84.2 F
Fort Smith
Sunday, June 28, 2026
Home Blog Page 407

Tiger Freshmen Experience Hog Heaven

Every kid has a dream in life. Some want to be an astronaut or a doctor. Others want to be the president or a professional sports star. In Arkansas though, many young athletes grow up wanting to be something bigger than any of those things. They want to be an Arkansas Razorback. The Razorbacks are the unofficial official professional sports program of the natural state so it stands to reason that the teams of the university’s athletic program are something to dream about. Normally, Tigers aren’t very welcome in Razorback dreams but two Mansfield junior high Tigers recently made an exception to the “No Tigers Allowed” rule.

The University of Arkansas indoor football facilities

On Thursday, June 16th a pair of Mansfield Tiger freshmen football players headed up north for the biggest experience of their young lives. Alex Hecox and Zander Walters were treated by Walters’s grandfather, Paul Walters, with an opportunity of a lifetime to practice and learn more about the sport they love at the 2022 Razorbacks football camp in Fayetteville, Arkansas. The boys were definitely minnows in a vast ocean of size, strength, and talent as they worked with top-notch players from not only here in Arkansas but from everywhere in the United States. There were players from Los Angeles, New York, Ohio, Orlando, Atlanta, and other areas of the country. Some who were attending the Razorbacks camp were highly touted three and four-star recruits who made stops at multiple colligate camps before landing in Fayetteville while others were there to try to get noticed by the Razorbacks recruiting staff.

Three stars, four stars, and Tiger stars

“I couldn’t have ever imagined doing something like this”, said Junior Tigers defensive end, Alex Hecox. “To meet the head coach of the Arkansas Razorbacks and shake his hand, man, that was awesome. The coaches working with us really seemed to care about us all getting better. We came from all over the map but were worked with like we were all Razorbacks. They taught us a bunch of techniques that will help us improve at our positions. I’m still in shock over the whole experience. Working with coaches at the next level and practicing around extremely talented athletes from around the country can make you or break you. Fortunately for the Tigers duo, they held their own in drills and showed that although they’re not as old and experienced as the multi-stared athletes, they can put in as much effort as anyone, no matter the stars by their name. Junior High Tigers running back, Zander Walters, said “I want to get better and I honestly think camps like this can help me achieve that. Some of the drills they did I didn’t know, but the coaches didn’t look down on me because of that. They took the time to show me how to do them right. The coaches were amazing, the facilities were amazing, the experience was amazing….it was just amazing in every way.”

Hecox and Walters shaking hands with Razorbacks head coach Sam Pittman

For these two youngsters, even being in the presence of Razorback coaches and players was enough to put them on cloud nine, but there are many benefits beyond the spectacles for junior high and high school athletes at camps put on by colleges. Tiger alumni, Brandon Cassidy, attended Arkansas camps in the 90s under former Razorback coaches Danny Ford and Houston Nutt. “The guidance and experience I received at my camps were second to none. I was able to learn from the best which motivated me to compete at higher levels in order to become a better football player at Mansfield. Team building, workout routines, learning unknown techniques, there was no shortage of things to do and learn at camp. Everything at the camps made you a good kind of tired when it was all done”. Mansfield’s own head coach, Tim Cothran, even chimed in on the benefits junior high and high school athletes get at college camps. “Players get to meet and listen to next-level coaches which in itself can be inspiring. These coaches expose athletes to cutting-edge techniques that can help young athletes perform better on the high school field and help prepare them for a possible college career. Camps also allow players to get their names out there if they want to play a sport in college. The college recruiting landscape has changed and these camps are a good way for athletes to sell their brand (name) to colleges who may not know they even exist”.

