October 9, 2015: Nacogdoches Sheriff’s Crime Log

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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October 9, 2015: Nacogdoches County Booking Report

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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October 5-October 9, 2015: County Court At Law

Record Of Criminal Actions taken by Nacogdoches County Court At Law

This is the report of the cases where a verdict was decided.



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SFA student’s internship with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention proved successful, beneficial

Stephen F. Austin State University senior Junior Elechi interned with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention during the summer alongside students from throughout the nation. Elechi boasted the many network opportunities he received. In fact, he said he is still in contact with many of the students pictured on his phone. Each week, the interns immersed themselves in different environmental themes such as air, water and food, and they met with professionals involved in these areas for discussion.

Atlanta skyscrapers replaced the towering East Texas’ pines as Stephen F. Austin State University senior health science major Junior Elechi traveled to Georgia for a 10-week internship with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention during the summer.

A native of the Houston area, Elechi began college with the goal of becoming a dentist, but quickly switched his focus to health science. He is a member of SFA’s School of Honors and plans to graduate in December with his bachelor’s degree.

Elechi’s experience in Atlanta began when he received an email from SFA’s School of Honors about various summer research opportunities. On a hunch, he applied.

“I really didn’t think I was going to get in,” Elechi said. “It was one of those things where you just throw your net out and hope for the best.”

After a phone call and several emails, Elechi was excited to learn he had secured a position in the CDC’s internship program.

Twenty-four interns from throughout the nation joined Elechi for the CDC internship. Elechi was a member of the Collegiate Leaders in Environmental Health section of the program, which fell under the non-accredited environmental health major program within the internship. Each week, the program focused on a different environmental theme such as air, water and food, and the interns met with professionals involved in these areas for discussion. When not immersed in the program activities, interns worked with their own supervisors on individual projects.

“I gained a lot from this experience. Not only did I learn how to properly network, but I also learned so much about the environment and how people are affected by things,” Elechi said. “I learned how to take care of myself and others around me.”

Additionally, the interns went on field trips to gain insight on professional industries within their areas of study. Such trips included visiting the Georgia Aquarium, water-utility sites, urban garden, air-quality sites and more.

Elechi can attest to the many benefits internships offer students, and said he strongly encourages students to apply.

“The network and opportunities are unparalleled, and you get to see what you are interested in,” he said. “It is a good experience for students to see if a particular area is something they want to pursue further or not.”

Public health communication is one area that stood out to Elechi during this program. He commented on how communication is key in helping societies move forward in disasters like Hurricane Katrina and the Ebola outbreak.

“You never really understand how important communication is, but people need to be educated and informed on things that are going on so they can better prepare for situations,” he said.

Elechi’s main project while interning for the CDC was creating a game to educate middle school students on toxic substances found in the environment. He was in charge of selecting a format for the game, creating the content and editing the material. Elechi said the game follows a mission format.

“We picked common substances that kids come in contact with like benzene, radon, lead, tobacco, and things like that,” Elechi said. “There is a mission for each substance and players go through the mission to educate themselves.”

Elechi hopes his hard work will pay off and that the game will be created within the next two years.

Elechi has returned to the pines and is currently completing his final semester at SFA. He hopes to attend graduate school to earn a master’s degree in public health or to secure a job working in the field. Regardless of where his future will take him, Elechi attributes much of his success to his SFA instruction and the CDC internship.

“The network and opportunities I received during my internship were great. The program helped me decide what to focus my career on and my goals,” Elechi said. “All the health science professors at SFA have been integral in the pursuit of my career goals.”

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Clardy kicks off Walk-Through-Texas walk-a-thon

State Rep. Travis Clardy kicked off the opening ceremonies of Stephen F. Austin State University’s Charter School and Parent-Teacher Organization’s Walk-Through-Texas walk-a-thon Friday morning in William R. Johnson Coliseum on SFA’s campus.

SFA’s Charter School and PTO have been working on this fundraising event for the past few months. This year’s “Walk-Through-Texas” theme blended Texas history and exercise. Each class in the SFA Charter School selected a city in Texas to research and created a PowerPoint presentation, which Clardy read aloud at the event. Clardy has a special connection to SFA’s Charter School. All of his sons attended the school, and he helped in its startup.

“It is really fun and exciting to be back with the Charter School kids,” Clardy said. “I think it is great to get all of the children here at one time to study Texas history and encourage them to be active and healthy. I’m very pleased and honored they asked me to be part of it.”

Dr. Linda Bobo, SFA associate professor of kinesiology and health science and co-chair of the walk-a-thon committee, was pleased with the attendance and announced the school raised more than $15,000.

“The heart of the event is the children who found sponsors and individually raised the funds. This is our only and primary fundraiser that we do for the whole year for the Charter School,” Bobo said. “These dollars go toward student-learning education, educational excursions and social events for the students. The money is just wonderfully phenomenal, and we are so grateful for the amount we were able to collect.”

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SFA Umbrella Donation

Embodying Stephen F. Austin State University’s honor code, Dr. Adam Peck, SFA’s dean of student affairs, along with SFA student affairs staff members and Generation Jacks Program members, recently donated umbrellas to the Emeline Carpenter Elementary School in Nacogdoches.

