The Daily Mississippian | November 13, 2025

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Thursday, November 13, 2025

Volume 114, No. 12

The Lane Kiffin Bowl: Ole Miss seeks to silence the noise, Florida hopes to turn up the volume

WILL WRIGHT Sports Staff Writer

The No. 7 Ole Miss Rebels will host the Florida Gators under the lights of Vaught-Hemingway Stadium at 6 p.m. for the last regular season home game on Saturday, Nov. 15, in a pivotal Week 12 matchup for Ole Miss. Playoff hopes are on the line for the team, and head coach Lane Kiffin’s uncertain coaching future raises the stakes that much more.

The Rebels dropped one spot, from No. 6 to No. 7, in the College Football Playoff rankings on Tuesday and are now projected to host SEC opponent No. 10 Texas. With Texas Tech’s win over thenNo. 7 BYU last Saturday, the Red Raiders moved up to No. 6 and pushed Ole Miss down a spot.

Since the Gators fired head coach Billy Napier on Oct. 19, Kiffin’s name has rattled through rumor mills as the potential replacement in Gainesville, Fla. Kiffin spoke to these rumors in his Monday press conference.

“Everyone’s talking about other jobs and everything. And I

think you’re two or three weeks away from coaching for your own job,” Kiffin said. “So you better make sure you’re doing really well where you are.”

DUNGEONS & DRAGONS

The University of Mississippi D&D Club builds character sheets and camaraderie.

SEE PAGE 3

That response has not quieted the rumors, whispers and online chatter about Florida being a job Kiffin could not possibly refuse. For students, players and

Chancellor Glenn Boyce looks to the future at ASB informal senate

Chancellor Glenn Boyce shared insight into new campus construction projects, possible admissions caps and a potential fall semester break during the Associated Student Body’s last informal senate meeting of the semester on Tuesday, Nov. 11 at the Gertrude C. Ford Ole Miss Student Union auditorium. As enrollment at the University of Mississippi increases each year, parking and housing problems for students continue to surge. Boyce referenced a series of new construction projects set for campus, such as new dorms for freshmen, additional parking lots and housing for upperclassmen.

Planned construction projects include:

• 1,250-bed dormitory on West Row

• Parking garage on Ridge Loop

• Apartments for upperclassmen and graduate students near West Row

• Dining facility near West Row

• Parking garage near West Row

• Patterson School of Accountancy building on Grove Loop

• Classrooms and esports facility in expanded Jackson Avenue Center

• Theater arts workshop in expanded Jackson Avenue Center

SEE ASB PAGE 2

the program is still climbing.

For Florida, Saturday is an opportunity to flip the script and make something good of an otherwise bleak season. Perhaps the Gators could use this game as an audition to lure Kiffin to the swamp.

Ole Miss students are looking forward to this weekend’s vital matchup.

“I just want to see Trinidad (Chambliss) ball. That’s all. That’s all I need,” junior business management major Wyatt Vance said. “Everything else, I don’t really care. But if Trinidad balls and Kewan breaks Judkins’ record, that’s all that matters to me.”

While Kiffin’s potential exit to Florida is a story line for this game, sophomore accounting major Damien Beglis is not worried about the noise.

fans in Oxford, this game means more than just another potential notch in the win column. It is a chance to prove that Kiffin belongs at Ole Miss and that

HALL OF FAME

Brittney Reese, Louis Guy and Johnny Parker were selected as members of the Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame Class of 2026.

SEE PAGE 6

“I don’t think Kiffin’s leaving. I think he’s staying here,” Beglis said. “There’s no upside to him leaving really.”

The Rebels need to win this game and the Egg Bowl against Mississippi State on Nov. 28 in

SEE FLORIDA PAGE 5

STUDY ABROAD

“You get to see your own life from the outside and realize how big the world is beyond Oxford and your hometown.”

SEE PAGE 7

Joint faculty senate session passes free speech resolution

The University of Mississippi Faculty Senate passed a resolution supporting free speech protections for university workers at its monthly meeting on Tuesday, Nov. 11. Representatives from all eight Mississippi Institutions for Higher Learning schools attended the 6 p.m. meeting at the Robert C. Khayat Law Center. This is the first of what is expected to be annual joint meetings with representatives from faculty senates at all IHL schools in attendance. Next year’s joint session is set for the University of Southern Mississippi.

“We, the members of the

University of Mississippi Faculty Senate, affirm that the foundation of a university rests on the free exchange of ideas, and any action taken against members of our community for expressing constitutionally protected speech undermines both academic freedom and the integrity of higher education,” the resolution’s opening paragraph reads.

The resolution passed by a vote of 40-4. Leading up to the vote, UM Faculty Senate President Hans Sinha, clinical professor and director of the Externship Program, cited the case of Jackson State University Associate Professor of Psychology and Faculty Senate President Dawn McLin, who was fired in August 2024. With support from free speech organizations and other faculty senates in Mississippi, McLin was reinstated

GRACE ANN COURTNEY / THE DAILY MISSISSIPPIAN
Hans Sinha speaks at the faculty senate meeting in the Robert C. Khayat Law Center on Nov. 11.
JACK KIRKLAND / THE DAILY MISSISSIPPIAN

The new dormitory on West Row is expected to be ready for occupancy by fall 2027. Boyce also mentioned the building of a new parking garage that should be completed by January 2027, in addition to other housing plans.

