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Mexico to bring charges against capo, not for drugs, but for turning over another drug lord to US

This combo of images provided by the U.S. Department of State show Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada, a historic leader of Mexico’s Sinaloa cartel, left, and Joaquín Guzmán López, a son of another infamous cartel leader, after they were arrested by U.S. authorities in Texas, the U.S. Justice Department said Thursday, July 25, 2024. (U.S. Department of State via AP)

MEXICO CITY (AP) — The strange saga of how two Mexican drug lords were detained after landing in a plane in the United States in July just got stranger.

The Mexican government now says it is bringing charges against Joaquín Guzmán López, but not because he was a leader of the Sinaloa drug cartel founded by his father, Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán.

Instead, Mexican prosecutors are bringing charges against the younger Guzmán for apparently kidnapping Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada — an older drug boss from a rival faction of the cartel — forcing him onto the plane and flying to an airport near El Paso, Texas.

The younger Guzmán apparently intended to turn himself in to U.S. authorities, but may have brought Zambada along as a prize to sweeten any plea deal.

Federal prosecutors issued a statement saying “an arrest warrant has been prepared” against the younger Guzmán for kidnapping.

But it also cited another charge under an article of Mexico’s criminal code that defines what he did as treason. That section of the law says treason is committed “by those who illegally abduct a person in Mexico in order to hand them over to authorities of another country.”

That clause was apparently motivated by the abduction of a Mexican doctor wanted for allegedly participating in the 1985 torture and killing of Drug Enforcement Administration agent Kiki Camarena.

Nowhere in the statement does it mention that the younger Guzmán was a member of th e “little Chapos” faction of the Sinaloa cartel, made up of Chapo’s sons, that smuggles millions of doses of the deadly opioid fentanyl into the United States, causing about 70,000 overdose deaths each year.

The federal prosecutors’ statement also included an unusually harsh and revealing description about evidence presented by prosecutors in the northern state of Sinaloa that has since proved to be false.

Sinaloa state prosecutors were apparently trying to distance the state’s governor, Rubén Rocha, from the killing of a local political rival, Hector Cuén, who was at a meeting that was used as a pretext for luring Zambada to the abduction site. Zambada has said he expected the governor to be at that meeting; Rocha has said he made a trip out of the state that day.

To play down reports of the purported meeting, state prosecutors published a video of an apparent shooting during what they claimed was a botched robbery at a local gas station. They said Cuén was killed there, not at the meeting site, where Zambada said Cuén was murdered.

While federal prosecutors stopped short of saying the gas station video was a fake, they earlier noted that the number of gunshots heard on the video didn’t match the number of gunshot wounds on Cuén’s body.

On Wednesday, the federal prosecutors went further, saying the video “is unacceptable, nor does it have sufficient value as evidence to be taken into account.”

Zambada has said that Guzmán, who he trusted, had invited him to the meeting to help iron out the fierce political rivalry between Cuén and Rocha. Zambada was known for eluding capture for decades because of his incredibly tight, loyal and sophisticated personal security apparatus.

The fact that he would knowingly leave that all behind to meet with Rocha means that Zambada viewed such a meeting as credible and feasible. The same goes for the idea that Zambada, as the leader of the oldest wing of the Sinaloa cartel, could act as an arbiter in the state’s political disputes.

The governor has denied he knew of or attended the meeting where Zambada was abducted.

The whole case has been an embarrassment for the Mexican government, which didn’t even know about the detentions of the two drug lords on U.S. soil until after the fact.
President Andrés Manuel López Obrador has long viewed any U.S. intervention as an affront, and has refused to confront Mexico’s drug cartels. He recently questioned the U.S. policy of detaining drug cartel leaders, asking, “Why don’t they change that policy?”

Former Valley View standout Torre returning home, joining UTRGV soccer

Valley View's Pablo Torre (10) celebrates one of his five goals during a regional quarterfinal against San Antonio Southwest on April 6, 2021 at Tiger Stadium in Pharr. (Joel Martinez | [email protected])

Former Valley View standout and North Texas SC soccer player Pablo Torre is coming home. Torre is joining UTRGV’s men’s soccer program for the 2024 fall season, the team announced via an Instagram post Wednesday.

The 20-year-old forward starred for 3 1/2 years at Valley View, serving as a key component of the team’s dominant runs between 2019-22. His junior year proved to be his best, scoring a Valley-leading 37 goals in 14 district games and carrying the Tigers to their third state tournament appearance.

