12
SWAN LAKE FORD CENTER The Russian National Ballet is bringing its acclaimed production of “Swan Lake” to the University of Mississippi’s Gertrude C. Ford Center for the Performing Arts for one show March 4. With music by Tchaikovsky, “Swan Lake” is based on a German fairy tale and follows the heroic young Prince Siegfried as he labors to free the delicately beautiful swan maiden, Odette, from an evil sorcerer’s spell. 8 p.m. March 4 $20 Mezzanine/ Balcony (Gen. Adm.) Orchestra/Parterre tickets are sold out. F RIDAY , F EBRUARY 25, 2011 | V OL . 100, N O . 91 this week inside LAW SCHOOL PARKING OPINION AFRICAN AMERICAN EXHIBIT LIFESTYLES RAIN OUT AT THE TAD PAD SPORTS M ISSISSIPPIAN THE DAILY C ELEBRATING O UR H UNDREDTH Y EAR | T HE S TUDENT N EWSPAPER OF T HE U NIVERSITY OF M ISSISSIPPI | S ERVING O LE M ISS AND O XFORD SINCE 1911 | WWW . THEDMONLINE . COM 1911 2011 DOORS OPEN @ 8:00PM - 1AM FRIDAY FEBRUARY 25 TH 2011 tickets are available at www.thelyricoxford.com After Congresswoman Gabri- elle Giffords was shot outside of a market in Arizona, there has been a big push for the relaxation of gun laws across the country. One of the issues that has arisen from this shooting has been whether or not firearms should be legal on college campuses. While the heat has picked up following the Giffords’ shooting, those in favor of allowing guns on campus cite the incident at Vir- ginia Tech, where a student shot and killed 32 students and faculty, while injuring 15 others. They say that if guns were legal on campus the students and faculty would have been able to defend them- selves, and possibly saved some of the lives lost. University Chancellor Dan Jones believes that Ole Miss is pre- pared for a situation, even without allowing guns on campus. “We have a disaster management plan in place,” Jones said. “And we go through exercises on a regular basis for implementing that. “We certainly hope and pray that we won’t have to go through anything like that, but that plan is reviewed on a regular basis. It in- cludes communicating as quickly as feasible with current technology with all students and faculty and staff and so forth, but there are di- saster management plans in place and we would execute those plans if needed.” Thirty-eight states currently do not allow guns on college cam- puses, while 11 others leave it up to the school to decide. Currently Utah is the only state that allows students and professors to carry firearms with them on campus. States such as Idaho, Texas, Georgia, Oklahoma, Florida, Col- orado, South Carolina and Ari- zona are pushing bills that would allow students and professors to carry firearms on campus. Geor- gia, Texas, and Arizona are very close to legalizing guns on their college campuses. Just last April, a lawsuit was filed in Colorado against the campus firearm ban. South Carolina re- cently edged closer to legalizing them on campuses by letting stu- dents check their weapons into the campus authorities and keep them in a locker at the police station. Senior history major David Mc- Dowell believes that if other states make it legal for students to have firearms on campus, that it affects not just those students, but stu- dents everywhere else. “I suppose if the University of Texas allows students to have guns on campus, that might affect my decision for grad school.” McDow- ell said. “Texas has a top 25 law school, but if at any point I may feel unsafe, that changes things. You don’t want to live in a neigh- borhood if you feel unsafe. If that Chancellor: No need to modify gun laws BY JACOB BATTE The Daily Mississippian See GUN, PAGE 4 Junior business marketing major Robert Holland sits in his home on Thursday af- ternoon. Robert owns guns, including two pistols and a semi-automatic AR 15, but says he would never bring them on campus because it is outlawed in Mississippi. ED WRIGHT | The Daily Mississippian Louise Leakey’s family has been piecing together the evolution of the hominoid species for three generations. Thursday, Leakey presented an outline of what they have learned at the Sally McDonald Barksdale Honors College Spring Convo- cation. “Who are we?” Leakey said. “The only way to know the an- swer to that is by going back in the past and looking.” The exploration of that ques- tion started with Leakey’s grand- father, Louis Leakey, who went to Kenya in 1931 to study in the Great Rift Valley. “He very rapidly turned up stone tools, and the fossils of oth- er animals in the old lake basin that date back two million years ago,” Leakey said. Much later, in 1959, my grandmother, Marry, while walking in the gorge, found the evidence of what we had been looking for — Who made those stone tools?” This find, Australopithecus, put Africa on the map. “The conventional thinking was that we needed to be looking in Asia and Indonesia,” Leakey said. “This find finally opened up for funding. We had been on a shoestring budget up until then. Thereafter, we managed to get a lot of support from the Na- tional Geographic Society, and they continue to support us to- day. As a family, we have received 128 grants from the National Geographic Society.” It is important to appreciate how difficult it is for a fossil to be made, Leakey said. “Most animals that die will never be fossilized or preserved,” Leakey said. “The chances are less remote that it will be brought back up. It is even less likely that the fossil will be found.” Leakey said hominids make up about 0.1 percent of the fossils they find in the valley. “These are very interesting, in fact, perhaps more interesting than hominids,” Leakey said. “Animals tell the story of what context humans lived in. We used these as part of the food chain.” More and more, Leakey is fo- cused on the administrative side of creating the Turkana Basin In- stitute. “We are building research cen- ters that we hope will make it easier to do the research,” Leakey said. “It is very difficult to oper- ate an expedition and get sup- plies.” Leakey said they run a field school from the center, and she encouraged anyone interested in this field to apply. BY CAIN MADDEN Campus News Editor Leakey urges students to look back in time at SMBHC convocation EMMA WILLOUGHBY | The Daily Mississippian

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Page 1: The Daily Mississippian - February 25, 2011

SWAN LAKEF O R D C E N T E R

The Russian National Ballet isbringing its acclaimed productionof “Swan Lake” to the Universityof Mississippi’s Gertrude C. FordCenter for the Performing Arts forone show March 4.

With music by Tchaikovsky, “SwanLake” is based on a German fairytale and follows the heroic youngPrince Siegfried as he labors tofree the delicately beautiful swanmaiden, Odette, from an evilsorcerer’s spell.

8 p.m. March 4$20 Mezzanine/ Balcony (Gen.Adm.) Orchestra/Parterre ticketsare sold out.

F r i d a y , F e b r u a r y 2 5 , 2 0 1 1 | V o l . 1 0 0 , N o . 9 1

this week

inside

LAW SCHOOL PARKINGO P I N I O N

AFRICAN AMERICAN EXHIBIT

L I F E S T Y L E S

RAIN OUT AT THE TAD PAD

S P O R T S

MISSISSIPPIANT H E D A I L Y

C e l e b r a t i n g O u r H u n d r e d t H Y e a r | t H e S t u d e n t n e w S p a 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 O x f O r d S i n C e 1 9 1 1 | w w w . t H e d M O n l i n e . C O M

19112011

1

DOORS OPEN @ 8:00PM - 1AM

F R I D A YFEBRUARYF R I D A YF R I D A YF R I D A YF R I D A YF R I D A YFEBRUARYFEBRUARYFEBRUARYFEBRUARY25T H25252525252525252525252525252525T HT HT HT HT HT HT HT HT H

2011

tickets are available at www.thelyricoxford.com

After Congresswoman Gabri-elle Giffords was shot outside of a market in Arizona, there has been a big push for the relaxation of gun laws across the country. One of the issues that has arisen from this shooting has been whether or not firearms should be legal on college campuses.

