THE
Daily
MISSISSIPPIAN
Thursday, February 15, 2024
theDMonline.com
Volume 112, No. 18
MANY STUDENTS STRUGGLE TO COMPLETE THEIR DEGREES IN FOUR YEARS. Why? “I think BRYNN BATES
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A
s the saying goes, “College is the best four years of your life,” but it’s taking longer than that for many students to complete their undergraduate degrees. Between the pressure for students to stack their resumes with activities outside the classroom and the struggle to enroll in the basic required courses, graduating in four years has become a daunting and expensive task. Over the past 10 years, the number of fifth-year students at the University of Mississippi has slowly decreased. The class of 2024, however, has 150 more fifth-year graduates than the class of 2023. According to University Marketing and Communications, first-time, full-time students graduate in 4.5 years, on average. For degrees designed to be completed in four years, students have access to a degree sheet that plots exactly which courses they need to take to complete their major in four years, from their first semester as a freshman through their senior year. So, what are the factors working against students completing their degrees in four years? Sophomore pre-nursing major Michaela Michaelis said that with the growing student population, registering for the classes she needs is becoming more problematic.
there are a combination of things that often interfere with those plans. Socioeconomic status, time management and failure to set goals are among contributors that we often encounter with our students.”
- Pamela Norwood
ERIN FOLEY / THE DAILY MISSISSIPPIAN
academic adviser in the criminal justice and legal studies programs
SEE 4 YEAR DEGREE PAGE 2
TIPPING CULTURE Many UM students have jobs in the food service industry. What does the conversation on tipping culture sound like in a college town like Oxford? SEE PAGE 7
OLE MISS x ‘SURVIVOR’ From the football field to the track and now to a field of 17 other contestants competing for a $1 million grand prize: Ole Miss’ very own Quintavius “Q” Burdette is set to appear on “Survivor 46.”
SEE PAGE 10 GRAPHICS: MILO GILDEA
No medical card needed: the loophole high JACK CLEMENTS
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The 1960s and 70s are over, and marijuana is here to stay — even in Mississippi. Two years after the state rolled out its medical marijuana program, a new type of cannabis is sweeping the market in Oxford. Advertised as a legal high, tetrahydrocannabinol acid, or THC-A, is sold in several local smoke shops to
people aged 21 and over. Not to be confused with THC, the primary appeal of THC-A is that it can be bought without a state-issued medical marijuana card. THC, or tetrahydrocannabinol, is the federally regulated compound in marijuana. According to the Drug Enforcement Agency, THC is believed to be the main ingredient that produces cannabis’s psychoactive effect. The federal Agricultural Improvement
Act of 2018, commonly known as the Farm Bill, classified cannabis flower containing 0.3% or less THC by weight as hemp, and legalized it. This opened the door for derivative products such as Delta-8 THC to be synthesized and sold. THC-A cannabis flower also fits into this category as it contains 0.3% or less THC. Leading the charge in Oxford’s legal, non-medicinal weed game is shopkeeper James Funk.
Funk owns Slackers Supply, a smoke shop he opened 14 years ago when he was 22 years old. Slackers is known for selling high-quality incense, glassware and now THC-A cannabis flower. Funk explained how THC-A is synthesized. “The biggest difference is a two-month grow cycle versus a six-month grow cycle,” Funk said. If cannabis is harvest-
SEE THC-A PAGE 3