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         Mississippi Schools General:     more books (72)
  1. RAC on fast track to rebuild Coast schools, casinos.(Focus): An article from: Mississippi Business Journal by Lynn Lofton, 2005-10-17
  2. Step by step: budding dancers will be on their toes as they learn from ballet's best at Jackson's International Dance School.(CULTURE CENTER) : An article from: Mississippi Magazine by Jana Hoops, 2006-05-01
  3. Southern Hospitality: Identity, Schools, and the Civil Rights Movement in Mississippi, 1964-1972 by David M. Callejo-Perez, 2001-06-01
  4. Freedom School, Yes! by Amy Littlesugar, 2001-01-15
  5. Life lessons: the inspiring story of a country school with a special mission.: An article from: Mississippi Magazine by George Tipton Wilson, 2002-09-01
  6. Southern sizzle: foodies flock to gourmet classes at the Viking Cooking School in downtown Greenwood.(Food): An article from: Mississippi Magazine by Mary Leigh Furrh, 2005-03-01
  7. The Cat That Could Spell Mississippi by Laura Hawkins, 1992-10-26
  8. A White Minority in Post-Civil Rights Mississippi by Thomas Adams Upchurch, 2004-11
  9. University of Mississippi 101: My First Text by Brad Epstein, 2005-07-30
  10. The Norumbega Harmony: Historic and Contemporary Hymn Tunes and Anthems from the New England Singing School Tradition (American Made Music Series)
  11. Using a Bilingual Storybook in the Classroom: A Teacher's Guide to Tell Me a Cuento/Cuentame UN Story by Susannah Mississippi Byrd, Joe Hayes, 1999-03
  12. School of construction at Southern Miss adds online classes and a location in Gulfport to meet increasing industry needs.: An article from: Mississippi Business Journal by Lynn Lofton, 2006-12-18
  13. CREATE Foundation aims to boost region's GED rates.(Focus Economic Development)(general education diplomas)(regional organization promoting children's ... article from: Mississippi Business Journal by Lynne Jeter, 2006-07-31
  14. Cape-clad teens head out to help hurricane victims.(Schools)(A Eugene school's "superheroes" will search for volunteer opportunities in Mississippi): An article from: The Register-Guard (Eugene, OR)

41. AACSB International
schools Accredited in Business ordered by country, state, name Jackson StateUniversity (United States - mississippi). Millsaps College (United States
http://www.aacsb.edu/General/InstLists.asp?lid=3

42. AAMC Reporter - Tight State Budgets Put Medical Schools In A Bind
We saw a 15 percent reduction in our state general fund in fiscal year 20022003, Marjorie Solomon, University of mississippi School of Medicine s
http://www.aamc.org/newsroom/reporter/april04/tightbudgets.htm
Home Government Affairs Newsroom Meetings ...
Reporter Home
HHS Outlines Policy on Discounted Hospital Billing A Word From the President: Healthcare Improvement: Time to Stop Talking and Start Doing Viewpoint : Public Health Research: The Time is Now Transformations in Research: Gates Foundation Pledges Millions to Global Health Tight State Budgets Put Medical Schools in a Bind "Portraits of Medical Education" Reporter Archive AAMC Newsroom Reporter Staff: Managing Editor
Robert Jacobson
rjacobson@aamc.org

Staff Writers
Scott Harris
sharris@aamc.org

Whitney L.J. Howell
whowell@aamc.org
Tight State Budgets Put Medical Schools in a Bind
By Suria Santana To compensate for state budget shortfalls nationwide, medical schools have been forced to be creative in raising revenue, relying on strategies that include increasing tuition, reallocating clinical funds, and freezing faculty salaries. Partly as a result of the budget crisis, median tuition and fees increased by almost 12 percent in public medical schools from 2002 to 2003, according to a recent AAMC study. Tuition rose again by nearly 18 percent from 2003 to the current academic year. Reacting to the state's higher education cuts, the University of Florida - which has the authority to implement selective tuition hikes among its schools - decided to raise its professional students' tuition far higher than the undergraduate tuition, according to Robert Watson, M.D., University of Florida College of Medicine's (UFLCOM) senior associate dean for educational affairs.

