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University of Arkansas at Fort Smith to hold mutiple summer band, athletics camps

FORT SMITH — The University of Arkansas at Fort Smith is hosting various sports and music camps for multiple age groups this summer. The university during June, July and August will have opportunities for students from kindergarten to 12th grade to participate in athletics and music-focused camps including sessions led by faculty, staff and coaches, […]

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FORT SMITH — The University of Arkansas at Fort Smith is hosting various sports and music camps for multiple age groups this summer.

The university during June, July and August will have opportunities for students from kindergarten to 12th grade to participate in athletics and music-focused camps including sessions led by faculty, staff and coaches, according to the university’s website.

Camp types include volleyball, band, and jazz and rock. Camp registration links can be found on the university’s website.

All youth camps are open to boys and girls, the website states. The camps vary in price, and discounts for university faculty and staff and military veterans may be available.

“The camp is designed around the introduction and development of young kids who like to play basketball,” the school’s head men’s basketball coach Zane Gibson said about the men’s basketball camps.

There will be five separate boys basketball camps for grades kindergarten to eighth grade, all priced at $69, according to the website.

Campers will learn the basics of dribbling, passing, shooting and defense and compete in games of one-on-one, three-on-three and five-on-five. Competition winners will receive prizes.

Campers will have fun while learning, Gibson said. “Everything we will do will be basketball oriented with a splash of fun involved,” he said.

Numbers have grown over the past two years of camps and youth who attended have learned how to better their skills, Gibson said. He said the camp gives the university another avenue to allow the community to come to the campus to see how beautiful it is and experience the great things staff would love for River Valley residents to take interest in.

All boys basketball camps will be 9 a.m. to noon and held on the following dates: June 9 to 11; June 16 to 18; July 7 to 9; July 14 to 16; and July 21 to 23.

“I hope our campers take away that the game of basketball is fun,” Gibson said.

Camp counselors will include UAFS men’s basketball players, whom campers can watch play during basketball season, Gibson said.

The university’s website states it will have three types of volleyball camps: Positional, Little Lions and College Prospect.

The Positional camp for sixth- to 12th-graders will be broken into position-specific sessions over the three days of June 2-4, according to the website. Campers can receive instruction on attacking and blocking June 2; setting on June 3; and serving, passing and playing defense June 4. The camp will be held 4-6 p.m. all three days and sessions are $54.

Campers can receive a discount if they register for multiple sessions in the same transaction — $2o off for two sessions and $30 off for all three, the website states.

The Little Lions camp for kindergartners to sixth graders will be 1-3 p.m. each day June 9-11. Campers will be introduced to volleyball and learn its fundamentals. The cost is $64.

The volleyball College Prospect camp June 11-13 will be for seventh- to 12th-graders interested in playing at the college level, the website states. Campers will have an option to stay overnight in the college dorms or attend for the day.

The price for overnight campers will be $291.50 for two nights and four meals. The price for day campers will be $238.50; day campers will receive two meals.

There will be two types of girls basketball camps, according to the website. There will be separate team camps for teams with players in ninth to 12th grades held June 5-6, and June 16-17 in which teams will compete in scheduled games.

Cost per game will be $106 for teams and times for the camps will vary by game schedule, the website states.

Two separate elite camps for ninth to 12th grades will be held June 14 and Aug. 9, and will be from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Campers will receive collegiate-level basketball instruction from college coaches and players, the website states. The elite camps cost $54 to attend.

Instruction for campers includes team defensive and offensive concepts, along with individual skill development.

The university will also hold a band camp and a jazz and rock camp.

A band camp for sixth- to eighth-graders will be June 9-13 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. All instruction will be led by UAFS music faculty and guest instructors, according to the website. The band camp’s final concert June 13 will be at 6 p.m. in Breedlove Auditorium. Cost is $185 per student.

The jazz and rock camp for eighth- to 12th-graders will be June 17-20 from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. According to the website, campers will play in jazz, pop and Latin combinations and big bands. Campers will also take improvisation and songwriting classes and participate in “The Real World” jazz workshop. The jazz and rock camp’s final concert June 20 will be at 6 p.m. in Breedlove Auditorium. Cost to attend is $165 per camper.

Athletics camps will be at the Stubblefield Center at 5600 Kinkead Ave.; band camps will be at Breedlove Auditorium at 5210 Grand Ave.

