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Old Posted Dec 20, 2023, 7:09 AM
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Grenada Sports Complex enjoys successful first year


The $6 million Kirk Auto Group Sports Complex opened for tournament play in March 2023 and played host to hundreds of games over the next nine months. | Photo by Adam Prestridge

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Officials have deemed the first seasons of tournament play at the new state-of-the-art Kirk Auto Group Sports Complex in Grenada a grand slam. Young athletes rounded the bases for the final time the weekend of Nov. 11, putting an exclamation point on a busy and successful inaugural year. Project Manager Ramey Ford is pleased with the multi-million dollar complex’s initial success
https://www.grenadastar.com/politics...&e_sort_order=
McComb gets a new sign


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Houston Gordon of Brookhaven Monument applies a fresh coat of paint to the lettering on one of two signs along Interstate 55 welcoming travelers to McComb on Thursday morning.
https://www.enterprise-journal.com/t...&e_sort_order=
El Volcan Mexican Restaurant, Grill & Bar now open in Petal






Quote:
When Gustavo Martinez and his wife Maribel Angel moved from Veracruz, Mexico to Petal approximately 10 years ago, they had the idea to bring a taste of authentic Mexican food from their hometown to The Friendly City.

To that end, on November 27 the couple opened El Volcan Mexican Restaurant, Grill & Bar at 223 West Central Avenue, in the former Verona Italian Grill and Pizza Hit location.

“We’re just trying to do something to make the customers happy,” Martinez said. “We thought downtown Petal was a great place to start a business, in the center of town.

“We got here at a young age, and our only goal was to thrive here and reach the goals we wanted. We wanted to raise our kids in a healthier and more educated place, where they had the chance to (excel).”

As far as the restaurant’s menu, customers can expect to find grilled items such as steak with shrimp, fajitas, quesadillas and nachos. Express lunch and other lunch items include carnitas plates, enchilada plates, tacos, chimichanga plates and other offerings.

Express lunch and regular lunch are both served from 10:30 a.m.-3 p.m. each day.

The restaurant also offers combination plates – with a mix of burritos, quesadillas, rice, beans and other options – along with salads and vegetarian fare such as Pollo de Plancha and a vegetarian taco salad. Guests also can choose from a variety of appetizers, street tacos, sides, tortas and items, along with several dessert offerings.

“The food here is more authentic,” Martinez said. “It’s more driven from the side that we come from in Mexico.

“It’s more traditional to our hometown, so that’s why we wanted to bring this restaurant here, so people can try it out. It’s real, authentic food.”

Martinez said although El Volcan has only been open for less than a month, the response from the community has been overwhelming so far.

“They love the food,” he said. “It’s different from everywhere else, and especially the salsa with chips is really different from other places.

“It’s a different tase and seasoning.”

Operating hours for El Volcan are as follows:

From 10:30 a.m.-9 p.m. Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday; and
From 10:30 a.m.-10 p.m. Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday.
For more information, call (769) 223-6373 or visit the restaurant’s Facebook page at El Volcan Mexican Restaurant, Grill & Bar.
https://www.hubcityspokes.com/local-...e_term_id=2063
USM's Innovation Park now a multisue space in Hattiesburg

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HATTIESBURG, Miss. (WDAM) - The Hattiesburg City Council has passed an ordinance to re-zone USM’s Innovation and Commercialization Park.

The area has been under development for the past 10 years, and USM has partnered with several city organizations to make the area come to life.

The goal is for the area to serve as a space designed for businesses to establish themselves through collaboration and growth.

The Hattiesburg City Council voted to re-zone the land Tuesday night, making it available for a wide range of uses. The land originally was zoned as a residential area.

“This is a step to establish a master plan for that property that hopefully will help spur future development,” said Hattiesburg City Council President Jeffrey George. “It will guide what can and can’t be put out there and where those things need to go. So, if someone is interested in locating a business headquarters or a research and development facility or a residential-mixed use development, or even some light manufacturing operations, they now know where they can locate and what can be done out there.”

In 2022, the Mississippi Development Authority gave a 3.4 million dollar grant towards the project to help clear the land, build access roads and extend water and sewer systems for future buildings.

Economic Development Director of the Area Development Partnership Adam Schraeder has been working with USM on this project for several years and said that this will create a positive economic impact on the Hub City.

“The good thing is that they are going to keep a lot of natural aspects of Lake Sehoy on the south side, where the old golf course you used to be,” said Schraeder. “So, they’re going to keep a lot of the natural aspects intact and then they’re also going to have the development for the remaining 500 acres. So, we’re very excited to see this come to fruition after so many years.”

Developments in the area will still have to get the final approval from Hattiesburg City Council; however, George says this is the first step in making progress.

“We want to make sure we protect our neighborhoods with this growth and having this plan will allow us to do that,” George said.

Right now, there is no set time when more developments in the area will start.
https://www.wdam.com/2023/12/20/usms...lti-use-space/
Old Hwy. 80 bridge reopens in Meridian

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MERIDIAN, Miss. (WTOK) - The Old Highway 80 Bridge is now back open in Meridian.

The almost 100-year-old bridge reopens after construction began in January 2023.

Waggoner Engineering oversaw the design and planning while Joe Mcgee Construction was the primary contractor for the project.

Meridian Public Works Director David Hodge spoke to News 11 about why improving our infrastructure is so essential.

“Between 2,000 or 3,000 vehicles a day, I guess at some point there might have been 7,000 vehicles per day right here at Old Hwy. 80 across Okatibbee reservoir where we are right now. So, to get people where they want to go most efficiently without having to get on smaller roads and cause gridlock this is an important venue or an important road to get back open again. We’re very excited,” said Hodge.

The new bridge cost just over 3.5 million dollars with most of those funds coming from the Mississippi Department of Transportation’s Emergency Road and Bridge Repair Fund.

Hodge said the city plans to make improvements to Grand Avenue Bridge in 2024.
https://www.wtok.com/2023/12/19/old-...pens-meridian/
Guaranty Bank launches construction of new full-service office in Ridgeland


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A new chapter in banking convenience and innovation is unfolding in Ridgeland, Mississippi, with the groundbreaking of Guaranty Bank’s latest project. Located strategically at 405 West Parkway Place, off Highland Colony Parkway, this new build-out marks a significant expansion of the bank’s presence in the area. On the morning of Dec. 6, the Ridgeland Chamber of Commerce, Madison Coun...
https://www.grenadastar.com/business...&e_sort_order=
Chipotle to open in Pearl on Thursday



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PEARL, Miss. (WLBT) - Chipotle’s first location in Pearl is set to open on Thursday, December 21.

The restaurant is located at 5718 Hwy 80 E, Pearl, MS 39208, and will be open every day from 10:45 a.m. - 10:00 p.m.

According to a press release, the restaurant will feature the brand’s signature “Chipotlane,” a drive-thru pickup lane that allows guests to conveniently pick up digital orders without leaving their cars.
https://www.wlbt.com/2023/12/19/chip...earl-thursday/

Last edited by vetteking; Dec 20, 2023 at 11:41 AM.
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  #342  
Old Posted Dec 20, 2023, 11:42 AM
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Updated last post with news about new restaurant coming to Pearl
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Old Posted Dec 21, 2023, 9:06 AM
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Madison County Schools break ground on new $6 million tennis complex. See when it opens


Madison County Schools officials and employees break ground on the new Madison County Schools Tennis Complex in Madison, Miss., on Wednesday, Dec. 20, 2023.
Kathy Matheny/Special to the Clarion Ledger



Quote:
Madison County Schools is adding something new for fall 2024 — a tennis complex.

The complex will serve all schools in the Madison County Schools district. The $6 million project will include 12 lighted tennis courts, a concession stand, restrooms and changing rooms. Wier Boerner Allin Architecture and Probity Contracting Group partnered with the school district to bring the vision to life.

On Wednesday morning, staff and board members gathered alongside students for a groundbreaking ceremony on the construction site, which sits directly adjacent to Rosa Scott School.

