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FRIDAY FEBRUARY 22, 2019
134th YEAR ISSUE 35
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF MISSISSIPPI STATE UNIVERSITY SINCE 1884
SA Debate shows off student government candidates DYLAN BUFKIN STAFF WRITER
The Mississippi State University Student Association held their 2019 SA Debate on Tuesday, allowing each candidate to convey their specific platform points and answer moderated or audiencegenerated questions. The event was moderated by The Reflector Opinion Editor Mia Rodriguez, as to prevent perceived bias from within the SA. The two candidates for SA treasurer, Grace Barr and Jes Miller, were called to the podiums first. Both are junior-year finance majors, Barr with a concentration in entrepreneurship, and Miller with a concentration in risk management and insurance. Barr has served in SA for two years, first as a member of the Programming Board and then as an SA Cabinet member, and believes her SA experience, as well as various other leadership positions in
campus organizations and consistently managing her own personal finances, has given her insight into how SA could run its finances more efficiently. Barr focused on the need for the treasurer to be objective in their budgeting, and to focus on whether the SA’s funds are adding value to the college experience, measuring the cost-benefit analyses of events. Miller has served several official positions within Phi Gamma Delta, as well as codirector of recruitment for the Interfraternity Council, and he has helped the MSU Foundation as a part of Foundation Ambassadors, currently serving as its president. Miller advocates for more frequent Appropriations Committee meetings to increase the rate of fund allocation to organizations, more fiscal responsibility by funding initiatives that increase the efficiency of SA funds, and monthly financial reports to increase transparency. SA, 2
Kiese Laymon visits MSU as Black History Month keynote speaker STAFF WRITER
Author and Jacksonnative Kiese Laymon provided the Black History Month Keynote Presentation and read “Meager,” a chapter from his award-winning book “Heavy: An American Memoir.” The African American Studies program at Mississippi State University sponsored the event Tuesday in the Old Main Academic Center. Laymon attended Millsaps College and Jackson State University before he graduated from Oberlin College. He later received an MFA in fiction from Indiana University. After spending 15 years in New York, Laymon returned to Mississippi and now serves as the Ottilie Schiling Professor of English and Creative Writing at the University of Mississippi. As Laymon took the podium Tuesday night, he immediately expressed his love for the MSU women’s
Tyler Bell | The Reflector
For Black History Month, author Kiese Laymon spoke to an audience Wednesday.
basketball team. “They are my favorite team on earth,” Laymon said. Laymon went on to describe his childhood and personal experiences he had endure with sexual assault. At 12 years old, he began to write about his experiences as a way of escape. These experiences included abuse
MSU accepting input on strategic plan from students, faculty and staff KAT BOWMAN STAFF WRITER
The Office of the President at Mississippi State University is currently taking input on the university’s Strategic Plan— State of Excellence 20192025 from anyone with an MSU login until midnight Feb. 28. The MSU community can provide input by filling out an online survey, and results will be reviewed by the President’s Committee on Planning. The survey consists of seven text fields and five survey items. The text fields are not required to fill out, but the five survey items must be completed in order to submit. Participants must select ‘submit’ for responses to be considered. The MSU Strategic Plan is a plan consisting of the university’s vision, mission, core values, overarching goal and strategic goals for the decade. Jason Lueg, assistant vice president for Academic Affairs Intern, explained the function the plan will serve for the university. “Once we’re done, it will be made available on the website,” Lueg said. “So, people are invited as a part of this process to be familiar with it, so they can see how they can contribute
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to it. Also, it’s going to be made available to all the colleges and units, and they can reflect on it, as they are invited to develop their own strategic plans.” Lueg explained the Strategic Plan is not just a general direction the university strives for, but the plan is also a flexible guide for colleges, departments and individuals to help achieve the listed goals. According to Lueg, the construction, implementation and success of the plan depends on everyone in the MSU community. “That’s why this process of getting all the input on the front end is, so that it’s as reflective of as many people so they can find themselves in the plan,” Lueg said. “That’s what makes it implemented.” Timothy Chamblee, assistant vice president and director of the Office of Institutional Research and Effectiveness (OIRE), elaborated by saying whether or not people can see themselves contributing to the plan is an important factor in determining the goals of the plan. “If people look at a part of the plan and say, ‘We’re not fitting in,’ then that’s an area that needs revamping,” Chamblee said.