Benjamin Weaver (center) shoots a free throw as fellow campers cheer during the 2024 youth basketball camp inside the Stubblefield Center on the UAFS campus in Fort Smith.  Visit rivervalleydemocratgazette.com/photo for today's photo gallery. (File Photo/River Valley Democrat-Gazette-Hank Layton)
Benjamin Weaver (center) shoots a free throw as fellow campers cheer during the 2024 youth basketball camp inside the Stubblefield Center on the UAFS campus in Fort Smith. Visit rivervalleydemocratgazette.com/photo for today’s photo gallery. (File Photo/River Valley Democrat-Gazette-Hank Layton)

Camp types, costs and datesBand camp for grades 6-12 $185 June 9-13Jazz and Rock band camp for grades 8-12 $165 June 17-20Boys basketball for grades K-8 $69 June 9-11 June 16-18 July 7-9 July 14-16 July 21-23Volleyball College Prospect camp for grades 7-12 $291.50 for overnight camper OR $238.50 for day camper June 11-13Volleyball Little Lions camp for grades K-6 $64 June 9 to 11Volleyball Positional camps for grades 6-12 $54 per session June 2-4Girls basketball team camp for grades 9-12 $106 per game June 5-6 June 16-17Girls basketball elite camp for grades 9-12 $54 June 14 August 9Source: UAFS website



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Philadelphia Girls Middle School Lacrosse Showcase highlights talent, teamwork, and rising stars

Philadelphia Girls Middle School Lacrosse Showcase highlights talent, teamwork, and rising stars – PhillyLacrosse.com CLOSE Link 1

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New Art Exhibit Reimagines Warren through youth and adult perspectives | News, Sports, Jobs

Photo submitted to the Times Observer Shown are some of the artists participating in the Lens to Canvas: Warren Reimagined exhibit that opens Friday at the Liberty Street Marketplace. From Lens to Canvas: Warren Reimagined will debut Friday, June 6, at Liberty Street Marketplace, blending photography and painting in a heartfelt tribute to the region’s […]

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Photo submitted to the Times Observer
Shown are some of the artists participating in the Lens to Canvas: Warren Reimagined exhibit that opens Friday at the Liberty Street Marketplace.

From Lens to Canvas: Warren Reimagined will debut Friday, June 6, at Liberty Street Marketplace, blending photography and painting in a heartfelt tribute to the region’s landscapes, landmarks, and everyday life.

Created by artists from Kimberly Slocum’s Creekside Art Studios, the exhibit features original paintings by both youth and adult students. Each work is inspired by photographs originally captured and shared on social media by the Warren County Visitors Bureau. The artists, some new to painting and others more experienced, selected images that personally resonated with them–transforming them into vivid, one-of-a-kind works of art.

“When Kim approached us a while back asking if her students could use our photos as inspiration, we were honored and excited at the opportunity,” said Casey Ferry, executive director of the WCVB. “Seeing an artist begin with something from our perspective and reimagine it through their unique vision is exciting. I found it very interesting to see the variety of photos selected.”

Opening night for the exhibition coincides with Warren’s First Friday Art Walk. The public is invited to the Liberty Street Lunch from 5 to 8 p.m. to explore the art on display at Creekside Gallery, meet the artists, enjoy local food, and celebrate the creative energy that continues to flourish in downtown Warren.

The full From Lens to Canvas exhibit will remain on view throughout June at the Liberty Street Marketplace. In July, a special rotating series called Warren Through Our Eyes–featuring three selected works–will be displayed monthly at the Warren County Visitors Bureau, giving locals and visitors alike the opportunity to enjoy the artwork throughout the summer.

Slocum, owner and instructor at Creekside Art Studios, emphasized how deeply the collaboration reflects the spirit of the Warren community.

“The constant barrage of beautiful photographs from the Warren County Visitors Bureau is what sparked the idea of doing paintings. The WCVB staff do a remarkable job of capturing Warren County. And then it makes it even easier to have somebody like Casey Ferry as the director who’s open to the community and ideas that foster events like this,” she said. “Then we got a connector likeMichelle Peterson who connected me with First Friday and Liberty Street Marketplace and Liberty Street Lunch. It’s this type of connection with the community that makes Warren County great.”

According to Slocum, the project was about more than painting–it was a learning experience that deepened the artists’ relationships with their home.

