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Lancer three pointers benefit Habitat

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Lancer three pointers benefit Habitat

Published 4:40 pm Tuesday, December 2, 2025

For the second straight year, three-pointers made by Longwood men’s and women’s basketball have a direct community impact.

After raising more than $1,000 last year for local youth sports, Longwood athletics and State Farm Agent Edgar Jones will partner up again for the 3 for 3 Challenge.

As part of the partnership, Jones will donate $3 for every three-pointer made by the Longwood men’s and women’s basketball teams this coming season, with the proceeds going to Habitat for Humanity.

“We are thrilled to work with Edgar Jones and State Farm again to support the local community after such a successful year last year,” said Longwood Deputy Athletic Director for External Operations Austin Shaver. “Habitat for Humanity has a tremendous impact in creating affordable homeownership opportunities in the region, and the chance to make an impact here is part of our mission at Longwood. We appreciate Edgar and his support for Longwood and the greater Farmville community through this initiative.”

Piedmont Habitat for Humanity is a local non-profit organization that is dedicated to creating affordable homeownership opportunities across the counties of Prince Edward, Buckingham, Cumberland, Charlotte, Nelson and Nottoway, ensuring that families continue to experience the positive benefits of safe, decent, affordable housing.

Locally, the Piedmont Habitat for Humanity has built or repaired more than 80 homes through a variety of community partnerships over the past 35 years.

“I am very excited about another year of supporting Longwood basketball as well as another important organization in the Farmville community,” Jones said. “Habitat for Humanity has had such a presence in our area for many years and has done so much good work for so many families that as a State Farm agent this seems like a perfect match. As a State Farm agent, the State Farm Foundation will also be matching every dollar that is donated during the 3 for 3 Challenge to our local Habitat for Humanity which will allow this partnership to have more of an impact. I am looking forward to a great season. Go Lancers!”

Lancer basketball is in the midst of its third season at the Joan Perry Brock Center, and both teams were selected in the top three of the Big South Preseason Poll — men ranked third and women ranked second. The Lancer men have won a pair of conference titles in the past four seasons, and the Lancer women are coming off a trip to the Big South Championship game.

Single-game tickets are on sale now and are available at longwoodlancers.com/tickets.



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Children’s day event coming to area | News, Sports, Jobs

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CHILDREN’S DAY EVENT SET — At left, James Baber, left, president of the Martin Luther King Association in Steubenville, along with Bobbyjon Bauman, executive director of the Sycamore Youth Center, have teamed to bring a special Youth and Children’s Day event to the Steubenville area on Jan. 17. At right, Bauman joins the day’s guest speaker, Nickayla Wiggins, a news achor and reporter with WTOV-TV.
— Contributed

STEUBENVILLE — The Sycamore Youth Center, in partnership with the Martin Luther King Association of Steubenville, will host a Youth and Children’s Day from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Jan. 17 at the Sycamore center.

The MLK Association is run under the leadership of its president, James Baber.

Activities have been designed to inspire and encourage youth throughout the area, offering music, faith, service and positive role models, according to Bobbyjon Bauman, executive director of Sycamore.

The Youth and Children’s Day will be open to the public, with programming geared toward school-aged children. Children are welcome to participate in the various offerings held throughout the day.

A special highlight of the event will be guest speaker Nickayla Wiggins, a weekend news anchor and reporter with WTOV-TV. Wiggins said she is excited for the opportunity to speak to the young people of Steubenville, and looks forward to sharing her personal story of faith, as well as her career journey in broadcast journalism.

Wiggins’ message will touch on King’s influence in her life and on her professional path, as well.

Bauman stated Wiggins joined WTOV after working as a producer at WJW-TV and WOIO-TV in Cleveland. A graduate of Cleveland State University, she gained national media experience through internships with the “Today Show” and with CNN’s “Don Lemon Tonight.”

Wiggins is known for her community involvement, including volunteering with Big Brothers Big Sisters of America.

She is a graduate of Riverside High School in Painesville.

The program will feature youth entertainment and performances from 11 a.m. to noon, along with Wiggins’ message.

Performers will include Elisha Fletcher, the winner of Valley’s Got Talent 2014; Gene “Minister of Truth” Shelby, a hip-hop artist from Pittsburgh; Lawrence Lewis Jr., a hip-hop artist from Steubenville; the Mighty Disciples; My Team; and the Next Level Community Choir.

