The West Bank Advocate 11-04-2015

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Tiny libraries hold BIG ideas; more in River Views ä 3G

ADVOCATE THE WEST BANK

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WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 4, 2015 H ALGIERS • GRETNA • TERRYTOWN • HARVEY • WESTWEGO • WAGGAMAN • MARRERO • BRIDGE CITY • AVONDALE THENEWORLEANSADVOCATE.COM

Lynne Jensen

Recipe for community tradition

Barbecue pitmaster shares history, hope in Central City

THROW ME SOMETHIN’

BY TIFFANY POWELL

St. Paul Lutheran marks 175 years During the past months, St. Paul Lutheran Church and School have been celebrating 175 of service to the Marigny community. Events will wrap up this weekend with a neighborhood block party from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday and a second-line parade, candlelight worship and potluck supper from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. Sunday at the church, 2624 Burgundy St. at the corner of Port Street. Saturday’s block party will include a main stage with musicians, including Charmaine Neville, Jon Roninger, Ryan Gregory Floyd and Naydja Cojoe. Local authors, including Mona Lisa Saloy and Bill Norris, will chat about their works and sign books. Neighborhood champion awards will be presented to those making outstanding contributions to the community, including Eugene Cizek, Richard Campanella and pastors Robert and Sherdren Burnside. An interactive experience called The Music Box Roving Village will be presented, along with performances by St. Paul’s cheerleaders, drumming circle and gospel choir. A variety of food will be sold, and visitors can tour

grew up,” said Conyers, who was raised in Manning, South Carolina, and moved to LouiWhen Howard Conyers cooks siana to work at the Stennis barbecue, the recipe includes Space Center in 2009 after community traditions as well earning a Ph.D. in mechanical engineering and materials scias pork and savory sauce. It would be hard for his ence from Duke University. A traditional South Carolina neighbors in Central City to miss the fragrance of a whole barbecue uses a whole hog, so hog simmering and crisping none is wasted. Smoke tenderfor hours over oak and hickory izes the tougher, less-desirable embers, in pits that Conyers meats that were accessible and his welder father built us- to those laboring as slaves or ing steel, sheet metal, cinder sharecroppers. “They couldn’t blocks and an old refrigerator. be selective to get ribs, pork “Barbecue is about commu- shoulder,” Conyers said. “They nity, a celebration; it’s how I used what they had.” Special to The Advocate

Photo provided by HOWARD CONYERS

Chef Linda Green, left, checks out Howard Conyers’ work during the New Orleans fundraiser for South Carolina families affected by recent flooding there.

A MELODY

Photos provided by New Orleans Women in Technology

Rajan Vyas, Monika Madhav and Nyasa Madhav build a tower with straw connectors.

Program allows girls to create with technology

Eva Jacob Barkoff

Advocate staff report

AROUND JEFFERSON

No chewing allowed: Shoe donations to help SPCA

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In the mood for

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If you have any extra pairs of gently worn shoes, the Jefferson SPCA could use them to raise money. All donated shoes will be redistributed throughout the Funds2Orgs, a network of microenterprise partners in developing nations. Funds2Orgs, based in Orlando, Florida, helps nonprofit organizations, churches and civic groups raise money for specific projects. And the proceeds from the Jefferson SPCA shoe donation fundraiser will be used to help start and grow businesses as well as to feed, clothe and house needy families in countries such as Haiti, Honduras and other developing nations. Shoe donations can be dropped off through Tuesday at five locations in Jefferson and Orleans parishes: the Jefferson Animal Shelter, east bank location, No. 1 Humane Way, Harahan; the Jefferson Animal Shelter,

“In the Carolinas, it might make some upset if they did not find a whole pig roasting,” Conyers said. “Barbecue strictly meant whole-hog barbecue, cooked over all wood. No Kingsford, gas, it was none of that.” Barbecuing a whole hog takes a lot of time and labor. “It couldn’t happen if everyone didn’t come together,” Conyers said. The results are worth it, however, creating a meal that can serve an extended family of 50 or 60 people. Everyone

Advocate staff photos by SHERRI MILLER

Jessica, June, 3, and Banks, 1, Lunsford play piano together recently at Audubon Park in New Orleans. Lafargue Pianos set up the instrument in the park for its ‘Let’s Play NOLA!’ campaign encouraging people to play music for the sheer joy of it.