While the heat has picked up following the Giffords’ shooting, those in favor of allowing guns on campus cite the incident at Vir-ginia Tech, where a student shot and killed 32 students and faculty, while injuring 15 others. They say that if guns were legal on campus the students and faculty would have been able to defend them-selves, and possibly saved some of the lives lost.

University Chancellor Dan Jones believes that Ole Miss is pre-pared for a situation, even without allowing guns on campus.

“We have a disaster management plan in place,” Jones said. “And we

go through exercises on a regular basis for implementing that.

“We certainly hope and pray that we won’t have to go through anything like that, but that plan is reviewed on a regular basis. It in-cludes communicating as quickly as feasible with current technology with all students and faculty and staff and so forth, but there are di-saster management plans in place and we would execute those plans if needed.”

Thirty-eight states currently do not allow guns on college cam-puses, while 11 others leave it up to the school to decide. Currently Utah is the only state that allows students and professors to carry firearms with them on campus.

States such as Idaho, Texas, Georgia, Oklahoma, Florida, Col-orado, South Carolina and Ari-zona are pushing bills that would allow students and professors to carry firearms on campus. Geor-gia, Texas, and Arizona are very close to legalizing guns on their college campuses.

Just last April, a lawsuit was filed

in Colorado against the campus firearm ban. South Carolina re-cently edged closer to legalizing them on campuses by letting stu-dents check their weapons into the campus authorities and keep them in a locker at the police station.

Senior history major David Mc-Dowell believes that if other states make it legal for students to have firearms on campus, that it affects not just those students, but stu-

dents everywhere else.“I suppose if the University of

Texas allows students to have guns on campus, that might affect my decision for grad school.” McDow-ell said. “Texas has a top 25 law school, but if at any point I may feel unsafe, that changes things. You don’t want to live in a neigh-borhood if you feel unsafe. If that

Chancellor: No need to modify gun lawsBY JACOB BATTEThe Daily Mississippian

See GUN, PAGE 4

Junior business marketing major Robert Holland sits in his home on Thursday af-ternoon. Robert owns guns, including two pistols and a semi-automatic AR 15, but says he would never bring them on campus because it is outlawed in Mississippi.

ED WRIGHT | The Daily Mississippian

Louise Leakey’s family has been piecing together the evolution of the hominoid species for three generations.

Thursday, Leakey presented an outline of what they have learned at the Sally McDonald Barksdale Honors College Spring Convo-cation.

“Who are we?” Leakey said. “The only way to know the an-swer to that is by going back in the past and looking.”

The exploration of that ques-tion started with Leakey’s grand-father, Louis Leakey, who went to Kenya in 1931 to study in the Great Rift Valley.

“He very rapidly turned up stone tools, and the fossils of oth-er animals in the old lake basin that date back two million years ago,” Leakey said. Much later, in 1959, my grandmother, Marry, while walking in the gorge, found the evidence of what we had been looking for — Who made those stone tools?”

This find, Australopithecus, put Africa on the map.

“The conventional thinking was that we needed to be looking in Asia and Indonesia,” Leakey said. “This find finally opened up for funding. We had been on a shoestring budget up until then. Thereafter, we managed to get a lot of support from the Na-tional Geographic Society, and they continue to support us to-day. As a family, we have received 128 grants from the National Geographic Society.”

It is important to appreciate how difficult it is for a fossil to be made, Leakey said.

“Most animals that die will never be fossilized or preserved,” Leakey said. “The chances are less remote that it will be brought back up. It is even less likely that the fossil will be found.”

Leakey said hominids make up about 0.1 percent of the fossils they find in the valley.

“These are very interesting, in fact, perhaps more interesting than hominids,” Leakey said. “Animals tell the story of what

context humans lived in. We used these as part of the food chain.”

More and more, Leakey is fo-cused on the administrative side of creating the Turkana Basin In-stitute.

“We are building research cen-ters that we hope will make it

easier to do the research,” Leakey said. “It is very difficult to oper-ate an expedition and get sup-plies.”

Leakey said they run a field school from the center, and she encouraged anyone interested in this field to apply.

BY CAIN MADDENCampus News Editor

Leakey urges students to look back in time at SMBHC convocation

EMMA WILLOUGHBY | The Daily Mississippian

Page 2: The Daily Mississippian - February 25, 2011

OPINIONO P INIO N | 2 . 22 . 11 | THE DAILY M IS S IS S IP P I AN | PAG E 2O P INIO N | 2 . 25 . 11 | THE DAILY M IS S IS S IP P I AN | PAG E 2

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Letters are welcome, but may be edited for clarity, space or libel.

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2

BY JOSH CLARK Cartoonist

There’s an episode of “Fam-ily Guy” in which Asian re-porter Tricia Takanawa inter-views an avid cyclist. When she asks him why he’s biking in the rain, he replies that “it’s a great way to stay in shape.”

While it’s true that biking is a fun and easy way to get some exercise, there is a much more effective way to main-tain physical fitness: running.

It’s true that running is much more taxing and takes more effort than biking, but there’s a good reason for it: Running is simply more effi-cient than biking.

A 155-pound person who runs five-and-a-half miles burns around 600 calories, and would have to bike 20 miles at 15 miles an hour to burn around the same amount. At the standard eight mph, it would take 45 minutes to run five-and-a-half miles, while it would take an hour to bike it.

For people who normally exercise in the morning, that’s

an extra 15 minutes to sleep through an alarm clock.

Because running requires a lot of energy, it is an excel-lent way to lose weight more quickly than other forms of less strenuous exercise. For college students, running is a great way to get rid of the “freshman 15” (or 40, de-pending on how much free-dom one utilizes from being away from home) and achieve an ideal weight.

Students who loathe run-ning can simply buddy up with a friend and run togeth-er. They can complain about how much homework they have in accounting, discuss plans for the weekend or talk about how much they hate running.

There’s a reason Weight Watchers (usually) works: People are more likely to con-tinue to exercise and to eat healthy when someone else is doing it with them.

Parents warn their kids

about the dangers of peer pressure because it works. Kids want to fit in with their peers, so they sometimes do mischievous things that force them to stay in the house for two weeks once Mommy and Daddy find out.

This same mindset applies to running, although it is much more conducive to your health.

If someone expects you to go running with them, you do not want to disappoint your friend and bail on him for a few sessions of Call of Duty. Put simply, you are more likely to stick with the routine when you have a running partner.

