Arkansas funded grants totaling more than $7 million dollars were awarded to 113 local and state law enforcement agencies and correctional or detention facilities. Approximately 90 percent of the total funds will be received by local police and sheriff’s departments to purchase new equipment.
The grants were authorized last year through legislation adopted by Governor Asa Hutchinson and the Arkansas General Assembly. Act 786 sanctioned the Public Safety Equipment Grant Program to the administered by the Arkansas Department of Public Safety and provides for grants to be used for purchasing, “non-lethal equipment that aids in improving trust and relationships between law enforcement agencies, detention centers and corrections agencies within their communities that they serve.”
“One of the key recommendations of our Task Force to Advance the State of Law Enforcement in Arkansas was the creation of state funding for increased training and improving the safety equipment used by local law enforcement officers,” stated Governor Hutchinson. “The grants directed to local law enforcement agencies will help to further the trust between these agencies and the communities they serve, and I want to commend the Department of Public Safety and the General Assembly for bringing this program to fruition,” said the governor.
The grant applications submitted earlier this year were reviewed and graded for distribution by a committee selected from a cross-section of state and local law enforcement officers, correction and detention officers and professional laypersons.
Recipients of Public Safety Equipment Grants are:
12th Judicial District Drug Task Force – $10,000.00
9th West Judicial District Drug Task Force/South Central DTF – $32,612.86
Alexander Police Dept – $100,000.00
Alma Police Dept – $100,000.00
Arkadelphia Police Dept – $90,247.96
Arkansas Division of Corrections – $100,000.00
Arkansas Game and Fish Commission – $100,000.00
Arkansas Law Enforcement Training Academy – $89,979.02
Arkansas State Police – $99,661.04
Arkansas State University – $100,000.00
Arkansas State University Mountain Home Police Dept – $3,448.39
Batesville Police Dept – $100,000.00
Bauxite Police Dept – $94,241.11
Beebe Police Dept – $100,000.00
Benton Police Dept – $67,500.00
Blytheville Police Dept – $100,000.00
Bradley Police Dept – $12,116.57
Bull Shoals Police Dept – $20,699.94
Cabot Police Dept – $100,000.00
Calhoun County Sheriff – $11,232.32
Camden Police Dept – $41,979.70
City of Ashdown Arkansas Police Dept – $100,000.00
City of Centerton Police Dept – $100,000.00
City of Conway Police Dept – $100,000.00
City of Fort Smith, Police Dept – $68,458.96
City of Greenbrier – $27,197.24
City of Hope – $13,375.00
City of Jonesboro, Police Dept – $100,000.00
City of McGehee Police Dept – $42,797.85
City of Monticello, Monticello Police Dept – $32,783.58
Clark County Sheriff’s Office – $53,240.89
Clarksville Police Dept – $100,000.00
Clay County Sheriff’s Office – $100,000.00
Cleburne County Sheriff’s Office – $79,327.13
Corning Police Dept – $100,000.00
Craighead County – $20,633.43
Crawford County Sheriff’s Office – $100,000.00
Cross County Sheriff’s Office – $100,000.00
Dardanelle Police Dept – $17,034.96
Decatur Police Dept – $46,028.12
Des Arc Police Dept – $26,126.14
DeWitt Police Dept – $100,000.00
Dumas Police Dept – $100,000.00
Earle Police Dept – $100,000.00
El Dorado Police Dept – $100,000.00
England Police Dept – $100,000.00
Faulkner County Sheriff’s Office – $100,000.00
Fayetteville Police Dept – $100,000.00
Flippin Police Dept – 13497.33
Fordyce Police Dept – $26,230.00
Fort Smith Public Schools Police Dept – $49,372.00
Grant County Sheriff’s Office – $21,347.00
Green Forest Police Dept – $33,110.00
Greenland Police Dept – $16,709.97
Greenland School District Police Dept – $6,173.00
Haskell Police Dept – $100,000.00
Hazen Police Dept – $18,820.80
Highland Police Dept – $30,660.43
Hot Springs Police Dept – $71,275.85
Independence County Sheriff’s Office – $11,875.00
Jacksonville Police Dept – $100,000.00
Jasper Police Dept – $17,999.61
Lake City Police Dept – $11,948.75
Lakeview Police Dept – $22,627.03
Little Flock- Police Dept – $100,000.00
Little River County Sheriff’s Office – $100,000.00
The County Line boys basketball team cruised to a 69-50 second round victory over the Pea Ridge Redhawks on Thursday at the Lavaca Invitational Tournament. County Line advances to the tournament finals on Saturday to play the home team Lavaca Golden Arrows. Tip-off time is scheduled for 7:30 p.m.
Leading the way for County Line in scoring were Cooper Watson with 23 points and Aundre Millum with 20. Coach Joe Brunson’s team is playing with “mid season” form and will be a tough out for their future opponents. Saturday’s final will be a classic for basketball fans, and you will want to get there early to get a seat for what should be a battle for the Lavaca Tournament title.
Many people take great pride in their lawns and learn to love what they do. Working with your hands on your property becomes sentimental, and the value no longer has any limitations. Here are a few ways you can naturally prepare your lawn so you can start caring for your yard and enjoy it while you’re doing it.
