Wednesday, May 27, 2026   
 
Uni­versity recog­nizes exem­plary staff mem­bers dur­ing annual MSU Zacharias Awards
Mis­sis­sippi State is recog­niz­ing a dozen uni­versity staff mem­bers for their exem­plary pro­fes­sion­al­ism and ded­ic­a­tion with this year's Don­ald W. Zacharias Dis­tin­guished Staff Awards. A trib­ute to the uni­versity's 15th pres­id­ent, the Zacharias awards were presen­ted May 22 dur­ing the annual Staff Appre­ci­ation Day, organ­ized by the MSU Staff Coun­cil. "This is one of the most dynamic uni­versit­ies any­where in the nation, and it's great because of the people I'm look­ing at -- all of you. Y'all run this cam­pus," said MSU Pres­id­ent Mark E. Keenum, who presen­ted the awards and con­grat­u­lated award win­ners, as well as all nom­in­ees. "Thank you for all that you do." "Your uni­versity annu­ally con­trib­utes $4 bil­lion to Mis­sis­sippi's eco­nomy," Keenum added. "That's massive in our state, and for every dol­lar that we receive from the state of Mis­sis­sippi in appro­pri­ations, we gen­er­ate $25 dir­ectly back to the state. There's not a bet­ter return on the tax dol­lar from an invest­ment stand­point than Mis­sis­sippi State Uni­versity, so that's something we should all be very proud of -- what we do to con­trib­ute to the well­being of our state and in edu­cat­ing these won­der­ful stu­dents who go off and do amaz­ing things with their Mis­sis­sippi State degrees."
 
MSU Extension program boosts food pantry support
The Mississippi State University Extension Service is helping strengthen food access in the Mississippi Delta through its Healthy Hub Initiative, providing training and operational support to food pantries. The Healthy Hub Initiative, launched by AIM for CHangE in 2025, was designed to help food pantries strengthen operations through training in grant writing, evaluation planning, food policy and client-choice nutrition systems. AIM for CHangE, short for Advancing, Inspiring and Motivating for Community Health through Extension, was established in 2018 with funding from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. "With the prices of groceries going up, communities need food pantries more than ever," said Alexis Hamilton, MSU Extension agent in Sharkey County. "It's great to see our longtime partners embrace the educational opportunities provided through the Healthy Hub Initiative." The Healthy Hub Initiative works alongside local food pantries to strengthen their operations and expand their impact within the communities they serve. By providing guidance, resources and hands-on support, the initiative helps pantries grow, improve efficiency and better meet the needs of families facing food insecurity.
 
Nelson inducted into MSU College of Agriculture and Life Sciences Hall of Fame
Kalyn Nelson, of Trinity, is among 18 Mississippi State students inducted into the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, or CALS, Hall of Fame. Nelson, a senior poultry science major, has been selected as the undergraduate student representing the Department of Poultry Science. Eighteen students from Mississippi State's College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, or CALS, were honored with the distinction of induction into the CALS Hall of Fame. The award, established last year, is given to one graduate and one undergraduate student from each of the college's nine departments. "Our faculty closely support students throughout their academic journey, helping ensure their success," said Darrell Sparks, acting CALS dean. "Students distinguish themselves through resilience, dedication, determination and leadership, and the Hall of Fame honors these remarkable individuals for their impact."
 
AEDC engineer earns recognition from former college
An Arnold Engineering Development Complex engineer recently earned significant recognition from his alma mater for his post-college accomplishments. Satsha Burden, a test engineer and test manager for the 716th Test Squadron Store Separation Group at Arnold Air Force Base, headquarters of AEDC, was named the recipient of the 2026 Northwest Mississippi Community College Foundation Young Alumni Professional Achievement Award. Burden began his AEDC career in August 2022. He said his time at NWCC prepared him well for his role at Arnold. "NWCC gave me a very solid foundation, particularly in my math and science courses," he said. Following his time at NWCC, Burden attended Mississippi State University, where he earned a Bachelor of Science in aerospace engineering in 2022. He was also a member of the MSU coed cheerleading squad and a member of the MSU Space Cowboys Rocketry Team.
 
Wayne-Sanderson Farms donates $1 million to MSU feed mill
Wayne-Sanderson Farms has donated $1 million in funding and equipment support to the new modular poultry feed mill under construction at Mississippi State University (MSU). The new mill at the H.H. Leveck Animal Research Center will provide a high-tech environment for research, nutrition trials, and hands-on student training that mirrors real-world commercial operations. The university broke ground on the project on May 7. "Wayne-Sanderson Farms is honored to partner with Mississippi State University and support one of the top poultry science programs in the nation," said Kevin McDaniel, president and chief executive officer of Wayne-Sanderson Farms. "This impressive expansion doesn't just benefit the students; it impacts the entire poultry industry as the knowledge and training they receive go into practice in the field." By investing in these facilities and providing leadership through the advisory board, Wayne-Sanderson Farms said it is ensuring that the next generation of agricultural leaders is prepared to drive the industry forward.
 
Beth Ford Wants You to Know That American Farmers Are in Crisis
Talk about versatility. Beth Ford had worked at six companies spanning five industries, including Pepsi, Mobil and Scholastic, before arriving at Land O'Lakes. As CEO of one of the only cooperatives in the Fortune 500, today she's answerable not to shareholders or investors but to thousands of decentralized owner-members. Half of the U.S.'s harvested acres flow through the Land O'Lakes network. What does she see from her vantage? A gathering storm in American agriculture. She believes the country isn't paying enough attention. With bankruptcies doubling in the past year, median farm income is trending downward, and roughly 90% of family-owned farms and ranches rely on alternative sources of income to survive. While some operations thrive, less than 5% of farms are profitable. Growers have been hit especially hard. To raise awareness, Ford, 62, has brought farmers to President Trump's office to share their troubles. An outspoken advocate, she's called for immigration reform, a new farm bill and infrastructure investment as she champions an industry contributing more than $1.5 trillion to the U.S. economy.
 
