THE DAILY
MISSISSIPPIAN
Friday, March 31, 2017
Volume 105, No. 115
T H E S T U D E N T N E W S PA P E R O F T H E U N I V E R S I T Y O F M I S S I S S I P P I S E R V I N G O L E M I S S A N D OX F O R D S I N C E 1 9 1 1
WHAT’S INSIDE...
Visit theDMonline.com
Mississippi’s hidden gem of Pascagoula
Isom Center director: Voice for women, LGBTQ
Bulldogs come back to upset Rebels in seventh
SEE OPINION PAGE 2
SEE LIFESTYLES PAGE 4
SEE SPORTS PAGE 8
@thedm_news
Honors College celebrates 20 years, renovations Police say two shot at Oxford Pawn Shop CLARA TURNAGE
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PHOTOS BY: ARIEL COBBERT
LEFT: Chancellor Vitter introduces James Barksdale at the Sally McDonnell Barksdale Honors College Building Dedication on Thursday. RIGHT: James Barksdale speaks at the Sally McDonnell Barksdale Honors College Building Dedication. The renovation project was funded by Barksdale, a former Netscape executive and husband of Sally McDonnell.
LYNDY BERRYHILL
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On its 20th anniversary, attendees gathered to support the newly christened Sally McDonnell Barksdale Honors College after a year of renovations. More than 100 people were in attendance, some
standing while others sat crossed-legged on the floor as Chancellor Jeffrey Vitter welcomed the Barksdale family and other community figures, including former mayor Pat Patterson, Honors College Dean Douglass Sullivan-Gonzalez, as well as others. “This building looks absolutely fantastic,” Vitter said.
“I think everyone in our entire university community can feel truly proud.” Founded in 1997, the Honors College enlarged the common areas and created more study spaces with computer space and classrooms. It added 15,000 square feet to the existing structure. Vitter said since the first class of students, the class
size grew from fewer than 400 to the current size of more than 1,400 students. The average ACT average has risen to 31, up from 29.7 in 2002. “This Sally McDonnell Barksdale Honors College is an incredible asset to our university,” Vitter said. “It
SLADE RAND
Attorney General Brent Ferguson. They will be handing over the reins to ASB President-elect Dion Kevin, Vice President Elam Miller, Secretary Dylan Wood, Judicial Chair Will Nowell, Attorney General Dillon Pitts and Treasurer Jennie Jesuit. “The new executive group is looking to hear from students more. They want more student engagement and students’ input,” current President Austin Powell said. “Just so students know which resources are available.” In his last week serving the student body, Powell reflected
SEE HONORS COLLEGE PAGE 3
Two men were shot in front of Oxford Pawn Thursday, according to Maj. Sheridan Maiden of the Oxford Police Department. According to Oxford Police Department Twitter, a person of interest, Ricky Mabry, turned himself in late Thursday night. The two men with gunshot wounds were flown to the Regional One Health in Memphis, Tennessee, according to a press release issued by the department Thursday night. The release said the victims are in stable condition at this time. According to the release, the police department received a 911 call around 7 p.m. reporting shots fired. A Ford Explorer belonging to one of the victims was being towed away, and witnesses had left the scene by 8:15. A worker at Chuy’s Place, which is next door to Oxford Pawn, said she didn’t see anything but heard the shots after 6 p.m. No more information was available at the time this was published. Oxford police request that anyone with information call (662) 232-2400.
Law school hosts race, Student Senate sworn in today sustainability forum thedmnews@gmail.com
See theDMonline.com for coverage from the law school’s third annual conference.