Dressed in their team sweatshirts, the students represented tennis teams from all four Madison County Schools Districts: Germantown High, Madison Central High, Ridgeland High and Velma Jackson High. Mayor Mary Hawkins-Butler was also in attendance.


Rendering of the Madison County Schools tennis complex set to open in fall 2024. Courtesy of Gene Wright

Tennis season for the student athletes starts up in February, so they will have to wait until next season to enjoy practices on the new courts.

The complex will be the first of its kind for Madison County Schools. Currently, tennis teams rent out various courts around the county and in Jackson.

Sam Kelly, president of the Madison County Board of Education, said this tennis complex is a great representation of what Madison County Schools has to offer its local population.

“We’re fortunate to be able to (build this complex) because whatever your interest is, we’ve got something for you to do,” Kelly said.

Ted Poore, who will take over Charlotte Seal's role as Madison County Schools superintendent in July 2024, said he hopes the new facility will become home to state championships, which are currently held in various places such as Oxford and Vicksburg, causing the students to travel for competitions.

“We think this is also going to be a great central location for being able to host tournaments,” Poore said.

The groundbreaking ceremony took place next to Poore’s Pass, the street leading to Rosa Scott. The street is named after Poore, who served as principal of Rosa Scott in the early 2000s.

“It’s scratching an itch that we’ve had for a while,” Poore said. “We’ve been at the mercy of the courts in the city. So, for practices and for matches, we really don’t have a home place to have a home match for tennis.”

The complex is part of a strategic plan with multiple goals aimed at strengthening Madison County Schools. A core goal involves investing in new buildings for student use. In Sept. 2023, the school district broke ground on a new performing arts center on Germantown High's campus.

Ken McCoy, a Madison County Board of Education member, played tennis at the former Madison-Ridgeland High School in the late '70s when Madison had a population around 2,000. McCoy and his classmates practiced on a concrete slab on which they painted lines and set up nets to create a makeshift court.

“Other than having a net, it was just raw concrete. If it rained, we didn’t get to play on it that much because it flooded it for about two or three days,” McCoy said.

McCoy, who has kids that went through Madison schools, doesn’t play tennis much anymore but said he’s excited for students to get this new opportunity, especially since many high school tennis players continue the sport into adulthood.

“It’s not like basketball or football where you leave it and you’re done. When you leave high school, this is a sport you can play,” McCoy said.

Poore said there is no immediate plan to open the courts to the public, but down the line, they may be available for general use. At the time of opening, the students and coaches will have priority over the complex.

At the ceremony's conclusion, board members and students lined up holding shovels decorated with multi-colored bows and officially “broke ground” on the new tennis complex. Construction trucks, which waited just out of view of the ceremony, moved in soon after to get to work.
https://www.clarionledger.com/story/...4/71963387007/
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  #344  
Old Posted Dec 22, 2023, 7:28 AM
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Originally Posted by vetteking View Post


Good morning fellow Mississippians, this holiday season please get in the giving spirit and please donate to the only community jazz station in the state of Mississippi, WJSU. Whatever you can will make a HUGE difference to make sure WJSU stays on our airwaves. Here is the link to donate whatever you can to WJSU 88.5 FM: https://fundraise.givesmart.com/form/r6y7iA?vid=1284m5
Just a friendly reminder to please donate to Jackson State’s WJSU. Your small or large contribution will go a long way to make sure WJSU 88.5 FM continues to provide great jazz music to the state of Mississippi and nationwide.
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Old Posted Dec 22, 2023, 11:56 AM
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Porsche dealership coming to Ridgeland

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RIDGELAND, Miss. (WLBT) - A new luxury car dealership is one step closer to opening in Ridgeland.

On Tuesday, the board of aldermen approved site plans for Porsche Ridgeland, which will be located on I-55 north of the Hyundai dealership.

“We’re really happy to see this come to fruition,” said Mayor Gene McGee. “It will add to our thriving business community.”

City officials are unsure when the dealership will break ground and still have not received construction plans for the project.

It’s unclear if Porsche is closing its location in Jackson. Officials with the dealership were not immediately available for comment.
https://www.wlbt.com/2023/12/21/pors...ing-ridgeland/
'Pack the Place': Public hearing scheduled over Lake Caroline Zoning Issue



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A resident who opposes a proposed convenience store at Lake Caroline thinks the public hearing that is scheduled next month will draw a crowd. “I expect we’ll pack the place,” said Bill Hardin, a Lake Caroline resident and a former director of planning and zoning for the city of Jackson. A public hearing about the zoning for the project is scheduled on Jan. 16 at 9 a.m. as part of the...
https://www.northsidesun.com/local-c...&e_sort_order=
MEDIA ADVISORY: Officials to cut ribbon on the recently completed East Metro Corridor TODAY



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WHO: Lt. Gov. Delbert Hosemann, Central Transportation Commissioner Willie Simmons, City of Brandon Mayor Butch Lee and other officials.



WHAT: Ribbon cutting ceremony.



WHERE: The ceremony will be held at the intersection of Burnham Rd., Old Brandon Rd. and Crossgates Blvd. in Brandon.



WHEN: Friday, December 22, 2023, at 10 a.m.



HOW: Officials will cut ribbon to celebrate the completion of Phase III of the East Metro Corridor (EMC). The EMC provides a vital north/south corridor connecting State Route 25 and U.S. Highway 80 in Rankin County. It was partially funded by the Mississippi Department of Transportation and the Federal Highway Administration.
https://mdot.ms.gov/portal/news_release_view/1724
OnDemand Specialty Vehicles opening facility in Jumpertown


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Medical transportation company creating 17 jobs
Expansion represents corporate investment of nearly $471,000
Jackson, Miss. (December 18, 2023) – Emergency medical transportation solutions company OnDemand Specialty Vehicles is locating its production operations in Jumpertown. This project is a $470,750 investment and will create 17 new jobs.

Headquartered in Knoxville, Tennessee, OnDemand Specialty Vehicles operates as a subsidiary of Priority OnDemand, a leading EMS and medical transportation provider. With a national service reach, OnDemand Specialty Vehicles specializes in delivering medical transportation solutions to municipalities, counties, hospitals and healthcare facilities.

Given Priority OnDemand’s annual demand for approximately 100 new ambulance units annually, OnDemand Specialty Vehicles is poised to become the primary production source for these units. The company has secured a lease and is upgrading a facility in Jumpertown, which will serve as a dedicated production site, ensuring timely delivery of essential medical transportation units to meet customer needs.

The Mississippi Development Authority is providing assistance through the Mississippi Flexible Tax Incentive, or MFLEX program.

OnDemand plans to begin production this fall.
https://mississippi.org/news/ondeman...in-jumpertown/
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Old Posted Dec 23, 2023, 12:23 AM
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Amerigo opens in Fondren December 28

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The upscale, casual neighborhood Italian restaurant, will officially open the doors to its newest location in Fondren on December 28. Marking its third location in the Greater Jackson area, the newest restaurant is located in the historic Duling School, just steps away from Saltine, a sister restaurant of Amerigo.

“It is with great pleasure that we welcome the Jackson community to our newest location in Fondren Place,” said David Conn, partner at 4Top Hospitality. “It’s only fitting that we open during the holidays, as our guests truly feel like family. For more than 35 years, Mississippians have made Amerigo a longstanding favorite in this community. We are thrilled to provide a comfortable space to gather and dine together this season and for many years to come.”

Located at 622 Duling Avenue, the 5,500-square-foot space features a dining room, bar area, private dining room, and patio. Menu offerings include Amerigo's traditional Italian fare for lunch, dinner, weekend brunch and daily early bird specials from 4-6 p.m. Catering and private dining events will be available to book in 2024. In addition to their 40+ international wines by the bottle, the beverage menu will feature classic cocktails with a twist, including the Prickly Bear Spritz, Morgan Martini, 1927 Slingback, Duling Margarita and Fondren 75.