Make Sure You’re Watering Adequately
To ensure your lawn is rich and healthy, you should do a handful of things to keep it at its best year after year. One thing is watering thoroughly. If you’re doing it properly, you don’t have to do it often. Providing moisture to the ground will keep the lawn from drying out and dying, which often happens in the late summer and early fall months when drought is likely to occur.
Always Use Compost and Top Dress
If you want to add something worthwhile to your lawn, make sure you’re going organic and using natural compost. This can be store-bought, or you can make it yourself! You can compost any organic materials to make the best mulch, which acts as a long-lasting fertilizer. Ensure you do this annually to replenish any nutrients the harsh weather may have stripped from your lawn in previous years.
Sharpen Your Mower’s Blades and Cut High
After a successful mowing season, you should make it a habit to change out the blades of your mower. If you practice doing this yearly, you will always have sharpened blades at the ready. This is important because dull mower blades won’t cut your grass, or they will leave large gaps in your yard where the mower should have cut the grass. This is especially true if you need blades sharp enough to cut through the thicket.
Always Use Organic Fertilizer
As an additional step to ensuring your lawn never has too many problems, it’s always wise to add some organic fertilizer in the fall and spring to give back to the land. Grass strips the ground of nutrients unless other elements are added to replace and replenish the ground. This alternative is safe for pets and kids, rather than using pesticides and fertilizers that could be harmful.
Remember, your yard is your responsibility, and there are many ways to naturally prepare your lawn. Make sure you’re doing the bare minimum to maintain a healthy environment for your grass and lawn.
For the football purest, Friday’s state semifinal game between Charleston and Rison is as good as it gets. Two legendary football programs, led by legendary coaches, will battle it out in south Arkansas for a berth in next week’s state championship game at War Memorial Stadium in Little Rock. Charleston travels to Rison tomorrow for a state semifinal game with the Wildcats. Kickoff is 7 p.m.
The Rison Wildcats are led by legendary coach Clay Totty. Totty’s 2021 Wildcats team finished 8-4 on the regular season in 2021, third in their conference. Rison defeated Jessieville 46-7 in the first round of the 2021 state playoffs before losing to eventual state champion Harding Academy, 48-20.
The Wildcats followed the 2021 season with a perfect, undefeated regular season in 2022. They have won their state playoff games by defeating Bismarck, 30-19 and Prescott by the score of 34-29.
Rison is a member of the 3A-6 conference. The results of their 2022 schedule are:
at Dumas 31-12 (W)
@Bismarck 34-31 (W)
vs Dardanelle 44-28 (W)
@Pine Bluff Dollarway 51-0 (W)
vs Camden Harmony Grove 36-15 (W)
@Fordyce 37-24 (W)
vs Hot Springs Lakeside 49-24 (W)
at Barton 29-16 (W)
vs Drew Central 48-20 (W)
The undefeated season for the Wildcats was exactly as predicted by Hooten’s Arkansas Football publication. And after a tough win last week in the playoffs over Prescott, the Wildcats will be hosting this Friday’s semifinal that should be a barn burner with Charleston.
Charleston head coach Ricky May and his Tigers will be playing on the road for the first time in the 2022 state playoffs. So far, Charleston has made quick work of everyone they have faced in the state playoffs. The Tigers feature a deep, talented, and experienced team in virtually every aspect of their team. Charleston will enter the game with momentum from their first three wins of the playoffs, and the senior-heavy Tigers will be giving it all that they have to finish their careers in Little Rock next weekend.
RNN Sports asked Coach May for his assessment of the Rison Wildcats. With a deep respect for the Rison program and their coach, Clay Totty, Coach May responded by saying, “Rison is a ground and pound team that is very good at what they do with big play capability and the rightly timed pass. They are physical and get after you on both sides of the ball. They have three really good running backs that can catch the football, as well. Their defense is very good at making you work for everything you get. It will be a good high school football game. Rison is very well-coached by legendary Clay Totty. He’s very good!”
Yes, Coach Totty has had an outstanding career and has had a great influence on high school football in Arkansas. His coaching record is worthy of induction into the Arkansas Sports Hall of Fame.
And in Charleston, another coach is quickly building his own resume after revitalizing a Waldron football program and with a stop at Booneville before winning three consecutive conference championships and four straight state playoffs appearances. Ricky May will, in my opinion, eventually finish his career among the best in Arkansas. But for now, he will have his band of Tigers ready to play at 7 p.m. Friday in Rison.
The playoffs can be a time of reflection, but for the four teams that remain in the hunt for a state title, the time for reflection will come soon enough. For now, all focus is on the next game. But, as a writer, I have the luxury of reflecting on what a great senior class this has been for the Charleston football program. I did ask Coach May to share his thoughts on this very special group, and he said, “I feel like our team is playing their best football right now. It seems like they have improved every week. They have played with a lot of fire and have been really physical. We hope to continue that streak this week.”
For Tigers fans making the little more than three hour trip to Rison, bring everything you have. Bring your Tigers spirit and be loud and proud for the Charleston Tigers. It should be a very special night that everyone will always remember. RNN Sports will see you there on the field to bring you special coverage on Saturday of this epic showdown, along with photos from the game.
So, travel safely, and we will see you in south Arkansas on Friday night! This is going to be a heckuva football game; one that no football fan will want to miss!
Note to Our Readers: This is a reprint of a RNN Sports story that was originally published in December 2020. In honor of coach Henry Hawk’s 50th anniversary of his 1972 state football championship at North Little Rock High School, RNN Sports is pleased to run this story again during state championship week.
