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FRIDAY NOVEMBER 30, 2018
134th YEAR ISSUE 23
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF MISSISSIPPI STATE UNIVERSITY SINCE 1884
SA Recap: Senate passes resolutions regarding campus parking, printing DYLAN BUFKIN STAFF WRITER
Rosalind Hutton
Local Humane Society utilizes Amazon in order to receive donations COURTNEY CARVER STAFF WRITER
Oktibbeha County’s Humane Society (OCHS) has taken a new, convenient approach to earning donations over the last few years with the help of an Amazon wish list and Amazon Smile. According to OCHS’s general manager, Christy Wells, the shelter has created wish lists for the past few years; however, the idea has taken off within the last year. “A lot of people wanted to donate, and there’s a lot of options,” Wells said. “A lot of people do find it kind of hard to come to the shelter because it can be emotional, so that was the biggest thing. It is super convenient for everybody.” The shelter began this wish list when community members wanted to help the shelter, but were not able to physically go there, according to Director of Development and Community Relations Martha Thomas. “We have been approached by multiple community members wanting to donate supplies to us, and with Amazon being one of the largest, if not the largest retailer in the world, an Amazon wish list seemed like a great idea to connect that largest retailer with those interested in purchasing things,” Thomas said. “We created the wish list with items that are used routinely in a shelter, so they add those items to their cart and the items are shipped directly to the shelter.” Furthermore, the items on the wish list vary greatly. Food, collars, leashes, office supplies and enrichment toys are just a few of the items on the list. Enrichment toys, according to Wells, has been the most popular item donated. The enrichment program helps animals by improving their well-being, lessening the stress being in shelters can cause. “We developed the enrichment program to help
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them out with that, and kind of reduce their stress while they are here and make them adoptable,” Wells said. “We even have different levels. If a dog or cat has been here for a significant amount of time, what we do is we will upgrade their enrichment. Everything gets the same thing on a schedule, but if they have been here for an extended length of time, we will give them extras.” According to Thomas, the items needed on the wish list vary in pricing. “There are a couple of items on there that are just a few dollars on up to items that are about $50 to $70,” Thomas said. “We try to put a good range of items on there.” With the donations via the Amazon wish list, many of the items qualify for Amazon Prime’s free two-day shipping or free shipping with purchases over $25, and the orders are shipped directly to the animal shelter. “Every now and then, we get a couple of things each month,” Thomas said. “Sometimes there is some really generous folks, and we will all of a sudden get several Amazon packages in one day. Our staff says it is like Christmas because we never know they are coming until they show up at the door. It’s really exciting, and we get to open the packages, see what it is and distribute it around the shelter.” When the shelter receives Amazon packages, the staff sends a “thank you” note to the sender, according to Thomas. While the Amazon wish list is one way for community members to donate, OCHS is also partnered with Amazon as a non-profit charity through Amazon Smile. “If you were to go to smile.amazon, you could click a charity for proceeds to go to,” Wells said. “It doesn’t take anything away from you or cost you anything. It just bases a percentage of your purchase from what you purchased, and it will give it to a charity that you select.”
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OCHS, 2
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The Mississippi State University Student Association Senate met for the last business meeting this fall semester, and before they concluded for the remainder of the year, they discussed 10 pieces of legislation. Act 6 was passed by voice vote and appropriated funds for several organizations on campus. Some notable highlights include appropriations for the Latino Student Association’s Dia de Los Muertos event, MSU Dance Marathon’s Beat Ole Miss Week and the American Society for
Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing’s Fall Events. The remaining $2,756 in the SA’s appropriations budget will carry over for the next semester. Moving on to resolutions, the Senate passed seven and tabled one during this week’s meeting. Resolution 7 shows student approval for more diversity in MSU’s hiring of faculty. Currently, some departments have low or non-existent minority representation, and both students and faculty alike have communicated this issue to the Senate. Therefore, the Senate urges the administration to find a solution to this disparity.
