8
MISSISSIPPIAN THE DAILY 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 M ONDAY , A PRIL 1, 2013 | V OL . 101, N O . 114 Prices increase for Oxford’s summer day camp Every year, the Oxford Park Commission puts on summer day camps for chil- dren ages 5-13. Campers stay busy par- ticipating in baseball, dodge- ball, kickball, flag football and swimming three days a week. Arts and crafts are also of- fered daily alongside many field trips to locations such as the Enid Lake fish hatch- ery, the Ole Miss Basketball Practice Facility, the Gillom Sports Center and Swayze Field. Summer day camp in 2013 will have two sessions: The first will begin June 3 and end June 28, and the second session will begin July 8 and end Aug. 2. The camp will run Monday through Friday, 7:30 a.m. until 3:30 p.m., at a cost of $250 per camper. For an additional $50, after-camp care is provided from 3:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. every day. Sam Pryor, direc- tor of Oxford Park Commis- sion Outdoors, attributed a recent cost increase to neces- sity. “Material and travel costs have gone up, and we had to raise prices to stay out of the red,” Pryor said. Oxford native Marie Moore said the $50 price increase will not deter her from sending her daughter to camp this summer. “It is still cheaper than anything else you are going to find that has the activities, instead of someone just bab- ysitting and sitting them in front of the TV,” Moore said. “It is well worth the money.” Eighty campers will be ac- cepted each session this year. Registration will begin at 8 a.m. on May 6, at the Oxford Activity Center located at 400 Price St. For more information, visit www.oxfordparkcom- mission.com or contact Sam Pryor by phone at (662) 232- 2758 or via email at stpryor@ oxfordparkcommission.com. Registration for the Oxford Park Commission’s annual summer day camp begins at 8 a.m. on May 6. BY WAVERLY MCCARTHY [email protected] JUSTICE WEEK JUSTICE WEEK AT OLE MISS Twenty-seven million peo- ple are kept as slaves around the world, according to the International Justice Mis- sion’s website. The University of Missis- sippi chapter of the Inter- national Justice Mission is holding Justice Week this week to raise awareness of exploitation around the world and to raise funds for the mission. “The International Justice Mission is a human rights agency that brings rescue to victims of slavery, sexual exploitation and other forms of violent oppression,” said Buki Alabi, Ole Miss mem- ber and engineering gradu- ate student. “Mission law- yers, investigators and social workers work with local of- ficials to secure immediate victim rescue and aftercare, to prosecute perpetrators and to ensure that public justice systems police, courts and laws protect the poor.” The week will start with a worship service in the Grove on Monday. “I’m really excited about this week’s events,” Alabi said. “It’s really great be- cause we have members who attend different campus ministries that have all come together to plan this event.” Other events include a screening of the movie “Amazing Grace,” a fair trade day to educate students on fair trade, a 5-kilometer walk/run, an open mic night and a prayer service to end the week. Many everyday foods, clothes and appliances may be manufactured by forced- labor slaves, which is why the IJM chapter said it is hosting a fair trade day. “Something as simple as researching about compa- nies before we buy from them can change a lot of the ways companies do busi- ness,” said Lucus Jackson, planner of the 5k run. The Ole Miss student chapter of the International Justice Mission will be hosting Justice Week this week to raise awareness of the numerous human rights abuses occurring around the world today. BY ANN-MARIE HEROD [email protected] See JUSTICE, PAGE 4 UM student takes on Washington, D.C. Begin the week with the International Justice Mission in the Grove for ‘Worship Monday.’ OTHER EVENTS: Screening of Amazing Grace Fair Trade Day 5K walk and run Open-mic benefit Ending the week is a prayer service FOR MORE INFO: Check out ijm.org or orgsync. com/28314/chapter or attend an interest meeting at 7 p.m. Mondays in Peabody 206. Daniel Roberts, a Trent Lott Institute and Honors College junior, is interning this summer at the White House DIAMOND REBS DROP SERIES AT FLORIDA P. 8 CARTOON: MARRIAGE EQUALITY P. 2 LADY NETTERS SWEEP WEEKEND P. 7 Check out our NEW site theDMonline.com Lott., Honors College junior to intern at White House — AM Hard work, dedication and determination are some of many characteristics that led a man from rural Missis- sippi to the the Oval Office. Daniel Roberts, public policy leadership junior at The University of Missis- sippi, landed an internship at the White House this se- mester that puts him one step closer to achieving his dream of success. The selection process en- tailed rigorous judgment based on the applicant’s commitment to public ser- vice, leadership in the com- munity and commitment to the mission of the Obama administration. Roberts is humbled and enthusiastic after being se- lected for this internship. “One of the most exciting things about being selected for the White House intern- ship program is having the opportunity to serve under the first candidate I have ever campaigned for,” Rob- erts said. Roberts said that in 2008, as a sophomore in high school, he became energized by President Obama’s “Yes, we can” slogan and worked diligently for the cause by giving out numerous signs and helping his father regis- ter citizens to vote. The internship takes a select group of young men and women from across the country who will dedicate themselves to bettering the White House and the com- munity. Roberts currently partici- pates in conducting White House research, manag- ing incoming inquiries, at- tending various meetings, writing memos and staffing events. Roberts said he hopes to become accustomed to de- manding and fast-paced work to ease the transition from college life into the work force. Similarly, he said he hopes to fortify his strengths and improve upon his weak- nesses during his time at the White House. “I still get nervous dur- BY LOGAN KIRKLAND [email protected] COURTESY UM COMMUNICATIONS See INTERN, PAGE 5