In 2022, the then-senior opted to forgo the remainder of his final year at Valley View, leaving the team midway through district play to sign with North Texas SC. Torre had netted seven goals in five district games that season.

Valley View forward Pablo Torre (10) sets himself up for a try on goal during a District 31-5A game against Sharyland High on Jan. 28, 2022 at Richard Thompson Stadium in Mission. (Roman Madrigal | Special to The Monitor)

Torre spent the next two years in Arlington competing with North Texas SC, appearing in 31 games and starting in seven during that span. The 6-foot-1 striker recorded six goals and two assists during his two-year stint with the team before ultimately not seeing his contract renewed at the end of the 2023 season.

The McAllen native is the third RGV native on UTRGV’s roster for the 2024 season, joining Brownsville native and former RGV FC goalkeeper Alexis Gonzalez and Edinburg native and RGV FC Academy product Arev Vera.

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McAllen Nikki Rowe football player injured at party dies

Adan De La Cruz
Adan De La Cruz

By OMAR ZAPATA and DINA ARÉVALO | Staff Writers

McAllen Nikki Rowe football player Adan De La Cruz has died.

The district announced his death on Wednesday.

“We are deeply saddened to hear the news of the passing of one of our students. Adan De La Cruz, a senior at Rowe High School, passed away today,” the statement read. “He was a wonderful young man, very well liked, and much admired by his peers.

“He will be missed but not forgotten.”

The district offered thoughts and prayers to the family during this difficult time.

“We have a team of counselors at the campus to help students and staff cope with this tragedy.”

McAllen Police Chief Victor Rodriguez said authorities received notice from medical personnel about his death early Wednesday afternoon.

“So, we are really, really sorry to learn that this afternoon about this young person,” Rodriguez said. “This is occurring as we speak, so that’s all I can tell you is that at this point in time, that is the information we’re getting from medical personnel at this time.

“Very, very tragic. We’re so sorry, you know, clearly our condolences to the family and to the student body as well.”

De La Cruz was injured when he slipped off a roof while attempting to jump into a pool.

The incident happened on Saturday just before midnight.

On Wednesday afternoon, police announced the arrest of a teenager they accuse of collecting the “entrance fee” at the party that resulted in the hospitalization of a football player.

Heron Hernandez Jr., of McAllen, is charged with purchase or furnishing alcohol to a minor.

He was arrested Tuesday and remanded to the Hidalgo County Adult Detention Center on a $25,000 bond.

Jaime De La Cerda Islas and Heron Hernandez Jr.

Police have also arrested Jaime De La Cerda Islas, 51, and his son, who is a juvenile, for the same allegations and charges.

De La Cerda hosted the party at his brother-in-law’s house and an entry fee was charged to attend.

They were charging $10 tickets before the party or a $15 fee at the entrance, according to a police report.

Investigators have a Snapchat video that depicts the incident.

Rodriguez said the investigation into De La Cruz’s death is ongoing.

“The outcome of that will determine what, if any more, charges and whom may be facing other charges. That call is yet to be determined,” Rodriguez said. “Clearly now that we have a death involved, that is clearly (a) serious injury so that, too, may be a factor that will determine charges as the investigation progresses.”

The chief said this incident shines light on the extent of risk involved when people consume alcohol and when people make alcohol available to people who should not have access to it.

“Those are the things that we want to hold people accountable for,” Rodriguez said. “If accountability can be established, then that’s what we are hoping the investigation will lead us to conclude.

“It’s just a really tragic set of circumstances and a really tragic outcome. A really sad day, I think, for the McAllen community and we’re sad to learn of this outcome today.”

Meanwhile, district spokesman Mark May said Nikki Rowe High canceled a football scrimmage scheduled for Thursday evening and its annual Meet the Warrior Night, which had been set for Friday.


Editor’s note: This story has been updated with new information. 

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McAllen teen who hosted pool party charged in tragic death

Harlingen High School installs new sign with fresh motto

Harlingen High School recently installed a new sign with a new motto. (Travis Whitehead | Valley Morning Star)
Harlingen High School recently installed a new sign with a new motto. (Travis Whitehead | Valley Morning Star)

HARLINGEN — The school with the red brick in the north of the city possesses a power and a vitality which never dies.

Perhaps this is why the new sign over the entrances — which has welcomed generations of students and teachers — declares now “Cardinal Spirit Never Dies.”