EXCLUSIVE: Gipson talks gubernatorial run in interview with Magnolia Tribune
Andy Gipson launched his gubernatorial bid in June of last year, becoming the first announced Republican to throw his hat in the ring for Mississippi's chief executive in what is likely to be a crowded field in the 2027 statewide election cycle. "We launched this campaign in June of 2025 and the response has been very, very positive and sometimes overwhelming," Gipson told Magnolia Tribune in a recent interview. "People started asking for yard signs really early and I just have gone ahead and got them and give them to folks when they see me." Gipson has served as Mississippi's Commissioner of Agriculture and Commerce since 2018, leading the statewide Department of Agriculture. Food security is one of Gipson's primary issues he hopes will resonate with Mississippians. Gipson want to take what is already Mississippi's largest industry, agriculture, and double it. "The way we do that is to bring back the processing, storage, distribution of local food products to our local stores and to our local region and country," the commissioner said.
 
Gulf shrimpers want help from Congress as fuel costs climb
When Acy Cooper finished building a new 31-foot trawler, he had a problem: his wife had just given birth to their daughter. And it's tradition to name boats after a woman. "So how do you do that and cover both of 'em?" he asked. Cooper found a simple solution. He took his newborn daughter's first name and his wife's middle name and christened the vessel the Lacy Kay. That was in 1983. For the next 40-plus years, the Lacy Kay was the main ship in Cooper's three-boat fleet, hauling in thousands and thousands of pounds of shrimp from the Gulf. But not this year. These days, the Lacy Kay remains tied to the dock in Venice, Louisiana, about an hour's drive south of Port Sulphur, where Cooper is now piloting rented vessels, ferrying oil rig workers to and from the platforms that dot the Gulf. He's been shrimping since he was 15, working alongside his father before getting his first boat. He's still adjusting to having a boss instead of being one. "I'm making money," Cooper said. "Not what I would be making, but you take what you can get." He took the second job to help make ends meet after his fuel costs spiked more than half in just three months. Blake Price, director of the Southern Shrimp Alliance, which lobbies on behalf of commercial shrimpers from North Carolina to Texas, says the industry was already limping before this year's fuel crisis hit.
 
Shrimp season opens slow as Biloxi backs federal relief bill
Shrimp season opened at 6 a.m. on Tuesday with fewer boats on the water as the Biloxi City Council approved support for a federal bill aimed at helping local fishermen. A total of 22 boats went out in South Mississippi on opening day, down from 33 last year. The same day, the Biloxi City Council also approved support for the Save Our Shrimpers Act. The legislation is aimed at protecting the domestic shrimping industry from foreign competition funded by U.S. tax dollars. If passed, the bill would prohibit federal funds from going to international financial institutions such as the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund to support foreign shrimp farms. Troy Rosetti with Quality Seafood said he supports the bill because it favors domestic seafood. "My grandfather started this business 74 years ago. He was a local fisherman. He caught shrimp here, he caught fish here, so I'm all for the local fishermen catching shrimp here," said Rosetti, Assistant Operations Manager at Quality Seafood.
 
Neshoba County Fair political speaking schedule announced
Political speaking at the 2026 Neshoba County Fair will begin on Wednesday, June 24, and continue through Thursday at Founders Square. Wednesday's program begins at 9:30 a.m. with state Sen. Lane Taylor of Philadelphia, followed by 3rd District congressional candidate Michael Chiaradino and U.S. Senate candidates Ty Pinkins and Scott Colom, as well as state Treasurer David McRae, Attorney General Lynn Fitch, and Lt. Gov. Delbert Hosemann. Thursday's slate opens at 9 a.m. with state Rep. Scott Bounds of Philadelphia and Central District Public Service Commissioner DeKeither Stamps and Transportation Commissioner Willie Simmons, then continues with Supreme Court Justices Jenifer Branning of Philadelphia and Kenny Griffis. The program concludes with Agriculture Commissioner Andy Gipson, Secretary of State Michael Watson, House Speaker Jason White, and Gov. Tate Reeves, who is scheduled to speak at 10:30 a.m.
 
Mississippi leader weighs in on Pope Leo AI stance
Mississippi's chief economic development official, Bill Cork, used his personal blog on May 25 to gently push back on Pope Leo's assessments on artificial intelligence. Pope Leo had urged governments to slow down and closely regulate the development of AI systems in his first major document, released on May 25, warning that they spread misinformation, prioritize conflict and risk leading the world down a path of unending war. The first U.S. pope called for ownership of AI data not to be left solely in private hands, for policy-makers to protect the rights of workers and keep children safe from the technology, and urged the cooling of competition between AI companies. In his blog, Cork, who is a practicing Catholic, said he understands where the Pope's perceptions are, but doesn't necessarily agree on all points. Cork was respectful of the pontiff, but as the Mississippi Development Authority Executive Director, he is the first Mississippi official to speak out on the Pope, who has been vocal on many issues in recent weeks and months, including his connecting AI as a form of slavery and denouncing the church's historical role in slavery.
 
Vance calls Pope Leo's AI warnings 'profound'
Vice President JD Vance praised Pope Leo XIV on Tuesday for issuing a new theological document rife with warnings about unbridled advancements in AI. The text, Leo's first encyclical since his installation as pope last year, urged a restraint that doesn't stop progress but, rather, functions as the "exercise of responsible care for the human family." Vance, a Catholic and a proponent of AI technology, said in a telephone interview with NBC News that he had yet to read the entire encyclical but had scanned "bits and pieces" and summaries of it. "What I read of it sounds very profound, and the sort of thing that you would expect and hope from a leader of the church," he said. Vance's interview Tuesday was his first to preview his forthcoming book, "Communion," set to be released June 16 by HarperCollins. The book traces Vance's faith journey -- a Protestant upbringing, a drift into atheism and, most recently, a conversion to Catholicism.
 
