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The Grit and Grind of Spirit

For a few weeks since mid-December, the volleyball gym at University of Memphis has been transformed into a dance studio, mats taped over the court floor, with the recognizable Tigers flags and megaphones tucked to the side. Mirrors have been rolled into the end of the court. The Pom Squad and Ambush Crew have been practicing their routines there, with rehearsals ramping up to nearly every day, hours at a time, in preparation for the UCA & UDA College Cheerleading and Dance Team National Championship in Orlando, January 17th to 19th. 

At today’s practice, while I speak with Carol Lloyd, University of Memphis’ spirit coordinator and head dance coach, the dancers warm up, one doing aerials, flipping her legs over her heads. Another jumps, knees turned out with her toes meeting to form a diamond in the air before she lands; soon, back up she springs, another brief diamond formed. 

On the other side of the mat, a group goes through a part of their routine to be performed in a mere few days. Their footsteps are sharp, measured according to counts, heads turning in unison; there’s no music, but they are in sync. They lift one of their teammates in the air, effortlessly — or, so it appears to the untrained eye. Something’s off, though they haven’t quite figured out what exactly. Should so-and-so adjust her leg? Should it be bent at the knee? Lloyd asks for feedback from the athletes, pointing out collaboration’s role in their process. They run through the counts again, and again, and again, and will again many more times. This part is only a few seconds of an entire routine that they’ve been working on since November. 

“It’s so detailed,” says Lloyd. “I don’t think a lot of people realize how much goes into just dancing for this minute-50 seconds.”

The Pom Squad and Ambush Crew compete in three categories: game day, hip-hop, and pom. In a game day performance, dancers recreate the live game experience with a band, fight song, Pouncer the mascot, and lots of spirit. Pom uses poms and can be a mix of hip-hop and jazz. 

Last year, the team took home the national championship for game day and placed third in hip-hop and seventh in pom. That same weekend, the university’s cheerleaders won the national championship in small coed. 

Winning titles isn’t unusual for U of M’s spirit squads, which include the cheer team, the Pom Squad, and the Ambush Crew, which Lloyd started last year to specialize in hip-hop during game days and compete with the Pom Squad at nationals. The cheer team holds seven national titles. The Pom Squad has 16, including nine consecutive titles from 1986 to 1994. 

“It’s always harder to stay on top than it is to get there,” Lloyd says. “I always feel pressure, but pressure is a privilege almost. And they do have the pressure of [having won last year], but also we don’t really harp a lot on it.”

On the back of the mirrors that the dancers rolled into the volleyball gym, the athletes have posted a sign that says, “Go with the goal of hitting your shit, not with the goal of winning.” They even tally up how many “full-outs” they do — how many times they practice their routines as if they’re performing in front of an audience. That number will get up to the 70s by the time they leave for Orlando, the dancers say. It’s about quantifying achievements, big and small. 

“In our league, everybody’s top-notch; everybody is so good and so elite,” Lloyd says. “It’s kind of hard sometimes to realize we’re one of those people, too. Especially with Memphis, because everybody knows who you are [in the college dance world] and it’s such a legacy — the Memphis dance team. Everybody knows you’re from Memphis. They look up to you; you’re a staple in dance team history.”

Photo: Courtesy Memphis Spirit

It’s a Legacy

The first national collegiate dance team championship took place in 1986, and Memphis State, as it was then, won — and it won for the next eight years. 

Lloyd, a Memphis native, cheered throughout high school and was on the college’s pom team during its champion-winning streak from 1989 to 1993. She would go on to succeed her college coach Cheri Ganong-Robinson in 2004. 

While, yes, winning titles marked her time on U of M’s Pom Squad, she also recalls traveling to entertain at NBA games, even going overseas. “We don’t do that any more,” Lloyd says, “and I miss some of our halftimes ’cause we used to dance for four to five minutes every single halftime and nobody left their seats. I don’t miss preparing for it because it is a lot and they do so much more now. … This sport has become so big — way more athletic, technical — so to still be one of the top teams and still keep it at that level is great.”

Other dance alumnae and current athletes agree. Bella Roy, a senior pom dancer, speaks of watching videos of older routines with alumnae at a Christmas party. “They’re like, ‘That’s me, that’s me,’ but it’s just crazy how it’s changed so much. But then, it still is so similar. It’s that crazy drive and that Memphis family; the legacy is just like no other.”