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Friday marks the 2015-2016 Associated Student Body Executive Board’s final day in office, as well as 100 years of ASB on campus. A new executive group of student leaders will be inaugurated Friday afternoon after leading campaigns focused on bringing more students into the ASB process. The 2016-2017 cabinet will step down, including Powell, Vice President Michael Howell, Secretary Austin Spindler, Judicial Chair Hurston Reed, Treasurer Jennie Jesuit and
on the mark the job has left on him and the university. Powell remembered his own presidency as a humbling, challenging and educational experience. “I saw my inauguration day as my oyster. You know, they say the world is your oyster,” Powell said. “It’s been hard; it’s been challenging, but it’s all been good.” He said the job was different than he expected, but in what he feels was a positive way. By handling necessary conflicts, Powell said he got to know what truly interests the campus and students. “One hundred years shows
SEE INAUGURATION PAGE 3
OPINION
PAGE 2 | THE DAILY MISSISSIPPIAN | 31 MARCH 2017
COLUMN
Pascagoula: Mississippi’s hidden treasure of a town
NESTOR DELGADO
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From Bozos to Edd’s Drive In, Trent Lott to Dickie Scruggs, Senquez Golson to Sarah Thomas, Ingalls Shipbuilding to Chevron Gas Refinery, President Zachary Taylor’s summer home to Jimmy Buffett, Pascagoula, a small town of 22,000 on the Gulf Coast,
has something to offer to everyone, whether you’re a foodie, naval history buff or music connoisseur. You drive into this simple small town and realize that the history, specifically its ties to Ole Miss and the foundation of this great nation, is something that must be addressed and appreciated. It is this town that the cornerback Senquez Golson, who made the game winning interception for Ole Miss against Alabama in 2015, called home. It is in this town where Sen. Trent Lott laid his foundation and began on his path to political success. It is the town where Dickie Scruggs, a former law-
EDITORIAL STAFF: LANA FERGUSON CLARA TURNAGE editor-in-chief
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managing editor
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LYNDY BERRYHILL SLADE RAND news editors
MCKENNA WIERMAN ZOE MCDONALD lifestyles editors
BRIANA FLOREZ assistant news editor
DEVNA BOSE assistant features editor
PATRICK WATERS opinion editor
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yer and current non-profit president in Oxford, took down Big Tobacco at the local courthouse. It is in this town where the first female full-time referee in the NFL, Sarah Thomas, began her tenure as a football referee. It is in this town where the concept of “Margaritaville” was conceived from the great “island escapism” artist, Jimmy Buffett. It is in this town where the late President Zachary Taylor found such beauty that he built a summer home at Beach Park. You drive off on I-10 off Exit 69 through Moss Point, home of the Phoenix Suns’ shooting guard Devin Booker, into downtown Pasca-
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make them great places to live, but our nation’s small towns are too often forgotten in the fast lane in which we all live. Sometimes the best way to find fulfillment in life is to emulate golfer Walter Hagen and “be sure to smell the flowers along the way.” Pascagoula gives you an opportunity to do just that. Pascagoula is a place I have come to appreciate and believe is the greatest small town in America, given its history and what it has offered our university, state and nation. Nestor Delgado is a sophomore public policy leadership major from Pascagoula.
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goula where you can find Scranton’s, a highly revered restaurant with a rich history in the local area. Driving onto highway 90, you’ll pass by Edd’s Drive In, known for its chili cheese burgers and “old school walk-up window” vibe. Head down Market Street and past Jerry Lee’s, and you’ll stop at a hole in the wall, Bozo’s Grocery, where one can pick up seafood, caught fresh from the gulf less than a mile south, and enjoy pounds of fresh crawfish or a fried oyster and shrimp po-boy with friends and family. We live in a country that loves our big cities. Metro areas like New York and Los Angeles have qualities that
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NEWS
THE DAILY MISSISSIPPIAN | 31 MARCH 2017 | PAGE 3
HONORS COLLEGE continued from page 1
