
This is the report from the Nacogdoches County Jail that lists the arrests made from 6 a.m. of the previous day to 6 a.m. of the listed day.

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This is the report from the Nacogdoches County Jail that lists the arrests made from 6 a.m. of the previous day to 6 a.m. of the listed day.

This page may take a moment to load

This is the report from the Nacogdoches County Jail that lists the arrests made from 6 a.m. of the previous day to 6 a.m. of the listed day.

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If you are having trouble loading the mugshots please try using a different internet browser
CONTACT: SGT. GREG SOWELL
936.559.2618
NACOGDOCHES CRIME STOPPERS PARTNERS WITH ANDERSON SOFTWARE TO COUNTER CRIME AND BUILD A STRONGER COMMUNITY
New technology optimizes the tip submission experience and effectiveness
Nacogdoches Crime Stoppers is proud to announce that they have recently partnered with the Texas-based company, Anderson Software, to provide a more seamless and efficient way for students and community members to offer information to help solve and prevent crimes or other serious or life threatening matters. Anderson Software leads the industry with its latest secure and anonymous tip acquisition and management solution, called P3 Intel. This partnership allows Nacogdoches County to foster a relationship between law enforcement and the public to proactively create a safer community.
Tips were previously accepted as SMS text messages using a short code and a dedicated keyword. Nacogdoches Crime Stoppers will now be accepting tips by phone, the web, and by way of the new, free P3 Tips mobile app available on the iOS and Android platforms, greatly enhancing the mobile tip submission process. Still completely anonymous, tips submitted through the P3 mobile app, unlike SMS text tips, have no length limitations and allow images, video, and documents to be uploaded with the tip. Anderson Software’s sophisticated encryption processes obscure any and all identifying information and provide assured anonymity for tipsters.
Even without the app, there is still an easy and secure option for submitting tips from any PC or mobile browser by going to p3tips.com. Of course, tips are still welcomed through calling our hotline (936) 560-INFO. Using whichever method, once a person submits a tip, they will be given a TIP ID and password. With this information they can login at p3tips.com and submit follow-up information, engage in real-time chat/two-way dialogue, be informed of the outcome of the tip, and access any pertinent reward information.
Nacogdoches Crime Stoppers feels that utilizing Anderson Software’s P3 Tips program will enhance communications with the public, thereby building a safer and more trusting community in which everyone prospers. To further show our value of tipsters’ contribution to the community, tips leading to an arrest will result in a cash reward.
Agenda for Commissioners Court Tuesday, November 8, 2016
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You’re Invited!
Join us for the celebration of Arbor Day!
The official Texas Arbor Day Celebration is being held in the City of Nacogdoches, the Oldest Town in Texas, now in its 300th year. In observance of this ‘holiday for trees’ the City of Nacogdoches will host a local celebration at Millard’s Crossing Historic Village on Friday, November 4, 2016, from 8:30 a.m. until noon.
Keep Nacogdoches Beautiful (KNB) has provided a sapling from a historic tree, The Treaty Oak, to be planted during the ceremony. The Treaty Oak is the only survivor of a group of live oaks known as the “Council Oaks,” under which Stephen F. Austin is reputed to have signed a treaty.
“It’s a five gallon tree, about four feet tall. It’s not the physical aspects of the tree that are impressive; it’s the lineage,” said John Boyette, Texas A&M Forest Service district forester and KNB board of directors member.
Texas communities celebrate trees and learn about the benefits trees provide for us every day – like clean air, clear water, improving our health and even saving us money on energy bills. This is a great opportunity for families get out and learn about trees and how they protect and affect us.
Sponsors of the event include The City of Nacogdoches, Texas A&M Forest Service, Texas Forestry Association, International Society of Arboriculture, Texas Chapter, Stephen F. Austin State University, Keep Nacogdoches Beautiful, Millard’s Crossing, and the Garden Capital of Texas Committee.
The events are free and open to the public.
Everyone is invited to participate either by attending the festivities Nov. 4, 2016 in Nacogdoches, by planting a tree in their own communities, or by just taking a minute to enjoy and celebrate trees and the vital resources they provide for us every day.
Dignitaries will be available for individual interviews after the event. The Governor, Greg Abbott, will potentially be in attendance.

