University Press (Beaumont, Tex.), Vol. 68, No. 8, Ed. 1 Friday, October 4, 1991 Page: 2 of 6
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Page 2
University Press
Friday, October 4, 1991 ^
OCTOBER, NOVEMBER, DECEMBER
1 fl fl PROGRAM GUIDE
O MEMBER - SUPPORTED
Jasper 91.9
Beaumont 91.3 * Lake Charles 90.9
KVLU week at-a-glance
Sunday
Saturday
Friday
Thursday
Wednesday
Tuesday
Monday
MORNING EDITION
(BEGINS 1 AM)
JAZZ AFTER HOURS
THE RADIO READER
THE BIG
BANDSTAND
MORNING EDITION
WEEKEND
EDITION
IARRIBA!
10:00
SATURDAY
MORNING CLASSICS
MATTERS OF THE MIND
PUBLIC PERSPECTIVE
WEEKEND
RADIO
AUDIOPHILE
AUDITION
NPR WORLD OF
OPERA
GARRISON KEILLOR
REBROADC^ST
AMERICA & THE WORLD
ALL THINGS
ALL THINGS
CONSIDERED
CONSIDERED
ALL THINGS CONSIDERED
WHADYA
GARRISON KEILLOR S
AMERICAN RADIO CO.
MARKETPLACE
KNOW
THE
GORDON BAXTER
SHOW
SATURDAY
NIGHT WITH
THE FOLKS
CAR TALK
ST. LOUIS
SYMPHONY
CHICAGO
SYMPHONY
PITTSBURGH
SYMPHONY
CLEVELAND
ORCHESTRA
THE THISTLE
AND SHAMROCK
BOB AND RAY
THAT
IMAGINATION WORKSHOP
RIVERWALK LIVE
FROM THE LANDING
THE RECORD
SHELF
HEARTS OF SPACE
EVENING CLASSICS
11:00
JAZZ NIGHT
FROM LAS VEGAS
EARTHTONES
MUSIC THROUGH THE NIGHT
(TO 5AM)
OUT OF THE BLUE
MUSIC THROUGH
JAZZ AFTER HOURS
THE NIGHT
Sunday
Saturday
Tuesday Wednesday | Thursday
Monday
Hallowed Be Thy Name in the Art£
Yes I Can!
Alterations,
Sewing & Classes
Prompt Service!
(near Lamar U)
832-0588
Stephanie Pellham, Bridge City senior, serves Melissa Milich, Port Arthur senior, and Cliff Huebel, Port Arthur alumnus.
Photo by Drew Loker 1
More than 2,000 turn out for Taste1
By Joy LeBlanc
UP staff writer
More than 2,000 people turned
out to eat some of the finest foods of
the area at the annual Taste of the
Triangle.
Tasfe of the Triangle is a unique
tradition of the area, sponsored by
the Sabine Area Chapter of the
Texas Restaurant Association, to
which many of the area restaurants
donate their time and their food to
raise money for several local chari-
ties.
This year’s Taste had more than
75 booths and raised between
$14,000 and $15,000 which will be
poured back into local society, said
Taste chair Randy Moncla of
Moncla’s Catering.
The money goes to various chari-
ties, such as the Boy’s Haven and the
Abused Women’s Shelter, as well as
to buy livestock at the Southeast
Texas State Fair. Also, at
Thanksgiving, Taste donates 40 food
baskets, containing turkey and other
food items, to needy families.
“We also supply all the sandwich-
es for the Special Olympics at Babe
Zaharias Stadium,” Moncla said,
“over 5,000 sandwiches."
LeBland McAdams, professor of
home economics, organized a group
of about 70 Lamar students who t
helped pour beverages at the event, ,
Moncla said.
This year’s Taste of the Triangle 1
was dedicated to A.J. Legcr, co- ,
owner of Don’s Seafood, for his out-
standing service in the Sabine Area •
Chapter of the Texas Restaurant
Association, as well as for his civic
and church service, Moncla said. ,
Lamar Baptist Student Union Does It!
FREE Lunch
Oct. 15,16 & 17
FREE Concert
Oct. 17 - Paul Smith,
Contemporary Christian
not just for Baptists
Carnegie Mellon University
offering degree in bagpipe
FREE LUNCH
.every Wed., 11:15am & 12:20pm
PITTSBURGH (UPI) — A man
who gave up his bank job to study
the bagpipe knows his pipe dream
won’t make him rich but it will make
him happy.
Jon Fiant, 25, is the first bagpipe
major at Carnegie Mellon University
— the world’s first university to offer
a degree in the Scottish instrument.
The school’s Scottish tradition dates
back to its founder, Andrew
Carnegie, but the bagpipe is striking-
ly different from the mostly refined
world of its Music Department.
“The kids have treated him with
the same respect as other musicians,”
said Marilyn Taft Thomas, who
heads the department
Fiant is getting a musical educa-
tion equal to that of any CMU
pianist, singer, orchestral player or
composer as he pursues his bachelor
of fine arts degree.
Fiant is studying under James
McIntosh, a winner of world bagpipe
LUNCH is now served every MONDAY,
11 a.m. to 1 p.m.
by the Lutheran Fellowship of Lamar
at the St. Matthew Student Center
(across from the tennis courts)
Good food, good fellowship, a good day
competitions. He sold his car, emp-
tied his savings’account, secured a
loan and pursued donations from
Scottish clan societies to enroll at
CMU, where tutition is $15,250 a
year.
