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Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame announces Class of 2025

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mississippitoday.org – Rick Cleveland – 2024-10-16 09:50:00

The Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame Class of 2025, announced Tuesday, includes: Mo Williams, Kevin Webb (representing his deceased father Robbie Webb), Steve Rives, Dexter McCluster, Steve Freeman, Mike Justice, Scott Berry. (Photo by Hays Collins)

The Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame Tuesday announced its 2025 induction class, and it is star-studded with championship coaches and athletes from football, baseball, basketball and golf.

In alphabetical order, the 2025 inductees are:

  • Scott Berry, baseball coach, at first Meridian Community College and more famously at Southern Miss, where his teams won 10 conference championships. Combined record as a head coach: 500 victories. At Southern Miss his teams won 528 games, lost 276 and tied one. They won 10 conference championships and he was five times a conference coach of the year.
  • Steve Freeman, Mississippi State and NFL football star and longtime NFL official, who is among the career pass interception leaders at both State and for the Buffalo Bills. He was one of the key cogs of State’s 1974 Sun Bowl team that won nine games and was one of the leaders of a Bills’ defense that was the NFL’s best in 1980.
  • Mike Justice, high school football coach. His teams won 297 games and lost only 98 over 35 seasons. He won championships at virtually every level of high school football. His 1999 Madison Central team is generally considered one of the best — if not the best — in Mississippi history.
  • Dexter McCluster, Ole Miss and NFL running back/kick returner who made All-SEC and All American for the Rebels and then played eight seasons in the NFL.
  • Derrick Nix, Southern Miss running back. Nix, who also coached collegiately at Southern Miss and Ole Miss and is currently the offensive coordinator at Auburn, was one of the all-time greats at Southern Miss, despite playing much of his career with a life-threatening kidney disease.
  • Steve Rives, high school and Delta State basketball coach, whose teams won more than 700 games. At Jackson Prep, his teams won 260 games while losing only 23. At Delta State, Rives’ coaching record was 388-188.
  • Robbie Webb, golfer and golf teacher, who will be inducted posthumously. After at outstanding college career at Southern Miss, Webb became the longtime pro at Canton and Deerfield country clubs. Webb taught and coached many future college golfers and amateur and professional champions.
  • Mo Williams, basketball standout in high school, college and NBA, now the head basketball coach at Jackson State. Williams was a McDonald’s All-American at Murrah before playing two years at Alabama and then 13 years in the NBA. Williams averaged 13 points and five assists a game for his 13-year pro career.

Clearly, it’s an outstanding class, which includes several sports heroes. I have had the good fortune to cover all as a journalist and have fond memories of each. What follow are some stories you may not know:

Dexter McCluster, who now lives in Brentwood, Tenn., is interviewed at Tuesday’s press conference. (Photo by Hays Collins)

As a junior golfer growing up in Gulfport, Webb played often with Mississippi Sports Hall of Famer Mary Mills, who would go on to win nine LPGA golf championships, including three majors. Later on, Mills played No. 1 on the Millsaps men’s golf team when Webb was playing No. 1 at Southern Miss. In a dual match once at the old Millsaps golf course, Mills led Webb one-up at the nine-hole turn. Southern Miss coach B.O. Van Hook chided Webb: “Hell, Webb, you gonna let a girl beat you.” Webb promptly took his golf bag off his shoulders and handed his clubs to his coach, saying, “Here, Hook, you try her…”

JSU basketball coach Mo Williams played 13 seasons in the NBA.

Mo Williams will be remembered as one of Mississippi’s most accomplished basketball players in history, but probably could have played professionally in baseball or football as well. Says John Richardson, the former Ole Miss football player who coached Williams at Chasten Middle School and now works as a jack-of-all-trades at the MSHOF museum, “Mo could have been a great quarterback in the SEC or probably a Major League shortstop. He was just so gifted and worked so hard at anything he tried. He was my quarterback at Chastain and we were undefeated. He could throw it or run it and nobody could stop him. I was a little disappointed when he chose to concentrate on basketball, but I’d say it worked out OK for him.”

I covered state championship victories for Justice both at Louisville and Madison Central. In a quick interview after his undefeated 1999 Madison Central team ransacked Provine in a state championship game, I asked, already knowing the answer: “Mike, do you know how many passes y’all threw tonight?” He thought for a couple seconds and then answered: “Well, I know if we threw one it was a damned audible.” They threw none.

Mike Justice once won a state championship without throwing a pass.

McCluster originally committed to play football at South Florida before a late recruiting visit from then-Ole Miss coach Ed Oregon. Said McCluster: “I’ll never forget it. We were playing football, using a couch pillow for the ball, in my living room. Coach O would fake a handoff to me and throw a pass across the room to my mother. He sold me, sold my whole family. He told me I could be Reggie Bush at Ole Miss. That man could recruit.” And Dexter McCluster surely could run.

Before Tuesday’s press conference, I knew Steve Rives won a whole bunch of basketball games both in high schools and at Delta State. I knew coaches around the state considered him a master strategist and motivator. What I did not know is this: At Delta State, Rives was 8-0 vs. Mississippi Sports Hall of Famer Davey Whitney, one of my favorite all-time coaches and people. I guarantee you this: Nobody else, anywhere, can say that.

