HB1788 Allocation
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A Guide to Genealogical Records and Resources
Bolivar County Library System Mississippi Room – Robinson-Carpenter Public Library A Guide to Genealogical Records and Resources This guide is designed to function as a finding aid for patrons performing genealogical research in the Mississippi Room and is not a complete list of materials in the Mississippi Room. All materials (books, microfilm, VHS cassettes, maps, etc.) in the Mississippi Room are non-circulating meaning they may be used in the Mississippi Room ONLY and may not be checked out. Duplicate copies of some non-reference titles are available in the Non-Fiction section; consult the card catalog or ask the Reference Services Librarian for assistance. A microfilm reader/printer in the Mississippi Room and copy machines near the Circulation Desk are available at a cost of 25cents per page for B&W and $1.00 for color copies. Ask the Reference Services Librarian or Circulation Desk personnel for assistance with microfilm and the reader/printer. Prepared by Reference Services Revised May 30, 2013 Bolivar County Library System Robinson-Carpenter Memorial Library 104 South Leflore Avenue Cleveland, MS 38732 Phone: (662) 843-2774 Fax: (662) 843-4701 Library Website: www.bolivar.lib.ms.us Bolivar County Library System Guide to Genealogical Records and Resources – Continued 2 JOURNALS Mississippi State University. Mississippi Quarterly: The Journal of Southern Cultures . 1969 through 11/30/1995 are shelved in Mississippi Room. 12/01/1995 through Present are available on the following MAGNOLIA databases: “Academic Search Premier,” “Humanities International Complete,” “Literary Reference Center,” and “MasterFILE Premier.” Journal of Mississippi History . John Edmond Gonzales, Editor. Shelved in the Mississippi Room. -
Mississippi Private School Association Informational Brochure Mississippi Private School Association
University of Mississippi eGrove Mississippi Education Collection General Special Collections 1991 Mississippi Private School Association informational brochure Mississippi Private School Association Follow this and additional works at: https://egrove.olemiss.edu/ms_educ Part of the Education Commons Recommended Citation Mississippi Private School Association, "Mississippi Private School Association informational brochure" (1991). Mississippi Education Collection. 103. https://egrove.olemiss.edu/ms_educ/103 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the General Special Collections at eGrove. It has been accepted for inclusion in Mississippi Education Collection by an authorized administrator of eGrove. For more information, please contact [email protected]. MississiPPi Private School Association 5727 County Cork Jackson, Mississippi 39206-3013 Don Souder, Jr., Executive Secretary \'V'rn David Derrick, Director of Instruction Telephone: (601) 956-6872 FAX (601) 956-9105 ,z J C - 1 7~ , /t.u( - "11 ~ ~. H IA~" ".,:]<J "" of , tJt o,;v { 4x".~v't So TABLE OF CONTENTS Itn'1,04'~ /jJ , ~ , I To s- /?l'7}-f ;V vv ~ () 1, (",,,1 P ~//1L1'1 l,'t1. - r 1 7 - 7 ? ?.3 I. Calendar of Events for 1991-92 ............ , .... .. .. , .... 1 & 2 f"7 104 L / ,t {").. - , 1 ,/' II . MPSA Executive Committee ............................... 3 ~ ( f ,.~.rA.."~ (; '?J-- .2Jy Y ill. ~~::~o~::a~{~~;~;;:;~~ f ~ 1 I I • IV. Certification Commission ................................. .4 V., MS Private School Education Association Officers and Directors ........................................ 5 VI. Academy Activities Commission .... .. , .............. 6 & 7 /'). /}tll; I ~ f/1;p.ln l. It "" '"~ ~ JI VII. AAC Committee Appointments for 1991-92 ... 8 & 9 VIII. Athletic Officials Association .................. ,. 10 & 11 IX. Athletic Alignment by Classification ...... -
Case: 2:65-Cv-00031-DMB-JMV Doc #: 215 Filed: 05/13/16 1 of 96 Pageid #: 4392
