WWW.REFLECTOR-ONLINE.COM
@REFLECTORONLINE
134th YEAR ISSUE 41
TUESDAY MARCH 26, 2019
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF MISSISSIPPI STATE UNIVERSITY SINCE 1884
How Sweet it is
MSU women’s basketball on its way to the Sweet 16
MSU finance student named Orrin Swayze award winner DREW GARDNER
This year’s winner was Jimmie Webb, a senior finance and economics student at MSU. With the Orrin Swayze Scholastic Awards, the scholarships given are split into two categories, the MYB Scholars and the Swayze Scholar. Out of the five students selected, only one is selected as the Swayze Scholar, with an award of $5,000 and the MYB Scholars being awarded $1,500 each.
STAFF WRITER
The Orrin Swayze Scholastic Awards Program is a very selective scholarship program for finance students in the state of Mississippi. Throughout the years and under the direction of Finance Professor Michael Highfield, Mississippi State University has several recipients under its belt.
AWARD, 2
Read more on Page 6
Mary Georgia Hamilton, Rosalind Hutton
Jimmie Webb | Courtesy Photo
Senior finance and economics major Jimmie Webb is this year’s Orrin Swayze finalist.
Geocaching galore: Phi Beta Kappa to host first Starkville residents MSU induction ceremony participate in local treasure hunts
SAVANNAH MUNN
CONTRIBUTING WRITER
The Phi Beta Kappa Society is the oldest, and arguably most prestigious honor society in the nation as over 140 Nobel Prize winners, 40 U.S. Supreme Court members and 17 U.S. presidents have been members. Now, 40 years after its first application in 1979, Mississippi State University houses its very own chapter, and will soon host its first induction ceremony. According to a press release from MSU, this is an honor only 10 percent of U.S. universities and colleges can boast. Creating MSU’s own chapter has been a long and grueling process, and happens in a three-year cycle, contributing to the time the university spent attempting to install a chapter. The effort was started by Bill Collins in 1979, and was continued by many other devoted faculty
TUESDAY HI: 64 LO: 36 SKY: Partly Cloudy POP: 0
members throughout the years, according to the press release. English professor Robert West spearheaded the successful campaign. “This has been a longterm goal for the university for about 40 years, a goal that’s involved whole generations of faculty and many directors, deans, provosts and presidents,” West said. “We stuck with it because we thought our best students in the liberal arts and sciences deserved the chance to be inducted into the nation’s oldest, and probably most widely recognized academic honor society. When we finally won the last vote of approval in Boston last August, at PBK’s Triennial Council, that was a wonderful feeling.” The society is not only a scholastic achievement, but something students can carry for life. According to West, the honor not only gives students a certain distinction, but it also prepares students for “life in general.”
WEDNESDAY HI: 69 LO: 43 SKY: Sunny POP: 0
GRACIE BYRNE
Geocaching, a type of scavenger hunt conducted using an app on one’s phone, is a popular pastime in Starkville. For Starkville, geocaching
Mark Keenum President of Mississippi State University Rosalind Hutton
PBK, 2
THURSDAY HI: 73 LO: 47 SKY: Partly Cloudy POP: 0
gained popularity in 2005. Shortly after picking up in the area, the Starkville Mafia was started. The Starkville Mafia is a group of individuals who go out together and geocache. The group has 3040 members, with 20-25 active members. GEOCACHING, 2
STAFF WRITER
FORECAST: This week is off to a sunny start and will continue into Thursday. However, the low for Tuesday is in the upper 30s, but by Thursday temperatures will hit the 70s.
Courtesy of Accuweather
Gracie Byrne | The Reflector
This medicine bottle container holds a tiny treasure, which it is part of the activity geocaching.
Reader’s Guide: Bulletin Board Puzzles Classifieds Bad Dawgs
3 3 3 3
Opinion Contact Info Life&Entertainment Sports
4 4 5 6
Policy: Any person may pick up a single copy of The Reflector for free. Additional copies may be obtained from the Henry Meyer Student Media Center for 25 cents per copy.