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Blair Oaks girls soccer falls in Class 1 state title game; Helias settles for fourth in Class 3

Blair Oaks girls soccer suffered a 6-1 loss to Elsberry-Silex in the MSHSAA Class 1 finals Saturday afternoon in Fenton. Sophomore Mia Antweiler scored the lone goal for the Falcons, slicing the ball through the net with 19:03 remaining in the first half to trail 2-1. Elsberry junior Grace White scored four first-half goals for […]

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Blair Oaks girls soccer falls in Class 1 state title game; Helias settles for fourth in Class 3

Blair Oaks girls soccer suffered a 6-1 loss to Elsberry-Silex in the MSHSAA Class 1 finals Saturday afternoon in Fenton.

Sophomore Mia Antweiler scored the lone goal for the Falcons, slicing the ball through the net with 19:03 remaining in the first half to trail 2-1.

Elsberry junior Grace White scored four first-half goals for her team in the win, while the other two goals were credited to freshman Ella Burbridge and sophomore Rylen Jensen.

Elsberry secured the Class 1 state title and finished its season with an 18-2-1 overall record.

Blair Oaks finished in second place with a 16-8-1 record.

Helias girls soccer blanked by Notre Dame de Sion

Helias girls soccer fell 2-0 to Notre Dame de Sion in the MSHSAA Class 3 third-place game in Fenton.

The Crusaders were shut out for the sixth time this season, and the Storm goals were scored by seniors Aubrey Nichols and Taelyn Smith.

Notre Dame de Sion claimed third place in Class 3 with a 13-11 overall record.

Helias finished in fourth with a 18-9 record.

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Sheriff highlights drop in murders, addresses questions on new jail at JSO town hall

Sheriff T.K. Waters addresses public safety concerns and questions on jail at Jacksonville’s first town hall of 2025. The Jacksonville sheriff’s office held its first town hall of the year. Sheriff T.K. Waters shared the department’s priorities and progress. He heard directly from neighbors who shared their concerns. Traffic was one of the big topics […]

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Sheriff highlights drop in murders, addresses questions on new jail at JSO town hall

Sheriff T.K. Waters addresses public safety concerns and questions on jail at Jacksonville’s first town hall of 2025.

The Jacksonville sheriff’s office held its first town hall of the year. Sheriff T.K. Waters shared the department’s priorities and progress.

He heard directly from neighbors who shared their concerns. Traffic was one of the big topics there Tuesday tonight.

Many people voiced concerns about speeding and congestion in their community.

Waters and his team also addressed concerns about youth violence and drug activity and plans to move the city jail.

It was a packed room Tuesday night as residents in Jacksonville’s District 6 heard directly from Waters on how his agency is addressing public safety concerns.

“The importance of having these meetings face to face is to make sure your concerns are addressed,” said Sheriff Waters.

From 2023 to 2024, JSO said Jacksonville saw a 53.9% drop in murders, the biggest drop in years.

Waters credits proactive policing, community engagement and youth violence intervention strategies.

“Maybe we can stop them, maybe we can get them to change their direction and find something different to do with their lives so they can survive, so they don’t take someone else’s life and find themselves in prison for the rest of their lives,” said Waters.

An ongoing concern already being addressed by the sheriff’s office is traffic.

JSO is expanding its traffic enforcement unit in the future, growing from 34 traffic officers to 50 and going from 17 motor officers to 30.

Waters also addressed building a new jail in a new location, because he says the current jail is no longer sustainable.

“It has to get done at some point. We’re looking at a lot of different ways to get it done,” he said. “Our city council is involved, the mayor’s office is involved. It’s not a T.K. Waters project it’s a project that the city’s gonna have to undertake.”

As for the decline in murders and increase in cases solved, Sheriff Waters said it couldn’t have happened without the community’s help.

“This year our city has risen above the flawed perception that  it is an epicenter of violent crime, because it is not,” said Sheriff Waters.

The next JSO town hall meeting will be held on Tuesday, July 15th in district 5 at Trinity Baptist church on Hammond boulevard.

RELATED: ‘I want to know why you don’t feel safe’: Jacksonville sheriff to hold annual town hall meetings

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Dr. Valerie Camille Jones Ford Highlights Black Women's Impact In STEM As She Joins …

Dr. Valerie Camille Jones Ford, an educator with over 25 years of dedicated service, was inducted into the National Teachers Hall of Fame on June 20, becoming only the sixth Black woman to receive the honor. The induction joins a long list of accolades, including the Presidential Award for Excellence in Math and Science Teaching, […]

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Dr. Valerie Camille Jones Ford Highlights Black Women's Impact In STEM As She Joins ...

Dr. Valerie Camille Jones Ford, an educator with over 25 years of dedicated service, was inducted into the National Teachers Hall of Fame on June 20, becoming only the sixth Black woman to receive the honor.

