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A new bold plan aims to help more Jackson third graders read on grade level 

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Michael Cormack felt like he’d been punched in the stomach. 

In May, Jackson Public Schools’ deputy superintendent was at his desk in the district’s central office, with the most recent third grade reading test results spread in front of him. As he thumbed through the papers, which showed that just over half of the students tested passed the state assessment on the first try, the knot in his stomach grew. 

He realized he had to do something — immediately. Within weeks, Project 75 was born. 

Project 75 is a reading initiative with an ambitious goal: to boost the percentage of third graders in JPS who pass the state assessment on the first attempt from 55% to 75%. Cormack presented his plan for Project 75 to the school board in August, but the initiative kicked off in earnest in mid-November. 

It’s a bold leap, but based on the data about students’ ultimate success rate, Cormack believes it’s possible. 

In 2013, state lawmakers passed the Literacy-Based Promotion Act aimed at increasing reading proficiency. The legislation put a historic amount of money and resources toward the goal and established a third grade reading “gate.” To get promoted to fourth grade, students have three tries to pass, or score 3 out of 5 or higher, on the reading portion of the state English Language Arts assessment.

Students have increasing success with each attempt. This past year, about 70% of JPS third graders ultimately scored high enough to move to the next grade, 15 points lower than the statewide average. 

“What that indicates to me is that there is some latent knowledge that scholars activate, and there’s a level of seriousness and intensity once we get the initial scores back,” Cormack said. “But what we want to do is to tap into those energies early to ensure that out the gate, the performance is strong.”

Largely thanks to the literacy act, the percentage of Mississippi’s fourth graders scoring advanced or proficient on the National Assessment of Education Progress has steadily grown, going from last in the country to ninth. But a closer look at the data reveals districts that still struggle, including Jackson. 

Cormack, whose background includes K-12 teaching and leading the Barksdale Reading Institute, reviewed hundreds of files for every student who failed the state reading test last year. The documents arrived by milk crate this spring, after being reviewed by school-level administrators. 

Kids attending Stewpot’s Recreational Summer Camp enjoy books while improving their reading skills, Thursday, June 12, 2025 in Jackson. Credit: Vickie D. King/Mississippi Today

What he found was, in many cases, students were not getting the targeted support they needed. 

At the start of each school year, JPS teachers assess students to identify their strengths and weaknesses. That test helps teachers determine students’ specific instructional needs to improve their weakest academic areas. 

However, in practice, that tailored instruction wasn’t always happening. 

“We know exactly where our students need help,” Cormack said. “So why can’t we do it?”

Project 75 aims to close those gaps by giving students targeted, tiered, thorough support. The plan involves seven strategies that center around data, district-wide coordination, professional development, monitoring and focused student learning.

Some action items include scheduling standing meetings with school leaders and staff to review data and adjust teaching, tracking student progress, offering more professional development for teachers on the science of reading and assigning struggling students to the district’s most successful teachers. 

Project 75 also includes an afterschool component for second graders and third graders who need extra help.

LaRoy Merrick, principal of Walton Elementary School, said some parts of the plan were already being implemented ahead of the fall start date. Early in the year, for example, school leaders identified their students who struggle the most with reading, grouped them together and ensured they received one-on-one help from a reading interventionist in a small setting.

Merrick also realized that his special education teachers — whose students are in the school’s bottom 25% of readers — needed to learn how to teach reading, so he sent them for training.

In preparing for the Project 75 kickoff, Galloway Elementary staff reviewed absenteeism rates, discovering that some of their least proficient readers were also regularly missing school, Principal Natasha Simmons said. 

Simmons said she’s impressed upon her staff the importance of the goal in front of them. 

“They’re going to have to do an obsessive amount of reading to pass that test,” Simmons said. “So we’re attacking this in a number of ways.”

The stakes are high. Research shows that reading is fundamental to academic success throughout schooling, which correlates with career success, financial security and better health outcomes. 

“It can create a snowball effect,” Cormack said of reading. “When scholars are retained, we also know they enter a higher risk category for not successfully graduating high school. That’s not a reality that we want to live with, so we know the urgency of getting this right.”

The initial impact of Project 75 won’t be revealed for months, until the third graders take the state reading test in May. But if the district falls short, Cormack is sure of one thing. 

They’ll keep trying.

Documentary on legendary Mississippi civil rights journalist Bill Minor to make television debut

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A documentary on the career of legendary journalist Wilson F. “Bill” Minor will make its debut on Mississippi airwaves on Thursday.

