Jones College receives 6th TAP Grant from MDOT for sidewalks and lighting

ELLISVILLE – Southern District Transportation Commissioner, Charles Busby hand delivered a check to Jones College President, Dr. Jesse Smith and Assistant to the President for Facilities Management, Michael Bradshaw to begin a sixth project using the federal Transportation Alternative Program grant funds which are administered through the Mississippi Department of Transportation. Phase two of the Stadium Circle Sidewalk Improvement project will provide 1,100 feet of sidewalk pathways and lighting from the Home and Health Services Building, along The Community Bank Park Baseball and Softball fields, to the Industrial Services Center parking lot.

“This project will provide walking paths with lighting alongside the athletic fields, making it safer for students and the public to access the stadiums,” said Commissioner Busby. “We have to take applications for these projects, so it is very important to me that they be properly executed, and Jones College has a great track record. The quality of the application packet gives me confidence that this project is going to be as successful as the others.”

Jones College President, Dr. Jesse Smith (left) and Michael Bradshaw (right) President for Facilities Management receive the letter of approval and a check from Southern District Transportation Commissioner, Charles Busby (right), releasing TAP Grant funds to the college to use for the second phase of the Stadium Circle Sidewalk Improvement project on campus, near the athletic fields.

The total cost of the second phase of the project is $665,821 with $540,000 coming from federal funds and Jones College matching the remaining 20% of the total amount. In addition to adding the sidewalks, which will be ADA compliant, the improvements will enhance connectivity between the surrounding buildings and recreational facilities on the south side of Jones College’s campus, allowing for safe travel across the streets from the dorms and stadiums.

“The TAP Grant program helps us leverage those available funds with the help of Transportation Commissioner Busby,” said Jones College President, Dr. Jesse Smith. “We’re thankful Commissioner Busby hand delivered the check and informed us we met the rigid protocols required to receive these funds.”

Phase one of the Stadium Circle Sidewalk Improvements from Smith Hall to the Sim Cooley/Bobcat Football Stadium should begin this summer with the second phase of construction beginning in the summer of 2025. Jones College was awarded the first TAP Grant to close the heavily traveled road in front of the C.L. Neill Student Center and Cafeteria to create the Pedestrian Plaza in 2017. The second and third TAP grants extended the Plaza to include Dan Jones North and South, and College Drive, east in front of the A.B. Howard Gymnasium. The Soccer Pathway Project, which was completed in 2023, was created using funds from the fourth TAP grant secured by the college.

JC hosts MCTM Jr. H.S. Math Competition

ELLISVILLE – Jones College’s Math department along with the Mississippi Council of Teachers of Mathematics recently sponsored the district level MCTM Math Contest for Jr. High School students. Twenty-eight students from seven Pine Belt area schools spent the morning working out various math problems to earn a spot at the state competition. The following winners of the regional competition will meet at the Mississippi School for Math and Science in Columbus, on April 6, to compete on a state level.

Leakesville seventh grader, Isabella Dobbins took first place with Seminary’s Tyson Breazeale earning second-place honors. Eighth-grader, Cameron Taylor of Northeast Jones won first place and Piper James from Leakesville achieved second place. All of the participants received a certificate with eighth graders also receiving a calculator from Texas Instruments.

Jones College’s Clarke County Center offering new programs; CNA & Phlebotomy

ELLISVILLE –Jones College’s Clarke County Center in Stonewall has added two new workforce programs this spring to its already growing number of programs offered to the region. Area healthcare clinics and hospitals have asked Clarke County Center Dean, Reggie Richardson to offer the healthcare related programs, Certified Nursing Assistant and Phlebotomy because of the increasing need.

“We have a good number of medical clinics, hospitals, nursing homes and assisted living facilities located in Clarke, Lauderdale, and other surrounding counties. This region has plenty of medical facilities in need of certified medical professionals who are willing to serve our community. This is why the Clarke County Center in Stonewall is now offering CNA and Phlebotomy classes to aid in this great opportunity,” said Richardson.