43. TALLAHATCHIE COUNTY MISSISSIPPI SCHOOL HISTORY FEBRUARY 7, 1849 TO
As a rule, mississippi schools in the county were poor because of Friday wasa day of general cleaning when school closed earlier for that purpose.
http://www.rootsweb.com/~mstallah/history/tallacoschoolshist1849-1937.txt

44. #704: 12-18-03 STATEMENT BY ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL FOR CIVIL RIGHTS R. ALEXA
REGARDING INSTITUTIONAL CONDITIONS AT TWO mississippi TRAINING schools to mississippi Governor Ronnie Musgrove and mississippi Attorney general Mike
http://www.usdoj.gov/opa/pr/2003/December/03_crt_704.htm
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 18, 2003
WWW.USDOJ.GOV
CRT
TDD (202) 514-1888
STATEMENT BY ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL FOR CIVIL RIGHTS
R. ALEXANDER ACOSTA ON LAWSUIT REGARDING INSTITUTIONAL CONDITIONS AT TWO MISSISSIPPI TRAINING SCHOOLS
“This morning, the United States filed suit against the state of Mississippi, challenging the conditions of confinement at two state-run juvenile facilities: the Oakley Training School in Raymond, Mississippi, and the Columbia Training School in Columbia, Mississippi. The suit follows a year-long investigation, which revealed systematic abuses of the civil rights of juveniles. Our investigation found evidence that juveniles were routinely hit, shoved, and slapped by staff, that juveniles were sprayed with pepper spray while in restraints. That in some cases, suicidal girls were stripped naked and isolated for extended time periods in windowless empty "dark rooms," with only a drain in the cement floor to serve as a toilet. We found evidence of systemic abuses, including hog-tying and pole-shackling. It was even reported that girls, overcome by the heat during drills, were forced to eat their own vomit. Our thorough investigation included on-site inspections, interviews with juveniles, faculty, and administrators, and review of program documentation. The results of that investigation, and in particular the many disturbing practices we found, are documented in a June 19, 2003, 48-page letter to Mississippi Governor Ronnie Musgrove and Mississippi Attorney General Mike Moore. Copies of our findings, and of this letter, are available here today.

45. Mississippi Attorney General Jim Hood
ATTORNEY general JIM HOOD TO PARTICIPATE IN SCHOOL DRUG TESTING POLICY CONFERENCE In addition to the mississippi Attorney general’s Office and the
http://www.ago.state.ms.us/news/index.php?use=sep30-2004

46. Mississippi Department Of Education
Financial Electronic Transfer (FETS), GED general Education Diploma mississippi Department of Education Central High School PO Box 771
http://www.mde.k12.ms.us/
"Quality education for every child...every child a reader" Select Topic ACT® Assessment National Academic Education Accountability, Educational Accountability, Statewide System Accreditation Requirements Adequate Education Program (MAEP) Administrative Cost Study, Public Schools Adult Basic Education Program, Mississippi Alternative Education Arts, Mississippi School of Assessment, Student Assisted Housing Teacher Program Blind, School of CAN-Certified Advanced Networking Career Development Certification, Mississippi Educator License Charter Schools in the United States ChildNutrition College Board College Entrance Exam, ACT College Entrance Exam, SAT College, Mississippi Public Universities College, Mississippi Community and Junior Compulsory School Connect-2-Tomorrow Council for Education Technology Critical Needs Teacher Loan/Scholarship Curriculum Framework K-12 Curriculum Framework Pre-K Curriculum Framework VocTech Deaf, School District School Listings District Superintendents District Technology Coordinators Dyslexia Program Educational Accountability Educational Resource Links Educational Technology Employment, MS Department of Education

47. 2001 Education Legislation General Bills Summary
EDUCATION LEGISLATION – 2001 general BILLS April 2001 SENATE BILL 2239establishes the mississippi School Safety Act of 2001. Section 1
http://www.mde.k12.ms.us/extrel/leg/01sum.html
EDUCATION LEGISLATION – 2001 GENERAL BILLS
April 2001

(To view or print a copy of each bill, click on the bill number at the beginning of each summary.)