Rosalind Hutton
SA, 2
Mama Jean is devoted to quality and connection SARAH MORGAN JOHNSON
she agreed and they started writing to each other. After seeing one another only twice in person, receiving letters and one Christmas card, he wrote to her and asked if she would marry him if he made it back to American soil from Vietnam. She accepted his proposal, and joined him in America about a year later. Now, Mama Jean compliments her husband for his skills. “Papa Al is a great cook and very talented Chinese artist,” Mama Jean said. “He had many one-man art shows in the past. He also served the U.S. Army fighting in the front line at the Vietnam War for two years.” They now have three children and seven grandchildren. The couple will be married 48 years this Valentine’s Day and have been in the restaurant business for just as long. JEAN, 2
STAFF WRITER
Albert and Helen Ma are the owners of Starkville’s Jean Café, but few know them by those names. To their customers, they are Mama Jean and Papa Al. Helen, or Mama Jean, is originally from Hong Kong, and met her husband while he was fighting in the Vietnam War. Albert was living in the United States, but had family in Hong Kong who knew Mama Jean’s cousin. When he visited his relatives in Hong Kong, his family asked Mama Jean’s cousin if she would spend time with him for an afternoon. She refused because she did not want to be alone with a boy she had just met. Before long, Albert came back to Hong Kong for another two days. Again, his relative begged Mama Jean’s cousin for her to entertain
Helen Ma | Courtesy Photo
Mama Jean and Papa Al along with their six grandchildren stand in Jean Café.
him for a few hours. This time, when her cousin asked Mama Jean to meet him, the cousin said being in Vietnam was dangerous and no one knew when their last visit home would be. “I thought, ‘Oh no, he
could die,’” Mama Jean said. “I couldn’t say no to that.” Next time Albert was in Hong Kong, he asked to see her again. After being told once more that any visit could be the last visit,
MSU Model UN represents Senegal in conference EMMA KING
STAFF WRITER
The Model United Nations team at Mississippi State University attended the Southern Regional Model United Nations (SRMUN) conference, earning two impressive awards. MSU’s Model UN team represented the country of Senegal, and the Senegalese delegation received a conference-wide award for its outstanding position papers. Members had to research and write papers on topics pertaining to Senegal before the conference began. SRMUN occurred this year from Nov. 15 to Nov. 17 in Atlanta. One of the delegates, Tyler Daniel, earned an Outstanding Delegation award for his service as Committee Chairman and Rapporteur for the UN Environment Programme committee, which included
over 50 college delegates. Daniel, a political science major, has a long history with Model UN, but SRMUN was his first time competing in college. After joining his high school team at Clinton High School in Mississippi, Daniel’s commitment to the club has only grown. He now serves as the cosecretary general for the SRMUN chapter at MSU. Daniel distinctly remembers the kind words of his committee director, Mike Engelhardt, after accepting the award. “He thanked me for my insights and reports to the committee, which were invaluable,” Daniel said. Model UN is offered as an extra-curricular activity for all MSU students. It is dedicated to role-playing as delegates from UN Member States represented across the world. Participants work in committees in conferences
FORECAST: Happy Maroon Friday, Bulldogs. We have a wet weekend in store for us with a chance of showers on Friday and more storms on Saturday. However, it will be a lot warmer than the start of this week, which is good for those of us who want to enjoy fall while it lasts.
Aaron Lowery, Campus Connect Meteorologist
Tyler Daniel | Courtesy Photo
Those attending the conference and representing Senegal were: in the back row (from left) Eli Laymen, Mayukh Datta, Charles Lenoir, Samuel Bates, Semaj Redd and Marisa Laudadio, and in the front row (left) Tyler Daniel, Brittany Russel, Sae Frey, Julius Cole, Robert Strong, MaKayla Beasley and Krishna Desai.
conferences, committees debate preassigned issues, while delegates collaborate through unmoderated caucuses to write joint resolutions.
throughout the U.S. These conferences often look like youth legislature conferences, except student delegates do not represent congressmen or congresswomen. During
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