And it’s that legacy that brought Roy from Franklin, Tennessee, to Memphis initially. “I knew from a very young age, I wanted to dance in college,” she says. “Memphis has been so well-known for so long as this amazing program across the nation in the dance world, so to be a part of it is absolutely amazing.”

University of Memphis’ reputation for its dance team also attracted freshman Linda Gail Rutland. She and Roy actually attended the same dance studio back in Franklin, and now they’re on the team together, if only for one overlapping year. For both of them, dance — more precisely dancing competitively on a team — has constituted most of their lives’ passion. 

“[Dancing on a team] comes to the point where, of course, you always want to win, but it’s not even about winning,” Rutland says. “It’s the memories and working for something bigger than yourself, being there for your teammates.”

“You’re all there because you chose to be there and you want to be there and you want to get better and be pushed to do good,” Roy adds. “Carol [Lloyd] is an amazing coach. She can be tough, but it’s in a good way. It’s in a great way. She gives us that tough love that we need.” 

For that matter, last year the National Dance Coaches Association named Lloyd College Coach of the Year. Having accrued so many titles as a student athlete and as a coach, this one speaks to Lloyd’s particular knack for leading her teams. After all, she’s been coaching since was 18.

Today, in addition to working for U of M, she coaches for the Collierville Middle School and Collierville High School cheer teams. Before accepting her position as spirit coordinator in 2013, she also coached for U of M’s cheer team, now under the leadership of Jasmine Freeman. 

“Seeing the athletes grow as individuals and as dancers, that’s always rewarding,” Lloyd says. “Plus, I mean, it’s challenging for them.”

The U of M cheer squad is known for cheers and stunts. (Photo: Courtesy Memphis Spirit)

It’s a Sport

“It’s easy to get so hard on yourself when you have all these long practices and you’re sore and ‘Oh, I can’t make it to my spot’ or this or that,” Roy says. “But then the alumnae are always like, ‘Oh, you’re flipping upside down, and you’re doing 12 turns,’ and we’re like, ‘Wait, we really are good.’” 

Yet neither the NCAA nor the Office of Civil Rights, which enforces Title IX, consider collegiate dance or cheer as sports, defining “sports” as activities whose purpose is competing, not “supporting” other sports on the sidelines. But the spirit squads consider themselves athletes, training hard and competing, albeit once a year, and even though they are at every football and basketball game, they’re also at community and philanthropic events because, as they would say, they’re the “face” of the university. 

While they receive some athletic benefits from the school like access to training and the athletic mental performance department, U of M’s athletics website doesn’t list the Pom Squad, Ambush Crew, or cheer team under women’s sports but instead offers a link in a sidebar, along with athletic news and a composite schedule, suggesting that their status as a sport is in limbo even at their home in Memphis. 

As it is, the spirit teams have to fundraise for the majority of their budget. Each year, the dancers and cheerleaders put on a golf tournament, host dance and cheer clinics, sell popcorn, offer appearances, and more. 

“It takes about $120 to $140 thousand each year to cover everything that we need,” Lloyd says. For reference, according to CNBC, U of M’s athletic program is worth about $148 million. That puts the school third among the American Athletic Conference, behind East Carolina University ($153 million) and the University of South Florida ($150 million). 

“We’re constantly looking for other ways to make money for them so they don’t have to keep fundraising,” Lloyd says.

The spirit squads also don’t have a dedicated facility, which can add another strain on the budget and affects efficiency. The cheer team practices at an All-Star gym out in Collierville, and the Pom Squad and Ambush Crew have bounced around for the past few years, last year renting a church gym and this year using one of the university’s rec gyms until the volleyball gym opened up. “This is my fourth year, and this is our third facility that we’ve been in,” Roy says. 

For each practice in the rec gym, the athletes had to tape down the 10-paneled floor mats they dance on, take up the tape back up, stack the mats on the side, and store away the mirrors and all their props like the megaphones and flags because it’s a shared space. “And that tape is extremely expensive,” Lloyd adds. “We need a facility for us.” 

Rutland puts a positive spin on it: “Even though we don’t have our own facility and sometimes it is a pain, doing it with your teammates, honestly, we bond.”