Set to air on Mississippi Public Broadcasting at 7:30 p.m., the documentary, “Eyes on Mississippi,” shares its title with Minor’s long-running newspaper column. The nearly one-hour film offers an in-depth look at Mississippi civil rights history through the lens of Minor’s reporting.  

Directed and produced by Ellen Ann Fentress, a journalist and former colleague of Minor, the documentary draws on 24 different historical archives and over 40 hours of footage from interviews of Minor by Fentress. The documentary was first released in 2015 and has since been partially re-edited with new archival material from MPB. 

A portrait of Minor and his dispatches from the front lines of the Civil Rights Movement, the film offers viewers a trenchant look at how journalism and race relations intersect.

“I think this is very auspicious timing for this story to come out,” Fentress said at a documentary screening in Jackson on Tuesday. “We need this story and the relevance of honest journalism and truth-telling. Telling truth to power could not be more important than it is right now.”  

Minor covered Mississippi politics for over 70 years, from 1947 until his death in 2017. He earned professional accolades and awards for his gutsy reporting of civil rights violence and the political and social forces that drove it. 

Minor offers an inside view of landmark stories such as the murder of civil rights workers in Neshoba County and the trial of Willie McGee, both of which captured national attention for their window into the racist violence and unequal justice system that infected the Jim Crow South.

The documentary features interviews with figures such as civil-rights leader Myrlie Evers and former Gov. William Winter, the latter calling Minor “our own interpreter of who we are as a state.”

Minor came to Mississippi as the one-man bureau reporter for the New Orleans Times-Picayune. In the years that followed, he documented and explained Mississippi’s society for countless others, including fellow journalists across the nation.

A native of Hammond, Louisiana, Minor was a Tulane University journalism graduate and a World War II Navy combat veteran.

When Fentress decided to make the film, she said that while the film’s title, “Eyes on Mississippi,” was the name of Minor’s column, it also was his strategy – that “the fastest route to change was to get the unvarnished facts of the struggle out. The more eyes on Mississippi, the more the pressure for transformation.”

After Thursday evening, the documentary is set to air on MPB again on Friday at 2 a.m., on Sunday at 2 p.m. and on Dec. 17 at 4 p.m.

People protest Deep South immigration crackdown as Gov. Reeves speaks at Madison restaurant

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MADISON — A small group protested outside a monthly community meeting Wednesday in Madison to raise awareness about an immigration crackdown in Louisiana and Mississippi — a campaign known both as “Operation Swamp Sweep” and “Catahoula Crunch” – and to oppose the Mississippi government’s collaboration with Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

While the group of about 12 protested outside, Gov. Tate Reeves, a vocal supporter of President Donald Trump’s immigration policies, spoke inside of the Madison restaurant. The protesters were far enough away from the restaurant to prevent any direct communications with Reeves.

Beginning this week, ICE and the Department of Homeland Security are conducting a two-month immigration crackdown in Louisiana and south Mississippi. Protestors marched in New Orleans during the weekend to oppose the campaign.

Protesters also oppose state agencies and local law enforcement assisting ICE’s immigration enforcement efforts .

On Wednesday, protestors in Madison stood across the street at the intersection in front of Mama Hamil’s, where Reeves was the keynote speaker at Grip N Grin, a monthly meeting to discuss current events. They waved signs as cars drove by, and some drivers honked as they passed.

Kathleein O’Beirne, a Ridgeland native, said this protest was made possible by a coalition of groups, including Mississippi United.

Kathleen O’Beirne gathers with other protesters in Madison on Wednesday, Dec. 3, 2025, to oppose immigration raids. Credit: Eric Shelton/Mississippi Today

O’Beirne said immigrants contribute greatly to American society and the economy, and the president’s rhetoric around immigration is not rooted in truth.

“The truth of the matter is we Mississippians are smart enough to realize that there is a humane and civil way that respects families, that protects our communities, to address our immigration issues,” she said.

The crackdown in Louisiana and Mississippi is part of the Trump administration’s larger campaign of mass deportations, which O’Beirne described as a campaign of intimidation and harassment against immigrant communities in Mississippi.

Among the group was Paula Merchant, a U.S. Army veteran and former English as a Second Language teacher who founded Adelante, which works with the immigrant community in Jackson and helped organize the protest.

Her experience as an immigrant inspired Merchant to establish the group. She believes the current immigration system is broken and the focus should be on fixing it rather than deporting people. 