Ashley Soleimani, Lily Adelzadeh and Jade Ku take a stab at ‘Heart & Soul.’

Children ages 4 to 17 and their parents worked together on technology-related projects during Bring Your Daughter to Hack Day, held recently at the University of New Orleans. New Orleans Women in Technology organized the event for the second year. Sponsorship by 365 Connect, UNO and GE Capital made the event free for about 75 children who attended. Boys were welcome at the event, but its specific purpose was to encourage girls to engage with technology at a young age. The kids and parents worked on one of four projects, targeted to different age groups, in which they dealt with fundamental concepts in engineering, coding and video production. About a dozen coaches from the New Orleans tech community were on hand to help. For children ages 4-8, the workshop was Thinkarella’s STEM Laboratory. Thinkarella provides hands-on experiments to inspire the next generation of makers, builders, shapers, doers and inventors. Cherie Melancon Franz, of New Orleans, created the program, which expanded to Mandeville this year. Like the other teachers at Bring Your Daughter to Hack Day, the teachers from Thinkarella donated their time, helping the younger children with activities including creating stars that twinkled with battery power and vibrating noise machines based on plastic cups. For children ages 8-12, the proj-

Monika Madhav and Nyasa Madhav make fingerprints. ect was the Electric Girls Work Bench, in which they explored the basics of electronic engineering, learned to use a soldering iron and experimented with circuit boards. They used a conductive dough to complete electrical circuits and light a bulb and used the vibration devices from cellphones to make small robots move. Electric Girls is a project of Flor Serna, who started it in 2014 in response to her experience as an audio engineer in a male-dominated field. Electric Girls meets Saturday mornings in the Idea Lab at St. Martin’s Episcopal School in Metairie. The cost is $600 for a 12-week session; scholarships are available. Children ages 11 and up had a choice of participating in the äSee TECHNOLOGY, page 2G


2G F Wednesday, November 4, 2015 F theneworleansadvocate.com F The Advocate

Literary, book fests this weekend The Tom Dent Literary Festival will be presented Friday by The African American Resource Center and Dillard University. The festival was established by the library’s African American Resource Center in 1999 as a tribute to the late New Orleans author Thomas Covington Dent. The purpose is to increase awareness of modern AfricanAmerican literature, to provide a venue for emerging artists @ THE to exhibit their LIBRARY work and to creCHARLES ate an interest in BROWN reading. Festival events include the presentation “From Congo Square to Jazz Funerals,” by poet Chuck Perkins, at the main library, beginning at 10 a.m. At 6 p.m., an author showcase will be held at Dillard’s Georges Auditorium.

Book Festival kicks off

The New Orleans Book Festival is a celebration of books for readers of all ages. The two-day festival, on Friday and Saturday, includes a familyfriendly evening performance and a full day of programming for book lovers ranging from new readers to literary scholars. “Twinkle Twinkle,” the

Friday night musical performance, will be on the grounds of the Latter Library beginning at 6:30 p.m. The daytime festival on Saturday is on the shores of Big Lake at City Park. It will feature readings, panel discussions and an activity area for kids, all centered around books and stories. Thanks to the festival’s special partnerships, every child who attends will receive free books. To ensure that anyone who wants to attend is able, the festival is free, including bus transportation and healthy snacks. See nola bookfest.org for more information.

Alvar branch turns 75

The Alvar Library opened Nov. 7, 1940, and remained in service until it was damaged during Hurricane Katrina, taking in a foot of water. It was closed and renovated, reopening to the community in June 2006. In honor of the Alvar Library’s 75th birthday, there’s a celebration Saturday with something for everyone. From 2 p.m. to 4 p.m., youth activities include a screen-printing workshop by the New Orleans Community Print Shop. Participants will make commemorative Alvar Library T-shirts. Entertainment will be provided by Bamboula 2000. The celebration for adults

and families will be from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. and will include a harp performance, poetry, a letterpress demo where Alvar Library commemorative postcards will be made, storytelling, an illustration workshop, creation of a time capsule to be opened on Alvar’s 100th birthday, a Champagne toast and birthday cake.

