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132nd YEAR ISSUE 21

FRIDAY NOVEMBER 10, 2017

THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF MISSISSIPPI STATE UNIVERSITY SINCE 1884

OCH remains locally owned SA Senate recap:

KATIE POE

STAFF WRITER

The issue of selling OCH Regional Medical Center was put to rest Tuesday night when 57 percent of voters decided to keep the hospital locally owned. The unofficial election results stated out of the 34 percent of registered voters who cast ballots, 3,819 voted in favor of selling the hospital and 5,271 voted against. As the results were finally announced in the Oktibbeha County Courthouse Annex, both cheers of victory and sighs of relief came from OCH employees and Friends of OCH members. Nurse and friends of OCH member Gail Kelly called the issue “a battle royale,” and said the trek to get this far has been exhausting. “I’m thankful to the community for being so wise, thankful to the community for appreciating what we’ve always had,

Senate focuses on funding for clubs DYLAN BUFKIN STAFF WRITER

JM, TR

thankful for the voters that turned out and thankful for the people that fought and never gave up,” Kelly said. “If you’re looking for a word that describes how I feel—exhausted, but extremely happy. It’s been a journey. It’s been a roller coaster.”

Friends of OCH member Cheryl Lyon said those in favor of the vote were previously described by a supervisor as “a large, silent majority,” but she said the “vocal majority” came out on top. OCH CEO Richard Hilton said the next thing

for the hospital is to consider affiliation with a larger system as a solution to the hospital’s financial problems. The night of the election, Hilton said he would meet with the Board of Trustees Wednesday to bring up the idea. Since

there is no capital exchange, this business does not have to go through the Board of Supervisors. Hilton said although three CEOs contacted him for affiliation, he could not do anything while the hospital was up for sale by the BOS. HOSPITAL, 2

Student Spotlight:

At the Nov. 7 Student Association Senate meeting, a myriad of legislation was discussed and passed. The Senate discussed Bill 23, which would allow campus groups to appeal denied appropriations. The Senate receives requests for funds from different campus groups, ranging from clubs to Greek organizations, and it is the senators’ duty to properly distribute the funds based on the SA’s allotted budget. Because of this bill, groups may now appeal the Senate’s decision if they feel they have been wrongly denied. Resolution 34 would provide student support to help assist non-English speaking families during orientation. Read more at reflectoronline.com

Insight into the lives of Mississippi State University veterans

Charles Pearman | Courtesy Photo

Charles Pearman Junior electrical engineering

major, 30 years old and Naval Petty Officer Second Class (E5).

What are some of the ways MSU supports its veterans? “The center they have on campus is unlike anything else you are going to find on a university campus in this country. The staff here is a top-notch staff and they really care about the students that are passing through this campus. I feel support from a freshman, who just started his semester, all the way up to President Keenum and all the way in between.” What are your thoughts on military appreciation week and Veterans Day? “It makes me think about those that served during the Korean War or during the Vietnam War, during World War II. It makes me think about the generation of veterans that came before me, because they are the ones that set up the structure for veterans nowadays to receive the support they do now.”

How did being in the military change you? “While I was in, they just instilled a lot of different values in me: how I should present myself and how I should act, what is important and it really just changed everything after a few years of delving into that lifestyle. I care a lot more about always doing everything as right as I can, whether people are watching or not, and really putting forth my all with everything I’m doing. I slacked off in high school. After being in the army I realized how important those little things really make you look and change how you feel about what you are doing in everything. How do you feel MSU serves its veterans? “When I started school, it was such a wealth of help Olivia Zeringue | The Reflector and everything. They have the new veterans center here orwin rummonD you can go over there whenever you want, you can talk Senior computer engineering with them about scheduling, how it’s going to work.” major, 28 years old and Army Specialist (E4). What does being a veteran mean to you? “To be a veteran is a title of sacrifices. You had to sacrifice a portion of your life to the country that we live in. You can’t just be a everyday person and be a veteran, it is a special title that you have earned.” What does it meant to have people around you appreciate your service? “I did not do it because of appreciation, I did it because I felt a calling to give back to the country and to honor those that came before me. My grandfather was in World War II, I had countless family in Vietnam and Korea, they sacrificed their lives and everything else to give us the freedom that we [have] today. I felt like that I am not better than them, so I needed to give back for Peter Carr | Courtesy Photo the future to have the same treatment and liberty we had eter arr Senior educational psychologist, growing up.” 28 years old and Marine lance corporal (E3).

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FARMtastic reaches the next generation EMMA KING

STAFF WRITER

FARMtastic, an agricultural learning experience for second through fourth-grade students, is returning for its fifth year at Mississippi State University on Nov. 9 and 10 at the Mississippi Horse Park. FARMtastic was first organized in Oktibbeha County in 2012 as a partnership between MSU Extension and the Mississippi Farm Bureau. The original FARMtastic’s target audience was third graders. However, the event has expanded its interests and locations over the past five years, now traveling across the state to educate more elementary school students. Several of MSU’s own agricultural groups are helping FARMtastic teach

FORECAST: Grab your jackets, Bulldogs! Temperatures will drop

the elementary students the importance of agriculture in their daily lives, including agricultural sorority Sigma Alpha and Animal and Dairy Sciences students, among others.

“Agriculture affects our daily lives from the food we eat to the clothes we wear. We couldn’t do anything without it.” -Julie White, MSU extension associate MSU Extension Associate Julie White created FARMtastic to educate kids at a young age

how prevalent farming is in their lives. “Agriculture affects our daily lives from the food we eat to the clothes we wear,” White said. “We couldn’t do anything without it.” Kids will be led through a variety of hands-on activities, which will help them explore almost every facet of farming such as livestock, agronomy, horticulture, aquaculture, catfish and forestry. The last two are particularly pertinent in Mississippi—forestry being the number one industry in the state. In addition, the elementary schoolers will be shown where farming enters the same places they visit every day, from the department store to their local pizza shops. The goal is to grow their appreciation of agriculture in the real world. FARMtastic, 2

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