PLACE lecture to focus on ?Technology and the Brain?

?Technology and the Brain? will be the focus of a Program for Learning and Community Engagement (PLACE) lecture on Monday, Oct. 30, at 12:15 p.m. in the Community Room of the Humanities Building on the ÂÒÉ«ÎÞÂëÈËÆÞÊÓÆµÓ°Ôº campus in Mount Pleasant, Texas.

Dr. David Yells, provost and vice president for academic affairs at Texas A&M University-Texarkana, will be the guest speaker.

The free event is open to the public.
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Vienna Boys Choir to perform at Whatley Center

The Whatley Center for the Performing Arts at ÂÒÉ«ÎÞÂëÈËÆÞÊÓÆµÓ°Ôº will host the Vienna Boys Choir on Monday, Nov. 6 at 7:30 p.m. One of the oldest boys choirs in the world, it was founded in 1498 and has since delighted audiences around the world with music new and old.

The modern†Vienna Boys Choir†bears little resemblance to the original group of six boys invited to sing at the Viennese court many centuries ago. Today, the Vienna Boys Choir consists of 100 boys between the ages of ten and fourteen, from dozens of nations, divided into four touring groups.

Alicia Cantrell wins Walter B Cooper Scholarship

Alicia Cantrell recently received the Walter B Cooper Scholarship at the Texas Leadership Conference. The Phi Theta Kappa conference, held on the campus of Texas Lutheran Unive
rsity, concluded by announcing four winners from across the state of Texas. The Walter B Cooper Scholarship recognizes outstanding students who are ?well-rounded?

Adult Education hosts Lunch & Learn on the Lawn

The ÂÒÉ«ÎÞÂëÈËÆÞÊÓÆµÓ°Ôº Adult Education Program recently held its annual Lunch and Learn on the Lawn for GED and ESL students and instructors in conjunction with Breast Cancer Awareness. The program will host student-centered activities and events each month to encourage staff and student engagement, to collaborate with local Adult Education supporters, and to promote Adult Education efforts in the community. The central office is located at the Community Resource Center at 105 N. Riddle Street in Mt. Pleasant (formerly Mt.
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ÂÒÉ«ÎÞÂëÈËÆÞÊÓÆµÓ°Ôº Ag to host tree workshop

The ÂÒÉ«ÎÞÂëÈËÆÞÊÓÆµÓ°Ôº Agriculture Department will host a Trees of the Northeast: Selection, Care and Planting Workshop Saturday, Oct. 28. This informative session will be from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the ÂÒÉ«ÎÞÂëÈËÆÞÊÓÆµÓ°Ôº Ag Complex located across FM 1735 from the main ÂÒÉ«ÎÞÂëÈËÆÞÊÓÆµÓ°Ôº campus. Led by Dave Wall, the $10 class will cover a lecture, materials and hands-on planting at the college farm, as well as lunch. Space is limited to 20 recipients, so please RSVP to Rene? McCracken, ÂÒÉ«ÎÞÂëÈËÆÞÊÓÆµÓ°Ôº Ag Director, at 903-434-8267 or rmccracken@ntcc.edu.

Brenda Godoy presents at East Texas Historical Association

Brenda Godoy recently became the second student in the history of ÂÒÉ«ÎÞÂëÈËÆÞÊÓÆµÓ°Ôº to speak alongside professorial scholars at a meeting of a professional association. She appeared at the East Texas Historical Association on October 13 at Galveston, wedged between a prize-winning author who was a former journalist for the†Dallas Morning News and a professor at Blinn College.

ÂÒÉ«ÎÞÂëÈËÆÞÊÓÆµÓ°Ôº invites community to Campus Dedication event

The community is invited to join ÂÒÉ«ÎÞÂëÈËÆÞÊÓÆµÓ°Ôº for a Campus Dedication event as it celebrates the completion of a major renovation project. The event will be held Thursday, Oct. 26 on the main campus plaza from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m., with remarks at 12:15 p.m. Lunch will be provided and guests are encouraged to explore the campus and check out the many changes implemented over the past two years.

Voters approved the funds for the project in 2015 and work began in 2016.

Theatre Northeast to perform Killer Halloween

Theatre Northeast, the student theatre group of ÂÒÉ«ÎÞÂëÈËÆÞÊÓÆµÓ°Ôº, will present the play Killer Halloween by Dennis SneeOctober 26-29 at the Whatley Center for the Performing Arts. The thriller/comedy will provide the right amount of scares and laughs for the season.

Set on Halloween in the small Midwestern town of Shudderville, where for on each of the preceding seven Halloweens, one or more Shudderville teenagers has been stabbed, slashed, bludgeoned, strangled, dismembered, disemboweled or otherwise killed in a really icky way. The killer remains at large.