Area junior and high school students will have the opportunity to define their vision of the community and possibly win $100.
"My Community – My Vision for Where I Live" is a youth essay contest presented by the Community Foundation of East Mississippi, through a partnership with Mississippi State University's Writing/Thinking Institute and newspaper publications within the foundation's five-county service area – The Meridian Star, The Neshoba Democrat, The Newton Record, The Union Appeal, the Kemper Messenger and the Clarke County Tribune.
Roman Herrington, executive director of The Community Foundation, said young people have something to say.
"Children and youth have some very compelling ideas, things that they would like to say within this area," Herrington said. "This is our opportunity to give them a platform, a voice, to be able to share their ideas about the community."
Essays will be judged in two categories: senior (grades 10-12) and junior (grades 7-9). Prizes will be awarded in each age category; first prize winners will receive $100, second prize winners will receive $50, and third prize winners will receive $25. Essay winners will be recognized in the newspapers and a select few may also be chosen to read their work for Mississippi Public Radio’s Rural Voices Radio program.
In addition, the narratives of the students' thoughts, ideas and opinions about what our community looks like and what they would like for it to be will be included in an exhibit to be presented in the fall at the Meridian Museum of Art.
"We will compile the essays with an art program that will have a narrative side of what the community looks like from the perspective of a youngster, combined with the visual and artistic side of that same question," Herrington said.
The essay contest also will be combined with an arts mini-grant initiative to fund several organizations that work with youth this summer.
"This will provide additional funding for arts programs," Herrington said.
Established in 1984, the Community Foundation of East Mississippi is a nonprofit, charitable foundation that serves to encourage generosity in the communities of East Mississippi.
FYI
Official entry forms, which include all rules and eligibility requirements, must accompany each essay and can be obtained from the offices of participating newspapers or downloaded from the Community Foundation’s Web site at www.cfem.org/publications.php. Essays should be no longer than 1,000 words and must be submitted by April 11. Winners, who will be selected from a panel of judges, will be announced in May.
Local News
Youth to share vision of community through essay contest
- Local News
-
-
City cuts payment to Watkins
The Meridian City Council voted unanimously Tuesday to cut their monthly payment to David Watkins, project developer of Meridian's new police station, by $9,999 until work resumes on the project.
The order, made during the Meridian City Council meeting Tuesday morning, included a mutual agreement between the councilmen and Watkins to reduce the project developer's monthly consultant fee of $10,000 to $1, effective Tuesday. -
Crews work on gasoline pipeline
If you hear a loud, booming sound early today, between 4 a.m.-10 a.m., there is no cause for alarm.
Workers with Plantation Pipeline will be performing maintenance work on their 30-foot gasoline pipeline in the Meridian area to accommodate the widening of Highway 493. The location of the work activity will be at Highway 493 North and Oak Hill Baptist Church, just inside the city limits. -
Team Spirit
-
High Honor
The flowers and balloons Crestwood Elementary School Principal Kimberly Kendrick received at school Monday were not an early Valentines' Day gift.
Kendrick has been named Meridian Public School District's 2012 Administrator of the Year – an announcement that both surprised and wowed the 17-year veteran educator when made by MPSD Superintendent Dr. Alvin Taylor. -
Master Dance Class
-
Digital system promises better communication
Hopefully in the near future you won't hear someone in the emergency services ask over the radio, "Can you hear me now?"
A digital communications system, one which is being pushed by the Federal Communication Commission (FCC), is a few months away and, in some cases, is already in the testing phase in Lauderdale County. -
Inmate escapes custody
Mississippi Department of Corrections officials said Monday afternoon an inmate escaped from custody Friday and is still being sought.
Officials said Johnny Hall Jr. escaped from two Wilkinson County Correctional Facility officers’ custody while being escorted from his father’s wake at the Picayune Funeral Home in Picayune. Preliminary information indicates Hall left the officers and jumped into a waiting black vehicle with a white female driver. -
Citizen’s Police Academy begins today
The work law enforcement conducts on a daily basis is often misunderstood by the general public.
Officials at the Meridian Police Department developed a program to inform and educate citizens on what police do in serving and protecting the population. The program, The Citizen's Police Academy, has been gaining speed for a couple of years since it was first offered. Officials said it shows residents are interested in police work and how it is conducted. - Woman: decongestant brought meth charge in Alabama
-
Star Of The Week: Dominique Goodwin-Jenkins
- More Local News Headlines
-
City cuts payment to Watkins





