to reject or cancel any advertisement at any time. Non-adjustable & non-refundable. Cancellations: Should you need to cancel prior to the last day, the price of your ad will be based on number of days published according to our rate structure. Call 940-387-7755 - ask for your cancellation number. This is your record of cancellation and it is important that you have it in the event of any misunderstanding or adjustment. Errors & Adjustments: Please check your ad the first day that it runs to see that all information is correct. This will ensure that your ad is exactly what you want readers to see. Call us the first day if you find an error at 940-387-7755. To report an error in Saturday or Sunday’s editions call Monday after 8:00 a.m. We must limit our financial responsibility, if any, to the charge for space, and cannot be held responsible for incorrect ads after the first day of publication. Omissions of Ads: The Denton Record-Chronicle assumes no financial responsibility in an ad beyond the cost of the ad itself, and no responsibility for the omission of an ad.

1999 Chevy Astro Van needs 4 new Pirelli Scorpion all season 1998 Lincoln Town Car 60,320 tires, 255/45/R20. 700 miles. Cost transmission and AC. Looks good miles, non smoker, no pets, new new tires, and luggage rack. tires, maintained by Bill Utter. $1020 new. Sell for $550. Call $1100 Call 940-395-0549 A lost pet? Check ads in “Lost & 940-594-34345724 $5000. 940-735-0021 Found” & “pets” daily. Visit or call Escalade Rear Seats local animal shelters and animal rescue organizations daily/often. from 2004, gray leather, 3rd row seats $225 for pair, cash. Found Bull in Ponder area. To Call 940-206-2900 2009 400 cc Suziki Scooter Claim call Denton County Sherri Denton. No text please. (Burgman 400) Pearl White, like Office at 940-349-1600 Ext 9. new. 4700 miles. $2995 Quad Boss Custom Wheels for Call 940-600-7098 Kawaski ATV New never mounted $150 set. $940-293-7580 DMC assumes no responsibility for ad content. Consideration should Quad Boss Custom Wheels for be given before financial committKawaski ATV. New never ment. Be aware of long distance mounted $150 set. phone charges, app fees & credit 940-293-7580 HUFFINES card information you provide. Books/lists of jobs don't guarantee SUBARU KIA Reese 5th Wheel 14K LB gross th employment or that applicants will 940-321-2504 trailer weight. 5 Wheel hook up be qualified for jobs listed. for the bed of your truck. $300. Call 940-566-2334

51st Annual Southwest Swap Meet

Sport Aluminum Wheel 15x7, 5 spoke 5 stud, fits 1998 - 2003 Chevy S10 pickup. $75. Call 940-382-6226

September 14, 15, 16 NEW LOCATION!

Texas Motor Speedway

CARS, PARTS, RELATED ITEMS BUY, SELL, TRADE CAR CORRAL info@southwestswapmeet.com Gary/Suzy Page at 469-463-6277

HY

Universal running boards in excellent condition with hardware for $35 for set. Call or text 940-594-0210 2005 XLT F150, V6, AC, 5 Speed Manual, 57K miles, Red, very Adult 3 wheel bicycle, good con- clean, Good inside and out $6500 Call 940-218-8298 dition, has basket, $175 Call 940-891-2645 New women's bicycle with basket and lock. $25. 7 speed. Pink Call 940-808-0036

1995 TOYOTA COROLLA FACTORY MANUALS: REPAIR MANUAL RM404U, ELECT WIRING DIAG EWD214U, PAID $193.69 FOR BOTH, $25.00 CASH FOR BOTH. ASK FOR BILL 940-591-6052

A Good Boat with trailer, no title. $100. Please call or text for pictures or more information. 940-594-0210

Master tow tow dolley new tires wench good condition for wider vehicles, $750 Call 940-293-7580 Master Tow tow dolley, new tires, wench, good condition. For wider vehicles, $750. Call 940-293-7580

**Now Hiring** 1st and 2nd Shift Available FT, PT, Seasonal Voice-Pick Order Pullers $12.00 - $12.50/hour Equipment Operators $14.00/hour Health Benefits as of Day 1 Generous PTO Package Apply in person Monday - Friday 2900 Airport Road . Denton

A cleaning position working Part Time evenings M-F.

940-382-1712

Active Home Health is currently looking to fill a Director of Nurses and a Marketing/Liaison position. We offer a benefit package to include PTO, paid holidays, healthcare benefits, and 401k. Come GROW with us! Please send resume via fax at 940-686-0146 or email to sciulla@activehh.net.

After school Teacher:

Local child care center is looking for a school age teacher hours 26 pm Monday through Friday (no exceptions). Must have clean driving record, state and FBI background checks. Must be at least 21 years old. You will be driving a 15 passenger van. Must be a positive, caring, responsible person. Must be able to life at least 35 lbs several times a day. We have been in business for 20 years. We have a new facility at 4025 Teasley Lane in Denton, TX 76210. Please come by to fill out an application. Phone number 940-243-CARE(2273)

ANDERSON LANDSCAPE Hiring Foreman and General Laborers. Pay based on experience. 940-479-2247 andersonlandscape@embarqmail.com

Bartel Transportation CDL, Local *Haul Truck Drivers *Tanker Driver * Mixer Drivers * Dump Truck Drivers *Tractor Trailer Drivers

Also Hiring

Bus Drivers Krum Independent School District is needing bus drivers for short morning routes and afternoon routes. Must have CDL & P&S endorsements. Please contract Krum ISD Transportation Department at 940-482-2557 or visit www.krumisd.net/employment Krum ISD is an Equal opportunity Employer City of Denton Employment Opportunities Apply Online At www.dentonjobs.com

*Heavy Equipment & *Field Mechanic Apply at: Frank Bartel 7401 S. Hwy. 377 Aubrey, TX 76227

Care Givers

for 24 Hour Live-in Senior Care Call 940-390-1910 Monday-Saturday 8am-6:30pm

**$2500 sign on incentive ** We have an immediate opening for local/regional/OTR Class A CDL Truck Driver to haul bulk food grade flour. Out 1-12 days at a time, depending upon position. Average $1000-1700 gross, weekly. Benefits: Health, dental, life insurance, short/long term disability, AFLAC, 401K with company match, Vacation/holiday/years of service bonus pay. Flex Plan. $1,000.00 Safety incentive pay.. We also have a passenger program and PrePass+ Must have a Class A CDL License and good driving record. Join the leaders in specialized freight today! Visit wwtransportinc.com or call 319-768-5545 DE-3822

First State Bank

DATCU is Hiring! Tellers (PT&FT) Systems Programmer Apply online at datcu.org EOE Drivers needed. Class A CDL with tanker endorsement preferred. Both shift are available. Call Mon thru Fri 8am5pm only. 940-736-0758

Gainesville: F/T Teller/New Accts.-Floater Real Estate Loan Processor P/T & F/T Teller Denton: P/T Teller (M-F 11am -6pm & Saturday 8am Noon) F/T Teller Roanoke: FT Personal Banker Retail Services Supervisor Decatur: F/T Teller

www.DentonRC.com

NOW HIRING

CONTROLLER Located in Gainesville, Texas

Roles and Responsibilities • Provide unparalleled service internally and externally • Complete month end close (prepare journals for review and approval, prepare balance sheet reconciliations, prepare intercompany elimination schedules) • Prepare bank covenant compliance certificates and borrowing base calculations • Work across departments to identify and implement cost saving strategies • Prepare audit schedules and coordinate audit requests • Day-to-day oversight of accounting staff (Accounts Receivable, Accounts Payable, Purchasing, etc.) • Maintain fixed asset register and depreciation schedules • Review labor and overhead allocations to inventory costing • Manage customer credit and work with A/R team to facilitate collections • Prepare consolidation schedules for monthly package • Prepare schedules for financial analysis Qualifications and Education Requirements • CPA or actively pursuing • Team player • High performer and self-starter • Detail-oriented with high math aptitude • 4+ years of experience • Minimum 3 years audit experience with public accounting firm • Manufacturing background preferred DE-4396

PLEASE SEND RÉSUMÉ TO GINGIFSCOATINGS.COM

BUSINESS DIRECTORY I am a CARE GIVER available DMC assumes no responsibility for ad content. State Law requires 24/7. Kind, gentle, responsible. child care providers to obtain perLots of experience. Refs available mit from DFPS (TxDept Family & upon request. 903-360-3335 Protective Svcs) to provide child care outside of a child's home. Daycare providers must comply w/applicable state/local licensing laws before placing ad. ConDenton Media Co. assumes no sumers / day care providers may responsibility for advertising content. Be aware of licenses/ insur- learn more on licensing,regulation, permits req'd to operate childcare ances needed or required by law in TX@http://www.dfps.state.tx.us/ to perform certain services or before purchasing certain services

LSAauctions.com

LIVE  AM MON., AUG. . DALLAS POLICE AUTO POUND

1955 Vilbig, Dallas, TX 5.5% Buyers Premium Impounded & Abandoned Vehicles (Approx. 350 Vehicles) Full cash payment due immediately. All Sales Final, ‘As Is, Where Is’. No one under 18 yrs. allowed. Announcements made auction day supersede all prior advertising. (Next date is MON., SEPT. 10)

Introducing ClickNBuy DentonRC.com/Classifieds

DANIELSON CONCRETE

All Types of Concrete & Asphalt Work! Slabs, Drives, Patios & Excavation. Commercial & Residential. Free Estimates! Visa & Mastercard Accepted. 940-391-3830. What do you want to be when you grow up? Find out, in the Denton Record-Chronicle Classifieds.

(940) 387-7755

DMC assumes no responsibility for Advance-Fee Loans/Credit offers: ad content. Be aware of licenses/ It's illegal for companies doing insurances needed or required by business by phone to promise law to perform certain services or loan & ask you to pay before they before purchasing certain services deliver. For info., call toll-free 1877-FTC HELP (public srvc msg)

DENTON SAND & GRAVEL, INC.

WE DELIVER We Can Also Load Your Pickup, Truck, or Trailer. All Types of Rock, Sand, Gravel, & Road Base. Excellent Top Soil, Compost, Blended Soils & Mulch. Roads & Driveways Built.

Steve & Paula Shackelford In Denton Call 940-566-4664 Toll Free Call 1-800-321-3322 Credit Cards Accepted

LANGSTON'S Handyman I do tile, wood floors, minor electric. Build fences, decks, tape, bed & paint. 940-390-9989

ANDERSON LANDSCAPE DESIGN & INSTALLATION

Creative landscape plans, installation, renovation, stone work, patios, wet. walls, seasonal color, clean-ups, lawn maint., tree & shrub trimming, Denton Publishing assumes no sprinkler & drainage systems. responsibility for ad content. Cord All your lawn & landscape needs. of firewood=128 cu.ft.(8' long X 4' 20+ yrs exp, many references www.380handyman.com wide X 4'high).1/2 cord = 64 cu.ft. Member BBB Visa/MC/Disc wall hole*doors*catio*paint/text 940-479-2247, 972-822-1805 ure*shelving*chicken house *zombie proofing *& More.... Text/Call 940-222-7114

DJ's Clean Up and Demo Vacant buildings, homes, garages, storage buildings, barns. 817-403-4485, Sanger DMC assumes no responsibility for ad content. Be aware of licenses/ insurances needed or required by law to perform certain services or before purchasing certain services

AAA FREE HAULING (for salvage in most cases) WILLIE HUDSPETH 940-465-4321

Kelly Clean-Up Service

Appliances, Yard Waste, Don Bartel Trucking Furniture, Carpet!! We'll Haul It! & Excavating 940-231-1846 Sand Gravel Topsoil kellycleanupservice@yahoo.com Excellent American Painting 940-391-0279 Full services handyman,home reWayne's Tractor Service pair . Www.excellentamericanLots & Pasture Mowing, Lot painting.com. Call 214-938-1088 Clearing, Rock Driveways, Drainwww.DentonRC.com age, Sm Ponds. 940-391-1986

GILL'S LAWN SERVICE Cut trees, fence repair/bldg, mow edge, weedeat, flower beds, trim bushes, rake leaves, mulch. Free Est. 15% Senior Discounts 940-442-1132 or 940-442-1252

Sell that old car in the Denton Record-Chronicle Classifieds!

(940) 387-7755

Gainesville Lawnmower Repair. Servicing all of your lawnmower, 4 wheeler, and motorcycles. Del. & Pickup, 7dys/wk. 940-665-0331

All American Painting & Model Int. Ext., Stain, Faux Patch & Repairs. 17+ yrs Exp. Free Est. 940-442-4545 or 940-735-4944

DMC assumes no responsibility for ad content. Be aware of licenses & insurances needed or required by law to perform certain services or before purchasing certain services

Roof Repairs Whole Roofs Chimney Caps, Sky lights

940-383-0338

Anderson Lawn Sprinklers Repair. Visa/MC/Disc. TX LI#8773 940-479-2247 972-822-1805

NEW IMAGE

TREE SERVICE - Tree Removal -Tree Trimming - Landscaping Free Estimates! We ensure Your New Image. Luis 940-442-8592

TREES, INC

LARGE TREE EXPERTS TRIM, REMOVE, BRACE, LOT CLEARING. Insured -- Free Estimate.

940-367-1239; 940-482-6545

Veterinary Medical Services -August 20% off Dentals w/ free dental exams -Save 20% off Spay & Neuters until September 30th Other services: Exam/Vaccinations, Surgery, Laser Therapy, Baths, Boarding 940-365-7387

DR-C Classifieds DentonRC.com/Classifieds

We know you have a choice. Thank You for Choosing Us! Big League Landscape - Full Tree Service - We'll beat other estimates by 10%! Est. 1 1/2 yr local business. Fully insured. Call 940-613-5351 for estimate.

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Denton Record-Chronicle

1-FT SL Nursing Assistant Assisted Living The shift is Sunday through Thursday 11pm-7am. Assisted Living is a 7 to 1 resident/staff ratio. We are looking for someone who enjoys working with older adults in a long term care facility. PCA or CNA certification is a plus but not required. Must be 18 years of age or older and can lift 50 lbs. Pay is based on certification and experience. Please apply at www.good-sam.com and put Denton Village in the key word box All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to gender, sexual orientation, gender identity, race, color, religion, national origin, citizenship, age, disability, veteran status, genetic information, marital status or other protected status.