The Daily Mississippian – April 1, 2013

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Page 1: The Daily Mississippian – April 1, 2013

MISSISSIPPIANT H E D A I LY

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

M o n d a y , a p r i l 1 , 2 0 1 3 | V o l . 1 0 1 , n o . 1 1 4

Prices increase for Oxford’s summer day camp

Every year, the Oxford Park Commission puts on summer day camps for chil-dren ages 5-13.

Campers stay busy par-ticipating in baseball, dodge-ball, kickball, flag football and swimming three days a week.

Arts and crafts are also of-fered daily alongside many field trips to locations such as the Enid Lake fish hatch-ery, the Ole Miss Basketball Practice Facility, the Gillom Sports Center and Swayze Field.

Summer day camp in 2013 will have two sessions: The first will begin June 3 and end June 28, and the second session will begin July 8 and end Aug. 2.

The camp will run Monday through Friday, 7:30 a.m. until 3:30 p.m., at a cost of $250 per camper.

For an additional $50, after-camp care is provided from 3:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m.

every day. Sam Pryor, direc-tor of Oxford Park Commis-sion Outdoors, attributed a recent cost increase to neces-sity.

“Material and travel costs have gone up, and we had to raise prices to stay out of the red,” Pryor said.

Oxford native Marie Moore said the $50 price increase will not deter her from sending her daughter to camp this summer.

“It is still cheaper than anything else you are going to find that has the activities, instead of someone just bab-ysitting and sitting them in front of the TV,” Moore said. “It is well worth the money.”

Eighty campers will be ac-cepted each session this year. Registration will begin at 8 a.m. on May 6, at the Oxford Activity Center located at 400 Price St.

For more information, visit www.oxfordparkcom-mission.com or contact Sam Pryor by phone at (662) 232-2758 or via email at [email protected].

Registration for the Oxford Park Commission’s annual summer day camp begins at 8 a.m. on May 6.

BY WaverlY [email protected] justice week

justice week at ole miss

Twenty-seven million peo-ple are kept as slaves around the world, according to the International Justice Mis-sion’s website.

The University of Missis-sippi chapter of the Inter-national Justice Mission is holding Justice Week this week to raise awareness of exploitation around the world and to raise funds for the mission.

“The International Justice Mission is a human rights agency that brings rescue to victims of slavery, sexual exploitation and other forms of violent oppression,” said Buki Alabi, Ole Miss mem-ber and engineering gradu-ate student. “Mission law-yers, investigators and social workers work with local of-ficials to secure immediate victim rescue and aftercare, to prosecute perpetrators and to ensure that public justice systems police, courts and laws protect the poor.”

The week will start with a worship service in the Grove on Monday.

“I’m really excited about this week’s events,” Alabi said. “It’s really great be-cause we have members who attend different campus ministries that have all come together to plan this event.”

Other events include a screening of the movie “Amazing Grace,” a fair trade day to educate students on fair trade, a 5-kilometer walk/run, an open mic night and a prayer service to end the week.

Many everyday foods, clothes and appliances may be manufactured by forced-labor slaves, which is why the IJM chapter said it is hosting a fair trade day.

