January 7, 2020: 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.

This page may take a moment to load

Click Here to load a separate PDF file

Posted in All Police, SO Crime Log | Leave a comment

January 7, 2020: 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.

This page may take a moment to load

If you are having trouble loading the mugshots please try using a different internet browser

Click Here to load a separate PDF file

Posted in All Police, Booking | Leave a comment

January 6, 2020: NPD Crime Report

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

This page may take a moment to load.

Click Here to load a separate PDF file

Posted in All Police, NPD Crime Log | Leave a comment

January 6, 2020: 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.

This page may take a moment to load

Click Here to load a separate PDF file

Posted in All Police, SO Crime Log | Leave a comment

January 6, 2020: 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.

This page may take a moment to load

If you are having trouble loading the mugshots please try using a different internet browser

Click Here to load a separate PDF file

Posted in All Police, Booking | Leave a comment

Obituary & Photo: Louise Lyons

lyonsMrs. Roberta Louise Lyons of San Augustine, Texas, passed away Wednesday, January 1, 2020, in San Augustine at the age of 79 years, 2 months, 10 days.

“Louise” was born October 22, 1940, in Stinnett, Texas, and had lived in San Augustine County since 1999. She received a Bachelor of Science degree in education from Texas Tech in Lubbock. Mrs. Lyons retired from San Augustine Independent School District following a wonderful career as a teacher. She had also taught in Houston, Fort Walton Beach, Florida, San Antonio, and Germany.

Her survivors include her husband, Duke Lyons of San Augustine, Texas; daughter and son-in-law, Kimberly and John Barry of Melbourne, Australia; son and daughter-in-law, Greg and Allison Lyons of Houston, Texas; grandchildren, Samantha Barry of Brisbane, Australia, Matt Barry of Melbourne, and Sarah Lyons and Jake Lyons, both of Houston, Texas; brothers, Bill Womble of Dallas, Texas, and Dub Womble of Spearman, Texas; and sisters, Betty Helen Anderson and Kathy Womble, both of Lubbock, Texas.

Louise was preceded in death by her parents, Robert “Boy” and Helen Womble; and two sisters, Donna Nell Smith and Peggy Fondren.

A memorial service will be held at Wyman Roberts Memorial Chapel with time and details to be announced later.

Visit www.WymanRobertsFuneralHome.com for memories and condolences.

Services are under the direction of Wyman Roberts Funeral Home in San Augustine.

Posted in Obituaries | Leave a comment

Nacogdoches Public Library News Releases

Click Here to load a PDF file (Study Group for Citizenship Exam – Jan 2020)

Click Here to load a PDF file (Google Apps Classes at Nacogdoches Library)

Posted in Nac News, NacCity | Leave a comment

Precision Approach Path Indicator System Installation Slated at Nacogdoches Airport

Media Contact
Name: Amy Mehaffey
Title: Communications & Main Street Director
Phone: 936-559-2573
Email address: mehaffeya@ci.nacogdoches.tx.us
City of Nacogdoches Airport Installation

Tuesday, January 7, at 1:00 p.m. the City of Nacogdoches’ A.L Mangham Jr. Regional Airport will celebrate the beginning of installation of the new PAPI (precision approach path indicator) lighting system on the south end of Runway 18-36.

This long awaited project is thanks to a generous donation of $45,000 from the Micky Elliott Family Foundation, a longtime supporter of the airport and its future development. The City of Nacogdoches invites the public and media to this event to celebrate the PAPI installation by KSA Engineering. As the City of Nacogdoches looks toward the future, the airport will have a crucial role in the economic development of the community.

PAPI lighting is important to pilots when landing in low light conditions or at night and its inclusion at the Nacogdoches Airport is essential to local aviation. These systems support pilots by giving a “glide path” while descending into the airport environment to avoid obstacles. PAPI lighting will provide not only convenience but safety to aircraft landing up to 20 miles at night and 3 miles during the day.

KSA Engineering is an industry leader, providing a broad range of engineering, architecture, planning, surveying, and construction management services and has worked on many projects with the City of Nacogdoches.

The City of Nacogdoches’ A.L Mangham Jr. Regional Airport is a general aviation public airport, which provides cargo, corporate, and recreational pilots a convenient, full-service destination.

Posted in Nac News, NacCity | Leave a comment

SFA percussionist Meyer to present faculty recital

Dr. Brad Meyer, director of percussion studies at Stephen F. Austin State University, will present a faculty recital at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 15, in Cole Concert Hall on the SFA campus.

Meyer will perform works by Andrew Hannon, Baljinder Singh Sekhon II, Thom Hasenpflug, Matthew Burtner, Casey Cangelosi and Jim Casella.

Hannon’s “Boundaries” for drumset and fixed video segments nine videos and disperses them throughout the composition based on magic squares. The formal structure is like a collage of diverse ideas. “Each of the videos concentrates on nature and has its own musical texture,” the composer states.

Sekhon’s “Distances” for solo marimba was commissioned by a consortium of percussionists, led by Michael Burritt. “The title refers to the intervallic distances between the pitch material that makes up the content of the composition,” Sekhon writes.