Tigers soaking up the experience while sweat soaks up their shirts

College athletic camps are not just for the wealthy either. The Arkansas camp that was held on June 16th was $50 and there will be University of Central Arkansas football camps on July 22nd, July 23rd, and July 24th for football players 9th grade and up that also cost $50. With all of the athletic and future benefits that these kinds of camps bring, nothing can be beat than the face of a young athlete who had an awe-inspiring experience and did something that they will never forget. Some players go to these camps because they have the talent for the next level. Some players go because they have a passion and love for the sport. But for most kids, these camps can be a highlight in their life and something they will tell their future kids and grandkids all about.

Attached below is the link to the upcoming University of Central Arkansas camps:

Football Camps | University of Central Arkansas | Conway, AR (ucabearsfootball.com)

“Just Roll with It” Serving up Recipes and Humor

Hello everyone! Arkansas heat is here and in full force. I enjoy the summer but am always ready for fall and Halloween. We all have those family members that are considered crazy. I am one of those in our family, ya’ll know you all have them. I just like being a fun girl. My niece Kelly and I have had some fun and crazy times together. We used to call ourselves Lucy and Ethel because when we were together something always went wrong or something crazy happened. Back when Tonya had given birth to Rheding, Kelly and I decided to go over and help Tonya and see the baby. Tonya was trying to rest and before we left we had knocked half the stuff off the wall in the dining room and making more noise than a wrecking crew. We can’t be quiet. We tried to to put everything back so Tonya wouldn’t know what happened.

The same niece, Kelly, is also the one that loses everything. She has lost wallets, wedding rings, money, a check, and a kid or two, just to name a few. Keep in mind it sort of runs in the family, but her dad, Larry, was always bringing those stories up and reminding her and we all had good laughs at her expense. One year we were Black Friday shopping and decided to eat lunch at Geno’s in Fort Smith and there was a group of us there. We were laughing about all the times Kelly had lost her purse or wallet. We all get up to leave and are in the parking lot walking to our car and one of the workers is yelling out the door “did one of ya’ll leave your purse? You guessed it, Kely had left her purse. We laughed and laughed about that.

Back before my brother Larry owned a smartphone, he had a flip phone. He loved that flip phone and did not want a smartphone, but now he is hooked. Back when he had the flip phone he had everyone in the whole family’s number written down on a piece of paper in his wallet. My niece Kelly, his daughter, gets a call from a man and he says “I found this wallet in the middle of the road and I called your number to see if you knew who Larry Wagoner was.” Talk about giving him a hard time. He will never live that down. He said of all the numbers on that list, he had to call Kelly.

We had a surprise party for Michael and Tony’s 25th wedding anniversary at Western Sizzlin and my brother leaves before Michael, and Michael sees his dad coming back. I’m sure Michael thought he forgot something. He found Michael’s wallet in the floor by the register. Do ya’ll see the pattern here.

Jason Wagoner is the king of losing things. He lost every coat his parents ever bought him while in school. While he was in high school they bought him a Dallas Cowboys nice coat, lost it of course. All of them ended up in the lost and found at school and Coach Fry was wearing the Cowboys jacket one day. We have laughed and laughed over that. You think Jason was going to go look in the lost and found, no. He has lost debit cards, wallets, keys, and just about everything except one of his children.

Okay, this week’s recipe is apple dumplings made by Morgan Marsh for us while we were in Nebraska. You need to make sure you have some vanilla ice cream to put on them when they come out of the oven. Delicious.

APPLE DUMPLINGS
6 Granny Smith apples
Pie Dough for a 9″ double pie crust (store-bought works great in the box rolled up)

Filling:
3 tablespoons unsalted butter cut into 6 equal parts
6 tablespoons granulated sugar
1 teaspoon apple pie spice

Sauce:
1 cup apple juice or apple cider
3/4 cup lightly packed brown sugar
1/4 unsalted butter

Pre-heat oven to 375 degrees. Grease a 9×13 baking dish, and set aside. Peel and core each apple. If using store-bought pie dough cut the dough into 6 equal pieces. In a small bowl, stir together the granulated sugar and apple pie spice. Place a cored apple in the center of each dough piece. In the center of each apple, place a piece of butter you cut up and sprinkle some of the sugar and apple pie spice mixture on top of the apple. Bring the corners of the dough up and pinch the edges together to seal the dough around the apple. Place all the apples in a greased baking dish. Place the sauce ingredients in a saucepan and bring to boil over medium heat, whisking frequently. Once the sauce comes to a boil and sugar is dissolved, pour evenly over the apples and bake for 50-55 minutes or until golden brown. Enjoy.