Fondren Place is a mixed-use development in Fondren including Duling School and the adjoining businesses along Duling Avenue. Amerigo joins several other new restaurants and businesses that have opened in the development this year, as well as longtime neighborhood staple and sister restaurant, Saltine.

For more information on Amerigo Restaurant, hiring and reservations, visit www.amerigo.net.
https://www.visitjackson.com/blog/am...n-december-28/
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Old Posted Dec 23, 2023, 3:49 AM
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Rankin County leaders celebrate completion of East Metro Corridor
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BRANDON, Miss. (WJTV) – The city of Brandon opened the East Metro Corridor for travelers this morning.

Project officials from the City of Brandon, Flowood, Pearl, Jackson Municipal Airport Authority, Rankin County and state departments attended the ribbon-cutting ceremony for the completion of the East Metro Corridor project Friday morning.

The new roadway connects Mississippi Highway 25 to U.S. Highway 80. It was paid for through local, state and federal funding.

Brandon Mayor Butch Lee says he is happy to finally see this project completed.

“It was brought by hard work, dedication and commitment. So you had commitment from a lot of people to get this job done. And we got it done,” Lee said.

Mayor Lee says the city of Brandon has more plans to extend roadways going south.
https://www.wjtv.com/news/local-news...etro-corridor/
Rankin County Chamber of Commerce posted pictures from today's event on Facebook:



Quote:
✂️The Ribbon Cutting and opening of the East Metro Corridor ✂️
This road connects Brandon's HWY 80 to Lakeland Drive in Flowood. We are excited for this new Parkway, allowing easy access for shopping, school & work commute, and ect.! Go check it out!
https://www.facebook.com/RankinCount...YiLz7GvUdhJ2Al
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Old Posted Dec 23, 2023, 9:56 AM
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Sutherland Electric Inc post pictures of Urban Air Jackson updates as opening day nears

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sutherland_electric
•Jackson, Mississippi


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Getting closer on #urbanairadventurepark Start making your birthday and party plans, or just come play for the day and have fun! #sutherlandelectricinc
https://www.instagram.com/p/C1LPq08sqEJ/
I was unable to post the pictures from their instagram post but I will try again later
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Old Posted Dec 25, 2023, 10:41 AM
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Merry Christmas Mississippians!
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Old Posted Dec 27, 2023, 5:35 AM
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Here is some history you probably didn't know about Jackson. 16 WAPT News talks about Jackson's extinct volcano, during last year's celebration of Jackson turning 200 years old.

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The Capital Volcano - 200 Years of Jackson

A closer look at the extinct volcano right beneath our state's capital

JACKSON, Miss. —
This year Jackson, Mississippi celebrates her 200th birthday, and all throughout her bicentennial,16 WAPT takes you on journeys into her one of a kind history... starting with the prehistoric! Join 16 WAPT's Adam McWilliams as he explores Jackson's extinct volcano; one sitting just below our state capital.


Photographed By Mark Hilton, May 14, 2019

So how does this extinct volcano still have an impact on our water, our roads, our foundations, and our future? Check out this week's episode to find out!
https://www.wapt.com/article/the-cap...kson/39108747#
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Old Posted Dec 27, 2023, 12:31 PM
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B&B Theatres grand opening at Northpark

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RIDGELAND, Miss. (WJTV) – Northpark and B&B Theatres are pleased to announce the freshly renovated Ridgeland Northpark 14 theater, will reopen to the public on September 3.

The theatre has undergone a multi-million dollar renovation including the installation of fully reclining, heated, electric leathers seats in all auditoriums, providing guests with unparalleled levels of luxury and comfort.

The Ridgeland location marks the company’s second theater property in Mississippi, and additional expansion, remodel, and new build plans are in place across the B&B circuit.

B&B Theatres is the 6th largest theatre chain in North America based on screen count and, with the addition of Ridgeland, operates 414 screens at 50 locations in Kansas, Iowa, Florida, South Carolina, Missouri, Mississippi, Oklahoma, and Texas.

To learn more about B&B Theatres, visit https://www.bbtheatres.com.
https://www.wjtv.com/news/bb-theatre...0September%203.
More coverage of Renovated Northpark theatre



Quote:
RIDGELAND — The newly-renovated B&B Theatres Ridgeland Northpark 14 opened today bursting with new features and six different movie-watching experiences.

The theater, located at 250 Ring Road in Ridgeland behind Northpark mall, reopened to the public on Sept. 3 after lying dormant for some time.

Christy Pender, the marketing and business development manager at Northpark, said that the Ridgeland location marks the company’s second theater property in Mississippi, and additional expansion, remodel, and new build plans are in place across the B&B circuit.

The theater has been flagged by Ridgeland officials as a good sign that the city can maintain growth despite challenges imposed by the COVID-19 pandemic. Alderma-at-Large D.I. Smith has said that the theater and other developments were reason to be optimistic moving forward.

“I think we are in a positive place and hope our businesses can stay open,” Smith said. “I think that new theater at Northpark and so many other positive developments are a good sign for the city. I hope and pray they are allowed to continue.”

Mayor Gene F. McGee said he looked forward to going to the movies again.

“I look forward to seeing you at the ribbon-cutting Thursday,” He told Shawn Cochran, Northpark General Manager after he spoke at a public hearing the city board held Tuesday.

The theater has undergone a comprehensive, full-scale, multi-million dollar renovation including the installation of fully reclining, heated, electric leather seats in all auditoriums. Pender said that the concession stand has been totally revitalized and updated with digital menu boards, countertops, and cabinets, and the restrooms overhauled and completely refinished.

Pender says the company offers six distinct movie watching experiences including two of the theater chains “grand screens” and MX4D, “the next evolution in cinema entertainment.”

MX4D features motion seats that move in sync with the onscreen action plus wind, rain, scent, smoke, strobe, and snow effects.

Finally, the theater is also home to ScreenX, the world’s first multi-projection cinematic platform.

“This remarkable technology produces crisp 4k presentation not just on the massive screen wall in front of the theater, but on the two auditorium sidewalls, creating a breathtaking 270-degree viewing window,” Pender said.

Ridgeland is also home to B&B’s LYRIC theater concept, a smaller and more intimate auditorium designed as a rentable venue for private events as well as a children’s auditorium with a playground area aimed at children ages three to eleven. Family movies shown in this auditorium will also feature a custom preshow that plays during the 30 minutes of playtime that precede a family-friendly feature.
https://onlinemadison.com/stories/re...now-open,32287
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Old Posted Dec 28, 2023, 7:21 AM
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Mississippi investing nearly $17 million in site development

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Jackson, Miss. (Dec. 27, 2023) – Governor Tate Reeves today announced the state of Mississippi is investing nearly $17 million in site development grants to further develop industrial sites throughout the state. The proposed projects represent Governor Reeves’ continuing commitment to attracting more opportunities for business development. The funding for these projects is being made available through the Mississippi Development Authority.

“Last year we brought in a record amount of new economic development, and these grants will help to continue Mississippi’s momentum,” said Governor Reeves. “These long-term investments are designed to create ideal opportunities where companies will find shovel-ready sites on which to build, grow and expand. This is key to our strategy of bringing more higher-paying jobs to local communities.”

