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Breaking
News
Arkansas chosen for National Symphony Orchestra residency
By BECKY HARRIS Special to the Log Cabin

The National Symphony Orchestra will present five concerts and more than 150 special appearances in Arkansas during its 2009 residency between March 24 and March 31, 2009, it was announced Wednesday.

The announcement was made in the lobby of the Don Reynolds Performance Hall at the University of Central Arkansas. Welcoming those in attendance was a brass quintet composed of Professor Larry Jones and Bryan Light, trumpet; Jeff Jarvis, tuba; Denis(cq) Winter, trombone; and Lindsey Tevebaugh, French horn. They played the theme from Masterpiece Theatre, "Rondeau" by Mouret.

Present for the announcement, in addition to UCA president Lu Hardin, were Gov. Mike Beebe and U.S. Rep. Vic Snyder, D-Ark.

Dr. Rollin Potter, dean of the College of Fine Arts and Communication, said he was watching the National Symphony's performance at the Fourth of July concert in 2006, and a notice about the symphony's American Residencies came on the screen.

That began an 18-month odyssey that involved a partnership with the Arkansas Arts Council, led by Joy Pennington, director, who also spoke at the announcement. The invitation from UCA and the Arts Council was accepted in September.

The residency is funded by the Kennedy Center through a grant from the U.S. Department of Education, and will include six orchestral concerts in the state and dozens of educational and outreach activities.

Concerts will be in Jonesboro (March 24), Lily Peter Auditorium in Helena-West Helena (March 25-26); Conway (March 28); Little Rock (March 29); and Fayetteville (March 30). Susan Jarvis of Conway will coordinate the other musical activities.

The program for each concert will be conducted by Ivan Fischer, his first American Residency. They will perform Wagner's Overture to Die Meistersinger; a Serenade by Weiner; three dance episodes from On the Town by Leonard Bernstein; and Anton Dvorak's Symphony No. 7.

Becky Harris is president of the Conway Symphony Orchestra board.




A world away from home on Mother's Day


1st Squadron 151st Cavalry Regiment CONTINGENCY OPERATING BASE ADDER-TALLIL, Iraq Like some moms, Tammy Treat will spend this Mother's Day at work. Unlike most, she'll report for duty at a tactical operations center in a desert thousands of miles from her sons.

Treat, a sergeant first class in the Arkansas Army National Guard, is a member of 1st Squadron, 151st Cavalry Regiment. Attached to the 39th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, the former Mayflower resident oversees C Troop's daytime operations. She and the Troops, whose home is now at Wilkesboro, N.C., she supervises track convoy escort teams (CETs) on various supply routes and prepare groups for upcoming missions.


 

For her sons, Sheldon, 16, and Mason, 12, both of Maumelle, this deployment is a source of mixed emotions.

"We're very proud," they said in an e-mail. "But also sad that our Mom is across the ocean participating in it."

E-mail is their primary mode of communication mainly because of the eight-hour difference in time though phone calls are important, too.

- Advertisement -
The boys said the distance hampers communication but that even electronic talking is helpful.

Day-to-day life deployed in a war-torn country isn't easy, but leaving children behind is more difficult, Treat said.

"There are so many goodbyes we go through when deploying, but that very last one before flying out is the hardest," she explained. "We try to constrain the tears, but once they drove off out of sight, the tears just flowed. The pain of knowing that I am missing my son's 16th birthday and the guilt of missing my younger son's football games it is just all the small things that a mom knows she will miss that make me cry."

A 17-year veteran of the Guard, Treat also deployed in 2003 for a stateside mission. She said that the time away can strengthen family ties.

"I have been in the military the whole of my children's lives. Our bond is a stronger one than most. I try to make them feel proud of their sacrifice."

 

  More Stories from Rick Fahr :

    · Helping heal wounds - 06/29/08
    · A world away from home on Mother's Day - 05/11/08
    · Bullies only need beating once - 11/05/07
    · AAA is getting too big for its britches - 11/03/07
    · One piece at a time ... - 09/03/07


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