Volume 10 - No. 29

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Union County’s source for community news and more

South Arkansas

Sept. 10, 2014

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City to pay tribute to victims on 13th anniversary of Sept. 11th Tomorrow morning, the community is invited to attend the annual 9/11 Remembrance Ceremony, this year marking the 13th anniversary of the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. The brief event will begin at 8:30 a.m. at the Arkansas 9.11 Memorial, located on the south lawn of the El Dorado Conference Center. Event organizer Sterling Claypoole said the Remembrance Ceremony is the community’s effort to pay tribute to those who died that day. “We come to celebrate the lives, the sacrifice and the ever-enduring freedom that brought us out of the chaos to this day – Patriot Day, a day of remembrance,” Claypoole said. At 8:46 a.m., the exact time the first plane hit the World Trade Center North Tower, the crowd will observe a moment of silence. Local leaders are set to speak, with several standing in commemoration of those who lost their lives on 9/11, including: » El Dorado Fire Department Chief Chad Mosby standing in remembrance of the 343 firemen killed. » ProMed Ambulance CEO Ken Kelley standing for the 15 emergency medical services personnel killed. » El Dorado Police Department Sgt. Chris Lutman standing in honor of the 23 police officers killed.

9/11 continued on Page 7

Zombie guru joins film fest p. 9

Registration is still available for the ‘Go Giclee!’ workshop tomorrow Lisa Burton-Tarver, staff photographer for the South Arkansas Arts Center, will teach a giclee print workshop from 6 to 9 p.m. tomorrow, Sept. 11. Tarver will lead the class in creating a one-of-a-kind inkjet giclee print. The $50 course fee includes all supplies. However, students are asked to bring their favorite photo images on a memory card or a memory stick. Coined in 1991 by printmaker Jack Duganne, giclee (pronounced zhee-klay) is the term for fineart digital prints made on inkjet printers. The name originally applied to fine art prints created on IRIS printers in a process invented in the late 1980s, but has since come to mean any inkjet print. It is often used by artists, galleries and print shops to denote high-quality printing. Artists generally use inkjet printing to make reproductions of their original two-dimensional artwork, photographs or computer-generated art. Professionally produced inkjet prints are much more expensive on a per-print basis than the four-color offset lithography process traditionally used for such reproductions. A wide variety

GICLEE continued on Page 10

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