fbpx
Home - Breaking News, Events, Things-To-Do, Dining, Nightlife

HPNM

Republicans Support School Choice

Yesterday, delegates at the Republican National Convention formally adopted the 2024 Republican Party Platform, and it includes a ringing endorsement of universal school choice: 

“Republicans believe families should be empowered to choose the best Education for their children. We support Universal School Choice in every State in America.” 

Polling conducted in Mississippi last year appears to support this statement, with 72% of Republicans and 74% of conservatives indicating support for an Arkansas-style universal school choice program. (Incidentally, 46% of Democrats and 59% of independents also expressed support for this policy according to the same poll.) 

 Earlier this year, former Mississippi Republican Party Chairman Lucien Smith penned an op-ed for the Magnolia Tribune in which he asserted that all conservatives should support school choice.  

“I for one do not believe you can call yourself a conservative and oppose [school choice] reforms, even if you disagree with how best to implement them,” said Smith 

Current Republican Party Chairman Mike Hurst also stood firm in support of school choice in a recent podcast interview with Empower CEO Grant Callen: 

“I don’t know how anyone in the world could argue with the fact that the parent knows what is best for their child and if we’re going to educate children the best way, the parent is the one who should be making that choice.” 

Hurst went on to add, “It’s frustrating that we are considered such a conservative, super-red state, and we are behind on this issue involving parents and children and schools.” 

The Mississippi Republican Party platform also endorses school choice: 

“Parental involvement in education should extend to allowing parents to choose the school that best meets the educational needs of their children.” 

Recently, the issue of school choice has enjoyed vocal support from a growing number of Republican party officials, and neighboring states have moved to enact sweeping school choice policies at lightning speed. Arkansas enacted a massive school choice bill last year,

Read original article by clicking here.

Republicans Support School Choice

Yesterday, delegates at the Republican National Convention formally adopted the 2024 Republican Party Platform, and it includes a ringing endorsement of universal school choice: 

“Republicans believe families should be empowered to choose the best Education for their children. We support Universal School Choice in every State in America.” 

Polling conducted in Mississippi last year appears to support this statement, with 72% of Republicans and 74% of conservatives indicating support for an Arkansas-style universal school choice program. (Incidentally, 46% of Democrats and 59% of independents also expressed support for this policy according to the same poll.) 

 Earlier this year, former Mississippi Republican Party Chairman Lucien Smith penned an op-ed for the Magnolia Tribune in which he asserted that all conservatives should support school choice.  

“I for one do not believe you can call yourself a conservative and oppose [school choice] reforms, even if you disagree with how best to implement them,” said Smith 

Current Republican Party Chairman Mike Hurst also stood firm in support of school choice in a recent podcast interview with Empower CEO Grant Callen: 

“I don’t know how anyone in the world could argue with the fact that the parent knows what is best for their child and if we’re going to educate children the best way, the parent is the one who should be making that choice.” 

Hurst went on to add, “It’s frustrating that we are considered such a conservative, super-red state, and we are behind on this issue involving parents and children and schools.” 

The Mississippi Republican Party platform also endorses school choice: 

“Parental involvement in education should extend to allowing parents to choose the school that best meets the educational needs of their children.” 

Recently, the issue of school choice has enjoyed vocal support from a growing number of Republican party officials, and neighboring states have moved to enact sweeping school choice policies at lightning speed. Arkansas enacted a massive school choice bill last year,

Read original article by clicking here.

Discover Mississippi: Experience 135 Years of Tradition at the Neshoba County Fair

0

This article first appeared on the Magnolia Tribune.

  • The Neshoba County Fair runs Friday, July 26 thru Friday, August 2 this year. There will be daily events, concerts, rides, food, dancing, vendors, and the political speeches in the square.

The countdown has begun for the 2024 Neshoba County Fair. Known as Mississippi’s Giant House Party, the Neshoba County Fair boasts eight straight days of non-stop fun and excitement for all ages. But this fair is far more than your typical rides and games; it is a culture all its own. 

