BURNIN’ UP LIFE | 7
back in action
SPORTS | 8 125th YEAR | ISSUE 31 @REFLECTORONLINE f /REFLECTORONLINE
JANUARY 31, 2014
FRIDAY
REFLECTOR-ONLINE.COM
Starkville police chief candidates announced BY PRANAAV JADHAV Staff Writer
Beginning at 5:30 p.m. Tuesday the city of Starkville Board of Aldermen will interview four candidates for the Starkville Police Department’s chief position.
Frank Nichols and Bobby Grimes from Starkville, Frederick Shelton from Columbus, and James Reed from Jacksonsville, NC are the candidates. In December, David Lindley, SPD’s former police chief who had been with the force
for 38 years, retired after being placed on an administrative leave by the Board of Aldermen. Scott Maynard, Ward 5 alderman, said the Board of Aldermen will interview four candidates for the police chief position next Tuesday.
“One of the candidates is internal, and three are external. One of those is from out of state, North Carolina, and the other two are local to the Golden Triangle,” Maynard said in an email. Former Ward 2 Alderman Sandra Sistrunk said she is
surprised there are four candidates because she was only aware of two. “Not having a police chief was disappointing. I am very comfortable with John Outlaw serving as the interim chief. I think the police force as a whole are well-trained
and professional. I hope the aldermen do what they need to do to get the best qualified person that they can for that job,” Sistrunk said. Former city administrator Lynn Spruill said the chief of police position is critical to the future of our city. SEE CHIEF, 2
Tea party benefits children’s hospitals BY LACRETIA WIMBLEY Staff Writer
Mississippi State University’s Intelligent, Dignified, Elegant, Ambitious Leaders (I.D.E.A.L. Woman) and Miss Riverland 2014 Jasmine Murray will join forces in co-sponsoring a “Princess Tea Party” in the Fos-
ter Ballroom of the Colvard Student Union at 3 p.m. on Sunday. Jasmine Murray, Miss MSU 2012 and Miss Riverland 2014, said the “Princess Tea Party” is an event that incorporates her platform of “13 going on 30” and is a source to support the Children’s Miracle Network. SEE TEA PARTY, 3
DAVID LEWIS | THE REFLECTOR
Tiffany Patterson, Diaspora Studies of the History and American Studies Department at Vanderbilt, gave the lecture “Slavery in the U.S. and other areas of the Atlantic” on Thursday in the Mitchell Memorial Library as part of the “Created Equal” events hosted through February. Other events include film viewings related to civil rights history.
Library hosts civil rights events BY LACRETIA WIMBLEY Staff Writer
On Wednesday, the Mississippi State University libraries and African American Studies Program began hosting a series of film screenings, discussions
and seminars about America’s civil rights struggle in the Mitchell Memorial Library Auditorium. After receiving a grant from the National Endowment for Humanities and Gilder Lehrman Institute of American
History, the MSU libraries and African American Studies Program presented “The Abolitionists” film Wednesday with the discussion and seminar on Thursday. Presentations will continue with the viewing of “Freedom
Riders” at 7 p.m. on Feb. 10 and the discussion and seminar at 3 p.m. on Feb. 11. The final film “The Loving Story” will be viewed at 7 p.m. on March 3 with the discussion and seminar at 3 p.m. on March 4. SEE EQUAL, 3
TORIA CARTER | COURTESY PHOTO
Jasmine Murray, Miss MSU 2012 and Miss Riverland 2014, works with I.D.E.A.L. Woman to host the “Princess Tea Party,” which benefits the Children’s Miracle Network. The event will include tea and tea cakes as well as performances by Models of Distinction and I.D.E.A.L. Woman members.
Professor challenges students to apply teachings to personal lives BY PRANAAV JADHAV Staff Writer
With one PhD and four post-graduate degrees in different streams including philosophy, applied mathematics, theological studies, physics and geophysical sciences, William Kallfelz has taught classes in mathematics, environmental ethics, statistics, religion, business ethics, philosophy, medical ethics and logic among others at Mississippi State University. Kallfelz said at the age of 21 he wanted to be a monk and
has attended a monastery. He said he read a lot of literature and practiced yoga as a teenager but always wanted to be an engineer. “The reason why I got a master’s in religious studies is because I loved the idea of reading theology, and my real interests have been more in the theoretical side,” Kallfelz said. Kallfelz has taught at MSU since 2010 for various departments. Whit Ables, junior biochemistry major who was enrolled in Kallfelz’s religion class in spring 2013,
said Kallfelz constantly challenged students to apply the knowledge learned in class to their personal lives. “He asked us to see the beauty and spirituality in the ordinary and the mundane, to view the world in a newer, fresher way. One of the many outstanding qualities I recognized from Dr. Kallfelz is his unceasing willingness to get to know every one of his students,” Ables said. “He made an effort to not only be a professor, but also to add the human element and personalize the teaching and learning experience.” SEE KALLFELZ, 2
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DAVID LEWIS | THE REFLECTOR
William Kallfelz, MSU professor, engages and bonds with his students by bringing his experience studying at a monastery to the classroom. He focuses on pushing his students to look at the world through different perspectives, acknowledge beauty and grow spiritually.
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