NDAA mark unveiled by House Armed Services Committee chairman
The House Armed Services Committee chairman released on Tuesday a proposed $1.15 trillion fiscal 2027 National Defense Authorization Act that emphasizes bolstering America's defense industry. The so-called chairman's mark from Rep. Mike D. Rogers, R-Ala., would authorize almost $1.15 trillion for the base-budget part of President Donald Trump's record $1.5 trillion defense proposal for fiscal 2027. But fully $350 billion of Trump's request would come via a separate reconciliation measure that Congress may have trouble enacting in this session. A GOP aide on the House Armed Services Committee told reporters Tuesday the chairman's mark did not attempt to "pad" its base budget measure with funding for priorities that the president offloaded onto the reconciliation request. Many of the administration's top priorities -- from drones to missile defense to munitions -- are contained in the reconciliation request. "We did not secret squirrel money away," the aide said. The committee plans to mark up the fiscal 2027 NDAA on June 4. The Senate Armed Services Committee has yet to announce its markup schedule for the companion bill.
 
Trump to hold Cabinet meeting amid declining approval on Iran, economy
President Donald Trump canceled a trip with his Cabinet to Camp David set for Wednesday, citing forecasts of bad weather as the reason he won't make what would have been a rare visit to the rural presidential retreat. Instead, Trump said, he will convene his Cabinet at the White House, a meeting that comes as he seeks to negotiate an end to the war with Iran and boost his flagging approval ratings ahead of the fall midterms. The White House had announced plans Tuesday morning for the meeting at Camp David, which would have been only the second time Trump visited since returning to office. But Trump wrote on social media in the evening that he would be "postponing the Cabinet trip to Camp David" because of possible bad weather and would meet at the White House. Showers and storms are in the forecast for Wednesday. A White House official told The Washington Post that foreign and domestic issues will be discussed during Wednesday's meeting. Other recent presidents used Camp David far more than Trump has. Former president George W. Bush visited the retreat nearly 150 times during his eight years in office, according to data compiled at the time by White House journalist Mark Knoller.
 
Donald Trump's revenge tour might not end in 2026
Donald Trump just ousted another Republican he viewed as insufficiently loyal. Two years from now, his revenge list could be even longer. The president has already lashed out at two House Republicans due to perceived slights, with the White House floating a longer list of potential targets over the past year. Trump could also take aim at several GOP senators up for reelection in 2028 -- including Alaska's Lisa Murkowski, Kentucky's Rand Paul and Indiana's Todd Young -- as he seeks to make a lasting mark on the Republican Party in the final stretch of his presidency. The prospect that Trump's much-ballyhooed "revenge tour" could continue into another election cycle was underscored by his late decision to endorse against Texas Sen. John Cornyn, who lost his renomination bid Tuesday night to Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton. But the real fireworks could come in 2028 Senate primaries, which could feature several of Trump's most persistent critics.
 
State program helps Mississippi families avoid rising college costs
Families looking to prepay their child's college tuition at today's rates have until Sunday, May 31, to enroll in a state program designed to help graduates avoid debt. The Mississippi Prepaid Affordable College Tuition program, known as M-PACT, allows families to lock in current college tuition rates for their child's future education. When the child goes to college, the price won't change. "The average child graduates college with an average of $30,000 to $35,000 worth of debt," said David McRae, Mississippi state treasurer. "We see on the national news, on the local news, that debt is a massive problem for families upon graduation. It affects major milestones for an adult upon graduation, when they're going to have children, where they live, if they're going to stay here in Mississippi." The plan covers two and four-year colleges and universities.
 
Medical student overcomes personal hardship after father's ALS diagnosis
Jonathan Parke, a Clinton, Mississippi, native, always planned to follow in his family's footsteps. When his father was diagnosed with ALS during his third year of medical school, Parke said his faith has kept him at peace as his father's condition progresses. "Sometimes things can be so bad that it doesn't feel real almost at the same time," Parke said. "It was so heavy and so much to think about that when I'm helpless and I have no other way of going about it and don't know how to go about it, the first thing that I do is to get on my knees and get into prayer." Parke's father, Ivan Parke, was a professor in the Department of Christian Studies and Philosophy at Mississippi College. He had taught at the university for more than 20 years before retiring due to his illness. Dr. Mike McMullan is the associate dean for student affairs at the school of medicine. He has known the Parke family for years, even before Jonathan arrived at UMMC. McMullan believes Parke's experience with his father's illness will help him excel in his career as a doctor. "He is a very genuine and sincere individual who's very hard-working," McMullan said. "He's able to deal with patients in a professional and engaging manner. He is a guy who really wants to understand his patients and relate to his patients." McMullan said Parke's father was his interim pastor at Broadmoor Baptist Church in Madison. He said Ivan was inspirational as a pastor. The last book Ivan Parke wrote was about Job from the Bible.
 
UMMC AirCare expands fleet with addition of fixed-wing aircraft
The University of Mississippi Medical Center AirCare flight team is preparing to expand its fleet with the addition of a fixed-wing aircraft and is looking to hire 10 additional medical staff members to support the new service. The aircraft, a Pilatus PC-12 provided through UMMC's partnership with Global Medical Response, will become the fifth vehicle in the AirCare fleet, expanding the program's ability to provide in-state and regional patient transport. "Adding a fixed-wing aircraft is a natural evolution for AirCare and gives us another tool to serve patients across Mississippi and the surrounding region," said Jeremy Benson, director of the Mississippi Center for Emergency Services, and program director for AirCare-Helicopter Transport. "It allows us to move patients safely and efficiently over longer distances, particularly when rotor-wing transport may not be the most practical option." AirCare is currently hiring for several positions to support the expansion of the flight program, including Flight Paramedic, Critical Care Paramedic and RN Flight / Transport roles.
 