The Neshoba County Fair runs Friday, July 26 thru Friday, August 2. There will be daily events, concerts, rides, food, dancing, vendors, and the political speeches in the square that bring all of the biggest candidates to the stage.

The political speeches in the square have put the Neshoba County Fair as a must-stop for political candidates state, local, and federal–even attracting President Ronald Reagan during his 1980 campaign, and Donald Trump Jr. on behalf of President Donald Trump in 2016.

Aside from politics, the Neshoba County Fair also hosts the only sanctioned horse races in the state of Mississippi, and they run throughout the week during the fair. 

A trip to the Neshoba County Fair should be a rite of passage for all Mississippians, and a prerequisite if you’re studying anything southern.

Mississippi’s Giant House Party: The Unique Appeal of the Neshoba County Fair

The 2024 Neshoba County Fair marks 135 years of gathering at the fairgrounds. In 1889, the fair kicked off as the Coldwater Fair, with roots in church meetings and singings. 

“After a group of local farmers attended the “Patrons Union” in Lake, Mississippi where farm produce and animals were shown, they arranged a picnic in the Coldwater Community (present grounds) in 1889,” said Natalie Scruggs, board member and Media Relations Specialist for the fair. “(This is) where farm animals, farm produce and women’s handiwork were displayed. After two successful picnics, the Fair was officially organized in 1891 when officers and a board of directors were elected.”

Folks would come and pitch tents and camp during the events. Two years later, the fair was organized as the Neshoba County Steak and Agricultural Fair Association.  In 1894, a pavilion was built, a hotel set in place for visitors, and cabins started to replace the old wagons and tents for shelter. Governor Anselm McLaurin spoke at the Fair in 1896, creating the tradition of political speakings during campaign season, which still stands today. 

“(There was) Ronald Reagan in 1980,” said Scruggs. “His appearance came one week after the Republican National Convention, where he was nominated as the Republican nominee for President of the United States and then successfully elected in November of 1980, where he went on to serve two terms as President.”

Reagan may have been the first presidential candidate to stomp at Neshoba, but he wasn’t the last. 

“(Then came) Donald Trump Jr, in 2016, on behalf of Donald Trump’s successful candidacy for President of the United States,” said Scruggs. “And Senator John Glenn in 1983 on behalf of his candidacy for President of the United States. He was also the first astronaut to successfully orbit the earth in 1962.” 

Governor of Massachusetts, Michael Dukakis in 1988, in his bid for President of the United States, though he lost to then VP, George H. W. Bush. 

Countless sitting governors and other statewide elected officials and district elected officials have participated in the political speaking programs since the turn of the 19th century.

In 1898, oak trees were planted with hopes of one day providing shade in Founders’ Square—and they still stand today. 

By 1914, several improvements were made, and it was time to kick off the horse races. 

But it wasn’t until 1939 that the Fairgrounds received electricity.  If you’re doing the math, that’s 45 years of July camping. In Mississippi. In the heat. 

In all these years, the Neshoba County Fair has only been on hiatus twice: during World War II, and in 2020 during the height of the Covid pandemic. 

Eight Days of Non-stop Fun: What to Expect at the Neshoba County Fair

The Neshoba County Fairgrounds are somehow both extensive and humble. To walk into the Neshoba County Fairgrounds during the fair is to walk into a small town, with various dirt and gravel paths. There are neighborhoods of cabins, RV campgrounds, livestock barns, show arenas, the carnival at Harrison Park, Founder’s Square, the Pavilion, and the Race Track. 

There’s almost an overwhelming amount to see and do. If you’re not familiar with everything, it’s best to pick up a map. 

Beyond Rides and Games: Mississippi’s Favorite Fair is a Phenomenon 

There are nearly as many activities as there are cabins at The Neshoba County Fair, with something for everyone of all ages. 