MDA is committing $16,859,893.19 in Site Development Grant – Select Sites funding. Created in 2021, the Select Sites program was designed to increase the number of highly competitive industrial sites available to meet the needs of prospective companies. Greenville, South Carolina-based Strategic Development Group was contracted by the state’s electric utilities to evaluate 32 of its top publicly owned industrial sites. Of these sites, the following are being invited to apply for Select Sites funding, based on current funding availability:

Select Sites

Business and Technology Park North – Grenada County – $4,356,576 for grading at the park’s 200-acre rail-served site

Pearl River County Industrial Park – Pearl River County – $1,350,000 to extend the turn lane into the industrial park

I-59 Supply Chain Park – Forest/Jones County – $2,340,924.19 to construct a secondary access road into the park

Mississippi Gulf Coast Aerospace Center at Gulfport-Biloxi International Airport – Harrison County – $50,000 to complete the master plan for the 240-acre site

I-59 South Industrial Site – Jones County – $881,350 to extend an all-weather access road and clear and grub additional acreage

Marion County AirPlex/IndustryPlex – Marion County – $420,000 to complete a master plan at the 2,000-acre site

Chickasaw Trail Industrial Park (Curl and Stamps Sites) – Marshall County – $1,113,853 to extend water and sewer lines and complete wastewater system improvements

Eagle One Mega Site – Forest/Jones County – $360,000 to identify conceptual treatment and disposal technologies to increase wastewater capacity at the site

East Metro Center (EMC) Industrial Park (EMC Rail Site) – Rankin County – $709,410 to complete a master plan, conduct pre-engineering work to extend water and wastewater lines, update environmental due diligence, conduct an ALTA survey and install signage.

I-20/I-59 Industrial Park – Lauderdale County – $685,800 for access road improvements

Martintown North – Union County – $1,623,600 for construction of an on-site elevated water tower and an underground electrical line

NorthStar Industrial Park – Oktibbeha County – $2,518,380 to construct a 200,000-square-foot building pad

Port Bienville Site #1 – Hancock County – $450,000 for a wastewater capacity study and pre-engineering to increase wastewater capacity

“These sites represent opportunities to strengthen the foundation of Mississippi’s business infrastructure and demonstrate how attractive Mississippi continues to be for new and growing companies,” said MDA Executive Director Bill Cork. “The Site Development Grant Program is an important part of the growing portfolio of advantages that make Mississippi an ideal place for business.”
https://mississippi.org/news/mississ...e-development/
Porsche, Volvo dealership plans OK’d

Quote:
RIDGELAND — Porsche and Volvo are moving to the suburbs.

A 13,040-square-foot Porsche dealership is slated for the I-55 frontage road and moved one step closer to becoming a reality following city board approval of the site plans last week.

Mayor Gene F. McGee said he was “excited” to see such a high-quality dealership and attractive facility come to Ridgeland.

Plans for the development show plans for future neighboring dealerships including Volvo. Plans show electric car charging stations and 138 parking spaces, three of which are handicapped.

The dealership expects to employ as many as 16 people.

Aldermen approved the plans 6-0 on the consent agenda. Ward 3 Alderman Kevin Holder was absent.

Previously the item received unanimous approval from the city’s Architectural Review Board.

Carlock Auto Group owns the Porsche and Volvo dealerships and has 24 brands across Tennessee, Mississippi, Alabama, and beyond, according to their website.

Porsche and Volvo are currently located at 5385 Interstate 55 North Frontage Road in Jackson.
https://onlinemadison.com/stories/po...ans-okd,91406?
Shutdown of Natchez cannabis testing lab based on anonymous tip forces closure of about 70 percent of state’s dispensaries



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NATCHEZ — The Mississippi State Department of Health has shut down the operations of a Natchez cannabis testing facility — one of only two in the state — based on an anonymous tip. Natchez resident Mamie Henry, whose company, Missla LLC, is majority owner of Rapid Analytics of 131 Jeff Davis Blvd. Suite C, said the company received an email from the state department that oversees medical marijuana on Wednesday of last week, telling them to “cease and desist” operations. In addition, none of the medical dispensaries whose cannabis was tested by Rapid Analytics of Natchez can sell any of those products.

After receiving the email from the state official, Henry said, “I called everybody I possibly could and finally got someone on the phone and was told that the state received an anonymous tip that we weren’t testing properly.” A statement on the Mississippi State Department of Health website dated Dec. 21 does not mention Rapid Analytics, but reads the an administrative hold has been placed on “a large number of medical cannabis products until retesting can be conducted to ensure that various products meet regulatory standards. The Mississippi Medical Cannabis Program is taking swift action to address the situation, with retesting being done as quickly as possible.” Henry said 70 percent of all of the cannabis products sold in Mississippi are tested by Rapid Analytics.

“They sent out a notice to all dispensaries and manufacturers telling them that all of the products tested by our lab are all quarantined,” Henry said. “That has put these people out of business. There are a lot of mom and pop dispensaries who won’t survive this.” On Nov. 18, 2022, the state gave its approval to Rapid Analytics here as a cannabis testing facility. Dr. Jeff Keller, Ph.D., is the company’s founder and was majority owner. Henry’s company has since bought majority ownership in the Rapid Analytics, but Keller is still a partner and minority owner, she said. Keller is also the director of the Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center at Pennington Biomedical in Baton Rouge. He continues to direct all scientific operations at Rapid Analytics. Henry’s company manages the business operations of the facility, she said.

“We had a meeting with them (state officials) on Wednesday after we received the email, and they told us the way we were reporting the testing of pesticides is different than what we said we were going to do when we got our license,” Henry said “Our scientists explained how we are doing it is much more detailed because we don’t want to just be accredited by the state, but we want to be federally accredited, and this is what is required for federal accreditation. “In the meantime, we have heard nothing from them since Wednesday. They are corresponding with all of the growers and sellers who do business with us, but are not copying us,” she said. As for disturbing, Henry said, is the state has now contracted with Rapid Analytics’ only competitor in the state — Steep Hill Mississippi of Jackson — to test products from companies currently doing business with Rapid Analytics. “What are they testing? We have offered to get to them the samples we have from the products we tested, but they have not responded to that. They would test those samples for free. But instead, they are paying our competitor to test, but they aren’t retesting the samples that we have already tested. That’s not an apples to apples comparison,” Henry said. “We just had a week-long audit by the state in August and passed it with flying colors. We are not doing anything differently now than we were doing then,” she said. “This is a fragile industry. It’s just starting up in Mississippi, and they make a knee-jerk decision to shut us down without anything other than an anonymous tip? Our lab still has its samples on everything we have tested and we have been retesting everything since Wednesday. Meanwhile, the state is not communicating with us, but is working with and paying out only competitor in the state. “We have urged the state to meet with us, but they have told us the earliest opportunity for that is 3 p.m. on Thursday. In the meantime, they are speaking to everyone in the industry, except us — all based on an anonymous tip,” Henry said. No one answered the phone at the contact number for the State Department of Health’s Medical Cannabis Program. A recording said the office was closed late Tuesday morning.

https://www.natchezdemocrat.com/2023...-dispensaries/
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KJ's Chicken Shack: Former owners of The Store open Baldwyn chicken joint








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BALDWYN – For years, Shawn Maynor woke up six days a week around 2 a.m. to fix breakfast, followed by lunch later in the morning.

All that food wasn't for her family, though; it was for the scores of hungry customers at The Store in Saltillo, and before that, at a convenience store she and her husband, John, owned.

Making large batches of food was nothing new when the couple stepped away from the convenience store business and try something new with the opening of KJ's Chicken Shack in Baldwyn in October.

The Maynors had owned The Store for about six years before they sold it in November 2021. Leaving the convenience store business was actually — well — more convenient.

"You don't have to worry about gas, beer and cigarettes — just food," John said.

They had hoped to open their restaurant a little sooner, but it took until this October, when they finally got to open it at 501 N. Fourth Street.

"With the way construction is, it took a lot longer than we anticipated," Shawn said. "John would usually have it ready in eight to 10 months, but this took a year-and-a-half. I got really worried because he was having a tough time getting people to come. But he did a lot of the work himself — he built the tables outside, the benches. He picked out all the colors, and I painted everything. And we did the floors. He was the general contractor and hired out what he couldn't do, but he did everything else."

They named their restaurant after grandson KJ, 2. They spent some time mulling names but decided what better way to name the family business than after one of their own?

Front and center on the menu is the hand-battered fried chicken — bone-in, strips, wings and boneless wings.

Does the chicken have a super secret blend of spices or batter? You know it.

