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Reflector

130 th YEAR ISSUE 24

THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF MISSISSIPPI STATE UNIVERSITY SINCE 1884

Arkansas bars Jak from field for Saturday game by Lacretia Wimbley Editor-in-Chief

and bars were the original flag of the Confederacy, adopted by the Confederate Congress in March 1861 because it resembled the Union flag of the North. The problem arose because the flags looked too similar, so commanders employed for more distinctive looks. The Confederate flag known today was the battle flag of the Virginian armies.

The Mississippi State University Bulldogs will take on the Arkansas Razorbacks this weekend in Fayetteville, Arkansas, but mascot Bully “Jak” will not take the field. MSU professor Whit Waide took to Twitter Thursday morning posting a photo of himself and mascot Jak. “Arkansas won’t allow our beautiful Bulldog in the stadium on Saturday. #FREEJAK #HAILSTATE,” Waide’s Twitter post read. While athletic officials at the University of Arkansas could not be reached for comment, an associate in the department who wished to remain anonymous said she recalls Arkansas having a policy regarding mascots on their field. “It is in our policy that we do not allow live mascots on our field other than our live mascot,” the associate said. “This may be for safety reasons or because of the size of our sidelines.”

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Sydney Herring| The Reflector

Volunteer’s work a table set up in the Colvard Student Union’s Dawghouse by the Mississippi State University Student Association. SA’s purpose was to facilitate students sending letters to members of the Mississippi State Legislature while also informing them of the process, giving students the information they need to contact government officials whenever they wish.

MSU students write letters to state legislature by Sydney Harring Contributing Writer

Last Wednesday, the Community and Government Relations Committee of the Student Association (SA) gathered in the Colvard Student Union Dawghouse providing students an opportunity to

write to their representatives and congressmen. The event strived to raise awareness of SA’s Resolution Nine, which calls forth the reexamination of the state of Mississippi’s flag and how it represents Mississippi State University. MSU’s SA and MSU President Mark Keenum both worked closely to make this issue known.

This has not been the first time in the university’s history the flag has been called for a change. In 2001, the Robert Holland Faculty Senate and the SA Senate called for a new state flag for Mississippi according to an article published on the MSU website by Chief Communications Officer Sid Salter on Sept. 9. Controversy over the state flag has made recent news

in the past few months. As a sign of equal treatment and forgiveness of the past, many cities and universities around the state have ceased displaying the flag. What is now known as the Confederate Flag is not actually the Confederate flag. John Coski, author of “The True History of the Confederate Flag” on HistoryNet.com said the stars

Keenum names Julia Hodges interim Provost for MSU by Savannah Taggert Staff Writer

During a Faculty Senate MeetingonNov. 13,President Mark Keenum announced that Julia Hodges has been appointed as Interim Provost

at Mississippi State. “I am confident that Dr. Hodges will provide outstanding leadership during the interim period. Please join me in thanking her for taking on this important responsibility,” President Keenum said during last Friday’s Faculty Senate meeting.

Hodges has been a faculty member at Mississippi State University for over 30 years, most recently serving as associate vice president for academic affairs in the Office of the Provost and Executive Vice President. Prior to this, she spent 12 years as the head of the computer science and engineering department. She

Brown speaks up in the South

also received her Bachelor’s Degree from MSU, as well as two masters degrees. Hodges will hold the position for several months while the school searches to replace former Provost and Executive Vice President Jerry Gilbert, who recently accepted the job of President at Marshall

University in West Virginia. “It is a well-deserved opportunity for Jerry, and we wish him and Leigh all the best, even though their departure represents a great loss to Mississippi State,” Keenum said in a campuswide email to faculty and staff. In the next few days, a

search committee led by Vice President for Research and Economic Development David Shaw will be finalized, and they will begin the process of finding and selecting Gilbert’s successor. To learn more about the new Interim Provost Dr. Julia Hodges visit http://web. cse.msstate.edu/.

TO SHAVE, OR NOT TO SHAVE: Member of Alpha Gamma Rho Dylan Neuhaus (pictured) and Brandon Fitzhough are raising money for St. Jude’s Children’s Research Hospital to find cancer treatment for children by allowing passerbys on the Drill Field to pay to vote for him to either keep his mullet or shave it off. They were outside Wednesday and Thursday this week and will be out again today at 10 a.m.

Kamau Bostic| The Reflector

BLOSSOM: Blossom Brown, a soon-to-graduate Mississippi University of Women nursing student, has spent the

last few months of her life traveling around the nation to tell her story and discuss the realities of growing up as a trans individual in the South. Last Monday marked the first time she addressed a crowed in the state she grew up in when she spoke to Mississippi State University students on the third floor of the Colvard Student Union.

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Sydney Herring| The Reflector

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