Dr. Richard Jones, professor of theatre at SFA, assists Mae Johnston, guest actor playing the role of Josie, with blocking for School of Theatre’s production of “By the Bog of Cats” by Irish playwright Marina Carr while theatre student Kara Bruntz, in the lead role of Hester Swaine, looks on. The show is at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday, Nov. 15 through 19, in W.M. Turner Auditorium on the SFA campus.
Rather, 2016 happens to be the centennial year of the Easter Rising in Ireland, a short-lived but extremely significant revolt against British rule, which led eventually to the establishment of the Irish Free State.
Dr. Rick Jones, professor of theatre and interim director of the School of Theatre, directs the play. Jones specializes in Irish theatre in his scholarly work; much of his research for the past 20 years has focused on Irish versions on inherited material, including Greek mythology. He’s taken SFA theatre students to Ireland six times to study Irish theatre, taught courses on Irish theatre and authored numerous publications on the subject. Still, he’s never had the opportunity to direct an Irish play in his 16 years at SFA, and the centennial of the Easter Rising seemed an appropriate time to break that drought.
Described by Jones as “hilarious in places, darkly disturbing in others,” “By the Bog of Cats” is Carr’s best-known play. Loosely based on the Medea legend, this haunting drama is “part tenderness, part quirkiness, and part ferocity,” Jones said. “It is my favorite play by my favorite contemporary Irish playwright.”
This play has been on Jones’s “someday” list for a long time, but he wasn’t confident he could cast the youngest character – the role of 7-year-old Josie – using college-age students. But when he learned that Junior Jacks veteran actor Mae Johnston, 11, might be interested in performing in the Mainstage production, successful casting of “By the Bog of Cats” became a possibility. Junior Jacks is the summer theatre camp at SFA for students in third through ninth grades.
“Mae is a remarkably intelligent girl – a quick study,” Jones said, adding that she came with recommendations from associate professor CC Conn, the driving force behind Junior Jacks, and from the SFA theatre students who worked with her in the camp. “In order to put the show in this season, I needed to know I could fill that role. So, she’s been in the role since May.”
All these aspects came together this year to allow “By the Bog of Cats” to be included in the 2016-17 Mainstage Series.
Dialect will be one of the greatest tasks all the actors will face in this play, Jones said. The skills of new theatre faculty member and visiting assistant professor Stephanie Murphy will be utilized to help students conquer dialect challenges.
“We will be using three different variations of Irish dialect, loosely described as northern, western and an upper-class Dublin accent,” he said.
In addition to the dialect, another challenge will be the portrayal of the complex characters that are “more human” in the sense that they have both positive attributes and flaws. Foremost among these characters is the play’s protagonist, Hester Swaine.
As the play opens at dawn, Hester receives prophecies that she will be dead by dusk. It is the wedding day of the man who was once her common-law husband and is the father of her child, and he is being wed to someone younger, prettier and richer, Jones explained.
“Basically, it is a day-in-the-life, but it is a significant day,” Jones said. “Hester is extraordinarily strong-willed, but she’s pushed to the edge and reacts with vengeance. Whereas we like certain people more than others, Hester is vengeful, given to violence, sometimes dishonest, and she’s got to be our heroine. She has to be sufficiently charismatic, and it is important that we understand why she behaves the way she does. We don’t have to approve of her actions, but we have to have some sort of admiration for her.”
Whereas a good share of the play is funny, it is a play that is “ultimately about sadness and anger,” Jones said. “Fitting those ideas into the same play is my challenge.”
“By the Bog of Cats” will be presented at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday, Nov. 15 through 19, in W.M. Turner Auditorium in the Griffith Fine Arts Building on the SFA campus. The play is recommended for mature audiences. A content advisory may be viewed at www.theatre.sfasu.edu.
A reception and post-performance interdisciplinary discussion in the Griffith Gallery featuring SFA faculty from theatre, folklore, classical studies and psychology will follow the Thursday night performance.
Single tickets are $15 for adult, $10 for senior and $7.50 for student/youth. For tickets or more information, call the SFA Fine Arts Box Office at (936) 468-6407 or visit www.theatre.sfasu.edu.

This is a complete list of reports responded to by the Nacogdoches Police Department
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This is the report from the Nacogdoches County Jail that lists the arrests made from 6 a.m. of the previous day to 6 a.m. of the listed day.

This page may take a moment to load

This is the report from the Nacogdoches County Jail that lists the arrests made from 6 a.m. of the previous day to 6 a.m. of the listed day.

This page may take a moment to load
If you are having trouble loading the mugshots please try using a different internet browser

Dr. Tim Clipson, professor in Stephen F. Austin State University’s Rusche College of Business, received the Meada Gibbs Outstanding Teacher-Scholar Award at the Association for Business Communication international meeting in Albuquerque, New Mexico.
The association is an international, interdisciplinary organization committed to advancing business communication, research, education and practice, according to the ABC website.
Clipson has been an ABC member since 1981 and said it’s truly an honor to receive this award.
“To be selected as one at the top of the game is rewarding, humbling and challenging,” Clipson said. “It’s rewarding to be recognized for the quality and consistency of my life’s work, humbling because I truly know there are many others who are worthy, and challenging because the bar is set to constantly do and be my best.”
The Meada Gibbs Outstanding Teacher-Scholar Award recognizes, encourages and rewards excellence in teaching and research in business communication and is sponsored by ABC and Pearson Learning. As the award recipient, Clipson received a plaque and monetary award and will have the opportunity to speak at the ABC conference next fall in Dublin, Ireland.
Clipson has been teaching for 45 years with 36 of those years at SFA. He is a professor in SFA’s Department of Business Communication and Legal Studies.
“I think of my classroom as a learning laboratory with the concept that the more engaged the student is in the learning process the more he or she will take away and apply to life,” Clipson said. “My subject matter is definitely important, my students, however, are more so.”