Case: 2:65-cv-00031-DMB-JMV Doc #: 215 Filed: 05/13/16 1 of 96 PageID #: 4392 IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF MISSISSIPPI DELTA DIVISION DIANE COWAN, minor, by her mother PLAINTIFFS and next friend, Mrs. Alberta Johnson, et al.; FLOYD COWAN, JR., minor, by his mother and next friend, Mrs. Alberta Johnson, et al.; LENDEN SANDERS; MACK SANDERS; CRYSTAL WILLIAMS; AMELIA WESLEY; DASHANDA FRAZIER; ANGINETTE TERRELL PAYNE; ANTONIO LEWIS; BRENDA LEWIS; and UNITED STATES OF AMERICA INTERVENOR-PLAINTIFF V. NO. 2:65-CV-31-DMB BOLIVAR COUNTY BOARD OF EDUCATION, et al. DEFENDANTS OPINION AND ORDER On May 17, 1954, the United States Supreme Court issued the landmark decision of Brown v. Board of Education, holding that “in the field of public education the doctrine of ‘separate but equal’ has no place.” 347 U.S. 483, 495 (1954) (“Brown I”). A year later, on May 31, 1955, the Supreme Court issued a second order directing compliance with Brown I “with all deliberate speed.” Brown v. Bd. of Educ., 349 U.S. 294, 301 (1955) (“Brown II”). Ten years after Brown II, residents of Bolivar County, Mississippi, filed this now fifty-year-old action seeking the desegregation of their school system. After decades of litigation, this case is currently before the Court for the determination of an appropriate desegregation remedy for the high schools and middle schools in the Cleveland School District (“District”) in Bolivar County. Case: 2:65-cv-00031-DMB-JMV Doc #: 215 Filed: 05/13/16 2 of 96 PageID #: 4393 Upon consideration of the parties’ proposed desegregation plans, the Court concludes that, in order to achieve constitutionally-required desegregation, the District must consolidate its high schools and must consolidate its middle schools. -
Mississippi Community Colleges Serve, Prepare, and Support Mississippians
Mississippi Community Colleges Serve, Prepare, and Support Mississippians January 2020 1 January 2020 Prepared by NSPARC / A unit of Mississippi State University 2 Table of Contents Executive Summary...............................................................................................................................1 Introduction.......................................................................................................................................... 2 Methodology ........................................................................................................................................ 2 Institutional Profile...............................................................................................................................4 Student Enrollment...............................................................................................................................6 Community College Graduates.............................................................................................................9 Employment and Earnings Outcomes of Graduates..........................................................................11 Impact on the State Economy.............................................................................................................13 Appendix A: Workforce Training.........................................................................................................15 Appendix B: Degrees Awarded............................................................................................................16 -
We Gotta Work with What We Got: School and Community Factors That Contribute to Educational Resilience Among African American Students
University of Mississippi eGrove Electronic Theses and Dissertations Graduate School 2019 We Gotta Work with What We Got: School and Community Factors That Contribute to Educational Resilience Among African American Students Denae Bradley University of Mississippi Follow this and additional works at: https://egrove.olemiss.edu/etd Part of the Sociology Commons Recommended Citation Bradley, Denae, "We Gotta Work with What We Got: School and Community Factors That Contribute to Educational Resilience Among African American Students" (2019). Electronic Theses and Dissertations. 