University of Memphis’ spirit squads perform at every football and basketball game (men’s and women’s). (Photo: Courtesy Memphis Spirit)

It’s a Family

At today’s practice, where 20 dancers are in the pom routine being rehearsed, a few who aren’t in the number have joined to cheer their teammates on. This is typical, Lloyd says. “It’s a good group of people. They’re grateful, very respectful. They’re hella talented. They’re supportive, and that’s important with anything.”

While we speak, Lloyd will interrupt with brief corrections and praises for the individual dancers, her eyes constantly roving the mat filled with multiple performers. “When you know that someone is struggling in a certain part, you’ve got to scream for them,” she says to her athletes. “If everybody gets in their head, start yelling. The mat talk is what’s going to help everybody.”

And so they scream and shout, and so does Lloyd. “This is their family,” Lloyd says, noting that out of 43 team members who are on Pom Squad and Ambush Crew, only four are local. 

“I wouldn’t want to be anywhere else,” Rutland says. “I got here and I don’t want to leave. It’s only my freshman year.” 

In a few days, Rutland will compete in her first showcase. “I’m so excited,” she says. “Scary, freaked out, I’m so excited.” She’ll compete in the game day category. “It’s like a big party. We really just have fun the whole time. I love cheering on the school and being at the football games and the basketball games and everything, so I just can only imagine how that will feel on the nationals floor.”

Roy, meanwhile, is competing in game day, pom, and hip-hop this year, her last year competing. Hip-hop, she says, has been the dance style that has challenged her the most but the one she’s most grown in since her freshman year. “I’ve learned so much from [Lloyd] and the upperclassmen, and then Ambush Crew took it to another level,” she says. “Everybody knows Memphis hip-hop in the college dance world, so to go out there and be a part of that is so special and fun.”

Memphis has consistently placed in the top four of the hip-hop division since the division started at the competition. “It’s very captivating, telling a story, being very much like, ‘This is us, we are who we are, watch us do our thing,’” Rutland says of the Pom Squad’s hip-hop routines.

“I feel like, too, it kind of ties into our T-shirts that say, ‘I am Memphis,’” Roy adds. “Like, ‘I am the city of Memphis.’ ‘I am Memphis Pom Dance Team Ambush Crew.’ ‘I am a part of this legacy.’

“But that first time my freshman year after we finished hip-hop for semis, when I did my last little smackdown and looked up, I just held my ending pose for at least 10 seconds,” Roy recalls. “It was that moment where I was just, ‘This is what I’ve dreamed of for so long. And I don’t want to leave.’ I was like, ‘I just did this.’ And then last year, that was always my lifelong goal to win a national championship. And to say that I actually did it is crazy, but it’s so worth it. Since I was little, that’s what I wanted.” 

Now, as Roy, a supply chain management major, looks to life after college, she says, “Since I’ve danced for so long, I think it’s going to be hard, that transition after college, figuring out what I’m going to do with my life. It’s been school, dance, school, dance, school, dance forever, so it’s hard to imagine a life without it, but I think I’ll continue taking dance classes here and there, doing a normal job. I have found a big passion, though, in teaching dance.”

Roy thought about professional dance in the NBA or NFL, a path that some alumnae have taken, so has Rutland, but neither are sure. “I’m set on living in the moment and enjoying my time here,” says Rutland, a finance major. 

Photo: Courtesy Memphis Spirit

It’s Game-Time

The spirit squads traveled to Orlando for the UCA & UDA College Cheerleading and Dance Team National Championship on January 15th, both the dance and cheer teams on the heels of last year’s wins. “We’ll stay true to what we do,” Lloyd says, “just being authentic to our culture. We’re very diverse. We’re a lot of fun, but we’re also very gritty, tough, and still dominating. We don’t try to do what other people do.”

When it’s all over, they’ll fly back on Martin Luther King Jr. Day, and the semester begins the next day. “I’m gonna be so tired,” Roy says, “but I would say I’m still kind of on a high a week after because I get to look at everybody’s videos and see how everybody did.”

The season won’t be over after the championship; the athletes will still perform at basketball games and other events, the spirit squads’ seasons lasting all school year. 

At the end of each practice, of which there will be more, the dancers come together in a circle and link pinkies. “Seniors or captains will give a little wrap-up of practice,” Roy says, “just to get everybody in a good headspace before we leave, and then we say the Lord’s Prayer.” The prayer then leads into a chant: “Five, six, seven, eight, whoo, MPDTAC.”

