
This is the report from the Nacogdoches County Sheriff’s Office that list the reports 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 Sheriff’s Office that list the reports 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 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.

Inmates can send letters to be posted on Everything Nac:
Everything Nac
PO Box 630091
Nacogdoches, Texas, 75963-0091
This page may take a moment to load
The Stephen F. Austin State University College of Fine Arts and School of Art will open “Big Skies, Brave People: Southwest American Art from the Panhandle-Plains Historical Museum, Canyon, Texas” with a 6 p.m. reception Saturday, Jan. 26, in The Cole Art Center @ The Old Opera House in downtown Nacogdoches.

“Prairie Fire” by Robert Farrington Elwell is among the work to be featured in “Big Skies, Brave People: Southwest American Art from the Panhandle-Plains Historical Museum, Canyon, Texas” opening Saturday, Jan. 26, in the Ledbetter Gallery in The Cole Art Center.
“Big Skies, Brave People” will run through March 22 in the Ledbetter Gallery, and it is part of the College of Fine Arts’ University Series exhibitions. The show is sponsored in part by the Nacogdoches Junior Forum and SFA Friends of the Visual Arts.
All exhibitions, receptions and gallery talks are free and open to the public.
The Cole Art Center is located at 329 E. Main St. Gallery hours are from 12:30 to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Friday and from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday. For additional information, please call (936) 468-1131.

Chris Herrington, Contributing Writer
If there were no guns on the planet, if the Chinese had never invented gun powder, if a million things, this would not be an issue, right?
People on the left, who allow abortion but abhor execution, want guns limited or even abolished. People on the right say that people are to blame and we need to keep the mentally challenged from getting them, but if we all carry guns, we can eliminate those who might attempt attacks. Those on the right abhor abortion, but they allow and support execution and assassination. If you make it to birth, the left says, you deserve every opportunity and concession. Once you are born, the right says, you are on your own and should not think for a minute that there will be any help coming from society at large. This same kind of thinking extended out can be quite odd. You may be born, and then welcomed if you make it. You will be born, but then it will be a battle to stay alive. We may get you before you’re born, but we will go after you after you’re born. Friendly world, right?
This is not unlike the gun control landscape. On the left, if we just take away the guns or limit access or limit certain guns, we will all be safer. We have more guns than people in Texas. That boat has sailed. On the right, all we need to do is mentally test everyone and find out if they should be allowed guns. In one minister’s mind the answer is that we have a sin problem. Well, that would be easily resolved; everyone who sins must turn in his or her weapons. That would be all guns, right? Or maybe we need to control all weapons, including hammers. Or the trouble is that weapons are stolen and then used to commit crimes. It seems to me that if we can’t stop others from stealing guns so that no regulations we have on their books will work, then we need to start with control over your own weapons. If gun owners cannot or will not control their own weapons, they should lose them. If your gun is stolen and used in a crime, you should share in the punishment if you have not reported the weapon stolen. And we should definitely test everyone in America for mental illness. I want to see those guidelines, especially for the paranoids and psychopaths.
While we are there, we can genetically test them to see if they are male or female, so that they can legally marry, since only those who are 100% male or 100% female need to be allowed to marry each other. Again, I want to see the test. Sometimes it seems to me that we open up cans of worms that don’t make for good fishing. We waste so much energy on fighting each other; it’s ridiculous. The reality is that everyone who stands to gain financially from these arguments should recuse him or herself. It seems a conflict of interest for gun sellers to argue for no gun control. Politicians get kickbacks, and so they are working with conflicts of interest. The oil industry is working to lower costs of course so they want to diminish regulations, even if it does put the entire oceanic eco-system at risk. The timber system seems to want to cover the planet in slash pine. Everyone is lobbying to put themselves into better economic positioning. The thought is that all the other corporations and entities will cut out a section of their own holdings for wildlife, habitat, national parks and clean water. No one wants to be the one who takes on that loss or makes that concession. And if people here in America complain about that, maybe we can hoodwink other countries into allowing us to crush their untapped resources. It’s just business.
Like gun sales. What we need is a planet of terrified people who need the latest arms so that everyone is paranoid and needs to rush out and spend all their money on guns. Well, that is Nirvana if you sell guns. No one would dispute that that tactic is working like a charm. With everyone terrified, and terrified they are going to lose access, and that they are going to lose their guns, it is no wonder that gun sales are being sold out in this perfect storm. And the sales machine is all up and ready.
Global warming is a question of pollution, but what is argued is proof of consequence. Really, the question is whether we should pollute at all. I think that ultimately it is not a case of “global warming” but rather death by cancer. If the law stated that all the executive had to live within ten miles of the industries they served, the rate of pollution would go way down. People are too far away from the consequences of their businesses. If gun producers and sellers had to meet with the victims of their trade, the families left by the abuse of these firearms, they might have a better sense of what they need to do to produce safer use.
So, we have a sin problem. Thoughtless distribution, unregulated access, sales and supply to a world that is not using these weapons as intended? What is the intent of having a military grade assault weapon at home? To protect your family against the military. I’m sure that Ruby Ridge and Waco create scenes of the need to protect. As well as that worked out. How many times have home owners successfully used assault weapons to deter burglars? Or didn’t their shot guns and hand guns work? What is conjured up is gun turrets in neighborhoods. With 50 cals lining the streets. Will this make us safer? Concrete planet, dead oceans, monocultured forests by Monsanto, and whole sub-divisions of paramilitary families living in compounds supported by Smith and Wesson. Hmmmmmm. Isn’t that called a death star?
runningturtle87