The letters black and shining over the entrances at Harlingen High School at 1201 Marshall Ave. reflect well the sun and the freshness of the Cardinal experience.

The sign with the black letters is a new addition with a legendary declaration, and its arrival on campus is the result of the spirit of the HHS Class of 1961.

When the Class of 61 had its 60th reunion online in 2021, alumni, including long-time Harlingen school board member Gerry Fleuriet (retired), realized they had extra funds and decided after some discussion amongst themselves and administrators to have the sign installed.

“We decided that we wanted to do something that would speak to all of our students and staff past present and future,” Fleuriet said. “The new principal said he envisioned something large and significant at the entrance. So, our committee decided that was a really good idea.”

Students of the Class of 2025 — and 26, and 27 — are enjoying the sign.

“To me it represents the type of people that we are,” said Luis Rodriguez, 17, a senior.

“We are people who are passionate about what we are doing,” he said. “Now it gives me a chance to leave my mark on the community. I am going to be guided by the Lord.”

If the stone and the brick of the entrances and the hallways could talk, they would tell deeper stories of individual lives spreading away from the school over generations.

“Ours was an outstanding class with multiple talents, which became even more evident as we read bios while preparing for our 60th Reunion in 2021,” Fleuriet said recently. “Attorneys, doctors and nurses, professors and teachers; engineers, scientists and researchers; artists, businessmen and women; ministers, to name just a few of our professions.”

There were of course also the soldiers, sailors, marines and airmen and women then and now. One of the more recent and noteworthy of successes is Irene Tyler, a 2018 graduate of HHS who is now a naval officer serving in Japan.

Being a student at Harlingen High School means being a part of decades of traditions and events both stellar and tragic. Not long ago a popular basketball player was senselessly killed. Meanwhile the Cardinal Band is getting its show ready for another great football season.

And the Lady Cardinals have hit the basketball courts, all ensuring the “Cardinal Spirit Never Dies.”

“I really like the sign,” said Lola Tamez, 16, a junior on the girls’ basketball team.

“I think the motto ‘Cardinal Spirit Never Dies’ really emphasizes the pride and the spirit of the school,” Lola said. “We are always Cardinals, we are always loyal to the Cardinals.”

Fleuriet’s fellow 1961 alumnus Dr. Peggy O’Neill pointed out there is more to Cardinal spirit than cheering the football team.

“It’s also all of the other lasting memories we have — the wonderful teachers, clubs and activities, and most of all the friendships that developed there and have continued for over 70 years,” said O’Neill. “It is a spirit of mutual respect and caring that lasts a lifetime.”

TxDOT shares new details about proposed State Highway 68

The city of Edinburg hosted a work session Tuesday, Aug. 20, 2024, to discuss the Texas Department of Transportation's State Highway 68 Project. (Courtesy photo)
The city of Edinburg hosted a work session Tuesday, Aug. 20, 2024, to discuss the Texas Department of Transportation’s State Highway 68 Project. (Courtesy photo)

EDINBURG — The city hosted a work session Tuesday to discuss the State Highway 68 Project.

Texas Department of Transportation Pharr District Engineer Pete Alvarez presented the proposed route and took questions about the project, which will create a 22-mile four-lane highway from US 281/I-69C in Edinburg to US 83/I-2 in the Alamo-Donna area.

The route shows SH 68 will begin just north of FM 490, heading east near Brushline Road before turning south and crossing FM 1925 (Monte Cristo Road) and SH 107. The route will then cross FM 1423 (Val Verde Road) before intersecting at US 83/I-2.

Alvarez also said that the new state highway will not be a tollway.

He said that SH 68 will provide and alternative route to I-69C, giving driver’s another option when traveling south to I-2.

During the presentation, Alvarez also said that there is consideration in taking FM 490, which is a two-lane roadway with shoulders, and increasing it to five lanes, or two lanes in each direction with a continuous left-turn lane.

“We believe that by adding this type of capacity it would improve, if you will, the opportunity for connectivity to (US) 281 along FM 490 to State Highway 68,” Alvarez said. “It will also, we believe, create an opportunity for economic development to occur in the area, and it just in general provides added capacity along this corridor.”

The highway was previously going to begin where I-69C intersects with FM 490. That starting point was moved north approximately three-quarters of a mile due to its proximity to South Texas International Airport. He said that by moving the route north, it would be out of the flight path while meeting ​​Federal Aviation Administration requirements.