The MPDTAC would stand for Memphis Pom Dream Team (and) Ambush Crew. And, yes, the DT stands for dream team — not the expected dance team — because, according to Lloyd, she’s always coaching the dream team, win or lose.  

Follow the Memphis Pom and Ambush Crew here and cheer team here.

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U of M Ranks First for Title IX Complaints, Despite Massive Drop

The University of Memphis (U of M) still has the most Title IX complaints of any state university, despite the number of complaints dropping by nearly half from last year.

Title IX bans discrimination on the basis of sex for “any education program or activity receiving federal financial assistance.” This includes admission consideration, employment, “treatment of students,” “access to programs and courses,” and more. 

For fiscal year 2024, the university reported 65 Title IX complaints, according to a new report from the Tennessee State Comptroller’s Office. Last year, the school reported 125. Other schools included in the report were Austin Peay State University (36 complaints), East Tennessee State University (24 complaints), Tennessee State University (17 complaints), and the University of Tennessee (15 complaints.)

When asked about the nature of the complaints and why the school saw such decline in reports, Jennifer Godwin, the school’s director of media and public relations, refused to give any details.

“The U of M has no additional comment on the Title IX report,” Godwin said in a statement.

The U.S. Department of Education mandates that for all Title IX reporting there is written assurance, an employee-regulated investigation, efforts to make sure that applicants, students, and employees are aware of the policy, and a grievance procedure for complaints.

U of M policy holds that these complaints are handled through the school’s Office for Institutional Equity. According to the U of M, the Title Coordinator tracks and monitors incidents, makes sure the university responds to each complaint, conducts investigations where appropriate, and provides and oversees training related to sex discrimination and sexual misconduct.

They assure that every complainant “has the right to the complaint being handled as confidentially as reasonably possible.”

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Tuition Could Rise Again at Tennessee Universities Next Year

The cost of tuition at Tennessee’s public universities could rise again as the Tennessee Higher Education Commission (THEC) reviews the topic in a meeting slated for next week. 

Commission staff said the state’s university system needs $75 million in new funds each year going forward. Most of the new funds — $40 million — will fund operations. The other portion — $35 million — will go to a 2.5 percent increase in raises for university staff. That figure is indexed to the state’s salary increases. 

THEC gets about $1.5 billion from the state each year. The system will will ask for those new funds in next year’s state budget. 

But the system’s total budget is about $3.3 billion. State schools get 57 percent of their money from student tuition and fees at universities. Tennessee community colleges get 40 percent from them and colleges of applied technology get 33 percent, according to THEC. 

To cover revenues here, THEC staff will suggest commission members consider a tuition and fee increase between 0-5 percent for the next school year.  

With a 1-percent increase suggested for next year, tuition at the school would increase by $107 to $10,835. Tuition and fees at the University of Memphis (U of M) have risen 8.1 percent over the last five years. Tuition and fees now cost students $10,728 at U of M. That’s up from $9,924 in the 2019-2020 school year. 

Tuition at Tennessee Technological University (TTU) increased 22 percent over the last five years, the largest of any THEC school. University of Tennessee Chattanooga (UTC) has raised tuition by nearly 13 percent in that time. 

Tuition at University of Tennessee at Knoxville (UT) remains the highest in the THEC schools at $13,812.

The THEC will meet on Thursday to review a change to the tuition increase range. They’ll likely set concrete rates in a future meeting.     

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UofM Unveil University Crime Information Center

The University of Memphis unveiled its new University Crime Information Center which will operate year-round to enhance campus safety.

In a statement released by the university, the center is “technology infused” and will provide “real-time data” which will allow university police to be proactive in stopping crime. The center will feature 24/7 monitoring, the ability to locate someone on campus by description, issue suspicious activity alerts, and provide virtual escorting.

“The mission of our University Crime Information Center is to provide our agency with the ability to capitalize on a wide and expanding range of internal technologies which allows for efficient and effective policing for our university community,” University of Memphis Police Chief Keith Humphrey said. “The center will be a repository for our technology resources that are utilized to ensure the safety of our campus.”

