SHSU
Update For Week Of April 2
Health Center To Screen
For Alcohol Abuse
Is your life on the rocks because of your excess drinking?
Recent research says that alcohol abuse on college campuses
is strongly related to accidents, sexual assault and injury
and even death.
In conjunction with National Alcohol Screening Day on April
5, the Sam Houston State University Counseling Center will
present the straight facts on alcohol and how if affects one’s
body, the risks that may be faced by drinking too much and
what can be done to regain control.
Alcohol screening sessions will be held for free in the Lowman
Student Center Mall Area on Wednesday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
In addition to the screenings, students can ask questions
and talk to a health professionals about alcohol or alcohol-related
issues.
For more information, call 936.294.1720.
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Summer Class To Look
At, Analyze Bollywood
Need an elective this summer that requires watching films
and major discussion?
The English and foreign languages department is offering “Bollywood
Cinema: New Directions in Language.”
"I decided to offer this class because Bollywood films
have become popular and successful in the United States,"
said Shirin Edwin, foreign language instructor.
Bollwood refers to the Bombay-based Indian film industry.
Discussion of the aesthetics of Bollywood themes: romance,
marriage, technical styles, music and identities of the Indian
characters will be incorporated into the class, Edwin said.
The class will also view and study a selection of recent international
films, such as “Bend it like Beckham,” “Monsoon
Wedding,” “Bride and Prejudice,” according
to Edwin.
The class has been scheduled as English 267W 01 and will be
held in the first summer session.
For more information, contact the foreign
language department at 936.294.1441.
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Rounds Up At ‘6th Best’
Raven Nest
Sam Houston State University’s Raven Nest Golf Club
is becoming better known near and far, and its rounds played
and revenue figures are showing it.
The course was recently ranked 6th in Texas by the Dallas
Morning News for courses with fees of $44 and under. A number
of new programs have also increased interest among area golfers,
according to Nate Nye, PGA head professional.
Nye said that rounds played are up 68 percent from a year
ago, prior to SHSU’s taking over management of the course,
and revenue is up 50 percent. He attributes the increases
to several factors.
Nye believes that the electronic messaging sign sponsored
by First National Bank is bringing the course's value to
the attention of Interstate 45 travelers. New programs such
as the Men’s
and Women’s Golf Associations, junior programs,
and yearly membership plans are becoming more popular
with area and local players.
In addition, more university students are playing. Nye said
that 25 percent of all rounds played are by SHSU students.
“The pro shop is fully stocked, and we’re open
rain or shine, even when the course is closed,” said
Nye. “That’s also the case with the new food,
drink, and snack operation.”
Jason Burnett, a Huntsville High School product who has expanded
his catering business, operates The Grille at Raven Nest,
which is becoming known for its breakfast burritos and cheeseburgers,
said Nye.
“We’ve got new patio furniture, and a lot of folks
are stopping by to eat even if they’re not playing,”
said Nye.
Rates including green fee and cart are $36 on weekends and
$26 weekdays. City, county, and TDCJ employees can play for
$30 and $24, and SHSU faculty, staff, and alumni for $25 and
$20. Students can play for $20 and $17, and seniors (60 and
older) for $5 less than the full rates.
Nine hole rates are also offered. More information is available
on the Raven Nest Web page at http://www.ravennestgolf.com/.
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Ag, A&M To Host SAM
Workshop For Ranchers
To address the need for basic information in agriculture
among new or inexperienced ranchers, SHSU, in conjunction
with Texas A&M University, will host the Successful Agricultural
Management Workshop April 19-21.
The workshop, which will be held on the SHSU campus in Huntsville,
will begin with the check-in from 7:30-8 a.m. on April 19.
Topics to be discussed at the two-and-a-half-day workshop
include basics of forage establishment, management and utilization,
and basic livestock management and production.
In-field demonstrations of various ‘how to’ methodologies
of planting, calibrating sprayers, inoculating legume seed,
castrating, vaccination, de-horning calves, and pasture and
livestock management will also be taught.
Due to limited enrollment, workshop attendees will have ample
time to visit with SHSU and TAMU faculty and staff to discuss
various aspects of forage production and livestock management.
Registration will be held on a first-come, first-served basis
and enrollment is limited to 50.
The cost is $350 per participant, which includes a workshop
manual containing dozens of publications on pasture and livestock
management, two noon and two evening meals, as well as break
refreshments, and participants will receive a special monogrammed
shirt and cap.
Pre-registration can be done by sending the $350 fee to Sam
Houston State University, Department of Agricultural Sciences,
Attention: Bobby Lane, Huntsville, Texas, 77341-2088.
Registration information can be obtained at www.shsu.edu/~agr_www/
or by calling 936.294.1215.