Ready to read

The Every Child Ready to Read Workshop series is designed to give parents the tools to help their children engage with books and stories at a young age. Parents and caregivers of children, newborn to age 5, are encouraged to attend the next workshop from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday at the East New Orleans Regional Library.

Latter branch renovation

The Latter Library is scheduled to be temporarily closed beginning Friday for a final round of renovation work. A scheduled reopening date is set for spring 2016. The Friends of the New Orleans Public Library Book Sale, held in the Latter Library Carriage House, will move temporarily to the Algiers Regional Library beginning Nov. 7, until Latter Library reopens. The Algiers Regional Book Sale hours are 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Tuesday through Thursday and Saturday.

Photos provided by New Orleans Women in Technology

Sydney Clay and her mom, Alicia Clay-Jones, work to build a website about high-heeled shoes in the TTS Website Factory.

Christine Baamonde and Selah Baamonde build a robot from part of a cellphone.

TECHNOLOGY Continued from page 1G

Sara Claire Guy and Breana Gremillion at Bring Your Daughter to Hack Day at the University of New Orleans Elephant Quilt Video Studio or the Website Factory with Tech Sarah Lohmeier, Becca Roth, had assistance from Sia KaraTalent South. New Orleans-based filmmak- malegos, of Tech Talent South, Cassie Wang, Jocelyn Horner, er Ben Samuels guided par- as they used a basic text editor Lila Mohamed, Ana Muñoz, ticipants in the Elephant Quilt and browser to built websites Dom Saulet, Cindy Chang, Chloe Video Studio as each one used on topics of their choice, which Frank, Mykia Smith, Chris Hudstock video and music clips to ranged from the earthbound dleston, Lindsey Dale, Brittany create a 30-second commercial (high-heeled shoes) to the inter- Roberts, Andrea Foglesong, Lindsey Foster, Ambyr-Shae about either technology or New galactic (nebulas). The day ended with a project Jarrell, Ave Maria Bordenave, Orleans. They learned the baJill Edwards, Susie Diaz, Nysics of timeline creation, sound showcase. Volunteers and coaches for Kaira Gray, Cristian Franco, editing and captioning using Bring Your Daughters to Hack Cynthiya Shrestha and Yessica free video editing software. Ruiz Carrasco. Website Factory participants Day were as follows:

CORRECTION A photo caption last week on page 1G in The West Bank Advocate contained some incorrect information. It should

have stated that the Seabrook Milne Boys home on Franklin Neighborhood Association’s Avenue. The Advocate regrets Night Out Against Crime took the error. place at the site of the former

Photo provided by HOWARD CONYERS

Fans of whole-hog South Carolina pit barbecue line up for plates of Howard Conyers’ specialty during the fundraiser for South Carolina families affected by recent flooding.

RECIPE

Continued from page 1G pitches in, and everyone gets a seat at the table. Recently, Conyers roasted three hogs for “From the Bayou to the Lowcountry,” a fundraiser held Oct. 18 at Kingsley House to raise money for the Clarendon County, South Carolina, Relief Fund for families affected by flooding there in early October. The fundraiser provided an opportunity for some Louisianians who know good eating to sample Conyers’ work. “I love what he does,” said Linda Green, who’s known as the “Yakamein Lady.” “I like the whole hog, the dark meat, and I love the skin! “He knew what he was talking about,” Green said. “I saw the passion in how he deals with the pig. I’m glad he is continuing the tradition, keeping the flavors.” “In Louisiana, cochon de lait is the closest; it’s whole hog but more open fire,” said Colleen Rush, co-author of “Low & Slow: Master the Art of Barbecue in 5 Easy Lessons.” South Carolina technique, Rush said, is “classic barbecue tradition; you get all the different pieces mixed in together. Not just white meat or shoulder, you get fatty bits, meaty bits, chewy, crunchy,