Nix was recruited by virtually every football power in the country but chose Southern Miss because his brother Tyrone played and coached there and because Jeff Bower promised him he could play running back, whereas Alabama, Auburn, Florida and others were recruiting him primarily as a linebacker. He became surely one of the greatest backs in USM history and surely would have made millions in the NFL if not for the kidney disease that almost killed him. “Derrick Nix had it all,” Pittsburgh Steelers scout Dan Rooney once told Sports Illustrated. “He reminded me of Deuce McAllister. He had a gliding style, so strong and fast. He was a can’t-miss prospect, the kind any NFL team would love to have.”

Steve Freeman has retired as an NFL official, but his son, Brad, the former Mississippi State baseball star, still officiates in the league. Asked if he misses it, Steve replied, “Nah, man, I am too old for all that travel. At 67, I looked around and noticed most of the guys were 25 to 30 years old. I knew it was time for me to go to the house.” Both the Freemans have officiated Super Bowls.

Over the years, Scott Berry has reminded me of Mississippi baseball legend Boo Ferriss in so many ways, most of them involving character and integrity and how much he cared about his players. One other similarity was how the two men manicured their baseball fields, at least until Southern Miss switched to artificial turf. Like Ferriss, Berry tended to the baseball field, making sure every blade of grass and every speck of dirt was just so. Once, when his daughter Kathryn Grace went to work with him, and watched him tend the field so painstakingly, the little girl asked him, “Daddy, is this your garden?” It really was, and on it Berry grew winners. He retired in 2023 after his seventh straight 40-victory season at a time when no other Division I program in the country had more five.

The Class of 2025 will be inducted in ceremonies next August.

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

Mississippi Today

On this day in 1972

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mississippitoday.org – Jerry Mitchell – 2024-11-16 07:00:00

Nov. 16, 1972

Credit: Courtesy: LSU Manship School News Service

A law enforcement officer shot and killed two students at Southern University in Baton Rouge after weeks of protests over inadequate services. 

When the students marched on University President Leon Netterville’s office, Louisiana Gov. Edwin Edwards sent scores of police officers in to break up the demonstrations. A still-unidentified officer shot and killed two 20-year-old students, Leonard Brown and Denver Smith, who weren’t among the protesters. No one was ever prosecuted in their slayings. 

They have since been awarded posthumous degrees, and the university’s Smith-Brown Memorial Union bears their names. Stanley Nelson’s documentary, “Tell Them We Are Rising: The Story of Black Colleges and Universities,” featured a 10-minute segment on the killings. 

“They were exercising their constitutional rights. And they get killed for it,” former student Michael Cato said. “Nobody sent their child to school to die.” 

In 2022, Louisiana State University Cold Case Project reporters, utilizing nearly 2,700 pages of previously undisclosed documents, recreated the day of the shootings and showed how the FBI narrowed its search to several sheriff’s deputies but could not prove which one fired the fatal shot. The four-part series prompted Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards to apologize to the families of the victims on behalf of the state.

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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Gloster residents protest Drax’s new permit request

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mississippitoday.org – Alex Rozier – 2024-11-15 13:33:00

GLOSTER — Drax, the United Kingdom-based wood pellet producer that’s violated air pollution limits in Mississippi multiple times, is asking the state to raise the amount of emissions it’s allowed to release from its facility in Gloster.

In September, the state fined Drax $225,000 for releasing 50% over the permitted limit of HAPs, or Hazardous Air Pollutants, from its facility Amite BioEnergy. In a pending permit application that it submitted to the Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality in 2022, the company is seeking to transition from a “minor source” of HAPs to a “major source.”

A “major source” permit would remove the limit over the facility’s total HAP emissions, but it would apply a new limit over the rate at which Drax could release the pollutants.

This year’s fine was its second penalty for violating Mississippi law around air pollution limits. In 2020, the state fined the company $2.5 million for releasing over three times the legal threshold of Volatile Organic Compounds, or VOCs, one of the largest such fines in state history. Drax underestimated its VOC releases since the facility opened in 2016, but didn’t realize it until 2018. The facility didn’t come into compliance until 2021.

The Environmental Protection Agency lists a variety of potential health impacts from exposure to HAPs, including damage to the immune system and respiratory issues. VOCs can also cause breathing problems, as well as eye, nose and throat irritation, according to the American Lung Association.

About sixty people packed into a Gloster public library for MDEQ’s public hearing over Drax’s permit application on Nov. 14, 2024.

For years since Drax’s violations became public, nearby residents have attributed health issues to living near the facility. During a public hearing on Drax’s permit request Thursday in Gloster, attendees reiterated those concerns.

“We all experience headaches every day,” resident Christie Harvey said about her and her grandchildren. Harvey said she has asthma too, and her doctor was “baffled” by her symptoms. “Each week I have to take (my grandchildren) to the clinic for upper respiratory issues … It’s not fair that we have to go through this. Drax needs to lower the pollution as much as possible.”

Part of the public outcry is the proximity of people’s homes to the plant, which is within a mile of Gloster’s downtown.