Jackson State University begins $21.7 million dining hall expansion
Jackson State University (JSU) leaders broke ground Tuesday on a nearly $22 million dining hall expansion aimed at improving campus life for students. University leaders said the new Tiger Dining Hall will feature flexible dining and study spaces and seat up to 550 guests. "We know that we want to create an environment that's completely welcoming for all of our students," said Dr. Denise Jones Gregory, president of Jackson State University. "It's not just the academics. It's not just the athletics, but it's also the facilities that are around them, the people that are around them as well. So, all of that is part of the initiatives that we want to bring back to Jackson State." JSU officials said the project is expected to be completed by summer 2027.
 
Millsaps agrees to cover at least half of tuition for eligible JPS students
Eligible Jackson Public Schools students will now be able to attend Millsaps College with at least half of their tuition covered under a new partnership announced Tuesday. The agreement, finalized through a memorandum of understanding between the two institutions, provides renewable undergraduate scholarships covering at least 50% of tuition for JPS students who meet Millsaps' standard admissions requirements. The scholarships may be renewed for up to four years. Millsaps officials said the initiative is designed to help more Jackson students pursue higher education locally while creating a stronger long-term workforce pipeline within Mississippi. "Mississippi's future depends on our ability to educate, retain and empower homegrown talent," Millsaps President Frank Neville said in a statement. "This partnership creates a clear pathway for Jackson students and families to see a future for themselves right here." The agreement also extends benefits to Jackson Public Schools employees and families. Dependents of full-time JPS faculty and staff will also qualify for the undergraduate tuition scholarship.
 
War of Words Over U. of Florida's Presidential Pick
Controversy is once again swirling over the University of Florida's presidential pick. When UF announced former University of Alabama president Stuart R. Bell as the sole finalist for its presidency last week, it bucked the prevailing trend in the Sunshine State, where other public institutions have prioritized hiring former Republican lawmakers over seasoned academics. In the hiring announcement, UF touted various accomplishments from Bell's 10-year run at Alabama, which ended in 2025. Under his leadership, Alabama saw its rankings and retention rates increase, won multiple college football championships, and achieved R-1 status. Republican governor Ron DeSantis -- who wields significant influence over presidential hires in the state -- signaled his support, nodding to Bell's success during his time at Alabama. "Dr. Bell did much to elevate the University of Alabama when he was the president in Tuscaloosa and I have no doubt that he will help UF reach new heights during his tenure in Gainesville," DeSantis wrote on X. "He is a great selection and has my full support!" But like the previous presidential hiring cycle at UF, Bell's selection soon sparked controversy.
 
White nationalist expelled from U. of Florida will argue free speech at trial
The University of Florida is going to trial May 27 to defend its expulsion of a self-described white nationalist for an antisemitic post on social media. The federal case could test just how far a public university can go in punishing offensive speech. And UF, the state's flagship university, is often touted by Gov. Ron DeSantis as a bastion for free expression. At issue is UF law student Preston Damsky. He first gained national attention last summer after his controversial remarks became the focus of town halls. He even got the highest grade in a class for his classwork and essay outlining his extremist views, which prompted national outrage. The lawsuit's outcome could be significant for students across Florida -- and even across the country -- who face discipline from their state universities for speech considered antithetical to American values, or that may appear threatening or hateful.
 
What happened when one university set out to purge 'woke' classes
Students in both classrooms were considering historic events. In Introduction to Sociology, the discussion was about globalization. Three buildings over, a Civil Discourse class was debating 1798 America and the federal government's battle with the states for supremacy. Both courses fall within the broad field of study known as the humanities. But at the University of Florida, the class on early America is part of a growing and well-funded effort to counter what the state considers "woke" liberal indoctrination, while the sociology class is considered a prime example of the problem. One of these classes is being nurtured; the other strangled. The Civil Discourse class is offered by the Hamilton School for Classical and Civic Education, which in just a few years has grown from an idea into a full-fledged school with nearly 50 professors, four majors, 69 classes this spring and tens of millions of dollars appropriated directly by the Florida legislature. Not so for Introduction to Sociology. Beginning this fall, the class, which covers issues of class, inequality, race and gender, will no longer count as one of the general education courses required for graduation. Enrollment is expected to plummet.
 
U. of Texas Board Makes It Easier to Fire Faculty, Close Programs
Faculty members at the University of Texas at Austin say new systemwide personnel policy changes could pave the way for politically motivated program closures and further disenfranchise faculty from decision-making related to their own departments. And, according to the Board of Regents' recent meeting agenda, more policy changes are on the way. The revised rule 31003, approved unanimously last week by voice vote, establishes new grounds to close academic departments. In addition to academic reasons -- such as low enrollment or poor program quality -- and financial exigency, presidents can now shutter programs due to "extraordinary circumstances" that necessitate "accelerated program closure due to regulatory requirements" and bypass typical review procedures. They were developed "in collaboration with stakeholders throughout the U.T. System," the agenda states. But faculty members were not made aware of the changes, said Brian Evans, an engineering professor at UT Austin and president of the Texas American Association of University Professors–American Federation of Teachers. Most faculty learned about the proposed revisions when the board posted the agenda 72 hours before the board meeting, which is the minimum notice period required by Texas law, Evans explained.
 