truly distinguishes us from all other institutions and allows Ole Miss to offer exceptional personalized learning experience to extremely talented students.” The project was funded by a donation from Jim Barksdale, a former Netscape executive and husband of Sally McDonnell. Barksdale donated $2 million toward the project along with $4 million from the university. “We’re so proud,” Barksdale said. “This has been a marvelously rewarding experience, and we are so happy with the success of our investment at the Honors College.” Two alumni also spoke about the profound impact of the college’s educational environment and the opportunities that changed their lives. 2011 graduate Christin Gates Calloway went on to graduate from Harvard’s Graduate School of Education and is currently earning her doctorate in education policy at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Calloway said the college was the space on campus where she built lifelong friendships and learned to engage respectfully, despite differences. “Most importantly, this space nurtured me into the young scholar that I am today,” Calloway said. “This beautiful new facility is the heart of campus for generations to come.” 2006 graduate Dr. Marc Walker shared his experience of working with medical missionaries in Bolivia. After the trip was organized, Walker went with a group of students to a poverty-stricken area in South America over spring break. “With the support of the honors college and the university leadership at the time, a few months later, as a junior, I boarded my first flight out of the country and joined my first medical mis-
PHOTO BY: ARIEL COBBERT
Dr. Marc Walker, Sally McDonnell Barksdale Honors College Class of 2006, speaks at the Building Dedication on Thursday. sion,” Walker said. The group spent 10 days walking door to door delivering medicine. It built homes for families and playgrounds for the children. “The world was changed for me,” Walker said with tears in his voice. Walker went back to serve in Bolivia the next year. Later he went on to graduate from Harvard Medical School and Harvard Business School. “Ten days ago, I returned from my fifth international medical mission. But this time was different. This time I wasn’t watching – I was doing,” Walker said. Walker and one other doctor performed nearly 100 surgeries and treated hun-
$
dreds of patients for hand deformities. They were the only hand surgeons in the country. “Every morning I woke up in Nicaragua, it was like waking up in Bolivia all over again,” Walker said. Walker said he credits the Honors College with providing the tools for a successful education. He said the building is not just an investment in the university but also in the students who will be housed in years to come. “I am very, very excited to see what those students do next after finishing at the Honors College,” Walker said.
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Austin Powell celebrates his election for ASB President last spring. Powell believes that students are challenging ASB more, which has pushed ASB to challenge the administration. He said students are challenging ASB more, and this has in turn pushed ASB to continued from page 1 challenge the administration more. the impact that students “That comes with a level of have over the years, not just trust, and its all been positive through ASB,” Powell said. aspects,” Powell said. “It’s the everyday needs that Powell said between the students have.” nature of campus, students Powell said that for its cenand the American political tury of existence, ASB’s priclimate, the new officers are mary goal has been to serve going to have a lot on their students, and he feels the plates. organization is gaining more “I’m excited to see how they credibility among the admintake that and do something istration, teachers and stugood with it,” he said. dent body. Powell said ASB will have “I think every year ASB is “some big announcements” evolving into a better organiwith some fun for students at zation, structurally, with the the inauguration on Friday. student leadership and in students’ initiative,” he said.
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LIFESTYLES
PAGE 4 | THE DAILY MISSISSIPPIAN | 31 MARCH 2017
A SERIES ON NATIONAL WOMEN’S HISTORY MONTH
Women ANmaking strides: ACADEMIC VOICE FOR WOMEN, LGBTQ RIGHTS MIRANDA GARDNER
mjgardn1@go.olemiss.edu
exchange. The environment in which I was raised made the central role of gender very clear. I knew early that I wanted more choices than my culture was offering.” It was not until her twenties that she began to further explore LGBTQ issues, and she came to the realization that she was primarily attracted to women. “This was even more unspeakable than being a feminist in Mormon culture, and it made me realize how many kinds of experiences our culture refuses to acknowledge, how many outsiders we create through our intolerance,” Harker said. “It made me want to learn and to create spaces in which those cultural outsiders were visible and valued.” Harker attended Brigham Young University, where she was encouraged by like-minded mentors to continue growing in regards to both her personal choices and her education. After attaining both her bachelor’s and master’s degrees from BYU, Harker spent another five years at Temple Univer-
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sity, where she received her Ph. D. It 2003 she arrived at Ole Miss, and she says it was love at first sight. “From the moment I arrived in Oxford for my campus visit, it always felt like home to me,” Harker said. Likewise, Oxford has welcomed her with open arms. In last year’s Pride Parade, Harker drove the leading
