Tuesday, November 23, 2010

SPORTS>>A seat at the pigskin table

BY TODD TRAUB

Leader sports editor

The high school football playoffs are in the stretch run to the December finals in Little Rock, and I’ve observed a few things during the past couple weeks of the postseason.

Most disturbing to me is the idea that, more and more, the press box is no longer being set aside for the press.

My co-worker Jason King actually proved he can read a map and made it to Batesville recently for the Beebe Badgers’, Class 5A first-round game against the Pioneers, only to have to cover the game from the sidelines.

Maybe we should have phoned ahead and reserved Jason a seat, but forgive us credentialed members of the press if we think we should actually be allowed in the press box.

I mean, Jason had his orange Arkansas Activities Association playoff pass and everything, yet he found himself squeezed out by all the cameramen, radio people and — forgive me for being cynical but I’ve seen it before — hangers on who probably don’t have a working function in said “press” box.

It seems ironic Jason traveled all that way to stand outside the press box at a Beebe road game — he could have gone up the highway to Beebe and suffered the same fate.

The Badgers have a smallish press box and have to allot space on a first come, first served basis, and since we sportswriters have to hit happy hour at Chili’s first, we often find ourselves among the late arrivals.

Speaking of Beebe, why is it every time I see a picture of coach John Shannon and his haircut I have this inexplicable urge to go watch “Midway” again?

Seriously, congratulations to Shannon and the Badgers for their fine conference run, and we are appreciative of any and all hospitality we receive throughout the season.

Whether we’re enjoying that big box of chicken and dinner rolls that are a Jacksonville tradition, the wacky antics of the crew at Lonoke, the people who are Johnny on the spot with the rosters at Cabot or that magical crock pot full of lovin’ at Sylvan Hills, it has been a pleasure to cover local games each Friday, or Thursday, or Tuesday or whenever the heck high school football is played these days.

All we need is about three feet of space and a clear line of sight to get our jobs done, but people go out of their way to give us so much more than that.

So, since it’s Thanksgiving week, we say thanks.

I have also observed this playoff season that there is no substitute for having a program.

No, not that book with the rosters that the cheerleaders sell at the stadium gates, but a real football program, which is not the same thing as fielding a team.

A program has continuity, coaches who know each other and work well together, team leadership, offseason conditioning and an offensive and defensive system you can hang your hat on.

Though beaten at Fort Smith Southside on Friday, Cabot proved once again it has a program — when you lose five starters to injuries just before the playoffs and can plug in other guys and win a game it’s clear your program is operating.

Jacksonville is headed that way under first-year head coach Rick Russell, who spent years with the Red Devils as defensive coordinator.

Under Shannon, Beebe — running a version of Cabot’s Dead T offense — also appears to be on the upswing after missing the postseason last year.

In Searcy, Harding Academy seems to always have plenty of pilots for its high-flying Spread offense and is headed for the 3A quarterfinals, the Searcy Lions just completed their second straight playoff trip under second-year coach Tim Harper while Riverview, which reached the postseason in its first year as a varsity program two seasons ago, made it to the second round this season.

Suffice to say, it’s been another interesting football season around here, and it’s not quite over yet.

We’ll keep our eye on things, even if we can’t get in the press box.

Happy Thanksgiving.

SPORTS>>Sylvan Hills’ Goodwin is a pretty good one

By Jason king

Leader sportswriter

It’s hard to imagine Sylvan Hills junior guard and top college prospect Archie Goodwin getting beat by a girl in a game of pickup basketball.

But that scenario was the catalyst for Goodwin, then a grade-school student, to improve on the game he now dominates almost nightly as a returning two-year starter on a Bears team already loaded with talent.

Goodwin can still recall the embarrassing, if not pivotal moment, even as elite NCAA Division I basketball coaches parade almost daily through the Sylvan Hills gym to catch a glimpse of the program’s first five-star recruit.

“It’s kind of a funny story,” Goodwin said. “I started playing when I was three, but I wasn’t really serious. So I never had my dad or anybody helping me out. One day, I played against this girl in basketball, and she beat me.

“I went home, and I was crying about it. My step dad, he asked me if I wanted to learn how to play basketball and I told him yes. He just explained to me how hard it was going to be, and from that day forward, I got in the gym every day and just continued to get better and better and better.”

Indeed, he got better.

Goodwin improved his skills to the point where he skipped over seventh grade and played up a year. His classmates caught up to him the following season and together they began to form the nucleus of a team many believe could terrorize Class 5A basketball over the next two years.

All the requirements to reach the upper echelons of college basketball are there – ball handling, outside shooting, driving to the rim, rebounding and defense, not to mention a sturdy, 6-5 frame that Goodwin’s family doctor said could extend to 6-8 by the time he stops developing.

His academics have not suffered either. Goodwin has maintained at least a 3.0 GPA since his sophomore year, and pushed it to 3.5 at the end of the last semester.

Goodwin’s easygoing demeanor and matter-of-fact self-analysis are a refreshing break from other high-profile athletes his age who tend to believe their hype and develop egos to match. He gives himself due credit on his aggressiveness and ability to score, but Goodwin doesn’t hesitate to say he needs to improve his defense and strength.

Recruiting revelation

Central Arkansas high-school basketball aficionados learned of Goodwin in his freshman year, when he was

part of a 20-3, junior Bears team that swept the River City Junior High Conference tournament in late February of 2009. Those on the AAU circuit had also seen the wunderkind play on the Arkansas Wings 15-Under team.

But it was a trip to St. Louis in June for the annual Nike Hoop Jamboree that propelled Goodwin into the national spotlight.

Just as Chicago-area post player Quincy Miller had done in the Jamboree the year before, Goodwin went from obscurity to become the darling of the nation’s recruiters with a dazzling performance in a field that included fellow junior Brandon Ashley, a top recruit from Oakland.

Goodwin turned heads with his versatility, even straying from his two-guard position to run the point during the elite showcase. ESPN’s recruiting blog listed Goodwin as the breakout player of the event.

“It’s been exciting; it’s been fun,” Bears coach Kevin Davis said of the numerous visitors from the college ranks. “We’re all in the education business together. Being a part of it has been special. The colleges that have been on our campus are too many to try and mention all of them.”

If Goodwin has a bright future it is the result not just of talent but hard work, which stems from a grounded family life. He is the son of Archie Goodwin, Jr. and Melesha Humphrey and his stepfather is Detron Humphrey. Goodwin is near the middle, age-wise, of a pack of 10 sibling and stepsiblings.

Once the college offers began to pour in, Goodwin’s family went to work with positive reinforcement, stressing he make careful choices because he has too much to lose. It may be a familiar lecture, but it resonates with Goodwin.