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from Louisville High School. “I was really happy to have the young people who read it be in the front row,” Laymon said. “That meant everything to me.” Morgan Alexander, president of the Society of African American Studies on campus, said events like these are important to have beyond Black History Month. “I think events like this are important because it gives people the power and the space to tell their own stories and connect with people and express our own experiences,” Alexander said. Interim Director of African American Studies Donald Shaffer said he hopes attendees of the presentation were encouraged to continue these types of discussions beyond Black History Month. “When the month of February ends, I hope that people are inspired and take away a sense of why this history is important and how it’s very much related to the history of America,” Shaffer said.
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and the racism he faced at a predominately white Catholic school. Laymon said he dedicated this memoir to his mother who encouraged him to read and write from a young age. He chose to read the chapter “Meager” during the presentation to relate to the younger audience visiting
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How MSU measures the success of the strategic plan: ACCREDITATION Legitimizes the quality and rigor of courses, making them transferrable and respected. - Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges (SACSCOC)–A regional, institution-wide accreditation MSU holds. It is also tied to receiving federal aid. - Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB)–A college-specific accreditation MSU’s College of Business holds, speaking to the quality of programs for business and accounting. - ABET Engineering Accreditation Commission– MSU’s Department of Mechanical Engineering undergraduate program holds this accreditation. Sources: Timothy Chamblee, MSU website, Carnegie Classifications website, U.S. News and World Report, National Science Foundation, Campus Compact.
RANKINGS Various systems rank all the universities in the United States based on different criteria, and this is how MSU compares. - U.S. News and World Report–This system yearly ranks universities based on eight broad areas. These are as follows: social mobility, undergraduate academic reputation, graduation and retention rates, faculty resources, student selectivity, financial resources, alumni giving and graduation rate performance. MSU is ranked #177. - National Science Foundation– This system yearly ranks universities on four main categories. In earned doctorates, MSU ranks 114 out of 431. In full-time graduate students, MSU ranks 129 out of 693. In total federal obligations, MSU ranks 144 out of 992. In total research and development expenditures, MSU ranks 94 out of 902.
CLASSIFICATIONS Speaks to the productivity in different areas for the whole institution, must be applied for every five or 10 years. MSU holds two main classifications. - Carnegie Classification: R1–This means MSU is considered a very high research institution. The qualifications require doctoral universities to award at least 20 research or scholarship doctoral degrees, and spend at least $5 million in total research expenditures. - Carnegie Community Engagement Classification–This classification recognizes MSU’s commitment to community engagement.
FORECAST: Rain will continue over the next few days thanks to a stationary front comes through. That front will eventually move back north as a warm front. That will bring in a chance for strong to severe storms on Saturday. All modes of severe weather look possible Saturday with straight line winds being the main concern. Thankfully, we will start to dry out some on Sunday as the sun returns to the forecast.
Kris Hudson, Campus Connect Meteorologist
Rosalind Hutton
Mindfulness meditation helps relieve student stress HANNAH BLANKENSHIP
is her first time attending the event, it has already helped her view meditation in a new way. “I think that it’s helpful to think about meditation in a different way, and I think that it’s helpful to figure out how to use that in our daily lives as college students,” McCaffrey said. For those not exactly sure what mindfulness is, Corey Fitzgerald, a staff counselor at the MSU counseling center and the leader of the group, defined it as “being aware of what’s happening in the present moment, and holding that in awareness in a nonjudgmental way.”
STAFF WRITER
The counseling center’s new mindfulness mediation group presents Mississippi State University students with a way to overcome the Monday blues and start the week fresh and stress-free. The eight-week program, currently in its third week, has been beneficial for many students. The mindfulness meditation group, held from 9 to 10:30 a.m. Mondays in the Sanderson Center Classroom, will continue meeting until April 1. Victoria McCaffrey, a senior chemical engineering major, said even though this
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