The induction joins a long list of accolades, including the Presidential Award for Excellence in Math and Science Teaching, recognition in the U.S. Congressional Record by the late Rep. John Lewis, and multiple honors from President Barack Obama for her work advancing equity and excellence in education.

As a Black female leader in STEM education, Jones Ford is committed to using her platform to inspire underrepresented students to pursue similar paths.

“I’m incredibly proud to be among such amazing educators, but it lets me know there’s still work to be done as far as bringing recognition, because I know there are so many teachers of color who deserve this platform,” Jones Ford told AFROTECH™. 

She said that she wanted to use her platform to share her experience and to bring more educators into the fold. 

“[I want] make sure that I can spread the view that education itself and engagement itself, especially with students of color, is about affirmation. It’s about access and agency.”

In ninth grade, a teacher helped Jones Ford realize she had dyslexia. That moment shifted her perspective on learning — particularly in mathematics — and sparked a passion to help others unlock their potential, as she recognized the need for more Black educators to serve as role models and show students what is possible. 

Since 2011, she has served as the head of the mathematics department at the Ron Clark Academy (RCA), a nonprofit middle school and professional development facility in Atlanta, where she continues to inspire both students and educators.

“When I stepped on Ron Clark Academy’s campus, I was blown away,” Jones Ford told AFROTECH™. “And I actually realized I probably should have done more research, because I was meeting these incredible students [who] could carry [on] conversations like that.

She credits Clark’s work in educating his fifth-grade students with lessons that she taught freshmen at the high school where she worked. 

“I just knew I had to work there. I had to work with him in the math department. I just had to make it happen.”

When Jones Ford began teaching in 2000, the classroom was lecture-based, where students completed assignments on paper. With the continued growth of technology, education has seen drastic evolutions, she said. 

“What I love about the progression in these 25 years is the different nuances with technology,” Jones Ford told AFROTECH™. “You know, it came to calculators and the graphing calculators, and then it morphed into using tablets and then [the] iPad and then VR programs and AR programs.”

With the rise of AI, Jones Ford sees exciting possibilities, especially when educators receive the proper training. 

“I think as educators and schools, the more we bring that in and the more we embed it into [our teaching], students are going to grow and benefit and maybe even want to work behind the scenes to create their own technologies. So I think that part of education is fantastic,” she added.

While RCA often goes viral on social media — usually during high-energy “pop culture” moments — Jones Ford shared that people don’t always see the hard work and effort students put in behind the scenes. She notes that while the more entertaining clips tend to attract attention, the school regularly shares academic content that doesn’t go viral in the same way.

“Our kids are so smart,” she said, noting that every student at the school graduates with at least one year of high school math — many with two — before even entering high school,” she said.

Jones Ford added, “Sometimes I feel like society picks what they deem as viral worthy. And then sometimes we get a lot of hate for it. …Either you love us or you hate us.”

She continued, “I just really want people to know [how] intelligent they are. They defy any stereotype, and they do so well academically. And that part I wish could be shown more.”

Jones Ford emphasized the importance of leading with authenticity and building everything on strong relationships.

She encourages educators to remain lifelong learners — not just in academics, but by learning from their students — and reminds teachers to be mindful that they may often be educating students who don’t look like them, and that awareness matters.

“You know, when a student sees someone who reflects or tries to do things that reflect their culture or their excellence, it shifts their belief in what’s possible, right? So, teachers need to let them see their passion for teaching,” Jones Ford told AFROTECH™.

Jones Ford encourages families — especially parents — to follow her across social media, where she shares videos of her teaching strategies, math lessons, and tips for helping children build confidence in math and STEM.

She also highlights her family life as part of a cosplaying “Blerd” (Black nerd) family, proudly showcasing their unique brand of Black excellence and joy on Instagram at Ford Family Strong.

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Tennessee 4-star LB commit Brayden Rouse. Photo via @brayden_rouse8 on Instagram. Tennessee beat out Michigan, Texas, and Alabama for four-star linebacker Brayden Rouse on Tuesday night, which was a massive win for Josh Heupel and the Vols. Rouse committed to Tennessee in front of a packed auditorium at Kell High School in Marietta, GA. The […]

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Brayden Rouse

Tennessee 4-star LB commit Brayden Rouse. Photo via @brayden_rouse8 on Instagram.

Tennessee beat out Michigan, Texas, and Alabama for four-star linebacker Brayden Rouse on Tuesday night, which was a massive win for Josh Heupel and the Vols.

Rouse committed to Tennessee in front of a packed auditorium at Kell High School in Marietta, GA.

The 6-foot-2.5, 220-pound linebacker is ranked as the fourth-best linebacker in the 2026 recruiting cycle, according to 247Sports’ rankings. Tennessee is building something big in the linebacker room, as the Vols picked up a commitment from fifth-ranked linebacker TJ White just last week.

