
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 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
Mr. Harry Wilson Holloway, III, age 55, passed away at his residence on Monday, October 7, 2013 in Douglass, Texas. He was born on July 12, 1958 in Texas City to parents Harry W. “Barney” and Edith Marie Holloway, Jr.
A funeral service will be conducted by Pastor Jon McClain on Thursday, October 10, 2013 at 2:00 pm at Cason Monk-Metcalf Sunset Chapel. Interment will follow at Rock Springs Cemetery.
Friends and family are invited to visitation on Wednesday, October 9, 2013 from 5-7 pm at Cason Monk-Metcalf Funeral Directors, 5400 North Street, Nacogdoches, Texas, 75965.
Online condolences may be offered at www.casonmonk-metcalf.com. Funeral arrangements are under the direction and care of Cason Monk-Metcalf Funeral Directors.
The Stephen F. Austin State University School of Music will present its jazz bands, the Swingin’ Axes and the Swingin’ Aces, in concert at 7:30 p.m Friday, Oct. 11, in Cole Concert Hall in the Wright Music Building on the SFA campus.
Under the direction of Dr. Gary Wurtz, professor of trumpet and jazz studies at SFA, the Swingin’ Axes will play “a number of terrific selections, both classic and modern,” Wurtz said. Among them will be Duke Ellington’s famous “In a Mellow Tone,” Chick Corea’s “Spain” and Cole Porter’s “It’s All Right With Me,” as arranged by Gordon Goodwin.
“The writing of Sammy Nestico, known for his work with Count Basie and the Airmen of Note, will be showcased through the tunes ‘Out of the Night’ and ‘Put it Right Here,’” Wurtz said.
The Swingin’ Aces, under the direction of Dr. Deb Scott, associate professor of trombone and jazz studies, will perform “Get Out of Town” by Cole Porter, arranged by Art Dedrick; “Here’s That Rainy Day” by Johnny Burke and James Van Heusen, arranged by Bob Lowden; “Pink Squirrel” by Shorty Rogers featuring Lufkin junior P.J. DeJesus on trumpet, Fort Worth freshman Jonathan Bowers on trombone, and San Antonio senior Angel Duran on tenor sax; and “Two Seconds to Midnight” by Alan Baylock featuring Chance Moore, a junior from San Augustine, on guitar and Bowers on trombone.
The concert is a joint presentation of the SFA College of Fine Arts and the School of Music. The jazz bands’ performances are part of the School of Music’s Concert Series.
Tickets are $8 for adults, $6 for seniors and $3 for students. For tickets or more information, please visit www.finearts.sfasu.edu or call (936) 468-6407 or (888) 240-ARTS.
With an emphasis on four-mallet marimba playing, Zator will perform various styles of pieces for different solo percussion instruments, such as marimba, snare drum, multi-percussion and more.
Zator is the director of percussion at Texas A&M University-Commerce. His responsibilities include the classical and marching percussion ensembles, the “Panimation” steel drum band, undergraduate and graduate applied lessons, and the percussion methods course.
As a marimba/percussion soloist, he has performed with the Conroe and The Woodlands Symphonies, with the Texas A&M-Commerce Symphonic Band, and at several Texas Day of Percussion events. He is active giving clinics and concerts at various colleges, high schools and state festivals, as well as the Texas Music Educators Association convention, the California Band Directors Association convention, and the Winter Music Festival in Vale Veneto, Brazil. He is the principal timpanist and percussionist with the Northeast Texas Symphony.
Tickets are $8 for adults, $6 for seniors and $3 for students. For tickets or more information, please visit www.finearts.sfasu.edu or call (936) 468-6407 or (888) 240-ARTS.
Cole Concert Hall is located in the Tom and Peggy Wright Music Building, 2210 Alumni Drive.
The Center for Regional Heritage Research at Stephen F. Austin State University will display the exhibit “Hauntings” starting 11 a.m. Tuesday, Oct. 1, at the Nacogdoches Historic Depot, 101 Old Tyler Road.
Just in time for Halloween, the exhibit will focus on iconic ghost stories developed around railroads. Many of these ghost stories originated in the 19th century and are still shared today. The exhibit will include tales of the headless brakeman who wandered the tracks, the mysterious ghost trains that traveled eerily through the night, the “waiting woman” and many more.