The center will be staffed 24/7 year-round with security specialists. Humphrey said this will aid in Police Services commitment to being transparent and “delivering unbiased, procedural justice.

The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation (TBI) 2023 Crime on Campus report showed a majority of crimes committed on campus were larceny and theft. There were a total of 105 offenses reported to the university and only five of those (4.8 percent) were cleared. 

Destruction and vandalism were the second largest category with 98 offenses and a 6.1 percent clearance rate.

Last year, the Tennessee Legislature passed a recommendation from Governor Bill Lee that allowed the University of Memphis to receive $5.488 million for campus safety and security upgrades. This was a non-recurring investment that was to be used during fiscal year 2023.

The university used the money to upgrade and install LED lighting, perimeter fencing, intelligent camera installations and more.

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University of Memphis Secures $30M Contract to Develop Drone Testing Facility

Successfully operating a drone in heavy rain or extreme wind conditions has long been a challenge, but a new, multi-million-dollar project at the University of Memphis could soon change that. 

The university has secured a $9.2 million contract from the U.S. Navy to design and construct a cutting-edge facility on Presidents Island  aimed at developing and testing drones capable of performing under adverse weather conditions. An additional $21.18 million in U.S. Navy funding over two years will develop a wind wall with variable airflow patterns for testing aerial drones. The majority of this work will be conducted in Memphis, with portions of the project also being carried out in Tucson, Arizona; Orlando, Florida; and Columbia, Missouri.

The facility, sponsored by the Office of Naval Research and the Naval Surface Warfare Center – Carderock Division, will be located on President’s Island at the William Morgan Large Cavitation Channel. This project, still in its early planning stages, underscores the U of M’s commitment to advancing technological innovation and contributing to national defense efforts.

“This project is the latest in an ongoing effort by the University of Memphis to develop intentional research-focused collaborations with the Naval Surface Warfare Center – Carderock,” said Cody Behles, Executive Director of Research and Innovation Development at the University of Memphis’ Division of Research & Innovation. “The Memphis Institute for National Defense Sciences at the University of Memphis helps coordinate opportunities in partnership with the offices of the Tennessee Congressional Delegation. Their collaboration and continued support are vital to get projects such as this off the ground.”

The project is being led by Eddie Jacobs, a senior researcher at the Center for Applied Earth Science and Engineering Research (CAESER) and professor of electrical and computer engineering in the Herff College of Engineering. The U of M will collaborate with researchers from the University of Arizona, the University of Central Florida, and the University of Missouri-Kansas City.

“The William Morgan Large Cavitation Channel is already a unique facility for testing ship and submarine components,” Jacobs explained. “We now have the incredible opportunity to help build another unique facility for testing unmanned aerial systems (drones) in this space, greatly expanding the Navy’s ability to develop and test these systems.”

Jacobs highlighted the potential of the new Unmanned Systems Degraded Environment Facility (USDEF) to significantly enhance the performance of unmanned systems in challenging environments, with far-reaching implications for both military and civilian applications.

“When flying drones, we are often restricted to days that have calm winds and no rain,” Jacobs said. “We will be able to accurately control the wind and generate rain in this new facility. This will help us design and test drones that can operate under more challenging conditions.”

U.S. Rep. Steve Cohen (D-Memphis) said he’s long supported the U of M’s “headlong leap into the unmanned aerial technologies of the future.” 

“This Navy contract will demonstrate the university’s critical national role in developing and testing these technologies, while helping create the cutting-edge aviation workforce of the mid- and late-21st century,” he said in a statement.

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Liza Wellford Fletcher Stadium to Rise at U of M

The University of Memphis has announced plans to build a new stadium for its soccer and track-and-field teams. Liza Wellford Fletcher Stadium will be named in honor of the St. Mary’s Episcopal School teacher who was abducted and murdered while on an early-morning run in September 2022. A 2006 graduate of Hutchison School, Fletcher played soccer for two seasons at the U of M and was a member of the 2007 team that won the first of 14 conference championships for the program under coach Brooks Monaghan.

“Our student-athletes deserve a place that reflects their accomplishments,” said U of M athletic director Ed Scott during a press conference Tuesday on the South Campus, where the new stadium will rise. “The importance [of this stadium] goes way beyond the bricks and mortar. It will honor the legacy of Liza Fletcher. I didn’t get the chance to meet Liza, but I’ve heard wonderful things about her. As a girl dad, there’s a special place in my heart when we can honor a young woman.”