“Some two-bedroom, two-bathroom apartments for upperclassmen, for graduate students (and) a new dining facility and another parking garage will be built (near West Row). All that’s going to be started within the next year,” Boyce said.

The chancellor called the senate’s attention to the upcoming construction of the new Patterson School of Accountancy building on Grove Loop, as well as some transformations planned for the now empty shopping center connected to the Jackson Avenue Center following the closing of the Malco Oxford Studio Cinema.

“We got the movie theater back across Jackson Avenue — we won’t be doing movies. What we will be doing is having 200 extra parking spots. What we’re going to do there is create classrooms and also put (the new) esports (build-

FACULTY SENATE

continued from page 1

in her tenured professor role in June. Sinha said this highlights the role of faculty senates in defending free speech in academia.

Faculty senate members who opposed the resolution — such as Thomas Andre, associate professor of health, exercise science and recreation management at UM — found it to be “redundant” and “obvious.”

Similar resolutions are expected

ing) over there,” Boyce said.

Boyce also mentioned plans for a new workshop space for UM’s theater arts program in the former shopping center.

Tuesday’s informal senate gathering gave ASB Senators and legislative aides the opportunity to voice their opinions on campus developments.

Allyson Hamilton, the legislative aide for the Inclusion and Cross-Cultural Engagement Committee and freshman double major in classics and biochemical engineering from Ridgeland, Miss., is cautiously optimistic about some of the university’s upcoming constructions.

“I’m glad that they’re doing something about the lack of parking,” Hamilton said. “However, I’m worried about the aesthetics and logistics of adding a parking garage, when we could cap student enrollment.”

Boyce is against setting a cap on student enrollment, despite introducing the idea of a freshman admissions cap to the ASB Senate in March.

“We can’t afford, at this point in time, to cap enrollment when your trajectory is just flying,” Boyce said. “Only about 13% of the money we receive is from our state or federal entities. If I don’t have you (the students), I don’t have anything. It’s you that is providing the funding

to be adopted at the other IHL universities. All institutions in attendance are either considering a free speech resolution or have already drafted and circulated a resolution. USM and Mississippi Valley State University passed free speech resolutions in the past weeks.

In an interview with The Daily Mississippian, Sinha expressed his pleasure with the passage of the resolution and the willingness of other universities to consider similar motions on free speech.

“And I think, as I said at the meeting, it’s a symbolic statement

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to make this university go.”

Boyce concluded with a discussion on the possibility of integrating a fall break into the university school calendar. After introducing the idea, he opened the ASB Senate floor for discussion, and many senators, including senator sophomore public policy leadership major Paul Winfield of Vicksburg, Miss., approved the idea of a fall break.

“I’m a huge fan of it,” Winfield said. “Especially because I remember back in high school, we had a Friday off, and we had Columbus Day Monday off — and so I feel like that was a really nice way to get away, or at least go home, especially for in-state students.”

While the majority of senators agreed with the implementation of a fall break, there was some objection to the idea, specifically from Nicholas Menendez, a junior mechanical engineering major from St. Louis.

“Personally, I’m against it,” Menendez said. “It’s really good to go to school all straight so over breaks you can work.”

Wilson Engeriser, principal of First-Year Encounters on the ASB President’s Cabinet, also presented the idea of an ASB buddy system that would pair current ASB members with one or two First-Year Encounters members, to be implemented

when it tagged a senate resolution, but the symbolism carries more weight when all nine IHL institutions will consider the same resolution, potentially vote (on) the same resolution,” Sinha said.

Sinha also detailed the context and rationale behind the resolution.

“There was no specific thing, but there’s a lot of things that have been going on in our society this last year or this past year that touch upon academia,” Sinha said. “I think, fair to say, there was a feeling among some of the people that power in academia needed to be adjusted somehow. And there’s a feeling among some faculty across the country that suggested adjustments may have been unfair. So there was some concern about free speech by faculty members as a whole, and that’s what drove this. There’s no specific one incident.”

Attending the meeting were representatives from faculty senates at Alcorn State University, Delta State University, JSU, Mississippi State University, Mississippi University for Women, Mississippi Valley State University, UM, the University of Mississippi Medical Center and USM.

Also in attendance was United Faculty Senates Association of Mis-

in the upcoming spring. Engeriser is a junior public policy leadership and rhetoric double major from Fairhope, Ala.

“One of the initiatives that I was wanting to do with a partnership with some of the former FYE members is having a sort of mentor-mentee program called ASBuddies,” Engeriser said in an announcement to the ASB Senate body. “The purpose of it is to have a more casual relationship with somebody.”

Boyce touted the university’s educational successes and potential for a brighter future.

“Look at what you guys do. We’re as good as anybody across the nation when it comes

sissippi President Josh Bernstein, who serves as an associate professor and graduate studies coordinator in the English department of USM.

In an interview with The Daily Mississippian, Bernstein said the meeting demonstrated a willingness for collaboration from institutions across the state. He also expressed the need for more participation from faculty senates across the state.

“I think increasingly academics and faculty and educators realize that we’re all in this together,” Bernstein said. “If any of us are going to have a future in learning, we’re going to ensure that our students grow and learn — we need to work together.”

The governance committee of the faculty senate also presented suggested changes to UM’s policies, specifically regarding employee evaluations and assessment criteria.

The committee believes that the current rules regarding assessment criteria during employee evaluations are too ambiguous, with no concrete details on who approves changes to assessment criteria and when the changes can take effect.

