NORTH TEXAS — It was nice to have a high slightly above normal again like yesterday. We finally broke the string of icy mornings, starting above freezing for the first time at DFW in a week. We stopped a streak of hard freezes at seven, the longest streak in four years.
A Carrollton homeowner is on edge after a person showed up at her door wearing a disturbing mask. The person was holding a sign with the Bible verse "Revelation 20: 1-15" on it. It's something police are now monitoring.
The end of the week has arrived, bringing warmer daytime temperatures to North Texas. However, Friday morning has been quite cold, with temperatures in the teens to low 20s.
Sylvia DeLeon and Gissel Lorenzo work at the same Bishop Arts taco place. They are also friends whose parents worry about deportation.
Showers and storms will arrive in North Texas late Saturday, Jan. 25. Rain chances (20%) will arrive with a weak cold front, with the best chances for precipitation south and east of the Metroplex, according to the National Weather Service Fort Worth. A few isolated thunderstorms are possible, although severe weather is not expected.
The weekend won't be a complete washout, but CBS News Texas meteorologists suggest planning any outdoor activities for Saturday, as it will be the nicer day.
Candra Rogers, an assistant principal at Collins Intermediate School, was injured in August when a student threw a wooden hanger at her. The hanger hit Rogers in the right eye, and knocked her eye out of the socket, she said.
North Texas is likely to see a three-day stretch of bone-chilling cold starting Sunday, according to the National Weather Service.
The commercial entails the dad, one of Mark Blitch's actor friends, attempting and failing during a family game of charades where the clues are clearly door, eat and toes. Xander, Mark Blitch's son, who was recently diagnosed with autism is also featured in the ad.
According to data from Zillow, average rents in the Dallas-Fort Worth metro now outpace those in Austin for the first time since at least 2015.
North Texas school districts are evaluating the impact of a new directive allowing immigration authorities to enter schools for arrests. The Department of Homeland Security has rescinded previous protections for schools,
"We were losing students, and we wanted to make sure that we maintained the number of teachers and the capacities of our campuses were met,” Dr. David Vinson said.