“I hear that speech all the time,” he said. “I get it from my mom, my dad, my step dad, my uncles – I get it from everybody. I understand what they’re saying. Sometimes, people don’t have that person who drives them, and that’s why some people don’t make it as far as they could have.”

Offers are already on the table from schools like Baylor, Arkansas, Memphis and Kansas. Arkansas coach John Pelphrey told Goodwin he is the primary focus of the Razorbacks’ 2012 recruiting class.

Goodwin has also taken unofficial visits to Kentucky and North Carolina, and has received interest from Missouri, Oklahoma, Tennessee and Texas.

For Goodwin, the benefits of the attention are twofold. Not only does he have a chance to reach the top levels of college basketball, so do some of his teammates.

“It’s been great,” Goodwin said. “Actually, it’s given a lot of the players on my team a chance to get looked at by coaches. Most of them may have come to see me, but they may find something else they like.

“It gives them all a good chance, and I’m just glad that I have the opportunity to be looked at. I’m just blessed for it.”

The recruiting blogs, notorious for speculation and gross over-analysis, have already put Goodwin in Razorbacks red or the light blue of North Carolina. One site curiously projected him to sign with Georgia, but the word straight from the source is that the pool of almost 40 interested schools will be narrowed down before a decision is made in 2011.

“I’m just going to wait it out,” Goodwin said. “I’ll make my decision sometime next year. I don’t know when exactly, but I can say I will probably narrow my list down to 10 by the end of the season.”

“The Triplets”

The list of Goodwin’s teammates on the AAU Wings is a Who’s Who of the state’s leading college prospects. The impressive list includes three who have already committed to the Arkansas: Aaron Ross (Little Rock Parkview), Hunter Milkelson (Jonesboro Westside) and Ky Madden (East Poinsett County) as well as 6-6 Little Rock Hall senior and future Nebraska Cornhusker David Rivers.

But it is classmates Devin Pearson and Larry Ziegler that Goodwin is most identified with on the local front. Davis began calling them “The Triplets” — after the famed Razorback trio of Marvin Delph, Sidney Moncrief and Ron Brewer — while they were freshman, although another junior, point guard Trey Smith, has come into his own as a valuable component of the Bears.

“I think we have a pretty good team,” Goodwin said. “It’s just exciting to see the talent we have, and how we play together. I’m just happy to be a part of this thing. We all have the same goal to win the state championship, which hopefully, we can do.”

Each player brings something different.

Pearson, a big-bodied 6-5 post player, is perhaps the strongest defender while handling the post’s rebounding and inside scoring duties. Ziegler is a 6-3 forward whose versatility is similar to Goodwin’s, while Smith, 6-0, is the Bears’ most consistent outside shooting threat.

The excitement around Sylvan Hills basketball was evident at the Bears’ home and season opener against Pulaski Oak Grove last week. Goodwin and company did not disappoint the standing room only crowd as they turned in a 93-73 victory fueled by Smith’s game high 20 points, 12 of which came from three-pointers.

Ziegler had 19 points and Goodwin had 18 while Pearson turned in a 17-point, 12-rebound performance on the low block.

“He’s got a great cast around him,” Davis said. “You can box-and-one, double team him or whatever, and he has no worries about who he gives the basketball to. That’s what makes it exciting around here.

“The faculty was extremely excited the next day. That’s a great experience. You come in to work, these kids come to school, and the faculty has been there to watch them, and they’re so exited about what you’re doing.”

Gearjammer

Davis has had his share of talent in his 13 years at Sylvan Hills, with outcomes good and bad. He reached the 5A state semifinals in 2006 with a team of scrappy underdogs that included point guard U.S. Robinson, utility guard Mike Gross and beefy post player Robert McKinney.

The group graduated that spring, leaving Davis’ roster depleted. By 2008, he had turned his eyes on the talent emerging from the junior-high ranks as the Bears returned to the Class 5A after two struggling seasons in 6A.

Goodwin and his teammates wrapped up their dominant freshman run in February of 2009, just in time for Goodwin to be pulled up to the varsity team for the end of the season. He made his debut at the Sylvan Hills gym in the 5A-Southeast Conference finale against Beebe, but played limited minutes.

Goodwin made his mark in Alma during the first round of the 5A state tournament against Greene County Tech, which eventually won the state title that year. Goodwin played most of the second half and went on to lead the team in scoring with 16 points.

He averaged 22 points a game and five rebounds in 10th grade, and Goodwin became the first Sylvan Hills sophomore named all state since Jeremy Brown in 2002.

“I basically have everything on the offensive part down,” Goodwin said. “On defense, I try to get into my defender, and I like to play the passing lanes too. I play aggressive, and sometimes, that can get you in trouble.”

As Goodwin’s game and body continue to develop, Davis’ keeps a watchful eye, as he has done for the past four years.

“Archie’s special,” Davis said. “I’ve been saying that since he was in the eighth grade. He’s got a gear that I haven’t seen, and this is my 20th year in the business around here. He’s just got a little something — got a nice flair about him. I call it an extra gear he can shift into.

“When you come and pay admission to see that kid, there’s no telling what you’ll see that night.”

SPORTS>>Red Devils wrap it up

BY TODD TRAUB

Leader sports editor

The Jacksonville Red Devils didn’t get where they wanted to be this year, but they did come a long way.

A year after it won just two games, Jacksonville became a 7A/6A-East Conference contender and a playoff qualifier in its first season under coach Rick Russell.

The Red Devils’ run ended with a 30-6 loss at Pine Bluff in the second round of the postseason, but Russell was happy with his team’s performance during the season.

“We’re real proud of the kids,” Russell said. “Week in, week out they came to practice very businesslike in their approach. They prepared for that week’s opponent.”

Jacksonville, the No. 3 seed from the East, beat Sheridan 31-7 in the first round of the playoffs and stayed with Pine Bluff for a quarter before the Zebras came to life, holding the Red Devils to 29 yards over the final three periods.

Pine Bluff earned the No. 2 seed in the South and was coming off a first-round bye.

“We felt like we could push a little further but Pine Bluff is a good football team,” Russell said. “They just won the battle in the trenches. They wore us down.”

It may be a bit misleading to say Russell is a first-year coach. After 15 years on the Jacksonville staff he spent last season as head coach across town at North Pulaski before returning to the program where he spent so much timeas defensive coordinator.

Russell replaced Mark Whatley, who left to join the staff at Springdale.

“We started in the middle of July and it was a good year, a good year,” Russell said. “I thought our season was successful because of the interaction of the coaches and the players.”