Livestock shows and agricultural exhibits highlight the best of Mississippi’s agribusiness, from animals, to food and more. This is where you’ll find blue ribbon livestock and the best produce grown in the Magnolia State. 

Carnival rides, concessions and games line the Midway at Harrison Park, and are running daily from noon through 1am. 

Arts and crafts will be on display and for purchase throughout the arenas at the fairgrounds, with an arts and crafts fair in Founders’ Square on Saturday, July 27th. 

There are concerts and live performances nightly, featuring Jon Langston, Blackberry Smoke, Tyler Branden, Dillon Carmichael, and the Frontmen at the Grandstand. Even more artists and local church choirs will be performing at the Pavilion at Founders’ Square throughout the week. 

Mississippi’s lawmakers will be heard during the political speeches that have brought the fair nationwide notoriety on Wednesday, July 30th and Thursday, August 1st. 

There are also plenty more traditional fair events happening throughout the week, such as the balloon glow, beauty pageants, cake walks, nightly dances, and the state’s only sanctioned horse races. 

“Horse racing has been held at the Fair since 1894,” said Scruggs. “The red-clay, 1/2 mile oval, constructed in 1914, presents for 6 days of the Fair,(with)  sanctioned harness horse races and thoroughbred and quarter horse racing.”

Check the Neshoba County Fair website for a full schedule. 

Join the Giant House Party at the Cabins 

There are so many things that make the Neshoba County Fair unique, but nothing stands out more than the cabin culture. 

Clusters of cabins are built throughout the fairgrounds, nestled into neighborhoods. Alleyways take you between the cabins, while their inviting porches call you to stop and chat a while. Many of the cabin owners spend a bulk of the summer in their cabins, but the community thrives the most during the week of Mississippi’s Giant House Party. 

Here’s the thing about the cabins. It doesn’t matter if you have your own, or if you’re just visiting for the day; you’re at home. The cabin culture calls and welcomes all. You’re going to get offered a coke, or something to eat, or a place to take shelter when it is raining. 

The cabins at Founders’ Square have their own sense of magic–each one is as inviting as the next. Kids jump from cabin to cabin to play with friends. Every cabin parent is a co-parent to every child there; no child leaves without a drink and a snack. Going to the cabins at the Neshoba County Fair is like going to visit Grandma as a kid with all the love, warmth, and hospitality you can imagine. 

More to Come for the Neshoba County Fair

There are more housing options than just cabins at the grounds. There are hundreds of places for RVs to park, but the demand is at an all-time high.

“Investments in the privately owned cabins is also at an all time high, as is interest in securing one of the 575 plus RV spots, of which the Association maintains a waiting list of 225 plus requests for spots from RV patrons across the state and nation,” said Scruggs. 

The Neshoba County Fair is the last remaining campground fair in the United States, according to Scruggs, with no plans of ending anytime soon. 

“There are 19 board members who volunteer time year round to plan the next fair.  We usually meet in August after the fair to discuss the previous fair, then take off September and start planning in October for the next year,” said Scruggs. “As a patron, the time you get with family and friends for an entire week (plus a couple of days) is the best part. Plus, it is a significant economic driver for the local economy.”

Don’t just take my word for it. Experience this purely Mississippi event and plan out your trip to the Neshoba County Fair, July 26-August 2. Discover one of the single greatest events Mississippi has to offer, along with some of the greatest people. 

For more information, visit the Neshoba County Fair website. 

This article first appeared on the Magnolia Tribune and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

Read original article by clicking here.

Discover Mississippi: Experience 135 Years of Tradition at the Neshoba County Fair

0

This article first appeared on the Magnolia Tribune.

  • The Neshoba County Fair runs Friday, July 26 thru Friday, August 2 this year. There will be daily events, concerts, rides, food, dancing, vendors, and the political speeches in the square.

