āTreats in the Streetsā at JC on Tuesday, October 29
ELLISVILLE- Āé¶¹Ö±²„ās Office of Student Affairs and Student Government Association along with campus clubs, organizations, and the city of Ellisville will host the annual āTreats in the Streetsā night of activities on Tuesday, October 29, 2019, from 4:30 p.m. until 6:30 p.m. The trick-or-treat trail event will be held on the front lawn area of Jones Hall. Admission is free unless otherwise noted, and the public is welcome to attend all events. Children must be accompanied by an adult.
From 4:30Ā p.m. until 6:30 p.m., JC clubs and organizations will have treats and games available in front of Jones Hall. This event is for children ages 0 to 12 years, and all children must be accompanied by an adult to attend. Also, the JCJC all-you-can-eat cafeteria will stay open for dinner untilĀ 7:30 p.m.Ā The cost for children ages 4 to 9 years of age is $4.50, and children ages 10 and adultsĀ isĀ $7.25 (tax included).Ā Taco Bell will be open untilĀ 9 p.m.Ā & the Bobcat Grill will be open untilĀ 8 p.m.;Ā both are located behind the A.B. Howard Gymnasium.Ā Ā Other food items will be available for purchase from various vendors.Ā
The costume contests will begin atĀ 5:30 p.m.Ā in the center of the grassy area of Jones Hall for kids ages 0 to 12. Ā AtĀ 6 p.m. a costume contest for JC students will begin.
The annual Treats in the Streets celebration is an outdoor event and may be canceled or modified, if it rains or if the weather is not conducive for children. For more information, contact Dr. Tessa Flowers at 601-477-4845 or email: tessa.flowers.jcjc.edu.
Āé¶¹Ö±²„ receives $25,000 from PGT for Work Ready Initiative with Laurel High School
ELLISVILLE- A collective partnership with the Jones County EDA, Mississippi Power, and PG Technologies in Ellisville will help ensure some Laurel High School Students are successful at work and school. A $25,000 grant from PG Technologies to Āé¶¹Ö±²„ will allow the Work Ready Initiative the two-year college began for its career and technical students to be expanded to Laurel High School students.
āWeāre sending an instructor to Laurel High School to teach the Smart Start class or soft skills to 18 students. This includes things like being at work every day and show up on time, resumeĀ“ building and financial literacy, to how to fill out an application. These are basic things students need to know to be successful in the classroom or the workplace,ā said JC Dean of Āé¶¹Ö±²„, Jennifer Griffith.
Laurel High School principal, Michael Eubanks said this class will help Laurel High School meet its goal of supporting students to be successful because this is amazing support from the community and from Āé¶¹Ö±²„.
āWe really need to excel and swing the pendulum of our district and school to where we want to be. This is the momentum we need,ā said Eubanks.
The eighteen students who successfully complete the class will earn dual credit, along with the national NCCRC certification and a Smart Start credential. Most importantly, PG Technologies managing director, Derek Hileman, said this training should open more doors for these students.
āThe more we do now (to train people), the less we have to do when they are inside our doors working for us.Ā Itās critical they learn these skills. It is hard to find talent and weāre working with colleges and high schools, so weāll all benefit in the long run,ā said Hileman.
The check presentation was held in conjunction with the EDAās Education in Industry Day partly because Āé¶¹Ö±²„ās Work Ready Initiative was an idea resulting from the gathering of business and education leaders.
āTraining today is very different in the workforce compared to 10 or 20 years ago,ā said Sandy Holifield, director of the EDA of Jones Countyās Existing Industry, Leadership Development & Workforce Training. āEducators need to know the difference and industry needs to express what theyāre looking for, or what skills are important.ā
Hileman said he encourages more businesses to support the efforts of the Work Ready Initiative and the Smart Start Class in the future. For more information about the Āé¶¹Ö±²„ at Āé¶¹Ö±²„ call the Whitehead Advanced Technology Center at 601-477-4114.
Āé¶¹Ö±²„ named Best Two-Year College in Mississippi
ELLISVILLE ā The Mississippi Business Journal has named Āé¶¹Ö±²„ as the āBest Two-Year Collegeā in Mississippi.Ā Ranked first in the state among the two-year colleges, the publication honored college representatives, Executive Vice President of Chief Enrollment Management, Information Technology, and Marketing Officer, Fineeā Ruffin; Āé¶¹Ö±²„ President, Dr. Jesse Smith and Assistant to the President for Government Relations, Jim Walley at a special event held at the Old Capitol Inn in Jackson. Being the best is an honor Āé¶¹Ö±²„ President, Dr. Jesse Smith said reflects every employeeās hard work to ensure our students are successful.
āOn behalf of our college faculty, staff, students, and board of trustees, we are delighted to be recognized for the qualityĀ of ourĀ work. Teaching the ideals of a democratic society, while at the same time ensuring our students are ready to enter the workforce or are prepared for university transfer is very challenging. Ā ReceivingĀ this recognition from the Mississippi Business Journal makes our efforts more worthwhile,ā said Smith.
Among the recent accomplishments college officials cited as examples of success included the Gold Medal three Jones students earned at the National SkillsUSA competition after taking first place in the engineering and technology category in July, the college newspaper, the Radionian winning first place in the two-year newspaper category at the Spring National College Media Convention in New York City and the Associate Degree Nursing programsā May 2019 graduates achieving a 100% pass rate on the NCLEX-RN exam. The 2019 MBJās Best of Mississippi listed the Top-3 in each of the 25 Best of Mississippi Business reader poll categories in itās September 12, 2019 edition.
Āé¶¹Ö±²„ students win tuition & technology at Convocation/Hall of Fame activities