A free luncheon will be provided by the Sycamore Youth Center from noon to 1 p.m. The afternoon will conclude with a community service project led by the staff at the Sycamore Youth Center from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. Participants will assemble food bags for children in need throughout the Steubenville area.

“The goal of Youth and Children’s Day is to uplift young people and show them that they are valued and have a purpose,” Bauman said. “By combining faith, music, service and encouragement, we hope this event leaves a lasting impact on the lives of our children.”

Programming will be geared toward children in kindergarten through 12th grade, although everyone in the community is welcome to attend, Bauman concluded.





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Club sports are reshaping youth athletics—at what cost?

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Club sports are reshaping youth athletics—at what cost?

It was one of Shayna Seymour’s favorite stories to share in 2025

TODAY’S YOUTH SPORTS WORLD. IN THE WORLD OF YOUTH SPORTS, A NEW PLAYBOOK IS BEING WRITTEN. A LANDSCAPE HAS CHANGED DRAMATICALLY FROM WHEN I WAS A KID. I FEEL LIKE WE’RE AT A DIFFERENT YOUTH SPORT EVERY NIGHT OF THE WEEK. BY SOME ESTIMATES, YOUTH SPORTS BRINGS IN $20 BILLION A YEAR IN ECONOMIC ACTIVITY IN THE UNITED STATES, AND CLUB SPORTS HAVE HAD A BIG HAND IN CHANGING THE GAME. THERE’S HUNDREDS UPON HUNDREDS OF ORGANIZATIONS AND TEAMS. IT’S BEEN A BIG TIME THIRST FOR PEOPLE. I THINK ACROSS SO MANY SPORTS. CLUB TEAMS OFFER YEAR ROUND TRAINING. I JUST LIKE, TRY TO LIKE KEEP GETTING BETTER EVERY DAY AT PRACTICES, AT GAMES, ELITE COMPETITION. WE PLAY GOOD TEAMS AND WE GET GOOD COMPETITION. AND FOR SOME, A PATHWAY TO COLLEGE. THE OPPORTUNITIES TO TO BE ABLE TO PLAY COLLEGE BASKETBALL FOR FREE IS ABSOLUTELY AMAZING. UNLIKE MANY TOWN IN SCHOOL SPONSORED PROGRAMS, CLUB SPORTS GO BEYOND SEASONS, GIVING ATHLETES A CHANCE TO FACE TOP TALENT ALL YEAR ROUND, SAYS EIGHTH GRADER MADDIE ABA. FOR A TOWN TEAM LIKE WE ONLY HAVE ONE GAME A WEEKEND, BUT FOR CLUB, WE HAVE A TOURNAMENT EVERY WEEKEND, SO I’LL BE PLAYING LIKE FOUR GAMES A WEEK INSTEAD OF JUST ONE CLUB TEAMS ARE FORMED BASED ON TALENT, SKILL AND EXPERIENCE FOR ATHLETES LIKE EIGHTH GRADER LANEY LEE, THE BENEFITS ARE CLEAR I GET TO SHOOT MORE, DRIBBLE MORE, AND I JUST GET TO PLAY WITH MORE GIRLS WHO LIKE, UNDERSTAND AND LOVE THE GAME AS MUCH AS I DO. AND FOR THE MANY PARENTS WHO SHUTTLE THEIR KIDS TO AND FROM CLUB PRACTICES AND GAMES, OFTEN HOURS AWAY, IT FEELS LIKE A SECOND JOB, BUT I WOULDN’T CHANGE THE EXPERIENCE AT ALL. IT CAN BE THE HOPE OF COLLEGE RECRUITMENT OPPORTUNITIES OR MORE SIMPLY, FOR THEIR CHILD JUST TO BE A PLAYER IN THE GAME. DO YOU FEEL LIKE THERE’S PRESSURE TO PLAY CLUB SPORTS? I THINK THERE’S A LITTLE OF THAT. ONE ORGANIZATION AT THE HEART OF THIS MOVEMENT IS MIDDLESEX MAGIC, A YOUTH BASKETBALL CLUB BASED IN WELLESLEY. FOUNDED IN 1993, THE CLUB IS NOW LED BY FORMER CELTICS ASSISTANT BASKETBALL COACH MICHAEL CROTTY JR, WHO TOOK OVER AFTER HIS FATHER’S PASSING. THE MAGIC HAS EVOLVED QUITE A BIT, STARTING WITH