Cut & Grow Lawn Services LLC is looking for Landscape Laborer for their facility located 1804 Overland Drive Bridgeport TX 76426 use hand/power tools to maintain lawns, dig holes and trenches using hand tools, will dig trenches with a max width of 6 inches and a depth of 6 inches, trenches are to install sprinkler systems and/or plant, lay sod & plant. Involves bending, stooping, lifting and stretching on a frequent basis. May operate motorized vehicles. Must be able to lift 75 lbs daily, work in hot/cold weather, standing for long periods of time. No education / No experience requirements. 3 positions available You may submit resumes to 1804 Overland Bridgeport TX 76426 or email to: jerrod@cutandgrow.com or at www.workintexas.com Refer to job order 5350247

C.N.A. FT Double Weekend FT 6am -2pm Ft 10p-6am (rotate 4 on & 2 off) PT Sat/Sun 6am-2pm PT Sat/Sun 2pm-10pm

FT Charge Nurse LVN 2pm-10:30pm

Seeking Charge Nurse LVN to work our 2pm-10:30pm M-F shift. Must have a current Texas L.V.N. License. We are looking for a team player who wants to join our awesome team. Must be someone who loves to work with older Must have a current TX C.N.A. liadults in a long term care facility. cense, be 18 years old or older This shift pays a $1.50 per hour and be able to lift 50lbs. We are shift differential. looking for a team player who loves to work with older adults in Please apply at a long term care facility. We pay www.good-sam.com shift differential for different shifts. and put Denton Village in the key Weekends is $1.50; 10p-6am word box to find this job posting. $.75 and 2pm-10pm $1.50. If you Have Hazmat & Tanker CDL en- work the double weekend shift All qualified applicants will receive you can earn up to 4 hours per dorsement? Come apply to be consideration for employment week in Baylor pay. a PROPANE BOBTAIL without regard to gender, sexual DELIVERY DRIVER orientation, gender identity, race, Apply at color, religion, national origin, Call 940-482-3225 www.good-sam.com citizenship, age, disability, and put Denton Village in the veteran status, genetic Heavy Equipment Operators key word box to find information, marital status or Truck Drivers Class A or B our open slots. other protected status. Asphalt Plant Operator, Plant Laborer All qualified applicants will receive FT Scheduler Supervisor Concrete Workers consideration for employment Apply at 3020 Ft Worth without regard to gender, sexual We will be interviewing career oriDrive, Denton orientation, gender identity, race, ented people with a good work ethic and a passion for customer Online at www.jagoepublic.com color, religion, national origin, service. We are a 33 year old Or call 940-382-2581 citizenship, age, disability, company specializing in the EOE veteran status, genetic informahealthcare industry in 30 major tion, marital status or other markets across the US. Located protected status. between Lewisville and Denton in a country setting.

IS-Midas Technical System Manager 1) 1-2 years IT experience

2) Associates degree or equivalent combination of experience preferred 3) Experience with Quality or Process Improvement

Wise Health System 2000 S. FM 51 Decatur, TX 76234 www.wisehealthsystem.com EOE • a not for profit hospital DE-4367

d 33rU AL

2018

ANN

ANTIQUE TRACTOR and Farm Machinery Show

Saturday and Sunday

Sept. 1st & Sept. 2nd SHOW EVENTS:

• Wheat Threshing • Hay Baling • Tractor Games • Small Engine Displays • Corn Shelling • Corn Grinding in Grist Mill • Corn Picking • Horse-drawn Equipment • Steam Tractors • Tractor Races • Old-Time Plowing • Tractor Parade • Kiddie Pedal Tractor Pull • Arts & Crafts

Show Starts at 11 a.m. Lunch & Refreshments Available Vendors Fee $20.00 for 10 ft. x 10 ft. for 2-Day Show

Admission $5.00 Under 12 FREE

Dietary/Waitstaff (1) PT -includes weekends.

Gates Open at 9 a.m. For Information, Call Day (940) 736-4541 or Evening (940) 665-6823 Mail to: P.O. Box 895 Gainesville, TX 76241

Sponsored by Cooke County Antique Tractor and Farm Machinery Club

DE-3794

What we offer: Initial, ongoing, and continuous training A positive team environment Relaxed atmosphere Promotions based on results, not seniority 100% paid medical benefits, vacation and PTO

Seeking PT - weekend Dietary/Waitstaff Assistant. This will be on Sat/Sun from Skills Needed: approx. 7am-3pm (subject to Can take directions, but change based on needs). We also a self-starter are looking for someone who is 18 years or older; can lift 50lbs Supervisor experience preand is someone who loves to ferred but not necessary work with older adults in a long Have a good work ethic and term care facility. You must be reliable able to Speak/Read English and Able to multitask clear a criminal back ground Pay attention to details check . Basic computer skills includAll qualified applicants will receive ing basic/advance excel consideration for employment Ability to type 50 WPM without regard to gender, sexual Pass a background check orientation, gender identity, race, color, religion, national origin, Agree to drug test upon recitizenship, age, disability, quest veteran status, genetic Hours: 12:30pm to 9:00pm. Apinformation, marital status or proximately after six week of emother protected status. ployment you will work two Saturdays per month from 5am to11am Note: Heavy schedules could result in longer than your normal hours. Pay based on experience please fax resume to 940-241-1260 or email your resume to FT - LVN or RN Maryj@businessdeliverysystems.com (1) M-F

2pm-10:30pm

Take I-35 to Gainesville; Hwy. 82 West to Lindsay. Go North on FM 1199 from Lindsay 3 miles. Watch for signs!

FT nurse to work the floor 2pm-10:30pm Monday Friday. You must have a current Texas License and is someone who loves to work with older adults in a long term care facility. Apply at www.good-sam.com and put Denton Village in the Key Word Box. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to gender, sexual orientation, gender identity, race, color, religion, national origin, citizenship, age, disability, veteran status, genetic information, marital status or other protected status.

Hiring full or part time warehouse labor, temp or perm. All shifts. Apply in person 1304 Corporate Drive, Gainesville, TX. Hot Shot Driver needed, class A CDL (skid steer S & small materials) experience a must. Home every night. Great pay! Please call James Mon-Fri, 8-4 or leave message 214-460-6307, Sanger.

Housekeeper FT M-F days Dining Assistant FT Nursing Assistant- Assisted Living PT nights

Hiring a Senior Sales Assistant for wholesale giftware design Apply online at: company in north Texas . Must www.good-sam.com be proficient with Microsoft Office. Bachelors degree preferred. Apply in person, 1304 Corpo- EEOE: All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employrate Drive, Gainesville, TX, ment without regard to race, or email resume to color, religion, creed, gender, sstephens@thirstystone.com marital/familial status, national origin, ancestry, age, disability, protected veteran / military status, public assistance status, sexual orientation, genetic information or any other protected classes

How Hiring CDL Drivers and Warehouse Personal, Apply in person at Justin Seed Company 524 South FM 156 Justin Tx *Terms and Conditions Apply. *Must Mention Ad During Interview.

WI N STAR WO R LD CAS I N O & R E S O RT Managers Beverage Servers Bartenders Barbacks Stock Clerks Line Cooks Sauté Cooks Grill Cooks

Prep Cooks Cashiers Food Runners Dishwashers Dining Room Attendants Servers Hosts Golf Cart Beverage Servers

equal oppo rtu n ity e m ploye r

DE-4171

Apply online at www.traditionsspirits.com or in person at the Traditions Spirits Administrative Office 11073 Rogers Rd. | Thackerville, OK 73459 | (580) 276-9523

IMMEDIATE! Magma Publishing is hiring: · Commissioned Sales Reps (+ bonus) · Graphic Design Consultant Magazine print ad sales and design. Flexible hours. Multiple counties. Apply: www.magmapub.com/careers Internet Sales Manager needed for a giftware/tabletop design company in north Texas. Must have Bachelors degree and experience managing multiple online accounts. Send resume and salary requirements to sstephens@thirstystone.com

JOBS! JOBS! JOBS!

Karl Klement Ford is seeking to add a qualified

PARTS BACK COUNTER PERSON to our team. We offer our associates a team environment, great benefits and ongoing training and support. If you are seeking a rewarding career that provides integrity, transparency, professionalism and teamwork, now is the time to accelerate your profession and be part of the best company in automotive retail. In addition to competitive pay, we offer our associates the following benefits: n Sign-On Bonus! n Health, Dental, Vision, Life, and Disability insurance n 401(k) plan with company match n Paid Training and Vacation n 5 Day Work Week. QUALIFICATIONS n Two or more year’s related experience in an automotive parts department is preferred. n One or more years of sales experience preferred. n Excellent customer service skills. n Ability to work well in a process driven environment.

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Sunday, August 26, 2018

For consideration, apply to Karl Klement Ford or submit resume to: Jodi Pettis, H/R Director E: jdusek@klementford.com P: 940-627-6362 ~ F: 940-627-6368 H/R Office: 605 N. Business 287, Ste. 102, Decatur, TX 76234

Machine Operators Manufacturing Assembly Maintenance Mechanics Forklift Drivers General Labor Quality Control Administrative Assistant Apply at www.otstaffing.com Or Call 940-442-6550 for more information

LEGAL ASSISTANT PARALEGAL Decatur Law Firm, 2-years family law and personal injury law experience required. Self-motivated; 60+ WPM, Bi-lingual helpful; salary based on experience. Send resume to Office Manager, P.O. Box 1711, Decatur, TX 76234 or to attorneyintx@yahoo.com.

Make $18-$20/hr, Cleaning Houses, M-F! Own Transportation. Please Call 214-855-7189

North Texas Heating & Air Now Hiring Experienced Service Technicians & Lead Installers with a minimum of 3 years experience. Must have driver's license, clean driving record and clean background. Apply at 3209 Fort Worth Dr, Denton or www.nthac.com/aboutus

La La Enterprises, LLC needs 70 temp/full-time Tree Trimmers, Pruners & Landscape Laborers. $16.51 hr and $24.77 hr OT. M-F 7am to 6pm from 11/15/18 to 4/1/19. No exp. req. and min. OTJ training provided. Clear sites of woody & herbaceous materials, such as tree stumps, fallen trees & limbs. Cut away dead & excess branches from trees. Load debris & refuse onto trucks & haul away for disposal. Operate shredding & chipping equip. & feed limbs & brush into the machines. Must be able to lift up to 50 lbs on a regular basis to load and unload equip. and stock. Must be able to bend, walk, stand and stoop for long periods work in extreme weather. Hours may vary somewhat due to weather & workload. Job location in Krum, TX. No drop ins please. Possibility of performance based raise. Must pass employer paid post hire drug test. Post hire employer paid background check. Transportation provided to jobsite from central location. Please inquire about the job opportunity or send applications, indications of availability, and/or resumes directly to: Texas Workforce Commission, 1300 Teasley Ln., Denton, TX 76205 (940) 3809652 or 505 Park Lane, Krum, TX 76249-Refer to job order # TX 8658454. Transportation (incl. meals and to the extent necessary lodging) to the place of employment will be provided, at its cost to workers reimbursed, if the worker completes half the employment period. Return transportation will be provided if the worker completes the employment period or is dismissed early by employer. Employer provided tools, supplies and equip. required to perform the job at no charge.

Remodeling contractor seeks helper. Tile, drywall, paint, flooring installs. Willing to train. Lv msg or text 972-898-2144.

Saddle treeless Bob Marshall Sport saddle with horn. Golden tan suede, & dark brown leather trim 15 inch. Weighs 20lbs, new and beautiful. $1200. 940-783-2282 Saddle, general purpose TR10 wide. English. Karl Niedersus, Sanger Bank is taking applications for motivated and friendly made in Austria. Black with brown seat, buffalo print on seat and individuals interested in banking thigh flaps. D-rings and crupper, careers. Several positions gorgeous! $2200., new condition. available. Inquire in person at 940-783-2282 Sanger Bank, 501 N. Stemmons Sanger, Texas. Ask to see Cindy. E.O.E. SkiHi Enterprises, Ltd. Is now accepting applications for the following positions in the Denton & DFW area. Superintendents, Experienced Licensed Plumbers, Med-Gas Certified Plumbers, Experienced Plumbing Apprentices and Helpers

For Sale. 2 year old male goat. Great for Breeding. $100. Brown and White. Call 940-566-2462 ask for Sue.

Blue reclining lift chair, only used 6 months. Works and looks like new. $650. Heavy duty wheel chair. Good condition. $1500. obo Call 940-465-5606 Kids GPS phone watch. BRAND NEW! Never opened. $30.972-832-5289

Go Elite Scooter 3 wheel with charger good conition $300. Call 940-222-7977 Simply Go Oxygen Concentrator, all flow rates, 3 batteries and a battery charger with plug ins for the house and the car. Includes a portable oxygen mobile cart. Only 3 years old, used three times. Great condition, like new. I paid almost $3,000, asking $1,500 OBO. Call 469-763-3214 or 972-415-2731