“They’re not going to work,” she said of the immigrants. “The kids are not going to school, and they don’t want to separate from one another because they don’t know if they’re going to be taken.”

Merchant was born in Mexico to a Mexican mother and an American father. She and her mother moved to the U.S. when she was 4 after her father died. Her parents never married, making it difficult to prove her father was biologically related to her. Merchant said this meant she and her mother had to take the standard immigration process, which was long and expensive. 

She said she didn’t get a green card until she was 14, and didn’t become a naturalized citizen until she was 28.

“Irregardless how you feel, they’re still your brothers and sisters,” she said. “They’re humans, you should want for them what you have for yourself.”

‘Running the ball’ with the winningest Delta football team

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Homecoming remains an important enough tradition in the Mississippi Delta that the violence that happened in Leland and Rolling Fork in October didn’t diminish the crowds. Relatives still traveled home. Dozens still set up grills and canopies at games. Mississippi Today produced a collection of stories of homecoming events in the Delta, where traditions have evolved over time.

CLARKSDALE — At the end of the first quarter, the Clarksdale High Wildcats were down by 8. 

Mosquitos bit into the ankles of players and spectators. Cheerleaders and majorettes rallied for a new routine in tune to the school band’s thumping brass bass. Coaching assistants white-knuckled clipboards as superfans on the sidelines winced at an interception by the visiting Ripley High School Tigers. 

Doubt crept in between sips of homemade lemonade and chips scooped into spicy cheese dip, manifesting itself in side-long glances, short prayers and yelps of support for quarterback Tommie Magsby. A murmur passed through the crowd in Clarksdale on a balmy 76 degree night: Would the Wildcats lose the coveted homecoming game?

The Wildcats have long produced stars and dominated football statewide. The NFL has recruited 17 Clarksdale players, the second-highest number of any Mississippi high school. This season, Clarksdale has only lost to perennial rival South Panola High School. Clarksdale has won two division championships in the last decade. At last year’s homecoming, the Wildcats lost by a single touchdown to Southaven High during a game some fans described as a heart breaker and nail biter.

Mack WIlliams IV was crowned Mr. Clarksdale High School at homecoming on Oct. 3, 2025. The football team also rallied to secure a big win over Ripley High School Credit: Katherine Lin/Mississippi Today

Under the harsh stadium lights and amid the roar of an antsy marching band, forceful head coach Curtis Kemp gathered the team on the sidelines with at least four assistant coaches in tow. 

He pulled his tight end and wide receiver into the huddle. Kemp exhorted them all to “run the ball,” execute the plays they practiced in the near equatorial heat of summer, be physical, and in the words of one of his assistants, get the smell and “homecoming feel” out of your mind. 

“You don’t want to lose the homecoming game,” Kemp said.

Visiting Green Bay Packers offensive lineman and former Wildcat Elgton Jenkins was in the audience. So were family and friends.

Even before kickoff, the aroma of rib tips wafted from smoker to serving plate, from tailgate to tent. Near the back fence, a truck let down a neon green shaved-ice hut from its trailer. Teachers folded programs.

‘You feel connected to something bigger’

When Tomika Bates first arrived in her hometown, she made sure to visit Rice Bowl, the greasy spoon Chinese spot that has her favorite shrimp. She and her high school friend group — all from the class of 2001 — missed other comforts of home such as Double Quick chicken and time with family.

Most of Bates’ friend group now live in the suburbs of Memphis or Jackson and in Nashville. They are bankers, morticians, instructional coaches at schools and principals. But today, in matching royal blue jerseys decorated with red iron-on patches, they are Wildcat superfans. 

“I’m here for a good time,” Bates said. “We all look forward to seeing old friends, rehashing old memories, and creating new ones year after year.”

Dennis Jackson, a multimedia teacher at Clarksdale’s vocational school and a Wildcat alum, stood by the 50-yard line during much of the game. He congratulated his students as they traded places by the bench between plays.

Jackson played football at Clarksdale while serving in the Marines and for an Australian football team. He was based in Wollongong, Australia, for much of his life between leaving the military and recently returning home. He also spent time as an actor in Hollywood.

“You get to know your home more when you’re far away from it,” Jackson said. “People know us from out there.”

Clarksdale High homecoming court candidates greet their family members by the bleachers at school’s homecoming game on Oct. 3, 2025.

He remembers when he first left Clarksdale at 20.