The countdown has begun for the 2024 Neshoba County Fair. Known as Mississippi’s Giant House Party, the Neshoba County Fair boasts eight straight days of non-stop fun and excitement for all ages. But this fair is far more than your typical rides and games; it is a culture all its own. 

The Neshoba County Fair runs Friday, July 26 thru Friday, August 2. There will be daily events, concerts, rides, food, dancing, vendors, and the political speeches in the square that bring all of the biggest candidates to the stage.

The political speeches in the square have put the Neshoba County Fair as a must-stop for political candidates state, local, and federal–even attracting President Ronald Reagan during his 1980 campaign, and Donald Trump Jr. on behalf of President Donald Trump in 2016.

Aside from politics, the Neshoba County Fair also hosts the only sanctioned horse races in the state of Mississippi, and they run throughout the week during the fair. 

A trip to the Neshoba County Fair should be a rite of passage for all Mississippians, and a prerequisite if you’re studying anything southern.

Mississippi’s Giant House Party: The Unique Appeal of the Neshoba County Fair

The 2024 Neshoba County Fair marks 135 years of gathering at the fairgrounds. In 1889, the fair kicked off as the Coldwater Fair, with roots in church meetings and singings. 

“After a group of local farmers attended the “Patrons Union” in Lake, Mississippi where farm produce and animals were shown, they arranged a picnic in the Coldwater Community (present grounds) in 1889,” said Natalie Scruggs, board member and Media Relations Specialist for the fair. “(This is) where farm animals, farm produce and women’s handiwork were displayed. After two successful picnics, the Fair was officially organized in 1891 when officers and a board of directors were elected.”

Folks would come and pitch tents and camp during the events. Two years later, the fair was organized as the Neshoba County Steak and Agricultural Fair Association.  In 1894, a pavilion was built, a hotel set in place for visitors, and cabins started to replace the old wagons and tents for shelter. Governor Anselm McLaurin spoke at the Fair in 1896, creating the tradition of political speakings during campaign season, which still stands today. 

“(There was) Ronald Reagan in 1980,” said Scruggs. “His appearance came one week after the Republican National Convention, where he was nominated as the Republican nominee for President of the United States and then successfully elected in November of 1980, where he went on to serve two terms as President.”

Reagan may have been the first presidential candidate to stomp at Neshoba, but he wasn’t the last. 

“(Then came) Donald Trump Jr, in 2016, on behalf of Donald Trump’s successful candidacy for President of the United States,” said Scruggs. “And Senator John Glenn in 1983 on behalf of his candidacy for President of the United States. He was also the first astronaut to successfully orbit the earth in 1962.” 

Governor of Massachusetts, Michael Dukakis in 1988, in his bid for President of the United States, though he lost to then VP, George H. W. Bush. 

Countless sitting governors and other statewide elected officials and district elected officials have participated in the political speaking programs since the turn of the 19th century.

In 1898, oak trees were planted with hopes of one day providing shade in Founders’ Square—and they still stand today. 

By 1914, several improvements were made, and it was time to kick off the horse races. 

But it wasn’t until 1939 that the Fairgrounds received electricity.  If you’re doing the math, that’s 45 years of July camping. In Mississippi. In the heat. 

In all these years, the Neshoba County Fair has only been on hiatus twice: during World War II, and in 2020 during the height of the Covid pandemic. 

Eight Days of Non-stop Fun: What to Expect at the Neshoba County Fair

The Neshoba County Fairgrounds are somehow both extensive and humble. To walk into the Neshoba County Fairgrounds during the fair is to walk into a small town, with various dirt and gravel paths. There are neighborhoods of cabins, RV campgrounds, livestock barns, show arenas, the carnival at Harrison Park, Founder’s Square, the Pavilion, and the Race Track. 

There’s almost an overwhelming amount to see and do. If you’re not familiar with everything, it’s best to pick up a map. 

Beyond Rides and Games: Mississippi’s Favorite Fair is a Phenomenon 

There are nearly as many activities as there are cabins at The Neshoba County Fair, with something for everyone of all ages. 