Paris Students Return From Successful Week at Arkansas Boys and Girls State

After a hiatas due to the COVID pandemic, Arkansas Boys and Girls States returned to in-person experiences for select high school boys and girls from all across Arkansas this past week. The event was held from May 29-June 3 at the University of Central Arkansas (UCA).

Students from Paris High School attended both Boys State and Girls State. Those participating in Arkansas Girls State were: Anna Hart, Caroline Fields, Rachel O’Neal, and Maggie Richey. Paris high school boys participating in Arkansas Boys State were: Xavier Martin, Andrew Wells, and Jesse Wells.

According to the Arkansas Boys State website, “Arkansas Boys State is an immersive program in civics education designed for high school juniors. Since 1940, the week-long camp has transformed the lives of young men throughout our state and beyond. These young men have gone on to become incredible leaders, including President Bill Clinton, former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee, and Senator Tom Cotton — just to name a few.” 

The Arkansas Girls State website states that, “Arkansas Girls State is a summer program of education that has been sponsored by the American Legion Auxiliary, Department of Arkansas since 1942. As of 2014, it has provided training for more than 55,000 Arkansas girls in the fundamental aspects of citizenship and practical government. The purpose of Arkansas Girls State is to educate young women of high school age in the duties, privileges, and responsibilities of American citizenship and to provide an opportunity for them to participate in the actual functioning of their government.”

The Paris delegations to both Boys and Girls States had great weeks and were elected to offices by their peers. In Girls State, Anna Hart was elected “Most Outstanding Citizen (Hutchinson City), Vice-Chairman (Hutchinson City), and Vice-Chairman (Smith County). Caroline Fields was elected as Circuit Clerk of Lewellan County. Rachel O’Neal was elected City Chairman of Kemp City, and both City Senator and County Chairman of Boozeman County. Maggie Richey was elected City Treasurer (Land City) and Federal County Clerk (Shanks County).

Boys States honors included Xavier Martin, elected to City Council (Cantrell City). Andrew Wells was elected to City Council (Rorex City) and as a State Representative. Paris HS senior Jesse Wells was elected both as a State Senator and as President Pro Tempore of the Senate.

Congratulations to the Paris delegations who participated in both Arkansas Boys State and Girls State. Both Paris delegations represented Paris and Logan County extremely well!

New Paris School Board Takes Office and Elects Officers

The Paris Board of Education held its regular monthly meeting for June last Tuesday (June 7) with a full agenda that contained a variety of administrative recommendations that ranged from facilities repair and improvements to policies approval and both student and employee personnel recommendations. The meeting was the first conducted by the board who was forced to run for re-election under the new election zoning requirements for members of school boards across Arkansas. As part of the Paris board’s agenda of business, the five members also voted to appoint board officers for the 2022-23 school and fiscal years.

At the forefront of the board’s agenda was the topic of mental health support for its students. The board considered recommendations for both online and in-person mental health support, as well as technological additions for both referrals and billing for the services. The Paris district is taking significant steps to take a leading position among school districts who are reacting to a movement and increased pressure to address mental health and school safety that has become a priority nationwide in light of the events in Uvalde, Texas, most recently. The board discussed how to improve mental health services for its students, as well as the long-term effects on safety within its schools. The district is already providing school resource officers for its schools; the actions under consideration by the board will address the mental health of students and protect student and staff safety, as well. Mental health issues have been a concern of school districts nationwide following the COVID pandemic and the subsequent quarantining of students that has taken place over the past two years.

