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FRIDAY JANUARY 17, 2020
135th YEAR ISSUE 26
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF MISSISSIPPI STATE UNIVERSITY SINCE 1884
MSU Engineers Without Borders wins award for work in Ecuadorian village JOHN HAYNES STAFF WRITER
Bethany Crane | The Reflector
Strange Brew Coffeehouseʼs newest addition is located in Midtown on Starkvilleʼs Main Street.
Popular coffeehouse opens new Midtown location PAYTON BROWN STAFF WRITER
Strange Brew Coffeehouse publicly expanded its franchise and unveiled a third location in downtown Starkville Dec. 30. The new building sits between other Starkville favorites in Midtown while also being only blocks away from Starkville’s thriving hub, the Cotton District. From 5:30 a.m. to
midnight, the new Strange Brew accommodates the needs of both local Starkville residents and current Mississippi State University students while also providing plenty of space for the usual crowds which typically populate the coffeehouse. The Mississippi-based coffeehouse added a new location to its current two establishments located in Tupelo and Starkville. COFFEE, 2
For the second year in a row, the Mississippi State University student chapter of Engineers Without Borders (EWB) has won MSU’s Community-Engaged Service award. This award is just one of the different categories of MSU’s Community Engagement Awards and is determined by several university offices. EWB will also receive a $3,000 cash prize to go towards their service project. This year’s first-place service award project is a multiyear effort to rebuild and revamp a decrepit water supply system in the tiny Ecuadorian village of Santa Teresita that is hidden away in the Andes mountains. In May 2019, EWB took its first trip to assess the lay of the land, conduct water purity tests and engage with the villagers. The two project coleaders are Laura DeCuir, a sophomore mechanical engineering major, and Craig Schexnaydre, a sophomore civil engineering major.
Craig Schexnaydre | Courtesy Photo
MSUʼs Engineering Without Borders chapter won first place in the Community-Engaged Service category of MSUʼs annual Community Engagement Awards. They received $3,000 to go towards their water supply infrastructure project in Santa Teresita, Ecuador.
Schexnaydre made it clear this undertaking was no trivial matter, but rather an extensive reworking of the entire setup in Santa Teresita. “We’ll look at expanding the system—finding new sources to bring more water into the system to further
increase the quality of life for the community, (to) provide 150% of what they need, so they can continue to grow, continue to thrive, and on top of all that we’re trying to teach them to sustain it, to maintain it so that, in 30, 35 years, the issue doesn’t come back,”
Schexnaydre said. According to Schexnaydre, part of the problem in Santa Teresita is the population’s use of the water for agricultural purposes despite the system’s original design being only meant to sustain everyday human needs. EWB, 2
MSU architecture alumni transform Music City JACKSON KEEL
CONTRIBUTING WRITER
Upon graduation, most students wish to see their work have a tangible impact on the world around them. For the Mississippi State University graduates working at the Manuel Zeitlin Architects firm in Nashville, Tennessee, they have the privilege to see their work shape the Music City skyline. Chris Riley and Lesley Beeman are two MSU alumni and co-owners of MZA. Both Mississippi natives, Beeman, 54, is from Meridian and graduated in 1995 with a bachelor’s degree in architecture a week before his 30th birthday. Riley, 39, is from Columbus and graduated in 2004 with a bachelor’s degree in architecture. Although they attended
MSU during very different times, both Riley and Beeman relate their current creative environment to their time in MSU studios.
the world as filled-out as possible,” Riley said. Beeman echoed Riley’s sentiment. “I think what I enjoyed
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I think what I enjoyed most (at MSU) and something that I sought out in my professional career is that studio environment and the camaraderie with the students, and collaborative nature of the work.
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Lesley Beeman 1995 MSU architecture graduate Co-owner, Manuel Zeitlin Architects
“It’s keeping that studio environment and that work ethic. It’s a creative field, and what you put out there are your ideas, and you want to get them out into
most (at MSU) and something that I sought out in my professional career is that studio environment, and the camaraderie with the students, and
collaborative nature of the work,” Beeman said. Since its founding by architect Manuel Zeitlin in 1981, MZA has taken on a variety of projects, such as restaurants and hotels, which have become landmarks in the city. “We do a very broad variety of work here. I’ll do a 700 square-foot outbuilding behind somebody’s house, right next to a 26 story hotel. We do such a broad variety of work, from housing to medical to restaurant to office space to condos. Just such a broad range of types and sizes,” Beeman said. According to Beeman, he has seen firsthand the change Manuel Zeitlin has brought to Nashville. The Gulch area in Nashville, recently popularized by Taylor Swift, was designed by MZA, Beeman said.
Libby Callaway | Courtesy Photos
Top: Employees at MZA work in an open, collaborative environment. Bottom: MZAʼs headquarters at 516 Hagan St. in Nashvilleʼs South Side.
ARCHITECTS, 2
MSU partners with Right Track to provide additional mental health resources KARIE PINNIX STAFF WRITER
Bethany Crane | The Reflector
Right Track Medical Group will now be partnering with MSUʼs Longest Student Health Center.
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Since forming a partnership with Right Track Medical Group, Mississippi State University is striving for better mental health care for its students. The new partnership will help bridge the gap between students who are struggling with mental illnesses and getting the necessary help they need. Dr. Clifton Story, executive director of MSU’s University Health Services, said the partnership between outpatient clinic Right Track Medical Group and MSU’s
John C. Longest Student Health Center will create a more accessible outlet for students to receive proper psychiatric care, especially in the forms of mental health counseling and medication treatment. “Psychiatric care is something that’s really been on all of our minds here, something that we felt a lot of the last five or six years,” Story said. Although all of the Student Health Center providers will care and provide for a variety of mental health issues such as anxiety, depression and ADHD, Story said some issues may require more
FORECAST: Rain moves back into the forecast later Thursday with a few showers and thunderstorms expected into tomorrow afternoon. This is due to a cold front sweeping through Mississippi bringing much cooler temperatures in behind it on Sunday. Sunshine returns to start your next work week.
Courtesy of Danielle Davis, Campus Connect Meteorologist
intensive care. “Mental health is more complicated, more complex for us as providers to deal with, to discuss or medicate,” Story said. “So, having a professional that’s trained in psychiatry is helpful.” Since the recent arrival of the Right Track Medical Group clinic in Starkville, MSU medical professionals thought an agreement with the outpatient clinic would be a helpful resource for students to receive treatment for otherwise undetected mental health issues. This partnership is especially significant considering Mississippi is a state traditionally known
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for having poor access to adequate mental health services. “It’s very hard in Mississippi in general to get good psychiatric care. There’s just not a lot of providers, not a lot of opportunities. So, there’s the question of how we improve that here, and it just so happens that they (Right Track) were opening a clinic,” Story said. MSU medical officials discussed the formation of a potential partnership with Right Track Medical Group and agreed to work with professionals from the Right Track Medical group daily. MEDICAL, 2
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