Baptist Church Funds Mizzou's Defunded Black Student Council
A Baptist church is stepping in to fund the Legion of Black Collegians, the University of Missouri's historic Black student council, after the university moved to cut the student governing body's designated annual funding. Mizzou leaders announced last month that they planned to stop official funding for the Legion of Black Collegians and at least several other minority affinity groups, starting in July, in response to a U.S. Department of Justice memo restricting diversity, equity and inclusion efforts. The Rev. Howard-John Wesley, the pastor of Alfred Street Baptist Church in Virginia, told churchgoers on Sunday that "we decided we are not going to let that student organization fail to have programming." The church helped the student council create its own 501(c)(3) to receive the funds. Wesley said the move sends a message to the Trump administration: "When you don't support us, we support our own."
 
Woman fired by Indiana university over Charlie Kirk post to receive $225,000 legal settlement
A woman fired by an Indiana university over her Facebook post criticizing conservative activist Charlie Kirk after he was killed will receive $225,000 to settle a lawsuit that accused her former employer of violating her free-speech rights, the woman's attorneys said Tuesday. The American Civil Liberties Union announced the settlement in a federal lawsuit it filed last year on behalf of Suzanne Swierc against Ball State University President Geoffrey Mearns. Swierc worked as director of health promotion and advocacy at Ball State's campus in Muncie, Indiana, before she was fired last September. Ball State cited Swierc's private Facebook post about Kirk as the sole reason for her termination, saying it caused "significant disruption" to the campus. Swierc's firing violated her constitutional rights because she was "speaking as a private citizen on a matter of public concern," said Stevie Pactor, an ACLU attorney in Indiana.
 
Mitch Daniels to return as interim president of Purdue as Chiang departs
One week after President Mung Chiang announced his imminent departure from Purdue University, its board of trustees approved former President Mitch Daniels to return as interim president. Daniels previously served 10 years as president of Purdue and, beginning July 1, will step back into the role temporarily while the university searches for a permanent replacement. Daniels will remain as the unpaid chair of the Purdue Research Foundation's Board of Directors, which is not unusual, according to a Purdue spokesman. The board of trustees confirmed the appointment Monday morning during a special session created solely for this purpose. Despite Daniels' comfortability with the role, trustees confirmed they will work swiftly to find his replacement. "One of (Daniels') conditions is that we do act expeditiously," Gary Lehman, board chairman, said. "He doesn't want this job to go as long as he's done it in the past."
 
The First Class of AI Natives Is Graduating. Offices Are Getting Ready.
Emma Kanjorski doesn't consider herself an advanced AI user -- at least compared with some of her fellow 2026 graduates. She avoided ChatGPT for much of her time at the University of Vermont because she didn't want to cut corners. Eventually, though, she figured out how AI could help her parse dense financial reports and process data. By senior year, the business major was advising younger classmates on using AI to gut-check their case study work and showing a professor how to prompt a "sanity check," or getting AI to critique its own output. Now Kanjorski sees AI as a potential edge when she starts as a financial analyst at an insurer in Burlington this summer, a spot she feels lucky to have after applying to around 40 jobs. "I would like to be the person who can help other people understand it better or figure out how it fits into their day-to-day," she said. Here comes the Class of AI, the most AI-native group of graduates to enter the workforce -- a cohort employers are already trying to figure out what to do with. They started college just a few months before ChatGPT splashed into the world. They're leaving as AI rapidly shakes up the entry-level jobs that were once thought of as solid career launchpads.
 
How schools are using AI and VR to train the next generation of nurses
There's real concern about the growing prevalence of the use of artificial intelligence and other technologies in higher education. But some schools have found benefits as well. In the case of nursing programs, more and more are integrating immersive technologies like generative AI and virtual reality into their curricula. Ali Rogin spotlights one of those for our series, Rethinking College.
 
Women rule (in college and graduate and professional schools)
here's a tectonic shift underway that most Americans may not think about, but see every day when they take their pets to the vet or their kids to the dentist, need a lawyer or an eye exam, see a therapist or pick up a prescription: More and more of the highly educated specialists who provide these services are women. Without much attention, the number of women in medical school, law school, pharmacy school, optometry school, dental school and veterinary school has surpassed the number of men. Women now earn 60 percent of master's and doctoral degrees, according to the U.S. Department of Education. It's a trend that begins with the steadily declining number of men who choose to go to college after graduating from high school. Among the reasons for this: Girls do better in grades K-12 than boys; traditionally female-oriented occupations such as teaching, nursing and social work require degrees; and boys are generally less likely to think they need college educations to get jobs. This is good news for women. But there's a catch. Men represent half of the potential labor force, and their relative absence from higher education is expected to worsen worker shortages in critical fields such as health care.
 
NIH Is Funding More Grants Up Front, a Risk to Research and University Budgets
The National Institutes of Health, a huge funder of universities' biomedical research, has stepped up its controversial practice of obligating funds up front for research grants that are usually funded over multiple years, the Association of American Medical Colleges says in a new report. This practice leaves less money in the current fiscal year to fund new scientific studies and pay researchers, increasing the competition among grant applicants for a smaller pot of dollars. The NIH has a more than $47 billion budget this year, much of which will go outside the agency to universities and independent research institutes in the form of grants. Last year, roughly $37 billion in NIH funding went out as these "extramural" grants, the AAMC said. Congress banned NIH from obligating more money this year than last toward "multiyear grants" -- also called "forward-funded grants" -- by slipping that cap into an appropriations act. But the agency is asking lawmakers to let it remove the cap next year.
 
