WEATHER Local Forecasts: 787-1111 50 50 60 The Nation 60 70 Today's forcasted 60 high temperatures and precipitation activity for the continental United States. Fronts: Warm Cold 70 Stationary 80 Occluded 80 An occluded front forms when a cold front overtakes a warm front and the original air mass is forced above the warm or cold front Pressure 33 HIGH LOW SHOWERS RAIN T-STORMS FLURRIES SNOW ICE SUNNY PT. CLOUDY CLOUDY Fort Worth and Dallas Today: Mostly cloudy and warm with a slight chance of thunderstorms. The high temperature will be in the upper 70s. The low temperature will be near 60.
Sunrise: 7:09 a.m. Sunset: 7:52 p.m. Normal high: 74. Record: 52 in 1930. Normal low: 52.
Record: 31 in 1971. Tomorrow: Partly cloudy and warm. The high temperature is expected to be in the lower 80s. The low temperature is expected to be near 60. Sunrise: 7:08 a.m.
Sunset: 7:53 p.m. Normal high: 75. Record: 93 in 1930. Normal low: 53. Record: 32 in 1938.
Tuesday through Thursday: Partly cloudy with a slight chance of thunderstorms Thursday. The high temperatures are expected to be in the 70s. The low temperatures are expected to be in the 40s and 50s. Last-quarter moon: Today New moon: April 14 First-quarter moon: April 21 Full moon: April 28 Yesterday: At High 76, Low 61. At Meacham Airport, High 78, Low 61.
Precipitation through 4 p.m.: 0.01; month's total: 0.01 inches; year's total: 6.68 inches. Texas high: 84 in El Paso Texas low: 41 in Dalhart Hourly at Temp. Hum. Temp. Hum.
midnight 63 11 a.m. 67 1 a.m. 63 noon 69 2 a.m. 62 1 p.m. 69 3 a.m.
62 2 p.m. 71 4 a.m. 61 3 p.m. 73 5 a.m. 61 4 p.m.
75 6 a.m. 62 5 p.m. 75 7 a.m. 63 6 p.m. 75 8 a.m.
64 7 p.m. 71 9 a.m. 64 8 p.m. 69 10 a.m. 69 9 p.m.
67 Normal high: 74. Record: 95 in 1960. Normal low: 52. Record: 36 in 1950. Normal precipitation: 3.63 inches for month, 9.63 inches for year through April.
Texas cities Following are the high and low temperatures and the precipitation for the 24 hours ended at 8 p.m. Abilene 0 Junction 0 Alice 20 Kingsville .28 Alpine .20 Lajitas .05 Amarillo 0 Laredo 0 Austin .14 Longview 95 Beaumont 0 Lubbock 0 Beeville 26 Lufkin .20 Brownsville .26 Marfa 0 Childress .0 McAllen Station 11 Midland C. Christi 92 Min. Wells Cotulla Palacios 17 Dalhart 0 San Angelo Del Rio San Antonio 30 El Paso Stephenville Galveston Texarkana .05 Hondo Victoria .07 Houston 0 Waco 0 U.S. cities Following are the high and low temperatures and precipitation for the 24 hours ended at 8 p.m.
and the weather conditions forecast for today and tomorrow. Abbreviations are S-sunny, C-cloudy, R-rain, Sn-snow. Yesterday Today Tomorrow Albuquerque Anchorage 0 Atlanta 0 AtlanticCity 0 Boston 0 Buffalo .02 Denver Chicago 0 Cleveland 0 DesMoines 0 Detroit 0 Fargo 0 Honolulu 0 Indianapolis 0 KansasCity 0 8 Las Vegas 0 LittleRock 0 LosAngeles MiamiBeach 0 Mpls-StPaul Nashville 0 NewOrleans 0 NewYorkCity 0 OklahomaCity 0 Omaha 0 Orlando 1.17 Philadelphia 0 Phoenix 0 a Pittsburgh 0 Raleigh-Durham StLouis 0 SaltLakeCity 0 SanFrancisco 0 SantaFe 0 Seattle .12 Shreveport .03 0 Foreign cities Following are the high and low temperatures and the weather for the 24 hours Athens London Auckland Madrid Bangkok MexicoCity Barcelona Montreal Beijing Moscow Beirut Nairobi Bermuda Nassau Brisbane NewDelhi Cairo Paris Dhahran Rome Frankfurt SaoPaulo Geneva Seoul Harare Sydney HongKong Tokyo Jerusalem Toronto Jo 'burg Vancouver School finance plan reported The Associated Press AUSTIN A group of state lawmakers yesterday moved closer to breaking the House deadlock on school finances, the head of the House Public Education Committee said. Rep. Ernestine Glossbrenner, D- Alice, said an agreement reached during morning negotiations was being drafted.