The exhibit will continue through Oct. 31. Hours are 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Tuesdays through Thursdays and 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Fridays. The event is free and open to the public. For more information, contact Kelley Snowden at (936) 468-4405 or snowdenkelle@sfasu.edu.

CC Conn, assistant professor of lighting and sound design for the SFA School of Theatre, records cell phone conversations by Sugar Land junior Daniel Miller in preparation for the opening of the School of Theatre’s production of “Dead Man’s Cell Phone,” which runs Oct. 8 through 12 in W.M. Turner Auditorium.
The play is written by award-winning female playwright Sarah Ruhl, and it’s directed by Laura Rikard, assistant professor of acting/directing in the School of Theatre. In glancing down the page at the list of credits, one sees that the lighting and sound design is by CC Conn, assistant professor of lighting/sound design, and the costumes are designed by Angela Bacarisse, professor of costume design. Only a few men are involved, notably two male student actors and scenic designer Richard Ellis, a visiting professor.
“We are doing a play by a female playwright,” Rikard said, “and we have a female director and two female designers. Sarah Ruhl is considered to be one of our great modern playwrights. Ruhl is produced by professional theatres every year, and she will be studied by theatre students who will be performing and auditioning for her plays for years to come.”
Playwright
Like all master playwrights, Ruhl has created her own unique style, and part of the challenge in directing and performing her plays is analyzing her text in order to comprehend the style, Rikard explained.
“The script is tricky to navigate because, at first, you think she is writing in contemporary realism, but in fact she is not writing realistically at all,” she said. “This particular play is realistic to the extent that it is set in the ‘here and now,’ but it lives in a surreal world. The script demands that the actors be versed in various styles of performance in order to execute the scenes. In one scene, an actor maybe asked to use skills based in melodrama, clowning and realism. As in the writings of Shakespeare, the mood is like a pendulum that swings from dark to light, laughter to tears, and back in an instant.”
The play premiered in 2007 and won a Helen Hayes Award for Outstanding New Play. It examines the conflicts between present-day technology’s ability to connect and isolate people in the digital age. “Dead Man’s Cell Phone” is a wildly imaginative comedy centered on a woman confronting her assumptions about morality, redemption and the need to connect in a technologically obsessed world, according to Rikard, who is directing her first SFA College of Fine Arts University Series and SFA School of Theatre Mainstage production. Rikard’s Nacogdoches directing debut was this past summer with SFA Summer Repertory’s production of “Charlotte’s Web.”
In the past year, Rikard was brought on board at the School of Theatre as the new acting and movement professor, Zach Hanks as assistant professor of acting and voice, and Laura Simms as an adjunct professor in theatre.
“We are profoundly lucky and grateful that the faculty who came before us built a strong, excellent program, and I hope that our experience can help to expand and keep it up to date with the ever-changing profession of the performing arts,” Rikard said. “Zach and I still continue to audition and work in the acting industry, and Laura is a professional career coach with experience as an actress. I hope that we can be an example for our students and continue to make connections for them for when they graduate and enter the profession.”
Sound design
Just as today’s technology drives our lives, the almost constant ringing of a cell phone drives what takes place on stage in “Dead Man’s Cell Phone.” Conn, who together with Nacogdoches junior Amanda Warren, is also doing lighting design for the play, describes the sound design for “Dead Man’s Cell Phone” as “pretty intense.”
“There are sound effects, such as the constant ringing of a cell phone, that drive the action of the play,” Conn said. “In addition to that, the style of the production is such that the scenes are connected with movement with the cast being ever-present on stage. These transitions between scenes use extensive music and voices like overheard cell phone conversations. It is the recording of the voices and mixing of these transitions in addition to a great deal of underscoring that make the sound design large in scale.”
Many students are lending their voices to the recordings, getting a little improvisation experience and voice recording experience. Nacogdoches freshman Devin Bruton has been learning the sound programs by helping Conn gather sounds and recording conversations. Nacogdoches sophomore Jessica Skidmore is the sound-board operator for the show and will be getting extensive experience with the sound playback program, SFX, as much of the sound will employ a surround sound technique where each sound is assigned to specific speakers throughout the theatre.
“The sheer quantity of computerized sound files to be created and the level of difficulty in doing surround playback makes this show challenging,” Conn said. “We rarely get the opportunity to employ this particular sound style. The last use of this to this degree was in ‘Woyzeck’ (2009). So it is definitely time for a new set of students to get this opportunity.”