FREE CHIHUAHUAS both coats. HP Slimline - Model S3400f (4.0) Wheelchair, good condition, MALES NEUTERED, 500 GB Hard Drive, $80. FEMALES SPAYED, Window 7 Ultimate software, Walker $40. SHOTS, ADULT HOMES. HP WM Monitor and 940-383-8749 APPROVED HOMES ONLY. Wage Based upon Experience printer PSC 1610 (All In one), 940-206-0281 Consideration for employment is Wireless keyboard & mouse. contingent upon passing a I have 3 male kittens needing a Excellent condition except printer. mandatory drug screen and Back- good home. One is a yellow tab(The whole set; $300.00) ground check. (940) 262-7724. 1 electric hospital bed, works by, one is black with white feet, great $350. Jazzy electric wheel and one is black with small white Apply in Person chair need battery $300, 1 Lil sew patch on chest. They are 6 SKIHI Enterprises, Ltd. and sew $25.00. Extra Large rice weeks old, litter box trained and 2943 Stuart Dr cooker $40 OBO, 1 Creatology eating dry food. Please call or 2 bar stools, dark wood. Seat is young artist set in wooden case, Fort Worth, TX 76104 text (940) 315-5345 or (940) 595wood and slightly curved. Very 103 piece, $25. 1 Art skills premiFax 817-921-0777 or 1570. nice. $30 each. 940-783-2282 E-mail: frontdesk@skihi.com um artist case 192 pcs $40. 2 2 wide seat swivel upholstery bar artists messenger bag art set 38 pcs $10 ea,4 cater pans $25 stools, curved wood back, very each Call 940-465-5606 nice and comfortable. Dark wood. Don't let your plants dry out! $75 each. 940-783-2282 1 frigidaire microwave in great Use a moisture meter, new in condition $100 and 1 GE also in container $5 940-566-3677 great condition $100 Garden supplies, garden totes Call 940-387-3632 SL Nursing Assistant great for caring for storing tools, 2 vintage Cintique chairs made in gloves, new $1-$3 Each. Garden Universal Worker England original cushion solid seat, adjustable height, great for ash frames with spring steel sysgarden work, like new $12. Leaf tem. $50 pair. 940-566-1717 rake, with padded handle, new, (1) FT Sunday $8. Soil testing kit, new in pack- Beautiful brass and white bed Thursday 11p-7a 2-Go Gator All weather bean bag head and foot set that is queen age $6. Call 940-566-3677 & washer toss. $25. size that I will sell for only $50. Seeking a nursing assistant to 1-Superior Tournament washer OBO Call 940.243.3883 work with our amazing Assisttoss $25. Black Thomasville Leather reclin- 2-Superior metal horse shoe set ed Living Team. A/L is a 7 to 1 er almost new in great condition resident/staff ratio. Looking for $20. Acreage Services $150 Denton. 940-391-7948 someone who enjoys working 2-Stunt Twister Z Cyclone LVN-Charge Spraying, Fertilizing, Seeding. with older adults in a long term Tumbler radio control $10. Tommy 940-390-3130 Nurse - Double care facility. If you are 1-Magellan Girls dome tent PCA/CNA certified the pay combo 5' x 4 x 36" $25. Alfalfa Large & Small Square Wknds starts at $9.50 plus any experi1-"Frozen" child's folding chair By the bale or Semi load. ence you have. $10. Round bales & small square FT - LVN to work Sat/Sundays 1-"Spiderman" child's folding coastal. 217-737-7737, Aubrey. 5:30a-10:30p. We pay $1.50 shift Must apply at chair. $10. differential and you can earn 940-465-5606 Baylor Pay. Must have a current Texas LVN www.good-sam.com 20 foot goose neck trailer, Book shelf that revolves with adlicense; be able to lift 50 lbs. We justable shelves. Can be used Two 7,000 pound axles. $2,800. are seeking someone who loves and put Call 940-395-9090 for books also. $29 obo. to work with other adults in a long Denton Village 972-318-1212 4 drawer tall metal file cabinet. term care facility and is a team in the Keyword box to find this $45 obo. player. job posting. Horse Quality Hay Call 940-300-8903 Round bales & square bales. Please apply at All qualified applicants will 4 Fuel storage barrels 55 gallon Call for pricing, will deliver. www.good-sam.com receive consideration for emwith dolly and fuel pump included 575-386-6294 and put Denton Village in the ployment without regard to $300 for all. . Key Word Box to find our gender, sexual orientation, genMesquite Killing 940-566-2334 open positions. der identity, race, color, reli- Mesquite tree and brush killing. 4 new Pirelli Scorpion all season gion, national origin, citizenTommy 940-390-3130 All qualified applicants will tires, 255/45/R20. 700 miles. Cost ship, age, disability, veteran receive consideration for employ$1020 new. Sell for $550. Call status, genetic information, Lamp with 3-way light ment without regard to gender, marital status or other protect940-594-3434 (low, med, hi). $27 obo. sexual orientation, gender identied status. 972-318-1212 800 feet of 2 3/8 OD pipe fencing ty, race, color, religion, national Lawn boy 6.75 $85. Craftsman with 2 post already welded on Thirstystone Resources, origin, citizenship, age, disability, precision with grass catching bag each 20ft joint. $1 foot. veteran status, genetic informa- the leader in coasters and home $100. Both run good. Call Call 940-241-2700 entertainment product, is seeking tion, marital status or other 940-442-9971 a Full-Time/Freelance Product protected status. Approximately 70 feet of used Photographer /Re-toucher aluminum rain Guttermaxx gutter to photograph product, edit/reNOW HIRING and other necessary parts that touch photos, and organize digital Daybreak Community Services is seldom have to be cleaned out. files. Position is in office Mon-Fri hiring FT and PT Direct Care Longest part 25 feet. $90 OBO. Leather sofa & love seat set. 8am to 6pm with overtime as Staff to work in the Denton Area. Light colored, goes great with any Highland Village, 972-639-6789 needed. Apply in person Looking for passionate people to decor. Leather is still soft and in 1304 Corporate Drive, provide care and enhancing the great condition. Smoke/pet free Gainesville, TX, or email quality of life for the individuals in Lithium-Ion Craftsman Cordless home. Sofa is 76"l x 30"d x 30"h. resume/portfolio to our care. Beginning pay rate is 24-inch Rotating Hedge Trimmer; Love seat is 52"l x 30"d x 30"h. sstephens@thirstystone.com $9.00. Must have valid DL. like brand new, only used once, $397 OBO. Will separate. Apply at www.cg-idd.com cost $180, sell for $125 Call Traffic Control Supervisor 972-318-1212 940.243.3883 Traffic Control Technicians Prefer: Ability to work nights Auricular Therapy Magnets Stop Certifications a plus smoking with the help of ZeAbility to drive TMA a plus rosmoke. One Kit lasts a lifetime. Apply at 3020 Ft Worth Drive, $35 Call 940-300-8903. Denton Or Online at NOW HIRING!! www.jagoepublic.com Bench constructed from 2 x 12 Entry Level Positions EOE lumber, exterior tan finish. A Pair of Eastlake Chairs 1st & 2nd Shifts Wise Health System Highland Village. $30 obo. from 1870's. AC Environment 2000 S. FM 51 Decatur 76234 Magnolia canvas 2x3 $20 AbGood wooden stool, 29 1/2 Gold Upholstery. Walnut Wood. $11-$11.50 per hour For a listing of openings, visit stract 20in x 40in $20 inches high, 13 inches diameter, Good Condition. Apply at www.otstaffing.com www.wisehealthsystem.com Call 972-318-1212 round woven seat, tan color. $140 Cash. Denton. Or call 940-442-6550 Highland Village. $12. 940-206-2900. Mirror, wall hanging, 28 3/4” x 972-639-6789 NO TEXT PLEASE. 36 3/4”, has wood trim in a warm maple color. $35. Can your own fruits and vegetaATTENTION: DMC assumes no 940-783-2282 bles. Canning kit includes 3 jars responsibility for ad content. with lids, canning rack with lifter, Consideration should be given recipes and instructions. New in before making a financial committbox $7. Call 940-566-3677 ment. Please be aware of long distance charges, application fees, & Champion 1800 Watt Generator. credit card info you provide. Used only to keep it running. Opportunities Available! Books/lists of jobs do not guaranRetails $200 will sell for $125. tee employment or that applicants Antique 2 Chinese Ceremonial Phone 940-591-1842. Dolls. 1-Boy, 1-Girl. 25 inches. APPLY ONLINE AT will be qualified for jobs listed. Blue & white porcelain head, www.highlandvillage.org Pier One 44 inch tall pottery vase, Craft supplies and patterns all hands, feet. Soft body. Human Resources indoor/outdoor, excellent condisorts $1 and up Call Excellent condition. $150 obo. 1000 Highland Village Rd tion $99. Call 972-318-1212 940-808-6946 940-218-1977 No text please. Highland Village TX 75077 Dishwasher racks for Talltub, Phone: 972-899-5087 Unemployed and looking for Antique cabinet with Singer sears, whirlpool, $12 cash for EOE work. Experienced and dependsewing machine, pedal style. pair, Northwest Denton able house cleaner seeking em- works good. $75. Antique coffee 940-206-2900 NO TEXT ployment. References upon retable, $75. quest. Call 940-231-2816 Call 254-707-0971 Garmin (NUVI) 255WT (3"X5") Box and accessories included.. Unemployed looking for work. $45.00 (Probably needs to upCustom sewing for the home. Painters wanted date information) Call: Cushions, drapes, slipcovers, Real Peacock Feathers Bou940-262-7724 DFW Area 30 plus years experience working quet, wood vase included. $24. Experience Preferred. in an upholstery shop. Denton. George & Martha Washington Call 972-318-1212 call office 817-341-1777 ext. 1. Call 940-435-3812 Lamp - $185.00 obo. Call 940-300-8903 Unemployed looking for work. Private home health care Antique Japanese Stoneware George Foreman HUGE grill; available Denton and surrounding Sake Large Jug. #27. 133 sq. in. easy-to-clean grilling areas. Day, evening or over night With original handles. $175. surface, sloped design knock out available, all aspects of caring Call 940-218-1977 the fat Dishwasher safe accesproviding, Home safety, Dr. visits, Plastic Fabricator On The No Text Please sories. cost $180; sell for $80. errands, family relief. Job Training Call 940-243-3883 MOVING SALE. Beautiful solid Sealy twin mattress 38x75 still in Live in 24 hr shifts available. Do you like working with your Call 956-621-9748 Denton/DFW oak dining room suite, includes 6 plastic wrapper, only used less hands? Did you know you can Grandfather Clock, ft. pedestal table with 18 inch than a month. Also white mattress weld plastic? $50 cash. Unemployed, looking for work. leaf, lighted 5 ft. hutch, and 6 pad and set of sheets. Paid $125 Come work for us and we will 940-206-2900 Room for Barter? Denton based plush chairs. Price reduced to just for the mattress, will sell all teach you how. Metal welding NO TEXT PLEASE. 56 yr old single Christian woman $750. Also, 8 piece place setting for only $75. Call 940.243.388 and woodworking experience looking to barter/assist elderly of Lenox Solitaire china, includes Husky hydraulic firewood splitter helpful. Detail oriented, selfwoman w/household needs, serving pieces Like new, rarely $900. Call 940-395-9090 starter, dependable, work overchores and errands on a daily used. $500 Also, Lenox Crystal in time as required. This is a family Large commercial cotton candy basis or as needed. A bedroom/ Maywood pattern. Rarely used. owned business that has been in machine. Classic Sloss by bath is required with no monthly $300 Price negotiable on all Lewisville for 38 years. Paragon. Cash and Carry. You rent under barter terms. Extreme- items. Call 406-291-6563 or 940Please call Dwight at 214-850pick up $500 Tioga Texas. ly experienced, resourceful, de387-3524. 5907 or email your resume to Call 940-437-3113 pendable, trustworthy person. ExSmall roll top home office desk. DwightL1313@gmail.com. Pri Madonna Noritake China 12 cellent references. Contact Shelly Red, well designed, nice looking place settings gold/brown roses Positions open in Denton, and 469-328-7748 leave message or with gray leaves, coupe, $300. in- piece of furniture. Quality conemail struction by Riverside, excellent Sanger for male/female Attencludes extra pieces. rainbowskys888@gmail.com condition. 44 high, 34 wide, 32 dant /Caregiver. Needed to do 940-300-4338 deep. 1 3/8 space for laptop to light cooking & housekeeping. slide under pigeon hole unit. Contact Isabell at 940-498-1524 Cords pass through rear panel. Zelano Health Care Paid $500 in 2005. Sell for $175 WANT TO BE A Mongoose crusher roller skates. BUY SELL & REPAIR Working including office swivel chair. FIREFIGHTER? & Non-working appliances, 817-403-3994. Heavy. Seller can Adjustable size 5-8 in women's. in Less Than 6 Months? In great condition! Lightly used. some brands. 377 APPLIANCE, not help load. Texas Commission on $15 972-832-5289 1010 Ft Worth Dr. 940-382-8531 Fire Protection and EMT cert. Enroll now for classes! Write: Haz-Co, PT RN Weekend PO Box 3063, Sherman, TX 75091 or call 903-564-3862 Bell Car Seat Bicycle Mount. Supervisor $45. 940-383-8749 Seeking Part Time Weekend RN New 5 ft X 8ft United States Tan Lift chair. Excellent condition! Supervisor to work Sat/Sun 8:00Navy Flag, $65 OBO Only asking $125! Please call 4:30pm. Must have a current TX 940-300-8903 (940) 300-7075 for more RN License and is someone who information! Old Buffet used for storage under loves to work with older adults in carport. Weathered but still in a long term care facility. We are Bob Marshall Sports Saddle well Twin size loft bed frame. good condition. Needs TLC. looking for a leader who can man- worn no horn, 15 ½ inch seat. Never been used, still in the box. Black suede. $300 FREE!!! A VERY LARGE WOOD age the HCC on the weekends. $150. Call 940-783-2282 SPOOL TABLE. 4 FEET TALL, 3 We pay $1.50 shift differential for Text me at 940-391-7626 FEET ACROSS THE TOP. weekend shifts. Bob Marshall Treeless Sports FREE. Frosted Glass shower Saddle with horn lace wrapped, door, 62 inches tall by Apply at Boys size 6 black dress shoes. with silver logo cap. Black suede 21 inches wide, Free www.good-sam.com Only used once. $10. and leather. 14 ½ inches. Like Please Call 940-382-6039 and put Denton Village in the key 972-832-5289 new. $950 Call 940-783-2282 4 Wheel walker with seat. Very word box. sturdy condition, $100. Push Old insulators. Leather saddle, 15 inch all Wheelchair, average size, $100 $10 each OBO. around saddle built by Mark All qualified applicants will reCall 940-387-5632 940-300-8903 Schumacher, Wolsey, South ceive consideration for employDakota. Like new $950. ment without regard to gender, Adult motorized wheel chair in ex- One 10 foot Werner step ladder 940-783-2282 sexual orientation, gender identicellent condition complete with $40, one 13 foot Werner step ladty, race, color, religion, national charger, and manual. $300 OBO der $100. Old vitamaster treadmill Saddle, leather, 15”+, horn, origin, citizenship, age, disability, ralaide bowman roper tree, built will deliver for additional gas mon- works fine, $80. Nova 4 wheel veteran status, genetic informaey. Adult regular wheel chair ex- walker with seat, hand brake, and by Gene Bullington, Mulino, Justin cowgirl boots. tion, marital status or other proOregon, nice! $600. In great condition! Size 6 1/2. $45 cellent condition, $50. Call or text. basket, $40. Call 940-382-3948 tected status. Cash only. 940-594-0210 940-783-2282 972-832-5289


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Sunday, August 26, 2018

Denton Record-Chronicle

PUBLISHER'S NOTICE: All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise COME SMELL THE ROSES "any preference, limitation, or discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin, or intention to make any such preference, limitation, or discrimination." We My late wife taught piano several will not knowingly accept advertisyears; need to dispose of her ing for real estate which is in viola- Welcome back UNT Students library. Includes The International tion of the law. All persons are *Central H/A Library of piano music (17 vols., hereby informed that all dwellings *Frost free Fridge plus 3 supplemental vols.mint advertised are available on an *Your own Hot Water Heater condition w/bookcase), dozens of equal opportunity basis. Patio Bar Set with glass top and 2 *8 Foot walk in closet Schirmer's collections of the masremovable shelves, can hold an *½ Bock East of Campus $620 ters (Beethoven, Bach, Chopin, umbrella, comes with 4 high back Call 940-391-5443 2 pm-8 pm Mozart, Liszt, Haydn, et al.), plus stools, beige in color. $60 obo or 940-898-8080 2 pm- 6 pm. many smaller collections and 60x38x30 940-566-1717 1 AVAILABLE sheet music (file drawers included). 940-218-2892. $200. Ramp trifold, highland ramparts 6 Cash only. feet long 1500 lb load capicity. $130. Cart 10 cubic feet steel, precisefit, barely used $30. 3 Tuff Stuff stock water tanks 40 gallon each. $30 each. 940-782-2282 Madden Portable Buildings $0 App, Luxury Downtown! & Carports 3310 Ft. Worth Dr Sewing Machine Nelco, in conmaddenportablebuildings.net 1BR $945 2BR $1195 3BR $1445 Near TWU, Quiet, sole cabinet with 3 draws, inWood Floors, Washer/Dryer 940-382-7060 cludes orginial instruction booklet, 940-368-6419 $40. Denton. 940-382-3513 2 bed/2 bath. www.DentonMelrose.com

Patio bar set with glass top 2 removable shelves, can hold a umbrella comes with 4 high back chairs, beige in color. $60. 60 inches wide 30 inch tall 38 inches deep. 940-566-1717

Small pet carrier, solid wood, can be one or two compart1696977ments. Heavy duty, opens from the top or side, $25 obo. 972639-6789

** AMAZING COMMUNITIES ** Spacious floor plans! 1/2 OFF DEPOSIT! Call 940566-0033 525 S. Carroll Blvd, #100, Denton Tx. 76201 Reserve yours today!!