Running is also a great way for students to exercise be-cause it can be done in any weather. When the standard Oxford weather is present (warm, sunny, girls aplenty) run outdoors and take advan-tage of the running paths and explore Oxford. You’ll never know what you’ll run into.

However, students can, much like the fabled mail-men, run in snow, sleet or hail, thanks to the Turner Center. If the weather or temperature in Oxford is inconvenient, students can easily go to the Turner Center to run on the jogging track above the bas-ketball courts in an amiable, air-conditioned atmosphere.

An added bonus to using the Turner Center is that it would hopefully put enough pressure on Ole Miss administration into upgrading our unsightly athletics center into one that is more state-of-the-art.

There are countless other benefits that running offers students, and I’m sure you can ask our good friend Jeeves and he will gladly share the infor-mation with you.

One benefit that may be a little harder to find, however, is that running helps alleviate stress. And, since I took two tests today, I think it’s about time for a jog.

Just Run With It

BY JONSTEPHENSColumnist

Page 3: The Daily Mississippian - February 25, 2011

O P INIO N | 2 . 25 . 11 | THE DAILY M IS S IS S IP P I AN | PAG E 3

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In an unprecedented move a few weeks ago, the Uni-versity announced that most non-freshman students must relocate to off-campus housing next semester to accommodate the hoards of new students at-tending the University of Mis-sissippi in the fall.

As could be expected, many current students are outraged at the decision, having to make other living arrangements on such short notice. Although many students had not planned on staying on campus next year anyway, many other students are unexpectedly being forced to find off-campus housing.

As a student on our busy campus, I have become ex-posed to many complaints about this unfortunate circum-stance. However, take it from me: This is the best thing that has ever happened.

Dorm life on campus is hor-rendous.

Being a resident of Stockard Hall, I have talked to many fel-low residents recently. I have heard many accounts about dorm life in general, in this building specifically and other dorms on campus. In Stockard, the way of life for any student is significantly inhibited.

The lobby comes fully fur-nished with broken furniture, half-eaten burgers on the floor, and a brand-new flat-screen television that is never turned on. The elevators are always broken, sometimes causing many of the 500 residents to be late for class or other meet-ings.

The hallways boast a wide variety of decaying foods scat-tered along the floor (with no garbage cans in sight, despite requests by the residents) and the aroma of the molding gar-bage chute rooms located on each floor.

The bathrooms have mil-dewing pieces of food in the sinks, empty toilet paper can-isters and ants trailing toward the showers.

Wireless Internet on campus

is barbaric.This full school year, I am

paying just under $20,000 to attend Ole Miss. About $6,000 of that goes toward housing. As a freshman, I am required to live on campus this year, so there is no manipulating my way out of staying in this hell hole. Paying that much money should qualify me to be able to access my mandatory online homework, right?

Not a chance. So far in this semester alone,

I have been late on three as-signments and have twice had to trek to the library at mid-night or later to complete as-signments that I could not ac-cess on my laptop due to the wretched wireless Internet on our campus.

We are on a university cam-pus in the 21st century, so I never expected to have to deal with this kind of treatment.

Parking on campus is also atrocious.

Are you aware that Ole Miss is one of the two SEC campuses that do not have a parking ga-rage? I bet you aren’t surprised in the least bit. For those of us fortunate enough to have a

vehicle on campus, we know that parking even at our own residence halls is nearly impos-sible.

At Stockard, if the main lot is full, you are required to park half a mile away from the dorm on top of a 50-foot cliff (no exaggeration). Think you can back into a non-Stockard parking space for ten minutes without getting a ticket? That thought will inevitably empty your pocketbook in the form of a sizable ticket every single time.

When the university told me I had to move off campus next year, I was thrilled beyond comprehension. Words cannot accurately express my pleasure in this new rule. Next year, I am living in an apartment that

will be cleaned and maintained to my liking, I will have work-ing internet at all hours of the day, and I will ride a bus to my classes without having to wor-ry about parking.

I honestly take pity on the freshmen next year that have to go through what I have gone through in Stockard and on campus.

The administration, the fac-ulty, the alumni and the stu-dent leaders need to figure this situation out now. It’s a good thing I love Ole Miss so much, or I would probably have trans-ferred by now.

I want things to get better because more students as dis-gruntled as I am can only lead to bad things for the future of our beloved Ole Miss.

BY ADAM GANUCHEAUColumnist

Housing on campus: blunder or blessing?

Speaking on prohibition in an essay called “My First Im-pression of the USA,” Albert Einstein wrote, “Nothing is more destructive of respect for the government and the law of the land than passing laws which cannot be enforced.”

Prohibition has always made for an easy pot to stir.

Cannabis — one of God’s most controversial creations.

Today, my aim is to distin-guish hemp, the soft and du-rable fiber cultivated from the Cannabis sativa plant that is used for industrial purposes, from its more potent relative, marijuana (often taken from the Cannabis indica plant).

Hemp cultivation literally dates back to the Stone Age. The Cannabis sativa plant is drought-resistant and grows well without herbicides, fungi-cides or pesticides.

Its fiber has countless indus-trial applications, including fabrics, paper, ropes and build-ing materials.

It’s a plant with even more benefits than cotton that can be grown in almost any envi-ronment.

To sweeten the pot, biodiesel fuel can be made from oils tak-en from hemp seeds and stalks, and alcohol fuel can be made via fermentation of the entire plant.

Hemp biodiesel, or “hemp-oline,” is clean-burning and non-toxic.

In addition, hemp produces more biomass per acre than most other crops. The eco-friendly grass-guzzler may be the car of tomorrow.

Industrial hemp is grown in

more than 30 countries world-wide — including China, Spain, Australia, Great Britain and Canada — but is illegal to produce in the United States.

Its prohibition is likely the result of its relation with marijuana, even though hemp grown for industrial purposes is not potent enough for recre-ational or medicinal use.

As a result, the United States imports more hemp than any other country — meaning we are one of the hemp industry’s biggest supporters — yet we still prohibit American farmers from growing this cash crop on our home soil.

Hemp is the only crop that is both illegal to grow in the U.S. and legal for Americans to import — a law the pot and the kettle can both agree is a bit hypocritical.

Some important questions should be raised: Should farm-ers be allowed to harvest hemp, and should the medical com-

munity be allowed to take ad-vantage of marijuana’s medici-nal benefits to treat patients?

We’ve taken a broad spec-trum (the Cannabis genus), stuffed it into a simple concept (“pot”), and put a lid on it at the expense of ourselves.

We classify Cannabis as a Schedule I Drug, which is broadly defined as a drug with “no accepted medical use for treatment” and “high potential for abuse.”

Why the United States gov-ernment does not consistently distinguish between the non-psychoactive industrial hemp and marijuana in its definition of the Cannabis genus is pecu-liar.