car. She says this was one of her fondest memories. “There was such joy in all the people who participated; when we turned onto Lamar, we were greeted with a roar of delight. I have never been prouder of my community, and I was so grateful for the allies who embraced the parade.” The strict Mormon upbringing that instilled
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It might be the last day of Women’s History Month, but that doesn’t mean we’ll stop appreciating and reflecting on some of the strong women Oxford has in its midst. Meet Jaime Harker, the director of the Sarah Isom Center for Women and Gender Studies and a professor here at Ole Miss. Harder is a strong advocate of both LGBTQ and women’s rights. Raised in a Mormon home, Harker was surrounded by very traditional values and social constructs. Though her views differed from those of her family, she was always encouraged to hold true to her own opinions. “I have always been a feminist. This took my parents by surprise because I was raised in a conservative Mormon family with a traditional approach to gender roles,” Harker said. “My father and I spent many evenings discussing and debating everything from theology to politics to the role of women in society, and while we often didn’t agree, we always felt we had learned something from the
such a sense of identity in Harker in her youth now grants her the strong sense of dedication that she applies to her work. “Though I no longer am a member of the Mormon church, I still carry those lessons and values with me in the work that I do for the Sarah Isom Center,” she said. Throughout her extensive and successful career, Harker has been a part of a number of great projects. She has published quite a number of texts and has edited and contributed to books such as “The Oprah Affect: Critical Essays on Oprah’s Book Club” and “1960s Gay Pulp Fiction: The Misplaced Heritage.” Currently, she is finishing a book called “Queer South,” which looks at the ongoing legacy of Southern lesbian feminist literature. “The book is a love letter to the South, at least the South that I have come to know and love,” Harker said.
LIFESTYLES
THE DAILY MISSISSIPPIAN | 31 MARCH 2017 | PAGE 5
Ride Tank and the Bangas’ music roller coaster AUSTIN HILLE
thedmfeatures@gmail.com
When it comes to the state of the music industry, one thing that is necessary to thrive is originality, and that is something Tank and the Bangas has no shortage of. “I cannot classify the music. It is not contained,” Tarriona Ball, the band’s lead vocalist and a contributing poet, said. “It’s everywhere. It’s funk; it’s soul, spoken word, hip hop. I can’t just say that it’s everything, but we really do touch on all of these things every show.” Perhaps the word “eclectic” does not even do the band justice. Each member adopts multiple roles, covering instrumentation ranging from the classic guitar to a flute. Much of this can be attributed to the group’s roots in its hometown of New Orleans, a heritage the members are proud of. “[New Orleans has taught
us] to just always entertain,” Ball said. “You can go to New Orleans and see a man literally just standing still, painted in all silver or gold, acting like he is one of the monuments. We just make people smile. We just make people feel like they are outside of themselves.” The group strives to make music with no bounds. It is its constant energy and fearlessness that brought it to internet fame when it won a recent NPR Tiny Desk concert session. A unique mix of styles and skills naturally bleeds into its live show, another element Ball feels makes the group so special. “It is quite exhilarating,” Ball said. “It’s just a roller coaster, very exciting, very colorful. The music is very colorful. It goes up and down like a really big roller coaster. I think people are going to be very surprised.” The group will be bringing this fresh sense of energy to Proud Larry’s tomorrow night for a show Ball
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can only describe as “the ultimate party.” Much like the goal of its recorded material, the group hopes to redefine
what good live music means to all who attend its shows, hopefully providing them with a whole new perspective on music altogether.
“I am about to change the direction of your life with the music. Period,” Ball said in regards to the group’s upcoming performance in Oxford. “That’s just what we do.” Tank and the Bangas has been focusing much of its time on touring lately, and as a consequence, its last studio project was released in 2014. But, as Ball was keen to explain, the dry spell will soon be over in a very big way. “It’s going [to be released] very soon. I’m working on it every day,” Ball said. “We went to live in London for a while, and that is where I got a lot of my inspiration from. ... It’s very colorful and a lot of fun. It’s fun. That’s all I can really say; it’s just fun. I really like it. I don’t want to hear anybody else’s music but my own right now.” Tank and the Bangas will be performing at Proud Larry’s tomorrow night. The show starts at 9 p.m., and tickets are $10.
