May 18, 2013
News
Jackson wins Circle of Excellence Award
by Christina Voss
SMU’s official university photographer and the Office of Public Affairs received international awards for accomplishments in image photography and media relations during the 2012 Circle of Excellence Awards competition of the Council for Advancement and Support of Education. SMU photographer Hillsman S. Jackson (pictured above, right) won the international Gold award in the Photographer of the Year category for images featured in the SMU cente...
WELCOME TO WHITE ROCK! Grocer will bring the greens to lower Greenville
by Shari Stern
While it’s true Dallas is inundated with grocery stores, most are as huge as the city itself and represent equally large national chains. We all support them and are glad they’re here. It will be refreshing, though, to have a friendly mom and pop grocer in the Lower Greenville mix when Green Grocer opens in the ’hood this fall. Some other grocery stores, including nearby East Dallas’ Central Market, Whole Foods and Sprouts, also carry organic ...
SMU group learning to give in Rwanda
by Denise Gee
A group of 20 SMU students, faculty and staff are in Rwanda from Aug. 3–13 to witness the deep emotional, physical and environmental scars of genocide while contributing to the African country’s recovery efforts. After Rwanda’s 1994 civil war, in which as many as a million people were killed in 100 days, “History lives on,” said Rick Halperin, director of SMU’s Embrey Human Rights Program, the trip’s sponsor. “The ethnic tensions that led to m...
New Performance Hall ready to connect with city
by Elena Harding
The newest addition to the Dallas Arts District, the Dallas City Performance Hall, will unveil Phase 1 of its construction to the public Sept. 13, and press got a sneak peak July 30. The city-managed project’s streamlined façade houses a functional space built to serve smaller to mid-size performance groups. Maria Muñoz-Blanco, City of Dallas Office of Cultural Affairs director and East Dallas resident, said the performance hall puts an emphas...
County officials warn of West Nile dangers
by Jennifer Bubel
Of all the West Nile cases reported in 2012 since July, Dallas has experienced the worst of them. As of July 19, 53 mosquito pools tested positive for the virus in Dallas County, and as of Tuesday, Aug. 7, there have been 123 known human infections, eight of which resulted in death. West Nile virus is a disease spread by infected mosquitoes, which contract it from the blood of infected birds. It is not contagious and can only be obtained by th...
Patterson to bring passion to Woodrow Wilson High’s PTA
by Kyle Rains
Randy Patterson will serve as PTA president of Woodrow Wilson High School for the 2012-13 school year. A member of the class of 1982, he is only the second alumnus to ever serve as PTA president and is the first male alum. Bradley Sue LaFon Howell, ’51, who also was librarian at the school for more than 25 years, was president in 1983-84 when her children attended the school (she has also had grandchildren graduate recently). Patterson is al...
Where Are They Now? Fuel City morphs from selling gas to being a gas
by Shari Stern
The State Fair of Texas has nothing on Fuel City, where there’s a fair every day. And it would be unfair to call the business a three-ring circus when it clearly has five or six rings, and we mean that in a good way. While it started out as a traditional Gulf service station and truck stop in 1999, Fuel City has become its own theme park. Oh, the gas is still available, and, according to owner John Benda, it’s at the lowest prices anywhere in ...
Artists Blackburn, Ransom join Meadows
by Victoria Winkelman
Noted national artists/educators Mary Walling Blackburn and Brittany Ransom have been appointed to faculty positions in the Division of Art at SMU Meadows School of the Arts, beginning in fall 2012. Blackburn, a New York-based artist and writer known for conceptually dense, multi-disciplinary projects, will be assistant professor of art and urbanism. Ransom, whose practice centers on art/technology and interactive installations, will be assist...
Residents remember Ford and his inventions
by Lucy Higginbotham
Why stroll down memory lane when you can cruise down it in a 1965 convertible Ford Mustang? That is what residents did at the Churchill Estates at Lake Highlands senior living complex on Monday, July 30. To celebrate the 147th birthday of Henry Ford, patriarch of the American car industry, residents and car enthusiasts rubbed elbows and traded stories about the cars from one of the most influential inventors of the 20th century. “Anytime peopl...
Riders at new camp experience playing polo
by Dena Miller
Two camp sessions were held at Prestonwood Polo Club, July 4-7 and 11-14. Polo Camp is open to students 8-18, whether they have had any riding experience or not. This year’s campers doubled the number of last year’s inaugural camp. Polo students began in the barn, learning the difference between polo ponies and ponies used in other equestrian activities, and getting familiar with polo equipment. After some mallet work they learned the game i...