Sarah Lasiter of the Paris School District Presented a Mental Health Services Proposal Tuesday Night to the Paris School Board
(RNN Photo / Jim Best)

In another highlighted action taken by the Paris Board of Education, the board approved a recommendation and bid to replace the roof at Paris Elementary School. Depending on the arrival of materials, the project to replace the PES roof could be completed this summer prior to the start of the new school year in August.

From minutes taken at the meeting, the five board members emerged from executive session and announced the election of board member Cory Wells as its President. Tracy Richey, who had served the board for several years as its President, was announced as the new Vice-President of the board. Beth Ulrich remains as the board secretary, and board member Dustin Schluterman was announced as the liaison for the board. The motion on the officers was approved by a unanimous 5-0 vote. The 5:30 p.m. meeting officially adjourned at 8:20 p.m.

The Paris Board of Education’s regular monthly meetings are usually held on the second Thursday of each month at the Paris Schools Administration Building.

Tencleve Named as Paris Boys Basketball Coach

It has become an annual occurrence for Paris basketball over the past four years; the naming of a new boys basketball coach for the upcoming season. Andrew Tencleve, former coach of the Cedarville Lady Pirates, was recently named as the new boys basketball coach at Paris. Tencleve will succeed Josh Ferrell who has moved on to take a position at Lincoln High School outside of Fayetteville. Tencleve becomes the fourth Eagles coach in as many years.

Recently I had the opportunity to visit with the new coach and to get his feelings on the move to Paris and the future of the team. In the 2021-22 season, the Eagles returned to the state playoffs, losing to eventual state champion Osceola. Two big pieces from that team, Jude Simmons, and Mequeill Ellingberg, have graduated. Their loss to the team represents significant size and inside presence that will not be there at the start of the 2022-23 season. The team will return three starters: senior Jesse Wells, senior Sam Muldrow, and junior Konnor Edwards. Other notable returners for the upcoming season include junior Juan Santos and junior Matthew Mainer. It will be important for other returning players to step-up as well next season. Coach Tencleve will also have to place a priority on developing player personnel from last year’s junior high team that struggled for most of their season in 2021-22.

But, summer in basketball is similar to spring in major league baseball; hope springs eternal, as they say. Everyone is optimistic this time of the year as teams participate in summer camps and workouts to develop new team chemistry with new combinations of starting line-ups, and, as seems to be the case with Paris, introduce a team to a new coach and a new system to learn before the November start to the season. This year, the Eagles and Lady Eagles basketball teams will again feature new head coaches at seasons’ start.

Paris’s Jesse Wells (24) and Konnor Edwards (5) along with senior Sam Muldrow (not pictured) will be counted on heavily in the 2022-23 season (RNN Sports File Photo / Jim Best)

I spoke with new Eagles coach Andrew Tencleve by telephone last week, and I must say, I was very impressed with his remarks. Coach Tencleve indicated that he is excited to be in Paris and is looking forward to the challenge of the upcoming season. I started off our conversation by sharing with him that I was impressed with seeing his team at the end of the season that lost a lopsided game to the Lady Eagles, and then return a few days later in the district tournament and avenge the loss to Paris. I thought he made significant progress with a very young team that was showing huge potential for the next season. So, I asked Coach why he chose to leave Cedarville to coach at Paris. Coach responded by saying, “It was a combination of things, really. As far as what drew me to Paris, it is a good location for my family and myself. I grew up just down the road (attended high school at Subiacco). My high school days were most spent running around Paris with Paris guys. So, this is kind of my second home, although I did not go to school here. I was at Cedarville for 14 years. So, it (coaching stint at Cedarville) was a long time and was hard to leave that place. In that kind of time you are going to develop a lot of really close relationships. You know, ten years ago, if you were to ask me if I was going to retire there; but times kind of changed, and this opportunity arose, we took it, and we are ready to roll.”