‘Liberal redneck’ comedy show sells out The Lyric GRAYSON WEIR
thedmfeatures@gmail.com
Stand-up comedians Trae Crowder, Drew Morgan and Corey Ryan Forrester are on a mission. Known together as the WellRED Comedy, the trio set out to prove that not all rednecks are conservatives and not all rednecks are idiots. On Friday, March 31, its tour stops at The Lyric in Oxford. Despite being a notorious Southern town with a deep-rooted history of conservatism, tickets have sold out. Each having a distinct upbringing, the three come together in a perfect comedy storm. Hailing from rural east Tennessee, Morgan weaves stories from his days as a small-town son of a preacher with his observations on everything from race to religion, politics and gender from his experiences living across the globe. Forrester, often seen sporting a PBR ball cap, calls on North Georgian roots that left him with an affinity for Southern wit and storytelling. Rounding out the group is Crowder, whom you may know from his viral YouTube series of highly unsophisticated yet topical progressive ‘Liberal Redneck’ rants. He finds himself, as a Southerner who is not conservative, to be an anomaly. “We’re not the norm, but it’s not as rare as people from outside of the South like to think it is,” he said. “I grew up in a tiny little redneck town, and some
of my best friends from growing up are liberal rednecks.” By embracing this notion of loving the South while also being frightened by it is the epitome of what makes WellRED Comedy different from similar acts that have come before it. Acts like Jeff Foxworthy and Larry the Cable Guy have made their careers in redneck-centric comedy within the conservative threshold. WellRED does not. And it works. “What I like most about Trae [and WellRED] is that [they] demolish stereotypes,” Oxford native Connie Braseth said. “I love to think about the confusion folks have in other parts of the country when they hear him. They have the accent and upbringing of (what I assume
is) the way the rest of the country thinks the South is. Then, they come out with hilarious, common sense commentary that is very progressive. I’ll be on the front row.” WellRED, which recently released its book ‘Liberal Redneck Manifesto: Draggin Dixie Outta the Dark,’ has drawn national attention with its slogan, “thereʼs a New South, and weʼre coming to claim it.” Having been featured on NPR, Forbes and other nationally renowned publications, the comedy trio brings people from all over to its tour. Moira Alice Flanagan, a nursing student at the University of Memphis, has had her tickets since the event was first announced and looks forward
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to being in attendance. “These guys provide a new, fresh, liberal voice in a Southern accent and jeans,” she said. “It’s almost oxymoronic humor with a direct, witty delivery. Some may think it’s mockery of the South, but it’s more so a representation of the up-andcoming views of my generation and the generation below me.” The WellRED guys, while never demeaning Southerners for being simplistic rednecks or having conservative viewpoints, do not let hypocrisy or bigotry slide. Their goal is to
make people laugh, but they also want to show the rest of the nation, and the world, that the South is not a big red blob of dumb racists. “The rest of us are trying to ensure that the next generation grows up in a world that’s a little more open-minded,” Crowder said in his first viral video. “And that’s happening, whether you like it or not.” This story was submitted to The Daily Mississippian from an advanced reporting class.
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SPORTS
PAGE 6 | THE DAILY MISSISSIPPIAN | 31 MARCH 2017
COLUMN
Farewell column: Sports editor Brian Scott Rippee
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late nights working in the Student Media Center with my talented co-workers who are now my friends for life. I’ll miss telling the stories of the uniquely talented student-athletes on this campus. I’ll miss covering football games and getting a front row view of just how passionate all of you are about this school and its teams. The most incredible part about this job was that it allowed a kid who grew up crawling up the steps of Vaught-Hemingway Stadium (to section O, row 42, seat 2) to cover the teams and programs that gave me so many memories in my childhood. This isn’t goodbye, though. Next week, I’ll be jumping over to the Ole Miss Spirit on scout.com to cover the baseball team through season’s end. After that, I’ll head over to the Arkansas-Democrat Gazette for a summer internship. Neither of those opportunities would have happened without The Daily Mississippian. I am not entirely sure what the future holds for me. But if it is filled with the incredible readership and talented co-workers I’ve been surrounded with here in Oxford, then I’m in for one hell of a ride. So farewell for now, but I’ll see you at the ballpark.
