
This is a complete list of reports responded to by the Nacogdoches Police Department
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This is a complete list of reports responded to by the Nacogdoches Police Department
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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Stephen F. Austin State University President Baker Pattillo surprised Steve McCarty, retired athletic director and current chair of the Board of Regents, at the board’s Tuesday meeting by awarding him a new title: athletic director emeritus.
“I think everybody here knows how much this university means to me,” McCarty said following the president’s announcement.
“It has been a major part of our life, for both me and my wife, Sara. I never expected this, Dr. Pattillo. I appreciate it more than you know. This is the highest honor of my life. Thank you very much.”
McCarty retired from SFA in 2005 after 21 years of service to the university, the last 15 as athletic director. He was appointed to the board by Gov. Rick Perry in 2009, becoming the first former staff member to ever serve the university in that capacity. He was elected chair in 2013 and was chosen earlier this year to lead the board for a second term.
A resident of Alto, McCarty also holds two degrees from SFA, which he earned in 1965 and 1970.
The board also approved numerous SFA faculty and staff changes during its quarterly meeting Tuesday.
The following faculty appointments were approved for the James I. Perkins College of Education: Yuleinys Castillo and Phoebe Okungu, assistant professors of human services; Chrissy Cross and Barbara Qualls, assistant professors of secondary education and educational leadership; Lauren Gonzales, assistant professor of elementary education; Frank Mullins, associate professor of human services; Heather Munro, clinical instructor of human services; Carla Murgia, professor and chair of kinesiology and health science; and Lydia Richardson, instructor of human services.
Appointments within the College of Fine Arts include: Joseph Turner, assistant professor of music; Jeffrey Brewer, assistant professor of art; and Tara Houston, assistant professor of theatre. The College of Liberal and Applied Arts appointed the following: Charles Gregory, instructor of government; Kara Lopez, assistant professor of social work; and Valerie Mahfood, assistant professor of government.
Other faculty appointments approved Tuesday include: Rajat Mishra, assistant professor of management, marketing and international business in the Nelson Rusche College of Business; Jared Barnes, assistant professor of agriculture, and Roger Masse, assistant professor of forestry, in the Arthur Temple College of Forestry and Agriculture; Matthew Beauregard, associate professor of mathematics and statistics, and Matibur Zamadar, assistant professor of chemistry and biochemistry, in the College of Sciences and Mathematics; and Johna Von Behrens, librarian I.
The Board of Regents approved staff appointments within the Department of Athletics, including: James Collins and James Haynes, assistant baseball coaches; and Todd Stutzman, athletic team operations coordinator.
Additional staff appointments include: Justin Glasscock, supervisor for the Arthur Temple College of Forestry and Agriculture Broiler Research Center; Lana Comeaux, development officer II in the Office of Development; Sarah Kouliavtsev, coordinator of promotions and sponsorship in Campus Recreation; Stanley Riley II, security specialist in Information Technology Services; Mary Smith, assistant director of instructional technology; Megan Weatherly, instructional design specialist in the Office of Instructional Technology; Jani Francis-Okai, manager of residence life systems in the Department of Residence Life; and Jennifer Stringfield, assessment specialist in the Office of Institutional Assessment.
Regents approved the following changes of status within the Perkins College of Education: Stacy Hendricks, from assistant professor of secondary education to assistant professor and coordinator of the principal prep program; Lisa Mize, from associate dean of education to associate professor of human sciences; Jannah Nerren, from associate professor of elementary education to associate dean of education; Janet Tareilo, from associate professor of secondary education to associate dean of education; Miranda Terry, from assistant professor of kinesiology and health science to assistant professor and coordinator of health science program; and Leonard Thornton, from associate professor of kinesiology and health science to associate professor and coordinator of the graduate kinesiology program.
The following changes in status also were approved: Treba Marsh, from professor of accounting to professor of accounting with Temple Inland professorship in the Nelson Rusche College of Business; Tod Fish and Bradley Meyer, from visiting assistant professors of music to assistant professors of music in the College of Fine Arts; Maxwell Holmes, from admissions counselor to academic adviser in the Arthur Temple College of Forestry and Agriculture.
Other changes of status at SFA include:
Financial Aid – Heather Rachele’ Garrett, from interim director of financial aid to director of financial aid;
Development – Dale Green, from director of alumni marketing and membership to development officer II;
Information Technology Services – Paul Davis, from director of information technology services to chief information officer;