It was near noon on a weekday in January in the late 1980s. Jackson was in the 900 block of Lower Brickyard, a Clarksdale neighborhood by McKinley Street, sitting across from his grandmother at her dining room table. They were enjoying a send-off meal of pinto beans and some of his other favorite dishes. She smiled at him.

When Jackson returned to Clarksdale two years ago, he hardly recognized his hometown with its many empty lots and closed storefronts. He looked around the streets for neighborhood kids playing outside but encountered an eerie quiet. 

“It was the depopulation that you can see most,” Jackson said.

At Walmart, he began to feel at home. He ran into an old teacher and some former neighbors. One offered him a job at the school district. He is now enjoying his second year as a multimedia instructor at the vocational school.

After years as a retired athlete, he has become a Wildcat superfan again.

“It’s always been a tradition, you know, running into friends, getting a chance to tell a few lies,” Jackson said of homecoming night. “You feel connected to something bigger.”

‘I gotta be there’

By the second quarter of the homecoming game, Clarksdale’s fortunes had turned. The Wildcats were up by a touchdown. The team was playing with renewed vigor.

A big crowd cheered for the Clarsdale Wildcats during their homecoming game on, Oct. 3, 2025. Credit: Katherine Lin/Mississippi Today

Magsby, the team’s star player, intercepted the ball near the 40-yard line. The audience was electric. Kemp led Magsby and his teammates to the field house as the buzzer sounded for halftime.

Kemp used the moment to impart wisdom and a winning strategy.

“I just told ’em it was going to be a long practice next week if we couldn’t get it done,” he said about the homecoming victory in a post-game interview.

The homecoming court was announced during halftime. Escorts led candidates across the muddy field. The students’ families descended from the bleachers to get a closer look.

One contestant, Erin England, and her brother carried a life-size portrait of her late father. The other contestants, in flowing gowns and hoop skirts, batted away bugs with white satin gloves and pushed curls behind bedazzled earlobes.

“Our next senior maid enjoys playing sports and spending time with friends. She loves going shopping and spending her mom’s money,” the announcer declared, describing England. “Her favorite Bible verse is Psalms 28:7: ‘The Lord is my strength and shield. I trust him with all my heart.’”

Mary Miller, the mother of quarterback and homecoming king Tommie Magsby, beamed from the stands during the third quarter. She held up a posterboard with his jersey number until the last play.

“I know his plays. I know when he’s going to run it. And each time, it’s a touchdown,” Miller said. “It’s like I know what he’s gonna do before he does it. He’s generous with the ball, and he’s got vision. You can’t teach people that.”

Mary Miller cheers for son, Tommie Magsby, from the bleachers during the Clarksdale High homecoming game on Oct. 3, 2025. Magsby scored four touchdowns that night. Credit: Katherine Lin/Mississippi Today

Since Magsby’s peewee league days, Miller has driven him to practices and made sure he had his water bottle and cleats. She remembers his first tackle and early victories. Even as a child, he spoke of little else than football.

In a recent game against Cleveland Central, Magsby ran a 90-yard touchdown. He might have scored five touchdowns if not for an opposing player tugging on his face mask. Coahoma Community College has offered him a football scholarship.

“I’ll miss seeing how good he plays out there,” Miller said. “Now, I work out of town. I have to put in time to make sure that I’m here. If I miss a game, it just does something to me. I gotta be there because that’s my son on the field. I want to let him know that he does have support and we follow him wherever he goes.”

Taking home the win

The locker room had a sour stench by the homecoming game’s triumphant conclusion: 43-14. Shoeless players in muddied pants blasted music from speakers. Admirers and superfans lingered just outside where equipment was being pulled in from the field.

Kemp reclined in his office beside a white board covered with Xs, Os and initials.

“As a coach, you really have to tamp it down,” he said with a wide smile, hardly able to contain his glee.

It was his students’ night, not his.

Kemp graduated from Clarksdale High in 1999 and became head coach three years ago. He’d previously worked as Northside High School’s head coach. He had wanted the job for much of his coaching career.

“Clarksdale has been a good team for some time,” he said.

Coach Kurtis Kemp watches the football game from the sidelines at Clarksdale High School’s homecoming on Oct. 3, 2025. Credit: Katherine Lin/Mississippi Today

More than developing star players and bringing home wins, Kemp said he is mostly in it for the mentorship.

If you’re an upstanding guy, the football part will work itself out, he said. He just asks for commitment and accountability.

The young men Kemp coaches sometimes remind him of a time when he was young, and shared NFL dreams with his teammates.