I’m not sure we’re ready for full-fledged recreational le-galization yet, but legalizing hemp for industrial uses and marijuana exclusively for me-dicinal purposes would benefit agricultural and medical com-munities.

I also understand that a lot of industries are going to have to adapt if a green revolution catches fire, but capitalism is allegedly a marketplace of ideas that encourages competi-tion and new ideas.

Regardless, states are capa-ble of making up their minds without the help of the Drug Enforcement Administration and the federal government. America is meant to be a melt-ing pot of different cultures and ideals — why split these states if we can’t trust them to govern themselves?

It’s said that watched pot won’t ever boil; if legalization for industrial, medicinal or recreational purposes is a cause you care about, get some like-minded people in office and continue to pray that Ron Paul runs for president in 2012 and uses a legalization compromise as a part of his campaign.

I bet you hippies will vote then.

Stirring The Pot on Modern-Day Prohibition

BY ANDREW DICKSONColumnist

THE DAILY MISSISSIPPIAN

HAS TURNED OVER

RESPECT MOTHER EARTH

RECYCLE YOUR NEWSPAPER

Page 4: The Daily Mississippian - February 25, 2011

NEWSNE WS | 2 . 25 . 11 | THE DAILY M IS S IS S IP P I AN | PAG E 4

4

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Ole Miss athletes have found a way to give back to the com-munity by spending a day at lo-cal elementary schools.

The student-athletes have visited the school, read to the students and interacted with them in the classrooms through various activities.

Reading With the Rebels is an event held each semester and is run by the Ole Miss Athletics Department through the Rebel Ready program, which focuses the athletes on their careers and personal development, as well as on community outreach.

Steven Cox works in the ath-letics department focusing on student-athlete development. He also works directly with the Reading With the Rebels events.

Cox said he’s very proud of the turn-out each semester and how eager the athletes are to be able to participate.

“The athletes go into the

classrooms and get a chance to really interact with the stu-dents,” he said. “They don’t just read to them; they par-ticipate in games and activities, and they talk to them about the importance of academics and school throughout the rest of their lives.”

Cox said the teachers and staff at all the schools have been supportive and always look forward to having the ath-letes back.

The students who participate are typically between kinder-garten and third grade.

Cox said the students really seem to look up to the athletes when they come in.

“Even when they don’t really know who exactly who you are or what sport you play, they look up to you because you are a college athlete,” said Mor-gan Springer, junior volleyball libero, who has participated in the program for the past three years. “It’s great to be able to serve as a role model to these kids, and a great opportunity to

give back to the community.”Any student-athlete can get

involved, and the events are not required.

Cox said students whose sports are not in season are more likely to attend the events, and each event has between 50 and 80 athletes participate dur-ing the three days they hold the event.

Junior wide receiver Melvin Harris said this year was his second time to participate, and he looks forward to being able to do it again.

“When I was young, we had players come into my school and do something similar to the Reading With the Rebels program, and it had a huge im-pact on me and really inspired me,” he said. “I like being able to do the same thing now.”

This semester’s event was held this week at Bramlett El-ementary School, Lafayette Lower Elementary School and Regents School of Oxford, with about 45 student-athletes participating.

Ole Miss Athletes Give Back to Local SchoolsBY ELAN LLOYDThe Daily Mississippian

CONTRIBUTED

Ole Miss volleyball player Morgan Springer reads to children at a local elementary school.

becomes an issue that definitely changes things for everyone.”

McDowell doesn’t know why the University of Mississippi would need to legalize guns on campus.

“If someone is knocking on your dorm room door, and you think they are going to beat you up, and you meet them at the door with a .22, then you’ve got more problems,” McDowell said. “And you’re probably not at the Univer-sity of Mississippi because we are a safe place like that. If things get more dangerous, I guess we’ll ad-dress that issue, but this is a safe campus. Why add the lethal ingre-dient?”

Mississippi is one of the 38 states that do not allow guns on college campuses. Mississippi law 97-37-17 says that it is a felony to carry any weapon on a college campus, unless authorized, for example, university police. If caught with a gun on campus, the person could face a fine of up to $5,000 or three years in federal prison. Concealed

weapons can be kept in vehicles.Camille Lesseig, a junior history

and Spanish major, believes that the current laws should remain the same.

“I think the current laws are fair,” Lesseig said. “I don’t have a problem with someone keeping a gun in their car, if they’re licensed to carry a gun that’s fine, they can have that gun.

“But I really don’t understand the rationale of carrying one on a school campus, the risk of some-one carrying a gun far outweighs any kind of benefit you could have. There’s no legal use for a gun on campus, you can’t hunt, the self-defense issue is really kind of muted by the fact that we have a police force on campus, and ide-ally they would take care of any is-sues that you could come across.”

The problem does not just lie with students. In February of 2010, Amy Bishop opened fire during a Biological Sciences De-partment faculty meeting, killing

three while injuring three others at the University of Alabama in Huntsville.

The number of gun related inci-dents on college campuses contin-ues to rise according to Security-Magazine.com. Since 2007, there have been 25 major incidents in-volving guns on college campuses in which someone was either seri-ously injured or killed.

Those 25 incidents, which in-clude the shootings at Virginia Tech and UAH, have resulted in 64 deaths and 52 injuries.

William Shughart, F.A.P. Bar-nard distinguished professor of economics, believes that if guns were legalized on campus, there would be less chance of something like Virginia Tech, or UAH, hap-pening.

“There is a substantial body of evidence from economic research that shows that violent crimes, murder, rape and robbery, rates are lower in states that allow people to carry concealed weapons on their person.” Shughart said. “The basic explanation is if you’re a criminal and you don’t know whether your victim is armed or not and could blow you away if he wants to, then you are less likely to commit the

crime. Where the real significant reduction comes is rape, if women can carry guns in their handbag, and a criminal knows that there is a possibility that if they try to as-sault a woman there is a chance they’ll pull a gun on them, that deters crime.

“Criminals know that a school is a gun free zone, and that makes it an inviting target. We’ve been for-tunate that it hasn’t been much of a problem in this state, but there have been lots of other events on campuses, where a graduate stu-dent has been mad at his disser-tation advisor and comes in and blows him away, or confronts a faculty or staff member and to be knowingly unarmed makes you vulnerable.”

Junior biology major Hunter Morris can understand why we would want to allow guns on cam-pus but also sees the risk as well.

“On the one side, you have the benefit of having guns on campus, because our students have the op-portunity to protect themselves in situation like what happened at Virginia Tech.” Morris said. “Any-body who is going to want to come have some shootout and massacre is going to do it. If they really want

to, they’ll figure out a way to make it happen. By saying we can’t have guns on campus, we’re not creating a lesser chance of that happening.

“However, when you think about how much alcohol is con-sumed on this campus, it seems to me that there would be a much greater risk of there being an alco-hol related gun injury or death, than there would be if someone decided to come shoot up Ole Miss.”