ELLISVILLE ā A Āé¶¹Ö±²„ freshman from Waynesboro, Matthew Williams won tuition for a year and a laptop for attending Convocation and Hall of Fame events on September 12. The nursing majorās name was randomly drawn to win tuition and compete for a Microsoft Surface laptop while attending the Hall of Fame football game against Hinds Community College. Ā To win the laptop, donated by Coca-Cola, Williams had to win the football throwing competition against Oak Groveās JaāDarius Sims, who was also randomly chosen to win a year of tuition.Ā The computer engineering major came up short against

Williams in the competition but said he is blessed to be chosen to participate in the event.
āWinning tuition will push me to do well in college. I donāt have any scholarships, so this is really a gift from God,ā said Sims.
Williams said his parents are happy to have tuition paid for this year. Upon graduation from Jones, Williams plans to get his bachelorās degree in nursing at the University of Mississippi Medical Center or Southern Miss.

āI didnāt know what to do when they called my name,ā said Williams. āFinancially, winning the tuition will relieve some stress, however, I hadnāt thrown a football in a long time, so Iām a little surprised to also win that competition.ā
Āé¶¹Ö±²„ and the Student Government Association also awarded Cole Mozingo of Laurel an Apple Watch, who was randomly chosen during the football game.
Maroon Typhoonās twirling sisters shine in Āé¶¹Ö±²„ās ādreamyā performance
ELLISVILLEā DāIbervilleās baton twirling sisters, Alyssa and Kayla Webb have been members of the elite, āDixie Doll Twirlersā team based in Biloxi, for more than 10-years together. As Āé¶¹Ö±²„ students, and the feature twirlers for the Maroon Typhoon Marching Band, the Webb sisters are performing together for the first time ever, in the ādreamyā half-time performance called, āWhat Dreams May Come.ā

āWe never had a routine together, so this is our debut!ā said Alyssa Webb. āYou donāt see sister twirlers in college performances. Itās very unique and it’s good because we understand each other. We know what weāre both capable of doing and we āreadā each other well.ā
During their competition days with the Dixie Dolls, the Webbās traveled throughout the southeastern region collecting trophies from numerous regional, state and local competitions. The team captured 1st place in Nationals and Kayla earned individual 1st place honors in a national competition while they were both at DāIberville High School. Using their award-winning experience, the Webb sisters incorporated a few of their favorite moves into their Āé¶¹Ö±²„ performances on the football field this fall.
āWe have a move that looks like a double cartwheel while tossing the baton. Weāre also exchanging batons, and twirling fire batons and blades,ā said Kayla. āDuring the pre-game and half-time shows, we perform during the Eurythmics song, āSweet Dreamsā and Van Halenās, āDream On.āā
Alyssa journeyed to the Ellisville campus first and then convinced Kayla to join her at Jones. āAlyssa had fun here and really liked it at Jones so I thought I would join her,ā said Kayla. āA lot of the Dixie Dolls have performed at Jones. I donāt expect that will end.ā
Several members of the āDixie Doll Twirlersā have dazzled Jones audiences over the last 15 years, including Carly Carpenter 2017-19, Autumn Dunnaway 2017-18, Sabrina Sagers 2015-17, Megan Crager 2009-10, Ashleigh Richardson Fulton 2008-10, Ashton Rushing 2008-10, Olivia Purvis Hall 2007-09 and Lauren Byrd 2003-04.
For Alyssa, her last performance may be at the last Jones home football game on October 24.Ā She plans to graduate in May and work on her bachelorās degree in accounting at USM. Kayla will spend another year as a Jones Bobcat before heading to the University of South Alabama to pursue a degree in physical therapy. The DāIberville High School graduates said they plan on enjoying the spotlight for as long as they can twirl the baton, or their careers prevent them from performing.
