Looking for ways to stretch your education dollar? Look to Meridian Community College.
For the spring semester 2009, MCC will offer to part-time students (those enrolled in less than 12 semester credit hours) who signs up for a single three or four-hour class, to select a second class from a special list tuition free.
Classes available for the special “Two-for-One Scholarship” include these Meridian Naval Air Station classes: Principles of Accounting I, Art Appreciation, Legal Environment of Business, Computer Applications, Human Growth and Development, American Literature I and II, World Civilization I and II, Intermediate Algebra, College Algebra, Marriage and Family, Public Speaking.
Evening classes available include Principles of Accounting II, Principles of Biology II with Lab, Legal Environment of Business, General College Chemistry I with Lab, Computer Application I, Introduction to Corrections, Economics II, Human Growth and Development, English Composition I, English Composition II, World Literature II, Introduction to Geography, World Civilization I, World Civilization II, Fundamentals of Mathematics, Beginning Algebra, Intermediate Algebra, College Algebra, Trigonometry, Business Calculus, Real Number System, Spanish II, Music Appreciation, New Testament Survey, World Religions I, Physical Science II with Lab, American Federal Government, General Psychology, Introduction to Social Science, Introduction to Sociology, Basic Speech, Public Speaking, Theater Appreciation.
For more information about the two-for-one classes, contact MCC at 601-483-8241 or 1-800-MCC-The-One.
Local News
MCC offers ‘two for one’ scholarship
- 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