A screenshot of Google Maps showing the location of Drax’s Amite BioEnergy facility relative to the rest of Gloster. The facility is within a mile of the downtown area.

“The wood pellet plant in Lucedale is situated in an industrial park outside of town,” Andrew Whitehurst of Healthy Gulf, an environmental group dedicated to protecting the Gulf of Mexico’s natural resources, said at the meeting. “The wood pellet plant that (Enviva is) trying to put in Bond will be situated north and west of the downtown area. Not like this when it’s right smack in the middle (of the city). It’s totally inappropriate. People can’t take it, they don’t deserve it.”

In a statement to Mississippi Today, Drax said it prioritizes the public health and environment in Gloster, adding that the permit modification is a part of standard business practice.

“When we first began operations, some of our original permits were not fit for purpose,” spokesperson Michelli Martin said via e-mail. “We are now working to acquire the appropriate permits for our operating output and to improve our compliance. Within these permits the requirements may change based on engineering data and industry standards. This permit modification is part of our ongoing plan to provide MDEQ with the most accurate data. Drax fully supports the resolution of our permitting request and looks forward to working with MDEQ to finalize the details.”

While researchers, including from Brown University, are studying the health symptoms of residents near the wood pellet plant, there is no proven connection between the facility’s emissions and those symptoms.

Erica Walker, a Jackson native who teaches epidemiology at Brown and who’s leading the study, spoke to Mississippi Today earlier this year. Regardless of the cause and effect, she said, the decision to put the plant near disadvantaged communities with poor health outcomes is concerning.

“We want to make sure we aren’t additionally burdening already burdened communities,” Walker said.

Operations resume at Drax in Gloster, Miss., on Friday, Feb. 16, 2024. Some Gloster residents are concerned with the industrial pollution caused by the company that produces wood pellets in the town. Credit: Eric J. Shelton/Mississippi Today

About 1,300 people live in the city, according to Census data, and 39% live below the poverty line.

Moreover, Gloster residents often have to travel hours, to cities such as McComb and Baton Rouge, to find the nearest medical specialist. Amite County, where Gloster is, has a higher rate of uninsured residents than the rest of the state, according to County Health Rankings, and the ratio of residents to primary care physicians is over three times greater in the county than Mississippi as a whole.

As part of its application, Drax is seeking a Title V permit under the Clean Air Act, which the EPA requires for major sources of air pollutants. This gives the EPA the opportunity to review Drax’s application and public comments submitted with it. The public can submit comments on the application until Nov. 26, and can do so through MDEQ’s website.

The Mississippi Environmental Quality Permit Board, which is made up of officials from several state agencies, will then decide whether or not to grant the new permits. A full overview of the process and Drax’s application is available online.

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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Mississippi receives ‘F’ rating on preterm birth rate

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mississippitoday.org – Sophia Paffenroth – 2024-11-15 10:11:00

Mississippi received an F grade for its rate of preterm births in 2023 – those occurring before 37 weeks gestation – from the 2024 March of Dimes report card

Mississippi’s preterm birth rate was 15%, the worst in the country. Any state with a rate greater than 11.5% also received an F. The U.S. average was 10.4%. 

Preterm births in Mississippi have risen steadily over the last decade, increasingly nearly 2% since 2013. In Jackson, the state capital, nearly one in five babies are born preterm, according to the report. 

“As a clinician, I know the profound impact that comprehensive prenatal care has on pregnancy outcomes for both mom and baby,” Dr. Amanda P. Williams, interim chief medical officer at March of Dimes, said in a press release. “Yet, too many families, especially those from our most vulnerable communities, are not receiving the support they need to ensure healthy pregnancies and births. The health of mom and baby are intricately intertwined. If we can address chronic health conditions and help ensure all moms have access to quality prenatal care, we can help every family get the best possible start.” 

In addition to inadequate prenatal care, factors such as smoking, hypertension, diabetes and unhealthy weight can cause people to be more likely to have a preterm birth.

The report highlighted several other metrics, including infant mortality – in which Mississippi continues to lead the nation. 

In 2022, 316 babies in the state died before their first birthday. Among babies born to Black mothers, the infant mortality rate is 1.3 times higher. 

The state’s maternal mortality rate of 39.1 per 100,000 live births is nearly double the national average of 23.2.

Mississippi has yet to expand Medicaid – one of only 10 states not to do so – and tens of thousands of working Mississippians remain without health insurance. It also has not implemented paid family leave, doula reimbursement by Medicaid, or supportive midwifery policies – all of which March of Dimes says are critical to improving and sustaining infant and maternal health care.

The Legislature passed a law last session that would make timely prenatal care easier for expectant mothers, but more than four months after the law was supposed to go into effect, pregnant women still can’t access the temporary coverage.

“March of Dimes is committed to advocating for policies that make healthcare more accessible like Medicaid expansion, addressing the root causes of disparities, and increasing awareness of impactful solutions like our Low Dose, Big Benefits campaign, which supports families and communities to take proactive steps toward healthy pregnancies,” Cindy Rahman, March of Dimes interim president and CEO, said in a press release.

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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