2
As I sit here battling my emotions and struggling to put together words to describe my experience as The Daily Mississippian sports editor, I can’t help but remember how the year began. It quite literally seems like last week that I was sitting at a Waffle House in downtown Orlando, Florida, at 3
reers and a basketball team rally around a teammate who collapsed on the floor and come roaring back to beat Tennessee. Who could forget National Signing Day and the latest round of self-imposed sanctions that dropped shortly after or the major football coaching overhaul in December. We’ve seen both good and bad, and we’ve survived it all. When I took this position at the end of last school year, I made a promise to myself that I would work as hard as I possibly could to deliver Ole Miss sports coverage to you in the best and most efficient way I knew how, and I hope I have held that standard. Thank you for reading. Thank you for the kind words along the way that have at times touched me to the point of tears. Thank you for the criticism. It helped me grow as a writer. None of it – good or bad – was taken lightly, and I remember each and every one of them. Thank you from the bottom of my heart for your loyal readership. It’s what motivates me each day. It’s hard to believe my time at The Daily Mississippian is over, and it’s even more difficult to swallow. But all good things must come to an end. There’s so much I’ll miss about this job. I’ll miss Andy Kennedy’s postgame quips just as much as I’ll miss all of the
9
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ent and passion inside me that I didn’t know I had. It changed the course of my career path. It took me to places I never thought I would go and provided opportunities that I never imagined would be possible. It’s allowed me to work with some extraordinarily talented people. That’s something that I don’t believe enough people fully appreciate. Whether you agree with everything that is published in the paper or not, not many college campuses still have an award-winning daily newspaper staffed with students who work their asses off to try to cover everything going on around you. From starting as a guest columnist as a timid and clueless sophomore, to trying to learn how to cover a baseball team, all the way to learning how to put together the sports section, it’s been the greatest learning experience of my life. But enough about me – the purpose of this column is to thank you. Thank you for reading and following along on this journey over the last year. We’ve been through a lot, you and I. From a roller coaster ride of a football season that sprung hope in August and disappointment in November, to a promising young basketball team that found its footing late in the year. We’ve watched the nation’s No. 1 recruiting class in baseball to begin its ca-
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BRIAN SCOTT RIPPEE
a.m. drinking a cup of coffee before I headed back to my hotel room. Ole Miss had just collapsed against Florida State in the second half of its season opener, and I had just left the Camping World Stadium press box around 2 a.m. after trying to make sense of it all before deadline. I remember sitting there half asleep thinking, “Damn, if this is how the year is going to go, I may not make it to December.” I can now say that I (somewhat surprisingly) did make it through this school year, and it was the most challenging yet rewarding year of my life. I’ve worked at The Daily Mississippian for three years, and can emphatically say that it’s changed my life. It brought out a tal-
SPORTS BASEBALL
continued from page 8 as the Rebels’ three runs, as well as all four hits, occurred in only two back-toback innings. Things started heating up for Ole Miss in the fourth with Thomas Dillard’s RBI double to left field to break the scoreless deadlock. The next inning saw Tate Blackman, who ran home the previous inning, send two others back home on a triple to right center. After the brief offensive explosion, Ole Miss seemed to shut down. Batters connected on deep balls but nothing quite made it. Much of this could be owed to Mississippi State’s Riley Self, who allowed just one hit on the night and effec-
THE DAILY MISSISSIPPIAN | 31 MARCH 2017 | PAGE 7
tively shut down the chances for any sort of Rebel offensive improvement. “I thought Self was terrific at the end in the last few innings,” Ole Miss head coach Mike Bianco said. “The left-handers were able to get to him, but we don’t have many left-handers. Our right-handers really struggled against him.”