“Something as simple as researching about compa-nies before we buy from them can change a lot of the ways companies do busi-ness,” said Lucus Jackson, planner of the 5k run.

The Ole Miss student chapter of the International Justice Mission will be hosting Justice Week this week to raise awareness of the numerous human rights abuses occurring around the world today.

BY ann-Marie [email protected]

See JUSTICE, PAGE 4

UM student takes on Washington, d.c.

Begin the week with the International Justice Mission in the Grove for ‘Worship Monday.’

OThER EvEnTS:• Screening of Amazing Grace• Fair Trade Day • 5K walk and run• Open-mic benefit• Ending the week is a prayer service

FOR MORE InFO:Check out ijm.org or orgsync.com/28314/chapter or attend an interest meeting at 7 p.m. Mondays in Peabody 206.

Daniel Roberts, a Trent Lott Institute and honors College junior, is interning this summer at the White house

DIAMOnD REBS DROP SERIES AT FLORIDA P. 8

CARTOOn: MARRIAGE EQUALITY P. 2

LADY nETTERS SWEEP WEEKEnD P. 7

Check out our NEW sitetheDMonline.com

Lott., Honors College junior to intern at White House — AM

Hard work, dedication and determination are some of many characteristics that led a man from rural Missis-sippi to the the Oval Office.

Daniel Roberts, public policy leadership junior at The University of Missis-sippi, landed an internship at the White House this se-mester that puts him one step closer to achieving his

dream of success.The selection process en-

tailed rigorous judgment based on the applicant’s commitment to public ser-vice, leadership in the com-munity and commitment to the mission of the Obama administration.

Roberts is humbled and enthusiastic after being se-lected for this internship.

“One of the most exciting things about being selected for the White House intern-ship program is having the opportunity to serve under the first candidate I have ever campaigned for,” Rob-

erts said.Roberts said that in 2008,

as a sophomore in high school, he became energized by President Obama’s “Yes, we can” slogan and worked diligently for the cause by giving out numerous signs and helping his father regis-ter citizens to vote.

The internship takes a select group of young men and women from across the country who will dedicate themselves to bettering the White House and the com-munity.

Roberts currently partici-pates in conducting White

House research, manag-ing incoming inquiries, at-tending various meetings, writing memos and staffing events.

Roberts said he hopes to become accustomed to de-manding and fast-paced work to ease the transition from college life into the work force.

Similarly, he said he hopes to fortify his strengths and improve upon his weak-nesses during his time at the White House.

“I still get nervous dur-

BY lOgan [email protected]

cOUrtesY UM cOMMUnicatiOns See InTERn, PAGE 5

Page 2: The Daily Mississippian – April 1, 2013

MISSISSIPPIANT H E D A I LY

The University of MississippiS. Gale Denley Student Media Center201 Bishop hall

Main number: 662.915.5503Email: [email protected]: Monday-Friday, 8 a.m.-5 p.m.

The Daily Mississippian is published daily Monday through Friday during the academic year.

Contents do not represent the official opinions of The University of Mississippi or The Daily Mississippian unless specifically indicated.

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

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The Daily Mississippian welcomes all com-ments.Please send a letter to the editor addressed to The Daily Mississippian, 201 Bishop Hall, University, MS, 38677 or send an e-mail to [email protected].

Letters should be typed, double-spaced and no longer than 300 words. Third party letters and those bearing pseudonyms, pen names or “name withheld” will not be published. Publication is limited to one letter per individual per calendar month.

Student submissions must include grade clas-sification and major. All submissions must be turned in at least three days in advance of date of desired publication.

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C O L U M N

gay Marriage and the supremes: ‘You Keep Me hangin’ On’

Last week, the Supreme Court heard arguments in two separate cases dealing with gay marriage. These cases dealt with the con-stitutionality of the federal government’s Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) and California’s Prop 8, both pieces of legislation that outlaw gay marriage. The decisions in these cases will be announced in June, and while it seems unlikely that either side will be claiming total victory, the Supreme Court now has a chance to move toward universal mar-

riage equality.Fundamentally, the Su-

preme Court will be decid-ing if either DOMA or Prop 8 are constitutional. This decision asks the question if gay marriage is a protected right under the 14th Amend-ment’s equal protection clause.