Coach Tencleve was the boys coach at Cedarville for 12 of his 14 years there in the Pirates’ basketball program. The last two years, he guided the Lady Pirates’ program. “I enjoyed my two years of coaching girls basketball. But, with my son going to be a ninth grader this fall and getting to be of the age that he is about to start playing high school basketball, it was definitely very appealing to flip back to boys and be able to coach him while he is in high school.”

With Coach Tencleve now being the fourth head coach in as many years for the Paris boys program, I asked him what the team’s reaction and reception to him have been since he was named as the new head boys coach. Coach Tencleve commented, “Yes, it’s tough. When I got to Cedarville 14 years ago, it was the same situation there. I was at the time the fourth coach in as many years, and, you get a little “new coach fatigue” from the kids. It is really important that you are sincere with them and try to build relationships with them as quickly as you can. So far, so good. I has gone really well. We went to camp yesterday and we seem to be getting along really well. We have just got to get down to work and get better.”

After our conversation, I came away respecting Coach for the one simple reason that he places a great importance on being honest with his players as he coaches them. To this point, Coach stated, “I think one of the things that helps me connect with my players, whether it is coaching girls or boys, is that I am always honest with them. They know that I am going to be honest with them. And it is like we always talk about, I am going to tell you some things that you might not necessarily like or want to hear at times, but it is for your own good, and it is because I love you and we’re trying to turn you into the best human and best basketball player you can possibly be. Sometimes, that means some uncomfortable conversations have to happen.”

Looking ahead to the 2022-23 season, Coach reflected, “We graduated two big pieces (Simmons and Ellingberg) and that was the extent of the size we had under the basket. So, we are going to be small this year. We are going to be athletic and we are going to be able to do a lot of the things that I like to do, minus having a post presence on offense. We are going to play really, really hard. I wish our numbers were better; right now, we only have ten out, and that kind of limits what we can do in practice. But, I think they are buying in and I think that we have a chance to have a very good year. It is going to depend on how much we progress defensively and how we rebound the basketball. With our size issues, we are going to have to put a lot of work in that area (rebounding). When we went to camp yesterday, our need to work on rebounding showed early. And as we got tired, it became a huge issue.”

So, as the new season approaches next fall, all of us at RNN Sports with Andrew Tencleve and the Paris Eagles the best of luck next season. And watch for more summer sports coverage in RNN Sports as we move on summer football and volleyball coverage, all leading up to the start of the seasons beginning in August.

And one last note…thanks to everyone in Logan County who has welcomed RNN to your hometowns. You have responded in a big way with your subscriptions to Logan County’s newest weekly newspaper, and RNN is honored to bring you LOCAL coverage of both news and sports that interest all of you…thanks again for your subscriptions and readership!

Financial Focus: What’s Your Investment Tolerance?

By Jeffrey O’Neal, Financial Advisor

Risk is a normal part of investing. If you didn’t take on any risk, you wouldn’t have the potential to achieve higher returns. But how much risk should you accept? ​You don’t want to incur unnecessary risk. So, you’ll need to assess the amount of risk you’re comfortable taking and then determine if this risk level supports your ability to achieve your long-term goals. ​Here are some of the key factors in determining your own capacity for investment risk:

​• Personality – We all have different personalities. And your individual personality can certainly affect your comfort level with risk. If you enjoy taking chances or pushing yourself outside your comfort zone in other aspects of your life, you could be more likely to accept greater investment risk, too, because you know that greater risk means greater potential reward. Conversely, higher-risk investments also carry greater potential for volatility, including steep short-term declines.

​• Time – Risk tolerance can change over time. When you are first starting out in your career, with decades to go until you retire, you may feel comfortable with a certain degree of investment risk, knowing you have time to potentially overcome the inevitable downturns in the financial markets. But as you near retirement, you might consider lowering your risk level and investing more conservatively, because once you do retire, you’ll likely have to start withdrawing money from your retirement accounts, which means you may need to liquidate some investments – and, ideally, you won’t want to have large fluctuations in value at that time. However, even during retirement, you may want your portfolio to include some growth-oriented investments to help keep you ahead of inflation.

