Crowds of two-legged Arkansans met some new four-legged and no-legged friends Saturday during the Show Me Reptile Show at the Arkansas State Fairgrounds.
The
JONESBORO, Ark. (KAIT) – The start of the Arkansas State Men’s Basketball season is right around the corner. And the Scarlet and Black are getting some major recognition.
The Red Wolves finished last season 20-17, winning 11 of 18 games in the Sun Belt, placing fourth in the conference. But going into the 2024 season Coach Bryan Hodgson will have eight returning players and several players added through the transfer portal and high school. Many outlets have the team winning the Sun Belt.
We caught up with coach after practice, and he talked about how he’s managing the expectations.
“People saying that we have potential that means we haven’t done anything yet, and that’s exactly the case. It’s great to see recognition. these young men deserve it, but we haven’t won a game yet. We’ve got a long way to go, and just reminding our guys to work ahead. And really, it’s kind of role reversed. you know, last year we were, you know, we were the hunters, and now, you know, people continue to, you know, say these positive things and pick us to win the league, you know, we’re gonna be the hunted. How do you respond to that I think you still have to keep that Hunter’s mentality. And so that’s something that we work on every day.”
A-State will host Trevecca Nazarene for an exhibition game on October 26th. The official season tips off November 4th versus Akron in the MAC vs. Sun Belt Challenge.
To report a typo or correction, please click here.
Copyright 2024 KAIT. All rights reserved.
Crowds of two-legged Arkansans met some new four-legged and no-legged friends Saturday during the Show Me Reptile Show at the Arkansas State Fairgrounds.
The
Florida A&M basketball’s Charlie Ward recaps win vs Grambling State
FAMU basketball defeated Grambling State in what was a homecoming for former head coach Patrick Crarey II. Here’s how it went down.
Florida A&M basketball is off to Arkansas-Pine Bluff to play a Southwestern Athletic Conference doubleheader this Saturday, Jan. 17, at the Hubert O. Clemmons Arena.
Women will open the day, tipping off at 4 p.m. Eastern Time. The men will follow at 6:30 Eastern Time.
Both games will stream on SWAC TV, which fans can download for free on mobile devices and televisions.
FAMU basketball teams are both enjoying winning streaks.
The Rattlers women (4-11, 3-1 in SWAC) have won three straight, last erasing a 14-point deficit to beat Mississippi Valley State on the road, 88-74.
Tahnyjia Purifoy has starred for the Rattlers, averaging 19 points over the last three outings. The 5-foot point guard was named the SWAC Impact Player of the Week on Tuesday, Jan. 13.
As for FAMU men’s basketball (5-9, 2-1 in SWAC), it has won two consecutive games.
On Monday, Jan. 12, the Rattlers spoiled their former head coach Patrick Crarey II’s homecoming by beating the Grambling State Tigers 91-84 in Tallahassee.
After missing nearly two months of action, FAMU guard Micah Octave is posting 14.3 points per game and 8.3 rebounds. He was named the SWAC Impact Player of the Year for men’s basketball.
Arkansas-Pine Bluff Golden Lions women’s basketball is 5-10 overall and 2-3 in the SWAC, and most recently hosted and beat Bethune-Cookman 77-54. The Golden Lions men’s basketball team is 6-11 and 3-1 in the SWAC, most recently losing 73-61 on a road trip at Prairie View A&M.
Gerald Thomas, III is a multi-time award-winning journalist for his coverage of the Florida A&M Rattlers at the Tallahassee Democrat.
Follow his award-winning coverage on RattlerNews.com and contact him via email at GDThomas@Tallahassee.com or on the app formerly known as Twitter @3peatgee.
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (KATV) — The last racial quota for a state board in Arkansas was recently struck down by a federal judge. Rather than defend that quota, the state actually agreed with the plaintiff suing to remove it.
Former University of Arkansas professor Jay Greene, a white man, sued the state in October over a law mandating that one member of the Arkansas Ethics Commission be of a minority race.
Greene’s attorneys say he had previously put forward his name for consideration for the commission.
“But because this statute states that there must be a member of a minority race on the commission, when the opening came up, he was disqualified due to no reason other than his race. It’s just a straightforward racial quota. And the Supreme Court has said that essentially the government can’t do that,” said Pacific Legal Foundation Sr. Attorney Caleb Trotter, who represented Greene.
The Ethics Commission’s racial quota was part of the 1991 initiated act that established the body. That’s likely why it survived longer than other race quotas, as the legislature couldn’t remove it from Arkansas’ Constitution without a two-thirds vote because the five-member commission was created by a vote of the people.
Each seat holder on the commission is appointed by a different state official, one by the governor, lieutenant governor, House speaker, Senate president pro tempore, and attorney general.
When commission member Miguel Lopez’s term came to an end last summer, the law demanded that his replacement be of a minority race because he was the only non-white commission member at the time. Attorney General Tim Griffin didn’t appoint a replacement, refusing to comply with the race quota.
Lopez has remained on the commission since.
Griffin’s refusal perplexed then-director of the commission, Graham Sloan.
“The people of the state of Arkansas said they wanted a five-member board and that they wanted certain people to be represented, certain groups to be represented on that board. It’s never proven to be a problem for the commission. You know, and I’ve been here more than 25 years and there’s never been a problem,” Sloan told KATV in June.
“Minorities constitute 20 percent of the Arkansas population. And so a law that would say that there’ll be one member of a minority race on the board, you know, it gives that 20 percent of the population. It gives them representation on the board,” Sloan said.
Last week, state officials with appointing power sided with the plaintiff suing them and filed a joint motion alongside Greene asking the court to declare the race quota unconstitutional, a violation of the Fourteenth Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause.
“And traditionally, you would have either a trial or briefs and then the court makes a decision weighing both arguments,” Trotter said, “but here we had all five state officials agreeing with our position that this racial quota for the Ethics Commission is unconstitutional.”
The next day, the court permanently eliminated the race quota.
“No longer does the attorney general or any other state official have to consider someone’s race in making these appointments,” Trotter said, “and that’s a great day for the Constitution. It’s a great day for equality under the law and for all Arkansans.”
Jeff LeMaster, spokesman for the attorney general’s office, told KATV that Griffin plans to announce a new appointment to the commission soon.
Service door of Crans-Montana bar where 40 died in fire was locked from inside, owner says
MERR responds to dead humpback whale washed up near Bethany Beach
Anti-ICE protest outside Dallas City Hall follows deadly shooting in Minneapolis
Virginia Tech gains commitment from ACC transfer QB
‘It was apocalyptic’, woman tells Crans-Montana memorial service, as bar owner detained
ICE arrests in Minnesota surge include numerous convicted child rapists, killers
Missing 12-year-old Oklahoma boy found safe
Julio Iglesias accused of sexual assault as Spanish prosecutors study the allegations