HOUSE BILLS HOUSE BILL 51 provides that the local school board may authorize in each classroom a brief period of quiet reflection for not more than sixty (60) seconds at the opening of each school day.
  • The motto "In God We Trust" shall be displayed in each classroom, school auditorium and school cafeteria in every public elementary and secondary school of the state. The motto shall be on appropriately framed background with minimum dimensions of eleven (11) inches by fourteen (14) inches.
Effective July 1, 2001 Approved by the Governor State Department of Education (SDE) contact: Steve Williams, 601-359-3515
HOUSE BILL 52
provides that the local school board, in its discretion, may establish and implement a vocational apprenticeship program in the high school(s) of the district. Participating students shall be required to meet the graduation requirements of the State Board of Education. The student may be awarded up to eight (8) units that apply to local graduation requirements. Effective July 1, 2001

48. General Information (Mississippi State University)
mississippi State University forms part of a cohesive townuniversity community the School of Industrial Pedagogy (1909), the School of general Science
http://www.msstate.edu/web/gen_info.htm
Skip to Main Content Search MSU Site Index A B C ... Z
General Information
The Setting
The University
An able faculty, drawn from the best institutions in all parts of the nation, strive earnestly to demonstrate excellence in teaching, while producing in their specialized studies scholarly books, articles, and conference papers that gain respect for themselves, the University, and the state. Thus they ensure for their students instruction that is in immediate touch with current knowledge and thought. A body of energetic researchers, both faculty and other, assisted by an effective research administration, places Mississippi State among the first one hundred universities in the nation in research and development in the sciences and engineering. The University’s service agencies are similarly distinguished, earning the respect and support of their varied constituencies throughout the state, as well as in other states and in foreign countries.
The History
By 1932, when the Legislature renamed the College as Mississippi State College, it consisted of the Agricultural Experiment Station (1887), the College of Engineering (1902), the College of Agriculture (1903), the School of Industrial Pedagogy (1909), the School of General Science (1911), the College of Business and Industry (1915), the Mississippi Agricultural Extension Service (1915), and the Division of Continuing Education, (1919). Further, in 1926 the College had received its first accreditation by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools.

49. FindLaw For Law Students
King s College Law Journal The general law journal of King s College London mississippi Law Journal University of mississippi School of Law.
http://lawschools.findlaw.com/journals/general.html
FindLaw For the Public For Business For Legal Professionals ... Message Boards FindLaw Newsletters Top Legal News Headlines
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Law Firm Articles Legal Dictionary Legal News FindLaw US Government Sites US Supreme Court US Constitution Legal Web Sites All Web Sites FindLaw for Students Academic Law Reviews and Journals : General Law Reviews

50. Welcome To Meridian, Mississippi
Meridian also boasts a degreegranting branch of mississippi State University.The City Public School System operates eight elementary, two middle schools,
http://www.winsteadrealty.com/meridian.html
W ELCOME T O M ERIDIAN Find any home in Meridian just type the address in here: Street Address: (House number and street) City/State/ZIP: (US addresses only)
Need Help?

CLIMATE:
The average annual temperature is 63.9 degrees. Average rainfall 53 inches. Growing season - 250 days. RECREATION: Meridian has a well rounded Parks and Recreation Department with activities for all ages. Meridian has four 18 hole golf courses, Okatibbee Reservoir, a 3800 acre lake offering water sports and hunting. There are over 20 lighted baseball and softball fields with bowling, skating and soccer all available in the area. Some of the best deer and turkey hunting to be found are also available. EDUCATION: Meridian is the only city in Mississippi with its own Community College. Founded in 1938, it is accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools. Meridian also boasts a degree-granting branch of Mississippi State University. The City Public School System operates eight elementary, two middle schools, two junior high and one high school. Lauderdale County operates four attendance centers. There are also five private schools and three parochial schools in the Meridian area. MEDICAL: Meridian serves as the Medical Center for East Mississippi and West Alabama. City hospitals have 1,488 bed capacity. There is also a county run Health Clinic, a state operated Mental Institution, seven nursing homes and Weems Community Health Center.