Alvarez said that TxDOT has considered many different alignments, including a route running south of the airport. He said that there were other constraints, including the Edinburg Landfill at 8601 Jasman Road, which is why the decision was made to move the route north.

Mayor Ramiro Garza said that he is concerned about the proposed route bypassing the airport. During the meeting Garza told Alvarez that since discussions began about SH 68 in 2014, proposed routes were always shown connecting directly to FM 490 and US 281 near the airport. That changed during discussions in 2021.

“I understand now there’s obviously these reasons that are being brought up as to why that can’t happen, but I find it hard to believe — I’ll be real honest with you — that over all this time, this section was not looked at,” Garza told Alvarez.

He said that he has an issue with the new highway not connecting directly to FM 490 and the airport like originally planned.

“The city of Edinburg has been investing in our airport for many, many years, and the state has been putting in funds there to expand it,” Garza said after the meeting. “It’s a general aviation airport, but it’s also for industrial. We’ve supported our State Highway 68 plans for a long time because it’s good for our area, but also because it was going to benefit our airport.”

He said that he appreciates TxDOT making the presentation for the city, but he would like to explore other options to find a way to go back to the original plans that connect SH 68 to FM 490 leading to the airport.

TxDOT is estimating that phase one of construction for SH 68 to begin in late 2026 or early 2027. Alvarez said that the project already has over $250 million allocated for the project as well as an additional $150 million that’s being proposed to provide an expressway facility to relieve the congestion on I-69C.

He added that once the Hidalgo County Loop is completed, which will run from the Pharr International Bridge to the Anzalduas International Bridge, the new state highway could possibly become an interstate highway.

“​​We believe it’s a very important project not only for the community of Edinburg, but really for the entire Valley,” Alvarez said after the meeting. “We anxiously await the comments that the mayor and his staff have regarding this project. We believe our coordination with the Federal Aviation Administration are being met with this new proposal, and we are anxiously waiting to preserve the right of way to allow for this new facility to come into play.”

Harlingen heating up for hotly contested election

A man walks up the path to the polling location Saturday, May 6, 2023, on election day for the HCISD Board of Trustees election at Jane W. Long Elementary School in Harlingen. (Denise Cathey/The Brownsville Herald)

HARLINGEN — A crowded field of candidates is turning the Nov. 5 election into the city’s most hotly contested match in years.

In the city’s first regular November election, eight candidates, including two former commissioners, are taking on incumbents in the District 3, District 4 and District 5 races.

Across town, election fever’s heating up in the city where many residents complained of apathy for decades.

“This is the first time since I’ve been here,” City Secretary Amanda Elizondo, who took office 13 years ago, said Wednesday, referring to the number of candidates on the ballot.

At City Hall, the candidate filing deadline closed Monday.

This year, the city’s extending its early voting hours to match Cameron County’s schedule, while the county’s running the election at a cost of about $70,000.

The city’s first regular November election is expected to drive higher voter turnout, Remi Garza, the county’s election’s administrator, said.

In 2020, the county’s voter turnout set a record, with 53% of registered voters going to the polls, he said.

This year, he’s expecting the county’s voters to set a new record, Garza said.

“November elections, generally speaking, have higher voter participation, especially presidential elections,” he said. “We see higher voter turnout.”

A county-wide increase in voter registration is also expected to drive voter turnout in the election, Garza said.

In Harlingen, 39,266 residents are registered to vote, he said.

“We’ve seen a steady increase in voter registration, so we expect higher turnout,” Garza said.

In 2022, Harlingen voters pushed the city’s May elections to November as part of the past commission’s plan to boost voter turnout.

Across the city’s five single-member voting districts, candidates’ campaign signs are popping up.

In District 3, Commissioner Michael Mezmar, a financial advisor who first won office in 2012, is facing Jennifer Vasquez Colten, who works as Texas State Technical College Foundation’s executive director of advancement operations; Frank Lozano, an attorney; and Steve Ritter, a pilot.

In the race for the District 4 seat, Commissioner Frank Morales, a semi-retired salesman bidding for a second term, is facing Dagoberto Pena, an investigator with the Cameron County District Attorney’s Office; Basilio “Chino” Sanchez, a retired newspaper production technician who served as a commissioner from 2012 to 2015; and B.T. Vargas, a business owner.