Many of the elementary school’s classrooms exit directly to the outdoors with only small awnings to protect the students from the elements. Sharitta Williams, a former SFA student leader and now elementary school employee, reached out to Peck for his assistance. SFA student affairs staff members and Generation Jacks Program members raised funds to purchase 20 small umbrellas to donate. Esther Campbell, manager of the Barnes & Noble bookstore at SFA, also worked to have large golf umbrellas made for the elementary school. The bookstore also covered the price difference.

Pictured from left to right: Erik Herrera, SFA student; Dr. Michael Walker, SFA assistant dean of student affairs support services; Sharitta Williams, former SFA leader and current Emeline Carpenter Elementary school employee; James Adams, principal of Carpenter Intermediate School; Dr. Adam Peck, SFA dean of student affairs; Esther Campbell, manager of the Barnes & Noble bookstore at SFA; and Alejandro Contreras, SFA student.

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SFA’s Wind Symphony, Symphonic Band to feature works by composer Turner

The music of composer Jess Langston Turner will be performed in a concert of the Wind Symphony and Symphonic Band at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 20, in Turner Auditorium on the Stephen F. Austin State University campus.

Directed by Dr. David W. Campo, associate director of bands at SFA, the Wind Symphony will feature guest soloist and SFA music faculty member Nita Hudson on Turner’s “Lullaby,” which is taken from a larger work for string orchestra and percussion, “Memorial to Silent Voices.” The text sung by the alto soloist is from the well-known traditional English lullaby, “All Through the Night.”

“While the melody sung by the alto soloist is not the original, snatches of the traditional tune appear periodically in a solo flute,” explained Campo. “The simple melody and the gently rocking chordal accompaniment combine to form a peaceful and soothing lullaby.”

The Symphonic Band, directed by Dr. Tamey Anglley, assistant director of bands, will open the concert with Turner’s “Oh, What A Morning,” which “depicts the dawn of a new morning, followed by rejoicing and an ecstatic celebration of eternal light,” according to Anglley.

Graduate student Cheyenne Handorf of Palestine will conduct “The King of Love My Shepherd Is,” which Turner transcribed for band.

“Originally composed by Dan Forrest for chorus, ‘The King of Love’ is an old Irish hymn tune with a lovely text by Henry W. Baker,” Anglley said.

The third Turner piece will be “Noche Triste,” which is a depiction of “The Night of Sorrows,” an important event in the Spanish conquest of Mexico, according to Anglley. The Symphonic Band will finish its half of the concert with Fred Jewell’s “Quality Plus March.” Jewell is known as the “March King of Indiana,” which is where Turner is currently completing his doctoral degree.

In addition to Turner’s “Lullaby,” the Wind Symphony will perform composer Kevin Walczyk’s “Sojourn of Dreams.” Walcyzk notes, “This work was commissioned to honor and celebrate the life of former band director Jeff Cumpston, who was tragically killed in Zimbabwe. The work’s melodic and harmonic constructs are derived from pitch structures based on Jeff’s name and folk elements indigenous to Zimbabwe. Prior to moving his family to Zimbabwe, Jeff was asked what made him decide to leave the comfortable environment of Oregon to go with his family and teach in Africa. Jeff’s answer was simple: ‘A dream.’ This work takes its title and inspiration from Jeff’s journey to fulfill a dream of service and commitment.”

The final work by Wind Symphony will be Karl King’s stirring march “Invictus.”

“This march was composed in 1921 and dedicated to Merle Evans, bandmaster of the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus,” Campo said. “The march features technically challenging parts for the low brass along with sparkling woodwinds in the final strain.”

Tickets are $8 for adults, $6 for seniors and $3 for students and youth. For tickets or more information, call the SFA Fine Arts Box Office at (936) 468-6407 or visit www.finearts.sfasu.edu.

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Pianist Crappell to perform works of famous Hungarian composers

Stephen F. Austin State University School of Music and the Cole Performing Arts Series will present pianist Courtney Crappell performing a recital at 7:30 p.m. Monday, Oct. 19, in Cole Concert Hall on the SFA campus.

“Hungarian Recollections” is a program of solo piano music featuring works by two famous Hungarian composers, Béla Bartók and Franz Liszt, according to Mario Ajero, associate professor of piano pedagogy at SFA.

“After beginning with the elegance, joy and naiveté found within Bartók’s settings of Hungarian children’s songs, the mood darkens and shifts towards spiritual awakening and Hungarian nationalism revealed in Liszt’s third ‘Années de pèlerinage’ (Years of Pilgrimage),” according to Crappell, who will also perform the Hungarian Rhapsody, No. 6.

Crappell is associate professor of piano pedagogy in the Moores School of Music at the University of Houston. A native of south Louisiana, he earned his BM in piano performance at Louisiana State University and completed his MM and DMA degrees in piano performance and pedagogy at the University of Oklahoma.

He is an award-winning published author and has served as an evaluator selected by the International Piano Performance Evaluations Committee in Taiwan. He remains active on the concert stage as a soloist and collaborative artist. During his graduate studies, he was a winner of the University of Oklahoma concerto competition.

Tickets are $8 for adults, $6 for seniors and $3 for students and youth. For tickets or more information, call the SFA Fine Arts Box Office at (936) 468-6407 or visit www.finearts.sfasu.edu.

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October 8, 2015: NPD Crime Report

This is a complete list of reports responded to by the Nacogdoches Police Department

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October 8, 2015: Nacogdoches Sheriff’s Crime Log

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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