51. The University Of Mississippi Medical Center - Home Page
The University of mississippi Medical Center in Jackson is the health sciencescampus of the University of mississippi. It houses schools of Medicine,
http://www.umc.edu/
Health Care Professionals affected by
Hurricane Katrina
The University of Mississippi Medical Center in Jackson is the health sciences campus of the University of Mississippi.
It houses Schools of Medicine, Nursing, Health Related Professions, Dentistry and Graduate Studies in the Health Sciences; the University Hospitals and Clinics; and the Rowland Medical Library.
Notice of Privacy Practice
This page last modified on September 21, 2005
Page Summary

52. The University Of Mississippi Medical Center
The 1950 mississippi Legislature enlarged and strengthened health The MedicalCenter is converting a 29bed general hospital it owns in Durant to a
http://www.umc.edu/generalinfo.html
HISTORY The University of Mississippi Medical Center in Jackson is the health sciences campus of the University of Mississippi. The Medical Center opened in 1955, but its beginnings date to 1903 when a two-year medical school was established on the parent campus in Oxford. In that era, certificate graduates went out of state to complete their doctor of medicine degrees. Finally, in 1950, the Mississippi Legislature by a one-vote margin enacted a law to create a four-year medical school. On July 1, 1955, the state's new University Medical Center, or UMC as it's commonly called, opened in Jackson, initially as a four-year medical school with medical and graduate students, interns and residents. As it had in Oxford, the School of Medicine offered both medical and graduate degree programs. The campus included a teaching hospital and a library. The Oxford campus' nursing department moved to the Medical Center in 1956 and it was granted school status in 1958. The School of Health Related Professions (SHRP) was added in 1971 and began offering baccalaureate curricula in 1973. The School of Dentistry was authorized in 1973, and its first students were admitted in 1975. The Medical Center functions as a separately funded, semi-autonomous unit responsible to the chancellor of the University of Mississippi and, through him, to the constitutional Board of Trustees of State Institutions of Higher Learning, which governs all eight state institutions of higher learning in Mississippi. The Medical Center's chief executive officer is the vice chancellor for health affairs.

53. WELCOME TO DESOTO COUNTY SCHOOLS!
Hernando, MS 38632 Phone 662429-5271 Fax 662-429-4198. i. Navigation Menu.Home. general Info Administrator Info School Info Departmental Info Resources
http://www.desoto.k12.ms.us/
Milton Kuykendall, Superintendent 5 East South Street
Hernando, MS 38632
Phone: 662-429-5271
Fax: 662-429-4198 i Navigation Menu Home General Info
Administrator Info

School Info
...
Resources

You must have Shockwave Flash to view this site in its completion.
DESOTO COUNTY SCHOOL
DISTRICT DOES NOT DISCRIMINATE
ON THE BASIS OF RACE, GENDER, RELIGION, OR HANDICAPPING CONDITIONS AND IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER.
This site was last updated 09/23/2005 05:04 PM For general information about DeSoto County Schools, please contact Riki Jackson, Community Relations Director Any technical questions regarding this website should be directed to Tina M. Streeter, Webmaster Free DHTML scripts provided by DESOTO COUNTY ATHLETICS Quick Menu to School Web Sites Choose One Center Hill Elementary Chickasaw Elementary Desoto Central Elementary Desoto Central High Desoto Central Middle DeSoto County Career Tech DeSoto County Alternative Center Greenbrook Elementary Hernando Elementary Hernando High Hernando Middle Horn Lake Elementary Horn Lake High Horn Lake Intermediate Horn Lake Middle Lewisburg Elementary Oak Grove Central Elementary

54. NO CHILD LEFT BEHIND
general Info Administrator Info School Info Departmental Info Resources The School Performance Classifications for the mississippi School Accountability
http://www.desoto.k12.ms.us/nclb.htm
Milton Kuykendall, Superintendent 5 East South Street
Hernando, MS 38632
Phone: 662-429-5271
Fax: 662-429-4198 Navigation Menu Home General Info
Administrator Info

