08/27/2019

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TUESDAY AUGUST 27, 2019

135th YEAR ISSUE 1

THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF MISSISSIPPI STATE UNIVERSITY SINCE 1884

MSU’s Orion named fourth fastest supercomputer in U.S. academia EMMA KING

STAFF WRITER

Grace Goodman | The Reflector

Located in the Thad Cochran Research Center, Orion is the worldʼs 62nd fastest supercomputer.

Mississippi State University recently became home to Orion, a supercomputer currently ranking as the fourth fastest supercomputer housed in a U.S. university. Orion also holds the place of 62nd fastest in the world, according to Top500.org, a website which scores the world’s strongest non-distributed computer systems. Trey Breckenridge, the director of MSU’s High Performance Computing Collaboratory (HPC²),

believes Orion has already begun to benefit MSU. “The benefits to MSU are numerous,” Breckenridge said. “We’ve already received a tremendous amount of positive attention and international exposure for the university and our research capabilities as a result of the system.” A supercomputer is, as defined by Breckenridge, one of the fastest, most powerful computers in the world at any given time. Orion, located in the Thad Cochran Research Center, was primarily funded by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) to support NOAA’s

research and development activities in environmental, weather and climate modeling, as well as autonomous vehicle design and operation, Breckenridge said. “MSU and NOAA researchers, as well as academic collaborators from around the nation, will use Orion to conduct and advance their research and scientific activities,” Breckenridge said. “As an example, Orion will be used to enhance weather forecasting models, ultimately providing for more accurate projection of hurricane tracks.” According to Breckenridge, MSU has a

longstanding and extremely successful research relationship with NOAA. MSU leads NOAA’s Cooperative Institute, the Northern Gulf Institute, which is a partnership of six academic institutions focused on addressing national strategic research and education goals within the northern Gulf of Mexico region. The university also closely partners with several NOAA units which are co-located in the MSU Science and Technology Center at the NASA John C. Stennis Space Center, Breckenridge said. COMPUTER, 2

MSU alumna wins journalism award

HANNAH BLANKENSHIP

NEWS EDITOR

1998 Mississippi State University graduate Evelyn Palmer is a shining example of the future success MSU promises its graduates, and Palmer said she is proud to give her alma mater the credit. A recent recipient of the Society of Professional Journalists’ prestigious Sigma Delta Chi award for her work covering the Thousand Oaks mass shooting in California, Phillips, now known in her career field as Germany Kent, is a television and print journalist, radio personality, non-fiction author, humanitarian, producer and social media influencer. According to the Society of Professional Journalists’ website, the Sigma Delta Chi Award is an annual award that recognizes excellence in various journalistic categories including print, radio, television, graphics,

online reporting and research. On winning the award, Kent said although it was a huge honor to receive recognition from her fellow journalists, it is a tragedy stories such as these are a current reality in the world. “It’s bittersweet. It’s a testament to hard work and a story that is real and raw, but it’s also devastating in that we have to cover stories like that,” Kent said. According to a press release from Kent’s media team, Kent was the first African American woman to receive the Sigma Delta Chi award in this category, a first that is actually not a first for Kent. While at Northwest Mississippi Community College, which she attended prior to her time at MSU, Kent was elected as the first African-American student government president, and while at MSU, Kent was the first African American woman elected to the MSU Student Association, where she served as attorney general.

Yashaswin Sridhar | The Reflector

Officer Hickey of the MSU police department drives one of the two electric, fume-free ʻZeroʼ motorcycles that were recently purchased by the police department and the Office of Student Affairs.

MSU Police Department acquires new electric motorcycles DREW GARDNER STAFF WRITER

Over the summer months, Mississippi State University’s Police Department purchased two brand new motorcycles for the patrol officers on campus. According to Chief Vance Rice of the MSU PD, these motorcycles are easier

to maintain than patrol cars, cheaper to equip and to top it all off, they are electric and completely fume-free. The idea for electric motorcycles came from Rice about seven years ago. He noticed the University of Florida adopted electric motorcycles to replace their own Harley Davidsons, which had a myriad of problems and maintenance

issues. Rice’s research showed that these new cycles are better for the environment and much easier to maintain than Harleys. According to Rice, along with being environmentally friendly and extremely mobile, cycles do not cost near as much to equip with the necessary utilities. The new cycles will cost around the amount a typical

patrol car would, but while a car’s equipment costs around $10,000, these new motorcycles will cost about $8,000 less. The particular brand of motorcycle MSU PD chose is called Zero Motorcycles, which is a relatively new company based in Santa Cruz, California that started in 2006. MOTORCYCLES, 2

Student-led conference S.P.A.R.K.s future ambitions for high schoolers

TORI BOATNER STAFF WRITER

Germany Kent | Courtesy Photo

1998 MSU graduate Germany Kent receives the Sigma Delta Chi Award for excellence in independent online deadline reporting at the National Press Club in Washington D.C. AWARD, 2

TUESDAY HI: 87 LO: 72 SKY: Cloudy POP: 60

WEDNESDAY HI: 87 LO: 65 SKY: Partly Sunny POP: 30

THURSDAY HI: 86 LO: 60 SKY: Sunny POP: 0

With the goal of exposing rising high school seniors to career and college opportunities beyond secondary education, a group of Mississippi State University student leaders gathered during July 11-14 to host 350 students from across the Southeast at MSU’s annual S.P.A.R.K. leadership conference.

Led by Tabora Cook, coordinator of recruitment activities in the Office of Admissions and Scholarships at MSU, S.P.A.R.K. (Students Paving a Road to Knowledge) hosted their second annual conference this summer. Cook said he and his colleagues began discussing a conference such as this in early 2017. He expressed a need for MSU to be a resource for underrepresented high

FORECAST: Expect more rain this afternoon with another muggy day. Highs will reach into the mid to upper 80s with scattered showers and thunderstorms. Tomorrow rain will become more isolated as a front pushes out of the area. Sunshine returns to the forecast Thursday!

Courtesy of the MSU Meteorology Department

school students seeking career and academic guidance beyond high school. “I felt like that demographic needed more guidance and mentorship on what to do when they left high school,” Cook said. The conference hosted several keynote speakers including Mark Keenum, president of MSU; ShirDonna Lawrence, assistant director of

Readerʼs Guide: Bulletin Board Puzzles Club Information Opinion

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Fraternity and Sorority Life; Brandi Kirkland, leasing and marketing manager for the Social Block and motivational speaker Samuel Jones. Cook said the goal of the conference is to provide underrepresented students with the tools they need to be successful, as well as expose them to people who will aid them on their journey to success. “Our goal is to develop our students,” Cook said. CONFERENCE, 2

Policy: Any person may pick up a single copy of The Contact Info 4 Reflector for free. Additional Life&Entertainment 3 copies may be obtained Sports 5 from the Henry Meyer Student Media Center for 25 cents per copy.


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