On a more personal note, Coach Hawk was our football coach during my years as a student at North Little Rock, and he is a man that I greatly admired then, as well as I do today. As football fans in both Booneville and Charleston eagerly await Saturday’s state championship game, I thought it would be noteworthy to take a few minutes to think of the coaches and what they represent to both their players and communities. Long after the game is over next Saturday night, the players will always remember the relationships they have made with their coaches, and I hope each one of them remembers theirs as fondly as I do coach Henry Hawk.
I hope you enjoy his story. -Jim Best
It was an uncharacteristically warm December day, and I am in my car driving to Conway. On the way, my mind is swirling with so many thoughts that it is difficult to make sense of them all. I am on the way to be reunited with our former high school football coach after 43 years. The last time I saw this great man was on graduation day in June 1977, and he was there helping with the evening’s commencement exercises.
Henry Hawk, former head football coach at North Little Rock Ole Main High School, was our head football coach when I was enrolled there as a student from the fall of 1974 to that graduation day in June 1977. He was a “larger-than-life”figure then, and he remains so today.
On Thanksgiving Day of this year, I published a story on Resident Press of a famous game between NLR Ole Main and LR Catholic High School. The game took place 45 years ago this past Thanksgiving Day, and Coach Hawk, who was constantly working to give our team a chance to win, not only on the field, but in life, came up with a way to help the Wildcats win that day. If you did not read the story, I highly recommend that you go back to the article on Resident Press and read it.
As I neared Coach Hawk’s home in Conway, the anticipation grew, and I couldn’t believe that it had been 43 years since I last saw or spoke to him, and I couldn’t believe that I was going to get the opportunity to see him on this day. In fact, the entire visit was an indication of the man that I have admired and respected for so many years.
Coach read the Thanksgiving Day story, and we communicated the day after on Facebook Messenger. It was the first time I had spoken to him after so many years. I asked Coach if he would like to do an interview, and he graciously accepted. When I asked him about scheduling the interview, he was again very gracious and said it could be done over the phone or at his home. Then he followed up and said that he would like to show me what he had done with this “man cave”. That meant so much to me, that after all of these years, he wanted to invite me into his home. But that is Coach. That, among so many other reasons, is why I have always admired and respected him so much. Way back in the late 1970s, I was a nobody in his program. I was not one of his many star players who played for him. But I learned so much from him; from the way he ran his program, to the ultra-high standards he lived his own life by everyday. He was and remains today the most disciplined and mentally tough individual I have ever had the privilege to know. As a coach, Henry Hawk was a “man’s man.” He was demanding, straight forward, and was very honest with everyone. He expected a lot from himself and others around him. As a student, I knew I looked up to him, but as I moved through adulthood, I have come to respect and admire him even more. So as I approached his home on the drive to Conway, I felt that this would be a moment in my life when I would truly be, in the presence of greatness.
Coach Hawk is a very humble and no-nonsense man. He believes in discipline, working hard, setting goals, and then working hard to achieve them. And that is exactly what he has done for his entire life. Coach was inducted into the Arkansas Sports Hall of Fame in 2006, and most recently, in 2019, was inducted into the Conway High School Hall of Fame. But that is just a very small part of his life and accomplishments. And on this day that I will never forget, I sat down with Coach in his home to reflect on his life, career, and passion for living that he maintains today.
I was greeted at the door by Coach and his wonderful wife, Jane. They graciously welcomed me into their home, and after a brief conversation, Coach and I adjourned to his “man-cave” that was adorned with many awards and mementos of his life time accomplishments. After about 45 minutes, Coach finished showing me awards that ranged from his All-American career as a running back for the University of Central Arkansas (named Arkansas State Teachers College, or ASTC back then), to his passion for running that included running ten straight Boston Marathons, and his world record indoor mile run in the 60-64 age group. That’s right….a world record holding runner!
As a coach, he coached the 1972 state 5A (that was the highest classification level then) football champions at North Little Rock. In fact, I owe Coach an apology. I incorrectly stated in my Thanksgiving Day story that Ken Stephens had coached the ’72 team. Coach Stephens, along with Coach Hawk also coached the state champion 1965 team at North Little Rock, and head coach Henry Hawk coached the 1972 state football champions. So, Coach Hawk, I will run a mile for the error after I publish this story, just as you had your players do after practice.
Resident Press Photos
As impressive as all of this is, it is by far not the end or the most significant contributions Coach has made in his life. Most recently, as a fitness instructor at Centennial Valley Country Club in Conway, Coach met a lady in his class that had experienced the great tragedy of seeing her son be involved in a four wheeler accident that did not kill him, but crushed his sternum and left him as a quadriplegic. Coach showed me photos of him in the hospital shortly after the accident, and they were among the most gruesome and startling photographs I have ever seen. His doctors told his mom that the only thing he would ever be able to do for the rest of his life would be to blink his eyes. She shared this story with Coach, and he told her that although he was not certified to work with such patients, he was willing to work with him every day through fitness training, specifically weight training, at no charge, to see if he could help him regain some of his mobility and ability to live as normal of a life a possible. The results have been staggering. Coach, EVERY day for five years, would go to his home and work with him. That is the man I know; the discipline, the dedication, and the desire to find a way to win, that is Henry Hawk.
