Rescheduled – Ribbon Cutting celebrating the 20th Leadership Nacogdoches Class Project – Pavilions at the Maroney Park spash pad

Join the 20th Leadership Nacogdoches class
for their Ribbon Cutting celebration
Pavilions for Splashadoches at Maroney Park

RESCHEDULED DATE:
4:30 p.m., Wednesday, Nov. 6

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Dia de los Muertos 11-2-19

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Opera, musical theater scenes explore timeless theme of love

The Stephen F. Austin State University School of Music will present opera and musical theater scenes featuring themes of love when students present “It’s Complicated” at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 9, in Cole Concert Hall on the SFA campus.

Directed by James Held, adjunct professor of opera, the performance tackles the “timeless and complex theme of love in its many forms,” explored through opera and musical theater from the Classical period to the 2000s, according to Held. Pianists Rachel Clark and Dr. Thomas Nixon will accompany.

“There are selections from 1790 to 2001 – from Mozart to Sondheim and beyond,” Held added.

Among the program selections are scenes from “Der Rosenkavalier” by Richard Strauss. Held describes the opera as “one of the most enduring” from Austrian Romantic repertoire. “The music is nothing short of resplendent and pulls at the heartstrings,” he said.

Gian Carlo Menotti’s “The Old Maid and the Thief” will also be performed. “Menotti was a Pulitzer Prize-winning operatic composer during the rise of television, and in fact wrote several operas specifically for TV,” Held said. “The Old Maid and the Thief “was originally commissioned by NBC as a radio drama and included narration. This performance uses action instead of narration to tell the story.

The program features Georges Bizet’s “Carmen,” which is “perhaps the most beloved French opera ever written,” Held said. “It’s a timeless tale of the dangers of love gone awry. The drama is brilliantly driven by Bizet’s near-perfect score.”

There will be several scenes from the musical theater repertoire, from shows such as “Into the Woods” by Stephen Sondheim; “How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying” by Frank Loesser; “Anything Goes” by Cole Porter; and “Urinetown” by Mark Hollmann and Greg Kotis.

Other scenes from operas include “Die Fledermaus” by Johann Strauss II; “Così fan tutte” and “Die Zauberflöte” by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart; and “La Cenerentola” by Gioachino Rossini.

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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Vienna Boys Choir to perform at SFA

 The world-renowned Vienna Boys Choir, conducted by Choirmaster Manuel Huber, will perform at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 21, in W.M. Turner Auditorium on the Stephen F. Austin State University campus. This special College of Fine Arts Encore Event performance is sponsored in part by Commercial Bank of Texas. Photo: Lukas Beck

The world-renowned Vienna Boys Choir, conducted by Choirmaster Manuel Huber, will perform at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 21, in W.M. Turner Auditorium on the Stephen F. Austin State University campus. This special College of Fine Arts Encore Event performance is sponsored in part by Commercial Bank of Texas. Photo: Lukas Beck

The Vienna Boys Choir, renowned as one the finest vocal ensembles in the world for more than five centuries, will perform “Journey Through the Americas” in concert at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 21, in W.M. Turner Auditorium on the campus of Stephen F. Austin State University.

A special Encore Event presentation of the SFA College of Fine Arts, the concert is sponsored in part by Commercial Bank of Texas.

“On their last visit to Nacogdoches in 2012, the Vienna Boys Choir sold out Turner Auditorium,” said Scott Shattuck, associate dean of the College of Fine Arts and director of the University Series and Encore Events. “So it’s especially important for music-lovers to order their tickets well in advance for this very special event. It’s truly a thrill to have such an internationally renowned choral group visit SFA again.”

“Journey Through the Americas” includes favorite Strauss waltzes, classical masterpieces by Verdi and Beethoven, modern-era works by Bernstein and Gershwin and folk songs from around the world. The program includes a performance of “Amazing Grace” arranged by John Coates.

The Vienna Boys Choir can trace its history as far back as the 13th century, but it was formally established at Vienna Imperial Chapel in 1498 by Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I. The many incarnations of the group have been performing continuously ever since.

Today’s Vienna Boys Choir is comprised of talented young singers from all over the world who are admitted by audition. One-hundred choristers between the ages of 10 and 14 are divided into four touring groups. Each spends 11 weeks of the year on tour. Between them, the choirs give around 300 concerts each year, attended by almost half a million spectators around the globe.