One of his fondest memories was playing during the 1999 homecoming football game. The Wildcats were playing Greenville’s T.L. Weston High School. The lights were bright and the fans were loud. Kemp was on the field with his best friends. The Wildcats had a handful of injured players and weren’t favored to win.

Kemp scored four touchdowns. The last one sealed Clarksdale’s win, and players and fans mobbed him at game’s end.

His wildest dreams seemed within reach.

“I wanted to go pro,” Kemp said. “Most players won’t. But if I could see them doing something, taking care of their families and doing stuff around town as young men, I’m fine.”

Barry White is tapped as next leader of Mississippi Archives and History

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The Mississippi Department of Archives and History announced Wednesday that Barry White will succeed Katie Blount as the agency’s director when Blount retires next year.

White has been director of the department’s Historic Preservation Division since 2020.

In his current role, he administers statewide grant programs, oversees major preservation initiatives and works on building partnerships with local, state and federal agencies. He is also part of the leadership team for the partnership between Archives and History and Mississippi State University to turn Historic Jefferson College near Natchez into a regional hub for education, research and workforce development. 

White will begin transitioning to his new role early next year. His first day as the director will be July 1, after Blount steps down.

“Our stories belong to every Mississippian, and I am committed to strengthening our connections to communities across the state,” White said in a press release. “As we look to the future, collaboration will continue to drive our efforts to preserve and share Mississippi’s history in meaningful ways.”

MDAH announced Blount’s planned retirement in August. After becoming director in 2015, she oversaw the opening of the Two Mississippi Museums in 2017 and helped efforts to redesign the state flag in 2020. She is the second woman to hold the position. The American Association for State and Local History gave her a lifetime achievement award in June.

“Barry has earned the trust of colleagues and communities throughout Mississippi,” Blount said in the press release Wednesday. “He’s forged strong relationships with key stakeholders through his thoughtful approach to preservation and his dedication to public service.

Spence Flatgard, president of the Archives and History Board of Trustees, said, “Katie Blount’s leadership has strengthened this agency in profound and lasting ways, and Barry is the right person to lead MDAH into our next chapter. His experience, integrity, and relationships across the state give him a deep understanding of both our mission and our partners who help carry us forward.”

White holds bachelor’s and master’s degrees in applied anthropology with a focus on historic preservation from Mississippi State University. He is the husband of Mary Margaret White, the CEO and executive director of Mississippi Today.

Ex-Capitol Police officer pleads guilty to civil rights violation

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A former Capitol Police officer accused of kicking a handcuffed man and slamming his head during a traffic stop in 2022 has pleaded guilty to a federal charge of violating his civil rights. 

Jeffery Walker, who was a Flex Unit officer, pleaded guilty Tuesday to one count of deprivation of rights under color of law – when a person acting with government authority wilfully deprives another of a constitutionally protected right. 

The felony charge carries up to a decade in prison, a $250,000 fine, three years of supervised release and a $100 special assessment. 

He is scheduled for sentencing on April 8 and will remain free until then  on a $10,000 unsecured bond. Plea documents weren’t immediately available Wednesday. 

Walker’s plea comes the day he was set to begin a jury trial. 

On July 27, 2022, Walker drove an unmarked police car and tried to stop a car driven by a man identified as E.S. in court records. The man led Walker on a pursuit, which several Jackson Police Department officers joined. 

The chase ended when Walker cut E.S. off, causing the officer to run into a tree and the man to swerve into a yard. A Jackson police officer pulled E.S. from the car and handcuffed him. 

While the man was under control and handcuffed, Walker slammed E.S.’s head into the hood of his car and kicked him in the head and face while he was on the ground, according to court records. 

Walker also faces state charges for another incident while working for Capitol Police. 

He and Officer Michael Rhinewalt were indicted for aggravated assault stemming from the Aug. 14, 2022, shooting of Sinatra Jordan and Sherita Harris. 

Harris was the passenger in a car Jordan was driving that Capitol Police officers stopped near State and Amite streets. Walker and Rhinewalt were later identified as those who opened fire.

A civil lawsuit Harris filed in 2023 which represents one side of a legal argument, alleges Jordan initially complied with a command to pull over, but then tried to drive away when shots were fired into the car. Gunfire hit Harris in the head and required her to undergo surgery to remove the bullet fragments. She has suffered “permanent neurological and facial injuries,” according to the lawsuit.

Walker and Rhinewalt were expected to start trial Monday. The trial did not take place, and court records do not list an updated trial date. 

