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Aldermen approve plan to narrow Main Street
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Junior Auxiliary to Stuff the Bus with school supplies
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National championship trophy to stop in Starkville on tour of state
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John Bateman to step down as SAAC executive director Starkville Area Arts Council Executive Director John Bateman poses with artwork in the council’s current exhibit “Time on Our Hands,” in the lobby of the Greater Starkville Development Partnership. Nicole Bowman-Layton/Dispatch Staff
Starkville Area Arts Council’s office sits in the back corner of the Greater Starkville Development Partnership complex at the corner of East Main Street and South LaFayette streets.
Barely big enough for two desks and a small table, the cramped office features art in various mediums on three of its four walls. The fourth, behind two dark brown wooden desks, features various posters of past art council events and awards won by said programs.
From left, Carolyn Abadie, the owner of Book Mart & Cafe, and Hannah Jian discuss the details of creating an online platform for Book Mart & Cafe to sell books on Friday in Starkville. Jian wanted a way to help businesses that are impacted by COVID-19, so she decided to start a pro-bono consulting organization and offer services to a few Starkville businesses. Photo by: Claire Hassler/Dispatch Staff
Business at the Book Mart & Cafe on Main Street in Starkville doesn’t look much like it did before the COVID-19 pandemic descended on the area in March.
Most of the Mississippi State University students who frequented the bookstore and the Bully Shop inside it went home for the summer. A lot of older readers began to stay away for fear of exposure to the virus.