Livestock shows and agricultural exhibits highlight the best of Mississippi’s agribusiness, from animals, to food and more. This is where you’ll find blue ribbon livestock and the best produce grown in the Magnolia State. 

Carnival rides, concessions and games line the Midway at Harrison Park, and are running daily from noon through 1am. 

Arts and crafts will be on display and for purchase throughout the arenas at the fairgrounds, with an arts and crafts fair in Founders’ Square on Saturday, July 27th. 

There are concerts and live performances nightly, featuring Jon Langston, Blackberry Smoke, Tyler Branden, Dillon Carmichael, and the Frontmen at the Grandstand. Even more artists and local church choirs will be performing at the Pavilion at Founders’ Square throughout the week. 

Mississippi’s lawmakers will be heard during the political speeches that have brought the fair nationwide notoriety on Wednesday, July 30th and Thursday, August 1st. 

There are also plenty more traditional fair events happening throughout the week, such as the balloon glow, beauty pageants, cake walks, nightly dances, and the state’s only sanctioned horse races. 

“Horse racing has been held at the Fair since 1894,” said Scruggs. “The red-clay, 1/2 mile oval, constructed in 1914, presents for 6 days of the Fair,(with)  sanctioned harness horse races and thoroughbred and quarter horse racing.”

Check the Neshoba County Fair website for a full schedule. 

Join the Giant House Party at the Cabins 

There are so many things that make the Neshoba County Fair unique, but nothing stands out more than the cabin culture. 

Clusters of cabins are built throughout the fairgrounds, nestled into neighborhoods. Alleyways take you between the cabins, while their inviting porches call you to stop and chat a while. Many of the cabin owners spend a bulk of the summer in their cabins, but the community thrives the most during the week of Mississippi’s Giant House Party. 

Here’s the thing about the cabins. It doesn’t matter if you have your own, or if you’re just visiting for the day; you’re at home. The cabin culture calls and welcomes all. You’re going to get offered a coke, or something to eat, or a place to take shelter when it is raining. 

The cabins at Founders’ Square have their own sense of magic–each one is as inviting as the next. Kids jump from cabin to cabin to play with friends. Every cabin parent is a co-parent to every child there; no child leaves without a drink and a snack. Going to the cabins at the Neshoba County Fair is like going to visit Grandma as a kid with all the love, warmth, and hospitality you can imagine. 

More to Come for the Neshoba County Fair

There are more housing options than just cabins at the grounds. There are hundreds of places for RVs to park, but the demand is at an all-time high.

“Investments in the privately owned cabins is also at an all time high, as is interest in securing one of the 575 plus RV spots, of which the Association maintains a waiting list of 225 plus requests for spots from RV patrons across the state and nation,” said Scruggs. 

The Neshoba County Fair is the last remaining campground fair in the United States, according to Scruggs, with no plans of ending anytime soon. 

“There are 19 board members who volunteer time year round to plan the next fair.  We usually meet in August after the fair to discuss the previous fair, then take off September and start planning in October for the next year,” said Scruggs. “As a patron, the time you get with family and friends for an entire week (plus a couple of days) is the best part. Plus, it is a significant economic driver for the local economy.”

Don’t just take my word for it. Experience this purely Mississippi event and plan out your trip to the Neshoba County Fair, July 26-August 2. Discover one of the single greatest events Mississippi has to offer, along with some of the greatest people. 

For more information, visit the Neshoba County Fair website. 

This article first appeared on the Magnolia Tribune and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

Read original article by clicking here.