The Certified Nursing Assistant program combines classroom instruction and lab work, along with clinical practice. During the course, the legal and safety aspects of the healthcare industry, communication and observation skills, medical terminology and basic healthcare procedures commonly required for long-term care patients will be emphasized. Upon completion of the 10-week course, successful candidates will be qualified to work in long term facilities like nursing homes with starting hourly wages ranging from $13-$20 an hour depending on place of employment. Additionally, the graduates of this CNA course are prepared for the NNAAP Exam.

The Phlebotomy course is a seven-week workforce training program offered with day and night class options available. Phlebotomists work in medical facilities including blood banks, like Vitalant, and labs like LabCorp. These professionals prepare individuals to collect blood specimens for clinical laboratories. During the course, students will learn legal and safety aspects of the healthcare industry, medical terminology and basic healthcare procedures preparing graduates for national certification. A phlebotomist’s salary ranges from $13-$20 an hour depending on place of employment.

Vitalant Blood Services Phlebotomist, Jaylin Bouie (middle) works with Jones College students during a recent blood drive on campus.

For more information about Certified Nursing Assistant or Phlebotomy contact the Jones College, Clarke County Center by phone 601-477-4835 or 601-659-0622, by emailing student navigator, Jessica Wood at jessica.wood@jcjc.edu or by visiting the website, https://www.jcjc.edu/workforce/locations/clarke-campus/

Jones College’s music department hosts Spring Recital Series

ELLISVILLE – This year’s Spring Recital Series will fill the air with a variety of music for four weeks in March and April on the Jones College campus. The musical “feast,” featuring musicians from the region and music from around the world and composed centuries ago, can be heard on Fridays in the Foote Chapel on the campus of Jones College in Ellisville. The annual Spring Recital Series begins on Friday, March 22, at 12:30 p.m. until 1 p.m., and will continue each Friday through April 19, except for Good Friday/Easter weekend. All concerts are free and open to the public.  For more information call the JC Fine Arts Department at 601-477-4203 or online at https://www.facebook.com/JCJCFineArts/

On Friday, March 22, at 12:30 p.m. in theFoote Chapel, the Series opens with, “Songs of Love, Light, and Spring,” featuring soprano, Susan Ruggiero-Mezzadri and Brian Murphy as her piano accompanist. This delightful recital features music by George Frideric Handel, Gioachino Rossini, and Florence Price and will include well-loved soprano arias as well as lesser-known music about spring by Heitor Villa-Lobos. The program will also include a premier of a new work by American composer Luigi Zaninelli called, “Spring Song.”

Susan Ruggiero

Susan Ruggiero, Associate Professor of music at William Carey University, has performed as a principal artist with New Orleans Opera, Mississippi Opera, Kentucky Opera, Natchez Opera, Opera South, Wildwood Opera, Blue Lake Opera, and Opéra Louisiane. She is the recipient of numerous honors including Shreveport Opera’s Singer of the Year Competition (First Place), the Mozart Award in the National Orpheus Vocal Competition, two-time District Winner in the Metropolitan Opera National Council Auditions, and a Tanglewood Fellowship. Her accompanist, Brian Murphy is active as a soloist, collaborative pianist, vocal coach, and pedagogue. He has performed as a soloist and as a collaborative pianist, presenting masterclasses across the United States, Mexico, Chile, Germany, and Italy. Murphy is on faculty at William Carey University in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, where he teaches applied piano, piano-related classes and music history, as well as collaborates with singers, instrumentalists, choral ensembles, and Carey

Opera. In recognition of his teaching, Brian has been awarded four Top Music Teacher awards by Steinway and Sons.

The Friday, April 5, at 12:30 p.m. recital in the Foote Chapel, features theImpromptu Piano Trio with Borislava Iltcheva on violin, Alexander Russakovsky on cello and Theresa Sanchez playing piano. This trio has been performing together for a number of years and is featured on the Mississippi Arts Commission Touring Artist Roster.  Their program this year includes beautiful trios by Mozart and the Spanish composer, Joaquin Turina.

