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Carol Turner, a fine arts consultant and former band director with Krum ISD, was booked into the Denton County Jail Friday on 11 felony charges of indecency with a child and sexual assault.
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The agency said its Silver Line trains are running on local tracks for the first time.
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Police in Dallas won't pursue criminal charges from a seven-year-old sexual assault claim against Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott, according to a television report Thursday.
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Officially, only one person has caught the illness during the current outbreak. But with limited testing, cases could be flying under the radar.
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Proposed zoning could block polluting industries from locating near Floral Farms, the former site of 'Shingle Mountain.'
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The Ukunika Bus and Walking Tours take passengers to sites around Dallas that were once hubs for the city’s Black community.
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Protesters gathered outside the Collin County Jail on Thursday demanding the release of 21 people arrested during a divestment demonstration Wednesday.
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Kim Noltemy will become president of the Los Angeles Philharmonic in July, helping guide the search for music director Gustavo Dudamel's successor.
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It's too early to tell whether the magnitude 3.0 and 3.2 earthquakes were human induced, but experts say most earthquakes in North Texas are due to oil and gas drilling.
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Tyson Bennet was suspended in March after a transgender student was removed from his role in the production. Sherman ISD held a special meeting on Wednesday to approve a voluntary separation agreement with Bennet.
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Students at the University of Texas at Dallas launched an encampment on Wednesday to demand the university divest from U.S. corporations affiliated with Israel's war in Gaza.
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Texas AG Ken Paxton and Kansas AG Kris Kobach are suing the Bureau of Alcohol, Firearms and Tobacco over a federal law closing the gun show loophole.
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A public memorial service is Saturday for Washington, who owned The Dallas Weekly — and became a city-wide presence on business, civic and arts boards - helping to steer them toward racial equity.
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The Supreme Court has refused to block a Texas law requiring pornographic websites to verify the age of their users. The justices on Tuesday rejected an emergency appeal filed by the Free Speech Coalition, a trade association for the adult entertainment industry.