But I will let him tell the story. I recorded almost 90 minutes of audio in our interview, and in this story, I have included some of his comments during the interview.
As Coach began to go around the room, he first pointed to his award for “Coach of the Year.” He began by saying, “We can just start right here (pointing at the trophy) this is for coach of the year. My wife would not let me put this in here (in jest), and my new son-in-law said how many people do you know has got this? That needs to be in here. That was in ’72.”
1972 Arkansas High School Football Coach of the Year Award Presented to Henry Hawk (Resident Press Photo)
Coach Hawk has published a fitness book with the Baptist Health System, and he had a copy on display. “This is a fitness book that Baptist Health, I taught fitness classes for about 20 years, and we put that book out.”
Fitness Book Published by Henry Hawk and the Baptist Health System (Resident Press Photo)
The Youtube video below, entitled “The True Athlete” is an excellent summary of Coach Hawk’s work and dedication. As he made a difference in the lives of so many boys, turning them into men, Coach continues to make his mark by helping others. I suggest that you take a few minutes to view the video below. If it doesn’t inspire you and bring tears to your eyes, I don’t know what would. The video captures why I have respected and admired this man for so many years.
(Video Credit: “The True Athlete”, Youtube.com)
As he pointed to the article on the plaque below, Coach said, “the one in the middle, there, I met with him for eleven years. He’s married, has a car lot, got a garage, the two of us working together, the true athlete. I think we were lifting weights, or something, and he said boy, if we keep doing this I will make a true athlete out of you.” I mentioned to Coach that I thought his work after retirement of working with paralyzed patients was perhaps his greatest work of all. He said, “Well, I have enjoyed it.”
Resident Press Photo
Our conversation switched to my frame of reference of when I knew him when I was a high school student. I shared with Coach that he was a bigger-than-life figure to me and so many others. I told him that I don’t think I have ever met anyone in my lifetime that was a more dedicated and disciplined person than he is. I remember him running several miles after every practice; probably the only coach I have ever known that was in better shape than his players. Coach replied, “that’s why we had the program that we had. I had 900 feet of film of drills that we did in the off-season.” I remember that players had to run from their last class to the locker room to get dressed for every practice. Coach said, “that’s right, and we never walked on the field.” Coach continued, “and they (the players) never complained. Because they knew that I was working harder than they were. And they challenged me. In fact, the way I got into running, I challenged the players on my 40th birthday, during off-season, I will run 10 miles. But then, you (the players) have got to set a goal. So, I went out and I ran the 10 miles. So, I went back and told them that I could do that. I told them that I will run it at a 8 minute per mile pace. And then, I did that. So, I went back and said, OK, I know I can do that. So what I am going to do is that I am going to challenge you guys. I’ll run nine miles, and if anybody in this room, and it can only be football players, run the tenth mile with me, and if you beat me, you can have some time off. But understand what I am saying, if you don’t beat me, button up your chin straps. Because we are going to get after it harder. They (the players) had a team meeting and there were six of them who convinced the others that they could beat me. So, on that birthday, March 4, the word was out. We had students and a pretty big crowd out there. So, I take off and run the nine miles, less than 8 minutes per mile pace. All six of them jump in, and Joe Abernathy, he was a miler as well as a football player, probably the best athlete in school, but he jumps in and gets them out about 200 yards ahead of me. I just kept going and I passed four of them, and the other two, if I had had ten more yards, I would have beat them. Monday rolls around, and the kids are saying, hey man, we have some time off! And I said, you know, I think I am just going to cancel off-season. Ya’ll are so good that two people in this room can beat a guy that is 40 years old and has already run nine miles in one mile. I said, I think I am going to call it off. Boy, they went to work. Johnny George, a player on the team, said I am going to run ten miles before school is out. He would go home, get his homework done and then go out and run. He did his ten miles before school was out that year.”
Coach Hawk’s off-season program was nothing short of phenomenal. In fact, the work ethic and the men he made from boys during the off-season is why his football program was so successful. So good was his off-season program, it caught the eye of some of the biggest names and legends in the college coaching ranks. “I took a film to St. Louis to the Kodak Coach of the Year Clinic. Bo Schembechler (Hall of Fame Coach at the University of Michigan), John McKay at USC, Barry Switzer, University of Oklahoma, and there I was as a high school coach. All of us as high school coaches were in one session, and after it was over with, I was the only one who was asked back to talk with these college coaches. I went back, and all of the college coaches said, just one question, how do you get an athlete to do that (work that hard in the off season)? They said, we wouldn’t have any athletes if we did this. I said, they don’t know any difference. That’s just the way it was with our program from day one.” I asked Coach how he got all of his players, who came from varying economic and racial backgrounds, to buy into his system and expectations. He answered, very simply, “one set of rules.” It didn’t matter who you were on the team, there was one set of rules for everybody. He has left players behind on game days when they were late for the bus, and he has dismissed an entire offensive line from the program for breaking school policy and embarrassing the program. One set of rules; it was fair and easy for everyone to understand.
And that’s the way it was with Coach Hawk. He operated his high school program on a higher level than what I had seen in others. After having played football at UCA from 1956-60, Coach was designated as an All-American running back in 1959, and signed to play professional football with the Canadian Football League’s Hamilton Tiger Cats after graduation. In August of the year, the country was at war with North Korea and Coach decided not to go to Canada. He did receive interest from the Los Angeles Rams and the new American Football League (AFL) team, the New York Titans (who later became the New York Jets). “So, I was going to go to Los Angeles, but I had to get a coaching job in education, so I did.”