The court will most likely be using the rational basis of review to decide these cases, or the easiest standard for the respective governments to uphold their laws. This means that the state must prove that it has a legitimate interest that the questioned law is trying to protect, and there must be a justifiable connection between the law and that interest. Rational basis was first deemed to be the appropriate standard for cases concerning laws deal-ing with sexual orientation

in another Supreme Court decision, Romer v. Evans.

There is the argument that marriage is a religious con-struct and civil unions are the appropriate avenue for homosexual couples. First, if marriage is only a religious institution, then how do we reconcile the acceptance of marriages performed in all faiths? Or civil ceremonies? All married heterosexual couples are considered mar-ried no matter what faith, if any, they were married in. Also, if that’s the case, there are numerous faiths and clergy that accept and are supportive of gay marriage. Civil unions are still not marriage. To borrow an apt phrase from the landmark case, Brown v. Board of Edu-cation, separate is not equal, and it never will be. Equality is equal treatment with no

caveats and exceptions.The sanctity of marriage

argument is also moot. States aren’t especially troubled about the sanctity of mar-riage when Britney Spears gets married for 55 hours or Kim Kardashian for 72 days. In fact, Las Vegas has built an entire industry around people getting hopped up, making bad decisions and entering into marriages that are ill-advised and typically short-lived. If sanctity of marriage was a legitimate state interest, it would be much harder to get divorced.

Proponents of DOMA and Prop 8 argued in oral argu-ments that marriage was a tradition with a long history and that legalized gay mar-riage would be an affront to that history. Marriage has

BY BrittanY [email protected]

See MARRIAGE, PAGE 3

BY jOsh clarK@JOShCLARK_TOOnS

Page 3: The Daily Mississippian – April 1, 2013

evolved right along with so-ciety and even heterosexual relationships of today look nothing like that of hundreds of years ago. Instead of young teenagers being bartered for cows and goats in arranged marriages, marriage is now a personal choice entered into by two consenting adults.

The final argument that was employed in both rounds of oral arguments was the argu-ment about child welfare and familial integrity. This argu-ment also doesn’t stand up to reasoning. The sole purpose of marriage isn’t procreation. If it was, older and infertile couples would be prohibited from marrying. If the func-tion of marriage is to ensure that children are brought into stable environments, there would be laws against chil-dren being born out of wed-lock and laws against bring-ing children into unstable heterosexual homes.

There is no legal justifica-tion to keep gay marriage illegal any more. The state has no rational interest in preventing it. The outcome of these new cases before the Supreme Court is like-ly to advance the cause of marriage equality without providing broad and sweep-ing reform. However, a step forward, even a small step, is better than a step backward. For proponents of marriage equality, they’ll have to con-tent themselves with the old adage that Rome was not built in a day.

Brittany Sharkey is a third-year law student from Oceans-ide, Calif. She graduated from NYU in 2010 with a degree in politics. Follow her on Twitter @brittanysharkey.

OPInIOnOPiniOn | 1 aPril 2013 | the dailY MississiPPian | Page 3

Marriage, continued from page 2

I hear sermons from the pul-pit, molding my mind through propaganda. These sounds on a Sunday talk about the work to be done on Monday through Saturday. These sermons on a Sunday talk about a “green” campus. Yet on a Monday, I see a giant light bulb projecting Ole Miss at Vaught-Heming-way. On a Tuesday, I witness a smoking ban for health rea-sons while university vehicles idle, emitting carbon monoxide –– game-day Grove in the fall future. During a speech on Sun-day, I listen to having a healthy lifestyle. On a Wednesday, I look at the Chick-fil-A line. One Sunday, I nod agreeably about affordable education: the life-blood for things civilized. Yet on a Thursday morning, I look at a price tag for buying through Barnes & Noble here on campus. A Thursday after-

noon shows nickel-and-dime fees for “processing” to drop a class and membership dues for a resume tag; most defer from service. On a Sunday, I hear a Great Public University, and on a Friday, I see liquid revenue stream into Ole Miss’s pockets via parking tickets. It was on a pay day Friday that I knew, as if a deflowered virgin, that col-leges were as much a corpora-tion as Wal-Mart or BMW.

Everything is a business on Saturday. On the following Sunday, the sermon will be what?

We are ignorant of the bitter reality that everything is a busi-ness model. How much do you pay in time, effort and money for a good Friday night? Sure, the bar tab might only be $30 dollars, but what’s your ef-fort and time worth? What are your friends “paying” to have you tell that joke or make the night pleasant? The price tag of an experience comes through

the investments put into other people, services exchanged and how the business model of friendship works.