Trump, GOP put pressure on ABA over rolling back DEI initiative
The American Bar Association (ABA) is moving closer to rolling back a key diversity initiative in an effort to hang on as the nation's law school accreditor while the Trump administration and Republicans ramp up pressure on such DEI initiatives. In recent years, conservatives have looked to sideline the ABA over concerns it leans politically to the left. They no longer view it as a neutral group that can be trusted. Front and center in the fight are the ABA's diversity initiatives. Under what is known as Standard 206, law schools desiring accreditation must "demonstrate by concrete action a commitment to diversity and inclusion." The standard was suspended the month after Trump took office, and it's not currently set to go into effect until at least August 2027. As conservatives aggressively push back, the ABA might now scrap it once and for all. It heads to the ABA House of Delegates for consideration this summer at their annual conference.
 
For most Americans, gas prices are the top public policy concern rising from Iran conflict
Columnist Sid Salter writes: President Donald Trump told the press, going into the Memorial Day weekend travel crush, that a peace deal with Iran is "essentially negotiated." For the sake of Republican candidates in mid-term congressional elections in places where partisan races are actually competitive, they should hope that Trump's assessment is correct. Elections in reliably "red" states like Mississippi are highly unlikely to see partisan shifts over high gas prices and associated rising costs, but in "purple" states where both the GOP and Democrats are competitive, the outlook is decidedly different. The late New York Times writer William Safire of William Safire, wrote about a competing metropolitan newspaper's poll describing a voter as someone who "understands and cares about kitchen-table issues," and noted that those issues were "the problems that everyday working people face in trying to make ends meet." In April, the Pew Research Center reported that of all the possible ramifications of the U.S. conflict with Iran -- sending in American ground troops, large numbers of U.S. casualties, terrorist attacks in the U.S., expansion of hostilities outside the Middle East, or a shortage of U.S. weapons, the largest single concern of Americans was higher gas and fuel prices.


SPORTS
 
MS State's President Dr. Mark Keenum Gives His Insight On CFP Expansion
Video: Dr. Mark Keenum joins The Paul Finebaum Show and explains why he supports playoff expansion, but thinks a 24-team playoff could be too early and too risky.
 
Mississippi State Softball Pulls Off David-Like Shocking Upset at No. 2 Oklahoma, Heads To First College World Series In School History
Samantha Ricketts wanted her players to simplify their thinking. Remove the excess, and focus on the next pitch, the here and now the Mississippi State coach encouraged. Focus was paramount for a team two games from Oklahoma City but one that had the demons of offensive inconsistency a fresh memory. Clearing your thoughts seemed like good advice for most players. Then there was Delainey Everett. It was hard to focus strictly on the enormity of the softball weekend when a key part of your softball past was missing. Everett, whose father Brandan -- who had also been her coach through much of her pre-college competition -- died days before the start of the 2025 season, collected herself, properly channeled her emotions, and pitched her teammates to a massive 6-0 upset. He weighed heavy in her thoughts while she pitched State to the most significant win in program history. The Bulldogs cranked out 17 runs in two wins against softball royalty as they earned a spot in the Women's College World Series for the first time. MSU will face No. 4 seed Texas Tech Thursday morning at 11 Central on ESPN.
 
'It's going to take everybody': Bulldogs embracing underdog mindset in first WCWS
Mississippi State Softball has been the underdog all postseason long, and head coach Samantha Ricketts wouldn't have it any other way. More than 2,400 miles from home, the Bulldogs upset No. 14 overall seed Oregon en route to the program's second-ever super regional berth. MSU then rolled to two of the program's biggest wins against softball giant Oklahoma, clinching its first-ever appearance in the Women's College World Series. State has earned a lot of eyes during its improbable run to the WCWS, but that doesn't mean people will look at them any differently headed into college softball's biggest week. The Bulldogs are the only unseeded team of the remaining eight and no team has won the WCWS in its first try since Oklahoma in 2000. "We're not supposed to be here, according to all the experts, and that's exactly how we like it," Ricketts said. "We're very much a program and a team where we don't want people to pick us, we want to be counted out, because then we get to play free and loose and prove people wrong."
 
How Broccoli Guy joined Mississippi State's magical ride to WCWS and is ready for more
Jim Stewart Allen, also known as Broccoli Guy, is still trying to wrap his head around the last two weeks. What started as a short trip from his home state of Washington to support Oregon in the Eugene Regional of the NCAA softball Tournament has turned into a trip to the Women's College World Series as Mississippi State softball's unofficial mascot. "I've dreamed about going to a softball World Series," Allen told the Clarion Ledger. "I didn't know when it was going to happen. And so, to be able to finally go is one thing, but to be able to go with such a meaningful connection with one of the teams, with Mississippi State, it just means the world to me." Allen plans to be in Oklahoma City for every step of the Bulldogs' WCWS journey, beginning with their opening game against No. 11 seed Texas Tech (57-7) on May 28 (11 a.m. CT, ESPN) at Devon Park. It will be the first WCWS game in MSU (43-19) program history. For as much as Allen enjoys watching the Bulldogs play, the players enjoy having him in the stands. Infielder Nadia Barbary said seeing him dancing during the games helps them remember to have fun and stay loose in tough moments.
 
Softball: Five Bulldogs Earn Academic All-District Honors, Goold Academic All-American Finalist
Mississippi State softball saw five student-athletes named to the College Sports Communicators (CSC) Academic All-District team this week. The Bulldogs were represented by Morgan Bernardini, Alyssa Faircloth, Peja Goold, Abby Grace Richardson and Morgan Stiles. Goold is a three-time all-district honoree and will be an Academic All-American finalist for the second year in a row. Bernardini is a two-time all-district honoree at MSU, and Faircloth was an All-American finalist last year while at Troy. Richardson was a junior college Academic All-American in 2023. Goold now advances to a national ballot to be voted on by CSC members. Goold, graduated this spring with a degree in marketing, and will begin a professional playing career this summer with the OKC Spark. She earned her first two CSC honors while at Chattanooga and has earned Academic All-District honors every year of her career (freshmen are ineligible). She was named a Second Team All-American by Softball America and USA Today Sports' SEC Newcomer of the Year.
 