1556. https://egrove.olemiss.edu/etd/1556 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at eGrove. It has been accepted for inclusion in Electronic Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of eGrove. For more information, please contact [email protected]. “WE GOTTA WORK WITH WHAT WE GOT”: SCHOOL AND COMMUNITY FACTORS THAT CONTRIBUTE TO EDUCATIONAL RESILIENCE AMONG AFRICAN AMERICAN STUDENTS A Thesis presented in partial fulfillment of requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology The University of Mississippi by Denae L. Bradley May 2019 Copyright © 2019 by Denae Bradley All rights reserved ABSTRACT This thesis examines how Black residents in the Mississippi Delta claim and deploy agency and resiliency in a rural community context entrenched in a legacy of oppression. Black, low-income communities are implicitly labeled non-resilient when macro-level community capitals and resiliency literature are applied. However, I find that resiliency is culturally distinctive and oftentimes detected in ritual, daily processes in Black communities. This thesis rejects dominant narratives that Black communities in Mississippi are only poor, backwards, and lacking. -
Project Access High School Directory 2012-2013
PROJECT ACCESS HIGH SCHOOL DIRECTORY 2012-2013 0School Name: Aberdeen High School Fax: 662-369-6004 District: 2 Counselor 1: Donna Cooper Physical Address: 205 Highway 145 North Counselor 1 Email: City, State Zip: Aberdeen, MS 39730 [email protected] Mailing Address: Post OfficeBox 607 Counselor 1 Phone: 662-369-8933 EXT. 205 Main office number: 662-369-8933 School Name: Ackerman High School Fax: 662-285-4149 District: 4 Counselor 1: Lynn Scribner Address: 393 East Main Street Counselor 1 Email: City, State Zip: Ackerman, MS 39735 [email protected] Main office number: 662-285-4101 Counselor 1 Phone: 662-285-4101 EXT. 103 School Name: Adams County Chrisitian School Main office number: 601-442-1422 District: 5 Fax: 601-442-1477 Address: 300 Chinquapin Lane Counselor 1: Tracy Davis City, State Zip: Natchez, MS 39120 Counselor 1 Email: [email protected] School Name: Alcorn Career &Technology Main office number: 662-286-7727 Center Fax: 662-286-5674 District: 2 Counselor 1: Rodney Hopper Address: 2101 Norman Road Counselor 1 Email: [email protected] City, State Zip: Corinth, MS 38834 Counselor 1 Phone: 662-286-7727 School Name: Alcorn Central High School Fax: 662-286-8720 District: 2 Counselor 1: Tazel Choate Address: 8 County Road 254 Counselor 1 Email: [email protected] City, State Zip: Glen, MS 38846 Counselor 1 Phone: 662-286-8720 Main office number: 662-286-8720 School Name: Amanda Elzy High School Main office number: 662-453-3394 District: 1 Fax: 662-453-1258 Address: 604 Elzy Avenue Counselor 1: -
Bkhand0809 to Post
September 12, 2008 Member Schools, Attached is the file that we will be sending to our printer on Tuesday, Sept. 16, 2008. Please find the page with the information pertaining to your school and check it for accuracy. If it contains information that is not correct, you will need to log into the “Directory Info” page, and make the appropriate updates. You will need to use your school’s 6-digit code to do this. Also, if you see a category displayed that you don’t want displayed, you can also choose to hide that field when at the “Directory Info” page. Again, this is time-sensitive, as we will be turning this over to our printer next Tuesday morning. We appreciate your cooperation in this matter. Thanks, Kay Shanks Adams County Christian School 300 Chinquapin Lane Natchez, MS 39120 (Adams) Main Office Phone: 601-442-1422 HS Office Phone: 601-442-1422 Elem Office Phone: 601-442-1491 Fax Number: 601-442-1477 Athletic Office Phone: 601-442-1422 E-mail Address: [email protected] Web Site Address: accsrebels.net Grades: K4-12 Elementary Accreditation Rating: AA Secondary Accreditation Rating: AA Other Accrediting Agencies: Southern Assn. of Colleges and Schools School Colors: Blue , Gray, & White School Mascot: Rebel Athletic Division: 3-AA Administrator: W. R. Buddy Wade High School Principal: Paul Hayles Junior High Principal: Paul Hayles Elementary Principal: Donna Loomis Guidance Counselor: Tracy Davis Athletic Director: Paul Hayles Student Council Sponsor: Brooke Holland & Tracy Davis Honor Society Sponsor: Brooke Holland & Tracy Davis Technology Coordinator: Sandra Eidt Choral Director: Judy Mason School Secretary: Marlene Southerland Business Manager / Bookkeeper: Brenda Gousset-Accts Receivable& Brooke Holland- Accts Payable Board Chairman: Frank Guedon Board Chairman's Home Phone: 601-442-7232 Alpha Christian School 1101 N. -
Chapter 1: Background & Analysis