The committee’s suggested amendments to existing policy would make it so that a two-thirds majority of tenured faculty must approve departmental changes and

to learning. You’ve taken the graduation rate, and the class ahead of you in particular, to a great level, a brand new level, something we never thought we could get,” Boyce said. “And now we’re there — you’re gonna push it to the next level.”

Paul Winfield is an opinion staff writer for The Daily Mississippian.

Wilson Engeriser is a sports staff writer for The Daily Mississippian.

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that changes must take place after a full evaluation cycle has passed.

Tamar Goulet, chair of the UM faculty senate’s governance committee and professor of biology, explained the need to prevent retroactive changes or changes without adequate notice to assessment criteria mid-evaluation cycle in an interview with The Daily Mississippian.

“What’s happening now in some departments, faculty are told of criteria changing, even retroactively, and they didn’t even know that,” Goulet said. “Let’s say you wrote an exam for a course, and then after the class ended, the professor said, ‘Okay, those that wrote in black ink, you’re going to get one point. Those that wrote in blue ink, you’re going to get two.’ Well, if you knew that ahead of time, you would have written in blue ink. So we’re trying, by inserting language and making it clear that after (criteria changes) … there will be a full evaluation cycle before those criteria take into effect.”

Copies of the proposed policy changes were given to senators, who will debate and deliberate the amendments during the senate’s next meeting on Tuesday, Dec. 9.

Chancellor Glenn Boyce addresses the ASB Senate in the Gertrude C. Ford Ole Miss Student Union on Nov. 11.
AVA HERNANDEZ / THE DAILY MISSISSIPPIAN
Members of the University of Mississippi Faculty Senate take a vote in the Robert C. Khayat Law Center on Nov. 11.
JACK KIRKLAND / THE DAILY MISSISSIPPIAN

Dice rolls and deep bonds: Dungeons & Dragons club provides community through campaigns

The University of Mississippi Dungeons & Dragons Club offers more than just a place to play games — it is an environment where imagination and creativity have sparked close friendships and a sense of community.

Dungeons & Dragons, often referred to as D&D, is a popular tabletop role-playing game invented in the 1970s. Players work with friends through fantasy storytelling to reach a common goal, whether that is engaging in battles, exploring or becoming increasingly powerful in the cultivated fantasy world.

The UM D&D Club’s president is junior English major Josiah Morrigan Avery, who uses the pronoun they. Collaboration through storytelling is one of the many aspects they love about the game.

“There’s something really captivating about telling a beautiful story that only exists in the minds and hearts of you and your friends who experienced it,” Avery said.

“When you have a group of people who are working together towards a collective task, even if that task is imaginary, you form really close bonds, both in and out of the game.”

Reice Hicks, a senior Southern studies major and vice president of the UM D&D Club, said he had hardly any experience with D&D before joining.

“So, I tried learning through some free online sources, but beyond that, I wasn’t actually learning,” Hicks said. “I was just kind of trying to make my own weird morphed version of (D&D). But then, when I got to the actual club, Wyatt Dunn (a previous D&D club member) actually taught me how to play.”

According to Avery, there are many programs and events within the club that are geared toward first-time players.

“We have so many programs for people who have never played before,” Avery said. “We are, first and foremost, a social club.”

The club has given its more than 100 members much more than a place to learn D&D. Avery said that before joining the club three years ago, they had not felt like they belonged on campus.

“During my freshman year, I really didn’t feel like I fit in, and it was to the point where I was considering dropping out,” Avery said. “And then I joined this club, and I found a community, I made a ton of friends, and I got a wonderful partner.”

Avery said that while being

The club hosts events nearly every week, from monthly board game nights that include D&D, among other games, to “Playing the Game” workshops.

president, they want to reciprocate the love that was given to them by fostering a caring community in the UM D&D Club.

“My personal goal with this club is just to give back to what I see as something of a second family,” Avery said. “I care very deeply for the people in this club. I want more people to be able to have that experience I had of going from feeling alone to knowing that you have people here on this campus.”

Besides offering a sense of community, the UM D&D Club has also helped its members feel more confident outside of club meetings.

Hicks said that through being a dungeon master, a role in D&D that serves as a narrative voice and storyteller, he was able to improve his public speaking skills.

“The reason why I enjoy doing that so much (being a dungeon master) was because it really helped me with my oratory skills for public policy because I learned how to adapt on the fly,” Hicks said. “I learned how to read rooms and change narratives based on what I know people want and don’t want. If there’s conflict between various players, it helps me figure out how to solve set scenarios in real life.”

Although the club has a strong core community, it has faced its fair share of challenges. With the new registered student organiza-

tion funding plan, many student organizations on campus have lost funding that promoted their clubs.

Avery said that although other clubs have been hit harder, the UM D&D Club could feel the effects of the new funding plan.

“We don’t use a ton of RSO funding, for which we’re lucky,” Avery said. “A lot of my peers have been hit really hard. The big things we do are club t-shirts, and, occasionally, we provide food for events. Last year, we missed the opportunity to do both of those things. This year, we were really hoping to be able to do it, and we’re really in this position where we are trying to figure out how — if we can at all.”

Despite occasional challenges, the UM D&D Club members continue to promote and teach what they are passionate about.

According to Avery, the club is ultimately a place to explore your love for games while cultivating a strong community.

“Much like any hobby, there’s a lot to love about these games, the stories that we tell and the people we tell them with,” Avery said. “I think it comes down to the community, though. That’s the large part of why we do what we do.”