Theresa Sanchez, Borislava Iltcheva and Alexander Russakovsky

Borislava Iltcheva started playing the violin at age of five, earning a bachelor’s degree from the Bulgarian National Academy, and master’s and doctorate degrees in violin performance from Louisiana State University. Her principal violin teachers include Alexander Iltchev, Evgenia Maria Popova, Kevork Mardirossian and Mauricio Fuks. Borislava holds prizes from several National and International Competitions and has an active schedule as a soloist and chamber musician. She is currently an Assistant Professor of Violin at USM.

A graduate of Yale University and the University of Santa Barbara, Alexander Russakovsky has appeared in numerous solo and chamber music performances in Russia, Israel, Europe and the United States. A founding member of the Jerusalem Academy String Quartet, he also performed in the Chamber Music Series of the Spoleto Festival in Italy, the Barge Music in New York City, and the Western Slope Music Festival in Colorado. In the fall of 2001, Dr. Russakovsky joined the music faculty of the University of Southern Mississippi in Hattiesburg.

Pianist Theresa Sanchez pursues a varied performing career as a soloist and collaborative musician. She has performed as a soloist with the Mississippi Symphony Orchestra, the University of Southern Mississippi Symphony Orchestra (including the Southern Nights CD) and The Wind Ensemble. She has been a faculty member at Jones College since 1995 and is a past president of the Mississippi Music Teachers Association.  She currently serves as Classical and Chamber Music Coordinator for the Hattiesburg Concert Association and FestivalSouth and is listed on the Mississippi Arts Commission’s Touring Artist Roster. She has been named an MTNA Fellow in 2024 by the Music Teachers National Association.

A “youthful” and “brassy” program is next on the list of musical performances with the Southern Arts Brass Quintet’s program, on Friday, April 12, at 12:30 p.m. in the Foote Chapel. Their program will include music from Baroque composer Samuel Scheidt, as well as 20th century music and even a transcription of the popular, “You Make Me Feel So Young.” The quintet is comprised of trumpet players, T.J. Tesh and Rob Smith, Robert Detjen on horn with Ben McIlwain on trombone and Richard Perry playing tuba. The Southern Arts Brass Quintet is a faculty brass quintet in residence at the University of Southern Mississippi. Founded in 1972, the quintet has performed throughout Mississippi and the Southern United States. Members of the quintet are full-time artist faculty at USM.

Dr. T.J. Tesh is a Grammy-nominated trumpeter, Yamaha and Pickett Brass Performing Artist, and serves as Associate Professor of Trumpet at The University of Southern Mississippi. He relocated to Mississippi after an exciting career as a freelance trumpeter and music educator in the Los Angeles area. Dr. Tesh has enjoyed an eclectic performance career, having performed with music legends like Stevie Wonder, Natalie Cole, Quincy Jones, Gordon Goodwin’s Big Phat Band, and many others.

Rob Smith is a doctoral student at the University of Southern Mississippi School of Music. As a performer, Smith has appeared in various performance settings spanning several styles and genres from orchestral and chamber music to jazz, pop, and contemporary music. He has performed with such groups as the Meridian Symphony Orchestra, the Pensacola Symphony Orchestra, Reno Philharmonic Orchestra, the Reno Jazz Orchestra, and many more.

Rob Detjen is the Assistant Professor of Music for Horn at the University of Southern Mississippi. He grew up in Southeast Alaska and earned his DMA from the Conservatory of Music and Dance at the University of Missouri-Kansas City. Dr. Detjen is an active educator and performer and is currently serving as fourth horn of the Mississippi Symphony Orchestra and second horn of the Meridian Symphony Orchestra and Gulf Coast Symphony Orchestra.

An avid supporter of modern music, Dr. Ben McIlwain has commissioned and premiered over fifty works for trombone. A Performing Artist for S.E. Shires Trombones and Professor of Music at Southern Miss, he released his debut solo album, Indefatigable, with colleagues Ellen Elder and Jackie McIlwain in 2022. This album was named a Global Music Awards winner for Outstanding Achievement (Instrumentalist) in 2022.