“Looking Down to See the Sky” by Hasenpflug references an area off the coast of Cozumel near the Columbia Reef known as El Cielo (the Heavens). The composer writes: “Here you will find a shallow sandy bottom with a bit of sea grass and hundreds if not thousands of giant starfish. The local dive operators who bring you to this location therefore say that you are ‘looking down to see the sky.'”

The program also features Burtner’s “Broken Drum,” which references a brake drum the composer found on the side of the road and made into a musical instrument.

The final piece on the program, “Prime Ordinals” represents composer Casella’s first venture “into the world of writing for a soloist with digital audio accompaniment.” It was written specifically for the djembe, a drum of African origin, which is capable of producing a wide range of timbres.

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.

Posted in All SFA, SFA News | Leave a comment

New scholarship supports students whose parent or spouse has died in the line of duty

 The Bobbie Hargis Todd Scholarship supports Stephen F. Austin State University students who are children or spouses of officers killed in the line of duty. Bobbie’s father, Nacogdoches Deputy Sheriff John Arlington Hargis, was killed while serving an arrest warrant in 1928, when Bobbie was only 18 months old. Bobbie’s children, Bobbie Ann Todd Anderson and Richard Todd, established the scholarship to honor their mother’s memory. Pictured are, from left, Texas Ranger Jim Hicks, Anderson, Todd and Sabine County Sheriff Thomas Maddox, president of the Sheriffs’ Association of Texas. Photo by Hardy Meredith

The Bobbie Hargis Todd Scholarship supports Stephen F. Austin State University students who are children or spouses of officers killed in the line of duty. Bobbie’s father, Nacogdoches Deputy Sheriff John Arlington Hargis, was killed while serving an arrest warrant in 1928, when Bobbie was only 18 months old. Bobbie’s children, Bobbie Ann Todd Anderson and Richard Todd, established the scholarship to honor their mother’s memory. Pictured are, from left, Texas Ranger Jim Hicks, Anderson, Todd and Sabine County Sheriff Thomas Maddox, president of the Sheriffs’ Association of Texas. Photo by Hardy Meredith

Beginning in fall 2020, Stephen F. Austin State University students who have suffered the loss of a law enforcement officer parent or spouse killed in the line of duty can apply for a scholarship designed to help them move forward.

The scholarship was prompted by the death of Bobbie Hargis Todd’s father, Nacogdoches Deputy Sheriff John Arlington Hargis, who was killed in 1928 while serving an arrest warrant when Bobbie was only 18 months old.

The Bobbie Hargis Todd Scholarship was established by her children, Bobbie Ann Todd Anderson and Richard Todd, in memory of their mother, whose life dramatically changed after her father’s death.

“My grandmother and her five children had to do whatever they could to survive and move forward,” Anderson said. “My mom and her siblings certainly would have benefited from financial assistance like this for college.”

Fortunately, Bobbie was able to live at home with her mother a few blocks from SFA. Her older siblings managed to chip in and help pay her tuition. While attending SFA, she was a cheerleader and member of the Fideles Social Club. During her freshman year, she began dating World War II veteran Joe “Orville” Todd, and they married Feb. 22, 1948.

“Upon their marriage, Mom moved from Nacogdoches to live with her husband and widowed father-in-law on a farm in Henderson. It was quite an adjustment,” Anderson said.

Employed first at the Rusk County Courthouse, it was after the birth of her first two children that Bobbie made the decision, encouraged by her husband, to return to college. She commuted daily to SFA and earned her degree in elementary education in 1957. She then taught third and fourth grade in the Henderson Independent School District for 23 years.

“Many times in her career, Mom was asked to advance to a principal position, but she wanted to teach,” Todd said. “She loved the kids.”

Bobbie’s students loved her back. For years after leaving the classroom, she received letters of admiration from former students for the way she successfully faced adversity following the death of her father, and the inspiration and encouragement she gave to her students.

“Because of her upbringing in a family with no father, mom had a special skill of working with children from low-income families,” Anderson said.

Both Anderson and Todd recall many students referencing the strong math and reading skills they learned in her classroom.

To continue their mother’s spirit of survival and support, Anderson and Todd established this scholarship for students whose parent or spouse has died in the line of duty, with preference given to students pursuing a degree in elementary education.

Texas Ranger Jim Hicks said the child or spouse of an officer killed in the line of duty can make one of two choices. “They can give up, or they can press forward. This scholarship is a tool that can help them move forward,” Hicks said.

Sabine County Sherriff Thomas Maddox, president of the Sheriffs’ Association of Texas, knew Bobbie and understood how hard she worked to be successful. “She also had a special way of making you feel like the most important person in the world,” he said. “She would have been very proud of this scholarship.”

Anderson said her mother’s unusual circumstances made her very strong, and she hopes the scholarship can pass that strength to others facing the same challenges.

“The children and spouses of officers killed in the line of duty form a very tight-knit community,” Anderson said. “We want them to know we’re here to support them.”

For information on how you can aid students who have lost a parent or spouse in the line of duty through this scholarship, contact the Office of Development at (936) 468-2278.

By Jo Gilmore, marketing communications specialist at Stephen F. Austin State University.

Posted in All SFA, SFA News | Leave a comment