The choir currently on tour in the U.S. includes boys from Austria, Germany, Japan, Korea, Poland, Czech Republic, Mongolia, Bosnia and Herzegovina. The choir’s conductor, Manuel Huber, the most recent addition to the ranks of choirmaster of the Vienna Boys Choir, is from Italy and has extensive experience as a voice coach, choir director and music educator in a variety of positions throughout Europe. Prior to his appointment with the Vienna Boys Choir, he was musical director of the Youth Project at the Gut Immling Opera Festival, a voice coach with the highly regarded Tölzer Knabenchor, and guest conductor of Kammerphilharmonie Budweis, Bad Reichenhaller Philharmonie, and Salzburg’s Mozarteum University Symphony Orchestra.

The POK Pühringer Privatstiftung, based in Vienna’s Palais Coburg, is the choir’s general sponsor. Exclusive tour management is provided by Opus 3 Artists, New York, New York.

Prior to the SFA performance, Dr. Tod Fish, assistant professor and associate director of choral activities in the SFA School of Music, will present an informative talk at 7 p.m. in Griffith Gallery. The gallery is located across the hall from Turner Auditorium, which is inside the Griffith Fine Arts Building, 2222 Alumni Drive. The audience is invited back to the gallery for a post-performance reception to honor the show’s corporate sponsor.

On the night of the concert, the College of Fine Arts will team up with the SFA Office of Student Engagement to collect non-perishable food items for The Pantry at SFA, which is the food pantry designed to assist SFA students in need. Any non-perishable food item will be accepted, but current special needs are canned fruit, variety boxes of oatmeal packets and canned entrees, such as Chef Boyardee ravioli, spaghetti, etc.

Encore Event tickets are $45 for Section A seating; $36 for Section B seating; and $27 for Section C seating. Discounts are available for seniors, students, children and SFA faculty and staff members, ranging from $3 (for SFA students) to $36 tickets, depending on discount type. For more information or to purchase tickets, visit finearts.sfasu.edu, stop by the Box Office in Room 211 of the Griffith Fine Arts Building, or call (936) 468-6407 or (888) 240-ARTS.

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SFA Chamber Singers to present ‘The Tapestry of Sound’

 The Chamber Singers at SFA will perform at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Nov. 8, in Cole Concert Hall on the university campus.

The Chamber Singers at SFA will perform at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Nov. 8, in Cole Concert Hall on the university campus.

The Chamber Singers at Stephen F Austin State University will present “The Tapestry of Sound” at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Nov. 8, in Cole Concert Hall on the SFA campus.

The diverse program will feature a wide range of music, from J.S. Bach to Cyndi Lauper, spanning more than 375 years, according to Dr. Michael Murphy, director of choral activities for the SFA School of Music and director of the choir.

“The rich threads of different music – classical, folk, popular and religious – create a rich tapestry of sounds presented by the 24-voice SFA Chamber Singers,” Murphy said.

Formerly the Madrigal Singers, the Chamber Singers will be accompanied by Davidson Reyes of San Pedro de Marcorís, Dominican Republic, piano, with Jacob Rivas of The Colony assisting as graduate conductor.

Among the program selections is Bach’s double choir “Komm, Jesu, Komm,” believed to have been composed before 1732 for a funeral.

“The most personal of all of Bach’s motets, this masterpiece opens with alternating pleas that give way to statements of assurance and dance rhythms,” Murphy said.

Just last year, American composer Dan Forrest set Daniel Landinsky’s Hafiz-inspired poetry “The Sun Never Say” to a new composition that was recorded this year by the popular British vocal ensemble Voces8.

“Forrest’s lush setting matches the poetry about the beauty of unconditional love,” Murphy said.

The Chamber Singers will also perform Cyndi Lauper’s 1986 “True Colors,” which spent two weeks in the No. 1 spot on the Billboard Hot 100. “True Colors” has recently become popular again through several choral arrangements.

Concert 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 29, 2019: NPD Crime Report

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

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October 29, 2019: 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 29, 2019: 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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SFA’s orientation and mobility program names recipient of third Christopher J. Snyder Memorial Scholarship

Kim Luna, left, presents Amy Rose, a senior from Fort Worth enrolled in Stephen F. Austin State University’s orientation and mobility program, with the Christopher J. Snyder Memorial Scholarship.