This struggle continued throughout the game and allowed the Bulldogs breathing room as they attempted to level the score. State’s comeback started in the seventh inning as it scored three straight to tie things up, taking advantage of the pitching change from McArthur to Stokes to Ethridge. After Woolfolk
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came in, some stability was restored, but the damage had been done. Entering the top of the ninth, Woolfolk only needed to keep the Bulldogs from scoring to give his team a shot at extra innings. The Bulldogs were able to get a runner on third with two outs left as tensions mounted. Cole Gordon struck out TWO BDRM, TWO BATH at The Mark. Includes major appliances, water, internet, and TV cable. $950/ month. Available 8/1/2017. (662)4566226 BETWEEN SQUARE AND CAMPUS 403 S. 5th. 2 spacious bedroom. 1 bath. $1010 month 662-832-0117
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swinging but the catcher, Cooper Johnson, lost the ball and allowed Gordon to make it to first on a passed ball as Jake Magnum crossed home for the win. The Rebels’ final scoring opportunity in the bottom of the ninth was hindered, once again, by strong pitching.
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• Former Special Agent with the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). • Practiced at his privately owned law firm for 45 consecutive years - located at the same place, being the Oxford Square, Downtown, Oxford, Mississippi. • Taught the Mississippi DUI Law and 5 different Criminal Law and Criminal Procedure courses each and every semester at the University of Mississippi for 29 consecutive years. • Former Municipal Prosecutor for the City of Oxford, Mississippi for over 6 years. • Former Municipal Court Judge for the City of Oxford, Mississippi for 8 years. • A Founding Member of the National College for DUI Defense conducted at Harvard Law School. • Selected as one of the Top 50 DUI Attorneys in Mississippi by the National Advocacy for DUI Defense. • Selected as one of the Top 10 Best Attorneys of Mississippi in 2016 for Client Satisfaction Award by the American Institute of DUI/ DWI Attorneys. • Selected as one of the Top 100 Trial Lawyers by the National Trial Lawyers Organization. • Recipient of the DISTINGUISHED AWARD OF MERIT for 1989 from the Mississippi State Bar given to one Attorney in the State each year for outstanding contributions to the practice of law. • Voted “Best Attorney in Oxford, Mississippi” in the 2013 Grove’s Choice Awards. • Former Vice President and President of the Lafayette County Bar Association; member of the Mississippi Bar Association, etc. • Appointed by the Mississippi State Bar to the Mississippi Commission on Attorney Ethics and Attorney Violations of the Canon of Ethics and All Mandatory Rules concerning the Practice of Law. Occupied the positions of Vice Chairman and Chairman. • A member of the Chancellor’s Trust since 1981. • Member of the American Association of Premier DUI Attorneys • Member of the National League of Renowned Attorneys - Top 1% • Awarded the United States Congressional Medal of Distinction by RNCC. Listing of these previously mentioned areas of practice does not indicate any certification of expertise therein.
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PAGE 8 | THE DAILY MISSISSIPPIAN | 31 MARCH 2017
SPORTS
Rebels overwhelmed by underdog Mississippi State ETHAN WRIGHT
thedmsports@gmail.com
The ominous storm clouds looming over Swayze Field hours before Thursday night’s baseball edition of the Egg Bowl seemed to foreshadow the game to come. The Rebels lost 4-3 in a heartbreaker to cross-state rival Mississippi State in the dramatic opener of a three-game series. The defeat dropped Ole Miss to 16-10 on the season and 3-4 in conference play. There was tough pitching on either side; some innings were filled with tremendous outburst of offense, while others were placated by offensive stagnation. In the end, a major error late in the game allowed the game-winning run. James McArthur got the start on the mound for Ole Miss and did well to control the flow of the game through six, throwing five strikeouts on 85 pitches. Despite his strong
performance early on, he allowed two hits in the seventh inning that turned into runs for the Bulldogs. He was then replaced on the mound by Will Stokes, who subsequently allowed another run and let MSU tie the game up at three. He was soon after replaced by Will Ethridge, who threw a single strikeout and allowed no runs in an inning and a half before Dallas Woolfolk came in to close things up. On the offensive side, the Rebels showed quick flashes of brilliance that showed up early in the season but have eluded them ever since. However, those moments tended to come few and far between
PHOTO BY: CAMERON BROOKS
Second baseman Tate Blackman walks up to the plate during a game earlier this season at Minute Maid Park in Houston. Blackman SEE BASEBALL PAGE 7 went 2-3 on the night along with 2 RBIs in Ole Miss’ 4-3 loss to Mississippi State.
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