South Carolina Barbecue: Culture, Misconceptions and Preservation What: A hands-on overnight barbecue cooking demonstration, with lectures and presentations from barbecue experts including Howard Conyers and Southern Living magazine barbecue columnist Robert Moss. When: 9:30 p.m. Friday to 5:30 p.m. Saturday Where: Southern Food and Beverage Museum, 1504 O.C. Haley Blvd., New Orleans Tickets: $250 for overnight; free Saturday. See sofabinstitute.org/ events/barbecue-weekend. fatty skin.” “The gratification is, when it’s done, everybody who tastes it loves it,” New Orleans native and CarolinaQNola team member Eddie Smith said. “Many don’t understand what goes into it.” Conyers sees his mission as promoting education as a vehicle for change. When the whole-hog feasting is over, he and his wife, Kathryn, continue to work for the betterment of their community, with a goal of helping young people in Central City know “anything is possible.” “The only way to help change is to show different opportunities exist,” Conyers said. “Education has helped me to succeed. It can be a strong tool to get the youth of New Orleans to a better place.” The Conyers family also shows its support for the community through work with

Warren Easton High School; the Grow Dat Youth Farm; Dillard University’s Ray Charles Program in African-American Material Culture; and Young, Gifted and Classy etiquette courses. “He and his wife, they care about people,” local businessman Andre Celestin said during the South Carolina flooding fundraiser. “Good people are good people, in South Carolina or New Orleans,” Conyers said. “Barbecue goes across community lines, from the richest of the rich to the poorest of poor. It doesn’t exclude.” Conyers will be curating “South Carolina Barbecue: Culture, Misconceptions and Preservation” Friday and Saturday at the Southern Food and Beverage Museum, 1504 Oretha Castle Haley Blvd., New Orleans. His offerings will also include a STEM presentation for young people.


The Advocate F theneworleansadvocate.com F Wednesday, November 4, 2015 F 5G

Propeller Club honors its maritime person of the year Advocate staff report The Propeller Club of the Port of New Orleans honored Arnold W. Donald, president and CEO of Carnival Corp., as its maritime person of the year during a gala Oct. 22 at the New Orleans Hilton Riverside. Donald, a graduate of St. Augustine High School, entered the banquet in the Napoleon Ballroom to the sound of that school’s brass band playing “When the Saints Go Marching In.” The three-course meal was served on tables with floral centerpieces of fall foliage. The menu included crawfish mirliton bisque, grilled tenderloin of beef with sauce Merlot, potatoes and clip-top carrots and molten lava cake. Among those at the gala were Frank Courtenay and Gary LaGrange, formerly honored as the club’s maritime people of

Photo provided by Propeller Club New Orleans

From left are Stephen Perry, president and CEO of the New Orleans Convention & Visitors Bureau; Gary LaGrange, president and CEO of the Port of New Orleans; Arnold W. Donald; Robert R. Barkerding Jr., committee chairman; and Sean Duffy, president of the Propeller Club Port of New Orleans. the year; Capt. Philip C. Schifflin, U.S. Coast Guard sector commander for New Orleans; Capt. Wayne Arguin, USCG deputy sector commander; Lt. Cmdr. Jamie Gatz, waterways

management chief for Coast Guard Sector New Orleans; and Jeff Dutton, acting special agent in charge for the FBI. Frank Courtenay gave the invocation.

Moisant Kiwanis holds annual banquet

Photo provided by Moisant Kiwanis

The Moisant Kiwanis held its annual member recognition and installation banquet recently. Pictured, from left, are directors at-large Cindy Usner, Ty Guidroz, Gene Usner and Mike Wade; treasurer Sandra Tisdale; secretary June Bergeron; and returning officers president Carlotta Duhe and president-elect Jason Borja. Special awards were given to Kiwanian/Member of the Year Jason Borja. Speakers were Ron Markham; Mike Haffner, lieutenant governor; and Ira Snyder, division trustee.

JENSEN

Continued from page 1G the historic St. Paul sanctuary and examine 175 years of memorabilia. For information call the church office at (504) 945-3741 or the school office at (504) 947-1773.

Urban heroes

The Urban Conservancy and StayLocal’s annual Urban Heroes Celebration will be held from 6:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 12, at Café Carmo, 527 Julia St. The theme is “Our Watershed Moment,” which addresses long-standing issues “in new and innovative ways,” Urban Conservancy Director Dana Eness said. Three people are being honored for their vision for a vibrant and resilient New Orleans: Flozell Daniels Jr., CEO and president of Foundation for Louisiana; Jay Nix, owner of Parkway Bakery and Tavern; and Prisca Weems, the first stormwater manager for the city of New Orleans. The event is open to the public, and tickets are available at UrbanHeroes2015.eventbrite. com. For information, visit www.staylocal.org/urbanheroes or call (504) 252-1259.