But she would not release details of the accord or name other House negotiators. John Bender, press secretary for House Speaker Gib Lewis, said Lewis met yesterday with a "small working group" of about eight lawmakers. That followed discussions that lasted late into Friday night among Lt. Gov. Bob Bullock, Lewis and several other legislators, aides said.
Bender characterized the agreement as "some broad, general concepts for a House "They are making some substantial progress. The speaker is optimistic, and he expects work will continue through the weekend," Bender said. The Texas Supreme Court twice has ruled unanimously that the current $14 billion-a-year school finance system is unconstitutional. Differences in local property values result in large disparities in education funding available to school districts, the court said. Arlington man, 24, dies after car crash ARLINGTON An Arlington man was killed yesterday when he lost control of his 1985 BMW and collided with another car in the 200 block of East Copeland Road.
Police have not released the 24- year-old victim's name. They said the man was eastbound on Copeland when he rounded a curve and lost control of his car about 11:30 a.m. yesterday. He slid into the oncoming lane and hit a westbound 1988 Chevrolet. The 41-year-old driver of the Chevrolet was taken to Arlington Memorial Hospital and treated for minor injuries; the driver of the BMW was pronounced dead on arrival at the hospital.
The accident was "speed- and weather-related," said Arlington police Officer Michael Nix. The victim's name will be released after police are able to contact his family. Motorist slips, slides into mayor's Cadillac FORT WORTH Bob Bolen may be escaping the rocky roads of the mayor's office when he steps down in May, but he says he can't escape slick city roads and the car accidents they can cause. Bolen was driving on an Interstate 20 service road about 1 p.m. yesterday when a motorist, who apparently lost control of his car on a rainslickened South Drive exit ramp, bumped into the city-leased Cadillac that the mayor was driving.
No one was injured. Bolen said he does not know the extent of damage to the car. The city leases a mayoral car annually "I'm very lucky that the car was only hit on the back and scratched on the fender," Bolen said. "The other car could've bounced the thunder off of it." A Free Community Celebration! MAINS Fort Worth Arts Festival A Presentation of Downtown Fort Worth, Inc. APRIL 11 14 DOWNTOWN FORT WORTH 1120 LIVE PERFORMANCES 200 ARTISTS INTERNATIONAL CUISINE Section Page 4 Fort Worth Star-Telegram Sunday, April 7, 1991.
20-year-old woman is charged in infant's death BY DAVID CASTELLON not clear how long the baby had been death. The other alleges that she en- But statements by her family and Fort Worth Star-Telegram abandoned or when it was born. dangered the baby without neces- neighbors led investigators to besarily intending to take its life. lieve she was the mother, Chaney FORT WORTH The Tarrant Jacqueline A. Cavanaugh, who Steve Chaney, senior staff attor- said.
Tests at John Peter Smith HosCounty district attorney's office was arrested in the case Wednesday, ney with the district attorney's off- pital indicated the woman had given filed murder charges yesterday had been living at the trailer park ice, said he filed the three counts to birth, he said. against a 20-year-old woman with her aunt's family periodically allow prosecutors more options in Cavanaugh was arrested after the accused of putting her newborn ba- for two months, according to the pursuing the case. tests and remains in police custody by in a grocery sack and leaving it to arrest report. Cavanaugh's aunt discovered the at the hospital. die in a trash can.
Cavanaugh, whose bail has been infant in the trash can on the porch Cavanaugh, who recently moved The dead baby boy was found set at $15,000, faces two counts of of her family's mobile home and to Fort Worth from Lubbock, has about 4:15 Tuesday at a trailer murder and one count of injury to a called police. When police ques- three children, ranging in age from p.m. park at 5551 Parker Henderson child. tioned Cavanaugh at that time, she 15 months to 3 years, police reports Road. An autopsy revealed that the One murder count charges that said she was not the mother of the said.
It was not made clear where baby died of hypothermia. It was she intentionally caused the baby's baby, Chaney said. they are living. Lamar student, Montgomery Ward REFRIGERATOR TOR SALE! 17, is charged with indecency BY ROY MAYNARD Fort Worth Star- Telegram ARLINGTON Scott Waterbury, a star athlete for Lamar High School bound for Oklahoma State University on a football scholarship, has been charged with exposing himself to a 16-year-old girl in December Waterbury, 17, is accused of exposing himself to a neighbor on the evening of Dec. 18 as she was arriving home from a Christmas party.
The youth had been charged 1 in December with indecency with a child, which is a felony. But the charge was changed to indecent exposure because Waterbury isn't more than two years older than the girl, Arlington police investigator Jeff Ackland said. Indecent exposure is a Class misdemeanor and carries a fine of up to $1,000. Clyde D. Whitfield Cafeteria worker MANSFIELD ClydeD.
Whitfield, a retired Jetton Cafeteria worker, died Friday at a Mansfield nursing home. She was 88. Funeral will be at 4 p.m. today at First Baptist Church in Mansfield. Burial will be in Mansfield Cemetery.
