Mississippi
TU Back At Home Against Mississippi Valley State

The College of Tulsa has simply two non-conference video games remaining earlier than convention play begins. Tulsa seems to show issues round Friday in opposition to Mississippi Valley State.
The season in all probability hasn’t began the best way new Head Coach Eric Konkol had hoped for when he took the job in March. Tulsa has began the yr 3-6. If you happen to ask Coach Konkol although, it’s all in regards to the course of and trusting his gamers.
“They’re getting expertise. Some are very younger, some are older in this system. However they’re being in these late sport positions for the primary time, and it takes a bit of little bit of time to develop and learn to win video games,” mentioned Coach Konkol.
With the 5 sport shedding streak ending this previous Saturday for the Golden Hurricane, Coach Konkol’s message to his staff was a easy one: play with confidence. He believes the perfect basketball is forward of them.
“Now we have to change into extra constant in these areas after which we have now to search out methods to complete. And we have now been speaking about ending, and never simply ending video games, however ending performs. Ending with a rebound and ending with a tough lower and simply being higher finishers,” mentioned Konkol.
Even with all of the struggles, this season Bryant Selebangue has been a brilliant spot. The Ahead is averaging 11 factors a sport and ranks twenty second for scoring.
“He has discovered methods to attain we want that we’re beginning to design extra issues to him in numerous spots. He’s getting higher and higher,” mentioned Konkol.
Tulsa seems for 2 in a row in opposition to Mississippi Valley State on Friday at 7:00 p.m. within the Reynolds Heart.

Mississippi
This week in politics: Legislators honor, reflect on legacy of Robert Clark

Updates on what happened on committee deadline last week, what legislative priorities are now dead
Mississippi House passes bill to cut income and sales tax
Rep. Trey Lamar, R-Senatobia, House Ways and Means chairman, presents the Build Up Mississippi Act to cut income and sales taxes.
As the past week’s legislative business came and went, several House and Senate lawmakers made speeches and posts on social media on the life and legacy of former House Speaker Pro Tempore Robert Clark.
Clark, who died on March 4 at the age of 96, was the first Black man elected to the Mississippi Legislature since 1894, and had served as a symbol of progressiveness in the legislature, his colleagues said several times throughout the week.
At first, when Clark was elected in 1967, he was remanded to a one-person desk and put in the corner of the House chamber, not being recognized to speak or make motions on the House floor or even to sit alongside his colleagues.
That, however, did not stop him from inspiring other Black politicians to run for office and serve in the state’s legislature. Nor did it stop him from his significant rise to prominence in the House.
Clark in his time would rise to chair the House Education Committee, a powerful panel of lawmakers overseeing funding, structures of and reforms to Mississippi’s education system.
After that in 1992, he became the House Speaker Pro Tempore, the second-highest position in the House with the responsibility of overseeing the chamber when the speaker was away. He would serve in that position until his retirement in 2004.
“His leadership paved the way for greater representation of African Americans in Mississippi politics, inspiring generations of public servants to follow in his footsteps,” said Cheikh Taylor, D-Starkville, Mississippi Democratic Party chairman. “Representative Clark’s legacy is one of courage, perseverance, and unwavering commitment to justice.”
When Clark’s death was announced, both Lt. Gov. Delbert Hosemann and House Speaker Jason White, who is also from Holmes County, like Clark, honored his memory.
“He was a trailblazer and icon for sure,” White said to the House chamber on Tuesday. “He was always mighty good to me when I was elected to office.”
Clark served as the only Black lawmaker for nearly a decade. Today, there are more than 50 Black legislators in Mississippi.
What happened in the capitol last week?
As lawmakers considered bills in committee by Tuesday’s legislative deadline, many pieces of legislation were left on the chopping block.
By the end of the day, both Senate and House lawmakers had killed about 100 bills that previously passed the Senate and House chamber, respectively, according to Mississippi Statewatch, a legislative intelligence service.
Notably, the legislature’s only vehicle to make reforms to the Public Employment Retirement System of Mississippi was abruptly killed by the House Accountability, Efficiency and Transparency Committee.
When asked why the committee didn’t take up the legislation that would have established a new retirement benefits package for government employees, Chairman Kevin Ford, R-Vicksburg, said he simply needed more time to consider the legislation.
“The failure to pass SB2439, despite countless hours of work in collaboration with the PERS Board and others, is devastating for Mississippi,” Hosemann told the Clarion Ledger in a written response. “Gov. Barbour warned of this crisis in 2009, and it has only worsened. SB2439 ensures funds for our retirees and state employees, including teachers, while providing an increased competitive benefit for future hires. This is a disaster.”
The committee had originally been scheduled to take up the bill, but the committee never did, and it was not on the final agenda.
Ford’s House committee was not the only one to do that after Senate committees killed House priorities by not bringing them up, raising questions of whether House and Senate lawmakers were at that point trading blows.
Tuesday morning, the Senate Education Committee let a flurry of House school choice bills die without consideration. Similarly, the Senate Gaming Committee did not bring up a House-approved bill to establish mobile sports betting in Mississippi.
Later that day, several House committees killed Senate bills and changed others. For example, when the House Education Committee met at 1:30 p.m., it quickly recessed so Chairman Rob Roberson, R-Starkville, could meet with House leadership to figure out what to do next.
When the committee re-met hours later, it killed many Senate education bills, passing only one with an amendment inserting a portability bill into the legislation, which would allow students to move between school districts more easily.
House Gaming Chairman Casey Eure, R-Saucier, also inserted his mobile sports betting bill into a Senate bill to reform the Tidelands Act, a law that creates a boundary between private and public land on the coast.
As for Hosemann and White’s legislative priorities for the year, some such as income tax cuts are very much still alive, some hang by a thread, like school choice, and others are at this point dead.
Those that are totally dead are state retirement system benefits reforms, ballot initiative restoration and suffrage restoration for some nonviolent felony holders.
Grant McLaughlin covers the Legislature and state government for the Clarion Ledger. He can be reached at gmclaughlin@gannett.com or 972-571-2335.
Mississippi
The Boys and Girls Alabama-Mississippi All-Star Classic on Saturday, March 8, 2025, at the Mitchell Center in Mobile, Ala.