So on a Sunday, my sermon involves how we come to un-derstand our business relation-ship as students to the univer-sity. Are we simply consumers ordering a “meal” in a course (not BK-style, can’t have it your way), and the professor evalu-ates how we digest that meal? Maybe. Are we signing up for a three-month cheer camp during a semester, with camp counselors guiding us to differ-ent events in the paper mauso-leum? Maybe. Are we involved in a complicated arranged marriage and class scheme with pimps, hoes and tricks, buying middle-class qualifica-tions? Maybe. Are we being sold, used-car-salesman style, a vehicle in education that’s theo-retically sound but might fault in application on the open road in life? Maybe.

What I’m sure of is that profes-sors rarely talk like a supervisor to an employee. That company is not asking me, “Dan, how can you make me money?” In-stead the company asks, “How much can you donate?” Why have yes-men and -women in a classroom chirping the “yes” in agreement to the lecture when you could employ us?

Insisting that students (your entry-level employees) go out and hunt for you and your pro-fessors and your company is called crowdsourcing, and I’d rather put forth more effort in a classroom creating meaningful works than simply regurgitating information. A campus could demand more if it wasn’t as afraid of maintaining retention rates.

They say change the environ-ment, and you’ll change the be-havior.

Daniel Purdy is an English se-nior from Oxford.

that sound on a sunday is action on MondayBY daniel [email protected]

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As I perused Facebook yes-terday, I noticed posts declar-ing outrage over Google’s doo-dle. Instead of Easter, Cesar Chavez was honored on the search engine’s home page.

Cesar Chavez was an Amer-ican civil rights activist who nonviolently organized farm-ers into a union named the National Farm Workers As-sociation. His contributions to the Hispanic community and the labor movement gained

national support. He was not a guy who ought to be dis-missed.

The belief that Google should have made a doodle for Easter is preposterous. Does anyone really think that Google, a website used by bil-lions of people of different eth-nicities and religious beliefs, would put up a picture of Jesus rising out of one of the O’s? At most, they would have tossed in a couple of eggs and an Eas-ter bunny. If we look back to former doodles on this spring holiday, there has only been

one that was Easter-themed. It was 13 years ago.

Besides March 31 being Easter, yesterday was also Chavez’s birthday; last year, it was named Cesar Chavez Day by the White House. When Barack Obama declared a day that could possibly land on Easter to be Cesar Chavez Day, he said it would be an opportunity for Americans to “observe this day with appro-priate service, community and education programs.”

Sounds pretty Christian to me.

Google is not the type of company to appeal to one’s religious beliefs, but it is one that will honor a man whom all people can call a hero.

Easter is meant to be a day of reflection, so why not reflect on how to better ourselves as people within our community? I think both Cesar Chavez and Jesus would have my back on this one.

Phil McCausland is an English senior from Carlisle, Pa. Follow him on Twitter @PhillMcCaus-land.

BY Phil [email protected]

Page 4: The Daily Mississippian – April 1, 2013

Page 4 | the dailY MississiPPian | 1 aPril 2013 | neWs

Before Ole Miss student Ashley Ferguson knew about the university’s International Justice Mission chapter, she said she had already taken on the task of planning a 5k walk/run and then mailing the proceeds to the mission’s headquarters.

“The main focus of this race is to share Christ and to spread his gospel, while also raising money and aware-ness for all of those enslaved around the world. For me, this race, as well as Justice Week, is so much more than humanitarianism or a good cause. This race and the is-sue of ending slavery are all about Christ and strikes right at the heart of the Christian gospel,” Ferguson said.

For interested students, IJM holds meetings Mondays at 7 p.m. in Peabody 206.

jUstice, continued from page 1

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Page 5: The Daily Mississippian – April 1, 2013

ing speeches,” Roberts said. “However, I learned to raise my comfort level and I can say I truly enjoy it now.”

Roberts said the most chal-lenging thing he has faced while interning is balanc-ing a full academic schedule with full-time commitment to the internship program. Roberts is involved in both the Trent Lott Leadership Institute and the Sally Mc-Donnell Barksdale Honors College.

“In the past it caused me to become stressed frequently, but I have grown to learn to delegate, which has made things a lot easier for me,” Roberts said.