While Mississippi has been rela-tively lucky when it comes to gun violence, we are still no stranger to the dangers that it can cause. Ear-lier this month a highschool stu-dent in Jackson brought a gun to school. While showing it off to his friends in the bathroom, he acci-dentally discharged it. Luckily, no one was hurt.

In 2009 a young woman brought a gun with her on a bus in Yazoo County, but the actions of a brave student kept her from being able to injure anyone on the bus.

Of the aforementioned 25 in-cidents, the University of Missis-sippi, which is consistently ranked in the top five safest campuses in the United States, does make an appearance on the list, with the fatal shooting of Ole Miss track star Rodney Lockhart at his apart-ment.

Chancellor Jones said he hopes that nothing changes.

“As an administrator I find the current gun law in Mississippi to be healthy and am glad to see that in place,” Jones said. “I’m not aware of any movement to change the law in Mississippi, and hope-fully we won’t change it.””

GUN, continued from page 1

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The Lyric Theater has become Oxford’s premier music venue and a staple of the Square.

The Lyric reopened its doors af-

ter a renovation during the sum-mer of 2008. Since then, it has hosted several nationally known artists such as The Black Crowes, MGMT, Modest Mouse, Wilco, Umphrey’s McGee and Bassnec-tar.

Although the venue holds many of the town’s big-name concerts, the Lyric has also provided a space for organizations to hold fund-raisers and charity events.

“(The Lyric) has provided a place for the Oxford and Ole Miss community to raise money for fundraisers and charitable events,” Tim Burkhead, head of production for the Lyric, said.

“Organizations and events like Hope for Africa, Kappa Alpha Fight Night, March of Dimes, Lafayette Oxford Foundation (For Tomorrow) and John Mc-Cain’s post-debate party are just a few beneficial events that have happened here.”

Marion Startz, general manager of the venue, said the Lyric has held at least 50 charitable events in the past two-and-a-half years,

and they are often held as fre-quently as once a month.

“People love going to the Lyric, so having our Fight Night event there for two nights was great,” Ty New, chairman of philanthropy for Kappa Alpha, said. “We raised $20,000 just from selling tickets at the door.”

Kappa Alpha was able to raise $80,000 overall, and 50 percent of its proceeds went to the Muscular Dystrophy Association. New said the rest of the proceeds went to local charities.

“The Lyric has not only ben-efited philanthropies and organi-zations but also the town of Ox-ford,” Startz said. “People come from all over the United States to come see the shows. When they come, they are renting hotels, eating in our restaurants, buying

stuff on the Square and visiting the Ole Miss campus. The Lyric has provided thousands and thou-sands of dollars to various organi-zations, charities and to the town of Oxford since it reopened.”

Pollstar, the only worldwide trade publication that covers the concert industry, ranked the Lyric at No. 95 on its 2009 Year-End Ticket Sales list, Top 100 World-wide Club Venues.

The venue has sold more than 32,000 tickets since its reopen-ing.

The venue will host another fundraiser tonight featuring Hy-per Crush, and all proceeds will go to benefiting St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital. They have the potential to raise $17,250 for the hospital, Brendan Rich, DJ for Hoodrich, said.

Lyric Theater is more than a music venue

BY BETSY JONESSpecial to The DM

ADDISON DENT | The Daily Mississippian

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NEWS

6

Construction workers finish the pediment of the new Center for Manufacturing Excellence building. Construction is expected to be complete in May with a dedication sometime in the fall.

ADDISON DENT | The Daily Mississippian

University of Mississippi pro-fessor Joanne Gabrynowicz has kept her mind on high places.

It has paid off. The U.S. sec-retary of the interior has ap-pointed 15 new members to the National Geospatial Advi-sory Committee. One of the new members is University of

Mississippi professor Joanne Gabrynowicz, a professor of space law and remote sensing law.

Gabrynowicz, who is also the director of the National Remote Sensing, Air and Space Law Center, will serve as one of 27 committee members. The com-mittee advises the U.S. on the use of geospatial data, which is data of any kind about a place

or location on the earth’s sur-face.

Gabrynowicz has served on panels and committees regard-ing space law and remote sens-ing law before.

“There’s a national archive where the United States keeps all of its non-classified satel-lite imagery, and I used to be the chair of an advisory board to that national archive,” Ga-brynowicz said. “So this adviso-ry committee is similar, but it’s addressing a broader subject. I was asked to serve because of my experience on the previous committee and also because of my academic background, what I do and what I teach.”

According to the NGAC Web site, the committee provides recommendations on federal geospatial policy and manage-ment issues on the develop-ment of the National Spatial Data Infrastructure. The NSDI promotes sharing of geospatial data throughout all levels of government, the private and non-profit sectors and the aca-demic community.

The committee Gabrynow-

icz will serve on meets three to four times a year and is strictly an advisory board, reporting to the chair of the Federal Geo-graphic Data Committee.

According to a press release from the office of the secretary of the interior, Secretary Ken Salazar said geospatial data in-cludes maps, simulations and databases. Geospatial data is an invaluable tool in effective management, including man-agement of utility infrastruc-ture, transportation, energy, emergency management, natu-ral resources, climate analysis, disaster recovery, homeland defense, law enforcement and protection planning.

The newly appointed mem-bers of the NGAC represent the varied interests associated with geospatial programs and technology.

Gabrynowicz said Ole Miss is ahead of other universities in the field of remote sensing law and the use of geospatial data.

“The university houses a very special expertise that’s nation-ally and internationally rec-ognized,” Gabrynowicz said.

“The university is specialized in an area that no other university in the country can claim. We really are the long-term leader in this field.”

Richard Gershon, dean of the law school, is proud of the accomplishments of Gabryno-wicz and the university.

“Commercialization of space will be an area of continued economic growth,” Gershon said. “The University of Mis-sissippi is at the leading edge of the legal issues surrounding this important subject, thanks to the efforts of Professor Ga-brynowicz, who is an inter-nationally recognized expert in the field, and the National Center for Remote Sensing, Air, and Space Law.”

Regardless of Gabrynowicz’s other duties, she still considers herself primarily a teacher.

“I love teaching. That’s what I did first and foremost,” Ga-brynowicz said. “I was a teacher before I was a center director or advisory board member. I still teach every year. I make a point of it. That’s the most important thing I do.”

Ole Miss law professor named to national committeeBY JAKE PRESLEYThe Daily Mississippian

Created for your morning pleasure

T h e S T u d e n T n e w S p a 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

The Daily Mississippian

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LIFESTYLES

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Help Nominate the 2011 Elsie M. Hood Outstanding Teacher of the YearMarch 1 Deadline

Each year since 1966, The University of Mississippi has recognized excellence in teaching by presenting the Elsie M. Hood Outstanding Teacher Award. Each recipient receives a personal plaque and a check from Chancellor Dan Jones during Honors Day ceremonies in April, as well as the satisfaction of being recognized for a job well done. Recipients’ names are also engraved on a plaque listing previous winners, which is displayed in the J. D. Williams Library.