Being His

0

This article first appeared on the Magnolia Tribune.

image
  • My beloved is mine, and I am his; he grazes among the lilies. Until the day breathes and the shadows flee, turn, my beloved, be like a gazelle or a young stag on cleft mountains. – Song of Songs 2:16-17

Surely if there is a happy verse in the Bible it is this—”My beloved is mine, and I am his.” It is so peaceful, so full of assurance, so overflowing with happiness and contentment, that it might well have been written by the same hand that penned the Twenty-third Psalm. Yet though the prospect is very bright and lovely—as fair a scene as earth can display—it is not an entirely sunlit landscape. There is a cloud in the sky, which casts a shadow over the scene. Listen: “Until the day breathes and the shadows flee.”

There is a word, too, about the “cleft mountains,” or “the mountains of division,” and to our love, anything like division is bitterness. Beloved, this may be your present state of mind. You do not doubt your salvation, you know that Christ is yours, but you are not feasting with Him. You understand your vital interest in Him, so that you do not have a shadow of a doubt about being His and of His being yours, but still His left hand is not under your head, nor does His right hand embrace you. A shade of sadness is cast over your heart, perhaps by affliction, certainly by the temporary absence of your Lord, so that even while exclaiming, “I am his,” you are forced to take to your knees and to pray, “Until the day breathes, and the shadows flee, turn, my beloved.”

“Where is He?” asks the soul. And the answer comes, “He grazes among the lilies.” If we would find Christ, we must get into communion with His people, we must come to the ordinances with His saints. Oh, for an evening glimpse of Him! Oh, to eat with Him tonight!

This article first appeared on the Magnolia Tribune and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

Read original article by clicking here.

Being His

0

This article first appeared on the Magnolia Tribune.

image
  • My beloved is mine, and I am his; he grazes among the lilies. Until the day breathes and the shadows flee, turn, my beloved, be like a gazelle or a young stag on cleft mountains. – Song of Songs 2:16-17

Surely if there is a happy verse in the Bible it is this—”My beloved is mine, and I am his.” It is so peaceful, so full of assurance, so overflowing with happiness and contentment, that it might well have been written by the same hand that penned the Twenty-third Psalm. Yet though the prospect is very bright and lovely—as fair a scene as earth can display—it is not an entirely sunlit landscape. There is a cloud in the sky, which casts a shadow over the scene. Listen: “Until the day breathes and the shadows flee.”

There is a word, too, about the “cleft mountains,” or “the mountains of division,” and to our love, anything like division is bitterness. Beloved, this may be your present state of mind. You do not doubt your salvation, you know that Christ is yours, but you are not feasting with Him. You understand your vital interest in Him, so that you do not have a shadow of a doubt about being His and of His being yours, but still His left hand is not under your head, nor does His right hand embrace you. A shade of sadness is cast over your heart, perhaps by affliction, certainly by the temporary absence of your Lord, so that even while exclaiming, “I am his,” you are forced to take to your knees and to pray, “Until the day breathes, and the shadows flee, turn, my beloved.”

“Where is He?” asks the soul. And the answer comes, “He grazes among the lilies.” If we would find Christ, we must get into communion with His people, we must come to the ordinances with His saints. Oh, for an evening glimpse of Him! Oh, to eat with Him tonight!

This article first appeared on the Magnolia Tribune and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

Read original article by clicking here.

SEC Media Days: Expectations for Kiffin, Ole Miss high ahead of 2024 season

0
image
  • As Rebels embrace expectations, it’s not Dart nor the hot names from the Portal that will tell the tale.

It fascinates that Lane Kiffin was at the podium today representing Ole Miss football at SEC Media Days in Dallas.

College football, thankfully, took our Mississippi minds off COVID for a minute in 2019 and 2020 when Mike Leach, Deion Sanders and Kiffin were hired at Mississippi State, Jackson State and Ole Miss.

Through Leach’s unfortunate passing and Sanders’ next big thing, Kiffin is the only one left. It was a widely held belief that he would be the first to bolt.

Leach had a history of settling in wherever he was, and Sanders, well no one really knew what to make of him that time. They still don’t.

But Lane Kiffin’s history was of short stays and movement. Add to that the fact that he had little history in the Southeast, only his run as Nick Saban’s OC, and no history with Ole Miss.