Roberts said he is most ex-cited about learning about the operations of the execu-tive branch of government and how employees foster connections with the legisla-tive and judicial branches, as well as making connections with his internship class. He said the interns come from many different backgrounds with numerous stories and experiences to share.

“Being around such goal-oriented and motivated peo-

ple is more than exciting,” Roberts said.

Roberts’ father, Ruben Roberts, described his son’s strength of character in one, simple statement.

“He would always take charge,” Ruben Roberts said.

He said his son is very strong when holding any leadership position and that he likes to help out in the community in any way that he can and to the best of his ability.He said he was ecstat-ic when his son told him he was accepted into this pro-gram.

“When you have a child growing, up you always want them to do better,” he said. “I was really excited, and not that many people get that opportunity.”

Ruben Roberts said this in-ternship is a step in Roberts’ life for him to better himself and open more job opportu-nities. He said he expects his son to take charge and run with the responsibilities he’s given.

“He never said no; he al-ways said he can,” he said. “There’s nothing he really can’t do.”

Former ASB Vice Presi-dent Emmalee Rainey has worked closely with Roberts and she said she has seen

him grow and excel.“He is a personable per-

son,” Rainey said. “He doesn’t like to let you down.”

Rainey said no matter what challenges were thrown at Roberts, he would take them head on.

She said he was the front-runner for the campus smok-ing ban legislation, which was difficult because the Senate vote was split. Even though a large part of the legislative body was against the ban, he knew he had to stand behind it.

Rainey said her most mem-orable moment with Roberts was one night when they were both on the Square, and he ran up to her spouting off new ideas for the Senate.

“Even though he wasn’t on the job, he was thinking about the job,” Rainey said.

Rainey said she was proud of Roberts when she found out about his internship be-cause she knew he had been working so hard.

“I feel like all of his friends were proud of him, and out of everyone, Daniel de-served it,” Rainey said.

Roberts’ mother, Debra Roberts, was so grateful when she found out her son was accepted for the intern-ship.

“He said, ‘Mom, I got the internship!’ and we started screaming together,” she said.

She said he has been work-ing hard from the very be-ginning. She said while most people were getting into trouble in high school, her son stayed busy writing es-says and compiling resumes to be accepted into the uni-versities he wanted to attend.

“He is a perfectionist,” she said.

She said her son faced some trouble when they moved from Washington, D.C. to Moss Point, Miss. For Roberts, she said, it was a culture shock.

He went from the fast-paced lifestyle of the District of Columbia to the more re-laxed Southern environment of Moss Point and had to make changes to be consis-tent in his schoolwork.

Debra Roberts said her son is a people person who strives to see the best in ev-ery single person.

“He pulls the best out of everyone,” she said.

She had a difficult time thinking of anything her son would need to work on. She finally said that he does not let people know when he is stressed or overwhelmed,

but that that is what she is there for. She takes it upon herself to see to his mental and emotional well-being but also helps him stay on top of the little things.

Debra said her son loves the big city and that going to Washington, D.C. for this internship is just like going home.

“He is preparing for his dream,” she said, “and this is where he needs to be.”

She is reminded of her son’s potential daily.

“You must be incredibly proud of him,” people say as they pass through her office and see the pictures of Rob-erts there, she says.

Many of these admirers also insinuate that Roberts has a “presidential” look about him and might be in the White House by his own right someday, and not for another internship.

“If I had a dollar for every time I heard that, I wouldn’t have to work,” she said.

She said she never wants her son to forget where he came from. She wants him to continue striving for ex-cellence and to keep moving in the right direction.

“Reach for the moon, and you’ll fall on the stars,” she said.

nEWSneWs | 1 aPril 2013 | the dailY MississiPPian | Page 5

intern,continued from page 1

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Page 7: The Daily Mississippian – April 1, 2013

SPORTSsPOrts | 1 aPril 2013 | the dailY MississiPPian | Page 7

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STARKVILLE – The No. 10 Ole Miss men’s tennis team won the doubles point, but lost five of the first six sets in singles against No. 13 Mississippi State, before a three-plus hour rain delay changed the momentum en-tirely. After the delay, the Rebels came out firing in singles on their way to a 4-2 win at the A.J. Pitts Tennis Centre.

With the win, the Rebels improved to 13-5 overall and 6-3 in the SEC upped the season series to 2-1 in their favor. With Texas A&M’s loss at Tennessee, the Rebels are tied with the Aggies atop the SEC West-ern Division in the loss col-umn.

