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Should women be able to carry

Starkville-MSU Symphony brings

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MOZART BACK

GUNS ON COLLEGE CAMPUSES?

TUESDAY, MARCH 3, 2015

Does Mullen

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129 th YEAR | ISSUE 37

THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF MISSISSIPPI STATE UNIVERSITY SINCE 1884

Mullen’s Scottish aristocrat brings Speculative Society to MSU contract increased, extended until 2018 by Savannah Taggart Contributing Writer

“I know my wife and I, it’s the best place we’ve ever lived, in Starkville,” Mississippi State University Head Football Coach Dan Mullen said last December in a Clarion Ledger article. Now, with Mullen’s $4.275 million contract extension, it seems Mullen, his wife and their two children will be staying in ‘Mississippi’s College Town’ for a while longer. Mississippi State’s athletic director, Scott Stricklin, announced Mullen’s contract extension and pay increase at the Central Mississippi Alumni Chapter’s “Evening in Maroon,” Thursday. “Dan has done a phenomenal job in leading our football team the past six years, and we’re happy to be in a position to reward his efforts while making sure he’ll be able to continue building a championship program for Mississippi State,” Stricklin said during the event. Under his previous contract, Mullen made $3 million a year. Mullen’s new contract includes a financial package that will average $4.275 million over the next four years. This salary surpasses that of coaches like Gus Malzahn and Bret Bielema, making Mullen the fifth highest paid coach in the SEC. MULLEN, 2

Maxwell MacLeod | Courtesy Photo

Scottish aristocrat Sir Maxwell MacLeod (pictured) visits Mississippi State University this month as the Shackouls Honors College’s writer-in-residence. MacLeod will stage a reproduction of Scotland’s famous debating society, Speculative Society, tonight at 7 p.m. in Griffis Hall. MacLeod has been the senior president of the society and will stage a one-off debate from a position questioning women’s rights and gun control. MacLeod’s arguments during the debate will not reflect his actual opinions, but are for the purpose of an engaging experience.

Q&A : Sir Maxwell MacLeod

Q: What, specifically, is the ‘Speculative Society?’

A: Started in 1864 in Edinburgh, Scotland, the Speculative Society is a kind of debating society in which lecturers make short speeches and the audience can then make a short speech in response. The purpose of the exercise is to give all those who might have the need to practice speech making a weekly opportunity.

Q: What is the purpose of the debating society? A: Most of the purpose of the society is to teach young lawyers and politicians how to speak in public and given that Scotland now has a woman first minister, and some of our finest lawyers are women, it would seem to be madness to stand in the sway of progress. However, that we men have evolved a system of uniquely masculine debate over the last 250 years. It is both interesting historically and quite fun that we should be allowed to have one meeting a year.

Political science professor receives 2015 ‘Hero Citizen’ honor by Claire Winesett Contributing Writer

Ravi Perry, an assistant professor in political science at Mississippi State University, was recognized as a 2015 Hero Citizen by The Andrew Goodman Foundation in January.

Perry teaches Introduction to American Government and Black Political Thought at MSU. He calls himself an activist scholar, and he was one of 50 to be named a Hero Citizen. He said he was excited and honored to be chosen. “I was surprised by it – to be in the company of the other Hero Citizens that they named. It is cool to be

among the list of the individuals that range from college students to civil rights legends,” Perry said. The Andrew Goodman Foundation is an organization created in honor of Andrew Goodman and his friends who were murdered during the Freedom Summer 1964. These men were committed to helping attain equality for all people.

The 2015 Hero Citizens list recognizes individuals that make an extreme effort to promote social justice for all people. As someone who has always been interested in social activism, Perry said he uses his profession as a professor to encourage his students to realize the potential they have to be an impact of change. “One of the privileges

of being a professor is that you have opportunities to utilize the power you have in the classroom to impact the community you are in,” Perry said. Perry also serves on the Millennial Advisory Committee, which The Andrew Goodman Foundation created to deepen relationships with the millennial generation. HONOR, 2

IREX links Pakistan, U.S. students through global program MSU food by Jennifer Flinn Staff Writer

Kiran Qureshi, a native of Pakistan, is the sixth international student to study at Mississippi State University through the International Research and Exchanges Board (IREX) within the United States Department of State. IREX is a function of the department and facilitates the Global Undergraduate Exchange Program in Pakistan (Global UGRADPakistan), which sends Pakistani students to the U.S. to study. Qureshi, senior computer science major, is from Hyderabad, a metropolitan city in Pakistan. Before the spring semester began, Qureshi met in Washington, D.C. with

other students in the Global UGRAD-Pakistan program. There, Qureshi and her fellow international students went through several seminars and conferences put on by IREX to acclimate them to life in the U.S. Also in Washington, D.C. students are assigned mentors, advisers and host families to help them transition into their assigned American universities. After the conclusion of the semester, the international students will meet again in Washington, D.C. to talk and learn from one another about their experiences abroad. Qureshi said IREX promotes a good relationship between Pakistan and the U.S. She said the alumni of Global UGRAD-Pakistan implement programs in Pakistan for the long-term improvement of their comKiran Qureshi |Courtesy Photo munities and country. Pakistan native, Kiran Qureshi (pictured), reflects on beneficial sentiments of IREX, a program that sends IREX, 2

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Pakistani students to the United States to study. According to Qureshi, the program allows for the improvement of Pakistani communities. Friday

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Policy: any person may pick up Reader’s Guide a single copy of the reflector for free. additional copies may be obtained from the meyer student media center for 25 cents per copy.

Bulletin Board Opinion Contact Info Classifieds

network provides assistance by D.J. Wormley Staff Writer

The Mississippi State University Food Network will partner with the Student Association’s “Block by Block” meal program to give meals to MSU students in need. Conner Ladner, co-director of the health and environmental affairs committee, said the program began when the Student Association President Brett Harris chose giving meals to students in need as a major focus. FOOD, 3

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Life Sports Bad Dawgs

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