Jordan, the driver, was charged in 2023 with fleeing felony law enforcement, assault on a law enforcement officer, resisting arrest and possession of marijuana. 

In March, he pleaded guilty to fleeing law enforcement, which was reduced to a misdemeanor, and the other charges were dropped. He received a six-month sentence, and as of Wednesday, prison records do not show anyone under his name incarcerated.  

Harris’ civil lawsuit has been put on hold until the state cases are finished.

Rhinewalt is facing another state charge from his role with Capitol Police.

He and now former Capitol Police Officer Steven Frederick Jr. were indicted for manslaughter in the Sept. 25, 2022, death of Jaylen Lewis during a traffic stop on East Mayes Street. 

They are scheduled to go to trial in Hinds County on Dec. 8. 

The officers, who were conducting a drug narcotics operation, saw the car driven by Lewis turn and then run a red light on another street. They turned on their police lights to pull the 22-year-old over and blocked him from moving forward with their car.  

The former officers reportedly told investigators that one of them shot Lewis in the head in self-defense because he drove his car toward them. 

A federal lawsuit by Lewis’ mother, which represents one side of a legal argument, states he reversed his car and bumped the cruiser behind him, and it states that he did not show a weapon, reach for one, “or take other actions that could be reasonably perceived as endangering officers or others.” 

Trinidad Chambliss takes the Conerly Trophy. What about a Heisman?

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Ole Miss quarterback Trinidad Chambliss holds the “Golden Egg” trophy his team won in their victory over Mississippi State at their annual NCAA college football game, Friday, Nov. 28, 2025, in Starkville, Miss. Credit: AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis

It came as no surprise whatsoever Tuesday night when Ole Miss Rebel Trinidad Chambliss stepped to the podium to a standing ovation to receive the C Spire Conerly Trophy as Mississippi’s  most outstanding college football player.

No, the bigger surprise is that Chambliss, a dynamic quarterback largely responsible for the Rebels 11-1 season and coming NCAA playoffs berth, has for the most part been omitted from the lists of viable candidates for the Heisman Trophy, the one that goes to the best college football player in America. I can’t say for certain Chambliss is the best in the country, but I know he belongs in the first sentence of any 2025 Heisman discussion. I know he deserves to go to New York as one of the finalists for the ceremony on Dec. 13.

The Heisman Trophy Trust normally invites four finalists to the New York Downtown Athletic Club for the presentation. I haven’t seen a prediction yet that expects Chambliss to be there.

Rick Cleveland

On3, the network of sports websites, recently published a poll of college football experts around the country that had Vanderbilt quarterback Diego Pavia leading the list of likely Heisman winners, followed, in order, by Indiana quarterback Fernando Mendoza, Ohio State quarterback Justin Sayin, Notre Dame running back Jeremiyah Love and Alabama quarterback Tyler Simpson. In sixth place, with far fewer votes than the top four, was Chambliss.

Pavia, the leader (and a great player), has completed 71% of his passes for 3,192 yards and run for 826 yards and nine touchdown. He has thrown 27 touchdowns and eight interceptions. Chambliss has completed 66% of his passes for 3,016 yards and run for 470 yards and six touchdowns. He has thrown for 18 touchdowns, only three interceptions. He seems at his best when it matters most. He makes plays when there doesn’t seem one there.

Trinidad Chambliss with the C Spire Conerly Trophy. (Photo by Hays Collins)

The individual stats are quite similar, especially when you consider Chambliss didn’t start the Rebels first two games and largely missed the opportunity to pad his stats against Georgia State and Kentucky. Chambliss’s numbers are as good or at least slightly better than those of the other three quarterbacks ahead of him.

Most Heisman voters are sports writers and sportscasters who presumably love a good story. There is no better story in college football than Chambliss, unless its Pavia (Vanderbilt? 10-2!). Last year, Chambliss led Division II Ferris State to the Division II National Championship and transferred to Ole Miss only after assistant coaches Joe Judge and Charlie Weiss Jr. saw some Ferris State tape on him last spring and couldn’t believe what they were watching.

Said Judge, who accompanied Chambliss to the Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame Museum Tuesday night, “The more we watched, the more impressed we were. He was clearly a great athlete. You couldn’t tell from that tape whether he was an SEC-caliber quarterback, but we knew he was a guy with the ability to help us win as a slot receiver or a punt returner.”