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Theatre To Perform
Rock Opera ‘Jesus Christ Superstar’
The SHSU department of theatre and dance will explore the
last three days of Jesus’ life on earth with its rendition
of Andrew Lloyd Weber and Timothy Rice’s “Jesus
Christ Superstar” Wednesday through Saturday (April
5-8).
Show times are 8 p.m. each day, with a 2 p.m. Saturday matinee,
in the University Theatre Center’s Mainstage Theatre.
The story, told from the viewpoint of Judas (Jon-Michael Hammon),
explores the personal angst of a man who wants to do right
but ultimately betrays Jesus (Derrick Davis).
Depicting the gentle and loving teacher-disciple relationship
between Jesus and Mary Magdalene (Briana Resa), the story
is infused with the zeal of Jesus’ ever-loving apostles,
chiefly Simon the Zealot (Nkrumah Gatling) and Peter (Adam
Gibbs).
The play forces the audience to see the cruelty set upon Jesus
in both Pontius Pilate’s (Aaron Thacker) and King Herod’s
(James Arrington) courts.
The rock opera premiered on Broadway in 1971, heralding Weber
into musical theatre history.
Student designers are Trey Carnely, sound, and Amanda Gutierrez,
props, and faculty designers include Don Childs, lights and
set, and Kristina S. Hanssen, costumes.
Tickets are $12 for general admission and $10 for SHSU students,
with an ID, and senior citizens. Group rates are also available.
The play contains adult content, and no children under the
age of three will be admitted.
For reservations, or more information, call the UTC at 936.294.1339.
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Museum Hosts Cutting-Edge
Art Quilt Exhibition
|
Michelle Naranjo-Brackett's "Betty’s
Meadow" is among those on display in the Walker Education
Center through April 30. |
Elements from the Front Range Contemporary Quilters, an exhibit
of quilts made using unconventional materials such as paint,
paper, beads, metal and wood, will be on display in the Katy
& E. Don Walker, Sr. Education Center ‘s Exhibit
Gallery through April 30.
Called “some of the most innovative quilt work being
done today,” these art quilts show a wide range of creativity
that melds ideas of home and hearth with cutting-edge technologies
of the digital age, according to David Wight, museum curator
of exhibits.
Juror Robert Shaw, author of “The Art Quilt,”
has selected 40 new works for this exhibition from members
of the Front Range Contemporary Quilters, one of the oldest
art quilt guilds in the United States.
Front Range Contemporary Quilters is made up of artists, both
women and men, from Colorado, Wyoming, New Mexico, and Kansas,
and has sponsored annual juried exhibitions since its inception
in 1988.
The members of Front Range Contemporary Quilters share a common
interest not only in the art of quilting, but also in a prevailing
theme surrounding the elements themselves. Weather, water
fluctuations, wildfires, and expanding population, among other
challenges, heavily impact the Front Range area, Wight said.
The natural elements—earth, air, fire, and water—intertwine
with the locality and geography of the group to provide both
poetic and practical subject matter, he said.
The Walker Education Center is located at 1402 19th St.
It is open from 9:30 a.m. to 4:40 p.m. on Tuesdays through
Saturdays and noon to 4:30 p.m. on Sundays.
For more information, call 936.294.1832.
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Art Works To Be Judged
For Scholarships
Art and photography students will have the opportunity to
display the pieces they have worked on throughout the fall
and spring semesters and compete for art scholarships and
other awards at the 7th annual Juried Student Show.
The show will be held April 3-27 in the Gaddis Geeslin Gallery,
located in Art Building F.
Students will have their pieces judged by guest juror and
artist Francesca Fuchs for scholarships and prizes.
The winners will be announced at the awards ceremony on April
20, at 6 p.m. in the Art Auditorium, located in Art Building
E Room 108.
A reception will be held the same day from 5-7 p.m. in the
Gaddis Geeslin Gallery.
In addition, the department will host ‘open studios,’
where attendees will be able to walk through the art classrooms
to see where the students work, as well as art on the walls,
said Debbie Davenport, slide librarian.
“This is a great opportunity to visit the SHSU art department,
meet faculty and students, and get an overview for the facilities
and programs the art department offers,” she said.
The Gaddis Geeslin Gallery hours are Monday through Friday,
from noon to 5 p.m.
For more information, call Davenport
at 936.294.1317.
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Festival To
Feature Contemporary Music, Composers
The School of Music will present a variety of music during
the 44th annual Contemporary Music Festival Wednesday through
Friday (April 5-7).
The concert will be held at five different times.
The Wednesday performance, which will be held at 7:30 p.m.
in the Recital Hall will feature compositions of SHSU School
of Music students.
On Thursday, a 2:30 p.m. concert will be held in the Recital
Hall featuring chamber music and a
7:30 p.m. concert of chamber music and featuring the Faculty
Brass Quintet will also be held in the Criminal Justice Center’s
Killinger Auditorium.
