Monday,  June 02, 2014 • Vol. 16--No. 319 • 20 of 33

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Americans.
• Sunday afternoon more than 1,100 friends, fans and coaches assembled at Allen Arena for a memorial celebration of life on the court that bears Meyer's name.
• Meyer died at his home in Aberdeen, South Dakota, on May 18 after a long battle with cancer. He as 69.
• The celebration was designed to provide an opportunity for his former players to reminisce and personally express condolences to Meyer's wife, Carmen, and their children, Jerry, Brooke and Brittney.
• There were 98 of his former players, managers and student assistant coaches in the crowd. Five of the speakers asked by the family to address the crowd were former players -- Ricky Bowers, Greg Glenn, Tom Kelsey, Richard Taylor and Wade Tomlinson. Greg Brown, a former student assistant coach and the current Lipscomb women's basketball coach, also talked briefly and led a prayer.
• All remembered Meyer as a servant-leader who demanded the best from his players.
• "At first you are an Xs and Os guy as a coach, but after a while you figure out it is about the kids that you coach ... no question," said Kelsey, who played from 1982-86 and is director of basketball operations at LSU. "He recruited great character guys. And if you didn't have great character he took the time to mold it."
• In July 2009, Meyer received the ESPN's Jimmy V Perseverance Award, named for former North Carolina State coach Jimmy Valvano, who died in 1993 from cancer. Meyer also was given the John W. Bunn Lifetime Achievement Award from the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in August 2010.
• "He could have taken his approach in coaching and taken it to another profession and been a success because of his passion," said Bowers, one of the top high school football and basketball coaches in the state of Tennessee. "But he had a passion for coaching that was unlike any coach I have ever known.
• "We lost a friend and a mentor, but I think all coaches, no matter what sport they coach, have lost their greatest teacher. That was really what he was. He was a teacher and a special guy."
• Meyer closed out his career at Northern State. A memorial service was held there two weeks ago.

Mississippi Senate race tops Tuesday's 8 primaries
CHARLES BABINGTON, Associated Press

• WASHINGTON (AP) -- Strange, unsavory twists in Mississippi's Senate Republican race are grabbing the most attention of Tuesday's primary elections in eight

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