Nominations for the award are now being sought from students, faculty, and alumni. Faculty who are Assistant, Associate, or Full Professors are eligible, except for previous recipients.

To nominate a faculty member, individuals with an Ole Miss WebID can visit the nomination web page at www.olemiss.edu/hoodaward. Alternatively, you can send an e-mail to [email protected] or mail a letter to the Chancellor’s Office, University, MS 38677.

Each nomination should be from a single person and include reasons why the nominee should receive the award, including examples of exceptional teaching. The submission deadline is March 1, so don’t wait to help bring recognition to an inspiring Ole Miss teacher!

“Reasons to be Pretty,” a tale that focuses on people’s obsession with physical appearance and its ups and downs, will be performed at the Powerhouse in Oxford this weekend.

The original play by writer and director Neil LaBute follows “Shape of Things” and “Fat Pig” (opening on Broadway in April) as the third chapter in a trilogy of

plays.The mature production is a se-

ries of monologues by four young adults depicting the do’s and don’ts of a successful relationship.

“I remember during the rehears-al process, the cast and I were talk-ing about the play and comment-ing that maybe this play would represent, instead of ‘how to,’ what not to do in a relationship” Alice Walker, director of the production, member of the Theatre Oxford Board of Directors and member of

the Yoknapatawpha Arts Council, said.

So what is all the buzz about? Walker gives a short synopsis of

the play.Greg makes the mistake of mak-

ing an off-handed remark about a co-worker’s pretty face in com-parison to his girlfriend. The un-flattering comparison gets back to his girlfriend and wreaks havoc on a close group of friends. When Greg’s best friend Kent and his wife Carly get involved, things get

dramatically more complex. When Greg’s relationship with

his girlfriend reaches the point of no return, their friends are pulled into the argument, which brings about a variety of problems.

Secrets and opinions are re-vealed, and the consequences are irreparable.

“Despite its fairly basic storyline, the play has many different lay-ers to it,” Walker said. “The story represents very real situations with very real people who we can either

relate to or we know. It is hard to sum up in a few words. This play is most definitely about a person’s looks and how we as a society judge people on whether or not a person is pretty or beautiful, whether we do it consciously or not.”

The play will be shown this weekend, Feb. 25 and 26, at the Powerhouse at 8 p.m.

Tickets for adults are $10 in advance/$12 at the door and for students and seniors $8 in ad-vance/$10 at the door.

‘Reasons to be Pretty’ to be performed at PowerhouseBY ASHLEY D. BALLThe Daily Mississippian

With Bassnectar playing at the Lyric earlier this week, Oxford is making a name for itself in the electronic scene.

Hyper Crush will be performing at the Lyric tonight, marking their first appearance in Oxford.

Forerunners in electropop (sometimes called synthpop), Hy-per Crush has made a name for themselves recently with the singles “Keep Up” and “Kick Us Out.”

Hyper Crush has performed as the opening act for numerous tours around the world, opening for Kevin Rudolf, Far East Move-ment and Lady Gaga.

They have also had songs fea-tured on MTV’s “The Hills” and “The Real World.”

Consisting of three members, Donny Fontaine, Holly Valen-tine and Preston Moronie, Hyper Crush is a genre-bending group that knows it has work ahead.

“We want our music to reach as many people, animals and plants as possible,” Preston said. “There are elements of dubstep and hard electro now being injected into pop music; However, if it’s not mixed or fused right with some-thing mainstream or pop it will never become big.”

Other than the big names such as Bassnectar and Deadmau5, the electro genre is, for the most part, underground. Most groups incor-porate different elements like dub-step (hard-hitting beats and heavy bass lines), keytars (a keyboard played like a guitar) and synthesiz-ers.

Hyper Crush embraces all these things, giving them a unique sound.

The harmony between rapper Fontaine and vocalist Valentine just gives them an even greater edge.

“The dynamic allows us to ap-peal to a wider variety of people,

BY CASEY HOLIDAYThe Daily Mississippian

Hyper Crush to take on The Lyric Oxford

The University of Missis-sippi Museum is hosting an exhibit on African American soldiers in World War II and their impact on the civil rights movement.

The exhibit in the Skipwith Gallery includes original pho-tographs, prints and cartoons demonstrating the impact of African Americans in Germany during the war.

Placed chronologically on the walls, the pieces take view-ers through history, starting with World War II and moving through several major events of the civil rights movement.

The exhibit is being show-cased in the United States and

Germany, and Oxford is the third location in the United States to host the collection.

It holds several photographs that have not been shown be-fore.

“The exhibit is so different; It tells a story and shows a part of history that we never really hear that much about,” Ashley Chaffin, museum program co-ordinator, said.

African American soldiers had a large influence on the battlefields abroad, making up two to three million of the 15 to 20 million soldiers stationed in Germany.

The goal of the exhibit is to educate people on an often overlooked subject.

“It is important for us to realize and recognize the role

of African Americans during World War II and how their positions were so different once they were out of the Unit-ed States and in Europe,” Tina Lutz, graduate associate at the University Museum, said. “It really is important to realize how crucial they were.”

Director of the exhibit, Ma-ria Hoehn, is working on cre-ating an online database that will allow anyone to access the photographs from the exhibit. She anticipates it benefiting teachers and others interested in learning more about African American presence in Germa-ny.

The photographs that Hoe-hn and her colleague Martin

BY MOLLY DYALThe Daily Mississippian

African American Soldiers in WWII Exhibit at Ole Miss

MOLLY DYALL | The Daily Mississippian

See EXHIBIT, PAGE 8

See HYPER CRUSH, PAGE 8

Page 8: The Daily Mississippian - February 25, 2011

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LIFESTYLES

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Who: All interested faculty and current studentsWhen: Monday, Feb. 28th-Thursday, March 3rd: 9AM-4PM Friday, March 4th: 9AM-1PMWhere: Student Union 405A (3rd floor) Monday-Thursday Student Union 410 (Catalpa Room-3rd Floor) Friday

The Offi ce of Enrollment Services is inviting all students, faculty and staff to sit down and write a few old-fashioned letters. The department is hosting a letter-writing campaign February 28th-March 4th to encourage high school seniors to attend Ole Miss in the fall.

JOIN THE LETTER WRITING CAMPAIGN

Come and write words of encouragement and wisdom to the students we hope will be the incoming class of 2011. Refreshments, stationery, and writing utensils will be available.

Klimke have collected are rare in their subject matter.

A photograph showing Ger-man soldiers being held hos-tage by an African American soldier gets Lutz’ attention.

“An African American man holding white men at bay — that is something that you would not have seen in Amer-ica at the time,” Lutz said. “The dichotomy is interest-ing, and so is seeing how dif-ferently people are perceived in other countries.”

The exhibit transitions from World War II photographs to pieces from the civil rights movement with a clip from a speech by Martin Luther King

Jr. during a visit to Berlin in 1964.