Richard Perry is Associate Professor of Tuba and Euphonium at the University of Southern Mississippi, where he directs the tuba-euphonium ensemble and performs with the Southern Arts Brass Quintet. He was previously on the faculties of the University of Montevallo and Birmingham-Southern College. Dr. Perry’s primary interests are the tuba-euphonium ensemble, and the use of the tuba in jazz. He was one of the founding members of the Modern Jazz Tuba Project, a professional jazz tuba ensemble that released two critically acclaimed recordings (Live at the Bottom Line and Favorite Things).

A combination of French and Russian musical cuisine will be served up for the final event in the Spring Recital Series on Friday, April 19, at 12:30 p.m., in the Foote Chapel. The program, “Virtuosic Chamber Music: French and Russian Classics” will be performed by Kenneth Graves on clarinet, with Taylor Shorey on bassoon and accompanied by Tyler Kemp on piano. This musical delight includes two wonderful examples of chamber music works from the 19th and 20th Century, respectively, that showcases the virtuosity and beauty of these instruments. The program is a collaboration of several local professional musicians and teachers living in the Jackson area.

Kenneth Graves is the Principal Clarinet of the Mississippi Symphony Orchestra and Meridian Symphony Orchestra. Kenneth graduated from the College-Conservatory of Music at the University of Cincinnati where he studied with Richie Hawley. He also completed a Master of Music degree at the University of Southern California and additional post-graduate studies at the Colburn School where he studied with Yehuda Gilad. As a concerto soloist, he has performed with orchestras across the South including performances with the Alabama, Pensacola, and Baton Rouge Symphony Orchestras, and he has held fellowships at the Music Academy of the West, National Repertory Orchestra, and the National Orchestral Institute.

Taylor Shorey is the Principal Bassoonist of the Mississippi Symphony Orchestra and the Mississippi Symphony Wind Quintet. Prior to his time in Mississippi, Taylor performed regularly as a freelance musician from coast to coast, appearing with Orchestras throughout the Midwest, North Florida, Washington DC, Honolulu and Los Angeles metro areas. In his studies, Taylor attended Florida State University, The Colburn Conservatory, and the Cincinnati College- Conservatory of Music studying with Jeff Keesecker, Richard Beene, Martin Garcia and Christopher Sales respectively. During his time at the Colburn School Taylor attended the National Repertory Orchestra in Breckenridge Colorado, where he performed as a featured soloist with the orchestra.

Tyler Kemp is a pianist, collaborator, and music director based in Jackson. Known for artistry and creativity in a wide range of musical styles and genres, he is at home in classical, musical theatre, jazz, pop, and worship music. Kemp maintains an active performance calendar, works on the music faculty at Mississippi College, and he serves as worship director at Bellwether Church. He earned degrees in Piano Performance (B.M. and M.M.) from Mississippi College. 

Jones College’s spring Blood Drive exceeds goals

Mize sophomore JC student, David Garner donates blood.

ELLISVILLE – Jones College’s community-wide spring blood drive was a big success. Eighty-one units of blood was collected over two days, Monday, February 26, and on Tuesday, February 27. Students like Petal’s James Leggett gave for the first time while sophomore David Garner of Mize said he has donated blood in high school.

“I wasn’t planning on giving today but I met this lady out on the plaza, and she talked me into donating. This is really convenient having the mobile unit near the Student Center Plaza and the Student Union,” said Garner.

Nursing majors, William Dycus of Whistler and Britton Dunnam of Greene County are regular blood donors for similar reasons; they just want to help people. It was only the second time to donate for freshman Ashlynn Conerly from Columbia. However, her reasons were very similar in just wanting to give. These students along with faculty, staff and community members helped to exceed the goal for the blood drive, making coordinators very happy with the turnout.

Columbia’s Ashlynn Conerly and Phelbotomist Supervisor, Jasmine McSwain.

Dr. Benji Sessums, Jones College Blood Drive Coordinator, and EMT instructor said the overall goal for the two-day blood drive was 65 units of blood and to have 81 units was a nice surprise.  Vitalant’s Michelle Anderson-Jones said she attributes the success of the blood drive to the “Jones Magic.” Two Mobile Blood Units were used over the two-day blood drive located in different locations across campus. Every donor received a T-shirt and was eligible for Door Prizes.