The first phase of the stadium project will include the construction of a grandstand, press box, and locker rooms at an estimated cost of $7 million. Having played for many years at the Mike Rose Soccer Complex and more recently on the South Campus (with temporary bleachers), Tiger soccer will gain its first on-campus facility, a “home” as Monaghan emphasized during his remarks.

“I’ve had the opportunity to work with some remarkable young ladies,” said Monaghan, “and Liza was undoubtedly one of them. Liza was not the most gifted soccer player, but her dedication, her spirit, her work rate, and her smile were unmatched. She was a leader, a friend, and a true beacon of light for anyone who knew her. I can’t help but feel this is the perfect way to honor her legacy.”

A construction timeline was not announced but when asked about goals for completion of the new stadium Monaghan emphasized, “as soon as possible.”

For more information on the stadium project, visit lizaslight.org.

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U of M To Address Transportation Challenges For Ford’s Blue Oval City

The University of Memphis has been chosen to further explore transportation challenges for Stanton, Tennessee, as the city prepares to become the destination for Ford’s Blue Oval City.

An announcement from Congressman Steve Cohen (TN-9) said the university, along with civil engineering professor Sabya Mishra, will receive $75,000 to “study the transportation challenges facing Ford’s future Blue Oval City employees.” 

Blue Oval City is a project that was announced in 2021 by Ford Motor Company as a part of its investment in electric vehicles and sustainable manufacturing. The planned expenditure of $5.6 billion marks the largest investment in the company’s history, with the goal of creating the “next-generation electric truck” from Ford.

“The site spans six square miles and will be among the largest auto manufacturing facilities in U.S. history. It will encompass vehicle assembly, battery production, and a supplier park in a vertically integrated ecosystem,” the company said.

Ford said the project  will create approximately 6,000 jobs for West Tennesseeans.

This grant comes from the National Science Foundation as a part of the Civic Innovation Challenge (CIVIC) Stage One project. Officials said the initiative provides a closer look at “efficient public transit systems” by examining things such as fixed-line buses, on-demand micro-transit, and more.

The United States National Science Foundation (NSF) said CIVIC’s purpose is to bridge the gap between “essential resources and services and community needs.”

“By addressing priorities at the local scale that are relevant across the U.S., CIVIC is laying the foundation for a broader and more fluid exchange of research and technology capabilities and civic priorities through joint partnerships involving civic partners and the research community,” NSF said.  “CIVIC funds projects that pilot state-of-the-art solutions to community challenges over 12 months.”

According to the abstract for the project, researchers plan on  developing a  “multi-modal transit system for Blue Oval City..”

Researchers said they will improve public transportation for prospective workers by using a mix of regular-sized buses and smaller ones. They will utilize on-demand transit to ensure on-time performance.

The university said it will create models using artificial intelligence (AI) to address the “high volumes of employee trips and create service zones with optimal pick-up and drop-off locations.” They will also work to make sure this initiative “incentivizes ridership and ensures social equity.”

Cohen said the project is crucial for the future success of Blue Oval City and it’s workforce. “I congratulate the University and Dr. Mishra for being awarded this prestigious grant for such forward-thinking and innovative research. Benefiting our entire region,” Cohen said.

According to NSF, the program will begin October 1, with an estimated end date of March 31, 2025.

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U of M Tuition Increase Prompts Mixed Emotions From Students

The University of Memphis recently announced their largest tuition increase in the last eight years after approval from the university’s board of trustees in June. However, current students have mixed emotions about this hike, as they don’t believe the student experience will improve as a result.

According to the university’s finance and audit committee, this recommendation was made off of a number of factors including student affordability, financial aid, inflation and more. The university said they have policies and structures in place to minimize the cost of attendance for in-state students, however they “must remain competitive with their national peers.”

“The University of Memphis has taken numerous steps over the past several years to contain costs and to keep tuition as low as possible,” the university said in a statement. “This resulted in the UofM having the lowest average tuition increase in the State of Tennessee of 1.3% over the past eight years, including 0% tuition and fee increases in three of the past eight years.”