An afternoon concert will feature chamber music on Friday,
at 2:30 p.m. in the Recital Hall, and the last concert,
at 7:30 p.m. in the Killinger Auditorium will feature chamber
music and the SHSU percussion and wind ensembles.
The concert series will feature works by Donald Grantham,
who will be a guest composer at the event, as well as other
contemporary composers.
Grantham, an Austin resident and professor of composition
at the University of Texas at Austin, is the recipient of
numerous awards and prizes in composition.
His music has been praised for its "elegance, sensitivity,
lucidity of thought, clarity of expression and fine lyricism"
in a Citation awarded by the American Academy and Institute
of Arts and Letters.
In recent years his works have been performed by the orchestras
of Cleveland, Dallas, Atlanta and the American Composers Orchestra
among many others, and he has fulfilled commissions in media
from solo instruments to opera.
His music is published by Piquant Press, Peer- Southern, E.
C. Schirmer and Mark Foster, and a number of his works have
been commercially recorded.
For more information, call the School
of Music at 936.294.1360.
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Clarinet, Piano Duo
To Perform Recital
Duo Karudan, a guest artist to the School of Music, will
perform a clarinet recital on Tuesday (April 4), at 7:30 in
the Recital Hall.
The duo, comprised of Christopher Ayer, clarinet assistant
professor at Stephen F. Austin State University, and his wife
Kae Hosoda-Ayer, piano, will play music written during the
late Romantic Era through the early 20th century, according
to Patricia Card, SOM assistant chair.
Ayer, a native of Fredericton, New Brunswick, Canada, also
coordinates undergraduate and graduate clarinet study at SFASU
and performs with the Stone Fort Wind Quintet.
He has studied with Thomas Martin, associate principal clarinetist
with the Boston Symphony, and Ronald de Kant, former principal
clarinetist of the Vancouver Symphony.
Prior to his appointment at SFA, Ayer was the clarinet professor
and orchestra conductor at Eastern New Mexico University.
In July, 2005, he presented a lecture- recital at the International
Clarinet Conference held in Tokyo, Japan.
He selected the 2004-2005 Texas All-Region audition etudes
and presented a clinic on these at the 2004 Texas Bandmaster's
conference in San Antonio.
Hosoda-Ayer received her master's from the New England Conservatory
of Music after completing her bachelor's degree at Toho Gakuen
School in Tokyo.
She is currently pursuing her doctoral degree from the University
of Texas at Austin, where, in April 2004, she won first prize
in the Sidney Wright Endowed Presidential Scholarship Competition
in Piano Accompanying.
She has performed throughout the United State and Japan as
a soloist and accompanist.
Ayer will give a master class for the clarinet studio students
earlier in the day.
The concert is free and open to the public.
For more information, call the School
of Music at 936.294.1360.
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Bookstore To Host Employment
Sessions For Students
Looking for a job? The Barnes and Noble University Bookstore
will host two student employment sessions on Thursday (April
6) and Friday (April 7).
The informal meetings, held at 4 p.m. on Thursday and 2 p.m.
on Friday, will inform students of what employment opportunities
are and will be available in the store.
Potential applicants are asked to bring a completed application,
which can be obtained in the store beforehand, and class schedules
for this spring, summer and fall 2006, if available.
University bookstore employees receive a 20 percent discount
on textbooks and up to a 35 percent discount on other merchandise.
For more information, call the bookstore at 936.294.1862 or
visit http://shsu.bkstore.com/.
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Choreographers, Students
To Perform ‘Entropy’
Students in the dance graduate program will present "Entropy"
on Monday and Tuesday (April 3-4).
The concert, choreographed by the graduate students, will
be held at 8 p.m. both nights in the Academic Building III
Dance Theater.
Eight group and solo dance pieces will be presented by graduate
students Samantha Angus, Cheryl Callon, Megan Lasher, Courtney
Mulcahy, Kyla Olson and Mary Zepeda.
“Most of the choreography is modern dance, but all different
styles of modern,” said Zapeda. “There is also
a performance art piece and an improvisation.”
Performers will include undergraduate dancers, as well as
students in the modern II dance class taught by Mulcahy, and
two of the solos will be performed by Lasher and Mulcahy.
Tickets are $5 at the door. For more information, call 936.294.3988.
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Send Update Items Here
Please send information for the SHSU Update to the Office
of Public Relations at SHSU. For electronic access to SHSU
news see the public relations Web page Today@Sam.
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- END -
SHSU Media Contacts: Frank
Krystyniak, Julia May,
Jennifer Gauntt
April 2, 2006
Please send comments, corrections, news tips to Today@Sam.edu
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