BARKOFF

Continued from page 1G West Bank location, 1869 Ames Blvd., Marrero; and three locations of Jefferson Feed, Pet and Garden — 4421 Jefferson Highway, Old Jefferson; 6047 Magazine St., New Orleans; and 309 N. Carrollton Ave., New Orleans. “We know that many people have extra shoes in their closets they may like donate to us and to those less fortunate (to help them) become self-sufficient,” said Jacob Stroman, programs director for the Jefferson SPCA. The Jefferson SPCA supports the Jefferson Parish Animal Shelter through programs and events that address animal cruelty and also provides medical treatment, rescues and adoptions for homeless pets. For more information about the shoe donation drive, send

Holiday Shopping

Members of the Church Society of the Pilgrim Progress Missionary Baptist Church invite the public to join them on a holiday shopping trip to Tanger Outlets in Foley, Alabama, from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. Nov. 14. Because of construction near the church at 3600 Loyola Ave., the bus will pick up passengers at the corner of South Claiborne and Washington avenues. Tickets are $40 and will help the church Benevolent Society. For information call Yvonne Guice (504) 432-2380 or Pat Guice (504) 944-9960.

Jung events

The C.G. Jung Society of New Orleans will welcome David Schoen’s presentation “The Latest Brain Research and Its Relation to Psychotherapy, Clinical Practice and Jungian Psychology” at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 6, followed by a workshop from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Nov. 7, at Parker United Methodist Church, 1130 Nashville Ave. For information visit www. jungneworleans.org.

Seabrook meeting

The Seabrook Neighborhood Association will meet at 6 p.m. Nov. 9, at the Willing Workers Baptist Church, 5714 Eads St. The meeting will include

an email to Stroman at jacob@ jeffersonspca.org

Family bingo

St. John Bosco Catholic Church will hold a family bingo at 7 p.m. Saturday in the Don Bosco Center on the church grounds, 2114 Oakmere Drive, Harvey. Admission is $10 per person and covers 20 bingo games. One of the games will be a $1,200 giveaway. Food and refreshments also will be available.

Auditions for musical

The Rivertown Theaters for the Performing Arts will hold auditions for the musical, “The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee” on Saturday at the theater, 325 Minor St., Kenner. Auditions are by appointment only. Callbacks will be at 5 p.m. Sunday. The show, scheduled for

reports from the Night Out Against Crime Committee and seek suggestions for upcoming activities and for the Neighborhood Security District.

West Bank Art Exhibit

“An Exhibitition of Artists Within Our Community” will be presented from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Nov. 7 through Nov. 15, at St. Phillip’s Episcopal Church, 3643 Aurora Drive. A meet and greet with the artists will take place from noon to 4 p.m. Nov. 7. Artists include Stephanie Akers, Penny Baker, Sharon Barrilleaux, Connie Brechtel, Carol Clavier, Donald Crais, Judy Erwin, Brenda Fortmayer, Mariloy Galle, Jeannie Hotard, Darlene Johnson, Deb Kerwin, Marlene Kinghorn, Anne-Marie Landry, Flori Landry, Rose McKinney, Sylvia Mothe, Josie Murphy, Carol Patai, Peggy Delery Pospisil, Marina Reed, Anne Stackel, Kuni Tripathy and Sandi Winston. The exhibition includes paintings and jewelry, and artists will donate 20 percent of their proceeds to the church. Lynne Jensen writes about New Orleans community events and people. Contact her at jensencolumn@gmail.com.

March 4-20, will be directed by Christopher Bentivegna and choreographed by Clayton Shelvin. To schedule an audition and for more information, call (504) 461-9475 or (504) 4687221, or go to www.Rivertown Theaters.com.