• Type of goal – You might have different risk tolerances for different goals. For example, if you know you need a specific amount for a particular goal in two years – such as buying a new car or taking an overseas vacation – you may want to put away money in a low-risk, liquid vehicle. This type of investment might not have much growth potential, but for this goal, you are less interested in achieving a high rate of return than you are in being reasonably sure the money will be there when you need it. So, in this instance, you may have quite a low tolerance for risk. But for a long-term goal, such as a comfortable retirement, you may be prepared to take more risk in the hopes of greater returns, given the longer time horizon.

By understanding your risk tolerance and knowing how it can change over time and under different circumstances, you can be better prepared to face investment volatility. And there are certainly things you can do to mitigate risk. By owning a variety of investments – domestic and international stocks, bonds, mutual funds, government securities and so on – you can reduce the impact of market volatility on your portfolio. (Keep in mind, though, that diversification can’t prevent all losses or guarantee profits.) In any case, the biggest risk of all is simply not investing. If you are going to achieve your financial goals, you need to invest for them.

By understanding your own risk tolerance, and by making wise choices along the way, you can stick with an investment strategy that can work for you in the long run. ​​​​​​​​​​

This article is provided by Jeffrey O’Neal, Financial Advisor
Edward Jones 20 N Express St, Paris, AR 72855
479-963-1321
jeffrey.o’neal@edwardjones.com edwardjones.com/jeffrey-o’neal
Edward Jones, Member SIPC

The Best and Worst Kitchen Features for Resale Value

You’ve dreamt of adding something new to your home for a while, and now you want to make it a reality. Not to accidentally burst your bubble, but some kitchen features have the potential to hurt the resale value of your home—here’s a list of the best and worst choices.

The Best Projects

To start, here’s a list of valuable enhancements to make to your kitchen. These are the projects that won’t hurt your resale value.

New Paint Color

Painting is a good step up, but painting your kitchen any random color can tarnish its appearance. You want a lively, bright space, not one that’s dull and gray. Colors such as these work best, but make sure your choice goes with your home’s theme:

  • Baby yellow
  • Light brown
  • Burnt orange

Improving Lighting

Lighting is a great way to show off your home’s most desirable focal points. You can’t go wrong with new lighting fixtures. Choose LED bars for cabinets and spotlights for the ceiling. You’ll love walking into a room with light that doesn’t blind.

Adding Fixtures

Enhancing the kitchen often means new fixtures. This is the where you can add value with upgrades such as a new refrigerator, new countertops, or an island you’ve been wanting to spruce up the space.

The Worst Projects

There are also some projects to avoid doing if you want a good return on investment. Here are projects to approach with caution:

Islands

Add an island only if you have the right amount of space for it—you don’t want to add it anywhere else but the middle of the kitchen. If the space doesn’t allow for it, don’t bother putting in an island.

Cheap Cabinets

If you want to replace the cabinets, ensure the material of your new cabinets is of good quality. The best-quality cabinet types to buy include plywood and timber-faced. Both are solid materials that add character and stability to the kitchen.

Built-In Anything

Some built-in features work well, but most families won’t need them. As great as it is to have a built-in stove, some people might want to change it out for something else anyway, meaning the kitchen will need another expensive remodel.

Kitchens are fun to make over, but some upgrades can depreciate your home’s value. Focus on renovations that improve your home but leave room for prospective buyers to imagine their lives in the house. Take these recommendations on the best and worst kitchen features when you’re working on your upgrades.

Economic Factors Affecting the Housing Market

The housing market is often affected by economic factors, such as the availability of jobs and the cost of building materials in a particular area. While these are important, many additional factors can affect the housing market. If you are interested in selling your home or are looking to buy, it is essential to understand the following factors and how they affect you and this country.