“What makes this project really special is how much the artists have learned throughout the entire experience. It wasn’t just about painting a picture,” she said. “They spent time looking through local photography, choosing scenes that meant something to them, and in the process, they connected more deeply with the place they live. They also worked on technical painting skills, learned to look at things creatively, and discovered what goes into presenting their work in a professional way. I think a lot of them were surprised by how much is involved, and they’ve all really stepped up.”

The show includes work from about 17 to 18 artists, with a mix of experience levels–from first-time painters to more seasoned artists who have studied with Slocum for years. Visitors will also be able to purchase notecards featuring the artwork, printed by Moments in Time Studio.

“This has been a true community collaboration,” Slocum added. “The Warren County Visitors Bureau helped us source the photography. Liberty Street Marketplace offered their space. Liberty Street Lunch is staying open for the reception. And Moments in Time Studio helped us print the artists’ note cards. Being able to tie it all into Warren’s First Friday event just brought everything together. It feels like a celebration of art, community, and local pride.”

For more information, contact Casey Ferry at the Warren County Visitors Bureau at 814-726-1222 or email director@wcvb.net. Slocum can be reached at 814-730-2490.



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Youth Soccer Association headquarters proposed for Elgin site

An abandoned mobile home subdivision in Elgin will become the headquarters for the Illinois Youth Soccer Association under plans submitted to the city. Midwest Sports Center received the Elgin Planning and Zoning Commission’s endorsement for a proposal that calls for a 17,661-square-foot building and a 78-foot-tall, 118,000-square-foot dome covering one of two soccer fields. Located […]

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An abandoned mobile home subdivision in Elgin will become the headquarters for the Illinois Youth Soccer Association under plans submitted to the city.

Midwest Sports Center received the Elgin Planning and Zoning Commission’s endorsement for a proposal that calls for a 17,661-square-foot building and a 78-foot-tall, 118,000-square-foot dome covering one of two soccer fields.

Located at 909 S. McLean Blvd., the campus also would have a 15,000-square-foot physical therapy office, a concession area and gathering spaces, Elgin senior planner Damir Latinovic told the commission. Eventually, the concession area would be converted into a restaurant with alcohol service.

The 9.7-acre property is between College Green Drive on the north and Torrey Pines Drive on the south. An abandoned single-family home and 25 mobile homes fill the west side and there’s wooded open space to the east, Latinovic said.

Midwest Sports Center is working with the city to meet the required number of parking spots, which might involve working with a neighboring property owner to provide additional parking space, he said.

The company is also seeking a code variance on the number of trees it needs to plant. Under city ordinances, developers must replace a certain percentage of trees being removed, in this case either by planting 320 new trees or paying a $156,954 fee, Latinovic said.

Midwest Sports Center is asking the city to waive the requirement and the fee, he said.

The property is “very tight for what they need. As a result, they have maxed out where they could be putting up trees,” Latinovic said.

Commissioner Karin Jones said the fee was a lot of money for a nonprofit youth sports league to have to pay. She would rather see the association use that money to buy equipment benefiting its members than purchasing replacement trees.

Jennifer Bueche spoke in support of the plan. She grew up in the single-family home on the property and said a majority of the trees being removed are not in good shape.

“I would like to be on record that I am in support of this project. I think it’s a very exciting opportunity for Elgin,” Bueche said. “Elgin used to have the slogan, ‘The City to Watch.’ I think this will bring a lot of excitement and additional business to our side of Elgin.”

The association is a nonprofit that plans on holding tournaments and working with the city of Elgin on creating more recreational opportunities, Latinovic said.

Gloria Casas is a freelance reporter for The Courier-News.



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MHS FCA group recognizes seniors Verbel and Walker

By jgoodman@metteradvertiser.com | on June 03, 2025 Seniors Amiya Walker and Jordan Verbel Metter High School launched an Athlete Leadership Huddle this year through Coastal Plains FCA. The participating athletes went through E3 Discipleship Training and Bible Studies to encourage them to become disciples who make disciples. On their […]

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Seniors Amiya Walker and Jordan Verbel

Seniors Amiya Walker and Jordan Verbel

Metter High School launched an Athlete Leadership Huddle this year through Coastal Plains FCA.

The participating athletes went through E3 Discipleship Training and Bible Studies to encourage them to become disciples who make disciples.

