Mississippi Today
IHL approves Ole Miss diversity division closure
The University of Mississippi’s plan to replace an administrative division dedicated to diversity, equity and inclusion with one focused on access won approval by its governing board last week.ย
The formal OK from the Institutions of Higher Learning Board of Trustees came two months after Chancellor Glenn Boyce announced the Division of Access, Opportunity and Community Engagement in a campus-wide email.
Boyce wrote the goal was to redouble the university’s efforts to help more students attend and graduate college amid the looming enrollment cliff facing Mississippi’s institutions of higher learning.
โWe are steadfast in our commitment to the transformative power of higher education, and now is the time to prioritize our efforts to broaden access to higher education,โ he wrote on Aug. 16.
The new division takes the place of the university’s Division of Diversity and Community Engagement. It will cost $1.5 million to implement and bring together four different campus offices that focus on community engagement, inclusion and cross-cultural engagement, disability services, and equal opportunity and regulatory compliance, according to the IHL board book.ย
A university spokesperson said Ole Miss did not have an additional comment on the changes beyond Boyce’s August statement.
In the last year, most universities in Mississippi have made similar changes to their diversity offices, even though state lawmakers have yet to pass a ban on state spending on diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives.
Unlike its counterparts, Ole Miss ran its changes through IHL, which oversees all eight of the state’s public universities. The University of Southern Mississippi renamed its diversity office the โOffice of Community and Belonging.โ Last November, Mississippi State University opened its new Division of Access, Opportunity and Success.
In higher education, DEI traditionally refers to a range of administrative efforts to comply with civil rights laws and foster a sense of on-campus belonging among those populations.
During the IHL meeting, Casey Prestwood, the associate commissioner for academic and student affairs, read a description of the new division. Earlier in the meeting, the IHL board had approved the diversity division’s closure when it voted on the consent agenda.
โUM’s goal is to better align resources to prioritize student persistence, success, and graduation,โ Prestwood read. โTo achieve this, UM needs to enhance its focus on expanding access to higher education, particularly for students facing limited resources, minimal family experience with higher education, and other barriers.โ
The board approved the change without discussion.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Crooked Letter Sports Podcast
Podcast: McDonaldโs All American, All-SEC, NBA All-Star, NBA champion, Mississippi Sports Hall of FamerโฆMo Williams joins the Crooked Letter podcast.
So much to discuss with the great Mo Williams: His JSU basketball team, his marvelously talented sons, growing up in Jackson, his NBA basketball career, playing with Lebron, playing against Allen Iverson, NIL, the transfer portal โฆ and so much more.
Stream all episodes here.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
Illuminating psychological thriller โGaslightโ opens at New Stage Theatre
Jackson, Miss. โย โGaslightโ casts an eerie glow of suspense at New Stage Theatre, where a Victorian house of flickering lamps and shifting shadows feeds a haunting sense of unease that feels like a button-glove fit for Halloween.ย
Its timely tuck in the midst of an election season seems fitting, too, as the psychological manipulation at the story’s heart โ a husband’s willful intent to unsettle his wealthy wife’s sense of reality and drive her mad โ resonates in an age of misinformation, deepfakes, foreign influence attempts and oft-repeated lies that can spread like wildfire across social media.
โGaslightโ by Steven Dietz, based on the original 1938 play by Patrick Hamilton, has its regional premiere at New Stage Theatre, with an Oct. 22 opening and performances through Nov. 3.
The acclaimed original spawned a host of incarnations, including the hit American play โAngel Streetโ and classic British and American films (both named โGaslightโ) in the 1940s. The acclaimed American version snagged two Oscars, for Best Actress Ingrid Bergman and Best Production Design, and was nominated for five others, including Best Picture.
โGaslightingโ first emerged as a verb in the mid-20th century, describing deception similar to that in the drama, but reached its zenith in current times as a broader shorthand for misleading someone for personal gain and in 2022 became Merriam-Webster’s Word of the Year.
The thriller’s newer, concise version moves the drama from London to 1880s-era New York, and gives the women in the story, the wife and two maids, more agency, as well other updates in a suspenseful story that unfolds over a single night in the stifling confines of a gloomy Victorian house on the East Side. Underscoring enhances a film noir-like atmosphere.