Several images include events from the Black Panther Party, activist Angela Davis and civil rights marches in Germany.

“You always hear about Mar-tin Luther King in the states, and especially his involvement in the South, but here in these images, we see civil rights ac-tivists going to Germany and places all over Europe,” Lutz said.

According to the University Museum, the exhibit has gen-erated a significant amount of interest within the community and will be open until March 14.

EXHIBIT, continued from page 7

and there are aspects that a male brings that a female can’t and vice versa. Being able to fuse the two makes you one step ahead of those who can’t,” Preston said.

Forming in 2006, Hyper Crush made a name for itself by indepen-dently releasing singles through MySpace, eventually leading to their first album “The Arcade” in May of 2008.

Toward the end of 2008, Hyper Crush signed with Universal Mo-town, with a follow-up to “The Ar-cade” exxpected later this year.

In addition to producing original music, Hyper Crush creates remix-es, most notably to La Roux’s “Bul-letproof,” Usher’s “DJ Got Us Fal-lin’ In Love” and Enrique Iglesias’s

“Tonight (I’m Loving You).”“The remix of ‘Bulletproof’ is

what really got me into Hyper Crush,” Jose Rodriguez, a graduate Spanish student, said. “I’m a huge fan of the Los Angeles music scene, and the fact they are coming to Mis-sissippi, especially Oxford, is amaz-ing.”

Hyper Crush is one band that transcends typical genre lines, and students across the university are getting excited for many different reasons.

“I like them because they appeal to the same audience as Pretty Lights and Civil Wars, but it is much more interactive because there are actual lyrics,” John Monteith, freshman journalism major said.

For some, Hyper Crush is more than a band, it’s an experience — one well worth a journey.

“Hyper Crush is the perfect mix of techno, 80’s and rap,” Mallarie Pitcher, an Ole Miss alumna who is traveling from Memphis for the concert, said. “Who wouldn’t love a band like that? I’ve been listening to them since I was an undergraduate, and it’s about time this futuristic band made a trip to good ole Mis-sissippi!”

Hyper Crush will be playing at the Lyric tonight. Doors open at 9 p.m., and the show starts at 10 p.m.

Tickets are $15 and can be or-dered at thelyricoxford.com or bought at the door.

HYPER CRUSH, continued from page 7

New Chrysler rivals import luxury

Those who watched the Su-per Bowl this year probably saw the Chrysler commercial that showed images of Detroit and Eminem driving the 200 to the famous Fox Theatre.

At the end, it has the slo-gan “Imported from Detroit,” which implies that the Chrysler 200 could hold its own against the luxury brands across both ponds like Lexus and BMW.

So I went out to test the va-lidity of that statement.

At first glance, the Chrysler 200 looks a little sedate. There is nothing that really pops out to catch the eye, especially compared to the stylish cars that Hyundai released recent-ly.

But it is not completely bland either. Things like the LED taillights, dual exhaust and 18-inch chrome wheels give it a little bit of style.

Once actually inside the car, it is amazing how good it looks and feels.

Our test car had the limited trim, which came with all of the luxury goodies like heated leather seats, automatic climate control, and tilt and telescop-ing steering wheel.

The leather wrapping the seats had exceptional qual-ity, not unlike something you might find in a Lexus ES350.

The front seats were also ex-tremely comfortable, thanks to soft padding and 8-way adju-stability. The rear seats were a tad on the hard side but with ample leg room and the same supple leather that was on the front seats– only the pickiest of passengers will complain.

The plastics in the 200 use the right textures and colors to make the interior seem much more expensive than our car’s $27,160 price would suggest.

Chrysler even added stitched leather to the side panels on the doors, which give it that little extra touch.

Our test car also came with

the optional navigation system including a 6.5-inch touch screen and also handles radio and MP3 functions.

The GPS was easy to operate and input addresses; however, it was sometimes hard to fol-low when it gave directions, and if you were to accidentally overshoot your exit, it does not want to recalculate your route.

Our car came equipped with the optional 283 horse-power Pentastar 3.7L V-6 and the 6-speed automatic, which worked almost seamlessly.

The engine proved powerful enough to get up to speed on highways and has decent gas mileage at 19 miles per gallon in the city and 29 MPG on the highway.

It was remarkably quiet (I literally had to try to hear it running), which pays homage to the cabin as well because not only could I barely hear the engine, there was also minimal road and wind noise. The en-gine is also very smooth with-out a hint of vibration when starting the car up or shutting

it down.The only negative thing I

have to say about the power-train of the 200 is the very un-responsive gas pedal.

To use half of the 283 horse-power, I had to push the gas pedal all the way to the floor.

The ride is quite smooth and on par with other vehicles in its segment, rolling over bumps and other road distur-bances with relative ease and comfort. The steering is a tad on the heavier side but overall pretty effortless with a little bit of understeer.

The overall quality and per-formance of the new Chrysler 200 is easily on par with some-thing like the Lexus ES 350.

And it is no doubt that Chrysler was using the Lexus as a benchmark, as both the Chrysler 200 and ES 350 are the exact same overall length, 191.7 inches.

But the best part is that a fully loaded Chrysler 200 is almost $10,000 cheaper than a Lexus ES 350, affording the same level of comfort and lux-uriousness as a Lexus from a Detroit import.

TEST DRIVE: 2011 CHRYSLER 200BY MATTHEW BISHOPThe Daily Mississippian

SUSAN HOLT | The Daily Mississippian

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CLAS S IF IEDS | 2 . 25 . 11 | THE DAILY M IS S IS S IP P I AN | PAG E 9

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CLASSIFIEDS INFORMATIONTo place your ad in The Daily Mississippian Classifieds section, visit: http://www.thedmonline.com/classifieds.

The DEADLINE to place, correct or cancel an ad is 12 p.m. one day in advance. The Daily Mis-sissippian is published Monday through Friday year round, when school is in session.

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The DM reserves the right to refuse ads that appear to of-fer unrealistic or questionable products or services.

201 BISHOP HALL662.915.5503

9

Interested in applying to serve on next year’s ASB Presidential Cabinet?

Applications Are Now Availablein the ASB Offi ce (Union 4th fl oor) and are due back by February 25th.

Contact Virginia Burke with any questions regarding due dates or positions at [email protected].

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Barring a Georgia-eqsue Southeastern Conference Tournament run, this will be the ninth consecutive sea-son the Ole Miss Rebels have failed to make the NCAA Bas-ketball Tournament.

Despite their ultimate goal appearing out of reach this season, the Rebels, 17-11 (5-8 SEC), still have some things to play for.

First, there’s the .500 mark in SEC Play.

While, given their play of late, winning the last three in conference play seems like a bit of a stretch, the biggest hurdle is tomorrow afternoon when the Alabama Crimson Tide, 19-8 (11-2 SEC), roll

into Oxford.While Alabama, which cur-

rently sits atop the SEC West, is a tall order, Ole Miss has shown this season that it has the potential to play with the league’s better teams.