Procurement and Property Services – Leah Gentry, from buyer to contracting specialist;
Student Affairs – James Maple, from spirit head coach to coordinator of spirit programs;
Telecommunications and Networking – Sandra Menscer, from network support specialist II to network support specialist III; and Steve Rasmussen, from network support specialist III to system network administrator; and
University Marketing Communications – Trey Cartwright, from marketing communications specialist to senior media producer.
In addition, Deborah Dufrene was named a professor emeritus within the Rusche College of Business, and Carla Murgia, professor in the Department of Kinesiology and Health Science, was granted tenure by the board.
The following retirements also were approved: Susan Barber, lecturer of elementary education in the Perkins College of Education; and James Cunningham, associate professor of mathematics and statistics in the College of Sciences and Mathematics.
Due to the success of Stephen F. Austin State University’s recent marketing campaign, the Board of Regents approved extending the project through the next fiscal year, allocating $1.6 million for a two-phase plan that will include more of the popular “Lumberjacks Make Great” billboards and other advertising.
The next phase of the campaign will include extensive media buys during both the fall and spring semesters, focusing on the most critical times of year for the college-decision process, according to representatives from Richards/Carlberg, the university’s marketing and creative design partner for the campaign.
“The initial phase of the campaign focused on increasing the positive perception of SFA among prospects, students, alumni and business leaders, and that will continue,” Chuck Carlberg, the firm’s principal, said during a presentation to the board Monday. “However, the next phase of the campaign will be more targeted at helping to increase inquiries and, ultimately, enrollment.”
The board approved the marketing plan for Fiscal Year 2015 at its quarterly meeting Tuesday morning. In addition to the fall and spring branding and enrollment campaigns, which will include the additional billboards, the plan includes funds for a redesign of the SFA website, high-profile media buys such as SFA signage recently placed inside Texas airports, campus signage and promotional materials.
Representatives from Richards/Carlberg said the marketing campaign’s first phase has performed above industry benchmarks, citing 276,000 unique guests were driven to an SFA web page created as part of the first phase.
“Especially encouraging is the adoption of the ‘Lumberjacks Make Great’ tagline in social media by current students and alumni,” said Josh Powers, senior copywriter for Richards/Carlberg. “We have even seen it picked up and utilized by outside vendors who have a presence here on campus. I can’t stress how uncommon this is for a campaign that has only been in the market for a few months. Our other higher education clients would love to have such an overwhelming response.”
The marketing plan was included in the total budget of $238.6 million for Fiscal Year 2015 approved by the regents Tuesday. The budget includes a 2-percent merit pool for faculty and staff pay increases and represents a less than 1-percent increase over last year’s institutional budget. A $4.39 million capital plan also was approved by the board for capital renewal, planned maintenance and renovation projects across campus, including upgrades to Johnson Coliseum and numerous academic and auxiliary facilities.
In other business, the board reluctantly revoked its recent selection of the Merrill Lynch LMT Wealth Management Group to serve as investment adviser for the university’s endowment funds. The board was informed that Merrill Lynch made a corporate determination that it considers a public university’s endowment funds to be public funds. Consequently, Merrill Lynch will not allow its advisers, such as the LMT Wealth Management Group, to manage public university endowment funds that are controlled by a board of regents. The SFASU Foundation and SFA Alumni Foundation as separate 501(C)3 organizations are not included in this Merrill Lynch determination.
Going forward, the university’s $11 million endowment will be managed by the Texas A&M University System through a State of Texas Interagency Agreement, the board decided Tuesday. The university plans for the Texas A&M University System to take over management of the SFA endowment Dec. 1.
During the meeting Tuesday, the board also approved:
· a telephone switch hardware replacement;
· the purchase of employee training software and maintenance;
· a storage area network replacement;
· an upgrade to the university’s Luminis platform, used for online course-related and administrative functions;
· classroom technology upgrades;
· new grant awards allocable to Fiscal Year 2014 totaling $183,254;
· the use of Athletic Supply Inc. and Teamline as team dealers for additional purchases of UnderArmour gear for athletic teams; and
· various new and revised university policies.

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

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 a complete list of reports responded to by the Nacogdoches Police Department
This page may take a moment to load.

This is a complete list of reports responded to by the Nacogdoches Police Department
This page may take a moment to load.

This is a complete list of reports responded to by the Nacogdoches Police Department
This page may take a moment to load.