Resident Press Photo
Conway has always been home to Coach. He grew up there, went to high school at Conway High School, and later starred at UCA as an all-american football player. In 2019, Coach was inducted into the Conway High School Hall of Fame. He proudly displays his plaque today in his home in Conway.
Resident Press Photo
Perhaps his biggest coaching honor came in 2006 when North Little Rock Ole Main football coach Henry Hawk as elected to the Arkansas Sports Hall of Fame. Coach was inducted along with Razorbacks running back Gary Anderson, Ray Brown who played at Arkansas State University and the Washington Redskins, Bernie Cox, legendary football coach at Little Rock Central High School, John Daley, Razorbacks and PGA golfer, Bettye Fiscus Dickey of Wynne High School and the Lady Razorbacks basketball program, Paul Eells, broadcaster of Razorback football and KATV, Fred Grimm, who led the Razorbacks to the NCAA basketball tournament in 1956, Charles Ripley, legendary basketball coach at Little Rock Parkview High School, and E.C. O’Neal, a star basketball player at Arkansas Tech University in the 1950s. Some company for an outstanding coach and a true athlete.
Resident Press Photo
Perhaps the biggest influence on Coach Hawk’s life was his college coach, Raymond Bright. Bright was an assistant coach at then ASTC from 1958-1964. Born in Hope, Arkansas, Bright coached football in the Conway school district until 1958. “He came over (to ASTC) my junior year. Then after I graduated, I went to Canada and came back. I went to Bald Knob, and then to 4th Street Junior High in North Little Rock. I eventually elevated up to high school (at North Little Rock High School). I was track coach and assistant football under Ken Stephens. Then Coach Bright took over as head coach at UCA, and he had been my high school coach. He’s the one that, everything I did, he’s the one that I learned it from.”
This answered a question I had for Coach. Where did all of this commitment and discipline come from? Coach answered, “He (Coach Bright) was a tough customer. They say when he was in college, they had to put him in a cage all week or he would hurt the whole team. They just turned him loose on game day! He was kind of a small guy, but they say he was mean!”
Raymond Bright (Photo Credits: 501 Lifemag.com)
Coach Hawk was not interested much in school as a child. He loved sports, and his credits Coach Bright as being the single-most influential figure in his life. Coach Bright, starting when Hawk was in junior high school, would check up on him to make sure he was in school and keeping up with his academic work. In athletics, Coach Bright was instilling the dedication and work ethic that Hawk went on to have as a player and coach. In short, Coach Bright was a second father to Hawk, and he becomes very emotional still to this day when he talks about how much Raymond Bright means to him. And that same thing can be said by so many players who played for Henry Hawk at North Little Rock.
Henry Hawk coached a long list of notable high school athletes at North Little Rock that went on to play Division I and Division II football. Razorbacks Charley and Ricky Jones, brothers who went on to play for Lou Holtz at Arkansas as defensive linemen, played for Coach Hawk in the late 70s. Razorbacks tight end Tim Adams, who played for Lou Holtz in 1977, played his high school football under Coach Hawk. A long list of players went on to play college football, but perhaps the most famous being Phillip Dokes who played for Coach and went on to be perhaps the best defensive end in Oklahoma State Cowboys history. Dokes played two seasons professionally with the Buffalo Bills. Dokes’s life came tragically to an end at the all too early age of just 34 when he died of a brain aneurysm.
Ole Main Wildcat, Oklahoma State Cowboy, and Buffalo Bills Defensive End Phillip Dokes Was One of Many Players Coach Hawk Coached at NLR That Went On to D1 College Programs and Beyond (Photo Credit: Tulsa World.com)
The athletes that Coach had at North Little Rock Ole Main were kids that came from middle to lower-middle class families and neighborhoods in the city. The came from families and circumstances that knew what hardship was, and in short, they were tough as nails. Coach, in his own way, worked hard and demanded much from everyone to make them the best they could be. It is the same standard he lives by today and has expected from his patients that he has worked with who have catastrophic injuries.
And Coach stood up for his players, his program, and the school. When the shift in school board and administrative politics began to favor the new Northeast High School in the Lakewood community, it was Coach who stood up to the powers that were at the time who wanted to favor Northeast High School due to the money and influence in the Lakewood community. Northeast High School opened in 1970 and remained as a stand-alone high school until 1990. The Northeast Chargers, coached by John Narkinsky, became the new rival to the now Ole Main Wildcats. The North Little Rock rivalry with Little Rock Central was still there, but there was no question that both Northeast and Ole Main considered themselves to be prime rivals. And it did not set well with the district administration, school board, and other power brokers in Lakewood with Coach Hawk and his Ole Main Wildcats would consistently beat Northeast. Coach was a good game planner, and his players would not be under prepared or out worked by Northeast or any other school they would face each year.
And with much consternation by the the NLR school administration, school board, and the others in Lakewood, it was Coach Henry Hawk and the Ole Main Wildcats who consistently defeated their cross town rivals. Even to the point that the NLR administration called Coach into their office to ask him, “what do we have to do to beat you?” In classic Coach Hawk form, he replied, “I don’t know.”