It was hard to argue that he’d be at Ole Miss for any amount of time. Now here he is, just the third Ole Miss coach since Billy Brewer to start a fifth season with the Rebels.

David Cutcliffe lasted six seasons before giving way to Ed Orgeron then Houston Nutt.

Hugh Freeze started a fifth season in 2016, but his tenure ended in flames just prior to training camp in 2017.

Ole Miss football has craved stability since the John Vaught Era and hasn’t found it.

Kiffin may not be a long-range answer, but he has navigated changing times and has the program more stable than it’s been for any reasonable amount of time since Vaught.

The Rebels never won the SEC West outright, but now the SEC West is gone, and that stigma will carry less and less clout as the years go by.

Kiffin has the Rebels as a trendy pick to make CFB’s first expanded 12-team field.

Making the playoffs becomes the bar. If Kiffin can get the Rebels there enough the bar will shift to winning a national championship.

It’s heady stuff to even think of the Rebels in this conversation, but here they are.

They’ve got big expectations not only because of Kiffin but because of an experienced star at quarterback in Jaxson Dart.

Wide receiver Tre Harris, preparing for just his second year in the SEC, gave reporters a veteran answer on the question of expectations.

“We understand there’s a lot of expectations on us this year. But at the end of the day we understand that everything that we worry about, we can only control what we can control. We all are just worried about the guys inside of the facility. We understand that each and every day we have to get better,” he said.

It’s a statement to Dart, to his experienced linemen, receivers and tight ends – and to Kiffin’s transfer portal and roster management – that Ole Miss could lose a player the caliber of Quinshon Judkins and still be having these conversations.

Kiffin returns a capable running back in Ulysses Bentley and has added intriguing pieces around him.

But the offense runs through Dart.

As Kiffin is so deftly showing it’s not hard to find people who can run and catch.

You better be elite behind center to have a chance to compete at a high level. 

‘Monumental’ return at QB

Dart gives the Rebels that chance this season.

Having him back is “monumental, to be completely honest with you,” Harris says. “The amount of work he puts in is really incredible. He doesn’t stop working. He’s definitely taken the leadership role to a maximum.”

Kiffin gives the Rebels that chance most seasons.

His in-season flirtation with Auburn in 2022 showed that he’s had wandering eyes during his Ole Miss tenure.

But Ole Miss AD Keith Carter has given Kiffin resources. Major work has been done on the Ole Miss football building, and more is planned for Vaught-Hemingway Stadium. He has money for assistant coaches, enough that he was able to add Defensive Coordinator Pete Golding to his staff.

He has a rocking collective to help him compete for players.

His own $8.75 million annual salary ranks among the top 10 for 2024. If Kiffin were to leave that level of commitment will make it easier for Ole Miss to find a quality candidate to continue Kiffin’s success.

Always be looking ahead.

The Rebels have been here before and have fallen short. For some in the fan base falling short has become so expected that disappointment has earned its own acronym – WAOM for “We Are Ole Miss.” That used to drive Ross Bjork crazy. I’m sure it does for Keith Carter too.

Kiffin, though, should not have the shortcomings of previous Ole Miss football attached to him for the 2024 season.

The 2022 season had a sour finish, but even that team won eight games. Kiffin delivered a 10-win regular season in 2021 and an 11-win season with an impressive Peach Bowl victory over Penn State – one of the nation’s top defenses – last year.

As cherished as last season was for Ole Miss fans the Rebels were still clearly the lesser team in their losses to Alabama and Georgia.

How the tale will be told

They need big wins to reach 2024 goals, but it’s how they compete against elite-level SEC talent that will write the story for this season.

For Kiffin, the important factor in this team is not Dart’s ability nor that of coveted transfers like defensive tackle Walter Nolen. It’s chemistry.

In the age of fast fixes “bonding and them coming together” can be overlooked, he said. Winning is more than grabbing hot names from the portal.