This is the report from the Nacogdoches County Sheriff’s Office that list the reports 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 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.

Inmates can send letters to be posted on Everything Nac:
Everything Nac
PO Box 630091
Nacogdoches, Texas, 75963-0091
This page may take a moment to load
SFA Gardens horticulturists Dawn Stover and Greg Grant will cover the ABCs of spring vegetable gardening, including soil preparation and composting along with when, where, and what to plant, at a seminar this weekend at Stephen F. Austin State University.
Spring Gardening 101 will be held from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Saturday, Jan. 19, in Room 110 of the Agriculture Building at 1924 Wilson Drive on the SFA Campus.
Participants should plan to roll up their sleeves and get dirty. The group will visit the compost demonstration site at the SFA Mast Arboretum, start vegetable seeds in pots and learn how to make a crown tire planter. It should be a full, fun day that will prepare participants to be successful vegetable gardeners.
Cost is $30 for Friends of the SFA Gardens members, $35 for non-members, and $55 for a participant and spouse. Lunch is included in the price, and advance reservations are required. To register or for more information, call the SFA Gardens education office (936) 468-1832 or email Elyce Rodewald at erodewald@sfasu.edu.
Grab your sneakers and join in the fun at the inaugural Holly Springs Relay For Life 5K Run/Walk, one of the many events raising money for Relay For Life of Nacogdoches County. The 5K run will start at 8 a.m. Saturday, Jan. 19, in historic downtown Nacogdoches at Thomas J. Rusk Elementary School, 411 N. Mound St.
Participants may register online at www.active.com until Thursday, Jan. 17, or register the day of the event beginning at 7 a.m. at TJR. Fees for the run are $25, and the first 150 registered participants are guaranteed a T-shirt. Proceeds will help Holly Springs Baptist Church reach their fundraising goal for this spring’s Relay For Life, which benefits the American Cancer Society.
Relay For Life will be held Friday, April 26 through Saturday, April 27. RFL is an all-night event designed to spread cancer awareness, celebrate the lives of survivors, remember those who lost their lives to cancer, and unite a community in the fight against cancer. Because cancer never sleeps, each team representative takesturns walking a track and a moving luminaria ceremony is held in memory of those who have lost the fight to cancer. The all-night event also honors strong survivors and features live entertainment, food and fun!
Funds raised for Relay For Life will enable the American Cancer Society to support local services and resources for cancer patients and their families. Funds also support critical cancer research and community education programs designed to teach people how to reduce their risk of developing cancer.
For more information about the Holly Springs Relay For Life 5K, call Michelle Rodriguez at (281) 467-6895, email emccrodriguez@aol.com, or visit www.active.com. For more information about Relay For Life of Nacogdoches County, visit www.relayforlife.org/nacogdochescotx or call (936) 634-2883. Be sure to friend us on facebook @ Relay For Life of Nacogdoches County.