Rising Costs

Inflation and supply chain issues can affect the housing market directly. In fact, many things that happened in the broader economic climate have implications for the housing market. The cost of everything is rising exponentially, from paper goods to gas. If the materials cost your contractor more, they will often factor that into the cost of the home, passing those price hikes on to you as the consumer. Home prices tend to keep pace with inflation as prices go up. Housing prices tend to at least keep pace, if not exceed inflation.

Supply and Demand

Prospective buyers are trying to keep up, but demand is soaring with such a limited supply of homes available. Home prices are rising at their highest rate in 15 years. In fact, some homes are selling within hours of going on the market. Prospective home buyers can often find themselves in bidding wars or with their dream home vanishing from the listings right before their eyes.

Two factors are causing this demand spike. First, not enough homes are being built to keep up with the population growth. Second, more people can work from home now and don’t need to commute. Many city dwellers have now chosen to leave for the space and square footage that the suburbs provide.

There are other options, such as building your own home, that could help to combat the issue of supply, but is the modular home market going up as well? We will have to keep our finger on the pulse of the home market to know for sure.

Supply Chain Issues

The supply chain delays from COVID-19 are suppressing supply in key industries related to the production of homes. Everything from screws to glass can be hard to come by, and if you purchase domestically, there is often a higher cost involved. The supply chain issue should balance itself out, and we should expect that prices will eventually level out as we work to combat the delays; however, for now, expect to see higher costs in everything you purchase, including your next home.

Home Sweet Home

The economic factors affecting the housing market can affect your ability to purchase your dream home. Job availability and the cost of living are just a few factors to consider. Current and prospective homeowners will need to keep their eyes on the state of the housing market over the next few years.

Mansfield’s Reather among Twenty-one Arkansas State Police Recruits

Twenty-one Arkansas State Police Recruits received their trooper commissions on Thursday evening, June 16, during a graduation ceremony in the rotunda of the state capitol.  The graduates were among an initial field of 227 applicants who were tested and interviewed during 2021.  On January 23rd this year, 38 recruits assembled at the state police training academy in Little Rock to form Recruit Class 2022-A and began a rigorous 21 week-long training stint.  The graduates received 1,160 hours of specialized instruction in the academy classrooms and through practical training exercises outside the classroom.  The graduates were sworn under oath as Arkansas State Troopers by North Little Rock District Judge Randy Morley.  Lieutenant Colonel Shawn Garner, Deputy Director of Enforcement for the Arkansas State Police and Jami Cook, Secretary of the Arkansas Department of Public Safety addressed the class.  State police senior command staff, troop and company commanders, the training section cadre and Arkansas State Police commissioners were among those attending the graduation.   The recruit graduates and their first post assignments are listed as follows:

  • Brandon Neal, 29, 2022-A Class Leader, will be assigned to Highway Patrol Division, Troop A, Pulaski County.  He is a graduate of Vilonia High School and Drury University in Chicago.
  • Zoey Baldwin, 22, will be assigned to Highway Patrol Division, Troop J, Johnson County.  She is a graduate of Russellville High School and Arkansas Tech University.
  • John Bucher, 21, will be assigned to Highway Patrol Division, Troop D, Woodruff County.  He is a graduate of Russellville High School.
  • Ana Elisa Escamilla, 28, will be assigned to Highway Patrol Division, Troop A, Pulaski County.  She is a graduate of Warren High School.
  • Aaron Killian, 21, will be assigned to Highway Patrol Division, Troop A, Pulaski County.  He is a graduate of Lakeside High School (Garland County).
  • Peter Kootz, 25, will be assigned to Highway Patrol Division, Troop B, White County.  He is a homeschool graduate from Sharp County and a graduate of Lyon College.
  • Jessica McCord, 28, will be assigned to Highway Patrol Division, Troop A, Pulaski County.  She is a graduate of Lake Hamilton High School, Marion Military Institute and Southern New Hampshire University.
  • Zachary Means, 24, will be assigned to Highway Patrol Division, Troop E, Desha County.  He is a graduate of Carlisle High School.
  • Caleb Miller, 23, will be assigned to Highway Patrol Division, Troop L, Benton County.  He is a graduate of Siloam Springs High School.
  • Shabby Moore, 25, will be assigned to Highway Patrol Division, Troop F, Union County.  He is a graduate of Ville Platte (Louisiana) High School.
  • Cade Padgett, 21, will be assigned to Highway Patrol Division, Troop J, Perry County.  He is a graduate of Danville High School.
  • Solomon Phifer, 30, will be assigned to Highway Patrol Division, Troop G, Miller County.  He is a graduate of Crossett High School, University of Arkansas (Little Rock) and Mid-America Baptist Theological Seminary in Cordova, Tennessee.
  • Candice Pike, 38, will be assigned to Highway Patrol Division, Troop I, Searcy County.  She is a graduate of Clinton High School.
  • Grant Pruitt, 21, will be assigned to Highway Patrol Division, Troop C, Mississippi County.  He is a graduate of Elkins High School.
  • Landan Reather, 23, will be assigned to Highway Patrol Division, Troop H, Sebastian County.  He is a graduate of Mansfield High School.
  • Tyree Sampson, 29, will be assigned to Highway Patrol Division, Troop K, Garland County.  He is a graduate of Hot Springs High School and National Park College in Hot Springs.
  • Jackson Shumate, 25, will be assigned to Highway Patrol Division, Troop A, Pulaski County.  He is a graduate of Sherman (Texas) High School.
  • Gavin Chance Taylor, 21, will be assigned to Highway Patrol Division, Troop D, Monroe County.  He is a graduate of Hazen High School.
  • Connor Vrooman, 25, will be assigned to Highway Patrol Division, Troop B, White County.  He is a graduate of Searcy High School and Arkansas State University (Beebe).
  • Daniel Walcott, 22, will be assigned to Highway Patrol Division, Troop J, Van Buren County.  He is a graduate of Penn Foster High School (Scranton, Pennsylvania).
  • Christopher Weatherly, 22, will be assigned to Highway Patrol Division, Troop A, Pulaski County.  He is a graduate of Cabot High School and the University of Arkansas (Little Rock).

Special recognition and awards were presented to the recruits who attained the highest overall academy scores within the respective curriculum and training categories:

ACADEMICS
1st place – Jessica McCord
2nd place – Peter Kootz
3rd place – Brandon Neal

PHYSICAL FITNESS
1st place – Brandon Neal
2nd place – John Bucher   
3rd place – Cade Padgett 

FIREARMS
1st place – Peter Kootz
2nd place – Chaice Weatherly 
3rd place – Zoey Baldwin 

Over the next month the new troopers will begin reporting to their respective assignments across the state.  They will receive an additional 5 – 9 weeks of instruction working alongside a Field Training Officer before being released from their training regimen.

2nd Annual Flag Disposal Ceremony

On June 14, 2022 Scott County Fairgrounds was the location for the second annual Scott County flag disposal ceremony. Waldron Volunteer Fire Department assisted with the lighting of the fire. Danville Cub Scouts Troop 170 presented the colors. Owen Ridenhour performed as the bugler.

Danville Cub Scouts Pack 170, Waldron Cub Scout Pack 59, Ouachita Mountain VFW Post 1345, and The John Tolleson American Legion Post 46 were in attendance to assist with the disposal of the retired flags. Chaplain Greg Shively led opening prayer.

According to the U.S. Flag Code “The flag, when it is in such condition that is no longer a fitting emblem for display, should be destroyed in a dignified way, preferably by burning.” Most flags can be machine washed with mild detergent and hung to dry to prolong its life. It is up to the flags owner to decide when the flag is too tattered to properly fly.

Flag day takes place annually on June 14th to commemorate the adoption of the Stars and Stripes as the official flag of the United States.