School Info
...
Resources

DESOTO COUNTY SCHOOL
DISTRICT DOES NOT DISCRIMINATE
ON THE BASIS OF RACE, GENDER,
RELIGION, OR HANDICAPPING CONDITIONS AND IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER.
This site was last updated 08/11/2005 02:13 PM For general information about DeSoto County Schools, please contact Riki Jackson, Community Relations Director Any technical questions regarding this website should be directed to Tina M. Streeter, Webmaster Does Your Child Have a Known Food Allergy? Click Here to Tell Us About It! Quick Menu to School Web Sites: Choose One Center Hill Elementary Chickasaw Elementary Desoto Central Elementary Desoto Central High Desoto Central Middle DeSoto County Alternative Center DeSoto County Career Tech Greenbrook Elementary Hernando Elementary Hernando High Hernando Middle Horn Lake Elementary Horn Lake High Horn Lake Intermediate Horn Lake Middle Oak Grove Central Elementary Olive Branch Elementary Olive Branch High Olive Branch Intermediate Olive Branch Middle Pleasant Hill Elementary Shadow Oaks Elementary Southaven Elementary Southaven High Southaven Middle Sullivan Elementary Walls Elementary DeSoto County Schools No Child Left Behind Act District Accreditation School Performance Student Assessment More Information In the new accreditation model, public school accreditation is two-fold:

55. America Reads Mississippi
general Program Information. Performance Measures. Recruitment AmericaReadsmississippi is dedicated to improving the reading skills of students,
http://www.americareadsms.org/general.asp

Home
General Program Information
Performance Measures
Recruitment
ARM University and
School Partners
Contacting Program Staff
Frequently Asked Questions
Links
America Reads-Mississippi is dedicated to improving the reading skills of students, encouraging public awareness and support of literacy, and helping to increase the number of certified teachers in Mississippi. -ARM Mission Statement America Reads Mississippi
Established in 1998, America Reads - Mississippi (ARM) is an AmeriCorps program administered through the Academic Affairs Office of the Mississippi Institutions of Higher Learning. ARM began with 200 full-time AmeriCorps members, partnered with two Universities, Delta State University (DSU) AND Mississippi State University (MSU), and included 18 school districts and 29 school partners. For the 2004-2005 Program Year, we are 270 members strong, serve in 53 school sites across the state, and have four University partners, Alcorn State University (ASU), Delta State University (DSU), Jackson State University (JSU), and Mississippi State University (MSU). Other major partners include the Barksdale Reading Institute, Head Start, the Mississippi Commission for Volunteer Service, the Mississippi Department of Education, the Mississippi Emergency Managment Agency, and the Mississippi Red Cross. America Reads - Mississippi addresses the AmeriCorps issue area of education. AmeriCorps teams at school sites tutor children full-time one-on-one and in small groups during the school day, before and after school, over school breaks, and in the summer. Additionally, members recruit community volunteers to assist with reading activities, implement literacy related community service projects in conjunction with the four statewide national service days: Make a Difference Day, Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, Read Across America Day, and National Youth Service Day, and coordinate Homeland Security and Citizenship activities and workshops.

56. GENERAL INFORMATION
LOCATION Located in central mississippi, Canton is 20 miles north of the A general hospital containing 67 private rooms. Services provided at the
http://www.canton-mississippi.com/community information/community_information.ht
Click here to download this information in PDF format. GENERAL INFORMATION AREA : Canton: 22.3 square miles Madison County: 717 square miles CLIMATE The area enjoys complete seasonal cycles with pleasant spring and fall seasons. Winter months are mild with cold spells of short duration. Summer months are quite warm. The mean annual temperature is 65.6 degrees. Average annual rainfall is 52.07 inches. LOCATION Located in central Mississippi, Canton is 20 miles north of the capital city of Jackson, MS. It is a lively self-sufficient community in the metro area. US Highways 51, 16, 22 and 43 intersect in Canton. Canton is located at north exit 124 and south exit 119 of Interstate 55. POPULATION IN 2000: Canton Madison County MEDIA NEWSPAPERS Madison County Herald (Weekly)
670 Highway 51, Suite C
Ridgeland, MS 39157
Clarion-Ledger (Daily)
P. O. Box 23067
Jackson, MS 39225-3067
Madison County Journal (Weekly)
105 Central Avenue
P.O. Box 219
Ridgeland, MS 39158
RADIO STATIONS TELEVISION WMGO 1370 AM WJTV Channel 12 WAPT Channel 16 WLBT Channel 03 WONG 1150 AM WDBD Channel 40 ETV Channel 29 SALES TAX : Canton like the state of Mississippi, has a seven percent (7%) sales tax on retail purchases. Canton adds a two percent (2%) tax on lodging and restaurants for tourism promotion.