Stools; two sturdy wooden stools; Denton, 2137 Savannah Trail one with wooden top, one with Fri 8-24, 9-4, Sat 8-25, 9-4, Sun padded blue cloth top; sell both 8-26, 11-3. Living estate sale with for $25. Call 940-243-3883 traditional household furnishings including two queen size tempurpedic mattresses, sectional sofa, pedestal table and chairs. Also offered Royal Albert old Country Rose China, original art work, plus garage full of tools and many more items. To much to list. Managed by Nancy Draver. Vintage Chinese Floor Candle Holders, one pair, green jade, three tiers, with carved brass. 35" tall. $600 FIRM for the set. Call for appointment only. 940-218-1977 No text.

2 bedroom, 2 bath, Very Clean, New Flooring, Fresh Paint. Completely Remodeled. Near TWU in Denton. $900/Month, $300 dep.Call 469-831-2086 2/2 near TWU. C/HA, built in appliances. $900/mo. Available Now. Crouch Realty 940-390-0419

BUY IT. SELL IT. FIND IT. C L A S S I F I E D

Residential, Commercial, Land, Real Estate Sales.

No Pets, Call for appt. 940-390-0328 REDUCED RATES FOR IMMEDIATE MOVE IN 808 Austin eff $695 all bills paid 408 Texas eff $695 all bills paid 605 Meadowview 2 -1.5 $995 2508 W Hickory eff $675 200 Hann Jr1 725 www.cbartproperties.com

940-383-2141

SMALL CABIN VALLEY VIEW AREA. $185 A WEEK OR $700 A MONTH ALL BILLS PAID. 940-284-0834

SPACIOUS 1 & 2 Bedrooms 223 Fry St- 1/2 Blk to Unt- 850 Near Universities SQ Ft. 2 bedroom, 1 bath Condo. Double walls/Windows/Storage/ Frost Free Refrigerator. No pets W/D/. Tenants pay bills-$900 De- $595 & Up. Call 940-566-0060 posit/Rent $950. Pet Friendly 940-367-3191

C Bar T Properties UNT-TWU + other areas 940-383-2141 for rental info www.cbartproperties.com

Brent Chow---BBS Realty Estate Sales---Liqudations, DFW/ Denton/Robson Ranch over 33 yrs of experience. 940-453-5159

Available for August Move-in 208 Ruddell, 1/1, $800. 1826 Sena, 2/1, $995.

LOTS from $445 - $480/Month

COMMERCIAL SPACE 2800 SQ FT. 420 E. MCKINNEY IN OLD MILL VILLAGE. 940.381.6675 tnt@tntprop.com

NEW duplex 3100 and 3104 Bell $1650 p/mth $1000 Deposit 3br/3bth! Covered Parking Denton, 1000 Cleveland St. & NO SMOKING NO PETS Move In 309 Bryan St. 1bd/1bth 600sq ft Special $500 off of first months $725/mo $350 dep. First Full rent 940.381.6675 Month Rent Half Off!!!! No smk/pets TNT Properites 940.381.6675 FREE LOCATOR SERVICE 613 Bernard, $850 Oakland/Congress, $850/$775. 940-566-4900. Elisha Bomar, Suzanne Fickey broker

2 bedroom 1 bath house on 4 acres in country, 10 minutes from Denton. $800 month, 972-489-8012

Kings Team Realty Veteran Owned Call Gaylon King 940-368-9312

QUICK CLOSE FAST CASH!! AS-IS/NO REPAIRS EASY MOVE!

with Carport and/or Shed Up to $2000 Move In Incentive! Centrally located 940-387-9914

Close to square!

Executive Office Space Available. Call 940-387-7467

940-383-2141

cbartproperties.com *Desert Sands Motel-Denton* CUSTOM S. DENTON HOME 3/2/2 1800 sf, gated, fncd, fans, Weekly only $230 and up, refrig fp, w/d, frmls, br bar, w-in's, c/tile & microwave. Free local calls, pets ok $1550+dp. 940-383-1940 Showtime, wifi. 940-387-6181

Denton, 9305 Glen Falls Available Auguast1st 3/2/2 Guyer/Harpool District $1400/ month Call Jason 940-453-9700

PUBLISHER'S NOTICE: All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation, or discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial Look From Home or national origin, or intenstatus, See Available Rentals at tion to make any such preference, jimmybrownrealtor.com limitation, or discrimination." We Jimmy Brown Prop. Mgmt. will not knowingly accept advertis940-387-4323 ing for real estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an Two bedroom apartments at 326 equal opportunity basis Peach St. for $850 SANGER LAND FOR SALE Call 940 566 5717 or email 2 Acre lots & 10+ Acres killianpropertymanagement@ CALL 940-536-3334 gmail.com for availability! Daphne Real Estate, LLC

www . DentonRC.com/ Classifieds

Find what you’re looking for.

BARBARA RUSSELL, REALTORS Real Estate Brokerage 940-566-2730

DentonRC.com/ Classifieds

Looking 2 Sell? Better Service, Better Results Jack Ragsdale, Realtor®

Low Inventory

Denton RecordChronicle Classifieds

CENTURY 21 Judge Fite 25 Offices in North Texas 940.320.4355 www.c21jf.us

CALL (940) 381-7045

Walk-in Closets,

Golf clubs, bag & cart. Good condition. $90. 940-383-8749

Stacking bins 18 gallon with lids that fold back for easy access great for storing pet food, garden supplies, tools, household, etc like new. $7 each 940-566-3677

Women's clothes. New & used. Large - 2X 20 tops/blouses New with tags $10. each Lightly worn .50 cents each 940-465-5606

3 bedroom homes available soon. Check back later. 940-391-8795 3927 Redstone, all brick. 3 bedroom 1.5 bath. 2 car garage. Ceiling Fans. All kitchen appliances & brand new. Fenced yard & storage building. Includes w/d. $1200 Mo, $1200 Dep Small pet ok with $200 non refundable pet dep. D & S Rentals 940-453-5397

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TOWN OF PONDER NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Fiscal Year 2018-19 Budget NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Ponder Town Council will

Denton Record-Chronicle conduct a Public Hearing on the

Fiscal year 2018-19 budget at 6:00 pm on Monday, September 10, 2018 in Ponder Town Hall, located at 102 W Bailey Street, Ponder, Texas. All interested parties are encouraged to attend. The proposed budget document will be available for review in the City Secretarys Office from 7:30 am to 5:00 pm, Monday through Thursday and 7:30 am to 11:30 pm on Friday, beginning Septem305 Benjamin Dr, Townhome, ber 1, 2018. Final adoption of the 1,633sf, 3 BR, 2.5 BA, 1-Car Gar, FY 2018-19 Budget will be conFP, wet bar, fncd backyd, $160's, sidered at this Town Council W & W, RLTRS, 940-391-2379 Meeting on Monday, September 10, 2018.

Access legals: www.dentonrc.com Bid Invitation for Asphalt Paving North Central Texas College (NCTC) is soliciting bids for Asphalt Paving on the Gainesville Campus. For copies of paving specifications, contact Dan Doss, at (940) 668-4249 or ddoss@nctc.edu. For clarification of bid specifications, contact Jack Cable at, (940) 668-4368 or jcable@nctc.edu. Bids should be submitted in sealed envelope marked “BID ASPHALT PAVING�. A prebid meeting will be held on September 5, 2018, at 10am, at 685 Bonner Road, Gainesville, TX 76240. Bids must be received to Dan Doss, Director of Purchasing, North Central Texas College 1525 West California Street, Room 102, Gainesville TX. 76240 by 2:00 p.m. on Monday September 10, 2018. Late bids, emailed bids, and faxed bids will not be accepted. NCTC reserves right to reject any or all proposals and to waive any or all formalities. NCTC does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, gender, religion, age, disability in employment, or the provision of services. drc 8/26 & 9/2/2018

TOWN OF PONDER NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Fiscal Year 2018-19 Budget

Sheri Clearman City Secretary Town of Ponder drc 8/26/2018 NOTICE OF PUBLIC MEETING TO DISCUSS DENTON INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT'S State Financial Accountability Rating Denton Independent School District will hold a public meeting at 6:00 P.M., September 11, 2018 in the Board Room of the Dennis E. Stephens Central Administration Building located at 1307 N. Locust Street, Denton, Texas. The purpose of this meeting is to discuss Denton ISDs rating on the states financial accountability system. drc 8/26/2018 CITY OF SANGER, TEXAS NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Notice is hereby given that public hearings will be held by the City Council in the Council Chambers, City Hall, 502 Elm Street, Sanger, Texas at 7:00 p.m. on Tuesday, September 10th, 2018, for the purpose of considering the following:

*A request for a Variance from Section 16 SF-8 (Single Family Residential District - 8), Exhibit A Zoning Ordinance of the City NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that of Sanger, Chapter 14 Planning the Ponder Town Council will and Zoning of the City of conduct a Public Hearing on the Sanger Code of Ordinances, to Fiscal year 2018-19 budget at allow variance from minimum 6:00 pm on Monday, September lot width of sixty (60) feet for 10, 2018 in Ponder Town Hall, lo- one of the two proposed lots cated at 102 W Bailey Street, for a replat of Lot 2(PT),3(N21) Ponder, Texas. All interested Block 37 of Original Town of parties are encouraged to attend. Sanger, being approximately NUMBER: A18-0002 0.35 acres (15,246 square feet) ThePROJECT proposed budget document will PROJECT be available for review Lakeside in the and generally NAME: Place located southCity Secretarys Office from 7:30 east of the intersection of Loam to 5:00 pm, Monday through cust Street and South 6th Street. HEARING Thursday NOTICE and 7:30 amOF to 11:30 PUBLIC pm on Friday, beginning Septem- *A request for a Variance from ber 1, 2018. Final adoption of the set-back requirements of SinFY NOTICE 2018-19 Budget be con- gle Family IS willHEREBY GIVENResidential TO District ALL sidered at this Town Council 10 Zoning District for Lot 1, INTERESTED THAT: 7, Sanger Trails Phase Meeting on Monday, PERSONS, September Block 2A within thehold City of Sanger, 10, The 2018.City of Denton City Council will a public being approximately 0.192 hearing on Tuesday, September 11, 2018, to acres, and generally located Sheri Clearman of theregarding intersection of Cityconsider Secretary adoption of ansouthwest ordinance Marion Road and Lake Park Town of Ponder the voluntary annexation Drive.of approximately *A Replat of Lots 1R, 2R drc 86.47 8/26/2018acres of land, generally located north ofand 3R, Block 1, L.L. & T. Addition, Hickory Creek Rd, and south Creekdale being of a Replat of Lot 1,View Block 1, L.L. & T. Addition, in the Exby the City of Denton, Denton County, Texas.(ETJ) traterritorial Jurisdiction of the City of Sanger, being apacres,the and For more information,proximately please 7.026 contact generally located north of FM Department of Development Services at (940) 455 and approximately 1300 feet east of the intersection of 349-8351. Union Hill Road and FM 455. # FM 455. All interested citizens and property owners are hereby notified of their right to appear and be heard on this matter. Cheryl Price City Secretary, City of Sanger drc 8/26/2018

MEETING DETAILS: Tuesday, September 11, 2018 at 6:30 p.m. City Hall, City Council Chambers 215 E McKinney St Denton, TX 76201 Publication Date: August 26, 2018 DE-4481

AESA16-0003/Country Club Road Estates

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN TO ALL INTEREST PERSONS, THAT: The City of Denton Planning and Zoning Commission will hold a public hearing and consider making a recommendation to the City Council regarding a request by Forestridge Inv. Ltd. for an Alternative Environmentally Sensitive Area Plan for Country Club Road Estates. The approximately 35.52-acre subject property is generally located on the east side of Country Club Road, approximately 270 feet south of Regency Court in the City of Denton, Denton County, Texas. AGENT: Allison Engineering PHONE: (940)380-9453

MEETING DETAILS: Wednesday, September 12, 2018, 6:30 pm City Hall, City Council Chambers 215 E McKinney St Denton, TX 76201 The recommendation of the Planning & Zoning Commission will be forwarded to the City Council for ďŹ nal action, which is tentatively scheduled for Tuesday, October 16, 2018. Publication Date: August 26, 2018

DE-4569

Street, Sanger, Texas at 7:00 p.m. on Tuesday, September 10th, 2018, for the purpose of considering the following: *A request for a Variance from Section 16 SF-8 (Single Family Residential District - 8), Exhibit A Zoning Ordinance of the City of Sanger, Chapter 14 Planning and Zoning of the City of Sanger Code of Ordinances, to allow variance from minimum lot width of sixty (60) feet for one of the two proposed lots for a replat of Lot 2(PT),3(N21) Block 37 of Original Town of Sanger, being approximately 0.35 acres (15,246 square feet) and generally located southeast of the intersection of Locust Street and South 6th Street. *A request for a Variance from set-back requirements of Single Family Residential District 10 Zoning District for Lot 1, Block 7, Sanger Trails Phase 2A within the City of Sanger, being approximately 0.192 acres, and generally located southwest of the intersection of Marion Road and Lake Park Drive. *A Replat of Lots 1R, 2R and 3R, Block 1, L.L. & T. Addition, being a Replat of Lot 1, Block 1, L.L. & T. Addition, in the Extraterritorial Jurisdiction (ETJ) of the City of Sanger, being approximately 7.026 acres, and generally located north of FM 455 and approximately 1300 feet east of the intersection of Union Hill Road and FM 455. # FM 455.

OF LAND LEGALLY DESCRIBED AS THAT TRACT OF LAND SITUATED IN THE M.E.P. & P.R.R. CO. SURVEY, ABSTRACT NO. 915 IN THE CITY OF CORINTH, DENTON COUNTY, TEXAS, PROVIDING FOR A DESIGN STATEMENT; PROVIDING A LEGAL PROPERTY DESCRIPTION; APPROVING A PLANNED DEVELOPMENT CONCEPT PLAN; PROVIDING FOR A PENALTY NOT TO EXCEED $2,000; PROVIDING FOR PUBLICATION AND A SEVERABILITY CLAUSE; AND PROVIDING FOR AN EFFECTIVE DATE. SECTION 4. PENALTY FOR VIOLATIONS Any person, firm, or corporation who intentionally, knowingly or recklessly violates any provision of this Ordinance or the Code of Ordinances, as amended hereby, shall be subject to a fine not to exceed the sum of five hundred dollars ($500.00) for each offense, and each and every day any such offense shall continue shall be deemed to constitute a separate offense, provided, however, that in all cases involving violation of any provision of this Ordinance or Code of Ordinances, as amended hereby, governing the fire safety, zoning, or public health and sanitation shall be subject to a fine not to exceed the sum of two thousand dollars ($2,000.00) for each offense.

UDC TO AMEND VARIOUS SECTIONS OF THE ZONING ORDINANCE RELATIVE TO LAND USE AND DEVELOPMENT REGULATIONS; PROVIDING FOR THE INCORPORATION OF PREMISES; PROVIDING A SEVERABILITY CLAUSE; PROVIDING A PENALTY OF FINE NOT TO EXCEED TWO THOUSAND DOLLARS ($2000.00) FOR VIOLATIONS THEREOF AS SPECIFICALLY SET FORTH HEREIN; PROVIDING A CUMULATIVE REPEALER CLAUSE; PROVIDING A SAVINGS CLAUSE; PROVIDING A SEVERABILITY CLAUSE; AND PROVIDING FOR PUBLICATION AND AN EFFECTIVE DATE.