In District 5, Commissioner Rene Perez, a schoolteacher who serves as the city’s mayor pro tem, is bidding for a second term in the race in which he’s facing former Commissioner Ruben De La Rosa, a Texas Southmost College instructor who served as a commissioner from 2015 to 2021; and Nikki Alvarez Daniell, who is a reserve deputy constable with the Cameron County Constable Precinct 5.

The election’s early voting period will run from Oct. 21 to Nov. 1.


Editor’s note: This story has been updated for clarity. 

Willacy County man sentenced to decades in prison for fatal child abuse case

Ruben Gonzalez Cordoba, second from left, who is accused in the death of Jesse Harrison, a 13-year-old boy, stands trial as he sits with his attorneys inside the 197th state District Court at the Cameron County Courthouse on Monday, Aug. 13, 2024, in Brownsville. (Miguel Roberts/The Brownsville Herald)

BROWNSVILLE — A Willacy County man was sentenced to prison Wednesday for the death of a Sebastian teenager.

The jury convicted Ruben Gonzalez Cordoba on Tuesday afternoon of a lesser charge of criminal negligent homicide instead of murder. They also convicted him of injury to a child. The jury found him not guilty of the remaining counts of injury to a child.

The sentencing comes after more than a week of trial.

He received 30 years for injury to a child and two years on the criminal negligent homicide conviction.

The sentences will run concurrent.

He was also fined $6,000.

Gonzalez was accused of abuse, including starvation, that killed 13-year-old Jesse Harrison Jr. on Jan. 23, 2021.

Following the sentencing, Gonzalez heard victim impact statements.

Gloria C. Cortez, Willacy County District Attorney Office’s victim liaison read statements from Harrison’s siblings, whose names were withheld.

“This has changed my life in more ways than I could imagine. I’ve lost my lovely brother,” one sibling said. “I miss his lovely laugh. I know that he’s watching over me. I miss you brother every day.”

Jesse Harrison Sr., the boy’s father, stood directly in front of Gonzalez stating that “on Jan. 23, 2021 when I heard the news of little Jesse’s passing I wondered who could have done this horrible act. … During the short time we were together I felt love for my son. … Ruben, I hope that you get to know Christ.”

A view inside the 197th state District Court at the Cameron County Courthouse in Brownsville on Monday, Aug. 13, 2024, where Ruben Gonzalez Cordoba, who is accused in the death of 13-year-old Jesse Harrison, stands trial as he sits with his attorneys. (Miguel Roberts/The Brownsville Herald)

After the sentencing, his attorney, Nat Perez, who was accompanied by his son, attorney Noah Perez, told reporters that he was glad the jury had paid close attention to the facts and had excluded the murder charge.

“There’s no torture. There was no  starvation,” he said. “The truth is that we don’t know the dynamics of the fall (alleged fall that caused Harrison’s broken arm). There was poverty in the home. Ruben had no other family to go to for help with Jesse. He had no authority to take Jesse to the hospital and he had no money to pay for a hospital bill.

“Although the Lyford school district had been leaving a lot of food in each student’s home … rumors that food had been sold was something he had never been told. That was a big problem in this case. There were so many rumors spreading around the community.”

Medical records show that Harrison had sepsis and the coronavirus just before he died.

Harrison did receive medical attention and the infection was why he was losing so much weight, not starvation, Perez said. 

Sabrina Loredo, from left, walks out of the 197th state District Courtroom at the Cameron County Courthouse Wednesday, July 31, 2024, during a hearing in the 197th state District Court in front of presiding judge Adolfo E. Cordova Jr. (Miguel Roberts/The Brownsville Herald)

Harrison’s mother, Sabrina Loredo and his grandmother, Antonia Villarreal Gonzalez, are also charged in the case.

Antonia Villarreal Gonzalez

Both women are charged with murder and several counts of injury to a child.

Loredo was 33 at the time of the alleged crime while Villarreal was 56.

They have both pleaded not guilty and are scheduled for trial later this year.

Gonzalez will get credit for time served and an appeal is pending.


Editor’s note: This story has been updated with new information. 

San Benito Historical Society to place marker at Bobby Morrow Stadium

Bobby Morrow Stadium is pictured Friday, Aug. 12, 2022, in San Benito. (Denise Cathey/The Brownsville Herald)

SAN BENITO — Four years after Olympic legend Bobby Morrow’s death, a Texas Historical Marker will honor the stadium bearing the hometown hero’s name.