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Meet the professor who turns science, and sometimes himself, upside down

When Associate Professor of Chemistry and Biochemistry Ryan Fortenberry wants to explain entropy, he does not just lecture — he flips upside down to make the concept stick.

Fortenberry explains to his class how this topic was “very upside down” to him. In the midst of describing that as entropy increases, order goes down, he positions himself into a headstand to help his students better connect to the concept he is teaching.

“Hopefully me doing a headstand or jumping on a table and walking across students’ desks will help them remember what I’m trying to say,” Fortenberry said. “The number one thing I want for my students is for them to grow

their problem-solving skills, and I will transcend boundaries to teach them to solve problems and become successful human beings.”

This method of teaching is often how Fortenberry runs his classes, sometimes doing flips or headstands to help students feel more engaged and open up to the idea of resetting their brains through fun analogies.

“When my daughter was one (year old), I started doing yoga, and through developing my body with yoga, I learned how to do a headstand,” Fortenberry said. “One day I just realized I could make this an analogy, because why else would anyone ever do this in class?”

The Clinton, Miss., native was surrounded by teaching from a young age, as his father, grandfather and great-grandfather were all educators.

His journey to chemistry and biochemistry was one with many twists and turns. During his undergraduate years at Mississippi College, he studied mathematics and later earned his master of science degree in communication also at Mississippi College. At the time, he wanted to be a science journalist, working as the editor of the Mississippi College school newspaper his senior year.

Combined with his passion for science, his undergraduate research with Professor of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering David Magers at Mississippi College showed him the opportunities the world of science could give him.

“(Magers) showed me that we could take all of the things I was learning in my math classes, pack that into computer programming and actually answer problems in the real world,” Fortenberry said. “I decided that was what I wanted to keep doing.”

While pursuing his PhD at Virginia Tech, Fortenberry realized he enjoyed space and the study of things beyond the earth. He latched onto researching astronomy and astrophysics.

After earning his PhD, Fortenberry worked for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). He subsequently worked at Georgia Southern University for five years before returning to his home state to teach at the University of Mississippi.

“Mississippi to me is just one big small town,” Fortenberry said. “I have lived in Virginia,

California and Georgia, and while I enjoyed living in those places, being back home is where I really feel like I’m finding connections with the people around me.”

During his time at Georgia Southern, Fortenberry wrote a textbook, “Complete Science Communication: A Guide to Connecting with Scientists, Journalists and the Public,” inspired by a communications class his students were required to take. He used a journalistic style to write scientific information.

“Once your audience has that trust in you, then you kind of get away from having to be the expert who has all the answers, and then you’re just getting to tell a fun story,” Fortenberry said.

Through his research group, the Computational Astrochemistry Group (Fortenberry Lab) at UM, students can research astrochemistry and explore resources to project their careers post-graduation.

“Seeing these young people who have a real passion for something that they don’t yet know what it is, and then taking that and showing them their capabilities through their love of knowledge and learning is a really rewarding experience for me,” Fortenberry said. “It makes me really happy to see them grow and go on to do things that they maybe wouldn’t have done without me.”

Tori Gallagher, a senior forensic chemistry major from Doylestown, Pa., enjoys the energy Fortenberry has brought to her physical chemistry class this semester.

“You can really tell he loves teaching by how much energy he brings to the classroom, rather than just putting up a PowerPoint and leaving us to fend for ourselves,” Gallagher said. “He doesn’t just want you to learn the material — he wants you to understand it. And although we might not think it’s as cool as he does, he definitely appreciates the effort from everyone.”

Gallagher believes Fortenberry’s gymnastic abilities help him better engage with his students.

“The most interesting thing I’ve seen him do is definitely a headstand,” Gallagher said. “Not many professors will and are willing to do that in front of their whole class and do it so well. Like seriously, he does it perfectly every single time.”

Fortenberry hopes to continue teaching in his home state, showing the world the intellectual talent and curiosity that Mississippians have to offer. Outside of the classroom, he spends time with his wife and two children, attending many sporting events. He also enjoys being outdoors, having climbed to the highest elevation points in 48 states. He plans to conquer the highest point of Illinois, but he will stop at 49, as he will not ascend the peak of Alaska due to high cost.

“What I really hope I can do is show students from small towns that they can do big things in the world of science — no matter where they come from,” Fortenberry said.

Josiah Morrigan Avery explains game play during a D&D club meeting in Lamar Hall on Oct. 9.
NATALY TELLO / THE DAILY MISSISSIPPIAN

Men’s basketball holds off Memphis for 3-0 start

Ole Miss Men’s Basketball beat non-conference rival Memphis 83-77 on Tuesday, Nov. 11 in The Sandy and John Black Pavilion. The Rebels shot 61.5% from three.

“We want to play Memphis. Home-and-home makes a lot of sense, maybe a neutral site. I’m not aware where

we are on the contract, but we want to play Memphis,”

Ole Miss Men’s Basketball head coach Chris Beard said in his press conference after their game against the University of Louisiana at Monroe on Friday, Nov. 7.

The Rebels and Tigers went back and forth for most of the first half. Former French professional Ilias Kamardine was hot from the field,

making 7-of-11 shots for 16 points in the first half. Kamardine also led the team in assists this half with two, and forward Corey Chest led the Rebels in rebounds with four.

Guards Travis Perry and Kezza Giffa ended the half with back-to-back 3-pointers to extend the Rebel lead to 42-33.