Costume design
Designing costumes for a contemporary play is different than designing for a play that takes place in another time and place.
“You are working more as a stylist than as a designer,” Bacarisse said, “and you are putting together a ‘look’ based on a type of character. This involves a lot of shopping.
“I start with contemporary images from catalogues, the Internet and magazines,” she said. “I put together collages of the characters to see if what I am thinking for them is in line with what the director envisions for the characters.”
Availability of what is needed, especially in a small city, is always a consideration, Bacarisse said.
“I do a lot of local shopping, and I find some amazing things,” she said. “But it can be tough when I need a very specific garment. I may pay for two-day shipping, but I live in a small town in East Texas, and two-day shipping usually arrives in about seven days. Regular shipping takes much longer.”
Specific to this play are clothes that are mentioned in the script, Bacarisse said.
“When someone on stage says, for example, ‘My, you’re all dressed in red,’ that actor had better be wearing red,” she said. “This play calls for specific colors and styles. It took me three weeks to find a blue raincoat that wasn’t over $100 – one that fit the actress and was the correct style for the character, and where the store accepted the SFA credit card.
“And really, shopping for a rain coat during a drought?” she said with a laugh. “Everyone looks at you like you are insane. I finally found something I could use, not exactly what I was looking for, the day after the rains hit Nacogdoches! I know everyone thinks, ‘How hard is it to find a raincoat?’ You have no idea.
“The playwright is very specific with her choices,” Bacarisse said, “and if you change, them you change the play.”
The performances
“Dead Man’s Cell Phone” is part of the 2013-2014 SFA College of Fine Arts’ University Series, “Live Out Loud.” Performances are at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday, Oct. 8 through 12, and at 2 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 12.
Prior to the opening night performance, there will be a 7 p.m. informative talk about the author and the play presented by Rikard in Griffith Gallery located across the hall from Turner Auditorium. The audience is invited back to the gallery for a post-performance reception to meet the cast, crew and director and to honor the event’s corporate sponsor, Tipton Ford Lincoln.
This play is recommended for mature audiences. Please visit www.theatre.sfasu.edu and click on the On Stage button to view the content advisory. If it were a movie, “Dead Man’s Cell Phone” would be rated PG-13.
Single tickets for “Dead Man’s Cell Phone,” which is also included in the School of Theatre’s Mainstage Series, are $20 for adults, $15 for seniors and $7.50 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.
Griffith Gallery and Turner Auditorium are located in the Griffith Fine Arts Building, 2222 Alumni Drive.

Dr. Evgeni Raychev, cello instructor at SFA, will join the Orchestra of the Pines in concert at 7:30 p.m. Monday, Oct. 7, in Cole Concert Hall on the SFA campus.
Joining the Orchestra of the Pines will be Dr. Evgeni Raychev, instructor of cello at SFA, as a guest performer as the ensemble presents “A Dramatic Soiree,” according to Dr. Gene H. Moon, director of orchestras at SFA.
Raychev agreed to the performance invitation only recently after the originally scheduled guest artist, the 2013 Schmidbauer Competition winner Hans Goldstein, could not join the orchestra for the concert due to injury, Moon explained.
“It is providence that we have such a talented cellist in our midst that can be at the ready to provide us with his immense talent and his time,” Moon said. “We look forward to Dr. Raychev’s performance with the SFA Orchestra of the Pines.”
Among the works to be performed is the “L’Arlesienne Suites” by Georges Bizet.
“This is one of the composer’s most well-known works,” Moon said. “The two suites contain music that will be familiar to many. A collection not played often enough, the music fits well as the introduction to the hefty second half of the concert.”
During the second half, Raychev will join the orchestra in performing the Cello Concerto in B Minor by Antonin Dvorak.
“The concerto is regarded as one of the most popular in the cello concert repertoire,” Moon said. “The work’s melodies are memorable and mesmerizing!”
This performance of the Orchestra of the Pines in part of the School of Music’s Concert Series.
Tickets are $8 for adults, $6 for seniors and $3 for students. For tickets or more information, please visit www.finearts.sfasu.edu or call (936) 468-6407 or (888) 240-ARTS.
Cole Concert Hall is located in the Tom and Peggy Wright Music Building, 2210 Alumni Drive.