PUBLIC NOTICE Notice is hereby given that sealed Requests for Proposals addressed to the Purchasing Department of Denton County, 401 W. Hickory, Denton, Texas 76201, will be received until 2:00 p.m., Monday, September 24, 2018, at which time said proposals will be publicly opened for:

SECTION 3. Video Visitation, PENALTY RFP #06-18-2474 Any person, firm, or corporation who intentionally, knowingly or Proposals shall be submitted for recklessly violates any provision unit pricing. Envelopes containof this Ordinance or the Code of ing proposals must be so marked Ordinances, as amended hereby, or they will not be considered. shall be subject to a fine not to exceed the sum of five hundred Minority and small business dollars ($500.00) for each of- vendors or contractors are fense, and each and every day encouraged to bid on any and any such offense shall continue all Denton County Projects. shall be deemed to constitute a separate offense, provided, however, that in all cases involving vi- A non-mandatory Pre-Bid olation of any provision of this Or- Conference will be held at the dinance or Code of Ordinances, Denton County Law Enforcement as amended hereby, governing Center, 127 Woodrow Lane, the fire safety, zoning, or public Lobby Training Room, Denton health and sanitation shall be Texas at 2:00pm on Wednesday, subject to a fine not to exceed the August 29, 2018. sum of two thousand dollars ORDINANCE NO. 18-08-16-24 ($2,000.00) for each Specifications may be examined AN ORDINANCE AMENDING offense.#000.00) for each of- without charge at the Denton County Purchasing Department, THE COMPREHENSIVE ZON- fense. 401 W. Hickory Street, Denton, All interested citizens and ING ORDINANCE BEING A Texas 76201. They will also be property owners are hereby PART OF THE UNIFIED DEVEL- drc 8/26 & 9/2/2018 available at Denton Countys notified of their right to appear OPMENT CODE OF THE CITY Internet site http://purchasing. PUBLIC NOTICE and be heard on this matter. OF CORINTH, TEXAS (UDC), BY dentoncounty.com or at AMENDING SUBSECTION eBid DentonCounty. 2.07.01, USES PERMITTED BY Notice is hereby given that the Cheryl Price Denton County Sheriffs Office is SUBSECTION City Secretary, City of Sanger DISTRICT, All questions shall be posted to 2.07.03 USE CHART, AND SUB- seeking Proposals for CommisDenton Countys on-line bidding SECTION 2.07.04 CONDITION- sary Services for the Denton drc 8/26/2018 service, eBid DentonCounty AL DEVELOPMENT STAN- County Jail. Sealed bids should (https://dentoncounty.ionORDINANCE NO. 18-08-16-23 DARDS OF SUBSECTION 2.07 be addressed to Chief Barry Caver, Denton County Sheriffs wave.net/Login.aspx), by the CORINTHIAN PARK PLANNED ZONING USE REGULATIONS stated deadline. All questions DEVELOPMENT DISTRICT OF SECTION 2, ZONING REGU- Office, 127 N. Woodrow Lane, AN ORDINANCE AMENDING LATIONS, AND BY AMENDING Denton, Texas 76205, and should and answers will be posted online at eBid DentonCounty. Bidders THE COMPREHENSIVE ZON- SUBSECTION 2.09.01 LAND- be received no later than 2:00 are responsible for insuring all ING ORDINANCE BEING A SCAPING REGULATIONS, SUB- PM, September 12, 2018. At which time, said bids will be answers to questions are PART OF THE UNIFIED DEVEL- SECTION 2.09.03 VEHICLE reviewed prior to bid submittal. OPMENT CODE, BY AMENDING PARKING REGULATIONS AND opened and considered. A nonTHE ZONING CLASSIFICATION SUBSECTION 2.09.04 BUILD- mandatory Pre-Bid conference FROM PLANNED DEVELOP- ING FAÇADE MATERIAL STAN- will be held at the Denton County Beth Fleming, MENT SINGLE FAMILY AT- DARDS OF SUBSECTION 2.09, Law Enforcement Center, 127 N. CPSM, C.P.M., CPPO Woodrow Lane, Lobby Training TACHED (PD SF-A) DISTRICT ZONING DEVELOPMENT REGDirector of Purchasing TO PLANNED DEVELOPMENT ULATIONS OF SECTION 2, Room, Denton Texas at Denton County, Texas SINGLE FAMILY ATTACHED ZONING REGULATIONS OF 10:00 AM on Wednesday 940-349-3130 (PD SF-A) DISTRICT WITH THE UDC, AND BY AMENDING September 5, 2018. MODIFIED DEVELOPMENT SUBSECTION 5.02 WORDS drc 8/19 & 8/26/2018 STANDARDS ON 4.796 ACRES AND TERMS DEFINED OF SEC- Payment of commission revenues OF LAND LEGALLY DE- TION 5, DEFINITIONS OF THE to the Denton County Sheriff shall INVITATION TO BIDDERS SCRIBED AS THAT TRACT OF UDC TO AMEND VARIOUS be made from the current funds DEVELOPER AWARDED LAND SITUATED IN THE M.E.P. SECTIONS OF THE ZONING of vendor. Envelopes containing CONTRACTS FOR PUBLICLY bids must be marked as de& P.R.R. CO. SURVEY, AB- ORDINANCE RELATIVE TO BID PROJECTS ONLY STRACT NO. 915 IN THE CITY LAND USE AND DEVELOP- scribed in the written proposal or OF CORINTH, DENTON COUN- MENT REGULATIONS; PROVID- they will not be considered and RECEIPT OF BIDS TY, TEXAS, PROVIDING FOR A ING FOR THE INCORPORA- returned to the sender unopened. Sealed bids addressed to the DESIGN STATEMENT; PROVID- TION OF PREMISES; PROVIDBoard of Directors of the South ING A LEGAL PROPERTY DE- ING A SEVERABILITY CLAUSE; The Sheriffs Office will provide a Denton County Water Control SCRIPTION; APPROVING A PROVIDING A PENALTY OF copy of the Request for Proposal and Improvement District No. 1, PLANNED DEVELOPMENT FINE NOT TO EXCEED TWO for Inmate Commissary upon will be received at the office of DOLLARS written request by U.S. Mail at: CONCEPT PLAN; PROVIDING THOUSAND the engineer for the District, FOR A PENALTY NOT TO EX- ($2000.00) FOR VIOLATIONS Chief Barry Caver, Denton Pape-Dawson Engineers, Inc., CEED $2,000; PROVIDING FOR THEREOF AS SPECIFICALLY County Sheriffs Office, 127 N. 6500 West Freeway, Suite 700, PUBLICATION AND A SEVER- SET FORTH HEREIN; PROVID- Woodrow Lane, Denton, Texas Fort Worth, TX, 76116 for the ABILITY CLAUSE; AND PRO- ING A CUMULATIVE REPEAL- 76205 or by email requests to construction of the Brookfield VIDING FOR AN EFFECTIVE ER CLAUSE; PROVIDING A Barry.Caver@dentoncounty.com. Offsite Water Main Extension, DATE. SAVINGS CLAUSE; PROVIDING Minority and small business until 2:00 PM, Local Time, on A SEVERABILITY CLAUSE; vendors are encouraged to bid Wednesday, September 12, FR18-0005/Hilltop Ranch Addition on any and all Denton County AND PROVIDING FOR PUBLISECTION 4. 2018, and then publicly opened PENALTY FOR VIOLATIONS CATION AND AN EFFECTIVE Projects. and read for “Brookfield Offsite DATE. HEARING NOTICE OF PUBLIC Any person, firm, or corporation Water Main Extension, Denton Sheriff Tracy Murphree who intentionally, knowingly or County, Texas.â€? Denton County Sheriffs Office recklessly violates any provision SECTION 3. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN TO ALL INTEREST Denton County, Texas of this Ordinance or the Code of GENERAL DESCRIPTION OF PERSONS, THAT: hereby, Any person,PENALTY Ordinances, as amended firm, or corporation WORK shall be subject to a fine not to who intentionally, knowingly or drc 8/19 & 8/26/2018 The major work will consist of the ThetheCity offiveDenton and any Zoning recklessly violates provision exceed sum of hundred Planning (approximate) following: InstallaPUBLIC NOTICE dollars ($500.00) forwill eachhold of- a of this Ordinance or the and Code of Commission public hearing tion of approximately 28,600 LF fense, and each and every day Ordinances, as amended hereby, ON LINE AUCTION #08-18-2483 of ductile iron and PVC water Vehicles/Computer a shall request by shall TonybeKimbrough with subject to a fine not to anyconsider such offense continue line ranging from 8â€? to 42â€? in Equipment/Office the sum Tudor of five hundred shallKAZ be deemed to constitute a exceedRandall Surveying representing for diameter; casing pipe for bored Supplies/Machines separate offense, provided, how- dollars ($500.00) for each ofcrossings, valving and vaults, Furniture/Appliances approval of a involving Final Replat Block A of day and1R, each and every ever, that in all cases vi- fense,Lot cathodic protection, erosion shall continue olation any provision of thisAddition. Or- any such theof Hilltop Ranch Theoffense approx. 3.5 control, and related dinance or Code of Ordinances, shall be deemed to constitute a Notice is hereby given that as depicted sitehereby, is generally the west sidehow- Denton County will sell surplus of- appurtenances separateonoffense, provided, as acre amended governinglocated equipment/supplies, furniture, on the construction documents. in all cases the of fireHilltop safety, Road, zoning, approximately or public ever, that1,521 feet involving south vi- fice health and sanitation shall be olation of any provision of this Or- appliances, computer equipment, PREBID CONFERENCE of toBrush Creek Road, in theorExtraterritorial Code of Ordinances, vehicles, and equipment in an subject a fine not to exceed the dinance A MANDATORY prebid conferamended hereby, governing on-line auction conducted by sumJurisdiction of two thousand dollars of the Cityas of Denton, Denton ence will be held on the following Rene Bates Auctioneers. the fire safety, zoning, or public ($2,000.00) for each offense. date, time and location: County, Texas. health and sanitation shall be The auction will run from Monday, DATE: August 29, 2018 subject to a fine not to exceed the August 27, 2018 through TIME: 2:00 PM Central Time Friday, September 7, 2018. ORDINANCE NO. 18-08-16-24 sum of two thousand dollars PLACE: Pape-Dawson for each AN ORDINANCE AMENDING ($2,000.00) Engineers bidding specifications Complete offense.#000.00) for each ofTHE COMPREHENSIVE ZON6500 W. Freeway, Suite 700 and requirements, pictures and ING ORDINANCE BEING A fense. Fort Worth, Texas 76116 descriptions of items including PART OF THE UNIFIED DEVELviewing times and locations can LOCATION: Main Conference OPMENT CODE OF THE CITY drc 8/26 & 9/2/2018 Room be obtained through the OF CORINTH, TEXAS (UDC), BY auctioneers web site AMENDING SUBSECTION www.renebates.com or through Attendance by each prospective 2.07.01, USES PERMITTED BY the Denton County website bidder or its representative DISTRICT, SUBSECTION http://purchasing.dentoncounty.- at the pre-bid conference is 2.07.03 USE CHART, AND SUBcom on Monday, MANDATORY, and no bid will SECTION 2.07.04 CONDITIONAugust 27, 2018. be opened unless the bidder or AL DEVELOPMENT STANrepresentative was present at DARDS OF SUBSECTION 2.07 All merchandise is offered as is, the pre-bid conference. ZONING USE REGULATIONS where is, and without warranty of OF SECTION 2, ZONING REGUany kind expressed or implied, Each Bid must be accompanied LATIONS, AND BY AMENDING each buyer assuming all risks of by a bid bond or a certified or SUBSECTION 2.09.01 LANDcondition, current status, and cashier's check, acceptable to the SCAPING REGULATIONS, SUBvalue. District, in an amount not less AGENT:2.09.03 Tony Kimbrough SECTION VEHICLE than five percent (5%) of the total PARKING REGULATIONS AND PHONE: (940)382-3446 amount bid, as a guarantee that BETH FLEMING, SUBSECTION 2.09.04 BUILDthe successful bidder will enter CPSM, C.P.M., CPPO. ING FAÇADE MATERIAL STANMEETING DETAILS:2.09, DIRECTOR OF PURCHASING into the Contract and execute the DARDS OF SUBSECTION Bonds on the forms provided and DENTON COUNTY, TEXAS ZONING DEVELOPMENT REG-2018, 6:30 pm Wednesday, Sept. 12, provide the required insurance ULATIONS OF SECTION 2, certificates within seven (7) City Hall, City CouncilOFChambers drc 8/26/2018 ZONING REGULATIONS daysafterthedatethe Contractor is THE215 UDC,E AND BY AMENDING McKinney St PUBLIC NOTICE notified. SUBSECTION 5.02 WORDS Denton, TX 76201 AND TERMS DEFINED OF SECNotice is hereby given that sealed PREQUALIFICATIONS TION 5, DEFINITIONS OF THE Date: August 26, 2018 1. The improvements included in Requests for Proposals UDCPublication TO AMEND VARIOUS DE-4486 this project must be performed by addressed to the Purchasing SECTIONS OF THE ZONING Department of Denton County, a contractor who is pre-qualified ORDINANCE RELATIVE TO 401 W. Hickory, Denton, Texas by the City at the time of bid LAND USE AND DEVELOPopening. The procedures for 76201, will be received until 2:00 MENT REGULATIONS; PROVIDZ18-0020/Creekside Z18-0015/Audra Oaks qualification and pre-qualification p.m., Monday, September 24, ING FOR THE INCORPORA2018, at which time said propos- are outlined as follows: TION OF PREMISES; PROVIDals will be NOTICE publicly opened NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING OFfor:PUBLIC HEARING ING A SEVERABILITY CLAUSE; 1.1. All Bidders and their subconPROVIDING A PENALTY OF HEREBYTWO GIVEN TO ALL INTEREST tractors required to be preVideo Visitation, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN TOareALL INTEREST FINENOTICE NOT TOISEXCEED RFP #06-18-2474 qualified for the work types requirTHOUSAND DOLLARS PERSONS, THAT: PERSONS, THAT: ing prequalification at the time of ($2000.00) FOR VIOLATIONS bidding. Bids received from conTHEREOF AS SPECIFICALLY Proposals submitted for Planning The City of Denton Planning and Zoning The shall Citybeof Denton and Zoning SET FORTH HEREIN; PROVIDunit pricing. Envelopes contain- tractors who are not prequalified if inadvertently opened) ING Commission A CUMULATIVEwill REPEALhold a public hearing on hold a(even public hearing and ing Commission proposals must bewill so marked shall not be considered. PrequaliER CLAUSE; PROVIDING A or they will not bemaking considered.a recommendation consider to City Wednesday, September 12, 2018, and fication requirement work types SAVINGS CLAUSE; PROVIDING and documentation can be found Council regarding by B.J.H. Johnson A consider SEVERABILITY CLAUSE; making a recommendation to the Minority and small business a request at the City of Fort Worths AuAND PROVIDING FOR PUBLIvendors or contractors Properties LTDarefor a zoning changeContractors from a City Council regarding a request to assign toDesk Buzzsaw CATION AND AN EFFECTIVE encouraged to bid on any and website: Neighborhood Residential 2 (NR-2) District to DATE. an initial zoning designation of Neighborhood all Denton County Projects. http://fortworthtexas.gov/tpw/cona Neighborhood Residential Residential 3 (NR-3) to approximately 47.66 tractors/4 (NR-4) District. SECTION 3. A non-mandatory Pre-Bid The 13.48-acre site is generally located on acresPENALTY of land, generally located on the south Conference will be held at the 1.2.Lane, Each Bidder unless currently Any side person, or corporation Denton Enforcement the County southLawside of Audraprequalified, approximately of firm, E. Ryan Road, east of the intersection must be prepared to who intentionally, knowingly or Center, 127 Woodrow Lane, 90 feet west of Barbara Street, in the City of of E. Ryan Road and Andrew Avenue by the submit to District within seven recklessly violates any provision Lobby Training Room, Denton calendar days prior to Bid of this Ordinance or the Denton Code of County, Texas. Texas at 2:00pm on Wednesday, Denton, Denton County, (7) Texas. City of Denton, opening, the documentation idenOrdinances, as amended hereby, August 29, 2018. tified in Section 00 45 11, BIDshallAGENT: be subjectThomas to a fine Fletcher not to AGENT: Sean Faulkner, Foresite Group DERS PREQUALIFICATIONS. exceed the sum of five hundred Specifications be examined PHONE: may (469)951-7417 PHONE: (972)731-2186 dollars ($500.00) for each ofwithout charge at the Denton fense, and each and every day County Purchasing Department, 1.2.1. Submission of and/or quesany such offense shall continue tions related to prequalification 401 W. Hickory Street, Denton, shall be deemed to constitute a should be addressed to the DisTexas 76201. They will also be separate offense, provided, howtrict contact as provided in Paraavailable at Denton Countys ever, that in all cases involving vigraph 6.1. Internet site http://purchasing. olation of any provision of this Ordentoncounty.com or at dinance or Code of Ordinances, 1.3. The City/District reserves the eBid DentonCounty. as amended hereby, governing right to require any pre-qualified the fire safety, zoning, or public contractor who is the apparent All questions shall be posted to health and sanitation shall be low bidder(s) for a project to subDenton Countys on-line bidding subject to a fine not to exceed the mit such additional information as service, eBid DentonCounty sum of two thousand dollars the City, in its sole discretion may (https://dentoncounty.ion($2,000.00) for each require, including but not limited wave.net/Login.aspx), by the offense.#000.00) for each ofto manpower and equipment stated deadline. All questions fense. and answers will be posted online records, information about key at eBid DentonCounty. Bidders personnel to be assigned to the drc 8/26 & 9/2/2018 project, and construction schedare responsible for insuring all ule, to assist the City in evaluatanswers to questions are ing and assessing the ability of reviewed prior to bid submittal. the apparent low bidder(s) to deliver a quality product and sucBeth Fleming, cessfully complete projects for the CPSM, C.P.M., CPPO MEETING DETAILS: amount bid within the stipulated Director of Purchasing time frame. Based upon the Citys Wednesday, September 12, 2018, 6:30 pm Denton County, Texas MEETING DETAILS: assessment of the submitted in940-349-3130 City Hall, City Council Chambers a recommendation Wednesday, September formation, 12, 2018, 6:30 pm regarding the award of a contract 215 E McKinney St drc City 8/19 &Hall, 8/26/2018 City Council Chambers will be made to the Districts Denton, TX 76201 Board of Directors. Failure to sub215 E McKinney St mit the additional information, if Denton, TX 76201 requested, may be grounds for The recommendation of the Planning & rejecting the apparent low bidder Zoning Commission will be forwarded to The recommendation of asthe Planning &Affected Zoningconnonresponsive. tractors will beto notified in City writing the City Council for ďŹ nal action, which is Commission will be forwarded the of a recommendation to the Distentatively scheduled for Tuesday, September Council for ďŹ nal action,trictwhich is tentatively Council.