Turns out, Chambliss was a quarterback deluxe. As Judge, the former New York Giants head coach, put it, “Trinidad has impacted our team both on and off the field. He’s great in the locker room. His teammates love him and believe in him. In my career, I have been around a lot of great football players and I can tell you with absolute certainty he is one. I don’t have a Heisman vote, obviously, but I can tell you Trinidad Chambliss is without question one of the best college football players in America.”

Patrick Kutas, the mammoth Ole Miss junior offensive tackle who Tuesday night took home the Kent Hull Trophy as the state’s most outstanding offensive lineman, says he didn’t know what to expect when learning that Ole Miss had signed a Division II quarterback in the transfer portal.

“The first thing you saw was the competitiveness in him,” Kutas said. “Trinidad is the ultimate competitor. He’s been fantastic all season long. He 100% deserves to be in the Heisman race.”

One strike against Chambliss – strange as it sounds – might be that he came to Ole Miss from Division II. The thinking: How can anybody who wasn’t even recruited by a DI school be the best player in America?

Said Chambliss Tuesday night, “There are great players at every level of college football.” 

Myriad examples exist, including a Super Bowl hero named Malcolm Butler, from Vicksburg, Hinds Community College and the University of West Alabama, and former Pro Bowler Fred McAfee, from Philadelphia (the one in Mississippi) and Mississippi College. For the record, 40 former Division II players currently play in the NFL.

Said Chambliss of his storybook season and the Conerly Trophy, “This is all a dream come true for me. I am blessed.”

Asked about the Heisman Trophy, Chambliss smiled and mentioned that not starting those first two games probably hurt his chances but that, “I really do feel like I am one of the best players in college football. I really do.”

•••

The Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame instituted two new college football awards Tuesday night:

  • Jackson State quarterback Jacobian Morgan won the SWAC Impact Award as the state’s top player in the Southwestern Athletic Conference.
  • Delta State linebacker William Carter IV won the DII DIII Excellence Award as the most outstanding player in Divisions II and III.

‘For such a time as this’: Resource bank to open after last south Jackson supermarket closed

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Dozens of defunct buildings line Terry Road in south Jackson. Business owners have been leaving the area for more than a decade. 

But one vacant bank may hold promise for the future. Come January, it will open as a different kind of bank – one where resources, referrals and health services are offered for free or low cost. 

Magnolia Medical Foundation, a network of five clinics and resource centers across the state that focus on providing holistic care to low-income Mississippians, is expanding to the most under-resourced part of Mississippi’s capital city. The bank will retain its layout: a drive-through where patients pick up prescriptions, a counter where tellers dole out supplies, such as diapers, and offices where patients meet with providers, social workers and other patient navigators. The bank will take walk-ins, as well as appointments.

“We all at some point in our life are able to make deposits, and sometimes, we’re just only able to make withdrawals,” said Dr. Erica Thompson, founder and executive director of the Magnolia Medical Foundation. “It’s important to have a space where you feel comfortable and you feel safe and you’re able to get the things you need.”

The expansion is made possible by a $200,000 donation from Molina Healthcare, a company based in Long Beach, California, that is a one of the entities that manages the care of Mississippi Medicaid beneficiaries. 

A vacant bank at 3311 Terry Road in south Jackson will reopen as a health clinic and resource bank in January.

“We are grateful to be a part of the Magnolia Medical Foundation,” said Laurie Williams, assistant vice president of growth and member engagement at Molina Healthcare, during a press conference at the new space Monday. “Dr. Thompson, your vision has just always been epic from the very beginning … We’re not going to be last anymore.”

Mississippi ranked last in the nation for its rate of preterm births – and has failed every year for nearly two decades – a recent report card from March of Dimes showed. While the bank will serve everyone, regardless of insurance status, it will also have services focused on improving outcomes for women, such as pregnancy and birth support from doulas. 

Other patient navigators will include medical providers, mental health providers and social workers, who will help low-income people traverse the complex processes surrounding applications for benefit programs – or help them understand their rights in legal matters. Thompson hopes that businesses and community members will make “deposits” when they can by partnering with the bank, volunteering, making donations and adding to the services offered. 

“Just like a regular bank brings in their investment brokers and all that, we want to bring in other folks who are able to make an investment in south Jackson,” said Thompson. 

Providers at the Magnolia Medical Foundation Midtown clinic spend at least an hour with each patient, according to Belinda Mundora, the foundation’s project director. That’s more than triple the average amount of time family physicians spend with their patients. When providers spend more time with patients they strengthen patients’ trust in them and get a better sense of how circumstances such as unstable housing may influence physical and mental health. 