Kim Luna, left, presents Amy Rose, a senior from Fort Worth enrolled in Stephen F. Austin State University’s orientation and mobility program, with the Christopher J. Snyder Memorial Scholarship.

Though they never met, Amy Rose, a senior in the orientation and mobility program at Stephen F. Austin State University, and Christopher J. Snyder, the namesake for the scholarship Rose received, found the program the same way — through an intensive internet search.

As a junior at Tarrant County Community College in Fort Worth last fall, Rose said she was still struggling to find her passion. “I didn’t even know orientation and mobility was a thing.” Then she visited the SFA Department of Human Services website. “It was a sign and a blessing from God,” she said. “The decision to transfer to SFA and all the hard work have felt right the whole time.”

Rose connects to her studies on a personal level because she’s been visually impaired since birth. “I’ve had to deal with this my entire life, so I can relate not only to the material we cover in our lecture courses, but also to the blindfold lessons we do out in the field and the work we do with our peers who are blind or visually impaired,” she said.

Rose’s leadership and stewardship impressed her classmates so much that they soon started calling her “Mama Amy.” These characteristics and her high GPA earned Rose the honor of being the third recipient of the Christopher J. Snyder Memorial Scholarship.

Established in 2017 shortly after Snyder’s death from cancer, the permanently endowed scholarship “means so much to keep Chris’ memory alive,” said Nacogdoches native Kim Luna, who married Snyder in 2001.

Snyder moved from Chicago to Nacogdoches and entered the SFA orientation and mobility program in 1997 after discovering it online. At the time, there were only two orientation and mobility undergraduate programs in the U.S. Today, SFA’s is the only one in the country, and it requires undergraduates to take the same certification exam as students in graduate-level orientation and mobility programs.

Upon graduating in 1999, Snyder returned to Chicago to help students with visual impairments, but he dedicated his summers to SFA. In 2000, he began teaching a six-week course at the university that helped teachers learn orientation and mobility skills to better assist their students with visual impairments. In 2004, he and Luna returned to Nacogdoches.

After earning his Master of Education in special education with an emphasis in emotional disorders and autism from SFA in 2005, Snyder began working for Nacogdoches ISD as the district’s assistive technology manager and orientation and mobility specialist. And every summer, he continued to work with SFA graduate students.

“I just wish I could’ve met him and worked with him because you don’t come across people who have the spirit he did,” Rose said, adding that she quickly heard about Snyder’s contributions to SFA’s orientation and mobility program when she arrived last spring.

Luna said she sees the same passion in Rose that she saw in Snyder.

“Chris loved what he did, and he was good at it. That passion is there in Amy, too. Teaching students with visual impairments is a special profession. Amy will make a difference in others’ lives.”

Luna, who married Snyder in 2001, said she sees the same passion for orientation and mobility in Rose that Snyder, who was a two-time graduate of the program, held. Snyder passed away from cancer in 2017. His family, students and friends established this permanently endowed scholarship in his memory. Rose is the third recipient.

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

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SFA Board of Regents approves faculty and staff appointments

Stephen F. Austin State University’s Board of Regents approved promotions and the appointment of new faculty and staff members during its quarterly meeting.

BUSINESS

Faculty appointments for the Rusche College of Business included Oscar Gonzales, lecturer, and Raymond Jones and Beverly Mendoza, assistant professors, management and marketing; Jamie Humphries, assistant professor, and Lucia Sigmar, associate professor, business communication and legal studies; and Janet Jones and Stephanie Ross, assistant professors, accounting.

EDUCATION

Faculty appointments for the James I. Perkins College of Education included Ralf Schuster, visiting assistant professor, and Jamie Flowers and Leigh Kirby, assistant professors, human services; Amanda Moore and John Stewart, assistant professors, Sarah Sanchez, visiting assistant professor, Victoria Wagner-Greene and Kristina White, instructors, kinesiology and health science; and Christian Pigg, visiting lecturer, elementary education.

Ashley McDaniel was appointed as a teacher for the Early Childhood Laboratory, and the following changes were approved: Brittany Fish, from coordinator of student success to visiting assistant professor of human sciences; Stephanie Schwartz, from substitute teacher to teacher at the SFA Charter School; and Nathaniel Walker from adjunct faculty in agriculture to visiting assistant professor of human sciences.