57. MISSISSIPI GULAG - Report By Ralph F. Boyd, Jr., Assistant Attorney General Subm
In addition, both facilities fail to provide required general education Oakley Training School, also known as the mississippi Youth Correctional Complex
http://www.nospank.net/msgulag.htm
A MISSISSIPPI GULAG U.S. Assistant Attorney General Ralph Boyd's report on the youth training schools in Raymond and Columbia Mississippi evokes images of prisoner-of-war camps at their worst, but with this distinction: sadistic POW camp guards don't misrepresent themselves as agents of rehabilitation. In that setting, the rules of the game are clear to all parties: the torturers and the tortured know exactly where they stand. To the reader who thinks I am overstating the case, I ask you to withhold judgement until you have read Boyd's report. Boyd describes a system out of control. He describes acts that even the most credulous observer could not deem rehabilitative, let alone safe. If those same acts were perpetrated against adults, prosecutions and convictions would surely result. And woe to any teenager who subjects an adult to even a small fraction of what the kids at these facilities endure daily. Because the victims are adjudicated juveniles, they are apparently disqualified for the normal protections of civilized society. Don't be misled by those who will tell you that the two Mississippi training schools are anomalies. They are standard. They are emblematic of the break-'em-down-build-'em-up theory of youth rehabilitation which every true educator knows is neither educational nor therapeutic. It's obedience training and brainwashing. These facilities were just as rotten last year when nobody was looking, and they are no worse than many other similar institutions elsewhere.

58. BusinessSchools.com - The Business School & Program Directory - Business Schools
mississippi College, School of Business, MBA Program University of mississippi,School of Business Administration
http://www.businessschools.com/cgi-bin/schools/search.cgi?data_file=data&match_l

59. Tobacco Use Common Among Mississippi School Athletes, Study Says
Tobacco use common among mississippi school athletes, study says during the83rd general Session of the International Association for Dental Research.
http://www.newstarget.com/005772.html
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60. MS General Educational Development
Test Centers in mississippi (*Call for Testing Schedule) Jones CountySchoolsPine Belt Education Center, Blackledge, Mary Jo, (601) 649-4141. Address
http://sbcjcweb.sbcjc.cc.ms.us/adulted/ged/listing.asp
State Board GENERAL EDUCATIONAL DEVELOPMENT - (GED) GED Main Site About GED Program Test Centers Test Center by County
Adams Calhoun Coahoma Copiah Forrest Greene Grenada Harrison Hinds Holmes Jefferson Jefferson Davis Jones Lauderdale Layfayette Lee LeFlore Lincoln Lowndes Marion Marshall Newton Oktibbeha Panola Pearl River Pike Prentiss Rankin Sunflower Tate Tishomingo Tunica Washington Administration Site MORE INFORMATION State Board Adult Basic Education Contact Us
Call 1-888-4-ABEGED
Test Centers in Mississippi (*Call for Testing Schedule) Test Center Examiner Telephone Alcorn State University Thompson, Valerie Address PO Box 599
Lorman, MS 39096 Test Center Examiner Telephone Calhoun County Schools Carnaggio, Judy Address PO Box 58
Pittsboro, MS 38951 Test Center Examiner Telephone Coahoma Community College Robinson, Linda Address 3240 Friars Point Rd
Clarksdale, MS 38614 Test Center Examiner Telephone Copiah-Lincoln Community College Posey, Jeff Address PO Box 649
Wesson, MS 39191 Test Center Examiner Telephone East Central Community College Dempsey, Jimmy Address PO Box 129
Decatur, MS 39327

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