Jacksonville opened the year against non-conference rival Cabot in War Memorial Stadium, with 7A Cabot winning 28-14. Within its own classification, Jacksonville had more non-conference success, beating Benton and Hot Springs.

On statewide television Sept. 23, Jacksonville opened conference play with a 26-2 victory over Mountain Home at Jan Crow Stadium.

The Red Devils’ conference losses were to Jonesboro — which took the top seed from the East — at home against West Memphis as they fell out of conference championship contention and at Marion in the season finale the following week.

But Jacksonville responded with its convincing playoff victory over Sheridan.

“The seniors led real well,” Russell said. “They had great attitude. They did what we asked them to do the way we asked them to do it.”

The Red Devils must replace 21 seniors, including quarterback Logan Perry, a three-year starter.

“He’s been in the wars,” Russell said. “He’s been a very positive influence in that huddle. That quarterback on offense is always going to be missed.”

Other significant losses will be cornerbacks Tyler Crook and Kenny Cummings, Russell said, as well as explosive two-way player Antwone Mosby.

“A running back and linebacker,” Russell said of Mosby. “That’s two spots right there.”

Russell said Jacksonville would also miss offensive/defensive lineman Rhakeem James.

But the Red Devils will not be starting over next season. Russell said the coaching staff has been grooming players to step in at every practice.

“We practice two groups all year long,” Russell said.

“We’ve got some younger kids and they’ve watched and they’ve learned and some of them have played a lot. It was good for them to see the program and the offensive and defensive schemes that we brought in. We can only get better.”

The Red Devils will start from a good spot with the return of D’Vone McClure next season. McClure is a threat at receiver of when carrying the ball.

“He’s a good football player who wants to win and is very competitive,” Russell said.

Just as important, Jacksonville will return some experience to the offensive line. James Reddick, Carter Grandison and Tyler Skeet will be back throwing blocks next season.

“We’ve got three guys who played every snap every night,” Russell said.

Jacarius Jordan is expected to lead the secondary next year along with Kevin Richardson and Demeris Williams will return to anchor the defensive line.

“We’ve got some guys that have some good experience,” Russell said. “We’re excited about where we finished this year and where we’re going.”

Saturday, November 20, 2010

SPORTS>>Arkansans, NFL appear a natural fit

By Jason king
Leader sportswriter

The influence of the Natural State on the NFL has been strong as of late.

Most notable is former Razorback and current Oakland Raiders running back Darrin McFadden, who led the league in rushing early this season before falling into a tie for seventh place with the St. Louis Rams’ Steven Jackson with 757 yards.

McFadden has been a strong part of the Raiders’ upsurge that has landed them atop the AFC West standings for the first time since 2003, tied with rival Kansas City at 5-4. McFadden came up with a pair of big, third-down plays to keep the Raiders going on what became their go-ahead drive to beat the Chiefs last week.

McFadden, a product of the central Arkansas area who went to high school at Pulaski Oak Grove, captured the imagination of every football fan in the state a few years ago when he was in serious consideration for the Heisman Trophy and finished second in the running two different times.

McFadden’s old teammate and dormitory buddy Felix Jones has found himself on the opposite end of the spectrum in the first half of the season as part of a Dallas Cowboys team that has been mired in injuries, coaching controversy and ultimately, lots of losing.

We were told to expect the Cowboys to make a Super Bowl run this season, especially with the event itself to be held in team owner and Arkansas native Jerry Jones’ new Taj Mahal of a stadium in Arlington.

But things have not quite worked out that way for “America’s team” with a shoulder injury to franchise quarterback Tony Romo and the recent firing of head coach Wade Phillips after the Cowboys got off to a lackluster 1-7 start.

Fans of Big D got a break Sunday when the Cowboys defeated the New York Giants for the second victory of their tumultuous season. But is it too late for Jones and the Cowboys, who are currently coached by former offensive coordinator Jason Garrett, to reach the playoffs?

Jones became the ground-attack catalyst for the Cowboys last season after sustaining a year-ending injury early his rookie season, and is the centerpiece again this season.

But with only 353 rushing yards through nine games and another 258 from veteran Marion Barber, Dallas’ running game looks more like a sputtering, dissipating rain shower than an inline storm.

Conway native and former Hog Payton Hillis is another feel-good Arkansas story this year. Hillis — who began his NFL career in Denver and spent much of his time as a fullback for the Razorbacks blocking for the fleeter McFadden and Jones — leads the Browns in rushing with 726 yards.

Hillis has rushed for eight touchdowns, with a 48-yarder as his longest. But he has been one of the few bright spots for the Browns, who sit third in the AFC North standings with a 3-6 record.

Those are the three biggest notables of close to 50 players in the NFL with some kind of ties to Arkansas. There’s also former Little Rock Parkview Patriot and current Atlanta Falcon defensive lineman Jamaal Anderson and current Chicago Bears defensive back and former Little Rock Fair War Eagle Chris Harris, among many others.

And for those of us in this area, you can’t speak of the NFL without mentioning Jacksonville’s own Clinton McDonald, in his second season as defensive tackle for the Cincinnati Bengals.

McDonald graduated from Jacksonville High School in 2005 and started for the University of Memphis for four years before getting picked up by the Bengals late in the 2009 draft.

McDonald earned his stripes on the Bengals’ practice squad in his first year, finally getting his first game experience two weeks ago against Pittsburgh.

McDonald also played against the Colts on Sunday and recorded his first, career unassisted tackle.

SPORTS>>Panthers end road in defeat by Rebels

By TODD TRAUB
Leader sports editor


Cabot was hoping to engineer one more home game when it left for its 7A state playoff game at Forth Smith Southside on Friday.

Instead the Panthers won’t play a regulation game at Panther Stadium until next year.

The Rebels scored three touchdowns in the first half on the way to a 28-7 quarterfinal victory at Johnny Roland Stadium that sent Cabot packing.

Cabot was hoping to win and for a Fayetteville victory at West Memphis to set up a home semifinal, but Cabot’s end of things became moot as Southside, facing the same scenario, rolled to its convincing victory.

Cabot trailed 21-0 at halftime but, before a good-sized and noisy Cabot crowd that made the trip, was threatening to get back into it after Mason James scored on a 24-yard run on a counter play with 4:58 left in the third quarter.

But Bryson Morris dropped Southside’s first punt of the game and the Rebels recovered at the Cabot 21, leading to Julius Jones’ five-hard touchdown run that made it 28-7 and capped the scoring as the game degenerated in a flurry of penalty flags in the fourth quarter.

The Panthers beat Rogers Heritage without five key players who were injured.