FINE ARTS

Faculty appointments for the College of Fine Arts included Eden Collins, visiting assistant professor, and Margaret Leysath, assistant professor, art; Kristen Blossom, visiting assistant professor, theatre; and Gregory Grabowski, assistant professor/director of orchestra, and Claire Murphy, assistant professor, music education.

Adjunct faculty member Carlos Gaviria was named lecturer of music, and Tyler Cureton was named technical director for theatre.

FORESTRY AND AGRICULTURE

Mike Tiller was appointed visiting lecturer of forestry, and Cobey Hendry was appointed supervisor of the beef farm.

LIBERAL AND APPLIED ARTS

Faculty appointments for the College of Liberal and Applied Arts included Christina Collins and Lenola Wyatt, visiting lecturers, social work; Kimberly Fruge, visiting assistant professor, and Rebecca Mcelyea, lecturer, government; Mitchell Klingenberg, lecturer, history; and Joseph Stepniewski, visiting assistant professor, mass communication.

The following changes also were approved: Hunter Hampton, from lecturer to assistant professor of history; Catherine Huh, from lecturer of languages, culture and communication to visiting assistant professor of mass communication; Brittany Middlebrook, from adjunct faculty to lecturer of languages, culture and communication; Mario Morera Jimenez, from adjunct faculty to visiting assistant professor of languages, culture and communication; Jessica Sams, associate professor in English and creative writing to associate professor of languages, culture and communication; and Carolyn White, director of the Academic Assistance and Resource Center to lecturer in history.

SCIENCES AND MATHEMATICS

Faculty appointments for the College of Sciences and Mathematics included Jennifer Gaston, clinical instructor, nursing; Carmen Montana-Schalk and Lindsay Porter, assistant professors, biology; Marissa Rotenberry and Anali Segura, lecturers, mathematics and statistics; and Bidisha Sengupta, assistant professor, chemistry. Ashley Wahlberg was appointed lab coordinator for biology.

In the Department of Athletics, Brandi Bryant was approved as associate director of student athlete services and strategic initiatives. Karl Berry was appointed as program director, and Matthew Sheehan was appointed assistant coach of women’s golf operations. Changes of status approved include Brandon Bernard, from coordinator of athletic marketing to director of athletic program (fan experience); Charles Hurley, from director of athletic media relations to director of athletic program (strategic communications); Robert McNulty, from assistant athletic trainer to athletic trainer; Kevin Meyer, from assistant director athletic media relations to assistant director of athletic program (strategic communications); Korbin Pate, coordinator of athletic video production to director of athletic program (marketing and revenue generation); and Kirk Turner, from coordinator of athletic marketing to director of athletic program (digital media).

In Residence Life, staff appointments were approved for hall directors Alisha Blach, Robert Carpenter and Erin Pratico.

Other appointments included Dennis Mosely, coordinator, community standards; Natalie Buuck, coordinator for disability services support, disability services; Erica Nordlund, coordinator, student engagement; Susan Jones, assistant director, financial aid operations; and Carrie Charley, director of auxiliary services, student center administration.

Changes of status include Javier Vega, from preparator in art to director of the AARC; Kimberly Deckard, from counselor to assistant director of admissions; Amy Camacho, from administrative assistant in economics and finance to analyst in institutional research; Amanda Pruit, from clinical instructor in human services to director in the office of community standards; Heather Howell, from executive assistant to executive assistant and interim special assistant to the president; Hillary Parish, from manager of staff services to assistant director of physical plant; Christine Broussard, from senior marketing communications specialist to coordinator of marketing communications; and Lacey Folsom, from director of student engagement to director of student engagement and interim assistant dean of students.

Three longtime faculty members, Patrick Jenlink, Susan Jennings and Ann Wilson, were honored with the title of professor emeritus.

Jenlink joined the SFA faculty in 1997 and served as the doctoral program coordinator and professor for the Department of Secondary Education and Educational Leadership.

Joining the faculty in 2000, Jennings served as a professor in the Department of Business Communication and Legal Studies and as the general business and online Bachelor of Business Administration coordinator.

Wilson joined the faculty in 2003 and served as a professor in the Department of Business Communication and Legal Studies and as the associate dean for Student Services.

Regents approved the retirements of employees with 58 years of combined service: Kay Halstead, librarian III, and Joanna Jones, teacher in the Early Childhood Laboratory.

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