Mrs. Whitfield was born in Pulaska, and had lived in Mansfield since 1909. She was the widow of Hershel Whitfield. Mrs. Whitfield was a member of Sagamore Hills Baptist Church.
Survivors: Two brothers, M.C. Sprinkle of Mansfield and Harry Sprinkle of Fort Worth; six sisters, Maye Worley and Ruth Morris, both of Fort Worth, and Aileen Day, Lucille Hart, Elsie Sells and Lois Meeks, all of Mansfield. Opal H. Martin Homemaker FORT WORTH -Opal H. Martin, a homemaker, died Friday in a hospital in Sherman.
She was 83. Funeral will be at 10a.m. Monday at Bluebonnet Hills Funeral Home. Burial will be in Bluebonnet Hills Memorial Park. Mrs.
Martin was born in Oklahoma and had lived in Fort Worth for 47 years. She was a member of Memorial Baptist Church in Haltom City. Survivors: Son, Bill R. Riner of Pottsboro; two daughters, Jo Anna Harpof Pottsboro and Linda Kidd of North Richland Hills; two sisters, Lois Clark of Hilton, and Floy Griffith of Clute; 13 grandchildren; several great-grandchilIren; and several great-great-grandchilIren. Delma C.
Forsyth Homemaker CLEBURNE Delma C. Forsyth of Cleburne died Saturday at a Cleburne hospital. She was 94. Funeral will be at 3:30 p.m. Monday at Crosier-Pearson-Mayfield Funeral Chapel in Cleburne.
Burial will be in Rose Hill Cemetery i in Cleburne. Mrs. Forsyth was born in the Bethany community in Johnson County and had lived in Cleburne for many years. She was a homemaker and a member of New Hope Baptist Church. Survivors: Husband, M.C.
"Bud" Forsyth of Cleburne; daughter, Helen Veal of Fort Worth; two grandchildren; and six great-grandchildren. Maude Moring Homemaker FORT WORTH Maude Moring, a homemaker, died Saturday at a hospital in Fort Worth. She was 90. Funeral will be at 2 p.m. Monday at Robertson Mueller HarperEighth Avenue.
Burial will be in Mount Olivet Cemetery. Mrs. Moring was a lifelong resident of Fort Worth and the widow of Tom Moring. She was a member of Southwayside Baptist Church. Survivors: Brother, William A.
Griffin of Quitaque; and sister, Ethel Ferguson of Temple. CLEARANCE OUTLET Sale Prices Apr. 7 through Sat. Apr. 13, 1991 SUN WED THU FRI SAT SOUTH 7 8 2 10 11 12 13 Look How You Save With Our Outlet Advantage Prices On Refrigerators: ORIGINAL OUTLET PRICE $1379 NOW $1199 YOUR DISCOUNT $179.85 YOUR FINAL 'MANAGER'S CHOICE" Select Lawnmowers Extra Off Select Air Conditioners Extra on Select Exercise Equipment Extra Off Select King Mattress Extra Off Select Dining Sets Extra Off Select Televisions.
Console Big Screen. Extra Off North Richland Denton Oid Glenview Monigomery Ward Pipeline Rd. Clearance Outlet Hurst St. peknap FI. Worth EXTRA OFF sa; Gra gra rell OUR ALREADY REDUCED PRICES ON SELECTED REFRIGERATORS! Sa ho LEA cit ne EXAMPLES Refrigerator 21 20 cu.
ft. Was $739.99.. Now $629.00 Refrigerator 21 cu. ft. Was $639.99.
Now $539.99. Refrigerator 18 cu. ft. Was $599.99. Now $539.00 AMT ERION DUCEVER VISA Master Cord.
Advertised sale price good through Quantities limited. No rainchecks. Items subject to new, one-of-a-kind, scratch and dent, used 6383 Grapevine STORE HOURS: 10 A.M.-8 P.M., SAT. 10 of cia No Fo Bri Ma Til You Pay $53465 Ma Fic You Pay $45815 Ma You Pay $45815 We welcome Montgomery Ward, VISA, MasterCard, American Express and Discover. ke Saturday, April 13, 1991.
sei prior sale. Items may be overstocks, tiv or discounted merchandise. co Highway Hi at A.M.-6 P.M., SUN. 1 P.M.-5 P.M. pit we Now you know what it's like to be a business without a Yellow Pages ad.
There's one moment in the buyer-seller relationship found only in the Yellow Pages: when someone, mind made up and money in hand, turns to the Southwestern Bell Yellow Pages to find exactly what they want. Did we say one moment? It's a scene repeated more than 93 million times a year in Fort Worth Which is exactly what you want. "Where people get what they want" Southwestern Bell Yellow Pages Bell Yellow Pages, 1990. Research, Inc. Westfield, NJ; 1989, Study of General Yellow Pages Usage.
da W2 Sa lif at wt be bu Fc A1 fie BI ne ar Fi Jo Jo bu er.