They welcomed back running back Spencer Smith and tight end Jesse Roberts on Friday, and running back Jeremy Berry suited up at halftime but didn’t get in. But the extra help wasn’t enough as things took a bad early turn for Cabot.

One of the worst things to happen to Southside was a fumble on the opening kickoff, but the Rebels recovered and quickly went 66 yards in seven plays, scoring on Jones’ 21-yard run he set up with a stutter step at the line of scrimmage before his dash up the middle.

Hunter Whorton completed first-down passes of 18 and 11 yards on the possession and Jones scored with 9:26 left in the first quarter.

Cabot got as far as the Southside 44 before a bad pitch from Morris to James Haley on third and six forced the Panthers to punt. In one of the half’s worst breaks for Cabot, punter Max Carroll took the low snap on one knee and was ruled down at the Panthers 27.

On the next play Whorton kept for the touchdown, staying just in bounds and crossing the pylon to make it 14-0.

Cabot managed a first down on its next drive, but a fumble snap that Morris recovered stalled the drive and Cabot punted, successfully this time.

The Rebel were poised to scored again after driving to the Panthers 8, but Greg Phelps at least temporarily saved the day with an interception that gave Cabot possession at its 1. It was Whorton’s sixth interception of the year.

But Cabot got nowhere and punted again and Southside drove for its third score, overcoming a penalty along the way. Whorton had a 14-yard gain and scored when he rolled right under pressure and kept 12 yards to make it 21-0 with 4:36 left.

Cabot put together its best drive of the half, marching to the Southside 25, but Morris’ pass was tipped and Zach Hood intercepted and, after a block in the back penalty, the Rebels were set up at their 23.

After two rushes by Jones netted 2 yards, Whorton took a knee to keep it 21-0 at halftime.

The Rebels finished the half with 212 yards, 121 on the ground with 103 coming from Jones. Cabot gained just 83 yards in the half.

SPORTS>>Keese unlocks victory as Wildcats move on

By JASON KING
Leader sportswriter

Seth Keese made sure Friday’s second round 3A playoff game against Bald Knob was not his last home game as a Harding Academy Wildcat as he led his team to a 41-14 victory.

The senior quarterback/defensive back threw for 308 yards and a touchdown and rushed for another 104 yards and two more scores to help the Wildcats to next week’s quarterfinals in which they will host Rison.

“We knew what to expect; we knew it was going to happen,” Keese said. “We had two weeks to prepare for this game, and the defensive line did a great job of putting pressure on their quarterback.

“As far as offense, our line made some really wide holes for me to run through. When it comes to a great game on both sides it’s not just me, it takes everyone. We all hustled tonight.”

The Bulldogs (9-3) threatened to make a game of it early in the third quarter after falling behind 28-0 in a first half that was all Harding Academy. But Landry Shipman intercepted Bald Knob quarterback Cordell Crisp to set up a 77-yard touchdown pass from Keese to Jay Bona that pushed the score to 35-6.

“We felt like we needed to pressure him,” Harding Academy coach Roddy Mote said of Crisp. “We couldn’t just let him sit back there in the pocket. We mixed it up on him. Sometimes we sent two and dropped nine; other times we’d send seven. The kids played hard and never let up on their intensity all night.”

Crisp, a sophomore, showed flashes of being a solid pocket passer, but also threw four interceptions, two of which were grabbed by Keese.

“It just kills your momentum,” Bulldogs coach Paul Johnston said. “We had a couple of passes we felt like could have turned into big plays for us, but they went the other way. Keese pretty much took over this thing.”

Keese set up the drive that sent the game into the sportsmanship/timing rule with an interception at the Wildcats 24 with 10:43 left to play. He found Corey Guymon on a 57-yard pass play to set up first and goal at the 2, and Ben Lecrone ran it in for the score on the following play to start the clock running almost continuously.

The Wildcats showed balance on their first scoring drive with first-down runs by Keese mixed with a 36-yard pass play to Bona that set Harding Academy up with a first down at the Bald Knob 30-yard line.

Keese found Bona again on the next play for a 10-yard gain before taking it to the 1-yard line on a quarterback draw up the middle.

Keese lost two yards on the next play, but connected with Ben Lecrone for a three-yard touchdown pass with 6:05 left in the first quarter. Josh Spears added the extra point to make it 7-0.

Harding Academy struck much faster on its next drive, as Keese kept for a 42-yard touchdown run on the third play of the drive and successfully threw to Bona for a two-point conversion.

Spears increased the margin to 18-0 with 9:16 left in the first half when he hit a 46-yard field goal.

The Wildcats started the drive at their 37 and advanced into Bulldog territory with a six-yard run by Lecrone followed by two five-yard scrambles by Keese, the first of which was aided by a 15-yard face mask penalty.

That moved Harding Academy to the Bald Knob 30-yard line. The Wildcats appeared to have pushed the ball inside the 20 three plays later when Keese completed a pass to Bona for 22 yards, but a second straight holding call backed the Wildcats to the 28.

Jordan Johnston tackled Keese for a one-yard loss to bring up fourth down and Spears’ kick from the right hash mark took a sharp hook but went just inside the left upright.

The Wildcats stayed with their passing game on the next drive until the final play.

They started after Lecrone returned Bald Knob’s punt to the Bulldog 30. Keese completed a pair of 10-yard passes to Lecrone following a holding call that backed the Wildcats up to the 40, and hit Bona for an 11-yard pickup.

The Bulldogs were flagged for unsportsmanlike conduct following the play, which set Harding Academy up with a first and goal at the 5.

Keese kept for the five-yard touchdown run up the middle with 3:16 left in the first half to make it 25-0.

Spears struck one more time for the Wildcats on the final play of the half with a 22-yard field that made it 28-0 at halftime.

SPORTS>>Hall halts rally bid as Cabot gets loss

By JASON KING
Leader sportswriter

Cabot and host Little Rock Hall both felt the need for speed in their second-round matchup in the Hall Invitational at Cirks Arena Thursday.

The Lady Warriors held off a frantic challenge by Lady Panthers’ leading scorer Melissa Wolff in the second half of their 61-51 victory to advance to tonight’s championship finals against North Little Rock.

Cabot will face Little Rock Parkview in the third-place game today at 4 p.m.

Wolff scored 13 of her 21 points in the second half, as Cabot (1-1) cut a 10-point lead to three with 4:30 left to play, but Hall teammates Tyler Scaife and Indica Austin answered the Lady Panthers’ challenge and pushed the lead to more than 10 in the closing minutes.

The fast pace resulted in an ample number of turnovers by both teams, as the Lady Panthers and Lady Warriors (2-0) each clamped down in the backcourt with press defenses.

Hall committed 18 turnovers to 23 by Cabot.