โIt’s not the typical melodrama, where the white knight comes in and saves the damsel in distress,โ said Drew Stark, who plays Jack Manningham, the husband whose charm may hide an undercurrent of greed and secret, sinister intent. โVillains are always fun, but the idea is not to play โI’m an evil villain’ with a twirling mustache of the melodrama era. But, to try to really focus on what I want, even though it’s different from what other people want and perhaps what society wants,โ he said of his character’s goal to unravel his wife’s sanity and land her in a mental institution.
Hannah Elizabeth Freeman of Brandon, a recent transplant from Kansas City, Missouri makes her New Stage debut as Bella Manningham, a relative newlywed only a few years into her marriage with Jack and still very much in love. โShe tries so hard to make him happy. She wants to be happy, desperately. She is orphaned at this point in her life. Her dad has passed away, and her mother was sent away. So, she’s fairly isolated and Jack is her lifeline and connection to the outside world.โย
Her guiding line is Bella’s statement, โI live forever now in a world of doubt, not knowing what’s real and what I have invented.โ Throughout, she is desperately trying to figure out what is real and who to trust. โIt’s a psychological thriller, so it’s perfect for Halloween. โฆ I think people will really feel like it’s the perfect time of year to go on this ride with Bella.โ Even if audiences know the story on the front end, cast and crew hope they will revel in the fun as clues pop up and the mystery unfolds.
Ward Emling has the role of Sgt. Rough, a retired British detective who had worked with the New York City police early in his career and just cannot let go of an unsolved murder from his early days as a young officer on the New York police force. โI come into their tenuous world, and stir it up a bit,โ he said of Sgt. Rough, who shows up at the house on this fateful evening, with a quest to prove his theory about the crime. He also soon sees the need to lift up Bella, give her strength, gain her trust and even win her over to help. He also manages to inject a bit of levity into this dark, tension-filled situation. Malaika Quarterman as the loyal senior maid, Marquita Levy as the sassy, younger maid, and Keith Allen Davis Jr. and Jacob Heuer as police officers, complete the cast.
โIt’s interesting that the term โgaslighting’ was not a term until after Patrick Hamilton’s play โ that it gave rise to the psychological term,โ said New Stage Theatre Artistic Director Francine Thomas Reynolds, who also directs this production. New adaptations of the story that draw out the women characters find more relevance in contemporary times. โHow do you deal with manipulation? How do you come through it? โฆ I think people will recognize the tactics of belittling someone and invalidating someone.โ
โThese conditions, these situations certainly exist today โ someone wanting money, and using charm to get money,โ Reynolds said. Bullying and the use of drugs and emotional control to target vulnerabilities and render people, often women, more pliable also resonate in today’s headlines.
In a broader, societal context, the illusion vs. reality question finds parallels, too. โIn looking at the play, I saw a lot of relation to misinformation,โ Reynolds said. โWe hear things and are told things and we’re told we need to believe them. What’s real news? What’s fake news?
โIn an age when we have so many choices for information, what’s real and what’s not is really hard to decipher.โ
Performances of โGaslightโ are at 7 p.m. Oct. 23-26, 29, 31 and Nov. 1-2, 2 p.m. Oct. 27 and Nov. 3, and 1 p.m. Oct. 30 at New Stage Theatre, 1100 Carlisle St., Jackson, Miss. Tickets are $35 each with discounts for seniors, students and military. Call 601-948-3533 ext. 223 or visit www.newstagetheatre.com for tickets or more information on the production.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
On this day in 1913
Oct. 23, 1913
An NAACP branch was formed in the Seattle-Tacoma area โ one of the few branches started west of the Mississippi River.
A beautician and philanthropist, Letitia Graves served as the first president, and journalist Horace Cayton Sr. served as first vice president. He had graduated from what is now Alcorn State University and married Susie Revels, the daughter of Sen. Hiram Revels, the first Black American elected to the U.S. Senate. She worked as associate editor for the Black newspaper that he began, the Seattle Republican.
NAACP members protested President Woodrow Wilson’s new policy of segregating Black federal employees. When the racist film โThe Birth of a Nationโ emerged in 1915, NAACP members sought to stop the showing of the film in Seattle. The effort failed, but they succeeded six years later when the movie returned. This time, Graves convinced the president of the Seattle City Council to have the police chief block the showing of the film.
In the decades that followed, the Seattle branch challenged discrimination in court and saw its membership grow from 85 to 1,550 members. After protests regarding police brutality and failure to promote black officers, the city of Seattle hired its first Black police chief in 1964. In the years since, the branch has continued to remain active.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
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