On Saturday, the San Benito Historical Society is set to hold a ceremony at 10 a.m., where officers are planning to place a Texas Historical Marker at the San Benito school district’s Bobby Morrow Stadium.

”The Historical Society wanted to honor Bobby Morrow, not only for his Olympic records, but because he lived his life as a role model for Christian values,” Sandra Tumberlinson, the society’s co-founder, said in a statement.

“When he died in 2020, kids heard about his sports achievements, but there was more to Bobby than sports,” she said. “We hope that this historical marker will help future generations read about Bobby Morrow and follow what he considered to be most important in life.”

On San Benito High School’s old dirt track, Morrow trained to become the man known as “the world’s fastest human.”

Two years later, he brought home three gold medals from the 1956 Olympics in Melbourne, Australia, hailed as “the greatest sprinter of all time.”

For six months, Tumberlinson researched Morrow’s life story to write her 64-page narrative supporting her request to the Texas Historical Commission for the historical marker.

“Bobby came from a farming family, ran on dirt tracks at the old stadium and won the hearts of America when he brought back three Olympic gold medals from the 1956 Olympics in Melbourne, Australia,” Tumberlinson wrote to the commission. “Bobby’s humble attitude, evident when he said, ‘Going to the state meet from our little high school in San Benito was something,’ stayed with him all his life. We are proud to honor Bobby with this state historical marker proclaiming his accomplishments and prouder still that he called San Benito home.”

At San Benito High School, Morrow entered the athletics program playing running back for Coach Jim Barnes’ Greyhound football team.

Signed career photos, family images and Olympic memorabilia of athlete Bobby Morrow are displayed Friday, Aug. 12, 2022, in Judy Parker’s Harlingen home. (Denise Cathey/The Brownsville Herald)

By early 1952, he was a sophomore when he joined the track and field squad.

Before afternoon practices, his father Bob Floyd Morrow would drive his tractor to school “to level and smooth out the dirt track,” Tumberlinson wrote.

In the school’s wood-working shop, Morrow built starting blocks to help brace his feet on the track.

As a sophomore under Coach Jake Watson, he qualified for the state competition.

A year later, Morrow was back at the big meet, winning the 100-yard dash.

During his senior year, he won the 100 along with 220-yard dash.

By the time he graduated in 1954, Morrow was a state champion, dominating the 100-yard dash.

After enrolling at Abilene Christian College, he went on to win 80 sprint championships.

Then in 1956, Morrow became the only San Benito High School athlete to compete in the Olympic Games, Leo Rodriguez, a local historian, stated.

In Melbourne, he became a legend, winning three gold medals, reigning over the 100-meter dash and the 200-meter sprint while leading his team to the gold metal in 4×100-meter relay.

Suddenly, Morrow was a superstar, featured on the covers of Life Magazine, Sports Illustrated and Sport Magazine, his big beaming smile splashing on cereal boxes.

Judy Parker holds up the Dec. 10, 1956 issue of LIFE magazine featuring Bobby Morrow on the cover Friday, Aug. 12, 2022, in her Harlingen home. (Denise Cathey/The Brownsville Herald)

In track, Morrow’s records were hard to beat.

“From 1956-58, Bobby Morrow won all the major sprinting titles for which he competed …, becoming the first man since fellow American Jesse Owens to do the sprint treble,” Tumberlinson wrote in her narrative. “He broke Owens’ Olympic record in the 200m before anchoring the USA to a new 4x100m record. Carl Lewis (1984) and Usain Bolt (2012 and 2016) are the only other men to win the three sprint titles at the same games. Not since Jesse Owens had a sprinter so dominated the Olympic track. Not until Carl Lewis and Usain Bolt would a man do so again.”

In 1989, Morrow was inducted into the National Track and Field Hall of Fame.

Then in 2016, he was instated into the Texas Track and Field Coaches Hall of Fame.

On Oct. 13, 2006, Morrow helped dedicate the $4 million, 12,000-seat football stadium bearing his name.

BPUB encourages conservation during drought

Falcon International Reservoir is seen on Wednesday, July 24, 2024. (Delcia Lopez | [email protected])

With the city of Brownsville under Stage 2 drought restrictions due to alarmingly low water levels at Falcon and Amistad reservoirs, Brownsville Public Utilities Board has rolled out free water conservation kits for its customers.

The kits are designed to make it easier for households to reduce water usage and help the city meet its water-conservation goals, according to BPUB, which said each kit includes practical tools that can easily be implemented at home.