18, 2018.

scheduled for Tuesday, October 16, 2018.

Publication Date: August 26, 2018

requirements for qualifiPublication Date: Augustadditional 26, 2018

DE-4490

1.4. In addition to prequalification,

cation may be required within varDE-4571 ious sections of the Contract Documents.

1.5. Contractor shall perform with his own organization, work of value not less than 80% of the value embraced on the contract, unless otherwise approved by the District. DOCUMENT EXAMINATION AND PROCUREMENTS Copies of thedocuments maybe

by a bid bond or a certified or cashier's check, acceptable to the District, in an amount not less than five percent (5%) of the total amount bid, as a guarantee that the successful bidder will enter into the Contract and execute the Bonds on the forms provided and provide the required insurance certificates within seven (7) daysafterthedatethe Contractor is notified.

Sunday, August 26, 2018

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PREQUALIFICATIONS 1. The improvements included in this project must be performed by a contractor who is pre-qualified by the City at the time of bid opening. The procedures for qualification and pre-qualification are outlined as follows: 1.1. All Bidders and their subcontractors are required to be prequalified for the work types requiring prequalification at the time of bidding. Bids received from contractors who are not prequalified (even if inadvertently opened) shall not be considered. Prequalification requirement work types and documentation can be found at the City of Fort Worths AutoDesk Buzzsaw Contractors website: http://fortworthtexas.gov/tpw/contractors/ 1.2. Each Bidder unless currently prequalified, must be prepared to submit to District within seven (7) calendar days prior to Bid opening, the documentation identified in Section 00 45 11, BIDDERS PREQUALIFICATIONS. 1.2.1. Submission of and/or questions related to prequalification should be addressed to the District contact as provided in Paragraph 6.1. 1.3. The City/District reserves the right to require any pre-qualified contractor who is the apparent low bidder(s) for a project to submit such additional information as the City, in its sole discretion may require, including but not limited to manpower and equipment records, information about key personnel to be assigned to the project, and construction schedule, to assist the City in evaluating and assessing the ability of the apparent low bidder(s) to deliver a quality product and successfully complete projects for the amount bid within the stipulated time frame. Based upon the Citys assessment of the submitted information, a recommendation regarding the award of a contract will be made to the Districts Board of Directors. Failure to submit the additional information, if requested, may be grounds for rejecting the apparent low bidder as non- responsive. Affected contractors will be notified in writing of a recommendation to the District Council. 1.4. In addition to prequalification, additional requirements for qualification may be required within various sections of the Contract Documents. 1.5. Contractor shall perform with his own organization, work of value not less than 80% of the value embraced on the contract, unless otherwise approved by the District. DOCUMENT EXAMINATION AND PROCUREMENTS Copies of thedocuments maybe purchased andpicked up at the officeofthe District Engineer, Pape-Dawson Engineers, 6500 W. Freeway, Suite 700, Fort Worth, TX 76116 for $150.00, or an electronic version may be obtained and downloaded at no charge by contacting a representative of the District Engineer: Danny McFadden, P.E., dmcfadden@pape-dawson.com. 8/19 & 8/26/2018 PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE Notice is hereby given that the Denton County Commissioners Court will hold a Public Hearing to consider and/or take appropriate action on replat of Stonehenge Addition Phase 1. The owners of Stonehenge Addition Phase 1 (Lot 4, Block A & Lot 10, Block A 5.40 Acres) are requesting to revise the plat. The purpose of the replat is to enlarge Lot 4 & Lot 10. The proposed replat has met all Denton County Subdivision Rules and Regulations and is recommended for approval by the Development Support Committee and Denton County Public Works. This replat will continue to conform to the original approval. The public hearing will be held in the Commissioners Courtroom, located in the Courthouse-on-the-Square, Second Floor, 110 West Hickory, Denton, Texas 76201 on September 18, 2018 at 9:00 AM. For more information please call Denton County Public Works (940) 349-2990.

The Denton Record-Chronicle offers

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• Runs 10 days in DRC and DentonRC.com • Up to 15 lines, each extra line $5 • 1 print & 5 online photos FREE

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PUBLIC NOTICE Notice is hereby given that the City Council of the City of Lake Dallas, Texas will conduct a Public Hearing to hear comments regarding the proposed budget for the fiscal year 2019. The public hearing September 6, 2018 at 7:00 p.m., Lake Dallas City Hall, City Council Chambers, 212 Main Street, Lake Dallas, Texas. The public is invited to attend the hearing and make comments. This budget will raise more property taxes than last years budget by an amount of $205,768 which is a 7.10% increase from last years budget. The property tax revenue to be raised from new property added to the tax roll this year is $27,727. drc 8/26/2018

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Sunday, August 26, 2018

Denton Record-Chronicle

THE NEW YORK TIMES DAILY CROSSWORD

SUDOKU PUZZLE Complete the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 box contains every digit from 1 to 9 inclusively.

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Denton Record-Chronicle

Sunday, August 26, 2018

7C

Sunday, August 26, 2018

Dear Abby | By Jeanne Phillips

Timing is everything in family feud over the table Dear Abby: My wife and I have a disagreement about when a person should be allowed to get up from the table. We have an 8-month-old son whom we both want to grow up to have good manners. We know he’ll soon be out of his high chair and become squirmy and not want to stay seated. My wife was raised to stay seated and be excused only after everyone is finished eating — holding everyone hostage until the last person is finished and extending dinnertime up to an hour or more. I feel it’s excessive, and a child would have a hard time sitting still that long. When she was little, her parents tied her to her chair so she couldn’t get up until everyone finished eating. I was raised to ask to be excused after I was finished, but was welcome to stay and socialize if I liked. In my opinion, dinner should last about 30 minutes so there’s time to finish chores around the house. I agree that coming to the table and leaving after 10 minutes is rude because the cook has taken great care to prepare the meal and may feel insulted if the diner gets up too quickly. Long dinners may have been acceptable in Jane Austen’s day, but not in today’s fast-paced world. — High Chair Hostage Dear High Chair: Your wife appears to be extremely rigid. On the plus side, she appreciates the importance of family dinners in the home. I agree that children should be taught table manners, however, tying a kid to a chair is considered child abuse these days, and I don’t recommend it. Modern parents recognize that small children have short attention spans and compensate for it in various ways. When a child is old enough to understand, the rules should be spelled out. If the children are in another person’s home or a public

place, materials should be provided so the child can entertain him- or herself while the adults make conversation. If the child needs to get up and move around, he or she should be accompanied by a parent so other diners won’t be interrupted. If a meal at home is going to be a long one, the child should be allowed to be excused from the table as you were. And because you are an adult, you should have the freedom to leave the table if you wish, too. Dear Abby: A woman in my social circle has called me a know-it-all and accused me of making her feel stupid. She has refused to accept my apology, canceled our carpools to events and has started challenging me at every turn of any conversation. I no longer feel comfortable accepting invitations to gatherings in her home, but frequent encounters with her are unavoidable. How should I handle confrontations with her in the future? — Traumatized Texan Dear T.T.: There shouldn’t be any “confrontations.” When you see the woman, be pleasant and keep your distance. If she tries to start an argument, tell her the problem is hers and you don’t intend to make it yours — period. Then, if there are others present, devote your time to them. Good advice for everyone — teens to seniors — is in “The Anger in All of Us and How to Deal With It.” To order, send your name and mailing address, plus check or money order for $7 (U.S. funds) to: Dear Abby, Anger Booklet, P.O. Box 447, Mount Morris, IL 61054-0447. (Shipping and handling are included in the price.) — Andrews McMeel Syndication


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Sunday, August 26, 2018

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BUSINESS

SECTION D Sunday, August 26, 2018 DentonRC.com

DVD reviews: Complicated romances hit the shelves Arts & Community, 3D

Good Samaritan, Sanford Health to merge By Julia Falcon Staff Writer julia.falcon@dentonrc.com

The Evangelical Lutheran Good Samaritan Society will be merging with Sanford Health, a health care company based in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, come November. It was announced Aug. 17 that a merger was approved between the two Sioux Falls nonprofits, with the new name set to be Good Samaritan Society of Sanford Health. “We feel strongly that this visionary plan will be modeled throughout the United States to offer a continuum of care throughout one’s life,” said Kelby Krabbenhoft, president and CEO

of Sanford Health, in a news release. “Having no objections during the government’s regulatory review confirms our beliefs. We’re excited to move forward.” There are two Good Samaritan retirement communities in Denton, the Denton Village and the Lake Forest Village. Plans for the merger were originally announced in June. Leaders from Good Samaritan Society and Sanford Health had the goal to combine the two organizations by the start of 2019, according to the news release. “For several months, we’ve talked about the advantages of bringing So-

ciety professionals together with the health care experts at Sanford Health,” said David J. Horazdowsky, president and CEO of the Good Samaritan Society. “This clears a major hurdle in advancing the care for those we serve.” Sanford Health is one of the largest health care systems in the nation, with 44 hospitals and nearly 300 clinics in nine cities and four countries. The Evangelical Lutheran Good Samaritan Society is one of the nation’s largest nonprofit organizations providing senior care and services with more than 200 locations nationwide. Neither of the Good Samaritan locations in Denton returned phone calls for comment.

DRC file photo

Denton has two Good Samaritan Society retirement communities, including the Denton Village at 2500 Hinkle Drive.

Ford’s fingerprint

Liz Weston PERSONAL FINANCE COMMENTARY

Plan for changes in stock market

Kim Phillips

T

he older the current bull market gets, the more stories you’re likely to read about how this is an awful time to retire. Yes, we’re due for a correction that trims 20 percent or more from stock values. That could be a big problem for people taking withdrawals from investment portfolios, since market losses early in retirement increase the chances of running short of money. The answer isn’t to cower in fear, but to plan for the inevitable downturns. Financial planners say the following actions can help make your money last.

