Burrows, Boydstun name Players of the Week

South Arkansas Community College had two NJCAA regional Players of the Week on the diamond for the week ending March 19.

SouthArk sophomore infielder Clay Burrows had a .523 batting average with 11 hits, including three home runs and seven runs batted in, over games that saw the Stars go 5-1. Burrows, of Jacksonville, is the first Star ever to be selected as a Region 2 Player of the Week in baseball. The Stars currently lead Region 2 with a 6-2 record (17-9 overall).

Softball outfielder Jaden Boydstun, a freshman from Ferriday, Louisiana, had a .500 batting average with seven hits, including three home runs and five RBIs, over games in which the Stars (8-20, 5-3 in Region 2 play) went 1-3. She is the first Star to be selected for Region 2 Player of the Week in softball this season.

Both teams are active at home on Thursday against squads from Rich Mountain, a Region 2 opponent.

Burrows Clayton  Boydstun Jaden

Librarian publishes book on Air Force command

Mahony Family Library director Philip Shackelford has accomplished much in his time at South Arkansas Community College. Soon, he’ll be able to add published author to that list.

Rise of the Mavericks,” a historical study that explores the rise and Cold War history of the U.S. Air Force Security Service, will be released by the U.S. Naval Institute Press in April. Shackelford’s book is the first work of academic scholarship exclusively dedicated to exploring this little-known command and its history.

Established in 1948 as part of the emerging U.S. national security apparatus, this communications intelligence organization was meant to place the fledgling U.S. Air Force on a competitive footing with its Army and Navy counterparts.  As World War II ended and the Cold War began, Air Force leaders understood that an effective cryptologic capability would be crucial for maintaining and enhancing the Air Force as a strategic and decisive component of America’s national defense. Communications intelligence would be a critical source of this information, and Air Force leaders were adamant that their service not remain dependent on other service structures for this capability.

“The Security Service was an important command, largely missing from the pages of history,” Shackelford said. “It was closely entangled with the transformative changes in the U.S. defense establishment following World War II, and played an important role in shaping the early U.S. Air Force.”

Shackelford said that “Rise of the Mavericks” fills a gap in military and intelligence history literature and complicates the literature surrounding the history of the National Security Agency, “which too often ignores or hastily addresses the contributions and role of service cryptologic agencies during the early Cold War period.”

The book explains how Security Service personnel were viewed as mavericks by other U.S. military and government organizations, and how they lived up to this characterization by developing an independent communications intelligence capability while persistently resisting the controlling efforts of the Armed Forces Security Agency and NSA.

“The history of the Security Service is not only fascinating,” Shackelford said, “but it’s also an incredible glimpse into the inner workings of American national security and intelligence gathering during the Cold War. This is a story that needed to be told.”

Shackelford is a former president of the Arkansas Library Association, a former secretary of ARKLink (a statewide consortium of academic libraries) and an associate editor for the Arkansas Libraries journal.

His academic research focuses on the U.S. Air Force, communications intelligence and national security during the Cold War. He has shared this research in multiple panel presentations at recent meetings of the Society for Military History, the 2022 annual conference of the North American Society for Intelligence History and an invited lecture for the faculty forum at the U.S. Air Force Air Command and Staff College. “Rise of the Mavericks” can be purchased by visiting the Naval Institute Press website at www.usni.org. Additional information about the author can be found at www.philipcshackelford.com.

Rise of the Mavericks Cover Philip Shackelford

Portilloz named national player of the week

The NJCAA has selected South Arkansas Community College freshman forward Kylee Portilloz as Division II Basketball Player of the Week, the first national honor ever received by a SouthArk student-athlete.

Portilloz was selected for the week ending Feb. 21 after putting up 27 points and snagging 19 rebounds en route to the Stars’ 69-62 upset victory over National Park College in overtime on Saturday (Feb. 18).

Portilloz also was named Region 2 Player of the Week for the week ending Feb. 19.

Wins have been hard to come by this season for the Stars (2-17, 1-8 in Region 2 play), particularly after roster numbers fell all the way to six players in the second half of the season. The Stars even were forced to cancel or forfeit several games early last month when, due to illness and injury, they could not field a complete team. They finished one game this season with only three players on the floor after multiple players fouled out.

Despite the challenges, Portilloz, of Choudrant, Louisiana, has put together a dominant season, leading Region 2 in both scoring (19.2 points per game) and rebounding (11.9 rebounds per game). In Saturday’s win, Portilloz never left the court, which included the extra minutes of an overtime period. Her game-high point total came with nine of 11 free throws.

Portilloz now is in the top 15 in the nation among D-II schools in both points per game and rebounds per game.

The Stars will travel to SAU Tech on Saturday to play the Rockets, who are ranked 14th nationally and are leading Region 2 with an undefeated record.

Employee BBQ

On May 4, 2017, SouthArk hosted a BBQ dinner to pay tribute to the faculty and staff, and to celebrate the ongoing mission of South Arkansas Community College. This was the second event in celebration of SouthArk's 25th Anniversary.

To our friends and colleagues who joined us and supported us in person and in spirit, we thank you for helping to make this such a fun and memorable event!

Success Stories

Read a few of the many SouthArk Success Stories.  While you're at it, feel free to share how your experience at SouthArk helped contribute to the success that you have become!

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"My first job was in a pediatric ICU.  I often saw the flight crews bring sick children.  I knew that I wanted to be a flight medic. SouthArk helped me make that dream a reality!”

LUCY PENNEY
Certified Flight Paramedic FP-C and a Certified Critical Care Paramedic CCP-C with Pafford Air One

dr kathy harrell

"My ties to community college run deep.  I graduated from SouthArk. For students attending right out of high school, community college is a valuable transition."

DR. KATHY HARRELL
Vice President, Carl Albert State College

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"My experiences at SouthArk, both as a student and as a teacher, paved the way for later successes. Instructors’ passion for their subject, matter as well as their rapport with students, provide great models of effective teachers and classrooms.”

BETH SULLIVAN
Gifted and Talented Coordinator, El Dorado School District