"I tried one breading, and it had too much flour. Then I started mixing it together myself and started playing around mixing this with this," Shawn said. "Also we brine it overnight. We wash it and then we brine it. It's not a perfect science. Sometimes it's a little saltier, so it sat a little extra long."


Despite the eatery's name, KJ's menu includes more than chicken. There are sandwiches and burgers, plus a load of sides, including fried okra, rice and gravy, baked beans, slaw, creamed corn and more.

"We also have something different for plate lunches every day," John said. "We try to make as much as we can by hand."

During the week (it's closed on Monday), KJ's also has plate lunches, starting at $8.99. On Tuesday, it's Shawn's famous and popular Mamaw's chicken or spaghetti; on Wednesday, it's fried pork chops or cheesy chicken rice broccoli casserole; on Thursday, it's meatloaf or cheesy chicken spaghetti; on Friday, it's hamburger steaks or fried pork chops.

Recently, on Friday nights, they added fried catfish and fried shrimp plates, and on Saturdays, the specials include hamburger steak, catfish or shrimp with prices ranging from $8.99 to $10.99.

The food is a literally a taste of home. These are offerings Shawn would cook at home, and many of them found their way to the convenience stores they owned, and now KJ's. Mamaw's Chicken is fried chicken covered in a gravy, but had to be adapted for the general public; instead of bone-in chicken, it was faster and more convenient to use boneless. But the rest of the ingredients are the same.

The Maynors are adding other items to the menu slowly as the restaurant gets on its feet. One of the latest additions is homemade gelato. Right now, it's available in vanilla, chocolate and strawberry.

At KJ's, the food is meant to satisfy, whether it's a plate lunch, the fried chicken or the many sides.


"I didn't go to culinary school," Shawn said. "I grew up in the country, and I learned from my grandmother and mother. I just taught myself and learned. I'm am not a chef; I'm a cook ... The main thing is, season it. If I'm not eating it, I'm not serving it."
https://www.djournal.com/culture/foo...0e89a5bb2.html
2023, A Historic Year for Mississippi Department of Transportation



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“Historic” is perhaps the best descriptor for the year 2023 at the Mississippi Department of Transportation (MDOT). The agency received record levels of funding to improve and build upon Mississippi’s infrastructure and notably, embarked on several capacity projects.

From the Mississippi Legislature, MDOT received a total of almost $2 billion, which includes a nearly $1.5 billion earmark-free appropriation as well as a $620 million supplemental appropriation.

“2023 was an exceptional year for MDOT, not only in terms of the historic funding received, but also for our increased commitment to efficiency and the exciting, large projects we have embarked upon,” said Brad White, MDOT Executive Director. “The people of Mississippi will benefit for decades to come from MDOT’s work and funding in 2023. We remain grateful to Congress, the Mississippi Legislature and Gov. Tate Reeves for entrusting us with significant funding that allows MDOT to accomplish more.”

For several years, MDOT focused largely on maintenance projects instead of major construction projects due to lack of funding and rising costs. The $620 million supplemental appropriation from the Legislature will pave the way to start work on eight major capacity projects that will increase safety, alleviate congestion and help grow Mississippi’s economy. MDOT is already putting these dollars in motion with several capacity projects slated to break ground in 2024.

MDOT’s record of efficiency also earned the department an increase in federal obligation authority and in turn, access to additional federal funding. The Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) obligated $926 million in federal funds for federal fiscal year 2023 ending September 30, over $100 million more than the previous year.

Along with funding records, MDOT recognized another historic milestone in 2023 – the five-year anniversary of I-269. Since its opening, this $640 million strategic infrastructure investment has not only provided the efficient movement of people and goods but also spurred exceptional economic growth in the area.

To be good stewards of these taxpayer dollars and help keep state highways clean, MDOT relaunched its litter prevention campaign this fall. The statewide campaign featured agency employees eagerly asking Mississippians to help MDOT and put trash where it belongs. The campaign reached over two million people through television, streaming, radio and social media.

In addition to these milestones and special projects, significant infrastructure projects are taking place across the state.

In north Mississippi, a much anticipated project known as Corridor V, designated as State Route 76, opened to traffic in Itawamba County. The final section of the $97 million project connecting State Route 25 and State Route 23 was completed this year, representing a critical link in a tri-state supply chain for auto manufacturers.

Also in north Mississippi, a new roundabout is coming to Benton County at the intersection of U.S. 72 and State Route 7 in Benton County. Capable of handling wide loads including semi-trailers, the roundabout will reduce conflict points, lower motorists’ speed and ultimately, decrease severe and fatal crashes. This $7.8 million project is expected to be completed in June 2024.

In the Mississippi Delta, major progress was made in 2023 on a $137 million project to construct a new roadway known as the U.S. 82 Greenville Bypass. Running nine miles from State Route 1 to Leland in Washington County, the bypass will help promote regional economic development and make area roads safer. The project is on track to be completed fall 2025.

In the central region of the state, crews completed a design-build project in 2023 on I-59 and I-20 in Meridian that involved widening heavily traveled interstate bridges over State Route 19/39 and 65th Ave., removing bridges over Knight Parker Rd. and upgrading interstate lighting. This $24.4 million project greatly enhances safety and efficiency for motorists and commercial traffic throughout Lauderdale County.

In the southwestern portion of the state, three bridges in Simpson County are being replaced on State Route 149, bringing them up to modern standards. This $25 million project is expected to wrap up in summer 2024.

A massive $212.6 million project in south Mississippi kicked off in 2023 with the State Route 57 widening and bypass project in Jackson County. SR 57 is being widened from two to four lanes and a new alignment is under construction. This project will alleviate congestion in the area and expand the capacity of the roadway, which is a hurricane evacuation route. Work is expected to be completed in 2027.

These projects represent a small number of the hundreds of projects MDOT undertakes and completes each year to meet Mississippi’s infrastructure needs. In addition to federal funding and state appropriations, the agency receives $80 million each fiscal year from the Mississippi Lottery, funds that are used to pave rural highways across the state. This year and each year, MDOT strives to put every dollar received into action to make meaningful and lasting improvements to Mississippi’s infrastructure.
https://www.taterecord.com/local-con..._term_id=15224
Celebrating lucky 13, expansion at Bok Homa


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Bok Homa Casino in Sandersville will celebrate its 13th anniversary and the grand opening of its new expansion at 10 a.m. Wednesday, Dec. 20. The public is invited and encouraged to attend, officials said.

The celebration will feature remarks by Tribal Chief Cyrus Ben, who will share the vision and achievements of the casino and the Tribe. Attendees will also have the opportunity to get a first look at the new expansion and enjoy its amenities while being treated to anniversary cake and hors d’oeuvres. The first 500 guests will receive anniversary t-shirts.

The expansion adds 7,000 square feet of gaming and entertainment space to the casino, including a state-of-the-art Sportsbook, where gamers can bet on their favorite sports and there’s a new restaurant, Red Creek, which offers a variety of dishes for eat-in or grab-and-go food plus an entertainment stage for live music and shows.
https://www.leader-call.com/news/fre...49e9bdd57.html
More coverage of Bok Homa Casino expansion from their facebook:

Quote:
Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians

On Wednesday, December 20, 2023, Tribal Chief and Choctaw Resort Development Enterprise Chairman Cyrus Ben, Choctaw Tribal Council members, and 2023-2024 Choctaw Indian Princess Nalani LuzMaria Thompson, joined with Bok Homa Casino and Pearl River Resort officials to celebrate the 13th anniversary of the casino. They also were on hand to cut the ribbon for the expansion of the property located in Jones County, Miss., near the town of Sandersville.
The new expansion adds 7,000 square feet of gaming and entertainment space to the casino, including a state-of-the-art Sportsbook, where people can bet on their favorite sports, a dine-in restaurant, Red Creek, that offers a variety of delicious dishes, a grab-and-go food option, for when people need a quick bite, and an entertainment stage, for live music and shows.
Attendees got to enjoy some anniversary cake and hors d’oeuvres, and the first 500 guests received anniversary t-shirts.
Congratulations to Bok Homa Casino, and we wish you even more success in the future!!!






