UNIVERSITY PRESS
The Newspaper of Lamar University
Vol. 92, No. 15 March 31, 2016
Floods drive evacuees to Montagne Elizabeth Grimm UP staff writer
Thunder, lightning and water rising. On March 9, flood waters swept through Texas and Louisiana causing devastation. As residents were forced out of their homes and evacuated to higher ground, Lamar University’s Montagne Center was used as a shelter for evacuees. Mary Jane Mudd, regional communications officer for Texas Gulf Coast of the Red Cross, said that everyone misjudged the intensity of the flooding.
“This is the worst flooding that this area has had since the late 1800s — I had underestimated that,” she said. “However, it’s my understanding that emergency management does have plans in place and they were tracking the weather, and there was a lot of communication about the weather. But it’s hard to believe until you’re in it. There was an understanding that this could happen — you always hope that it won’t.” Mudd said it was only a couple of days before spring break when the Red Cross had a meeting
about whether they should “stand up,” as the operation is called, or not. “We were tracking a rain and I thought, ‘Oh, it’d be a couple of days — maybe some water,’” she said. “I was gone for that week, and that’s rare. Then, oh my gosh, (I) found out it went from a level-one disaster to a levelfour disaster — that’s based on how much it will cost us to be flying people and serving food and so forth. That’s when I realized that the rivers were flooding and See FLOODS page 2
Courtesy Photo by American Red Cross
Vizutti to feature at LU’s Brass Fest Alexandra Sokolova UP contributor
Lamar University will hosts the first Brass Fest, April 7 through April 9, in the Simmons Music Building. “What we are doing is having a brass festival that is going to be open to all brass players (at Lamar),” Brian Shook, associate professor of trumpet, said. This year’s featured performer is Allen Vizzutti, who developed the Allen Vizzutti Trumpet Method, a standard treatise used worldwide. The festival opens with the Lamar Faculty Brass Quintet at 7:30 p.m., April 7, in the Rothwell Recital Hall. The Lamar Brass Faculty Solo Recital will be held at 7:30 p.m., April 8, in the Rothwell. LU Honors Brass Quintet and Faculty Brass Quintet will host Brass Chamber Music Workshop at 10 a.m., April 9, following a masterclass with Vizzutti at 1 p.m. The event will
conclude with Gala Concert at 5 p.m., in the University Theatre, featuring Vizzutti with the LU Brass Choir and Jazz Orchestra. All concerts are open to the public, and a $20 ticket covers all festival events. An exhibition of instruments by Yamaha, Conn-Selmer and Eastman-Shires will be on display April 9, from 9 a.m. in the University Theatre. See BRASS page 8
ALLEN VIZZUTTI
UP staff honored with SPJ awards
Thrill ride
University Press staffer Lane Fortenberry and editor Grant Crawford earned awards at the Society of Professional Journalists Mark of Excellence Awards, presented March 19 in Forth Worth. Fortenberry earned first place in the sports writing category for his story, “Risk vs. Reward,” a feature about the effects of concussion in football. Crawford and Fortenberry were runners up in the sports column writing category for a combined portfolio. “The Mark of Excellence awards are tough competition,
UP Kyle Swearingen
A cowboy fights to stay atop a bucking bronco, Saturday, during the South Texas State Fair rodeo at Ford Park. The fair opened March 24 and continues through Sunday. For more photos, see page 5.
so to be a finalist is quite an achievement,” Crawford said. “As always, it is great to be recognized for the work the staff does. Ultimately, we do the work because that’s what we do, but it doesn’t mean we don’t appreciate a trophy now and then.” For winning first place, Fortenberry advances to the national finals, to be announced in September. The SPJ awards are split into 12 regional categories, with the winners advancing to nationals. Region 8 encompasses schools in Texas and Oklahoma.
International Film Festival to begin April 6 Allison Pipkins UP contributor
The Spring 2016 International Film Festival, sponsored by the Lamar University’s French Circle, will take place with a screening each Wednesday in April. The festival opens April 6 with “Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown,” and continues, April 13 with “Where Do We Go Now?,” April 20 with “M,” and concludes April 27 with “Timbuktu.” The films begin at 7 p.m. in 113 Communication Building. Admission is free and open to everyone. French professor Kenneth Rivers, now retired, founded the French Film Festival
many years ago. When Caitlin Duerler, instructor of French, took over the event, she decided to change the format. “This year’s film festival, I wanted to expand more into international film,” she said. “I wanted to give the students more variety than just French films.” During the planning stages, Duerler said she reached out to several faculty members, including Clinton Rawls and Mahmoud Salimi from communication, and Maria Elena Sandovici from social and behavioral sciences. “I love to be entertained,” Rawls said. “Film is a way that entertains everyone.
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These varieties of films are windows into different cultures.” It was not hard for the group to choose the movies, Sandovici said. “This film is a little more risqué than others we have seen,” she said. “We have seen everything from the movie about Coco Chanel and her really raunchy sex scenes to a French slasher that was really gruesome with a brilliant twist at the end.” “Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown” is a 1988 Spanish film by Pedro Almodovar. “This is my favorite movie of all times,” Sandovici said. “It’s crazy, it’s fun, it’s aes-
thetically pleasing.” The film features a young Antonio Banderas that stutters over his on-screen crush. Sandovici said the film is a Spanish lesson through a poem. “It really is a magical film,” she said. The Lebanese film “Where Do We Go Now?” showcases this peaceful living between Christians and Muslims until a series of slights and misunderstandings stir the pot for the men of the small Lebanese village. The women come together to try to mend the relationships for the men but were unsuccessful. In their final attempts to mak-
See FILM FEST page 4
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