He sees in this team “a good mixture” of portal darlings and experience – Ole Miss experience.

“You have so many players coming back which we didn’t have two seasons ago. They know our expectations, know how we want things, what our culture is.”

Read original article by clicking here.

Trump receives enough delegate votes to officially be Republicans’ nominee

MILWAUKEE (AP) — Donald Trump has become the official Republican presidential nominee after receiving the votes of enough delegates at the Republican National Convention.

Trump has been the presumptive nominee for months. But it was the vote of RNC delegates in Milwaukee that made it official Monday afternoon.

Trump hit the necessary threshold with votes from his home state of Florida.

Stay up to date with all of Mississippi’s latest news by signing up for our free newsletter here

Copyright 2024 SuperTalk Mississippi Media. All rights reserved.

Read original article by clicking here.

Trump receives enough delegate votes to officially be Republicans’ nominee

MILWAUKEE (AP) — Donald Trump has become the official Republican presidential nominee after receiving the votes of enough delegates at the Republican National Convention.

Trump has been the presumptive nominee for months. But it was the vote of RNC delegates in Milwaukee that made it official Monday afternoon.

Trump hit the necessary threshold with votes from his home state of Florida.

Stay up to date with all of Mississippi’s latest news by signing up for our free newsletter here

Copyright 2024 SuperTalk Mississippi Media. All rights reserved.

Read original article by clicking here.

Pick is in: Trump-Vance ticket announced

0

This article first appeared on the Magnolia Tribune.

FILE – Sen. J.D. Vance, R-Ohio, right, points toward Republican presidential candidate former President Donald Trump at a campaign rally, March 16, 2024, in Vandalia, Ohio. Vance is a top contender to be selected as Trump’s running mate. (AP Photo/Jeff Dean, File)

  • The former President announced the first term Ohio Senator as his running mate via TruthSocial Monday afternoon.

Republican presidential nominee and former President Donald Trump has announced his pick for a running mate – Ohio U.S. Senator J.D. Vance.

The news came on the opening day of the Republican National Convention where Trump and now Vance will be officially nominated by the party for the 2024 presidential ticket later this week.

“After lengthy deliberation and thought, and considering the tremendous talents of many others, I have decided that the person best suited to assume the position of Vice President of the United States is Senator J.D. Vance of the Great State of Ohio,” Trump wrote on TruthSocial Monday afternoon.

Trump went on to say that Vance honorably served the country in the Marine Corps, graduated from Ohio State University Summa Cum Laude, and is a Yale Law School Graduate, where he was Editor of The Yale Law Journal and President of the Yale Law Veterans Association.

“J.D.’s book, ‘Hillbilly Elegy,’ became a Major Best Seller and Movie, as it championed the hardworking men and women of our Country,” Trump continued. “J.D. has had a very successful business career in Technology and Finance, and now, during the Campaign, will be strongly focused on the people he fought so brilliantly for, the American Workers and Farmers in Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, Ohio, Minnesota, and far beyond.”

Trump’s choice of Vance is an important selection, as the former President is term limited and cannot seek re-election should he win in November. Vance will be the favored standard-bearer for the Republican Party come 2028.

Vance was elected to the U.S. Senate in 2022, defeating former Congressman Tim Ryan for the open seat. His wife, Usha, is an attorney and works for a law firm based in San Francisco and Washington, D.C. The two have been married since 2014 and have three children.

The Ohio Senator has not always been in lockstep with Trump, but he was endorsed by the former President in the 2022 election and has since been one of his most loyal backers.

Vance was among a laundry list of potential running mate choices Trump was said to be considering. Other names tossed about were Florida U.S. Senator Marco Rubio, North Carolina Governor Doug Burgum, South Carolina U.S. Senator Tim Scott, former Secretary Ben Carson, businessman Vivek Ramaswamy and more.

This article first appeared on the Magnolia Tribune and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

Read original article by clicking here.