https://www.facebook.com/BokHomaCasi...LxquZ5pDq6i51l
New terminal complex at Starkville airport awaits grant funding

George M. Bryan Field Airport is shown near its front entrance in Starkville on Tuesday. The airport is applying for grants to help fund an estimated $11.4 million terminal complex that could begin construction as soon as October 2024. Grant McLaughlin/Dispatch Staff

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STARKVILLE — Plans for a new $11.4 million terminal complex at Starkville’s George M. Bryan Field Airport aim to address the airport’s evolving needs and position it competitively among other university-adjacent airports in the Southeastern Conference, according to Board Engineer Carey Hardin. Hardin emphasized the need for expanded facilities at the Starkville Rotary Club on Monday, especially with SEC sports teams frequenting the airport for games. [gallery columns="1" size="medium
https://cdispatch.com/news/new-termi...grant-funding/
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Road beside Chick-fil-A now a pleasure to drive in Columbus


Mayor Keith Gaskin stands beside the newly paved road beside Chick-fil-A on Thursday, after a ribbon-cutting for the work. The much maligned road has been in disrepair for years. The city owns a portion of the road, and Magnolia Place Cooper LLC — which owns the shopping center that contains Old Navy — owns the other portion. The two split the $48,000 paving costs. Jessica Lindsey/Dispatch Staff

Quote:
As cars passed smoothly, their drivers and passengers offered gestures of celebration such as fist pumping and “raising the roof.” Columbus city officials and representatives from Chick-fil-A cut the ribbon on the newly paved road between the fast-food chicken chain and the shopping center housing stores like Old Navy and TJ Maxx. “Several people suggested we do a ribbon cutting because they were so excited about the road opening, so we were kind of doing it in jest,” Mayor Keith G
https://cdispatch.com/news/road-besi...sure-to-drive/
Crappie Drop Will Mark Start Of New Year – Water Valley Style

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WATER VALLEY – What kind of fish has fire bell eyes, an ooga horn, confetti breath and is six feet long and tips the scales at almost 100 pounds? A Steampunk Crappie Contraption of course – the kind that makes an annual New Year’s Eve appearance on Main Street. Water Valley resident James McCormick has…
https://www.yalnews.com/category/archived-stories/
Courthouse Cafe Reopens With New Owner

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The Courthouse Cafe, formerly known as Courthouse Coffee and Bistro, reopened in September with new ownership and management. Owner Justin McDaniel reported that he saw strong potential when the location operated as Courthouse Coffee and Bistro under a former owner. He resumed operations following a brief closure for interior renovations that included a new layout…
https://www.yalnews.com/category/archived-stories/
Cramer’s Body Care Focuses On Products Not Readily Available In Store

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Randall Cramer and Angel Cramer opened Cramer’s Body Care after a two-year quest to develop a soap product that is not readily available in stores. Their business is located at 100 Railroad Street (blue building behind the car wash on Main Street) and also offers homemade whipped sugar body scrubs, lip butters, bath bombs, milk…
https://www.yalnews.com/category/arc...tories/page/2/
McGlawn Homes, Inc. – Focuses On Providing Affordable Housing

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McGlawn Homes, Inc. is a construction company based in Oxford with an office in Water Valley. The company specializes in value-built residential homes. Josh McGlawn cites the nationwide need for affordable housing as the driving factor that led his company to construct value-built homes that can often be sold at a price point below market…
https://www.yalnews.com/category/arc...tories/page/2/
New retailer coming to downtown Starkville in historic building

The building being renovated had housed many businesses before the Korean Church took over the property. Now, Castleberry and his crew are looking to restore it to fit modern business. (Photos by Tanner Marlar, Starkville Daily News)

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In downtown Starkville, on the corner of South Lafayette and East Lampkin St, sits a currently boarded up building that recently housed the Starkville Korean Church.

The church moved out of the historic downtown building to a less expensive location, but when the property was purchased by Mark Castelberry and his company, Castle Properties, the Starkville-based businessman had a plan.

The building was, in its early days, a car dealership, Castleberry said. It came complete with several roll up doors that, before East Lampkin was sloped so heavily, would have been street level enough to fit a car into either the basement or the first floor, which was used as a showroom.

“We’re kind of returning it back to what it was,” said Castleberry, “so more of what we’ve done is we’ve removed stuff that’s been added ever since (the dealership).”

The window size is still the same as it was many years ago, complete with large showroom size windows for prospective customers to peer through as passerby.

At the end of its construction, the building will hold a semi-large and successful regional retailer, according to Castleberry. He couldn’t share specific details, but ensured that the incoming business will be one that Starkville residents are familiar with already. That retailer will take up the entire first floor of the building.

Castleberry added that there are challenges to doing a historic renovation like this one, but that the group is already navigating those hurdles.

“We’re doing it as a historic renovation,” Castleberry said, “which means we’re going to use the historic tax credit program, so we have to get approvals from the Mississippi Department of Archives and History and also the National Park Service.”

The group is currently waiting on the aforementioned groups’ approval to get their building permit, and have completed all work up to this point under a demolition permit.

The new building will include large windows on the first floor, just like the original building, but the lower floor has more changes that are scheduled to be made. For instance, the roll-up door to the basement that is located on East Lampkin will be replaced with a large glass window to allow more natural light into the space. While there are ongoing conversations over the occupancy of the lower floor, Castleberry said that those plans are a bit further off than the top floor, which will roll along with completion once permits are received.

Castleberry also noted that he believes a space like this could be beneficial to the beautification and commercialization of the downtown area.

“This building will be better used as a retail space. It will be bringing traffic into this area. It’ll help make Lafayette more viable. I think it’ll be very picturesque. People coming up Lampkin, getting a view of all the windows and the business here, it’ll create sales revenue and it’ll employ people,” Castleberry said.

Castleberry also noted that this building is a piece of the puzzle in the ongoing beautification efforts of the downtown area of Starkville.

The project is still ongoing, but residents of Starkville should be able to watch its completion from start to finish in the building’s prominent spot in the heart of downtown.
https://www.starkvilledailynews.com/...13e34e4ed.html
Tulane Baptist Church breaks ground on disaster response building

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The community celebrates the upcoming arrival of a new food pantry distribution center and an emergency disaster support building following the recent groundbreaking by Tulane Baptist Church. The 2,800-square foot facility is a welcoming site for the local community to support such critical needs within Yazoo, following the effects of a disaster. The facility will support operations ...
https://www.yazooherald.net/tulane-b...&e_sort_order=
Chancellor’s House to Rebrand as The Oliver Hotel, Oxford







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Chancellor’s House Hotel, a luxury hotel in the heart of Oxford, has announced it will be rebranding as The Oliver Hotel, Oxford.

The Oliver Hotel, Oxford will expand into 40 rooms and suites with unique dining options.

The Oliver Hotel will be introducing three new concepts — a new patio restaurant, a cocktail parlor lounge, and a rooftop bar, which will round out the already robust food and beverage and event offerings at the property.

The management company will continue to be Oliver Hospitality, a Nashville-based hotel and restaurant management company, that purchased the hotel back in April 2022.

With the transition to The Oliver Hotel, the team “embraces a new era while creating a space where guests can feel at home.”

The name pays homage to The Oliver Hotel in Knoxville, Tennessee, which was the first hotel project Oliver Hospitality took on more than 12 years ago.

“Each Oliver Hotel is location specific and that’s something to celebrate,” said Ethan Orley, Managing Partner of Oliver Hospitality. “The Oliver Hotel in Oxford will create a sense of belonging uniting the nostalgic spirit of Ole Miss with a modern approach to southern hospitality. The team will foster community experiences and brand touchpoints that feel warm, charming and lively.”