Kathryn Carroll Barham, a nurse practitioner currently working at the foundation’s Midtown clinic, said the work she does is more often social than medical. Carroll said she’s excited to continue that work in a place where the need for it is great. 

“That’s why I want to work in a place like this – that has something that’s so holistic, working with people who think about every part of the patient rather than just the physical aspect,” Carroll Barham said.  

The Midtown clinic also operates a food pantry Monday through Thursday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Thompson said she hopes to do food drops at least once a month at the new location. 

The foundation’s expansion couldn’t come at a more opportune time. Food Depot, the last remaining full-service grocery store in south Jackson, shuttered two weeks ago. Kroger and Piggly Wiggly of south Jackson closed in 2015. 

Food Depot on Terry Road was the last full-service grocery store in south Jackson before it closed in mid-November.

Living in a food desert means people either go without fresh meat and produce, or they travel to supermarkets where their tax dollars support cities other than their own. In these areas, local economies collapse and people tend to be sicker

Those effects are expected to be exacerbated by major changes to social safety net programs coming down the pipeline. Tens of millions of dollars previously covered by the federal government for programs such as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) and Medicaid will shift to states, due to the so-called One Big Beautiful Bill signed into law by President Donald Trump over the summer. Experts predict this will force states to limit benefits, cap enrollment or shut down services altogether. 

Thompson knows these changes will impact most of the patients she sees. Jackson’s median income is $43,000 – well below the state median income of $54,000. Mississippi is among the poorest states in the nation. To be eligible for SNAP, individuals must make less than about $20,000 annually. New work requirements from the federal budget bill are expected to make it harder for eligible people to remain enrolled. 

“I always think about the scripture, ‘for such a time as this,’” Thompson said. “This is the perfect place for the storm.”

Anyone interested in partnering with Magnolia Medical Foundation’s new south Jackson bank can contact Erica Thompson at ethompson@magmedfound.org. Volunteers can sign up online

It’s not like there’s nothing to talk about…

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Egg Bowl redux, Kiffin leaving, Golding elevated, SWAC Championship, state high school football championships, Southern Miss review, SEC Championship, FBS playoffs. 

Stream all episodes here.


No, a vehicle didn’t try to run Lane Kiffin off the road, says Mississippi Highway Patrol

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There is no evidence that a driver tried to run former Ole Miss football coach Lane Kiffin off the road while he was on his way to the Oxford airport to accept a new head coaching gig at rival Louisiana State University, according to state and local law enforcement agencies.  

Kiffin announced last weekend that he was leaving Mississippi’s flagship university after helping it clinch a spot in the playoffs for the first time in the program’s history. He said in a Monday press conference in Baton Rouge that an angry Rebel fan tried to run him off the road while he was driving with his son Knox to the airport in Oxford.  

Bailey Holloway, a spokeswoman for the Mississippi Department of Public Safety, told Mississippi Today that Kiffin had a safety escort from the Mississippi Highway Patrol when he traveled to the airport. The agency’s officers have no record of an automobile trying to push the football coach’s car off the roadway, Holloway added.

Sean Tindell, the DPS commissioner, weighed in on the situation by posting a satirical social media video Tuesday night, stating that there were no incidents involving Mississippi Highway Patrol officers trying to run the coach off the road. 

In the video, Tindell wore a visor, something Kiffin is known for wearing, and walked a dog on a leash. Tindell said that the pet was not even his dog, a reference to lingering questions about Juice Kiffin, a dog that has become an unofficial mascot of sorts at Ole Miss. 

“He had a safe trip, and he’s on his way,” Tindell said of Kiffin. “I’m sorry, this is not even my dog. Y’all be safe.” 

Tindell runs the state’s top law enforcement agency and was poking fun at the situation that has inflamed an already bitter rivalry between two SEC schools and caused a wave of internet memes. 

Still, attempting to run a car off a roadway is a criminal offense in Mississippi, and if someone attempted to harm the football coach, state and local police could launch an investigation. 

Breck Jones, the public information officer for the Oxford Police Department, also said that the local police department received no calls or complaints about the alleged incident, and they have not been asked by anyone to look into it. 

Communications officials with LSU athletics and the university did not immediately respond to a request for comment. 

This is not the first time Kiffin, now persona non grata among the Ole Miss fan base, has made national headlines over situations that occurred around an airport. The University of Southern California famously fired him in 2013 on the tarmac at the Los Angeles International Airport after the team’s plane landed.