If it lives up to that po-tential and knocks off a Tide team that’s on the NCAA Tournament bubble, winning out gets a lot more manage-able, especially considering Ole Miss is currently unde-feated against both Arkansas and Auburn – its final two opponents.

A .500 finish in SEC play would, at best, keep the Reb-els in contention for a bye in next month’s SEC Tourna-ment and, at worst, send them to Atlanta on a high note.

Additionally, another 20-

win season is still an attain-able goal.

If Ole Miss could reach the 20-win plateau again this sea-son, it would be the fourth such time it had done so dur-ing coach Andy Kennedy’s five-year tenure in Oxford. That’s quite an accomplish-ment.

Winning an NIT would also be a notable achievement this season.

Though the Rebels have twice made it to the semifinals at Madison Square Garden, they have yet to win a game there, much less the enitre tournament.

An NIT championship run would serve as the icing on Chris Warren’s career and keep the Rebels playing well into spring.

Finally, the Rebels still have next year to play for.

I know it’s hard to start thinking about next season while this one is still going on, but it must be done to some extent.

Ole Miss will be without Warren and Zach Graham next season, so it will be im-portant for other players to continue to develop over the final weeks of this season.

With a number of goals still within reach, this season’s Rebel basketball team still has something to play for, perhaps a few somethings.

A win tomorrow afternoon over Alabama would be a nice achievement in and of itself, and might just lay the founda-tion for whatever future suc-cesses Ole Miss achieves.

BY REID BARRINEAUThe Daily Mississippian

Rebs have much to play for despite slim NCAA Tournament chances week honors.

Junior right-hander Codey Morehouse got the ball on opening day for Houston and went seven innings, giving up just one run on four hits in his first career start.

Junior left-hander Jordan Lewis, another junior college transfer, pitched seven score-less innings on Saturday, while senior left-hander Taylor Ham-mack received the start last Sunday for the Cougars.

“When you’re on the road, you have an increased focus,” junior Matt Snyder said. “Houston’s a good team. It’s just like last year when we were playing Tulane – Houston’s a good team; Tulane was a good team.”

The Diamond Rebels will re-turn home following the Hous-ton series for a season-long 15-game home stand, starting with a two-game midweek series against Austin Peay on Tuesday and Wednesday.

REBS, continued from page 12

It has now been more than two weeks since the No. 18 Ole Miss men’s tennis team last played a match. The Rebels have not complained about it, but have rather used the two-week break in a beneficial way.

“The two weeks has really given us a chance to get used to the outside (courts),” Ole Miss coach Billy Chadwick said.

“It’s been a great two weeks.”

The Rebels will participate in their first outdoor match of the season and begin a four-match home stand Saturday when they welcome Tulane to Oxford in a match set for noon at the Palmer/Salloum Tennis

Center.“I think the whole team is

ready to play in a match,” se-nior Kalle Norberg said. “We’ve been practicing outdoors now for a couple of weeks, and ev-eryone is ready to go.”

Tulane enters Saturday’s con-test with a 5-2 record, while the Rebels are currently 3-2. The Green Wave carries some momentum into Saturday af-ter coming off a 7-0 sweep of Jackson State last Sunday.

Meanwhile, Chadwick had plenty of knowledge on the Green Wave when asked about them Wednesday.

“(Tulane coach Mark Boo-ras) used to be the assistant coach at LSU,” Chadwick said. “He knows the Southeastern Conference well — he knows big-time tennis. He’s build-

ing a very good program down there.

“As most people know, after Hurricane Katrina they actu-ally closed down many of their sports for several years, and tennis was one of them.

“They’re in the rebuilding process, but last year I thought they made some big improve-ments.

“When we played them it was extremely competitive, and we’re expecting them to be at the top of their game when they come here Saturday.”

Following Saturday’s match, the Rebels will host Memphis on Tuesday, with the Tigers being Ole Miss’ final non-con-ference match before opening SEC play next weekend against two current top-25 opponents, Kentucky and Vanderbilt.

Rebel Netters return to action SaturdayBY JOHN HOLTThe Daily Mississippian

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After an undefeated home stand to open the 2011 season, the Diamond Rebels (5-0) hit the road for the first time this season and take on Houston

(4-0) in a three-game weekend series beginning Friday at 6:30 p.m.

“There are a lot of guys that are going to (go on a road trip) for the first time, so that’s why we always take one weekend on the road,” Ole Miss coach Mike Bianco said.

Under first-year coach Todd Whitting, the Cougars are off to an equally fast start this sea-son after a three-game sweep of University of Texas at Arling-ton and a midweek win over Stephen F. Austin.

Houston, picked to finish seventh in the league, is the second of four Conference USA opponents Ole Miss will face this season.

Led by the bats of junior catcher John Cannon, junior third baseman Austin Grac-ey and sophomore shortstop Chase Jensen, Houston has batted .353 and scored 40 runs through four games this sea-son. Jensen, a junior-college transfer, finished the weekend with a .600 batting average and five runs batted in to earn Conference USA hitter of the

Undefeated Diamond Rebs head to Houston this weekend

BY AUSTIN MILLERThe Daily Mississippian

See REBS, PAGE 11

AUSTIN MCAFEE | The Daily Mississippian

After heavy rainfall, the roof of Tad Smith Coliseum sprung a leak that prematurely ended Thursday night’s match-up be-tween the Lady Rebels and No. 4 Lady Volunteers (33-2, 15-0 SEC). With Ole Miss (10-17, 3-12) trailing 66-39, officials called the game with 5:24 left in the contest.

Tennessee asserted itself from the very beginning of the game, and led 27-7 with 9:25 left in the first half.

“Tennessee is a better team,”

Ole Miss coach Renee Ladner said.

Ladner said the Lady Rebels generally start games slow, but acknowledged it’s tough to gain ground on a team like the Volun-teers.

At halftime, Ole Miss trailed 43-22, but went on a 6-0 run at the onset of the second half to bring the score to 49-35.

Against Tennessee, the Lady Rebels main problem was re-bounding. The Lady Vols fin-ished with 43 boards – more than double the Lady Rebels’ 15 rebounds.

Ladner had no illusions about out-rebounding Tennessee. “I

never thought we would out-re-bound them,” she said.

The Lady Rebels shot 31 per-cent from the floor as opposed to Tennessee’s impressive 52 per-cent.

“Tennessee’s better than we are,” Ladner said. “Tennessee is No. 4 in the country. So you knew what you had coming in.”

Valencia McFarland led the Lady Rebs with 14 points and four assists, while She Nelson chipped in nine points.

The Tennessee game was Ole Miss’ last home game of the year, but they travel to take on Missis-sippi State on Sunday at 2 p.m. to end the regular season.

Rainy day for Lady Rebs vs. Tennessee BY KAITLYN DUBOSEThe Daily Mississippian