TWO TEAMS, MIDDLESEX MAGIC HAS GROWN TO MORE THAN 70 ACROSS ALL LEVELS AND AGE GROUPS. MORE THAN 600 MAGIC PLAYERS HAVE GONE ON TO COMPETE AT THE COLLEGIATE LEVEL. TO BE ABLE TO HELP ONE KID BECOME A COLLEGE ATHLETE EVERY TIME IT HAPPENS, THE JOY I GET IS SO REAL. GOOD MOVE ALEX. ATHLETES LIKE 19 YEAR OLD ALEX WILKINS HAVE THE MAGIC SPIRIT. HE PLAYS ON MAGIC’S SPONSORED ELITE UNDER ARMOR TEAM. WHAT IS IT THAT YOU LOVE ABOUT BASKETBALL? BASKETBALL HAS BEEN AMAZING TO ME. IT’S GOTTEN ME TO SCHOOL FOR FREE, SO IT MEANS A LOT TO ME FOR SURE. AT SIX FIVE, WILKINS EARNED 25 COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIP OFFERS. YUP, 25. LET ME SEE WHAT YOU GOT. LET ME SEE. HE’S HEADED TO FURMAN UNIVERSITY, WHOSE BASKETBALL PROGRAM COMPETES AT THE DIVISION ONE LEVEL. MOM AND DAD MADE A LOT OF SACRIFICES FOR ME, SO I’M EXCITED THAT I’M. I’M ABLE TO GIVE BACK. ALEX CREDITS HIS FAMILY FIRST FOR HIS SUCCESS, BUT ALSO THE OPPORTUNITIES PROVIDED BY CLUB SPORTS, LARGELY MIDDLESEX MAGIC. IT’S OPEN DOORS THAT I NEVER THOUGHT WOULD OPEN. IF I’M BEING TOLD I SHOULD CHANGE MY LIFE. I’VE MET SOME SOME REALLY GREAT PEOPLE WATCH FILM. WE HAVE WE HAVE SCOUT REPORTS. WE’RE ALWAYS TOGETHER. WE’RE ALWAYS EATING TOGETHER. DO YOU THINK CLUB SPORTS ARE NECESSARY TO PLAY AT THE COLLEGIATE LEVEL? YES, MA’AM. I PLAYED IN FRONT OF MAYBE 30 COACHES A GAME THIS SUMMER. KARATE KNOWS A LOT OF PEOPLE. HE’S BUILT THOSE RELATIONSHIPS OVER YEARS. IF YOU THINK YOU’RE A COLLEGIATE ATHLETE, YOU SHOULD DEFINITELY BE PLAYING FOR A CLUB. BUT CLUB SPORTS AREN’T CHEAP, AND MOST FAMILIES HAVE TO PAY TO PLAY. INVESTING THOUSANDS A YEAR IN TRAVEL, TRAINING AND EQUIPMENT. THE 2022 ASPEN INSTITUTE STATE OF PLAY REPORT SAYS PARENTS OF KIDS IN ELITE CLUB PROGRAMS OFTEN SPEND $12,000 OR MORE PER YEAR, AND FOR EVERY SUCCESS STORY, LIKE ALEX, MANY FAMILIES INVEST BIG BUCKS IN ENDLESS TIME INTO CLUB SPORTS FOR ATHLETES WHO MAY NEVER PLAY AT THE NEXT LEVEL. WHY? SO WE HAVE THOSE INSPIRATIONS LIKE OUR KIDS ARE GOING TO GO PRO, BUT THEN WE COME TO A REALIZATION THAT, YOU KNOW, THAT’S NOT GOING TO HAPPEN AS LONG AS THEY FEEL COMFORTABLE PLAYING AND THEY BUILD THAT CONFIDENCE IN THEMSELVES. THAT’S WHAT WE LOOK FOR. I’M HAVING A BLAST. I TALK TO PARENTS THAT I KNOW WHOSE KIDS ARE OUT OF COLLEGE AND THEY SAY, HEY, YOU KNOW WHEN YOU’RE IN IT, SOMETIMES, YOU KNOW, YOU CAN FEEL LIKE IT’S A LITTLE OVERWHELMING. BUT I’M THINKING ABOUT, YOU KNOW, 3 OR 4 YEARS FROM NOW, I DON’T KNOW WHAT I’M GOING TO DO ON WEEKENDS. GIVEN THE BILLIONS SPENT ON THESE PROGRAMS, THEY’RE LIKELY HERE TO STAY. STILL, A GROWING NUMBER OF PEOPLE AND ORGANIZATIONS ARE SEEKING ALTERNATIVES. WHAT IS BEING SOLD RIGHT NOW IS THAT THE ONLY WAY FOR MY KID TO PARTICIPATE IN SPORTS IS TO REALLY DEEPLY INVEST IN ONE SPORT, PICK THE CLUB SPORT, PICK THE THE SPECIALTY TRAINING, WHATEVER IT MIGHT BE. AND ROBERT AND I BOTH CHALLENGE THAT AS WHAT IS REAL FOR KIDS IN TERMS OF THEIR DEVELOPMENT. AND THAT CONTINUES TO BE A HUGE CONVERSATION IN THE YOUTH SPORTS WORLD. ALSO, PRIVATE EQUITY IS IN THE GAME. BUYING TEAMS AND FACILITIES, WHICH COULD BRING BETTER RESOURCES, BUT ALSO HIGHER COSTS TO FAMILIES AN