The renovation project, undertaken by Mey & Co Interior Architecture Design Studio, reimagined the hotel’s interiors, blending an eclectic aesthetic with the timeless charm that guests have come to adore.

For more information about the transformation into The Oliver Hotel, visit www.chancellorshouse.com.
https://www.hottytoddy.com/2023/06/2...-hotel-oxford/
Needmore Center construction rolls forward in Starkville



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On the end of East Gillespie Street, beside the Marathon gas station, construction of the new Needmore Community Center is rolling along.

Mills Contracting, LLC. was selected to complete construction ahead of two other bidders for the more than $2 million project, which will serve as a new hub for community events such as birthday parties, meetings and any other event the community needs a space for.

Mayor Lynn Spruill provided updates in a recent interview.

Spruill added that the main focus and long term goal of the project is to revitalize that area of the city.

This was not the type of project in which the building had any hopes of being revitalized like so many here in Starkville, either, according to Spruill. The old metal structure earmarked the facility as a building the city would rather replace than repurpose.

Spruill also elaborated on the opportunities that McAllister’s, which is located in the adjacent shopping center, would more than likely have to cater some of the events in the new center. However, Spruill does not believe that the center will drive much more foot traffic into the rest of the businesses in that immediate area. The main focus of the new center, again, is to revamp the appearance and purpose of that area of the city.

Spruill also added that she does not believe the new center and beautification of the area will cause local rents to rise, either, at least no more than current trends in housing account for.

With many other projects in the city underway, the Needmore Community Center looks to be one that plenty of Starkville residents will be able to enjoy at their leisure.
https://www.starkvilledailynews.com/...d54937cdd.html
Love’s Travel Stops Expands Operations with Four New Locations

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Love’s Travel Stops has expanded its presence by opening three new locations in Michigan City, Indiana; Nicholson, Mississippi; and Watertown, New York. Another location in Salinas, California, is scheduled to open shortly, collectively providing 377 truck parking spaces and creating 312 job opportunities within these communities. President of Love’s, Shane Wharton, acknowledged the accomplishment: “Opening four locations in a single week is an achievement, and our team members are prepared to serve customers in Salinas, Michigan City, Nicholson, and Watertown. Each location will offer amenities for professional drivers and four-wheel customers to facilitate their swift return to the road.” Nicholson, Mississippi Location Details: Size: More than 13,000 square feet. Bojangles restaurant (opening Dec. 18). Truck Parking: 99 spaces. Car Parking: 68 spaces. RV Parking: Eight spaces. Diesel Bays: Eight. Showers: Seven. CAT Scale available. Bean-to-cup gourmet coffee. Brand-name snacks. Mobile to Go Zone featuring the latest GPS, headsets, and smartphone accessories.

Love’s will contribute $2,000 to local nonprofits in each town as part of the grand openings. In Nicholson, Mississippi, the donation will be directed to Nicholson Elementary School. These new locations reinforce Love’s commitment to providing essential services and amenities for professional drivers and travelers while contributing to the economic landscape of the communities they serve.

https://www.picayuneitem.com/2023/12...new-locations/

Last edited by vetteking; Dec 28, 2023 at 10:19 AM.
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The image above for Love’s Travel Stops is from an Alabama location similar to what the rendering of the Nicholson, MS location looks like. I could not find any pictures for the exact location so please forgive me. Happy for our Nicholson neighbors and out-of-town travelers, Bojangles is good restaurant and Love's is great as well. We need more locations throughout Mississippi.
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Hopefully we will get some pictures from the opening of Amerigo's in Fondren district. Here is WJTV coverage of them working on getting it ready for grand opening today:

Video Link


Speaking of food, here is WAPT reporter going around town trying the many great restaurants in the Jackson metro:
16 Cuisine: Food Truck Friday
Video Link


Quote:
JACKSON, Miss. —
Foodies beware: Food Truck Friday in Downtown Jackson will leave your belly full and have your coworkers asking, "Where'd you get that from?"

You'll find lines of food trucks on the first, third, and fifth Friday each month from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Smith Park.

From soul food to a classic Chicago-style hotdog, there are options for everyone.

Our 16 Cuisine team made a stop at Smokey's Meal on Wheels for tender ribs, smoked brisket, mac and cheese, plus a side of baked beans.

"My husband and I like to eat, and we like to feed people the way we like to eat," said the owner, De'Shannon Williams.

She's also an organizer of the event, which she says is like one big family of restaurant owners.

We'll take you behind the scenes of Road Dogs, Mr. Turkey Leg, and Dab's Chicken and Waffles.

To see all the tasty treats, watch the video above as we take a deep dive into Jackson's Food Truck Friday.
https://www.wapt.com/article/16-cuis...riday/44951184
16 Cuisine: Buenos Aires Bakery
Video Link


Quote:
RIDGELAND, Miss. —
A bakery owner in Ridgeland is serving up delicacies from her homeland.

"When you go into a bakery, it's mainly like cupcakes, cookies and brownies — and that's pretty much it. So, we wanted to bring a little piece of Argentina into Mississippi," said Evelyn Aviles, owner of Buenos Aires Bakery.

The bakery serves Argentinian pastries and custom cakes. Aviles said she started out baking for her friends.

"I just started doing it from home and people were like, 'Can you bake me a cake?' I'm like, 'Really?' But then I started into it, and it just grew from home, and that's when we decided to expand and bring something different," Aviles said.

She said Argentinian pastries draw from the influence of Italian immigrants.

Buenos Aires Bakery is best known for its tres leches cake.



"It's a vanilla sponge cake and it's soaked in a mixture of condensed milk, evaporated milk and half and half. We actually use five ingredients for our tres leches," Aviles said.

And it's not just sweet treats. There are also savory pastries like empanadas.

"It's a beautiful feeling, you know, to have people come in and actually enjoy and then tell me that they love what they had," Aviles said. "It just gives me more passion to do what I'm doing because I love it."
https://www.wapt.com/article/16-cuis...akery/44210444
16 Cuisine: Sugar's Place
Video Link


Quote:
JACKSON, Miss. —
WAPT's Cecil Hannibal tries the chicken and waffles at Sugar's Place in Jackson. Watch the video above to find out what makes the food so good in this week's 16 Cuisine.

https://www.wapt.com/article/16-cuis...31101/42362334
16 Cuisine: Tuk Tuk Boom
Video Link


Quote:
JACKSON, Miss. —
16 WAPT's Cecil Hannibal visits Tuk Tuk Boom in Highland Village and learns how they make spicy beef noodle, the restaurant's most popular dish.

https://www.wapt.com/article/16-cuis...-boom/41980720
16 Cuisine: Eddie & Rubye's Snack Shack
Video Link


Quote:
JACKSON, Miss. —
Eddie & Rubye's Snack Shack has been frying up fish and serving Jackson residents for more than 40 years. "It was a legacy that my father had and my mother had, and they loved what they did, and I love them, so I love doing what they did," owner Patricia Bennett said.

The restaurant on Valley Street is known for its fried catfish and pan trout.

"We make our own recipe. We do our own batter, and it's a secret," Bennett said. "We put a lot of love into it."

Since the pandemic, Eddie & Rubye's has only been open for carryout.

"If you haven't tried it, come by. You will enjoy it," Bennett said.

Eddie & Rubye's is open 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. and 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday.
https://www.wapt.com/article/16-cuis...shack/43862769

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The International Museum of Muslim Cultures

Nation's First Muslim Museum

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Unique in America, the IMMC is dedicated to educating the public about Islamic history and culture, the contribution of Muslims to the global community and the diversity of the Muslim community: past, present and future. IMMC contains two permanent exhibitions. The Legacy of Timbuktu features ancient Timbuktu manuscripts uncovering Africa’s literate culture and celebrating a glorious age of learning and empire building. Islamic Moorish Spain: Its Legacy to Europe and the West features artifacts and information on Muslim rule in Spain, its contributions to philosophy, science, medicine, mathematics, astronomy, agriculture, commerce, architecture and the arts.