The Lady Panthers made out slightly better in the transition game, but the Lady Warriors persevered with better shot selection down the stretch, along with a stout, 26-point performance by Scaife to lead all scorers.

Cabot junior post player Laci Boyett made it 45-42 when she stole the ball at half court and drove for a lay-up. Austin came back with a jumper, followed by a score by Scaife with 3:40 left that pushed Hall’s lead to 49-42.

The Lady Panthers appeared to have caught a break when Damonique Miller, Hall’s biggest outside shooting threat, committed her fifth foul on Jaylin Bridges, who made both free throws.

Austin traveled to give the ball back to Cabot, which had a chance to pull within one possession.

But Cabot couldn’t score, and Scaife made a basket from the lane to extend the lead to 51-44.

Cabot senior point guard Kaki Thomas led in assists most of the night before hitting a three-pointer that made it 51-47 with 2:21 left for half of her six points. Thomas finished with five assists.

But it was all Hall from there. Scaife hit a pair of free throws, followed by two successful trips to the free-throw line by Austin for a 57-47 Hall lead.

Hall also used a big run early in the first half to seize momentum. Cabot took a 5-2 lead with some help from a technical foul against the Lady Warriors when 6-3 post player Katelyn Weber entered the game despite not being listed in the official scorebook.

Sophomore Elliot Taylor made one of the technical free throws, and Bridges made a three-point basket when she grabbed a long offensive rebound and put it back up.

The Lady Warriors came back with a pair of three-pointers by Jasmine Ford and two transition baskets by Scaife, followed by a free throw by Tierra Coffey as Hall overcame a 7-2 Cabot lead to go in front 13-7.

Taylor was not able to recreate the 20-point performance she had against Lonoke in the opener on Monday. Hall was aggressive defensively in the lane, limiting her to seven points, five of which came from the free-throw line.

But Taylor shined with a game-high nine rebounds.

Bridges, Thomas and Boyett all finished with six points for the Lady Panthers. Junior post player Sydney Wacker added six points and five rebounds.

SPORTS>>Pine Bluff tops Jacksonville


By Michael murphy
Special to The Leader

Pine Bluff advanced to the semifinals of the Class 6A playoffs with a 30-6 victory over visiting Jacksonville at Jordan Stadium on Friday.

After a close first quarter of play, Pine Bluff’s defense came to life, allowing the Red Devils just 29 yards in the remaining three quarters and getting seven sacks.

“They made plays and we didn’t,” Jacksonville coach Rick Russell said. “The kids played as hard as they could play and we’re proud of them. Pine Bluff is a good football team and we wish them well the rest of the way.”

Senior defensive linemen Melvin Johnson and Jeremy Pulliam each recorded two sacks. Bryan Terry had a sack and a forced fumble, and sophomore Kelvin Seargent added yet another sack.

“We had a great mental week at practice defensively and a great bye-week practice defensively,” Pine Bluff coach Bobby Bolding said. “I fully expected to get what we got.”

The Zebras defense made things difficult for the Red Devils after forcing running back Antwone Mosby out of the game with a knee injury in the second quarter. Quarterback Logan Perry couldn’t find his rythm, finishing the game 2 for 9, but he did have a 59-yard touchdown pass to D’Vone McClure with 6:25 remaining in the first quarter for Jacksonville’s only touchdown.

The Pine Bluff secondary gave an impressive performance as junior safety Jared Turner deflected several passes for the Zebras.

“They played great,” Bolding said. “Big hits, and we got a great pass rush, I was really pleased with our defense. They won the game tonight.

Jawahn Hunt, who broke the 2,000-yard rushing mark with Friday’s performance, gave Pine Bluff an early lead, breaking a 46-yard touchdown run with 9:29 remaining in the opening quarter. Hunt finished the game with 185 yards on 21 carries.

“He had a great game, got some good blocking,” Bolding said. “He runs the ball hard and he’s got great speed obviously.”

However Hunt wasn’t the only Pine Bluff back to get in on the action as sophomore Walter Ashley and junior Jalen Dabner both had rushing touchdowns for the Zebras. The two combined for 76 yards on the ground in relief of Hunt.

Ashley was also on the receiving end of quarterback Jordan Humphrey’s 47-yard touchdown pass which gave Pine Bluff a 30-6 lead with 10:21 remaining in the game.

“Walter had a good game,” Bolding said. “He was sick Wednesday and wasn’t able to practice, but he came back and had a good game.”

Humphrey finished the game 4 of 6 for 87 yards and a touchdown, but was intercepted by Jacksonville’s Kenny Cummings on a deep pass intended for senior Justin Bishop in the second quarter.

Senior tight end David Smith had two key receptions for the Zebras for 34 yards. His first catch went for 19 yards on a third-and-18 play.

Smith also hauled in a 15-yard reception on second and 19 which set up Dabner’s eight-yard touchdown run in the third quarter.

Although the Zebras rushed for nearly 300 yards, the passing attack was efficient when Pine Bluff went to the air.

“You just kind of go to sleep when you watch us play,” Bolding said. “It’s what we do. We want you to go to sleep.”

SPORTS>>JACKSONVILLE LIGHTHOUSE CHARTER SCHOOL BASKETBALL INAUGURALSEASON PROGRAM STARTS AGAINST JACKSONVILLE MIDDLE SCHOOL

By TODD TRAUB
Leader sports editor

Did anyone realize history was being made?

Yes, a few people did.

But it was more fun just playing basketball.

Lighthouse Charter School tipped off its first, sanctioned basketball season with seventh-grade girls and boys games against Jacksonville at Jacksonville Middle School on Thursday.

The girls team played a thriller, losing 17-14 to the Lady Red Devils while the boys took it on the chin, falling behind 26-3 at halftime on the way to a final score somewhere in the neighborhood of 63-14, to the best of coach Brad Burl’s recollection.

“When we get beat like that I tend to forget them quick,” said Burl, who coaches the boys and girls teams.

No matter. While the girls drew several shrieks of pleasure and support in their nail-biting loss, the parents and teachers who made up the fan base applauded both squads like champions after the final buzzers sounded.

“It was very exciting and I think it’s important for the kids to see us here and see our support,” teacher Melonie Burton said. “If they see us support them here, then they’ll be more willing to work for us in our classrooms.”

The teachers said it was no problem finding players — announcing the sign-up was all that was needed — though there was some friendly dispute over expectations.

“I was surprised,” Burton said. “I was really proud of my girls; they showed up and showed out today.”

“I wasn’t very surprised,” Burton’s fellow teacher Christy Head said. “I know some of those girls.”

For the record, Diamond McGloan scored the first points in the girls program’s history while Giovanni Castiallano scored first for the boys.