After William Kall-berg gave Ole Miss a 3-2

lead with his come-from-behind win at three − and with freshman Stefan Lind-mark locked at 1-1 in the third at four − senior Jonas Lutjen finished off a rally to defeat long time nemesis Malte Stropp in three sets to clinch the team victory.

“It was a great comeback by the guys; we knew that it was extremely important to get the doubles point,” head coach Billy Chadwick said. “This was a great Missis-sippi State team, and it’s extremely difficult to beat them in Starkville. We are very proud of the guys for battling back to get the win.”

The Rebels host Florida Friday April 5 at 4 p.m. at the Palmer/Salloum Tennis Center followed by South Carolina April 7 at 1 p.m.

rebels and rain wash away the Bulldogs

O L E M I S S S P O R T S I N F O R M A T I O N lady netters sweep weekend matches

FRIDAY: No. 37 OLE MISS 4, MISSISSIPPI STATE 1

The Lady Rebel tennis team got back in the Southeastern Conference win column Friday afternoon, handing in-state ri-val Mississippi State a 4-1 loss in Oxford.

It was the 24th-straight win for Ole Miss (8-9, 4-5 SEC) in the series against the Bulldogs (7-10, 1-8 SEC).

The Rebels’ commanding play began with the doubles matches, as the Rebels easily won the doubles point.

In singles play, junior Caro-line Rohde-Moe won in straight sets, 6-2, 6-4, and looked very deserving of her No. 45 rank-ing. Sophomore Julia Jones lost her match in straight sets,

6-1, 6-4, to Alexandra Perper of Mississippi State.

At No. 3 singles, freshman Mai El Kamash put away Naomi Tran in straight sets, 6-4, 7-5, then freshman Marija Mi-lutinovic clinched the win with her 6-1, 6-0 win against Roseine Dion.

SUNDAY: NO. 37 OLE MISS 4, SOUTHERN MISS 0 (DH)

Ole Miss (10-9, 4-5 SEC) continued its winning ways Sunday with two 4-0 wins over in-state foe Southern Miss. The doubleheader gave head coach Mark Beyers the opportunity to give freshman Allie Robbins and sophomore Santa Shumi-lina some experience while resting Julia Jones and Caroline Rohde-Moe.

In the first match, sopho-more Erin Stephens got the start at No. 1 singles and won

her match against Alexus Coats handily, 6-4, 6-0, which clinched the early win for the Rebels.

Freshman Mai El Kamash, ranked No. 82, cruised to an easy 6-1, 6-0 victory over Kate Lanier. Sophomore Iris Ver-boven and junior Vief Vlaar both won in straight sets as well.

The second match played out in a similar fashion. Again, Ole Miss cruised to an easy 4-0 win without dropping a single set to Southern Miss in six singles matches.

El Kamash played No. 1 singles and was up 5-2 in the first set when sophomore Santa Shumilina clinched the Rebels’ victory with her 6-1, 6-3 defeat of Elanor Grossman.

Ole Miss returns to action next weekend when it plays at Florida Friday and at South Carolina Sunday.

The Ole Miss women’s tennis team netted three wins over in-state foes this weekend, defeating Mississippi State, 4-1, on Friday before sweeping a doubleheader against Southern Miss, 4-0, in both matches Sunday.

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Page 8: The Daily Mississippian – April 1, 2013

SPORTSPage 8 | the dailY MississiPPian | 1 aPril 2013 | sPOrts

DiamoND Rebs DRoP seRies at FloRiDa

GAINESVILLE, Fla. – The Rebel offense took advantage of chances and manufactured runs on Friday night as No. 11 Ole Miss (23-4, 4-3 SEC) picked up a 4-3 win over Florida (11-16, 2-5 SEC) in 11 innings at McK-ethan Stadium.

In his homecoming, junior Will Allen delivered the big hit in the top of the 11th with a leadoff double to set up the go-ahead score for the Rebels. Following the hit to left center, Lance Wilson entered the game to run for Allen.

Ole Miss’ Will Jamison put down a sac bunt to move Wil-son to third, but Florida relief pitcher scooped and misplaced the throw, allowing Wilson to slide in safely and then come home as the ball scooted away from the Gators’ third baseman and Ole Miss took the 4-3 lead.