COMMENTARY

Exhibit, self-guided tour spotlight famous architect’s local work

W

e see them when we drive downtown. Many people frequent them: some for business, others for leisure, educational or even spiritual pursuits. Some just stay because they live there. They are buildings scattered around town. Denton City Hall. Emily Fowler Central Library. Denton Civic Center. First Christian Church. The Little Chapel in-the-Woods on the campus of Texas Woman’s University. The gazebo on the University of North Texas campus. These and several other local structures, including a handful of homes, share one very significant attribute. Local boy-turned-internationally famous architect O’Neil Ford designed them all. Ford left his mark of genius in places across the country. Perhaps most notable is the Tower of the Americas constructed 50 years ago in San Antonio for the 1968 Hemisfair, iconic even still to that city’s skyline. Today’s column, though, is all about Ford’s fingerprint on Denton. UNT on the Square director Herbert Holl carefully separates architectural renderings and blueprints across a large table. Around us, the “O’Neil Ford: The Architect in His Works and Words” exhibit is taking shape. Photographs are sorted along display walls

Make sure you’re diversified

renderings of City Hall,” Herbert says while pointing to one of the large pages. It was our City Hall, all right,

Stocks have quadrupled since March 9, 2009, the beginning of the current bull market. Meanwhile, returns on bonds and cash remain low. Investors who haven’t regularly rebalanced back to a target mix of stocks, bonds and cash probably have way too much of their portfolios in stocks. The time to rebalance is now, before markets start bucking and making it harder to think rationally. The right asset allocation depends on your income needs and risk tolerance, among other factors, but many financial planners recommend having a few years’ worth of withdrawals in safer investments to mitigate the urge to sell when stocks fall. Certified financial planner Lawrence Heller of Melville, New York, uses the “bucket” strategy to avoid selling in down markets. Heller typically has clients keep one to three years’ worth of expenses in cash, plus seven

See PHILLIPS on 4D

See WESTON on 4D

Courtesy photo/Denton Convention & Visitors Bureau

In 1983, the Texas Society of Architects selected the Little Chapel-in-the-Woods designed by O’Neil Ford as one of 20 buildings representing “Texas’ Proudest Architectural Achievements of All Time.” The chapel is on the Texas Woman’s University campus. where they may hang later. Letters, building plans, and sketches are in glass cases and protective packaging waiting for placement. Various memorabilia even include

the official certificate designating O’Neil Ford a historic landmark, the only occasion the designation was bestowed on a human. “These are the original architectural

Business aids Explorium Denton By Lucinda Breeding Features Editor cbreeding@dentonrc.com

A local massage therapy business donated $2,500 to Explorium Denton, a children’s museum opening soon at Stonehill Center on Interstate 35. Soma Massage Therapy will get its name near the doorway of the museum’s nursing lounge, a space for nursing mothers — or parents and grandparents who want to give their little ones a bottle — for its donation. “The donation will pay for the furniture in the nursing room,” Executive Director Anyah Martinez said. “People are absolutely free to nurse anywhere in the museum, but some of them might prefer privacy. I know when I was first

nursing, I needed quiet. I needed to get calm and settled.” Amber Briggle, a massage therapist and the owner of Soma, said she remembers when Martinez visited the Rotary Club she belongs to. “She had the schematics, and she told us that she was looking for corporate sponsorships. I remember looking at it and going, ‘Oh, nursing room!’” Briggle said. The nursing room is a small, private area with two recliners and a footstool. A diaper changing station with shelves will arrive soon. Martinez said the museum will probably stock the room with wipes and diapers, and possibly some feminine hygiene products. A two-way mirror allows anyone in

the nursing room to see into the museum, which will help people keep an eye on older children playing in the museum. The donation marks more good news for the museum, which announced a few months ago that unforeseen costs might keep the Explorium from opening. A major donation put the six-year-old project back on the road to completion. Now the museum looks closer to opening — a huge indoor play structure is nearly finished and a canvas tepee has been erected over an interactive lightboard. Craft tables are lined up in the “Make & Think” section. See EXPLORIUM on 4D

Jeff Woo/DRC

Amber Briggle, owner of Soma Massage Therapy, left, visits on Friday with Anyah Martinez, Explorium Denton executive director. Briggle donated $2,500 to furnish the museum’s nursing room shown above.


arts&community

PAGE 2D Sunday, August 26, 2018 DentonRC.com

At 85, drummer Billy Kaye keeps swinging

Jazz hands

ABOVE: Billy Kaye performs at the Vollis Simpson Whirligig Park in his hometown, Wilson, N.C., on June 7. BELOW: Billy Kaye joins fellow jazz musicians in a tribute for the late Seleno Clarke at the American Legion in Harlem, N.Y. Photos by Astrid Riecken/For The Washington Post

By Astrid Riecken The Washington Post

The first time I saw Billy Kaye, in February 2017, was in New York at the weekly Monday Night Jam at the Jazz Foundation of America, a nonprofit that assists struggling musicians. He looked like he had just come out of a movie set from 1950, wearing a fedora, beautiful suit and shirt. I felt a little shy when I approached him — he was 84 then, 5 feet, 5 inches tall and one of the most respected jazz musicians still playing at that age, and here I was, this 5-foot-10 German woman with a funny accent asking him whether I could follow him around to document his life in the years to come. See KAYE on 3D

Choir captain

Guest conductor could take leadership of Denton Bach Society By Lucinda Breeding Features Editor cbreeding@dentonrc.com

Awesomeness Films-Netflix

Peter Kavinsky (Noah Centineo) takes Lara Jean (Lana Condon) and her little sister to school in “To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before,” one of Netflix’s breakout hits of the summer.

Feel-good flick Success of Netflix’s ‘To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before’ offers lessons By Emily Yahr The Washington Post

As you may have heard, Netflix is having quite a summer of romantic comedies. Chief content officer Ted Sarandos recently boasted that Joey King’s The Kissing Booth was “one of the most-watched movies in the country, and maybe in the world.” In June, Set It Up became a favorite with view-

ers, while the streaming giant included other offerings from Like Father to Ibiza. As the Netflix rom-com factory keeps churning, it’s easy for selections to get lost, though that is certainly not the case with To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before, about a teenager whose private love letters to her crushes are inadvertently delivered to their doorsteps. A mere seven days after its release, the film already has whipped up an intense fan base and rave reviews. The unwieldy hashtag #TATBILB results in hundreds upon hundreds of tweets and photos as fans declare

their love of the film and clamor for a sequel. The chance of a sequel from Netflix is likely — the film is based on Jenny Han’s popular YA trilogy, so source material already exists. But, as happens with any hit, others in Hollywood will take notice as they inevitably try to replicate the success. And there are quite a few lessons to the overwhelmingly positive reaction to the film. First, as many already have noted, it’s an important reminder that your rom-com leads don’t have to be all See BOYS on 3D

When Charles Rives takes up the baton at the Denton Bach Society’s October concert, he won’t lead the choir and players through a baroque program. Rives will shepherd the choir and orchestra through a program of American composers. The musicians will perform Stephen Foster (best known for “Beautiful Dreamer”), Aaron Copland (“Rodeo”), Howard Hanson (“Song of Democracy”), Morten Lauridsen (“Lux Aeterna”) and Randall Thompson (“Frostiana”). “We’re starting again, and we’re exploring what we want to be in the future,” said Hildegard Rainbow, a longtime singer with the Bach Choir and a board member of the Bach Society. “You could say we’re taking chances.” Rives is a newcomer to Denton. He and his wife, Cynthia, moved to Denton in 2016 to be closer to family. Before he retired, though, Rives was the Director of Choirs at Tarleton State University for 29 years. He was a choir director, voice instructor and music educator for 41 years. He led the Cross Timbers Civic Chorale in Stephenville. Rives has studied with some of the top choral directors in the country: Robert Shaw, Douglas McEwen, George Umberson, Ronald Shirey and Donald Bailey. He got a bachelor’s degree in music education and a master’s degree in choral music from Eastern New Mexico University. He got his doctorate in Musical Arts from Arizona State University. And if the fall concert goes well,

Charles Rives Rives might step into the director’s post for the Bach Society. “There’s nothing better that creating great music together,” Rives said. “I look at it as a collaboration between voices, conductor and the musicians. As a director, I look at it as being my job to teach the musicians technical things so that they can see the musical things in the text and the music.” Choir rehearsals started last Monday, and Rives said he treats rehearsals as a sort of expedition into the music. “Our job is to find out what the poetry is really saying,” Rives said. “Our job is to really look for the composer’s purpose. It’s like The Wizard of Oz. The text is the black and white. Then you land in Oz and its in technicolor, and that’s the music.” He follows the text before the music. “I think one of the most important things is the text. I have this saying, ‘The text is everything.’ In choir, you’re wedding poetry — and sometimes scripture — with the music,” Rives said. The Denton Bach Society — which includes the Denton Bach Choir and See RIVES on 3D


ARTS & COMMUNITY

Denton Record-Chronicle

3D

Sunday, August 26, 2018

DVD REVIEWS

Dusted off Twilight Time leads week of restored films, poignant documentaries By Preston Barta Film Critic

This month’s restored classics from Twilight Time include historical epics and stories about complicated romances.

Twilight Time ★★★A July releases Cinderella Liberty — This 1973 film adaptation of Darryl Ponicsan’s novel is easily my favorite of the Twilight Time releases from last month. It’s a nice melding of The Last Detail and Pretty Woman. It follows a young sailor (James Caan) who, while on leave, falls in love with a prostitute (Marsha Mason) with an 11-year-old son (Kirk Calloway). It’s a complex and sweet-natured drama with many great character moments and truths about the world. (Trivia: John Williams did the musical score.) Rated R, 116 minutes. The Children of Huang Shi — The 2008 historical epic tells the extraordinary story of a British journalist (Jonathan Rhys Meyers) and an Australian nurse (Radha Mitchell) who save a group of orphaned children during the Japanese occupation of China in 1937. However, the film is bit underwhelming and never allows the tension to gain much momentum to have your complete investment. Rated R, 125 minutes. Genghis Khan — There was a time when Hollywood would do these big productions about stories across the pond and would cast white people to play the parts. 1965’s Genghis Khan starring Stephen Boyd and Omar Sharif is one of those cringeworthy examples. The history of the film’s making and the historical story itself are better than the product. It’s a severely dated film, but it remains a neat piece of history to own. Not rated, 125 minutes. The Revolt of Mamie Stover — The second-best release in the bundle is this 1956 title. Jane Russell stars as the titular Mamie Stover, a prostitute who decides to run out of town just as World War II intensifies. She moves to Hawaii, hoping to start fresh, and falls for a science-fiction writer (Richard Egan) who respects her and treats her well. However, Mamie’s past resurfaces to complicate her romance and new life. Hollywood’s censorship and narrow perspective at the time causes this film to suffer a bit, but Russell gives a witty performance that provides a lot to enjoy. Not rated, 92 minutes. Extras: The special features on these limited edition Twilight Time releases (available today on twilighttimemovies.com) vary, but most include such extras as audio commentaries by various film historians and the filmmakers, isolated score tracks and original theatrical trailers. ■

Bram Stoker’s Shadowbuilder (★★A) A cult summons a demon called the Shadowbuilder (Andrew Jackson), who wants to destroy the world. The Shadowbuilder needs to find young Chris Hatcher (Kevin Zegers), a boy with the potential to be a saint. Thankfully, goodguy/tough priest Father Vassey (Michael Rooker) is there to keep it from happening. If I were to change some of the plot details of this 1998 movie, you’d think I was describing Terminator 2. There’s nothing exceptionally original about the storyline, as it feels like a less effective Dario Argento film and less memorable Buffy the Vampire Slayer episode. The cast is good (including Candyman’s Tony Todd) and the characters have clear motivations. But it’s hard to ignore the dated special effects and complete lack of suspense. It’s very much a direct-to-video from the ‘90s. Rated R, 101 minutes. Extras: As always, the MVD Rewind Collection packages the ultimate collector’s disc. Whether you like the movie or not, it’s shelf jewelry at its finest, sparkling with its custom cover art (complete with a slipcover that has retro stickers, like “Warning: This video cassette will melt if left in the car in the sun”). The film (available for preorder through mvdb2b.com) includes a director’s audio commentary, a 30-minute making-of, a 13-minute visual effects featurette, a short featurette on actor Kevin Zegers, a trailer and collectible poster. ■ Autumn in New York (★★A) I have a soft spot for sappy romantic dramas. 2000’s Autumn in New York is a romance drama that stars Richard Gere and Winona Ryder. It’s about an aging playboy who falls for a young, terminally ill woman. It’s exactly the kind of Nicholas Sparks material you think it is. But there’s a charm to it, even if the actors are saying dialogue that’s desperate to tug at your heartstrings. There’s also not much fire between Gere and Ryder. So, perhaps this movie makes for a good guilty pleasure film. Rated PG-13, 104 minutes. Extras: Though it’s being advertised as a release that’s “a little simpler and a little less expensive,” the MVD Marquee Collection (available for preorder through mvdb2b.com) is not quite as exciting a release as the titles in the Rewind Collection. The disc art is pretty basic (only the movie’s poster); the Marquee Collection logo once you put in the disc is just an image (compared to the Rewind Collection’s

LEFT: Winona Ryder stars with Richard Gere in the 2000 romance “Autumn in New York.” MVD Marquee Collection

clever spin on putting in a VHS copy of a movie); and the disc menu is a standard highlight reel with no graphics. The only special features are trailers and an image gallery. But the amount of bonus content varies from movie to movie. ■ Criminal Minds: Season 13 (★★★A) As this point in the game, you should know what to expect. The formula hasn’t changed much over the years: Some killer or bad person has done some bad things and the good guys have to save the day at the last minute, which is then followed by one of the cast members reading a famous quote that relates to the horror or tragedy they’ve just endured. Some cast members are no longer with us, and it’s understandable because we’re on Season 13. But if you’ve stuck it out this long, it’s still the same fun show. There are some surprises along the way, and it’s always a thrill to see how real-world issues shape the kind of material they explore episode to episode. Criminal Minds is one of the most realistic crime shows. You don’t see David Caruso taking off/putting on his sunglasses before delivering a one-liner, but you do see extreme technology and situations every now and then. That said, it’s always been the team dynamic that makes the show so great. While I miss having Shemar Moore and Thomas Gibson around, the new team keeps the ball rolling. Not rated (TV-14), about 15 hours and 29 minutes (22 episodes). Extras: The six-disc DVD release includes a few behind-the-scene featurettes, a gag reel, deleted/extended scenes on select episodes and the pilot episodes of SEAL Team and Bull.

BELOW: Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg is the subject of the documentary “RBG.” Magnolia Pictures

■ RBG (★★★A) In a political climate filled with cynicism and a sense of civic decay, Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg often helps to keep our eyes fixed on a more hopeful future. Given her large and enthusiastic following, it’s no surprise a documentary about her life and career has been made. Her achievements and ongoing battle for equality are inspiring and perfect material with which to capture a viewer’s interest at large. Even though RBG fails to offer a warts-andall approach to its subject, it’s a film that may persuade you to sport a trendy “Notorious RBG” T-shirt and follow her lead. Filmmakers Julie Cohen and Betsy West capture Ginsburg’s tireless work ethic and sharp wit, reminding us that it’s not about who we’re up against in life, but what we are fighting for. Rated PG, 98 minutes. Extras: The DVD release include additional interviews and deleted/extended scenes. ■ The Ballad of Gregorio Cortez (★★★A) This is a true find. The Criterion Collection likely found it on the shelf, blew off the dust and did their best attempt at restoring it. 1982’s The Ballad of Gregorio Cortez is a true-story tale about a Mexican-American farmer (Edward James Olmos) who flees a Texas town when he is accused of murder-

From Page 2D

Boys

Astrid Riecken/For The Washington Post

Billy Kaye’s hands seen at his home in Manhattan, N.Y.