Can you imagine a coach being asked this? And it didn’t end there. It appears that there was such an effort to turn the attention to the new high school, that when Coach Hawk qualified for and trained for his first Boston Marathon (he completed 10 in 10 attempts), he was again called into the district office and told not to go to Boston. Coach followed policy and took personal leave to go to Boston, but the administration simply did not want him and the school to gain publicity and cast an even bigger shadow on Northeast High School. Can you imagine?
But as the years went on, it was Ole Main High School and its campus that withstood the test of time and the politics of the late 70s. Northeast ceased to exist as a stand alone high school in 1990 when the district re-organized and created North Little Rock High East and West campuses. Students in grades 9-10 went to the former Northeast campus, and students in grades 11-12 went to the former Ole Main campus. The two schools eventually consolidated their colors, names and mascots to include the blue of Ole Main, the gold of Northeast, and mascots of the Ole Main Wildcats. The new school’s blue and gold Charging Wildcats became the school that it is today. The old Wildcats Stadium, where so many memories were made is gone, but it has now been replaced by a state of the art new stadium that faces north and south, unlike the old stadium that faced east and west.
When I listened to Coach tell this story, I was so disappointed in my former school district. Again, as a student, I was oblivious to any of this. To Coach’s credit, he never complained openly or brought us into the politics at the time. But, I am proud to say, Coach Henry Hawk did go to Boston that year and he finished with a time that was in the top ten percent of finishers in his age category. That is the man I am so proud to say was our coach; he stood up for what was right and he overcame the unfairness of the local politics. He is a true champion. In fact, he is World Record holder in his age group. But most importantly, he has great character.
I could go on and on about this great man and what he has meant to me and to so many others. Although he has had a stellar career in so many areas, Coach is not one to dwell on past accomplishments. When some want to sit around and talk about the old days, getting better as the years go by, that is not for Coach Hawk. He is still moving forward; he is moving forward with his running, his daily, morning workouts and golf games, and with helping people who have experienced great tragedy in their lives to regain some sense of normality so that they can move forward. He is a former deacon in his church and in this special way, has served his church and the spiritual side of his life and the lives of others.
So, I could go on seemingly forever talking about this special man who has meant so much to not only me but countless others. As our visit continued, I hung on every word and every story he shared. We even discussed the possibility of writing a book of his life that incorporates a personal fitness routine that he developed that targets various diseases and disorders. Absolutely amazing.
As I end this story, I want to share with you an excerpt from two notebooks of notes that Coach has developed that he entrusted with me to take home and read as part of the foundation for his book. This excerpt, I believe, characterizes Coach Hawk:
“Commitment, commitment, commitment, how many times have you heard this term used? It has been mentioned many times, but it needs to be brought up more frequently. It is much easier to try something for a while, and if favorable results should not come soon, give up and walk away. The commitment is a long term proposition that a lot of people do not want to make.” -Henry Hawk
After 43 years, he continues to practice this commitment every day. I am so lucky to have been a student at the school where he coached, and I realized that unseasonably warm day in December, as I sat in his man cave, listening to this great man, I was, truly, in the presence of greatness.
After stepping away from the team and receiving public support from his coach, Arkansas’s Davonte Davis is back and practicing with the Razorbacks mens basketball game. Yesterday, the University of Arkansas released the following statement on behalf of Davis:
“I am excited to be back with my teammates and coaches. I want to thank my family, our fans, the Razorback basketball program and especially Coach Muss for the support shown to me this last week. I look forward to continuing my development as a leader and basketball player as this team focuses on our goals for this season.”
The Razorbacks host San Jose State on Saturday, December 3 at Bud Walton Arena. Tip-off time is 3 p.m.
Note to Our Readers:Portions of this story were sourced directly from the University of Arkansas Office of Communications, Mike Cawood, Associate Director of Communications.
Note to Our Readers:The following story was sourced in its entirety from Mr. Glenn Parrish, Director of Communications, Booneville School District. Mr. Parrish is a RNN Sports contributor, and we thank him for bringing this story to our readers.
There are four high schools with a form of Bearcat as its mascot in Arkansas.
Booneville has met Mena 63 times for football and have had meetings in most other sports.
Booneville’s Bearcats met Brooklyn previously in baseball and will complete the cycle with a football game against Melbourne on Friday.
Melbourne, which uses a spelling of Bearkatz, will host the game at its Bearkatz Stadium. Melbourne reached the semifinals by beating Glen Rose 21-20 last week.
The Bearkatz (13-0) beat Jessieville 55-14 in the first round and eliminated Greenland 61-51 in the second round. The Bearcats (11-2) beat Osceola 35-20 last week to follow up a 60-14 win over Smackover and one of 42-14 over Junction City.
Greenland is a common opponent. The Bearcats beat the Pirates 55-21 on October. 7.
In Friday’s game at Osceola Dax Goff ran for 189 yards to push his season total to 2,081 establishing a new single season high by a Bearcat.
The Bearcats led the Seminoles 21-20 when Goff went 58 yards for a touchdown with 9:45 to play to make it 28-20.
A ball fumbled into the end zone and recovered by Trace Hall gave the Bearcats a two-score lead at 35-20.
An interception by Jace Washburn ended any late game heroic aspirations by the Seminoles.