Softball's Big Stages Nothing New For Richardson
Softball's biggest stage awaits Mississippi State beginning Thursday when the Bulldogs play their first-ever Women's College World Series game. MSU will battle in a setting no one in MSU Maroon and White has before. In times like these, with so much on the line, it always helps to have someone to look to and lean on. Enter State senior Abby Grace Richardson whose career has consistently featured ballgames where the stakes were the highest possible. "I think my past has taught me how to win and how to be on a winning team and how to play a leadership role that a team needs," Richardson said. "I think it's all helped me to bring the fight and the grit that it takes to win, even if you're an underdog." To steal and adapt a line from T-Pain, all Richardson does is win, win, win no matter what. Wherever she's been and wherever she's played, success has followed for her teams.
 
Is Ryan McPherson difference between Mississippi State baseball early exit or CWS run?
The plan was for Ryan McPherson to pitch on May 23 had Mississippi State baseball beaten Georgia in the SEC Tournament quarterfinals. It would've been his third start since returning from a forearm strain that sidelined him for seven weeks, but MSU lost to Georgia and was eliminated from the SEC Tournament. The Bulldogs still made sure McPherson got his pitching reps though in a team scrimmage on May 23 because he's that important. Mississippi State (40-17) is the No. 14 national seed in the NCAA Tournament, hosting the Starkville Regional that begins May 29 (1 p.m., ESPN+) against No. 4 region seed Lipscomb (29-24). McPherson being at or near full strength could be what determines if Mississippi State wins the regional and makes a run to the College World Series for the first time since 2021. "Ryan McPherson will be a big part of it," coach Brian O'Connor said on May 25 after the bracket was revealed. "We threw Ryan on Saturday night. We scrimmaged late at night on Saturday night in the stadium and he threw five shutout innings in a scrimmage. He ran his pitch count up to just shy of 80 pitches and felt great the next day. He's on target for us this weekend."
 
With issues abound, is collective bargaining a viable solution for college sports? 'I never thought I'd say it, but I'm there on employment'
Last week, near the steps of the U.S. Capitol, a scene unfolded that encapsulates the troublesome predicament in which college athletics finds itself. Flanked by the leader of a players association, the president of the NAACP and members of the Congressional Black Caucus, a college football player spoke into a microphone to deliver a message. "It's important that people hear what athletes have to say," said Jackson Pruitt, a Temple offensive lineman. "It's important that we push for player representation and some kind of player union that gets us what we deserve." Not far away, while participating in a panel held by Democratic Congresswoman Lori Trahan, a group of women's basketball players unleashed a fury of comments directed at college leaders. One of them, some might contend, said the quiet part out loud. "I think it's time to come to the truth: We are employees," said Oluchi Okananwa, a Maryland women's hoops player from Boston and the Big Ten's Defensive Player of the Year last season. College sports executives may claim that these players were used as tools for partisan lawmakers at a divisive time in American politics. But their message -- schools should deem athletes employees and bargain with them -- is beginning to gain traction at the highest levels of the industry, including within the Southeastern Conference and its powerful group of university presidents, chancellors and athletic directors.
 
'Pretty Close to Anarchy': Georgia President Jere Morehead Calls on SEC Leaders to Leave This Week's Meetings With Plan to Start Working on Implementation of Rules
UGA President Jere Morehead appeared on the Paul Finebaum Show on Tuesday from SEC Spring Meetings in Destin, FL. Morehead spoke about the current lack of rule enforcement in college sports, and once again advocated for the SEC to start taking it's own measures. Morehead has become a leading voice in the current landscape of college sports, attending a round table on the issues facing it at the White House earlier this year. Morehead started his appearance by talking about the lack of progress in rule enforcement in college sports, and his desire to see SEC presidents and athletic directors leave Destin with a plan that would move them towards a set of SEC only rules. "Unfortunately, we haven't gone anywhere, we're stuck. We're having basically the same conversations we were a year ago, and that's very frustrating. I hope out of this meeting we don't end and say, 'well we're going to wait' before we start actually planning the next steps."
 
Sun sets on SoCon Saturday: SEC ADs vote to end 'cupcake' November nonconference scheduling
The SEC is officially ending cupcake weekend. Or "SoCon Saturday," as it was also derisively called. SEC athletic directors voted Tuesday to have everyone play a conference game on the penultimate week of the regular season. That will be effective for the 2027 season, ending a tradition that began two decades earlier. "I think that's the end of cupcake weekend in late November," commissioner Greg Sankey said, smiling. "We never got that one sponsored, though." SEC teams became known for scheduling weaker opponents the week before Thanksgiving, sometimes from the Southern Conference of the Football Championship Subdivision, thus the "SoCon Saturday" moniker. It wasn't always just that weekend, sometimes the previous weekend, but either way the programs saw it as a way to give their starters a late-season rest before rivalry games on Thanksgiving weekend. This year, there are four such games scheduled for Nov. 20 (Week 12): Chattanooga at Alabama, Samford at Auburn, Wofford at Ole Miss and Tennessee Tech at Mississippi State. There are five conference games. In the future, they will all be conference games.
 