But after a taste of real, competitive action, the players were more concerned about getting back into the gym and into their next game, whenever it is.

Lighthouse opened in August 2009 and played intramural sports last year. The Arkansas Activities Association didn’t approve the school for interscholastic competition until September, leaving little time to put together a schedule.

Burl is still hustling to find opponents and hopes to have 7-8 games this first season, including another against Jacksonville. With that in mind he was grateful to Jacksonville for playing host Thursday.

“I just appreciate this opportunity so much,” Burl said, after members of the Jacksonville coaching staff congratulated him for his players’ scrappy effort. “Because I did reach out to some other schools and their schedules were already full. But they made the opportunity for us to come and have a chance to do something positive.”

Lighthouse, founded as an alternative to some of the schools in the sometimes troubled Pulaski County Special School District, is located at 251 N. First Street in Jacksonville. Current enrollment is 394 in grades kindergarten through seventh, with a waiting list that is almost double that number.

“It just gave a whole different opportunity for all my kids,” said Karen Gabriel, a mother of five, after watching her daughter Jonae Guy-Gabriel play in the girls game. “I think they did pretty good, they kind of held their own, so hopefully they’ll improve and get better.”

The school’s blueprint is to add a grade, and hopefully a level of sports, each year, so that one day there will be a senior high and a varsity athletic program. Lighthouse also offers soccer, swimming, cheerleading/dance and Brazilian jiu-jitsu and is planning to run a track and field program in the spring.

The athletic program is so young Lighthouse has yet to settle on a mascot, and is planning a student-body vote. The school has yet to build a home gym and practices twice a week at First United Methodist Church in Jacksonville and spends the rest of its time on a makeshift court in the school’s multi-purpose room and on the playground.

“We’re going to take a lot from this first game and we’re just going to grow and we’re going to build,” Burl said.

Burl, who gave his age as “over 30”, is a former North Little Rock basketball and football player who also played football at Arkansas Tech, where he received his degrees in education and graphic design.

He earned his master’s in education administration and supervision at UALR and plans to earn his specialist degree and his doctorate.

Though he is coaching two start-up basketball programs at Lighthouse, those are just the beginning of Burl’s responsibilities. He is also an administrator, art teacher, physical education instructor and the school’s director of culture.

“If the children see me still trying to work and study hard, I hope that inspires them to work and study hard,” Burl said.

Lighthouse is somewhat unique in that its core curriculum is art-infused.

Before the school year is out, each student is required to take part in some sort of artistic endeavor — a play, an art show, a reading — and the idea is if students can visualize and build a creative project it will be more conducive toward learning grammar, math or hard sciences.

“It’s a new concept,” Head said. “You take children who are not interested in education and you give them an art project or a music assignment that they are interested in and they’re more willing to do the assignment and are more engaged in learning because of the art curriculum.”

So how does basketball fit into the art picture?

The program may be too young for Burl to be talking about transition offenses and man-to-man defenses. But there are some important fundamentals to be learned. Burl quickly ticked off the advantages, from helping kids build self-esteem and learn hard life lessons like perseverance, to building time management skills and developing good health.

“But I always want to stress to the children first, the main goal is education,” Burl said.

“You could be hurt, it could be your last day of playing sports today. But your mind, and your education and your book smarts are what are going to carry you.”

Somewhere down the line, if the basketball program matches the projected growth of the school, there will be bigger crowds, taller players, deeper rosters, victories and maybe even a state championship or two.

Those things may be years away, but now, at least, Lighthouse basketball has driven some of the shadows from its future.

“For a lot of the children it was the first time playing and they responded very, very, very well,” Burl said. “All I can do is brag on them.”

Friday, November 19, 2010

EDITORIAL >>Uphill climb for road plan

The state Highway and Transportation Department picked a fine time to get into a financial bind, in the dismal train of the worst economic decline in 70 years, but then hasn’t it nearly always been in a financial bind? 

Over the next decade, the agency says, it must have $19.1 billion to maintain the 15,000 miles of state highways and meet the growing traffic needs for wider and better highways and bridges, but it can expect to get only $4.1 billion from its existing tax sources.  

You can dismiss that $19.1 billion estimate as pie in the sky. It’s not as desperate as that. The Highway Commission for half a century has produced bloated estimates of what it will take to maintain and build good roads and bridges. It would like to build a super highway system. We also would like to have a super public school system, a first-rate system of higher education, top-drawer health insurance and excellent corrections, but people have concluded that we can’t afford any of those things. 

But the highway program is indeed in a jam, and we are not so poor that we cannot take a few steps that will keep the pace of improvements. Automobile fuel economies have made the current excise tax on motor fuels a dwindling source of revenue, and rising oil and construction prices send roadbuilding costs perpetually in the opposition direction. So the Blue Ribbon Committee on Highway Finance, which was created by the legislature in 2007, has produced a package of financing proposals, just in time to arrive dead on arrival at the 88th General Assembly. 

We may be too pessimistic, but three of the committee’s four major proposals require tax increases, and a high quotient of the 135 lawmakers will arrive at the Capitol in January firmly committed to vote forever against any tax of any size for any purpose. It is a pledge that Republicans nationwide made, a key part of their strategy to take over Congress, statehouses and legislatures. It is hard to imagine a significant tax measure making it through the legislature in 2011, even if Gov. Beebe puts his magic hands on it. 

If the economy picks up steam next year—there are modestly encouraging signs—perhaps something might be done later in the biennium, a special legislative session in the fall or winter that could consider road taxes in a more hospitable climate. 

A couple of the committee’s ideas hold more promise than the others. One is surely dead, the transfer of a sizable part of the state’s sales taxes from the general fund to highways. The Highway Department has wanted for 40 years to reap the sales-tax revenues on vehicles and automotive supplies and services, which support the schools and other general-revenue programs. Robbing education to pay for highways is logically and politically impermissible. Beebe says it will not happen on his watch, and it shouldn’t. 

The committee suggests indexing motor-fuel taxes, currently 21.5 cents a gallon for gasoline and 22.5 cents for diesel, to inflation in the construction industry. The tax would go up every year automatically as petroleum prices and other highway-building costs rose. That is constitutionally dubious—the legislature cannot delegate its taxing power to any other entity—and taxpayers will not stand for an open-ended tax. They should forget that option. 

The committee recommends that the legislature refer a highway bond issue to the voters in 2012. 

The bonds would be backed by a 10-year sales tax of one-half of one percent. Presumably, both the bonds and the tax would be subject to voter approval, unlike Gov. Mike Huckabee’s tax-and-bond scheme in 1998. Voters approved a big bond issue to rebuild interstate highways, but the ballot made no mention of taxes. Huckabee and the legislature had already approved the tax that would pay off the bonds. 