For most of the second half, the Rebels kept a healthy double-digit lead. With about six minutes left, the Tigers implemented a full-court press. This pressure caused a few close calls for the Ole Miss offense, but the Rebels held on to win.

Kamardine continued his scoring rampage in the second half, ending the game 11of-14 from the field (3-of-4 from 3-point land) to lead all scorers at 26 points. He was the go-to offensive option this game when Ole Miss needed a spark. He hit several contested pull-up jumpers at the top of the key, yet also demonstrated solid finishes at the rim.

Toward the end of the game, however, Kamardine failed to take care of the ball, a cardinal sin for a point guard. His two turnovers came in the last six minutes, one of which was a behind-the-back pass that flew off target and was picked off by a Memphis defender. He also launched a hazardous inbounds pass across the court to forward James Scott when a timeout could have given the team a reset. Luckily for

the Rebels, Giffa collected the pass after a scrum for the ball.

Giffa earned his keep as a starter with a solid game. He shot 4-of-7 from the field with 15 points, five assists and a plus-five rating. He showed finesse around the rim, even when his shots were contested. Following an andone by Tiger forward Ashton Hardaway, which cut the Rebel lead to only eight, Giffa took the ball coast-to-coast for a layup on the other end.

Perry played only nine minutes and did not start the game. His shot finally began to fall: He finished with six points, shooting 2-of-3 from deep. While the bench did not light up the scoreboard, every player was at

least plus-four on the court. Ole Miss outscored Memphis 42-33 in the first half but was outscored 44-41 in the second. The Rebels were fairly consistent, shooting 53.6% in the first half and 50% in the second. What’s next?

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The Rebels take on California State University, Bakersfield on Friday, Nov. 14 at 6:30 p.m. for the final throwback game in the Tad Smith Coliseum. The game will be broadcast on ESPN+.

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• Member of the American Society of Legal Advocates - Top 100 Criminal Defense Lawyers in the State of Mississippi.

• Selected as one of the Top 10 Best Attorneys of Mississippi for Client Satisfaction Award by the American Institute of DUI/DWI Attorneys.

• A Founding Member of the National College for DUI Defense conducted at Harvard Law School.

• Selected by the Attorney and Practice Magazine as one of Mississippi’s Top 10 Attorneys, et cetera.

• Selected as one of the Top 100 Trial Lawyers by the National Trial Lawyers Organization.

• 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 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.

• Former Municipal Prosecutor for the City years.

• Selected Advocacy

• Selected as one of the Top 10 Best Attorneys Satisfaction Award by the American Institute

• Former Municipal Court Judge for the City years.

Listing of these previously mentioned areas of practice does not indicate any certification of expertise therein.

• Recipient of the DISTINGUISHED AWARD OF MERIT for 1989 from the Mississippi State Bar given to one Attorney in the State of Mississippi each year for outstanding contributions to the practice of law.

• Selected Satisfaction

• Selected as one of the Top 100 Trial Lawyers Organization.

• Voted “Best Attorney in Oxford, Mississippi” in the Grove’s Choice Awards.

• Voted “Best Attorney in Oxford, Mississippi” in the Grove’s Choice Awards.

• Member of the American Association of Premier DUI Attorneys.

• Former Vice President and President of the Association; member of the Mississippi Bar

• Member of the American Association of Premier DUI Attorneys

• Member of the National League of Renowned Attorneys - Top 1%

• Member of the National League of Renowned Attorneys- Top 1%

• Awarded the United States Congressional Medal of Distinction by RNCC.

• Selected Organization.

• Recipient of the DISTINGUISHED AWARD the Mississippi State Bar given to one outstanding contributions to the practice

• Recipient the Mississippi outstanding

• Awarded the United States Congressional Medal of Distinction by RNCC.

• Member of the American Jurist Institute - Top 10 DUI/DWI Attorney for Mississippi

• Member of the American Society of Legal Advocates - Top 100 Criminal Defense Lawyers in the State of Mississippi.

by

• Appointed by the Mississippi State Bar to Attorney Ethics and Attorney Violations Mandatory Rules concerning the Practice Vice Chairman and Chairman and served

• Voted

• Voted “Best Attorney in Oxford, Mississippi”

• Member of the American Association

• Member of the American Jurist Institute - Top 10 DUI/DWI Attorney for Mississippi

• Member

• A Founding Member of the National College Harvard Law School.

• Member

• Member of the National League of Renowned

• Member of the American Society of Legal Advocates - Top 100 Criminal Defense Lawyers in the State of Mississippi

• Selected by the Attorney and Practice Magazine as one of Mississippi’s Top 10 Attorneys, et cetera.

• Awarded

• Awarded the United States Congressional

• Selected as one of the Top 50 DUI Attorneys Advocacy for DUI Defense.

• Member Mississippi

• Member of the American Jurist Institute Mississippi

• Selected as one of the Top 10 Best Attorneys Satisfaction Award by the American Institute

• Selected as one of the Top 100 Trial Lawyers

• Member of the American Society of Legal Defense Lawyers in the State of Mississippi

• Member Defense

Ilias Kamardine dribbles down the court during the game against Memphis in The Sandy and John Black Pavilion on Nov. 11.

order to set themselves up best for a spot in the playoffs. An 11-1 SEC team will not miss the playoffs, but if the Rebels lose either game, making their record 102, they would not host a playoff game and could potentially miss the playoffs altogether.

On paper, Ole Miss’ and Florida’s records suggest a mismatch — Ole Miss is 9-1 (5-1 SEC), while Florida is 3-6 (2-4 SEC) — but this clash carries plenty of meaning for both sides as they fight to define the narratives of their respective seasons.