Among the items provided with the kit are a garden hose timer to help manage outdoor water usage, and leak-detection tablets, which allow users to rapidly identify and fix plumbing leaks.

The kits also include a toilet tank bank — essentially a rubber bag you fill with water and hang in your toilet tank to help reduce the amount of water used per flush. Customers will also find in their kits a moisture meter to prevent overwatering of plants, a faucet aerator to decrease water flow, and a five-minute shower timer to encourage shorter showers.

“BPUB encourages all customers to pick up their free kit and take advantage of these resources to conserve water,” the city-owned utility said. “The initiative comes as part of the city’s broader efforts to address water scarcity and ensure sustainable water management for the future.”

Customers can visits www.brownsville-pub.com to claim their free water conservation kit.

Cantu joins UTRGV women’s basketball as graduate student coach

UTRGV Athletics announced the hiring of Mission Veterans alumnus Ronnie Cantu as a women's basketball graduate student coach. Graphic courtesy - UTRGV Athletics.

UTRGV head women’s basketball coach Lane Lord announced on Tuesday that Ronnie Cantu, a former basketball standout at Mission Veterans High School, has joined the program as a graduate student coach.

Cantu will be pursuing a Master of Communications while assisting the women’s basketball program. She’ll work with the guards and posts, shadow each coach to assist with breaking down film for scouting reports and fundamental drills, and help coordinate travel and other aspects of basketball operations. Cantu will help run practices and travel to road games with the team.

“We’re really excited to have Ronnie for many reasons. She’s from the Valley, played college basketball for four years, and to have her back here to help us get engaged in the community is great,” Lord said. “She’ll be with us for two years, which is a blessing. One of the most important things is she has a lot of knowledge with Synergy and a lot of our video-editing systems that she used in college, so now she’s on the other side of it breaking down film and she’ll gain a lot of knowledge working with our staff. We coaches have the greatest job in the world and to be able to pass that knowledge on to the young people is what we’re here for.”

Cantu comes to UTRGV after playing for the St. Edward’s Hilltoppers from 2020-24, where she earned her bachelor’s in kinesiology with an emphasis in physical therapy. The 5-4 guard played in 94 games making 31 starts and averaging 3.9 points, 1.8 rebounds, and 1.4 assists per game at St. Edward’s. She was a 74% shooter from the free-throw line and averaged 19.6 minutes per game for her career. Cantu earned the Topper True award while at St. Edward’s, which is given to one student-athlete each year who embodies what it means to be a Hilltopper.

Growing up a coach’s kid, Cantu calls herself a “gym rat” and grew up around the game of basketball. She played for her dad, Rafael, at Mission Veterans, where she racked up individual accolades as a four-year letterwinner. She was the district and RGV Basketball Coaches Association (RGVBCA) All-Valley Newcomer of the Year in 2017, the district co-MVP in 2019, and the district and RGVBCA MVP in 2020. She also earned The Monitor’s All-Area Co-Offensive Player of the Year, All-Region IV and Class 5A All-State honors from the Texas Association of Basketball Coaches (TABC) as a senior.

“I’m truly happy to be back home, and what better way to make my homecoming than by contributing with the sport I’ve loved my entire life,” Cantu said. “I’m excited to work with Coach Lord and the rest of the coaching staff and the team, to learn about them and from them. I really want to take this coaching opportunity and see where I can run with it.”

Coming off her own four-year career, Cantu hopes to be a resource to help the Vaqueros adjust to the demands of being a collegiate student-athlete. She’ll lean on the experiences gained during her own playing career to preach the importance of the guard-post relationship and balancing academics with athletics.

“Being a student-athlete isn’t an easy task, so my goal is to be someone they can lean on and talk to and feel vulnerable with and give some basketball knowledge as well,” Cantu said. “My dad was my high school coach, so I was lucky to have an amazing human being guide me. The best thing about going into coaching now is I can use all of that love from my dad and my previous coaches and mentors and be that person for the next generation.”

Cantu is eager to soak up lessons from the Vaqueros coaching staff and share her love of the game. She said it’s special to be back home as she embarks on a new chapter in basketball and aims to be an asset to the program.

“I want to thank the Valley, the community, for all of their love and support and everything they’ve done as I continued my journey into college basketball and now back to the Valley,” Cantu said. “The beauty of this staff is that we’re all so different in a good way. We all bring something new and exciting to the table. I’m so excited to go on this journey with this team.”