Georgia's Smart fears massive football budgets will imperil other sports
Kirby Smart is a two-time national champion in the NIL era who works at one of a handful of schools able to routinely fund a massive budget for talent acquisition. But as coaches gathered for the SEC's annual spring meetings on Tuesday, Georgia's Smart was quick to call for sanity in the marketplace. Smart was among a number of SEC coaches to bemoan the massive uptick in spending from revenue sharing and NIL, and he suggested, if trends continue, that the ballooning football budgets will put all Olympic-level sports in peril. "My biggest concern for our sport is we're going to ruin all the other sports," Smart said Tuesday. "People say, well, that's just the way it is. I don't agree with that. We fund Olympic sports at our program and we go to class with [other athletes]. You learn culture by being around those people. But that's why we're talking about student-athletes, which most of you all would argue that there is no student in the athlete. I still think the best thing is to get a degree while also training to be a professional athlete. We're going to lose that if we keep spending because not everybody can spend at the rate we're spending."
 
Laura Rutledge pens heartfelt farewell to SEC Nation: 'It has truly been an honor'
Laura Rutledge penned an emotional farewell to SEC Nation on Monday, calling her time with the show "one of the most meaningful chapters of my life." It was reported in March that Matt Barrie will replace Rutledge as host of the SEC Nation football pre-game show on the SEC Network this fall. Rutledge is expected to take on larger duties with ESPN's NFL coverage as the network gets set to broadcast its first Super Bowl in February 2027. "SEC Nation has never just been a show to me," she wrote. "It's been a family, a front-row seat to the passion of college football and a weekly reminder of what makes the SEC so special. From the roar of packed stadiums on crisp fall mornings to the quiet, behind-the-scenes moments that viewers never see, every second has meant something. Seeing all of you show up for us every Saturday and feeling genuinely honored you wanted to take pictures and chat will always stick with me."
 
Bill to hide public money paid to college athletes nears final passage
Louisiana legislators are rapidly advancing a bill that would hide details on how much public money is being paid to college athletes. House Bill 608 by Rep. Tehmi Chassion, D-Lafayette, passed the Senate Tuesday on a 22-13 vote. Because it was amended in the Senate, it has to go back to the House for another vote. The bill has received significant support from the LSU athletics department, with some of its leaders working to secure votes for the bill. Executive Deputy Athletics Director Julie Cromer and Senior Deputy AD Heath Schroyer have appeared at committee hearings to advocate for the proposal. The legislation would create a new exemption in the state's public records law to conceal how much public money universities pay directly to student athletes. The payments are allowed under new "revenue-sharing" rules the NCAA implemented after it settled a lawsuit last year brought by student-athletes seeking compensation. Regardless of its source, all revenue a state university receives is public money. For each athletics department, it is a mix of self-generated revenue such as ticket sales, tax dollars and, for some, student fees. There are currently no exemptions in Louisiana law for sharing records with the public that detail how state money is spent.
 
Bipartisan college sports bill with antitrust protection, salary cap for players set to be introduced in days
The bill is finally coming. After years of dead ends, a bipartisan bill on college sports from Sens. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, and ranking member Maria Cantwell, D-Wash., is expected to be introduced within days, sources familiar with the legislation told CBS Sports on Tuesday night. Language for the bill is being finalized and is now moving through the standard pre-introduction process. The bill is expected to carry the prize college sports leaders have chased for the better part of a decade: a limited antitrust exemption regarding player eligibility and transfer rules -- the legal shield that would let the industry write its own rules and enforce them without being challenged in the court system by players seeking additional years on the playing fields and courts. What else is in the bill has largely remained a mystery, frustrating university leaders who previously backed the since-withdrawn SCORE Act, which also promised antitrust protection. As with any bipartisan bill, compromises were part of the process in drafting the Cantwell-Cruz bill, and what did and didn't make it into the upcoming legislation is paramount to the power players.
 
2 key senators strike deal on sweeping bipartisan college sports reform with transfer, eligibility and cap enforcement
Two U.S. senators have struck a deal in landmark bipartisan legislation to regulate college athletics. Next comes a months-long process of gaining enough support for passage in a divided U.S. Congress at a divisive time in America. Sens. Maria Cantwell, a Washington Democrat, and Ted Cruz, a Texas Republican, reached an agreement on Wednesday after more than two months of intense negotiations, adopting a comprehensive bill that would grant the NCAA its long-sought antitrust exemption related to athlete transfers, eligibility and the compensation cap. The bill -- named the Protect College Sports Act -- precludes the creation of a so-called "super league"; creates an agent registry limiting fees to 5%; permits the pooling of media rights; and bars coaches from leaving their team before the season ends. "This bipartisan bill is designed to save the part of college sports that fans actually care about," Cruz said in an interview with Yahoo Sports announcing the legislation. Perhaps the most interesting aspect of the bill is the narrow legal protection granted to college sports' governing body intended to slow player movement, standardize eligibility and control the third-party NIL spending on athletes.
 
Supreme Court Takes Key Title IX Case on College Sports Employees
Last week the U.S. Supreme Court announced it will review former Georgia Tech women's basketball coach MaChelle Joseph's Title IX lawsuit against the school for sex discrimination in employment. The case could open the door to more employment-based Title IX claims brought by coaches, trainers and other athletic department employees at a time when college sports law is in flux, with numerous lawsuits involving college athletes, NIL, antitrust and eligibility. Title IX prohibits discrimination based on sex in education programs that receive federal financial assistance. It can be enforced through private litigation or by federal agencies. As detailed in a Supreme Court brief by Gregory J. Dubinsky and other attorneys and in related court documents, Joseph argues that a coach can use Title IX in employment litigation when the coach's employment -- and her ability to do her job -- was allegedly harmed by inferior treatment of her team.



The Office of Public Affairs provides the Daily News Digest as a general information resource for Mississippi State University stakeholders.
Web links are subject to change. Submit news, questions or comments to Jim Laird.
Mississippi State University  •  Mississippi State, MS 39762  •  Main Telephone: (662) 325-2323  •   Contact: The Editor  |  EEO Statement  •   Updated: May 27, 2026Facebook Twitter