Ole Miss enters the weekend riding its best start in decades. The Rebels have been sharp on both sides of the ball. This past Saturday, Kiffin and Co. rolled past The Citadel 49-0 in a tune-up game that allowed Ole Miss to test its depth before the final SEC stretch. Florida, meanwhile, arrives in Oxford amid turbulence. The Gators are coming off a deflating

38-7 road loss to Kentucky. Interim head coach Billy Gonzales has stepped into a tough situation, leading a team desperate for a statement win to restore some pride in a once premier program.

The Rebels have developed one of the most balanced and dangerous offenses in the SEC, led by quarterback Trinidad Chambliss, whose efficiency and composure have kept defenses off balance since he took over the starting job earlier this season. Running back Kewan Lacy has remained a major weapon and is among the SEC’s top backs. Together, this duo has given Ole Miss the ability to dictate tempo, dominate time of possession and wear opponents down over four quarters.

Defensively, Ole Miss has been aggressive and opportunistic by forcing turnovers at key moments and creating constant pressure on opposing quarterbacks. That could spell trouble for a Florida offense that has struggled all season with consistency and pass protection. If the Gators cannot establish the run early, they will be forced to test a Rebel secondary that

has improved steadily each week.

Ole Miss looks poised to take care of business at home. If Chambliss continues to operate with precision and Lacy gets rolling early, the Rebels could seize control quickly and never look back.

Florida will compete — and

probably have a little extra motivation to win this matchup. Although, the gap in execution, confidence and chemistry between these two teams is hard to overlook.

Expect Vaught-Hemingway Stadium to be rocking late into the Oxford night Saturday as

University suggests ways to avoid football ticket scams

of

out. The subsequent scramble to buy and sell tickets creates ripe opportunities for scammers.

The University of Mississippi has sent emails to students emphasizing how to avoid ticket scams. These emails were sent from the university’s public relations account (UMPR) on Sept. 24 and Nov. 11 just before big home football games against LSU and Florida.

They remind students that there “is not a dedicated student resale marketplace for student tickets, and it’s important to be cautious when buying resale tickets.”

According to the emails, screenshots of tickets are not accepted for admission into home games. The university advises students to be wary when buying tickets off GroupMe, social media or Craigslist.

The university also provided ways to avoid scams and receive

legitimate tickets. These methods include buying from official sources, not buying from or selling to strangers and exchanging tickets in person in well-populated locations on campus.

Students can transfer tickets on the Ole Miss tickets website by selecting the ticket they wish to transfer and entering the name and phone number or student email address of the transfer recipient. However, there is no way for the site to police transactions, since payment transfers cannot be completed on the site. Students could plausibly transfer their tickets and not receive any payment or pay other students for tickets, which the seller did not transfer.

Numerous students have been scammed.

Freshman exercise science major Quinn Amory missed out on season tickets and joined a GroupMe to fix her issue.

“I was added to a GroupMe, and the scammer pretended to be someone else,” Armory said.

“When I sent them the mon-

ey for season tickets, the scammer never sent the tickets.”

Amory went to the University Police Department, but there was little the officers could do to get her money back.

The university is aware of the issues with scams and is working on a way for students to resell tickets to other students.

“There is a possibility that we could be working on one (way to resell tickets for students) prior to next season,” Assistant Athletic Director for Ticketing Operations Jarren Ramsey said in an interview with The Daily Mississippian. “I don’t know what the real chance of that is just yet, but there is something that we could be working on toward making sure that there is a safer option for students.”

Some students who were unable to buy student tickets have relied on SeatStock, a third-party seller that allows students to either pay for tickets or bid on them. Katelyn Stepkowski, a freshman exercise major, used this site to acquire her ticket for the LSU game on Sept. 27.

“All I had to do was put in my student email so they could confirm I’m a student, and then I was able to bid on tickets,” Stepkowski said. “I was able to get a student section ticket for $185. The day of the LSU game, the owner of the ticket sent them over, and I was able to put my ticket in my Apple Wallet.”

However, Ramsey stated that the university does not endorse SeatStock and cautions students against selling to, or buying from, strangers.

“So I’m not familiar with SeatStock. I don’t know where that originated from,” Ramsey said. “The one thing that we try to tell any of the students that we have a chance to talk to when they call is to only purchase or accept a transfer from a student that they are familiar with, but I’m not familiar with SeatStock.”

Students should be especially careful when they attempt to send tickets to, or acquire tickets from, people they do not know; however, it is best to avoid dealing with people they are not familiar with altogether.

Ole Miss takes another step toward its first College Football Playoff berth in school history.
John Ross Ashley and Cooper Cannon carry the flags into Vaught-Hemingway Stadium on Nov. 8.
REAGAN KURTZ / THE DAILY MISSISSIPPIAN
Ole Miss Football tickets are in high demand, and thousands
students miss

3 former Ole Miss Rebels

to be inducted into Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame

The Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame and Museum recently announced its Class of 2026, which includes three former Rebels: track legend Brittney Reese, football standout Louis Guy and strength coach Johnny Parker. They will be inducted in a series of ceremonies in July 2026.

“Each of these honorees has elevated Mississippi athletics on a national and even international stage,” Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame Executive Director Andrea Patterson said in the announcement. “Their impact extends beyond their wins and records.

They represent the perseverance, leadership, and integrity that define Mississippi sports.”