The Tennessee Higher Education Commission (THEC) has a binding range of zero to five point five percent to which colleges and universities can increase undergraduate in-state tuition and mandatory fees. As a result, the university was faced with the decision to either increase tuition within that range or eliminate the guaranteed tuition plan, which is available to first-time and first-year students and guarantees “locked-in rates for eight consecutive semesters.

The board decided to raise full-time undergraduate in-state tuition by 3.71 percent, and out-of-state tuition by 4.1 percent. In-state graduate tuition increased by 3.69 percent, while law tuition for Tennessee residents increased by 3.78 percent. Out of state students will see a 4.02 percent increase for graduate programs and 4.03 percent for law school.

Redding Johnson is an in-state transfer student who is a senior at the university studying journalism and feels that the decision to increase tuition without student input is “deceptive.” She also feels that the students don’t have a concrete understanding as to where this money is going and have no say in where it should go.

“We did get a new STEM building this past year so I’m sure some of the money went to that, but we don’t see the money going to programs that actually need it like journalism and architecture programs,” Johnson said. “The money doesn’t seem like it’s going to campus security either, which is a huge problem at U of M. I personally think they are trying to make up for the loss of students enrolling over the last decade.”

For Fall 2023, the university reported 21,731 students enrolled in their programs, a 0.83 percent decrease from Fall 2022 (21,912.) Enrollment increased in 2022 following the decline in enrollment in Fall 2021 from Fall 2020 (2.63 percent.)

On the other hand, students like Ashleigh Porter, a senior from Memphis, says they’re “amongst the few people” that feel the tuition increases have been worth it, as she has noticed building upgrades and improvements in her communications program.

“Things are really starting to be more polished and the campus offers a lot of new things that it didn’t when I first started two years ago,” P added.

Chadai Jones, an out-of state nursing student from Atlanta, Georgia going into her sophomore year said she understands the shock and “disbelief” that her fellow students are experiencing due to the tuition percentage increase, but she’s hopeful that it will benefit students with more funding for campus events and other additions to student life.

“It’s not like they’re just taking more money and we don’t benefit from it,” Jones said. “We would be getting our money’s worth, but it does suck that out of the blue tuition is being raised. I personally just hope they stick to their word and make sure it does benefit all students.”

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MEMernet: Memphis Masters, Go Glo, and Who to Follow

Memphis on the internet.

Memphis Masters

The University of Memphis football team got into Masters Week with a little golf on the turf.

Go Glo

Posted to X by CMT

GloRilla is everywhere. She was recently seen at the White House with President Joe Biden. Last weekend she was on the red carpet for the CMT Music Awards.

“GET ’EM GLO!” CMT tweeted.

Who to Follow

Posted Instagram by heybertflex

Heybert Flexworthy is a Memphis comedian and musician. A video posted to Instagram last week had the city’s number with lines about high MLGW bills, never going to Graceland, potholes, slang, Dixie Queen, and how the city turned Ja Morant into “a thug.”

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MEMernet: Kyle, Candy Champ, Glo and Joe

Memphis on the internet.

Kyle, Kyle, Kyle

“Leftist agitators disrupted the Turning Point USA (TPUSA) chapter event hosting Kyle Rittenhouse last night at the University of Memphis,” reads a story from Turning Points USA the day after Rittenhouse was booed from the stage and chased away from campus by protestors.

MEMernet celebrity Allan Creasy asked Memphians on X and Facebook for their most Memphis insult for Rittenhouse. They didn’t disappoint.

“Kyle says mane but spells it main,” wrote Forrest Quay Roberts.

“Kyle Rittenhouse walked into the Rendezvous and ordered the shrimp,” wrote Jonathan Green.

“Kyle thinks Chili’s has the best ribs,” wrote Danny Bader. “He also eats ribs with a fork.”

“I 100 percent know his favorite Grizzly was Chandler Parsons,” wrote Henry A Wallace.

Candy Champ

Posted to X by Jessica Benson

“This kid eating an insane amount of cotton candy has been the best performance we’ve seen in five games in Memphis this weekend,” tweeted Jessica Benson, a Grind City Media host on the March Madness games played at FedExForum last weekend.

Glo and Joe

Posted to Instagram by GloRilla

Memphis rapper GloRilla met President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris at the White House last week. In a brief Instagram selfie video with Biden, GloRilla says, “Yeah, Joe!” The president responded, “Not yeah, Joe. Yeah, you!”