University Press (Beaumont, Tex.), Vol. 70, No. 21, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 10, 1993 Page: 6 of 6
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Wednesday, November 10, 1993
University Press
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Quintet
Commission—
Continued from page 1
try, as well as possibilities for
alternative fueling and high-speed
rail.
Some of the changes taking
place in economics and the envi-
ronment, she said, are causing
some “growing pains” which she
sees as the cause of some of the
problems in industries and corpo-
rations in Texas.
Smokers-
Continued from page 1
register for the class,” Martha
Hardie, Lamar University health
educator said. Hardie said those
who register for the class will be
expected to attend all four ses-
sions.
Hardie will be the facilitator for
the class.
“Smokers who attend the class
will gain insight into their habit,
motivation to quit and group sup-
Her main objective with this
trip, she said, was to get the word
out to the people about the com-
mission’s eagerness to hear what
they have to say on issues.
“We hear from special interests
all of the time. What we really
want is to hear from the average
people of Texas,” she said.
port,” Hardie said.
Hardie said the key to success
when trying to stop smoking is a
strong motivation and a will to
make a change.
All smokers interested in the
class should call the Student Health
Center at 880-8466 by Friday to
register, or call the American
Cancer society at 899-9164 for
more information.
Continued from page 1
taste is in music, you’ll find some-
thing to like,” he said.
The program includes Victor
Ewald’s “Quintet no. 2,” James
Sclater’s “Concert Piece,” “A
Brass Menagerie” by John
Cheetham, a salute to Glenn Miller
arranged by Bill Holcome and Paul
Nagle’s “More Jive for Five.”
The core members of the Brass
Quintet group — Ornelas, Dyess,
and Robert Culbertson — are fac-
ulty members who have been play-
ing together many years and are all
very well-known to the local musi-
cal scene.
The Third Sunday concert series
will take place on the third Sunday
afternoon of selected months and
Lamar faculty members will per-
form free public concerts. The
series is designed to give faculty
members more opportunities for
public performance, and also to
attract new audiences to the recent-
ly renovated Rothwell Recital Hall
on the LU-B campus.
Rebecca Jemian, series coordi-
nator and adjunct instructor of
music, said, “We have a beautifully
redone recital hall, and faculty
members are always saying they
want to perform more, so I took
them at their word and organized
this concert series so they could.”
A reception will be held after
the concert at the Dishman Art
Gallery.
“The concert series offers a
wonderful break for those needing
to escape from Sunday afternoon
football overkill, and also gives a
rare opportunity to see the current
exhibit at the Dishman Gallery on a
weekend, since it is normally open
only weekdays,” Jemian said.
“This month there is a retrospec-
tive by Lamar fine arts faculty
member and longtime Beaumont
resident, Robert Madden. It is a
perfect afternoon with the arts: an
exciting concert, a lovely art exhib-
it, and a reception, all in one free
package.”
Wife severs husband's
penis, charges him with
marital sexual assault
MANASSAS, Va. (AP) — A
woman who cut off her husband’s
penis sobbed on the witness stand
Monday as she told the jury he
pinned her to the bed and raped
her. After he fell asleep, she said,
“I lifted the sheets and I cut it”
John Wayne Bobbitt, 26, is
accused of marital sexual assault.
Mrs. Bobbitt faces her own trial
Nov. 29 for the mutilation. Each
could be sentenced to 20 years in
prison if convicted.
The prosecutor in the rape trial
told the jury of nine women and
three men that Bobbitt frequently
forced his wife to have sex.
The defense said the sex was
consensual and Lorena Bobbitt
leveled a false accusation because
she was jealous and dissatisfied
with his lovemaking.
Mrs. Bobbitt, 24, testified she
objected several times but her hus-
band said her objections didn’t
matter. She said that after inter-
course she was angry, grabbed a
knife and returned to the bedroom.
“I lifted the sheets and I cut it,”
she said.
Mrs. Bobbitt severed two-thirds
of her husband’s penis while he
slept.
Police found it on a grassy cor-
ner where Mrs. Bobbitt had thrown
it from a car. The organ was
packed on ice and taken to Prince
William Hospital, where it was
reattached in a nine-hour opera-
tion.
Doctors say Bobbitt, an ex-
O'Hare's-
Continued from page 3
the lighter side of the menu, the
eatery offers a half-price chicken
night on Tuesdays.
During the football season,
O’Hare’s offers sports enthusiasts
$1 hot-dogs and $2 pitchers of
beer at half-time on Saturday
Marine, is recovering well.
In his cross examination of Mrs.
Bobbitt, defense attorney Gregory
Murphy stressed inconsistencies
between her testimony and prior
statements about the mutilation.
Mrs. Bobbitt appeared to give
conflicting statements about
whether her husband used his feet
or his hands to remove her running
shorts and how he held her down.
“I don’t know, I don’t remem-
ber,” she said as Murphy read her
earlier statements aloud.
Murphy told the jury Mrs.
Bobbitt became upset after seeing
her husband talking to another
woman a few days before the muti-
lation.
He also paraphrased Mrs.
Bobbitt’s statement to police, in
which she complained her husband
was a selfish, insensitive lover.
“She said, ‘At least he could
have taken off all my clothes,”’
Murphy said. "That does not sound
like the statement of a woman who
has been raped.”
Murphy said Mrs. Bobbitt and
some of her friends are chiefly
concerned with making money
from the highly publicized case.
“That’s what this case is about,”
she said.
Bobbitt has made no public
statement since his arrest. Mrs.
Bobbitt has granted two inter-
views. The Bobbitts, who married
four years ago, are seeking a
divorce.
through Monday.
To show its appreciation to
Lamar students, O’Hare’s will
offer all students 10 percent off on
food only with proof of school ID.
The discount is not valid with any
other coupon or specials.
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Louviere, C. E. University Press (Beaumont, Tex.), Vol. 70, No. 21, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 10, 1993, newspaper, November 10, 1993; Beaumont, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth500062/m1/6/?rotate=180: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar University.