Finally, the blue-ribbon men proposed an excise tax on gasoline and diesel at the wholesale level. 

It is the best and most politically feasible idea of the package. It would be a new tax, one that was not collected in 1934, so the legislature could enact it with a simple majority, not the extraordinary majority required of most taxes. If it was an ad-valorem tax, based upon the wholesale price, it would be more elastic than the current gallonage tax and provide a source of revenue that rose with costs. It should, in fact, replace the current tax and not be a supplement. 

We have one quaint idea of our own. The legislature should raise the severance tax on natural gas, which was enacted two years ago and dedicated to highways, streets and roads. The act, which was written by lawyers for gas producers, exempts most of Arkansas’ growing gas production from the 5 percent tax on the wellhead price and instead taxes it at 1.5 percent or even lower. The tax could be raised to 2.6 percent by a simple majority of the legislature. It could not be passed on to households or business consumers of gas. And it would be a substantial help to the highway program.

There will have to be a more propitious moment than January 2011 for any of these ideas to fly, but we commend those to the legislature and the governor for that moment, whenever it comes.

TOP STORY > >City budget would be less in 2011

By rick kron
Leader staff writer

Jacksonville’s proposed 2011 budget is about $100,000 less than this year’s budget but still gives employees a small raise and maintains services, even though the city will have to take a half-million dollars out of its reserves to do it.

“We have nickel and dimed this budget to death,” Finance Director Paul Mushrush said at a half-attended city council meeting Thursday night.

The mayor, along with Jim Durham, director of administration, and Jay Whisker, city engineer, were in Dallas trying to woo business developers to Jacksonville.

Aldermen Kenny Elliott, Bill Howard and John Ferrell were also out.

Mushrush told the council that revenues for 2011 are expected to come in at $18.4 million, while expenditures are expected to reach $18.9 million, leaving a $504,341 shortfall which the city will cover with reserves.

The city will give its employees a flat $500 raise instead of a percentage raise as it has in the past. City council members will not receive a raise.

Mushrush said all city services will stay at their current levels, but added that something needs to be done with sanitation.  He explained that if the city continues without a rate increase or a deduction in garbage and trash services, the department will lose about $1 million over the next five years. The department is already running a deficit of more than $400,000.

The department has not raised its rates in almost a decade and the council formed a committee Thursday to look at what can be done to get the sanitation department back to a break-even point. It might mean a rate increase, a drop in services or a combination. 

Alderman Reedie Ray will head the committee which also includes aldermen Terry Sansing, Bob Stroud, Kevin McCleary and Bill Howard.

“We are the only city that I know of that picks up trash twice a week,” Sansing said at the meeting, implying that he might be in favor of cutting back to once a week.

Part of the budget problems come from the voters rejecting annexation, which would have infused about $1.9 million annually into the city coffers.

Fletcher said shortly after the vote that the people had spoken and that the city will have to make adjustments.

Nearly 67 percent of the expected revenue will come via sales taxes, followed by intergovernmental transfers at 7.8 percent, operating transfers at 6.4 percent and utility franchise fees at 5.9 percent.

The bulk of expenditures will be for public safety at 64 percent of the total budget, followed by public works at 22 percent, general government at 11 percent and judicial at 3 percent.

In other council business:

The council approved the first reading of an ordinance placing a total of $70,895.29 in liens on a total of 139 properties throughout the city. The liens are being placed against the properties because the city had to either cut the grass, clear the properties or perform some other service after the owners would not.

The ordinance must be read and approved two more times before it becomes law and the liens are placed on the properties. The council will call a special meeting before the end of the month to take the other two votes on the ordinance.

The liens range from a low of $37.39 owed by Shayla Johnson of 133 Lonsdale Circle to $10,295.57 owed by Wyman Gaye of 107 and 109 Smart St. Some property owners will have multiple liens against them such as Duane Smith, who owns numerous properties on Jane Drive, will have four liens against him and so will Roy Martin, who owns property on Flight Court.

In his monthly report to the council, Police Chief Gary Sipes said his department responded to 4,209 complaint calls in October.

The police arrested 334 adults and 57 juveniles during the month.

The chief reported that the city had no homicides, five reported rapes or sexual assaults, four robberies, 11 felony assaults, 21 burglaries, 76 thefts, six vehicle thefts and no arsons during October.

Fire Chief John Vanderhoof, in his monthly report, said his department responded to 243 rescue calls, 85 still alarms, 23 general alarms and had 266 ambulance runs.

The chief estimated fire loss to the city for October at $1,000 and fire savings, based on quick responses, at $399,000.

Alderman Marshall Smith, who served as mayor at the council meeting, reminded those attending that city offices would be closed Thursday and Friday for Thanksgiving. 

TOP STORY > >Road-tax plan needs traction

By JOHN HOFHEIMER
Leader senior staff writer


A special committee that has been studying ways to pay for highway improvements hopes it can convince state officials to raise taxes, although that might be difficult to achieve.

Among its recommendations: Index state gas and diesel excise taxes to the cost of road construction, add a wholesale fuel-sales tax and divert sales tax revenues from the sale of vehicles, batteries, auto parts and similar highway-user items from the state’s general fund—where they have traditionally gone—and into a new highway trust fund.

Those are three of the main changes the state’s Blue Ribbon Highway Finance Committee will recommend in its Dec. 1 report to Gov. Mike Beebe, the state General Assem-bly and other interested parties, according to state Sen. John Paul Capps, committee co-chairman.

The committee was charged with finding permanent, sufficient and flexible financing to keep the state’s aging road system in good repair.

Most states already dedicate sales tax from vehicle sales and vehicle-related sales to their highways, but in Arkansas, where state revenues have been hard to come by, those taxes generate about $400 million a year to help fund schools, prisons, Medicare and Medicaid, according to Jim McKenzie, executive director of Metroplan and a member of the committee.

Diversion of the vehicle associated sales tax revenues would not begin until general revenues exceed the $2.2 billion mark set in 2007, according to Capps, and then would be phased in over a decade.

Currently, the state Highway and Transportation Department projects that it needs $19 billion over the next decade just to maintain the highways it has, but expects only about $4 billion in revenues.

A new wholesale-fuel tax would be phased in over six years, McKenzie said.

The recommendation will include a constitutional amendment for a half-cent general sales tax to fund bond issues, which would allow the department to undertake major new highway construction, McKenzie said. He added that the highway- construction lobby supports that idea.

The problem in financing highway and road construction and maintenance is that Arkansas has the 12th largest state highway system in the nation and the 10th largest county system, but is only 36th in population and 47th in percapita income.