The impacts that these individuals had on their respective programs are still felt today. During their careers, they garnered both national and international recognition for their accomplishments.

Brittney Reese

Reese, born in Inglewood, Calif., and raised in Gulfport, Miss., competed as a long jumper for Ole Miss for only two years — a short career, yet long enough to leave an indelible mark on the community. Reese played bas-

ketball for two seasons at Mississippi Gulf Coast Community College before transferring to Ole Miss in 2006, where she quickly emerged as a standout athlete.

“It means a lot. Just growing up in Mississippi and seeing all the great athletes that came through, great coaches that came through,” Reese said in a phone interview with The Daily Mississippian. “It’s just an honor for me and my family to be inducted into the Hall of Fame.”

This is Reese’s fourth Hall of Fame induction, but this one means more.

“This one is special because it’s actually from your state,” Reese said. “To me, it’s a really big deal to get inducted in anything that has something to do with where you grew up and you were raised.”

Reese won the 2007 NCAA indoor bronze medal in long jump, then, during the 2007 outdoor season, won silver in long jump. The next season, Reese secured the 2008 gold in indoor long jump and took bronze in indoor high jump. Later, she added the 2008 NCAA outdoor long jump gold.

Reese holds the Ole Miss records for all three of her events — high jump, long jump and triple jump — in both indoor and outdoor competitions.

After her professional debut for Nike in June 2008, Reese competed at 11 World Athletics championships from 2007-19, all in long jump. At Worlds, Reese won seven medals, including six golds.

Reese also is a four-time Olympian and three-time Olympic medalist. She finished No. 4 in the 2008 Beijing Games, then won gold in long jump at the 2012 London Games. Later, she took silver in long jump at both the 2016 Rio Games and the 2020 Tokyo Games.

Reese also has 12 United States Track and Field National titles and holds the national indoor long jump record with a jump of 7.23 meters (23-8.75).

Today, Reese is the jumps/

multis coach at Long Beach State University in California, where she helps train the next generation of successful athletes.

Louis Guy

Guy, a McComb, Miss., native, played football for the Ole Miss Rebels under coach Johnny Vaught. Guy served as the Rebels’ wingback from 1960-62.

“Congrats to my dad, Louis Guy, who will be a 2026 inductee to the Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame as an Ole Miss Football player from 1960-62, as well as a New York Giant and Oakland Raider,” Sean Guy said on Instagram. “We are so honored and grateful for this accomplishment and acknowledgment.

During his Ole Miss career, the Rebels won the SEC Championship and a national championship in 1960 and the SEC Championship with a perfect 10-0 record in 1962.

Guy set many records while with the Rebels. In 1962, he tied the SEC and NCAA record for the longest interception touchdown return with his 100-yard runback in a game against Tennessee. He also set the Ole Miss record (now broken) for the most receiving touchdowns in a single game with three against Houston. That same year, he led the SEC for the most touchdown catches with five.

After college, Guy played two seasons in the NFL, one for the New York Giants and another for the Oakland Raiders.

After his retirement, Guy earned his Master of Science and his Doctor of Dental Surgery in orthodontics from the University of Tennessee College of Medicine. He practiced orthodontics in Jackson, Miss., where he now resides.

Johnny Parker

Parker was born in Shaw, Miss., and majored in history at Ole Miss. Although he did not compete in any col-

lege sports at the university, he made his impact as a pioneer in strength and conditioning.

“It’s a great honor and I’m thrilled and I’m humbled by that. For an old cotton picker from Shaw, Miss., to be in there, it’s a great honor,” Parker said in an interview with The Enterprise-Tocsin. “This is something that Walter Payton and Jerry Rice are in.”

Parker began working as a strength and conditioning coach at the University of South Carolina in the 1970s. He then took the job at Indiana University under head coach Lee Corso, making him the first strength and conditioning coach in the history of the Big Ten. He spent one year at LSU before returning to Oxford.

Always looking to improve his knowledge in the field, he earned his master’s degree from Delta State University in 1976 and then traveled to the Soviet Union in the early 1980s to learn from experts in strength and conditioning.

All of Parker’s hard work paid off when he revolutionized the weight-lifting scene across the United States by applying what he learned in the Soviet Union to his jobs back home. His innovation and work helped the Rebels reach the Independence Bowl in 1983 to end their 12-year bowl game drought.

Parker then took his talents to the next level when he joined the New York Giants as their strength and conditioning coach. With the Giants, Parker won the Super Bowl in the 1986 and 1990 seasons.

From there, Parker moved around the professional league. His New England Patriots went to the Super Bowl in the 1996 season, and his Tampa Bay Buccaneers won the Super Bowl in the 2002 season.

Other inductees in the Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame Class of 2026 include former Mississippi State defensive lineman Glen Collins, former Mississippi State running back Michael Haddix, current Wil-

liam Carey University baseball coach Bobby Halford and former Delta State University swim and dive coach Ronnie Mayers. The Class of 2026 will be inducted in a series of ceremonies scheduled for July 3, 2026, through Aug. 1, 2026. Tickets to the events will go on sale in January.

4 Rebels set to compete in NCAA tennis individual championships

Four Ole Miss Rebels qualified to compete in the 2025 NCAA Division I Singles and Doubles Championships in Orlando, Fla., Nov. 18-23. The pair of Emily Welker and Andrea Nova will represent the women’s team in doubles, and the pair of Kai Milburn and Isac Strömberg will represent the men’s team. Welker will also compete in singles. Both duos qualified for the tournament after their wins in the Intercollegiate Tennis Association (ITA) Southern Regionals in October. This tournament is a competition for individuals, while the spring championship will be for teams.