Brett Huber then picked up his seventh save of the season, closing out the game for the Rebels in the 11th as Ole Miss picked up the win in the series opener.

Aaron Greenwood (3-0) picked the win in relief as he worked 2.0 innings with one hit and a strikeout after entering the game with a man on and no

outs in the ninth.Florida closer Johnny

Magliozzi (2-1) took the loss, working the final 2.2 innings but surrendered the winning run, albeit an unearned run be-cause of the throwing error on the Jamison bunt.

“That game tonight wasn’t easy, but that’s life in the SEC; none of them are easy,” said Ole Miss head coach Mike Bi-anco. “I’m proud of the way our guys hung in there tonight. That’s what you have to do in this league. The pitchers hung in there and the defense hung in there and we manufactured some runs. It was a good team win tonight.”

SATURDAY: FLORIDA 7, No. 11 OLE MISS 0

The Rebels couldn’t get to starter Jonathon Crawford at the plate on Saturday while the Gator offense capitalized on op-portunities as No. 11 Ole Miss (23-5, 4-4 SEC) felt to Florida (12-16, 3-5 SEC) by a score of 7-0 in game two of the weekend series.

Mike Mayers (2-3) took the loss for the Rebels, allowing six runs – four of them earned – on nine hits with a walk and a strikeout through 5.1 innings

of work as the Gators took ad-vantage of infield hits to build the early lead before tacking on four more runs late.

Crawford (1-4) picked up the win, working a complete game and limiting the Rebels to two hits with eight strikeouts and two walks.

SUNDAY: FLORIDA 4, No. 11 OLE MISS 0

Early miscues put the Reb-els in a hole and the offense couldn’t muster much against the Gators pitching as No. 11 Ole Miss (23-6, 4-5 SEC) fell to Florida (13-16, 4-5 SEC) by a score of 4-0 in the series finale on Sunday.

Chris Ellis (1-2) took the loss for the Rebels, allowing four runs on four hits with four walks and a strikeout. Only three of the runs were earned after sur-rendering an unearned run in the first inning.

Danny Young (1-2) picked up the win for the Gators, allowing one hit with two walks and a strikeout through 5.1 innings of work before Johnny Magliozzi picked up his fifth save of the season with a scoreless 3.2 in-nings. Magliozzi allowed three hits and struck out one in his time on the mound.

“It’s a disappointing week-end,” said Ole Miss head coach Mike Bianco. “If you’re not go-ing to score runs, then you have to pitch well and play defense well. We didn’t do those two things the last couple of days. We’ll have to get after Monday in practice and get ready for Memphis on Tuesday night and a good Vanderbilt team coming to our place next weekend.”

O L E M I S S S P O R T S I N F O R M A T I O N

thOMas granning | the daily Mississippian

Bobby Wahl releases a pitch during the Rebels’ game vs. Texas A&M last week.

O L E M I S S S P O R T S I N F O R M A T I O N

Matt insell tabbed to lead UM women’s basketball

Matt Insell, who has spent the last five seasons as an assistant coach with the na-tionally-ranked University of Kentucky women’s bas-ketball program, has been named head coach of the Ole Miss women’s basketball team, athletics director Ross Bjork announced today.

Insell has helped guide Kentucky to four 20-win seasons and four trips to the NCAA Tournament in his time in Lexington. The Wild-cats have ended the last three seasons ranked in the top-25 and are currently ranked No. 7 heading into the team’s Sweet Sixteen game Satur-day.

Insell, who was responsi-ble for the guards while also having recruiting and player development duties, served as the top assistant coach and helped UK ink three top-10 recruiting classes and seven McDonald’s All-Americans.

“I’m very excited to be the new women’s basket-ball coach at the University

of Mississippi,” Insell said. “This is an opportunity I’ve had my eye on for a long time and I just can’t put into words how excited I am to be leading this team. I promise you this - we are going to put a team on the floor that is go-ing to make the Rebel Nation very happy.

“We are thrilled to wel-come Matt Insell to the Uni-versity of Mississippi and the Ole Miss family as our new women’s basketball coach,” Bjork said. “Our search to find the right head coach took us to all corners of the country as we attracted top coaches from the basketball community. Coach Insell has coaching in his veins and was destined to be a head coach from day one. Coach Insell is viewed by many in college athletics as the top assistant coach in the coun-try and his expertise in game planning, strategy, recruit-ing, and the student-athlete experience has been well chronicled.”

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