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FRIDAY AUGUST 30, 2019
135th YEAR ISSUE 2
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF MISSISSIPPI STATE UNIVERSITY SINCE 1884
MSU staff member celebrates record year DANIEL DYE
CONTRIBUTING WRITER
Megan Bean | Courtesy Photo
For Starkville native Jeanette Booth, 2019 marks 60 years of employment at the university, 60 years of marriage and her 80th birthday.
Mississippi State University is known for many traditions, whether it be ringing cowbells at Davis Wade Stadium or watching a ballgame from the Left Field Lounge. However, there are not many people who know the traditions of MSU better than Jeanette Booth. 2019 marks 80 years of life, 60 years of marriage and 60 years of employment at MSU for Booth. Born and raised in Starkville, Booth spent most
position in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering with the intention of working only a few months. Seventeen years later, Booth can still be found at her desk on the second floor of Simrall working diligently as ever. Throughout her 60 years of work, Booth said the most valuable part has been the friendships she made along the way. “I’ve been blessed to work with good people. There are a lot of people I have met along the way that I am still friends with and that is something I can take when I leave,” Booth said. BOOTH, 2
of her time working in Britt’s Café, her parent’s restaurant, which is now Starkville Café. It was there, at her parents’ business, that Booth met her husband, Marion, in July of 1959. According to Booth, the two were married in November, shortly after meeting. Earlier the same year, Booth took a job with Mississippi State working in accounts payable, where she worked for 42 years before retiring. According to Booth, her driven personality, however, did not allow her to enjoy retirement for long. As a result, she took a part-time
IT Department to discontinue msu1x, encourages switch to eduroam
HANNAH BLANKENSHIP
feature of users being able to connect to wireless networks at universities worldwide. His girlfriend, Emily Williamson, who studied at Oxford University in England over the summer, was able to seamlessly connect with the wireless network there. “She was in the U.K., Oxford and they actually offer eduroam there, and at several universities over there in London. So, as soon as she got to Oxford, her phone, her laptop automatically connected to eduroam. (She) didn’t have to worry about it, didn’t have to worry about finding a guest Wi-Fi or talking with instructors trying to figure that out. That’s generally the case, there are thousands and thousands of universities that are partnered up with that program all across the United States and elsewhere,” Creel said.
NEWS EDITOR
On Oct. 15, Mississippi State University will be saying goodbye to their original wireless network, msu1x, and switching to sole use of eduroam. According to Gerhard Lehnerer, director of Information Technology Infrastructure for MSU’s Information Technology Services, eliminating msu1x will free up broadband space for eduroam, a wireless peering service that allows users to seamlessly connect to eduroam networks at universities across the world. The two networks are identical in coverage and function, Lehnerer said, and having them both occupy the same broadband space is pointless. ITS has encouraged students to switch over to eduroam for some time now, and has plans to disconnect
Rosalind Hutton
msu1x for good October 15. “We’ve put a stake in the ground of October 15 and we’re going to turn it off, and we expect it to be a tough day for a lot of people,” Lehnerer said. Teresa McMurray, director of User Services, said ITS is trying to minimize students panicking over their lost network connection by having them reconfigure before the deadline. “That’s why we’re
recommending that if your wireless devices are connected to msu1x we would like our users to go ahead and reconfigure their devices to eduroam so they won’t have any network interruptions and it will reduce the panic and the stress. We’re trying to get the word out so they’ll switch before October 15,” McMurray said. According to McMurray, the reason many students
have not switched over yet is they do not realize the credentials for logging in to eduroam are slightly different than those used to log into msu1x. “To join msu1x you just use your netID and net password, but to connect to eduroam, most people don’t know you’ve got to use your netid@msstate.edu and your net password,” McMurrary said. “So they think they can’t get on to eduroam. Well, they
can get on, they just aren’t using the right credentials.” Stephen Creel, a senior computer science major who works with IT services, said the switch to eduroam is nothing but beneficial to the university and the students. “There’s nothing but a net positive. Nothing but good things that are going to happen as a result of the switchover,” Creel said. Creel cited actual experience with eduroam’s
EDUROAM, 2
MSU sociology professor Terry Likes to lead the receives award for book Department of Communication “White Kids” COURTNEY CARVER MANAGING EDITOR
KARIE PINNIX STAFF WRITER
Mississippi State University assistant professor of sociology Margaret A. Hagerman attended the annual meeting of the American Sociological Association from August 10-13 where she received a national book award for her non-fiction book that details how children with privilege view racial inequality in today’s world. Hagerman is the recipient of the 2019 William J. Goode Book Award, an award given by the American Sociological Association Family Section for her 2018 New York University Press work, “White Kids- Growing Up with Privilege in a Racially
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Margaret A. Hagerman | Courtesy Photo
Margaret A. Hagerman is the 2019 recipient of the ASAʼs William J. Goode Book Award.
Divided America.” This award is given annually to a published sociology book that has made an impact in the field of family research.
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BOOK, 2
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Mississippi State University’s Department of Communication has named Terry Likes, originally from St. Louis, Missouri, the new department head. Likes began his college career in business at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Texas. After a couple of years, he decided to change his major to broadcasting and returned home to St. Louis to finish at Maryville College, now known as Maryville University. After working towards his bachelor’s degree, he received his first job at a radio and television station in Kentucky. He then began working at a television station in Evansville, Indiana,
while he pursued higher education. “I started working on my master’s at Western Kentucky. Western
Likes wondered what his next goal would be. “I was a faculty member at Western Kentucky for 20 years. I became the head of the department at Tennessee State University with a program similar to this, but Mississippi State is a much bigger school with a solid foundation, strong program, very good people and further south,” Likes said. “All of those things are things I wanted to do. I was able to use that experience at Tennessee State which helped prepare me to come here to a bigger school.” Likes became aware of the department head position through instructor Jason Hibbs. Hibbs was one of Likes’s students when Hibbs was pursuing his undergraduate degree at Western Kentucky University. LIKES, 2
head said, ‘You should consider going to get your doctorate.’ I kept teaching, but I was commuting to the University of Kentucky
“It was in his news writing class that I became certain that this is what I wanted to do for a career, meaning broadcast journalism. I think it was Dr. Likes that really ignited my passion for the industry.” - Jason Hibbs, MSU broadcasting concentration coordinator and former student of Likes Kentucky offered me a faculty job, and that’s how I got started there,” Likes said. “While I was there, at the end of my first year the department
FORECAST: Expect the next few days to be absolutely beautiful- a great holiday weekend with highs in the upper 80s to low 90s with lots of sunshine. In the evening hours, lows will be dropping into the mid to upper 60s. Hurricane Dorian won’t be impacting us over the holiday weekend as it makes landfall in Florida.
Courtesy of the MSU Meteorology Department
and over a period of time finished my doctorate, and that’s how I moved up to become a tenured full professor.” After this achievement,
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