Club sports are reshaping youth athletics—at what cost?

It was one of Shayna Seymour’s favorite stories to share in 2025

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Updated: 7:50 PM EST Dec 29, 2025

Editorial Standards

It was one of Shayna Seymour’s favorite stories of 2025: an in-depth look at the youth sports phenomenon, including the influence of private, club sports. By some estimates, youth sports brings in $20 billion a year in economic activity in the United States, and private club sports have had a big hand in changing the game.

It was one of Shayna Seymour’s favorite stories of 2025: an in-depth look at the youth sports phenomenon, including the influence of private, club sports.

By some estimates, youth sports brings in $20 billion a year in economic activity in the United States, and private club sports have had a big hand in changing the game.



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Letter: Kids’ sports too serious for the wrong reasons

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EP 14U softball, MHR football power youth sports in area | Sports

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As club teams continue to grow in popularity across youth sports in recent years, house leagues at the community level for baseball and softball are working as hard as ever to remain relevant.

So, when a neighborhood rallies around a huge storyline at the community level, it can’t help but turn heads.



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Wisconsin should have more Winter Olympians. How can we make it happen?

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Dec. 30, 2025, 5:24 a.m. CT



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Toxic Legacy: How Lead in Schools Is Silently Harming Black Kids

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By Quintessa Williams

Dionna Brown was two weeks shy of her 15th birthday when her world turned upside-down. An outstanding public high school student in Flint, Michigan, with a report card most of her peers would envy, she suddenly began to struggle in the classroom for no obvious reason. 

“I was in AP and honors classes — straight-A student,” she recalls. “Then all of a sudden, I couldn’t remember things. I couldn’t concentrate.” 

Rushed to the hospital, doctors pinpointed the problem: tests revealed elevated levels of lead, a potent neurotoxin, in Brown’s blood. In high enough concentrations, lead can cause permanent brain damage, lower IQ, learning disabilities — and even death. 

Without knowing it, Brown became one of the many young victims of the Flint water crisis. But her story is being repeated in cities across the country.

For generations, America’s crumbling infrastructure has quietly poisoned its most vulnerable populations. From peeling paint in public housing to unsafe water pipes beneath city streets, lead has lingered long before and after its federal ban in 1978. 

But while the government has taken action against lead exposure in homes, experts say its impact in our schools remains overlooked.

In January, the issue made headlines again when a child attending a Milwaukee public school tested positive for elevated lead blood levels. The discovery triggered emergency inspections and forced at least four other schools in the district to close temporarily. 

Subsequent data found that children in cities like Cleveland, Detroit, Philadelphia, Baltimore, and Chicago also face disproportionately high levels of lead exposure in schools. Cleveland topped the list, with nearly 9% of children under the age of six showing signs of elevated lead levels in their blood. 

“Once a child is exposed to lead, the impacts are irreversible,” says Dr. Denae King, Associate Director of the Bullard Center for Environmental and Climate Justice at Texas Southern University. “There’s not a lot you can do to undo that damage — and it’s still happening.”

These cities share more than aging infrastructure: they also serve large Black K-12 student populations, often in racially segregated neighborhoods. And even Flint, whose water crisis made national news, still hasn’t fully established safe drinking water for its children.

While Milwaukee’s crisis may feel like the beginning for some, the poisoning of Black communities by lead — especially in schools — began long before 2025.

Today, Brown, now the National Youth Director of Young, Gifted, & Green, a non-profit organization, has spent years fighting for environmental justice. But what still haunts her the most is how little has changed.

“That was over a decade ago,” she says. “And we’re still here. Kids are still being poisoned in our schools and communities.”

Schools Built to Fail?