Welker competed in the ITA Southern Sectionals in Baton Rouge, La., and qualified for NCAA Individual Championships for singles. Milburn and Strömberg are 7-1 in doubles this season, while Welker and Nova are 5-0.

The path to the tournament began in September with the ITA All-American Championships. From this event, 10 singles athletes and four doubles pairs qualified for the NCAA tournament.

In October, the top two finishers in singles and doubles champions from each of the 13 regions of the ITA Regionals qualified for the NCAA championship. From this tournament, 26 of the 64 spots in the NCAA singles bracket were filled, and 13 of the 32 spots in

the doubles bracket were filled.

The NCAA Division I Singles and Doubles Championships is the final stop for athletes individually. The championships follow a single elimination format in both singles and doubles. In the singles bracket, athletes play the best of three sets; doubles pairs compete in a one-set match, but the winner must win by at least two games.

Winners of the singles championships earn wildcard entries into the US Open the following year.

“That’s really exciting, and I wish them the best,” sophomore biology major Cassidy Keller said. “I would say (they are) definitely heading in the right direction. It’s exciting that we have tennis players that qualify for that here.”

For sophomore biology major Allie Rae, this is a good opportunity for the tennis teams to grow.

“I think that’s awesome. That’s so cool. I’m so proud of them,” Rae said. “I think that’s a huge step for the program.” Official brackets for the NCAA Individual Tournament will be released Nov. 15.

Johnny Parker
RUSS EDDINS / THE
Louis Guy
PHOTO COURTESY: OLE MISS ATHLETICS
Brittney Reese
PHOTO COURTESY: OLE MISS ATHLETICS

Studying abroad is worth more than another semester in the Velvet Ditch

“Travel is not about running away from Ole Miss but about coming back and realizing the world is so much bigger than your GPA or Blackboard notifications.”

Packing a suitcase and leaving the country may sound dramatic — like something people do after a breakup or during a midlife crisis. But honestly?

College is the perfect time to get on a plane and temporarily abandon your comfort zone.

This winter, the University of Mississippi is offering students an opportunity to go to Hawaii to study coral reefs, volcanoes and sea turtles for course credit.

There is also a tropical ecology course in Costa Rica, an art history trip to Italy, a business and culture program in South Korea and French immersion in Paris or Lyon, along with endless more private programs.

These programs are not

hypothetical — they are happening. The question is: Why aren’t more of us going?

Many students skip study abroad because they do not want to miss a football game, a Grove Saturday or spring concerts. But those things happen every year; opportunities to live and learn in another country don’t.

You can always tailgate again, but I doubt you will be 20 years old again, taking train rides across continents or hiking a volcano for course credit.

Travel is not about running away from Ole Miss, but about coming back and realizing the world is so much bigger than your GPA or Blackboard notifications. You don’t need all the answers. You just need a passport and a tiny bit of courage.

While this might sound

like everyone’s dream, the reality is that money gets in the way for a lot of students. Plane tickets, program fees and housing abroad can make travel feel like something only other people get to do.

But it’s more doable than it seems — especially at Ole Miss. The university offers faculty-led trips that are shortterm, credit-earning and designed for students who have never traveled before. These aren’t just brochures sitting in Martindale-Cole or the Duff Center — they’re real programs with real professors and real academic credit.

And yes, they can be affordable. Students who receive Pell Grants can apply for the Gilman Scholarship, which can cover $4,000 to $8,000 of a trip. The

Opinion Policies:

Columns do not represent the views of The University of Mississippi or The Daily Mississippian. The Daily Mississippian welcomes letters to the editor, which should be emailed to thedmopinion@ gmail.com. Letters should be no longer than 300 words. They may be edited for clarity, brevity and libel. Third-party letters and those with pseudonyms or no name will not be published. Letters are limited to one per individual per month. Letters should include contact information, including relationship to the university, if applicable.

Study Abroad Office also offers its own scholarships, the Honors College has travel grants and financial aid can often be applied to approved programs.

Some programs, such as the Croft Institute or Modern Languages, even cover airfare or housing for certain immersion experiences. Traveling abroad isn’t just a dream but a financial puzzle that actually has uncomplicated solutions.

Cute pictures are not the only reward you will reap from travel. Scientifically, it rewires your brain. New environments boost neuroplasticity, which is the brain’s ability to form new connections.

A study in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology found that students who studied abroad became more creative and better at problem-solving. Traveling also teaches

emotional regulation — like staying calm when your entire Spanish vocabulary disappears the moment someone actually speaks Spanish back to you.

Travel also makes you pay attention. Suddenly, you are noticing architecture, languages and how people hold their coffee cups. You get to see your own life from the outside and realize how big the world is beyond Oxford and your hometown.

Study abroad, take a class across the ocean or just get a stamp on your passport. You will return with a clearer understanding of yourself, your home and the world you are a part of.

Vidya Adlakha is a sophomore biological sciences major from Ocean Springs, Miss.

CONTACT THE OPINION DESK AT thedmopinion@gmail.com

and

FARIDA BELAL / THE DAILY MISSISSIPPIAN

RESULTS & BENEFITS

Increased Calorie Burn

Detoxification

Lower Blood Pressure

Anti-Aging & Skin Rejuvenation

Improved Circulation

Weight Loss

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