Currently, the state spends about $400 million a year to maintain highways, but to provide the same level of maintenance in 2020 will cost an additional $150 million a year.

To completely reserve the system and meet urban congestion problems would cost $10.9 billion over 10 years, of which $800 million a year would need to be new revenues.

If the state implemented all the revenue-increasing measures recommended, it would have barely enough to begin that level of maintenance, McKenzie said.

To add significant new capacity to the state highway system would cost yet another $700 million a year.

The committee asked the governor and legislature to review or undertake new studies.

What would it cost to reduce the size of the state highway system by turning roads such as Broadway over to the counties after bringing them up to snuff?

Also, there needs to be a new federal study evaluating the cost to state roads of the heavy trucks. That could lead to increases in licenses and fees on those trucks to more fairly pay for the damage they do.

TOP STORY > >PCSSD defends China trip


By john hofheimer
Leader senior staff writer

Superintendent Charles Hopson is leading a delegation of eight from the Pulaski County Special School District on a sponsored, weeklong trip to China, the first steps toward a program to teach Mandarin Chinese to some district students.

Detractors brought word of the China trip to the public before the district could craft its announcement, according to PCSSD spokesman Deb Roush, claiming that it would be costly to the district and was not a proper use of district resources.

“We’re real excited about this,”Roush said. “It’s a good thing.”

The program brings Ameri-can school officials to China to see the culture and the education system there, and then helps match them up with Chinese teachers.

Currently, nine Arkansas school districts have Chinese teachers teaching Mandarin to students in their districts.

A letter, purportedly from an unnamed “former administrator” to the head of the state Legislative Audit, claims PCSSD could spend the money better, maybe for Spanish classes, or could find a Chinese teacher without leaving the state. The author says he (or she) is “furious.”

A link to the letter was published by Dawn Jackson on her SavePCSSD.Org website, which has been closely associated with the Pulaski Association of Classroom Teachers.

Of the skepticism, Hopson said, “I think because of the experiences of the past, people are just suspicious, and they probably have a right to be. As an instructional leader, it’s part of trying to put the district at an advantage.

“I’m moving very, very fast and there are a lot of things—strategic planning—a lot happening at the same time. I didn’t anticipate that this would rise to the surface as a negative thing, but a celebration.”

Board president Bill Vasquez of Jacksonville originally ex-pressed some skepticism, but now calls the program “wonderful.”

“If we’re going to be business partners with China in the global economy, this is a pretty positive thing.”

Vasquez said communications could have been better. He hadn’t heard of the trip before this week, even though Hopson and the others leave Dec. 2, and even though the board appropriated about $3,423 for the district’s share of the eight plane tickets.

“This is good for the district, good for the state and good for our children,” said Vasquez. 

“The expense is minimal.”

He said Riceland hires people who can speak Chinese to help them open up markets in China.

Tim Clark, who was board president at the time that ar-rangements for the trip were made, will be among the eight, but he has paid for his own plane ticket, according to Roush.

“It is part of a partnership between the Confucius Institute headquarters in Beijing, working through the Confucius Institute at the University of Central Arkansas in collaboration with the Arkansas Department of Education,” Roush said.

“Our group is going as part of an American delegation of Arkansas educators from across the state. The program is called Teach Chinese in Arkansas, and the goal is to help schools in our state develop Chinese language programs as part of their curriculum,” she added.

Other Arkansas school districts going on the trip are Beebe, Wynne, Lincoln and Hot Springs, according to Jingjing Li, deputy director of the UCA Confucius Institute.

Arkansas school districts already involved in the three-year-old program are Hot Springs, North Little Rock, Cross County, Harrisburg, Batesville, Conway, Waldron and Wynne and based in Farmington, the Northwest Arkansas Education Service Cooperative, she said.

The Hanban, which is a Chinese governmental organization under which the Confucius Institute operates, pays each of the teachers $12,000 a year, with the individual district picking up the rest of the teacher’s salary and benefits, according to Li.

Currently, 11 teachers from China are teaching Chinese language courses to about 1,000 students in nine Arkansas school districts, Li said.

The Confucius Institute has programs in more than 60 countries and dozens of school districts in the United States. Roush said the district expects to incorporate Chinese in the Robinson feeder-pattern schools and at the new high school in Maumelle.

“We are also looking to expand the program in the College Station feeder pattern,” she said.

Those making the trip, in addition to Hopson and Clark, are College Station principal Lisa Watson, Maumelle principal Joy Plants, Robinson High School principal Yoluandra Williams, Robinson Middle School principal Cherrie Walker and Bruce Bryant, who oversees curriculum for the district.

Crystal Hills Elementary teacher Cindy Casto, who is of Chinese heritage and helped organize the trip, will travel as a translator, Roush said.

Why is PCSSD interested in providing Chinese language classes?

“Chinese is the most widely spoken first language, spoken by 1.3 billion people. More than 200 million Chinese school children are studying English, but only 50,000 students in the U.S. are studying Chinese,” Roush said. “This will give PCSSD students the edge.”

Hopson’s goal in building partnerships with the groups involved in the trip “is to help us incorporate Chinese into our curriculum and is part of his plan to help PCSSD become a world-class district offering a global standard of excellence,” she said.

“We have the opportunity to make our district better,” Hopson said, “to bring to a global standard and to give our students access another global economic language.

“It’s exciting that we are able to bring enrichment opportunities to the district,” he said. 

“Conway is ahead of us, they started a year or two ago. Arkansas is late to the process.”

The delegation will arrive in Beijing, where they will attend an official welcoming event and tour the city for a few days. Members will then visit one of several host provinces, where they will participate in educational activities, visit schools and sightsee “to experience the diversity of the landscape and culture.”

The Confucius Institute says the days will be long and rigorous—quite demanding, and that delegates are expected to attend all activities and events.

The institute says the trip will help educate the educators about Chinese language, culture, and society with workshops and school visits.

The activities and itinerary are specially tailored to the needs of schools and districts looking for resources to start offering Chinese language and/or culture courses.

In addition to paying half of the airfare, the institute will pay for hotel accommodations, meals and local transportation.

The Arkansas Department of Education has signed a memorandum of understanding with the Confucius Institute and will send a representative to interview prospective Chinese teachers.

Some of the programs have been “wildly successful,” according to Education Department spokesman Julie Thompson. In one case, the Chinese teacher had trouble adjusting to the culture.

“It is beneficial to the students,” she said. “The program is good.”

Although the prospective teachers have master’s degrees in teaching Chinese as a second language, the state will help them get certified for alternative teaching certification, Thompson said.