Rouse ranks as the No. 68 overall player in the nation and the No. 8 player from the state of Georgia in the 2026 class. He makes for Tennessee’s 19th overall commitment after the Vols landed three-star athlete Javonte Smith earlier in the day on Tuesday.

“Active and instinctive pursuing the football, will make plays sideline-to-sideline and evade blockers in space with ease,” 247Sports’ Hudson Standish wrote about Rouse in an evaluation. “Exceptional coverage defender to the point where he could offer flexibility as a potential overhang on Saturdays. Will routinely make highlight snags at the catch point on both sides of the ball, and has shown serious YAC ability for a player his size.”

Rouse is a big-time talent in the class. He lands as Tennessee’s highest-rated defensive commit and the Vols’ third highest-rated commit overall, behind five-star QB Faizon Brandon and five-star OT Gabriel Osenda.

More From RTI: Former Tennessee Football Wide Receiver is Already Back in the Transfer Portal

Want more of a look at what’s coming to Rocky Top? Check out some of the highlights from four-star linebacker Brayden Rouse here:


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Lynn Shimmin, Warren County Fair Board Highlights Upcoming Livestock Shows

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Lynn Shimmin, Warren County Fair Board Highlights Upcoming Livestock Shows

Notice of Non-Discrimination

Prairie Media Communications is committed to the principles of equal opportunity and strictly prohibits discrimination against any person on the basis of age, ancestry, citizenship status, color, creed, ethnicity, gender identity and expression, genetic information, marital status, mental or physical disability, national origin, race, religious affiliation, sex, sexual orientation, or veteran status in its activities, admissions, educational programs, and employment.

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'Terrifying experience'

Officials in Texas report at least 100 fatalities, including more than two dozen children, as catastrophic flash floods swept through Central Texas over the weekend. The once-in-a-century storm struck with indiscriminate force, leaving communities in mourning and triggering an ongoing search for closure. In the aftermath, RV parks were notably affected, with many trailers destroyed. […]

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'Terrifying experience'

Officials in Texas report at least 100 fatalities, including more than two dozen children, as catastrophic flash floods swept through Central Texas over the weekend.

The once-in-a-century storm struck with indiscriminate force, leaving communities in mourning and triggering an ongoing search for closure. In the aftermath, RV parks were notably affected, with many trailers destroyed. Survivors are now picking up the pieces of their lives.

IN RELATED NEWS | Remembering some of the lives lost in the Texas flood tragedy

One RV owner described the terrifying speed at which the waters rose: “17 years of combat, I’ve had my moments of being scared but it’s usually after the fact. This had my knees knocking on the way out. It came up so fast that it was such a strong current, trees are snapping, branches are snapping. Just a terrifying experience. I wouldn’t have gotten in that water to save my mother. It would be instant death.”

The damage at Riverside RV Park highlights the disaster’s impact, with trailers moved as far as 100 yards from their original locations — all part of the debris field along the Guadalupe River.

Another flood survivor expressed that the losses went beyond physical possessions: “It just sucks to see that it literally took maybe not even 10 [or] 15 minutes for all this to be like. I might of lost my life savings, but the people that saved my life — like my kids, like I still have them.”

“I am grateful,” he added. “That’s what’s keeping me. I look at little things that my kids wrote me for Father’s Day not that long ago, and honestly that’s been keeping me going.”

RELATED STORY | ‘It looks like a war zone’: Inside the search after the devastating Texas flood

As of Tuesday, at least 161 people are still believed to be missing, four days after the unprecedented flooding. Texas Governor Greg Abbott confirmed that this figure includes individuals reported missing in Kerr County, although no statewide total has been provided.

The devastating floods in central Texas have left families and communities in urgent need of support. Scripps News and the Scripps Howard Fund are partnering to provide critical relief to those impacted. Every dollar donated here will go directly to helping victims recover.

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Medford trap team's conference championship highlights eventful season

The 2025 Medford Trap Team were conference champions in Class 1A, Conference 7. (Photo courtesy Medford Tigers Trap Team) The Medford trap team had an eventful season this past spring, as it became conference champions, while competing at a new home location and adding a skeet team for the first time in program history. Reid […]

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Medford trap team's conference championship highlights eventful season








Medford Trap Team.jpg

The 2025 Medford Trap Team were conference champions in Class 1A, Conference 7. (Photo courtesy Medford Tigers Trap Team)


The Medford trap team had an eventful season this past spring, as it became conference champions, while competing at a new home location and adding a skeet team for the first time in program history.







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Reid Wildgrube finished 2nd in the conference with a season average of 24.40. (Photo courtesy Medford Tigers Trap Team)








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The Medford Trap Shooting Team competes in a tournament at the Morristown Gun Club. (Photo courtesy Medford Tigers Trap Team)








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Medford had a skeet shooting team this season for the first time in program history. (Photo courtesy Medford Tigers Trap Team)








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Mason Degrood (left) was Medford’s lone senior on the team this season. (Photo courtesy Medford Tigers Trap Team)


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