Washburn also had a key 30-yard reception in the game to set up the touchdown that made it 21-20. Goff also threw a touchdown pass to Brooks Herrera that led to an 8-8 tie, then caught one from Peyton Tatum on a play that covered 55 yards to give the Bearcats their first lead at 14-8.
Whether you love to come up with elaborate costumes to wear yourself or you just have to see your child in the cutest getup possible, Halloween is always a great time to flex your creativity. However, once the spooky fun is over, it’s not as exciting to deal with the bulky costumes for the rest of the year. Rather than toss it in the garbage, we’ll show you why you should donate your Halloween costume instead. It may surprise you to learn about the effects it could have.
Giving Back to the Community
Donating your Halloween costume is a wonderful way to give back to the community. Not only are you providing a costume for someone else for the following year, but you also provide extra dress-up costumes for children to play in. Halloween costumes can also be a source of inexpensive fabric materials that others can use for sewing and creating new pieces of clothing.
Additionally, this donation helps those in need feel considered, and they’ll appreciate the gesture. You never know if someone might need an extra princess dress for an upcoming party or event. As such, this is one of the primary reasons why you should donate your Halloween costume.
Giving More Trick-or-Treating Opportunities
Unfortunately, many families don’t have the means to afford a costume for their children when they want to take them on trick-or-treating adventures. If you have a spare costume your child no longer needs, you can help families provide their children with barely worn costumes that they’ll love without the crazy Halloween markup price.
It is easy to find a donation facility in your local area. Certain facilities might also offer a donation pick-up service, so you don’t have to leave your home. Just make sure the costume is donatable rather than trash. It should be clean and undamaged for future use.
Less Environmental Waste
Throwing away clothing means that it will usually end up in a landfill. That doesn’t exclude Halloween costumes, so ensure you aren’t letting yours go to waste. Clothing and costumes can always get repurposed into other things, such as new recycled clothing or rags to soak up oil spills.
Halloween costumes can go beyond just the single night you wear them. When donated to the right place, such a simple action can make a difference in someone’s life. If you don’t want to shove your old Halloween costume into the back of your closet, donating it can be a much better choice.
Arresting agency – Sebastian County Sheriff’s Office: Billy Gene Boyster of Huntington was booked into the Sebastian County Detention Center on November 22 at 2:41 p.m. and released on legally sufficient bond November 28 at 1:54 p.m. Boyster was charged with interfering with emergency communications – 1st degree misdemeanor, domestic battering purposely, and four counts of possession of firearm by certain persons felony.
Cody Owen Covey of Huntington was booked into the Sebastian County Detention Center on November 26 at 9:47 p.m. and remains at the SCADC. Covey was charged with two counts of Failure to Appear – Class B Misdemeanor, and Contempt-willful disobedience (Failure to Pay Fine).
Veronica Elena Gonzales of Mansfield was booked into the Sebastian County Detention Center on November 20 at 4:03 p.m. and released on signature bond November 20 at 8:15 p.m. Gonzales was charged with Theft of Property <$1k.
Zoe Lizsette Gonzales of Lavaca was booked into the Sebastian County Detention Center on November 21 at 12:53 p.m. and remains at the SCADC without bond. Gonzales was charged with Assist Outside Agency-Felony, Failure to Appear – Class B Misdemeanor, and Failure to Appear – Class A Misdemeanor.
Tristen Ace Nason of Huntington was booked into the Sebastian County Detention Center on November 26 at 1:45 a.m. and released on legally sufficient bond November 26 at 6:05 a.m. Nason was charged with Resisting Arrest Misdemeanor, Criminal Mischief in the First Degree – $1,000 or less, Battery in the Second Degree – Officer, and three counts of Aggravated Assault – Firearm.
Arresting agency – Bonanza Police Department: Bradley Sean Brewer of Greenwood was booked into the Sebastian County Detention Center on November 24 at 8:51 p.m. and released on signature bond November 24 at 9:58 p.m. Brewer was charged with Contempt-willful disobedience (Failure to Pay Fine), and Failure to Appear – Class B Misdemeanor.
Arresting agency – Arkansas State Police Troop H: Tylor Dillan Charity of Bonanza was booked into the Sebastian County Detention Center on November 26 at 9:22 a.m. and released on signature bond November 28 at 2:51 p.m. Charity was charged with Failure to Appear – Class B Misdemeanor.
Arresting agency – Barling Police Department: Dylan Alan Hill of Magazine was booked into the Sebastian County Detention Center on November 25 at 8:11 p.m. and transferred to an outside agency on November 27 at 9:04 a.m. Hill was charged with Assist Outside Agency-Misd.
Joshua Wayne Meinert of Lavaca was booked into the Sebastian County Detention Center on November 23 at 7:01 p.m. and released on legally sufficient bond November 25 at 3:25 p.m. Meinert was charged with Possession of Drug Paraphernalia – Pack, Repack and others, Possession of Controlled Substance – Schedule VI Misdemeanor <4oz, Possession of Cocaine <2g, and Simultaneous Possession of Drugs and Firearms-Firearm.
Deborah Jean Penix of Lavaca was booked into the Sebastian County Detention Center on November 23 at 7:01 p.m. and remains at the SCADC without bond. Penix was charged with Possession of Drug Paraphernalia – Pack, Repack and others, Possession of Controlled Substance – Schedule VI Misdemeanor <4oz, Possession of Controlled Substance – Schedule I/II Felony <2g, Simultaneous Possession of Drugs and Firearms-Firearm, and Parole Violation.