CHAPTER 1: BACKGROUND & ANALYSIS G ENERAL F EATURES Location Greenwood is the county seat of Leflore County, Mississippi and is located at the eastern edge of the Mississippi Delta, approximately 96 miles north of Jackson, Mississippi and 130 miles south of Memphis, Tennessee. Natural Features The city has a total area of 9.5 square miles, of which 9.2 square miles is land and 0.3 square miles of it is water (3.15%). Greenwood is located where the Tallahatchie and Yalobusha rivers join to form the Yazoo River. In fact, Greenwood is one of the few places in the world where you can stand between two rivers, the Yazoo and the Tallahatchie Rivers, flowing in the opposite direction. The flood plain of the Mississippi River has long been an area rich in vegetation and wildlife, feeding off the Mississippi and its numerous tributaries. Long before Europeans migrated to America, the Choctaw and Chickasaw Indian nations settled in the Delta's marsh and swampland. In 1830, the Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek was signed by Choctaw Chief Greenwood Leflore, opening the swampland to European settlers. Picture: Greenwood's Grand Boulevard once named one of America's ten most beautiful streets by the U.S. Chambers of Commerce and the Garden Clubs of America. History The first settlement on the banks of the Yazoo River was a trading post founded by John Williams in 1830 and known as Williams Landing. The settlement quickly blossomed, and in 1844 was incorporated as “Greenwood,” named after Chief Greenwood Leflore. Growing into a strong cotton market, the key to the city’s success was based on its strategic location in the heart of the Delta, on the easternmost point of the alluvial plain and astride the Tallahatchie River and the Yazoo River. -
Episcopal Church of the Nativity Greenwood, Mississippi • January
Episcopal Church of the Nativity Parish Profile Greenwood, Mississippi • January 2021 2 CONTENTS Who We Are 3 A Brief History of Nativity 4 Diocese of Mississippi 7 Community 8 400 Howard Street Greenwood, MS 38930 Our Facilities 10 Telephone: 662.453.7786 Fax: 662.453.1329 Rectory 11 Email: [email protected] Our Ministries 12 Neighboring Mission Stations 13 Godly Play 14 Day School 15 Stewardship 16 Financial Management 17 Permanent Endowment 18 Our Staff 19 Parish Assessment 20 Our New Rector 22 From the Search Committee 24 Contact Us 25 “worship, love, belong, grow and serve.” 3 Who We Are The Episcopal Church of the Nativity, located in Greenwood, Mississippi, is a deeply committed parish with members bringing a wide variety of personal histories, interests and talents, all searching for a closer relationship to Jesus Christ and the people in our community. We cherish our long history and look forward to living out the principles of our Anglican heritage. Nativity is an active, eclectic parish represen- tative of our deep Delta roots. Our membership is a diverse group of backgrounds and professions. We are cradle Episcopalians and lifelong members of Nativity, yet many of us found Nativity on our spiritual journey. We are newlyweds, young fami- lies, empty-nesters, recent retirees, and octogenarians. We are physicians and medical professionals, educators and coaches, attorneys and judges, farmers, chefs, authors, realtors, bankers, business professionals of all types, civil servants, local leaders, and all in between. Our individual interests are as wide ranging as our backgrounds, and we count among us historians, hunters, birders, gardeners, flower arrangers, musicians, pilots, softball players, runners, walkers, motorcyclists, and fishermen. -
JOB SATISFACTION AMONG HIGH SCHOOL PRINCIPALS in MISSISSIPPI Geoffry Alan Haines University of Southern Mississippi
The University of Southern Mississippi The Aquila Digital Community Dissertations Fall 12-2007 JOB SATISFACTION AMONG HIGH SCHOOL PRINCIPALS IN MISSISSIPPI Geoffry Alan Haines University of Southern Mississippi Follow this and additional works at: https://aquila.usm.edu/dissertations Part of the Educational Leadership Commons, and the Elementary and Middle and Secondary Education Administration Commons Recommended Citation Haines, Geoffry Alan, "JOB SATISFACTION AMONG HIGH SCHOOL PRINCIPALS IN MISSISSIPPI" (2007). Dissertations. 