From Page 2D

Kaye I explained to him how I had photographed several elderly jazz musicians in Washington, D.C. I told him how much I particularly love jazz of the 1930s to the ’50s — big band to bebop — and also the fashion and visual style of the era. But I said I was mostly interested in photographing how older jazz musicians get by today. He gave me a gentle smile and said this could be arranged, a phrase he often uses. I was happy about that but stressed that my documentary

work was not set up or staged, and that I would be shadowing him a great deal. As a boy, Billy, who was born in Wilson, North Carolina, in 1932, took piano lessons; he didn’t start playing drums until he enlisted in the Air Force, at age 17. He is entirely self-taught and has toured the world and shared the stage with such jazz greats as Count Basie, Charlie Parker, Thelonious Monk (with whom he played in Washington), George Benson, Lou Donaldson and Dinah Washington. Billie Holiday once cooked for him after he fell sick. Drumming is a rigorous en-

deavor, but Billy, who competed in track and field in the 1952 Olympic Games in Helsinki, still regularly performs in New York, where he has lived for more than 70 years. He often hosts the Monday Night Jam, which happens every two weeks, and he also plays at local retirement homes. Of all the pictures I’ve taken of Billy, the one I think about the most is a detail shot of his right hand, which shows the thickness that has built up around his thumb from holding sticks most of his life. Evidence of continuity and conviction, of strength and survival.

white. Even though you might think that’s an obvious one, as it’s 2018 and there are many blockbuster movies that feature diverse casts, Han told People magazine that she had to turn down offers from studios that wanted Lara Jean’s (Lana Condon) character to be white, and not Asian-American. “It was a difficult position. You have to say no again and again,” Han said, adding that when she did find a production company, “the fact that the lead was Asian-American wasn’t seen as a liability. It was something they were excited about.” Another big lesson: Even though satire and snark are popular tonal choices, sometimes viewers crave a movie that’s just really nice. Sound boring? Really, it’s just refreshing. This issue has come up multiple times in coverage of the film, as the most common descriptor is “sweet”: Vox praised “the unabashed sweetness of this movie,

From Page 2D

Rives the Denton Bach Players — has performed as an all-volunteer group in Denton for 42 years. Between 25 and 30 singers performed with the choir last season. “We wish to be 35 voices,”

ing a lawman in 1901. This is a chase film, plain and simple. It’s not a full-throttled adventure, but rather a nuanced slice of history that taps into all the miscommunication going on in our world today. It provides a lot of insight into the madness of those who are quick to accuse before taking the time to listen. The film may be slow in its pace, but it still manages to knock you off your feet by the end. Not rated, 85 minutes. Extras: The now-available Criterion release includes a new interview with actor and producer Edward James Olmos, an interview with author Chon A. Noriega, a cast-and-crew panel from 2016 and an essay about the film. ■ Also available this week: American Animals; Blast (1997); Book Club; Bound (1996); Flash:Season 4; Lucifer: Season 3; Mary Shelley; Memories of Underdevelopment (1968): The Criterion Collection; The Rider; and Woman Walks Ahead. PRESTON BARTA is a member of the Dallas-Fort Worth Film Critics Association. Read his work on FreshFiction.tv. Follow him on Twitter at @PrestonBarta.

and the way it builds itself around nice people who care about each other and want to do nice things for each other.” While promoting the film, Condor noted, “there’s not a lot of just good-hearted movies.” The Huffington Post called out Lara Jean’s most significant crush, Peter Kavinsky, for his “bedrock kindness.” And that’s another critical takeaway for producers and writers everywhere: Never, ever underestimate the power of a leading man who is simply kind. Peter Kavinsky has become an internet sensation — the Cut noted that he “has grown women actually running to IMDb to make sure the actor, Noah Centineo, is an appropriate age. (He’s 22.)” Netflix’s own Twitter bio currently reads, “this is now a Peter Kavinsky stan account.” Sure, Peter is the typically handsome athlete; still, he’s sensitive, thoughtful and emotionally intelligent. At first, it doesn’t seem that way — when he receives one of Lara Jean’s letters, he comes up with their wacky scheme of pretending to date so he can make

his ex-girlfriend jealous. But throughout the movie, he reveals himself as a genuinely good person, who has been pretty hurt by his past relationship, yet is mature enough to know that he has to process his feelings. He drives Lara Jean and her little sister to school. He goes across town to the grocery store to find the Korean yogurt drinks she likes. He never pressures Lara Jean, even when her first rule for the fake relationship is “no kissing.” “Swoon. Sigh. Moon,” the Cut added. “It’s enough to make viewers wish they were a teenager again. If only all adults could correct everything they’ve done wrong in their lives, which is, most pressingly, not finding a Peter Kavinsky.” Dramatic? Perhaps. But also, accurate! Other movies only wish that they could form this kind of personal connection with viewers. So hopefully, To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before will not only help prove that rom-coms can command a devoted audience, but with just a few unique elements, they can stand out from all the rest.

Rainbow said. Rives said the All-American concert planned for Oct. 14 is a departure for the Bach Society. All the music is sung in English, and the music was written well after the baroque era. Rehearsals are 7 p.m. each Monday at St. Paul Lutheran Church, 703 N. Elm St. For more information

about singing with the choir, send an email to Rainbow at hildegardfroehlich@my.unt.edu. The time and place of the Oct. 14 concert is to be announced. LUCINDA BREEDING can be reached at 940-566-6877 and via Twitter at @LBreedingDRC.


4D

BUSINESS

Sunday, August 26, 2018

BRIEFLY

From Page 1D

Phillips

IN BUSINESS

State funds workforce development at Jostens Jostens Inc. and North Central Texas College partnered to provide job training using a $600,986 grant from the Texas Workforce Commission. Workers will receive manufacturing-related training, including electricians, financial analyst examiners and industrial engineers. After the 404 workers finish the training, they will receive an average hourly wage of $16.46, according to a commission press release. For more information, contact NCTC recruitment specialist and career adviser Angel Fitzpatrick at 940-668-3373 or afitzpatrick@nctc.edu.

Kroger to phase out use of plastic bags Kroger announced Thursday it will ban all plastic checkout bags by 2025. The company plans to help the transition from single-use to reusable bags by ramping up availability of reusable bags it sells for $1 each, according to news reports in the Cincinnati Enquirer and USA Today. Shoppers will still be able to ask for paper bags for the foreseeable future, company officials said. The move is expected to reduce the amount of plastic sent to landfills and ending up in waterways. The company is the nation’s largest supermarket chain, with

2,800 stores in 35 states and the District of Columbia. The move is expected to pressure other supermarket chains to move in a similar direction. Kroger officials said they are focusing on eliminating plastic bags at checkout, but plans include phasing out plastic bags for produce and meat, too. The company’s subsidiary in the Pacific Northwest, QFC, will be the first to eliminate the bags in its 64 stores next year. The company did not say when to expect the change to take place in Texas. In June, the Texas Supreme Court struck down Laredo’s ban on plastic bags, saying that cities did not have the authority to make such rules. — Staff reports

Lowe’s delivers strong second quarter By The Associated Press

Lowe’s rebounded in the second quarter after dismal weather cut into projects at home — and into company profits — to start the year. Investors also shrugged off a more guarded outlook as the home-improvement retailer shifts direction under new CEO Marvin Ellison.

From Page 1D

Weston to nine years’ worth in bonds, giving them 10 years before they would have to sell any stocks. “That should be enough time to ride out a correction,� Heller says. Near-retirees who use target date funds or computerized robo-advisers to invest for retirement don’t have to worry about regular rebalancing — that’s done automatically. But they may want to consider switching to a more conservative mix if stocks make up over half of their portfolios.

Start smaller, or be willing to cut back

Historically, retirees could minimize the risk of running out of money by withdrawing 4 percent of their portfolios in the first year of retirement and increasing the withdrawal amount by the inflation rate each year after that. This approach, pioneered by financial planner and researcher Bill Bengen, became known as the “4 percent rule.� Some researchers worry that the rule might not work in extended periods of low returns. One alternative is to start withdrawals at about 3 percent. Another approach is to forgo inflation adjustments in bad

After a premarket selloff, Lowe’s shares jumped nearly 8 percent Wednesday and touched a new high, underscoring the market’s faith in Ellison. The former J.C. Penney CEO had also been a longtime executive at Lowe’s competitor Home Depot. Lowe’s is preparing for a more constrained housing mar-

ket, as higher mortgage rates combined with steadily rising real estate prices have dampened home sales despite the robust economy and job market. While Americans continue to invest in their homes, Lowe’s has long been a laggard to Home Depot and Ellison plans to make it more of a destination.

years. Derek Tharp, a researcher with financial planning site Kitces.com, found that retirees could start at an initial 4.5 percent withdrawal rate if they were willing to trim their spending by 3 percent — which is equivalent to the average inflation adjustment — after years when their portfolios lose money. “You don’t actually cut your spending. You just don’t increase it for inflation,� says certified financial planner Michael Kitces.

Ideally, retirees would have enough guaranteed income from Social Security and pen-

sions to cover all of their basic expenses, such as housing, food, utilities, transportation, taxes and insurance, says Wade Pfau, professor of retirement income at the American College of Financial Services. If they don’t, they may be able to create more guaranteed income using fixed annuities or reverse mortgages, says Pfau, author of How Much Can I Spend in Retirement? Fixed annuities allow buyers to pay a lump sum to an insurance company typically in exchange for monthly payments that can last a lifetime. Reverse mortgages give people age 62 and older access to their equity through lump sums, lines of credit or monthly payments, and the borrowed money doesn’t have to be paid back until the owner sells, dies or moves out. Covering expenses with guaranteed income actually can free retirees to take more risk with their investment portfolios, which over time can give them better returns and more money to spend or leave to their kids, Pfau says. This column was provided to The Associated Press by the personal finance website NerdWallet. Liz Weston is a columnist at NerdWallet, a certified financial planner and author of “Your Credit Score.� Email: lweston@ nerdwallet.com. Twitter: @lizweston.

person to walk the planet,� Briggle said. Martinez said her friendship with Briggle always seems to be fruitful. They won’t see each other for months, but then will have a 15-minute phone call and accomplish something major.

“Moms get stuff done,� Martinez said. Explorium should open in September, she said. LUCINDA BREEDING can be reached at 940-566-6877 and via Twitter at @LBreedingDRC.

Pay off debt, maximize Social Security

Reducing expenses trims the amount that retirees must take from their portfolios during bad markets. That’s why Melissa Sotudeh, a certified financial planner in Rockville, Maryland, recommends paying off debt before retirement. She also suggests clients maximize Social Security checks. Benefits increase by about 7 percent to 8 percent for each year people put off starting Social Security after age 62. The more guaranteed income people have, the less they may have to lean on their portfolios.

If needed, arrange more guaranteed income

Denton Record-Chronicle

but with four stories. Herbert explained that Ford designed City Hall’s foundation to accommodate “going upâ€? when population growth eventually demanded administrative expansion, the predicament our City Council is grappling with right now. Many and varying types of exhibits rotate through UNT on the Square, but this one is personal to Herbert. He’s part of a volunteer team that is researching, collecting assets and creating this extraordinary show, which is now open. His co-creators are Denton preservation officer Roman McAllen, city planner Sean Jacobson and Chuck Voellinger, Denton Public Library special collections librarian. “Back in the early 1990s, Mike Cochran and some others organized a big O’Neil Ford exhibition at the Greater Denton Arts Council,â€? Herbert said. “It’s been more than 20 years. A lot of people have just moved here. Others have forgotten about him. They drive past these buildings and don’t realize the significance of O’Neil Ford and his relationship to Denton.â€? The Denton Convention & Visitors Bureau is adding an experiential layer to the O’Neil Ford exhibit, one that will exist digitally far into the future. Employing a Visit Widget tool built into our “Discover Lil dâ€? digital application, the bureau is launching a new self-guided, interactive O’Neil Ford tour itinerary. The app allows users to locate all of Denton’s Ford-designed structures and customize a map for seeing the ones that interest them. The new tour will be available in conjunction with this Friday’s public opening reception from 6 to 8 p.m. at UNT on the Square. Download the free app from the App store or Google Play and then click on “Itineraries.â€? Roman credits Sean Jacobson with having the idea for this exhibit some 18 months ago, an idea that between these four gentlemen has morphed into what will be an O’Neil Ford show unlike any other.

Courtesy photo/Kim Phillips

Herbert Holl, director of UNT on the Square, shows an O’Neil Ford original blueprint Tuesday. The blueprint is one of several on display in “O’Neil Ford: The Architect in His Words and Work,� the new exhibit at the downtown gallery. “It’s important to refresh the public’s mind that O’Neil Ford truly is a legend in architecture,� Roman said. “We have material on loan from [Ford’s last architectural firm, San Antonio-based Ford Powell & Carson], universities, Historic Denton and stuff we’re pulling from archives,� Roman continued. “That’s what’s going to make it fun for the people who are real geeks. They’re going to see things they’ve never seen before.� Roman describes O’Neil Ford as “a preservationist before it was a thing.� Herbert agrees, noting that Ford’s style was also that of an environmentalist, integrating modern design into the natural landscape. “Serious consideration for aesthetic values and good planning principles is a serious consideration for economic values. They’re complementary; not opposites,� Herbert reads the quote aloud from one of Ford’s handwritten letters in the exhibit. “That’s what all cities growing fast are up against, matching cost with aesthetic,� Herbert says about government capital

projects. “People say, ‘There’s no money for that.’ Well, there is and there isn’t. All the towns where we love going to spend time? Somebody 40, 50 or 80 years ago decided they would spend some money on making the town beautiful.� Lucky for Denton, there were some of those somebodies in charge back in the middle of the 20th century when Ford was designing for Denton. His unique style matched our original, independent spirit, his architectural-trailblazing ways are their own original and independent expression. Our legacies are forever entwined. “O’Neil Ford: The Architect in His Works and Words� is open through Sept. 22 at UNT on the Square, at 109 N. Elm St. Admission is free. KIM PHILLIPS is vice president of the Denton Convention & Visitors Bureau at the Denton Chamber of Commerce. She loves promoting Denton’s original, independent spirit through the city’s sense of place and cast of many characters. She can be reached at kim@ discoverdenton.com.

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ommunity orner

Helping to promote community service events beneďŹ ting non-proďŹ t organizations in Denton and surrounding communities.

From Page 1D

Explorium The nursing room is just days away from being ready for visitors, too. And when patrons take a seat in a recliner, they’ll notice menu cards and literature about the local massage therapy business. They’ll see the information on the app where they can make an appointment for a massage, too. “This makes sense for Soma,� Briggle said, adding that her business is equal parts service and education on how to cope with stress and how it affects the body. Soma has a civic mission in Massage for a Cause, established two years ago. Patrons can check the business’ website for the latest donation collection. Soma has collected toilet paper for Interfaith Ministries of Denton, and backpacks and food for Kyle’s Place, a Denton County shelter for homeless LGBT youth, among other initiatives. When patrons donate, their name goes into a drawing for a free massage. Martinez and Briggle have been friends for several years, and Briggle said Martinez was instrumental in helping to raise funds for what is now the Carl Gene Young Jr. Sprayground, the splash pad Briggle led fundraising efforts for several years ago. “I just think Anyah is the best

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Seeking Area Singers for Fall 2018 Vivaldi “Gloria� & Christmas Classics will be featured. Directed by Mr. Clint Kelley. Rehearsals Start August 28 at 7:00 PM. Meet in Choir Room at Gainesville campus of NCTC. For Further Information see:

Abe Nayfa, AAMSÂŽ

www.northcentraltexaschorale.com

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Financial Advisor

For information on submitting your organization’s community service events within this space, please email marketing@dentonrc.com at least two weeks prior to preferred publication day.

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