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Mike Kittrell
Girls Alabama-Mississippi All-Star Classic
Alabama’s Kaylee Yarbrough of New Hope and Mississippi’s Lyla Cox of Pontotoc dive for the ball during the first half of the girls Alabama-Mississippi All-Star Classic on Saturday, March 8, 2025, at the Mitchell Center in Mobile, Ala. Mississippi head coach Ricky Austin of Spring Garden watches the action. (Mike Kittrell | preps@al.com)
Mississippi
It’s time to go fishing and camping. New fees, permit structures at MS state lakes

‘Hopefully, this will make it much simpler when people pull up to signs and try to figure out which permits you need.’
900-pound dolphin leaps onto small fishing boat
New Zealand fishermen were coming to the end of a competition, when a 900-pound dolphin leapt out of the water and landed in their boat.
- The Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries and Parks has simplified its fee structure for state lakes, reducing the number of permits from 20 to 13.
- The new fees, which include guests for annual permits, mark the first increase in fishing and boating fees in 20 years.
- Daily permits for fishing without boat launching are $5, while those including boat launching and skiing are $9.
Spring is fast approaching and with warmer weather, a lot of people are thinking about camping and fishing. If you decide to camp and fish at one of Mississippi’s state lakes, you may notice a change in the fees.
“Basically, we simplified the permits,” said Jerry Brown, Fisheries director at the Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries and Parks. “Where we used to have maybe 20 permits, we reduced it down to 13.”
State lakes offer a variety of opportunities beyond just fishing. Camping, skiing, pavilion rentals and other activities are offered at them. Some of the fees have been increased this year.
“It is probably worth noting that it has been 20 years since we went up on any fishing and boating fees,” Brown said.
Some fees have simply been restructured. Previously, a person with an annual boating, fishing and skiing permit was required to pay extra for a guest. While the fee of that permit has been increased, it now includes guests.
“Hopefully, this will make it much simpler when people pull up to signs and try to figure out which permits you need,” Brown said.
What are the fees at Mississippi state lakes?
Daily permits
- Youth fishing ages 15 and under: Free
- Fishing, no boat launching: $5
- Boat launching, fishing, skiing: $9
Annual permits
- Boat launching, fishing, skiing ages 16-61: $125
- Exempt boat launching, fishing, skiing: $100
- Fishing, no boat launching: $55
- Exempt fishing permit, no boat launching: $35
Camping and pavilion rental permits
- Camping, one day, ages 21-61: $25 *
- Exempt camping, one day: $22 *
- Camping, 30 days, ages 21-61: $500 *
- Exempt camping, 30 days: $360 *
- Primitive tent camping, one day, no electricity: $20
- Pavilion rental, one day: $53, reservations required
Exempt permits are for persons ages 62 or older, 100% disabled, active service members or military veterans.
* These camping permits include fishing and boat launching for registered campers not to exceed eight people.
Do you have a story idea? Contact Brian Broom at 601-961-7225 or bbroom@gannett.com.
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