Clad in an Ole Miss cap, civil rights activist James Meredith, the first African-American granted admission to the University of Mississippi, watched his oldest granddaughter, Jasmine...
On the June 30 edition of “Conversations” at 10 p.m. tonight, author Ed Meek is joined by fellow journalist, historian and University of Mississippi Professor Curtis...
The U.S. Senate has passed a resolution authored by U.S. Senators Roger Wicker, R-Miss., and Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H., commemorating the 50th anniversary of James H. Meredith’s...
Today at 11 a.m., former Ole Miss student Austin Reed Edenfield pleaded guilty to a federal civil rights crime for tying a rope and Confederate flag...
University of Mississippi students won 26 awards in the annual Southeast Journalism Conference, and for the fourth time in five years, they were honored as the...
It was a rainy Wednesday night but the people within J.D. Williams Library seemed oblivious to it in their warm cheer. The long-awaited Mamie and Ellis...
An African American Ole Miss student and resident of the Retreat Cottage Community in Oxford was doused with an alcoholic beverage and called a “black nigger”...
Following the defacement of the James Meredith statue on campus Sunday, record-setting former Ole Miss wide receiver Shay Hodge was among many Ole Miss students, alumni,...
Three 19-year-old Ole Miss students, all from Georgia, have admitted hanging a noose around the neck of the statue of James Meredith. UM police confirmed the...
With the recent unrest between law enforcement and African American citizens that the nation has watched unfold in Ferguson, Missouri, some might think the word ‘unrest’...