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TUESDAY OCTOBER 6, 2020
136th YEAR ISSUE 6
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF MISSISSIPPI STATE UNIVERSITY SINCE 1884
HOME GAME HEARTBREAK The Mississippi State University Football Team suffered a 21-14 loss against Arkansas Saturday. Read more on page 6!
Suicide symposium at MSU draws awareness to the growing problem BAYLEE HILL STAFF WRITER
Mary Georgia Hamilton | The Reflector
Mississippi State University’s department of psychology partnered with the Mississippi Department of Mental Health (MDMH) to host a virtual Suicide Prevention Symposium on Sept. 29. From 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., over 1000 people listened to six experts in psychology and suicide speak about the theme “Fitting Suicide Prevention into Our Changing Time.” Michael R. Nadorff, associate professor and director of the clinical PhD program in MSU’s department of psychology, said some of the topics covered were ways to help those struggling, the
the distance that would need to be traveled in between classes, technological challenges and size of the space, among others. “It was a lot of meetings, a lot of time in these spaces,” Dickerson said. Several spaces were considered that ultimately were not used, such as the Old Main parking garage. The idea of a “tent city” was tossed around but deemed too challenging to facilitate logistically. An MSU press release described all the hard work MSU staff put into preparing the campus for the return of students over the summer, including laying
29,000 feet of network cable, installing 159 cameras in classrooms in a matter of days and even making their own sanitizing wipes when they were sold out due to such high demand. “There’s been a lot of great cooperation, and everybody’s risen to the occasion to help,” Dickerson said. MSU Associate Professor of history Jim Giesen teaches a class of 800 students in the Humphrey Coliseum arena. Normally, he teaches two classes of 400 students in the Old Main Auditorium, but the classes were combined to be taught in the Hump this year.
effects of suicide on friends and family members, suicide and depression in minority groups and youth and adolescent suicide. According to Nadorff, this is the first year the department co-hosted the symposium. He said the department of psychology cowrote a grant with MDMH a year ago where they received money from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration to go towards youth suicide prevention in the state. “MSU was asked to take over and try to link the symposium with top researchers in the area in order to bring in that empirical basis,” Nadorff said.
From basketball to books: MSU utilizes and adjusts to unconventional classroom locations amidst COVID-19
HANNAH BLANKENSHIP
MANAGING EDITOR
“I told the students I was going to try and dunk in class, but I’m 47. So I’m not sure; it could be the most epic of fails,” joked Mississippi State University Professor Jim Giesen, one of the many MSU professors who are teaching their classes this semester in a variety of nontraditional learning spaces. Last semester, in response to the onset of the novel COVID-19 virus, the MSU campus closed its doors and conducted all classes virtually. However, this semester, after a summer
of planning and preparation and in response to student requests for a return to face-to-face instruction, the university announced their intention to offer in-person classes in a safe, socially distanced manner. This necessitated the use of many never-before-used classroom spaces on MSU’s campus, such as the Humphrey Coliseum arena, the NewellGrissom volleyball gym, the McCarthy Gymnasium, the Sanderson Center, the McComas Theater, Bettersworth Auditorium in Lee Hall and the Leo Seal M Club in Davis Wade Stadium. John Dickerson, MSU
MSU Libraries and faculty dissect real versus fake news HEATHER HARRISON CONTRIBUTING WRITER
“Fake news isn’t just news you don’t like or news that you don’t agree with. It can actually take a variety of forms. It can be anything from innocuous misinterpreted parody or satire to malicious disinformation,” said Beth Downey, associate professor and instruction librarian at Mississippi State University. In a time when fake news seems all-too-common, people are flushed with different, often opposing ideas of what the term means, causing confusion and misinterpretation of what is true. On Sept. 25, MSU Libraries hosted a virtual event via WebEx called “Evaluating Real vs. Fake News.” During the event, Downey shared how influential and harmful fake news can be and provided multiple perspectives on what fake news is and how
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registrar and assistant vice president for enrollment, said Provost David Shaw appointed a task force at the beginning of the summer to find and set up additional classroom space that would allow for the necessary social distancing. “We knew if we were going to have any kind of face-to-face opportunities we were going to have to use some different space,” Dickerson said. The group compiled a list of potential spaces and then analyzed the logistics of each one with ITS and Facilities Management. The group considered factors such as entrance accessibility,
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In a spin on the t-shirt cannon used by the cheerleaders at basketball games, Giesen is now known for using a threeperson slingshot to launch t-shirts into the stands that say “making history in the Hump.” Giesen said that, aside from the slight delay in the microphone that comes from teaching in such a big arena, he has not had any technology issues, although he records his PowerPoints with voiceovers separately to accommodate for students that are unable to attend class in person rather than doing a live WebEx recording of his lectures. CLASSROOMS, 2
Catfish Comeback
it shapes the world today. According to Downey, news becomes fake when the main idea of a story is not in another source, the reader’s emotional state becomes significantly heightened while reading the article or the author of the article is not a real journalist. Fake websites often produce fake news. Imitation news websites can design their page to look like a reliable, well-known source to spread false information to a broader audience. Biases control people’s interpretation of news, and everyone is subject to bias. Holli Seitz, assistant professor of communication at MSU and co-author of “Correcting Misinformation about Neuroscience via Social Media,” said people are susceptible to believing fake news because it helps them understand confusing information. FAKE NEWS, 2
WEDNESDAY
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Mississippi State University is on the forefront of the catfish industry’s comeback. Check it out on our website! MSU graduate student Josh Neary overlooks tanks at South Farm aquaculture facility
Mary Georgia Hamilton | The Reflector FORECAST: It is looking to be a beautiful week! Temperatures will range from the low 80s during the day to the high 50s during the night. Expect sunny days and a slight chance of rain on Thursday.
Courtesy of National Weather Service
Readerʼs Guide: Bulletin Board Puzzles Bad Dawgs Opinion
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