“The fact my financial future is
uncertain means nothing to me,”
Fiant said.
“What I feel is important is to do
what makes me happiest and be the
best at that"
Fiant first became enchanted wth
the bagpipe after studying traditional
fiddling as a youth.
He became intrigued with a bag-
pipe band that performed for tourists
while working a summer job in
Mystic, Conn., in 1985 and began
taking lessons three years later.
He has since quit his job as an
auditor at Reading’s Meridian
Bancorp and could become a per-
former, teacher, competition judge or
reed maker with the skill he learns.
LU Briefs
Staff Appreciation Day planned
There will be a Staff Appreciation Day Oct. 11 in the Montagne
Center from noon to 2 p.m.
The menu will include barbecued brisket, hot links, potato salad,
Texas toast and a dessert. Tea and soft drinks will also be served. There
will also be drawings for door prizes.
All staff and faculty are invited.
Baptist Hospital offers mental testing
In recognition of Mental Illness Awareness Month, the Center for
Life Management at Baptist Hospital of Southeast Texas will provide
free mental health assessments weekdays from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. during
October.
Appointments can be made by calling 839-5347 or 1-800-833-9192.
The Center for Life Management, located at 3450 Stagg Drive, has
both inpatient and outpatient programs for the treatment of mental dis-
orders and chemical dependency.
For more information on the Center for Life Management or to
schedule a confidential assessment, call 839-5347 or 1-800-833-9192.
Spindletop Unitarian to discuss death
"Death with Dignity" will be the topic for discussion at the Spindletop
Unitarian Church, 1575 Spindletop Road, on Oct. 13. Services for chil-
dren and adults begin at 10:30 a.m.
For more information contact the Rev. Walter Moulton at 833-6883.
Hertzog's work displayed
An exhibition summarizing Carl Hertzog's work and his contribu-
tions to the printing world is on display in the lobby of the Mary and
John Gray Library.
Bom of American parents in Lyon, France, Hertzog first became
fascinated with printing after receiving a toy printing press as a child in
Pennsylvania. Although influenced by Porter Garnett of Carnegie
Tech, he was largely a self-taught printer.
The exhibit is On loan from the Institute of Texas Cultures in San
Antonio and will be displayed until Oct. 15.
Omega Theta Alpha to hold meetings
Omega Theta Alpha sorority will conduct meetings Oct 7 at 12:15
and 1:45 p.m. in 108 Setzer Student Center.
Guest speaker at the meetings will be Evelyn Wagner of the depart-
ment of fine arts. Her topic will be Lamarissimo.
For more information contact Cynthia Gibson, president of Omega
Theta Alpha, at 880-8817.
Big Thicket offers photography course
The Big Thicket National Preserve and Lamar University are co-
sponsoring a non-credit course in wildlife photography during
November.
Jeffrey Schultz, of the R.A. Vines Environmental Science Center in
Houston, will conduct a six-hour course in the Lamar University class-
room located at Parkdale Mall. The class will meet three times, and
each session will be from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m.
Sessions are scheduled on three successive Saturday mornings on
Nov. 2, 9 and 16. There is no fee for the course, and all supplies will be
provided.
For reservations, call the Big Thicket National Preserve at (409)
246-2337.
St. Elizabeth offers arthritis program
St. Elizabeth Hospital will offer the PACE Exercise Program,
designed to help arthritis sufferers feel better. PACE stands for People
with Arthritis Can Exercise. During this eight-week program, trained
personnel will guide participants through a series of gentle movements
and activities to increase mobility and range of motion.
The next session begins Oct. 21 and will be offered at St. Elizabeth's
Health Resource Center in Parkdale Mall on Mondays and Thursdays
at 10:30 a.m.
Pre-registration is required, and participants must have a physician's
release to begin the program. Release forms and more information may
be obtained from the Health Resource Center in Parkdale Mall or by
calling 899-2273.
' THE READER REBROADCAJ
ST
MAKE-BELIEVE
BALLROOM
BROADWAY
AND BEYOND
MARIAN McPARTLAND
CITY CLUB FORUM
NEW AMERICAN GAZ./
NATIONAL PRESS CLUB
AFTERNOON JAZZ
LIVING ON EARTH
mmmmmmm
Wed., Oct. 9 - Fri., Oct. II
Wed., Oct. 16 - Fri., Oct. 18
Wed., Oct. 23 - Fri., Oct. 25
Wed., Oct. 30
Us
Fri., Nov. 1 - Wed., Nov. 6
Fri., Nov. 8 - Wed., Nov. 13
Fri., Nov. 15 - Wed., Nov. 20
Fri., Nov. 22
Wed., Dec. 4
4
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be in
/vi/ HANDS S
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INMY i
/HIKING j
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St. Matthew's 833-5642 j
what's going on at the Baptist Student Union..
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Casey, Jay. University Press (Beaumont, Tex.), Vol. 68, No. 8, Ed. 1 Friday, October 4, 1991, newspaper, October 4, 1991; Beaumont, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth499630/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar University.