Thanksgiving program

“A Toy Story Friendsgiving” is the title of a special Thanksgiving program planned for 10 a.m. to noon on Nov. 14 at St. Matthew United Methodist Church, 6017 Camphor St., Metairie. The event, for children 5 and younger, will include arts and crafts, food and refreshments. Registration is required. Call the church at (504) 888-1155 or go to www.stmatthewumc.com. Eva Jacob Barkoff writes about the people and events in Jefferson Parish. She can be reached at ejbarkoff@gmail.com


The Advocate F theneworleansadvocate.com F Wednesday, November 4, 2015 F 7G

COLLEGE BRIEFS DANCE THEATER OF HARLEM: The Dance Theater of Harlem will perform Nov. 20 in Cook Auditorium at Dillard University, 2601 Gentilly Blvd., New Orleans. For information, call (504) 2838822. DILLARD UNIVERSITY: Human rights activist Bryan Stevenson, executive director of the Equal Justice Initiative and author of

Photo provided by De La Salle High School

Retired De La Salle faculty member Kathleen Calder receives the Medal of St. Louis from Archbishop Gregory M. Aymond.

De La Salle faculty retiree honored with St. Louis Medal Advocate staff report Kathleen Calder has received the St. Louis Medal from Archbishop Gregory Aymond, becoming the third faculty member from De La Salle High School to get the honor. The others were Johnny Altobello, a coach, who was honored in 1980, and Warren Caire, dean of the faculty, who was honored in 1983. The Order of St. Louis IX award was established more than 40 years ago to recognize and honor members of the laity who have contributed their time and talents to the Catholic Church in the Archdiocese of New Orleans. Calder was nominated for the Order of St. Louis IX by Monsignor Andrew Taormina, pastor of St. Francis Xavier Church in Metairie, where she serves as lector and extraordinary minister of Holy Communion. Recently, she completed a 32-page book on the 90-year history of the parish. “When I retired from De La Salle after having completed 25 yearbooks there ... I thought I was done with yearbooks,� she said, laughing, “but ‘Father T’ had other ideas.� After six months of research, she finished the parish history, and it arrived the first week of August. Although officially retired, Calder still volunteers at De La Salle, organizing the Sports Hall of Fame and doing publicity articles for the school. On alternate days, she volunteers at St. Francis Xavier with the Sharing Program, also doing publicity and odd jobs. “I guess old war horses don’t retire; they just get involved in other projects,� she said, “but I’ll admit I miss working with the kids.�

CONTACT US THE WEST BANK ADVOCATE

Published every Wednesday Submissions: Send news by Monday at 5 p.m. to be published 10 days later, as space is available. Original photos will run as space is available and must be highresolution JPEG attachments, 1MB or larger. First and last names must be included, from left to right. Email news and photos to: crescentcity@theadvocate.com Read online at: theneworleans advocate.com/community/ crescentcity Contact: Karen Taylor Gist The New Orleans Advocate 1010 Common St., Suite 3030 New Orleans, LA, 70112 (504) 636-7434 For Advertising: (504) 636-7421 (classified) (504) 636-7425 (display) 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday Questions about subscriptions? Call customer service at (504) 529-0522 or visit theadvocate. com/subscriptions. Questions about Red Bag Delivery? Call (504) 262-5998 or email notmc@theadvocate. com

“Just Mercy,� will present the Revius O. Oritque Jr. Lecture on Law and Society at 7 p.m. Nov. 23 in Georges Auditorium at Dillard University, 2601 Gentilly Blvd., New Orleans. For information, call (504) 283-8822. SCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE: The local chapter of the Federation of Texas A&M Mothers’ Club (Aggie Moms of GNO) is award-

ing three $500 scholarships to current students of Texas A&M University for the spring semester. To be eligible, one must be in good standing with the university and live in the New Orleans, Baton Rouge or Lafayette areas. Applications will be accepted by email only to Diane Dean, ddeanx@gmail.com, and must be received no later than

Nov. 20. Provide name, university address and phone number, college attending as well as a short statement of qualifications. TULANE IN MISS.: Tulane dedicated its Mississippi Coast Campus in Biloxi at a dedication ceremony led by university President Michael Fitts. The Oct. 26 grand opening of the new campus marked 10 years since the uni-

versity reopened following Hurricane Katrina. The eco-friendly campus, a 14,961-square-foot building with an academic area twice the size of the old campus, is equipped with a sophisticated security system, two PC labs and a Mac computer lab. The facility will serve 500 evening and weekend students and an additional 500 daytime students.

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