1312. https://aquila.usm.edu/dissertations/1312 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by The Aquila Digital Community. It has been accepted for inclusion in Dissertations by an authorized administrator of The Aquila Digital Community. For more information, please contact [email protected]. The University of Southern Mississippi JOB SATISFACTION AMONG HIGH SCHOOL PRINCIPALS IN MISSISSIPPI by Geoffry Alan Haines A Dissertation Submitted to the Graduate Studies Office of The University of Southern Mississippi in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy Approved: December 2007 Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission. COPYRIGHT BY GEOFFRY ALAN HAINES 2007 Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission. The University of Southern Mississippi JOB SATISFACTION AMONG HIGH SCHOOL PRINCIPALS IN MISSISSIPPI by Geoffry Alan Haines Abstract of -
Barrett, Bobby, 63 Barrett, Vernon, 49 Bayou Academy, 65 Beach, Mrs. Florence, 85 Beard, Dr. John, 43 Bell, Reverend, 95 Bennett
Index -A- Barrett, Bobby, 63 Aaron Tabernacle Missionary Baptist Barrett, Vernon, 49 Church, 93 Bayou Academy, 65 Abel's Point, 1 Beach, Mrs. Florence, 85 Abernathy, Thomas (U.S. Representa Beard, Dr. John, 43 tive), 12 Bell, Reverend, 95 Abide, Dr. John K., 31 Bennett, Barney, 88 Adams, Dr. James G., 43 Benoit, A. W., 33 Adams, Henry, 2, 3 Benoit, Mississippi, 42, 47, 58, 73 Adams, William S., 31 Berger, Mr., 45 Alabama Metal Products Company, Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Incorporated, 39 Church, 95-96 Alexander, W. J., 95 Bethel A.M.E. Church Ministerial List, Alford, Earl, 9 96 Alford, Frankie, 60 Beulah, Mississippi, 20, 32, 45, 46, 47, Allen, Byrd, 81 (and family) 50, 51, 53, 66, 73, 80, 82, 84, 99 Big Allen, Charlie, 56 Island, Arkansas, 108-109 Allen, Vernon, 88 Bilbo, Theodore G. (Governor), 4 Alligator, Mississippi, 58 Black, Carl, 32 Ammons, R. L., 32 "blind tigers," 99 Arkansas City, Arkansas, 95, 102, Bloodworth, N. B., 2 107 Board of Police of Bolivar County, 45- Arkansas River, 36 46 Arnold, Columbus, 46 Bobo, J. E., 31 Austin, L. B., 31, 42, 43 Bogy, Ben, 56, 60 Austin, Mrs. Zoe, 76 Bolen, Mellie, x Aycock, Clyde W., 4, 31 Bolivar Commercial (Cleveland, Mississippi), 30 -B- Bolivar County Courthouse, Cleveland, B & T Tractor and Auto Parts, 35 Mississippi, x Baggett, N. T., 6 Bolivar County Courthouse, Rosedale, Baird, Mrs. Postelle C., 83 Mississippi, x, 5, 9, 85, 107 Baker, L. P., 9, 10 Bolivar County Democrat, 6, 10, 29, Baldwin, Mrs. Delta, 32 30, 34, 78, 98, 102, 112, 113 Bolivar Bank of Rosedale, 31 County Library, 5 Bank Store, 34 Bolivar County Review, 12, 112 Barnes, Joe G., 63, 64, 65, 66, 67 Bolivar Landing, 70 Barr, Tommy, 57 Bond, J. -
Board of Supervisors Leflore County Greenwood, MS
MINUTES OF THE BOARD OF SUPERVISORS LEFLORE COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI MINUTE BOOK 140 SEPTEMBER 1994 ORDER RECEIVING ABSTRACT OF MENTORING PROGRAM FOR JUVENILES PHILLIP B. WOlFe, Obi. I W1LU3 a BRUUFELD, Clerk GREENWOOD. US BOARD OF SUPERVISORS GREENWOOD. MS ROQEHT E. MOORE. 0*1. 2 JAMES W. BURGOON, JR.. Attorney GREENWOOD. MS LEFLORE COUNTY GREENWOOD. MS WtLLUM J. STEWART, Oat. 3. President POST OFFICE BOX 1468 ITTA SENA, MS FREDRICK Q CLARK, SpecW Counsal GREENWOOD, MS GREENWOOD, MISSISSIPPI 38930 MM H SANDERS. Oist. 4 GREENWOOD, MS TELEPHONE (601) 455-3904 REGULAR MEETINGS EACH MONDAY AT *00 P.M. JAMES M HOOPER, JR. Owl 5, Vfcv PtoaUunl ; SIUON. MS l AX (601) 453-7460 September 12, 1994 TO: Leflore County Board of Supervisors FROM: Mr. Robert E. Moore 7f^l/h/y^ Supervisor District 2 "'D RE: Juvenile Mentoring Program Attached you will find an abstract of a mentoring program for juveniles. This is a delinquency prevention model designed to place successful adults with youth at-risk of becoming delinquents and lead them away from criminal activity. The project will employ two (2) full time staff members and cost around $60,000 per year. There is no cash match obligation. We can probably work out a housing arrangement later. MINUTES OF THE BOARD OF SUPERVISORS LEFLORE COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI MINUTE BOOK 140 SEPTEMBER 1994 PROGRAM ABSTRACT DESCRIPTION OF THE PROJECT The JUMP program will be a one-to-one mentoring program with the primary purpose to reduce juvenile delinquency and gang participation, improve academic performance and reduce the dropout rate through the use of adult mentors for at-risk youth.