Nationwide, more than 38% of public K-12 schools were built before 1970, well before the government banned the use of lead-based paint. Many of the schools were built to serve Black students in underfunded, segregated neighborhoods, and these aging buildings often contain lead service lines, contaminating the water that flows into cafeteria faucets and hallway water fountains. 

According to a 2022 study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Black children face higher levels of early lead exposure. The report found that exposure was linked to significantly lower standardized test scores in fourth-grade reading and math compared to their white peers.

“Most of the Black kids we’re talking about attend schools built before the ban,” King says. “That means many of them are still walking into buildings that are not only failing structurally, but failing them academically, too.”

The Educational Cost 

King explains that the root of the lead crisis in schools often begins underground, with lead service lines — city-owned pipes that deliver water from municipal systems to homes, businesses, and schools. 

“Most cities still have lead service lines,” she says. “So it’s no surprise students are being exposed. She adds that even if a school updates its internal plumbing, “students remain at risk” if city pipes aren’t upgraded. 

Once a child is exposed to lead, the impacts are irreversible,” says Dr. Denae King, Associate Director of the Bullard Center for Environmental and Climate Justice at Texas Southern University.

Dr. Denae king, associate director of the Bullard Center for Environmental and Climate Justice

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, even low levels of lead exposure in children can cause irreversible damage, including reduced IQ, learning disabilities, developmental delays, and behavioral problems. 

“The data is very consistent when we think about learning and cognitive ability with lead exposure in children ages zero to six,” King adds. “By the time you get to first or third grade, you start to see the results of that early exposure.”

Just as striking as the exposure itself is the uneven response. 

In wealthier districts, King says, active parent-teacher organizations (PTOs), can quickly raise money for water filtration systems. Unfortunately, that’s not the case in predominantly Black or low-income communities, where PTOs and other resources are underfunded or absent altogether. 

Who Should Be Held Accountable?

Cleveland, Ohio, currently leads the nation in childhood lead exposure, with more than 8% of children younger than age 6 testing positive for elevated blood lead levels. The Cleveland Metropolitan School District (CMSD) serves a student population that is 64% Black.

When asked about lead in students’ blood, CMSD told Word In Black they’re “concerned” about the health hazard and will “continue to strongly support the work done by the City of Cleveland and the Lead Safe Coalition to identify and remediate lead in our neighborhoods.”

While the school district did not directly address the problem, Dr. David Margolius, the city’s director of public health, says school systems aren’t entirely to blame.

“This is the fault of the generations of disinvestment in housing and public infrastructure in poor communities — which leads to exposure in the first place,” he says. 

We need reparations — full stop. We need healing, investment, and policy change that will center our survival.

Dionna Brown, National Youth Director of Young, Gifted, & Green

However, both King and Brown say the problem is nuanced.  

“There are different levels of accountability that include the municipality and homeowners,” King says. “But on the school side, they are responsible for ensuring their campuses are safe. You send your child to school expecting they’ll be protected, not poisoned.”

She also adds that parents are often left in the dark.

“Many parents have shared that they are concerned that their children are not learning at the same level as other students in their classes,” she says. “And I am surprised that schools don’t do a better job of educating parents about the risk of lead exposure and that they don’t provide wraparound services once a child has been exposed.”

Brown agrees: “Schools still have a responsibility. Kids spend 8-plus hours in school buildings every day.”

Moreover, federal programs intended to address the crisis have faltered. While the Biden administration’s Infrastructure and Jobs Act was designed to fund the replacement of lead service lines, access to the resources remains inconsistent across cities, often leaving underfunded and de facto segregated school districts behind.

“There’s no agency that owns the problem,” Margolius adds. “There’s no one taking ownership for how to fix this at the federal level. That’s the real issue.”

Making matters worse, the CDC recently laid off its entire childhood lead poisoning prevention staff, shifting responsibility to the newly formed Administration for a Healthy America under Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Experts are concerned about whether the federal government is prepared to meet a crisis of this scale. 

Communities as First Responders

Houston offers a glimpse of what’s possible. There, the Bullard Center and community groups are training parents and neighborhood leaders to identify lead hazards and demand answers from school officials.

King also encouraged students to write letters to the district. She said systems have begun to respond.

Community groups “did all the education themselves,” she says. “We trained them on what lead looks like, how it’s affecting their children, and then they got out there and educated others. The community stepped up where the system failed.”

Back in Cleveland, Margolius hopes to see a similar momentum, but on a national level. 

“Keeping these stories alive in the media and community discussions is essential. Without sustained attention, the crisis will quietly continue.”



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