On their Club Days, they led Bible Study for roughly 125 of their peers in small groups.

To close out the year, the group recognized its two seniors, MHS Valedictorian Jordan Verbel and Amiya Walker, for their exemplary leadership on and off the field.



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Connecticut town’s schools are investigated for transgender athlete policies

A federal appeals court in 2022 dismissed a challenge to Connecticut’s policy. It was later revived and the case is still pending. It could be ready for a trial in 2026. Days after taking office for his second term, Trump signed an executive order titled ” Keeping Men Out of Women’s Sports,” which states that […]

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A federal appeals court in 2022 dismissed a challenge to Connecticut’s policy. It was later revived and the case is still pending. It could be ready for a trial in 2026.

Days after taking office for his second term, Trump signed an executive order titled ” Keeping Men Out of Women’s Sports,” which states that all funds from educational programs ”that deprive women and girls of fair athletic opportunities, which results in the endangerment, humiliation, and silencing of women and girls and deprives them of privacy,” will be rescinded.

In his post, Demetriades asked state officials to help hold the town harmless from liability and intervene if Cromwell is sued by the Department of Justice.

In March, the Department of Education opened an investigation into Portland Public Schools, Oregon’s largest school district, over allowing a transgender athlete to compete on a high school girls’ track-and-field team.



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Connecticut town’s schools are investigated for transgender athlete policies

CROMWELL, Conn. (AP) — A school system in Connecticut is under investigation by the Trump administration over its transgender athletic… CROMWELL, Conn. (AP) — A school system in Connecticut is under investigation by the Trump administration over its transgender athletic policy, the U.S. Department of Education confirmed Tuesday, adding a new flashpoint in the national […]

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CROMWELL, Conn. (AP) — A school system in Connecticut is under investigation by the Trump administration over its transgender athletic…

CROMWELL, Conn. (AP) — A school system in Connecticut is under investigation by the Trump administration over its transgender athletic policy, the U.S. Department of Education confirmed Tuesday, adding a new flashpoint in the national debate over trans girls’ participation in youth sports.

James Demetriades, the mayor of Cromwell, said the town’s school system could lose nearly $1 million in federal funding if the department determines it’s in violation of Title IX, the federal civil rights law that forbids discrimination based on sex in education programs or activities that receive federal assistance.

The mayor, a Democrat, said Monday that the school district would be ineligible for the state’s athletic conference if it didn’t allow student athletes to compete on sex-segregated sports teams consistent with their gender identity. He said the district is currently following “all applicable state and federal law as well as the rules for the Connecticut Interscholastic Athletic Conference.”

“We don’t know why Cromwell was targeted for this action,” Demetriades said in a statement on Facebook. He said the investigation also includes restroom and locker room usage.

The head of the U.S. Education Department’s Office for Civil Rights, Craig Trainor, said in a statement that the investigation was looking at whether the district’s policies were “depriving girls and young women of equal athletic opportunities.”

U.S. Secretary of Education Linda McMahon added that, “This Administration will fight on every front to protect women’s and girls’ sports.”

A community of more than 14,000, Cromwell is about 20 minutes south of the capital, Hartford. A rally in support of transgender youth was planned Tuesday evening at Cromwell High School.

In 2019, during President Donald Trump’s first term, the Office for Civil Rights launched an investigation into Connecticut’s policy that allows transgender high school athletes to compete as the gender with which they identify. It followed a complaint filed by the families of three girls, who said they were discriminated against by having to compete in track events against two athletes who were identified as male at birth, including one at Cromwell High School.

A federal appeals court in 2022 dismissed a challenge to Connecticut’s policy. It was later revived and the case is still pending. It could be ready for a trial in 2026.

Days after taking office for his second term, Trump signed an executive order titled “ Keeping Men Out of Women’s Sports,” which states that all funds from educational programs “that deprive women and girls of fair athletic opportunities, which results in the endangerment, humiliation, and silencing of women and girls and deprives them of privacy,” will be rescinded.

In his post, Demetriades asked state officials to help hold the town harmless from liability and intervene if Cromwell is sued by the Department of Justice.

In March, the Department of Education opened an investigation into Portland Public Schools, Oregon’s largest school district, over allowing a transgender athlete to compete on a high school girls’ track-and-field team.

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