Arresting agency – Greenwood Police Department: Tommy Dean Hutson Senior of Fort Smith was booked into the Sebastian County Detention Center on November 21 at 8:14 p.m. and remains at the SCADC. Hutson was charged with two counts of Contempt-willful disobedience (Failure to Pay Fine).
Dylan Royce Wood of Greenwood was booked into the Sebastian County Detention Center on November 22 at 6:29 p.m. and remains at the SCADC. Wood was charged with Trafficking [Schedule I/II Controlled Substance], Possession of Controlled Substance – Schedule III Misdemeanor <2grams, Possession of [Schedule I/II Controlled Substance] with the Purpose to Deliver <2g, Possession of Drug Paraphernalia – Store or Conceal – Meth/Cocaine, Fleeing -On Foot-Misd., Petition to Revoke – Felony, and Failure to Appear – Class C Felony.
Arresting agency – Fort Smith Police Department: Eric David Little of Greenwood was booked into the Sebastian County Detention Center on November 21 at 6:46 p.m. and remains at the SCADC. Little was charged with possession of drug paraphernalia – store or conceal – meth/cocaine, and two counts of possession of controlled substance – schedule I/II felony <2g.
Darren Wayne Schaeffer of Booneville was booked into the Sebastian County Detention Center on November 25 at 8:55 p.m. and released on November 28 at 5:16 p.m. Schaeffer was charged with Contempt-Failure to Comply w/ Court A Misd., Contempt-willful disobedience (Failure to Pay Fine), Domestic Battering in the Third Degree – Purposely, Kidnapping – Act, and Escape II-Force.
Arresting agency – Logan County Sheriff’s Office: Aaron Klein, 41, was booked into the Logan County Detention Center on November 20 at 12:48 a.m. Klein was charged with public intoxication and criminal trespass.
Robert Nicholas Capo, 40 of Ratcliff, was booked into the Logan County Detention Center on November 21 at 7:19 p.m. Capo was charged with failure to pay.
Billy Taylor, 44 of Lavaca, was booked into the Logan County Detention Center on November 23 at 9:07 a.m. Taylor was charged with hold for U.S. Marshalls.
Sonya Elliott, 33 of Fort Smith, was booked into the Logan County Detention Center on November 24 at 9:21 p.m. Elliott was charged with aggravated assault on a household or family member and theft of property.
Sabian Landrum, 20 of Pottsville, was booked into the Logan County Detention Center on November 26 at 3:17 p.m. Landrum was charged with failure to appear.
**The charges against those arrested are allegations and the cases are still pending in the courts.**
Barbara Jean Hawkins of Waldron, Arkansas went to be with her Lord and Savior, Tuesday, November 22, 2022 in Waldron. Barbara was born November 21, 1942 in Birmingham, Alabama to Malcolm Elmer Gettmann and Marie Coyle Carr. She was 80 years old. Barbara was a longtime member of Waldron United Methodist Church.
Barbara was a super volunteer. She could be found volunteering her time in as many ways as one’s mind could imagine. Barbara could be found at any given time working at the church, helping her church family, working the food pantry and so much more. She also volunteered for the VFW and Ladies Auxiliary for many years. Barbara was a lifetime member of the Ladies Auxillary. In 2016 Barbara was the recipient of the Ann Crossett Volunteer of the Year Award. Barbara’s true love and passion was her family. She treasured her time with her children and grandchildren making forever memories and leaving a legacy of love, care and compassion with each of them to cherish.
Barbara leaves behind to cherish her memory, her children: Kimberly Spencer and husband Michael of Corsicana, Texas, Melynda Morace and husband Steven of Oceanside, California and one stepson, James W. Hawkins. Nana, Grammie or GG will forever remain in the hearts of her grandchildren: Jacob (Elizabeth) Spencer, Michaela Spencer, Matthew Spencer, Ryan Morace, Emily (Shelby) Robey and great grandchildren: AnnaBelle, Levi and Finnley. Barbara is also survived by her siblings: Patricia Chitjian, Candace Ross, Malcolm Gettmann, Patrick McGarity and Daniel Harris. Barbara will be missed by all those who knew her and the many whose lives she impacted including a host of special nieces and nephews, close friends and fellow church members she loved dearly.
Barbara was preceded in death by her parents, Malcolm Gettmann and Marie Coyle Carr, her loving husband James Dillard Hawkins, one sister, Judith Rizek and one brother, David McGarity.
Barbara’s life celebration will be 1:00 p.m. Friday, December 2, 2022 at the Waldron United Methodist Church with Roger Rice and Diane Miller officiating. Interment will follow in the Hawkins Cemetery in Parks, Arkansas. Arrangements are being entrusted to the Heritage Memorial Funeral Home in Waldron, Arkansas.
Barbara’s pallbearers will be Michael Spencer, Matthew Spencer, Malcolm Gettman, Shelby Robey, Levi Robey, Jacob Spencer, Pete Reyman, Joe Reyman and Josh Reyman.
Barbara’s visitation will be 5:00 p.m. until 7:00 p.m., Thursday, December 1, 2022 at the Heritage Memorial Funeral Home Chapel in Waldron, Arkansas.