While the original museum is currently closed, visit "Muslims with Christians and Jews: An Exhibition of Covenants and Coexistence," a special exhibition that explores the historical and current relationship between Islam and America, highlighting the positive views of our Founding Fathers and what they knew and said about Islam. This theme is further explored through the struggle for freedom in America, featuring the voices of African American Muslims, and connecting this struggle to today’s continuing struggle for civil and human rights in the United States of America.

The exhibition is at 101 E. Capitol Street at the corner of Capitol and Farish in downtown Jackson.

101 E. Capitol Street
Jackson, Mississippi 39201

Phone: (601) 960-0440
https://muslimmuseum.org/

https://www.visitjackson.com/directo...slim-cultures/
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Old Posted Dec 30, 2023, 11:14 AM
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Here's a great article on The International Museum of Muslim Cultures in Jackson:

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Religious Freedom And Unity: America’s First Muslim Museum Launches National Tour, Hosts Webinar



In April 2001, a small group of Jacksonians visited the Majesty of Spain—an international touring exhibit at the Mississippi Arts Pavilion in the Art District in downtown Jackson. However, the exhibit left out more than 700 years of Islamic civilization from its storyline.

In response to that void, Emad Al-Turk and Okolo Rashid founded the International Museum of Muslim Cultures, which was founded in late 2000. In conjunction with the Majesty of Spain exhibit, the museum premiered its first major exhibition, “Moorish Spain: Its Legacy to Europe and the West,” which attracted more than 2,000 visitors a month.

The museum is continuing its work with the launch of its 2021-2027 National Tour for its two signature exhibitions, which are “The Legacy of Timbuktu: Wonders of the Written Word” and “Muslims with Christians and Jews: An Exhibition of Covenants and Coexistence.” The former exhibit debuted in 2006, and the latter debuted June 28, 2019, and will run until April 2021.

“Muslims with Christians and Jews,” curated by Lina Ali, Jeanne Luckett and Okolo Rashid, showcases the peace-building leadership of Muhammad, who prepared the first constitution in history for his multiethnic, multiracial, multilingual and multi-religioius Commonwealth, the website says.

“Taking visitors back to a time when people of many faiths lived side-by-side and worshipped in peace, the exhibition presents historical covenants and treaties that Islam’s Prophet Muhammad (Peace Be Upon Him) made with Christians and Jews living amongst each other in the city of Medina,” the website describes.


A museum guest and child interact with the educational hands-on elements at the Covenants & Coexistence exhibition at the International Museum of Muslim Cultures’ satellite location at 101 E. Capitol St. in Jackson, Miss. Photo courtesy Basel Almisshal

The exhibit will also explore the historical and current relationship between Islam and America, as well as highlight the views of the U.S.’s founding fathers and their knowledge of Islam, the site reads.

“This theme is further explored through the struggle for freedom in America, featuring the voices of African American Muslims, and connecting this struggle to today’s Islamophobia, and the continuing struggle for civil and human rights in the United States of America,” the museum’s website says.

“The Legacy of Timbuktu” highlights Islamic West Africa’s sophisticated culture of scholarship, wealth and empire-building, which contrasts with the historic narrative that most times begins with African enslavement in America.

The museum partnered with the Mamma Haidara Memorial Library in Timbuktu to curate the exhibit. The library, which is the largest of 22 private libraries in Timbuktu and holds more than 9,000 ancient manuscripts, loaned IMMC 39 manuscripts that contain calligraphy, colorful illustrations and a variety of subjects, the site says.

This is the first time the manuscripts will be displayed for a national audience through a traveling exhibition. Along with the manuscripts, visitors will get to experience a combination of African and Islamic heritage through videos and audio production, artifact displays, interactive media, models and artifact displays, the museum’s site says.

“Understanding and educating about and for human dignity is fundamental to combating injustice and intolerance, and is key to achieving equity and healing,” Co-founder and President of IMMC Okolo Rashid said.

“IMMC is uniquely positioned to address this special moment in our history with our multiple venues and approaches to engage and educate our local community as well as national and global audiences through our virtual and digital platforms,” she added.


An inside look at IMMC’s “The Legacy of Timbuktu: Wonders of the Written Word” exhibit located on the second floor of the Mississippi Arts Center on 201 E. Pascagoula St. in downtown Jackson. Photo courtesy Basel Almisshal

Along with the launch of the museum’s national tour, it will also host a Zoom webinar, “Exploring African Islamic Contributions to Civilization,” on Thursday, Dec. 17 at 6 pm. The panel discussion will include museum co-founders Okolo Rashid and Emad Al-Turk, University of the District of Columbia President Dr. Ronald Mason. and Tougaloo College and Millsaps College religious studies professor Dr. Loye Ashton, a press release states.

“This webinar will serve as a kickoff to an extended webinar series in partnership with California-based Muslim Public Affairs Council, focusing on social justice and equity, diversity and inclusion and how we are uniquely positioned to address this special moment in America and the world,” a press release reads.

The International Museum of Muslim Cultures has worked across the divide of race, class, gender, ethnicity and religion to bring people together to get a better understanding of our shared community, the co-founder said.

“IMMC’s foundation is built on the strategic alignment of the African American and diverse immigrant Muslim communities’ shared action and engagement with the broader community,” Rashid added.

The International Museum of Muslim Cultures is on the second floor of the Mississippi Arts Center on 201 E. Pascagoula St. “The Muslims with Christians and Jews, An Exhibition of Covenants and Coexistence” is housed at the museum’s satellite location at 101 Capitol St. To attend the International Museum of Muslim Culture’s webinar, you can register here.

https://www.mississippifreepress.org...-hosts-webinar
Found another great article about the museum:

Quote:
Mississippi's Muslim Museum


In 2000, Okolo Rashid was as excited as most other Mississippians at the prospect of the upcoming blockbuster exhibition “The Majesty of Spain: Royal Collections from the Museo del Prado and Patrimonio Nacional.” The third in a series of biannual international exhibitions hosted by Jackson’s Mississippi Arts Pavilion, “Majesty” was expected to attract half a million visitors—including King Juan Carlos and Queen Sophia of Spain.

A devout and well-read Muslim, Rashid knew that one of Spain’s most illustrious periods had been the roughly 800 years of Muslim rule in Al-Andalus, the southern part of the Iberian Peninsula. It was a time of productive and mostly peaceful coexistence among Spain’s Muslims, Christians and Jews, as well as among the many mixes of nationalities. As a leader in one of Jackson’s two mosques, Rashid welcomed the Spanish exhibition as an opportunity for showcasing the positive legacy of her faith.

But she had a surprise coming. “I was looking at all the marketing materials,” Rashid remembers, “and I realized they were going to leave out the important contributions of Muslims.”


At first, “everyone we talked to said we were crazy, that it couldn’t be done.” “We’re talking about using history and culture to give you dignity and purpose.”

Rashid is well-known and well-connected in Jackson, having spent more than 20 years in inner-city community development, organizing and historic preservation. She contacted people in touch with the “Majesty” organizers and was told that she was correct: There would indeed be no mention of the Islamic centuries in the exhibition. “The emphasis was to be European,” she was told.

Rashid was not, she says, “a museum person.” But faced with this significant gap in the coming exhibition, she conceived the idea of a companion exhibit to “Majesty,” one that would focus on the omitted material. She approached her mosque, the Masjid Muhammad, with the idea. The mosque’s economic development board decided to take it on, led by Rashid and the committee chair, Emad Al-Turk. The problem was, they only had five months.

“Everyone we talked to said we were crazy, that it couldn’t be done, that these projects take a couple of years to develop,” says Al-Turk, whose roots are Palestinian.

But as a longtime local businessman, as chief operating officer of a large engineering firm, and with decades of experience with interfaith nonprofit organizations, Al-Turk knew how to transform drawings on paper napkins into multistory buildings. The mosque leased a squat, dank, dilapidated building the size of a small house strategically located a block away from the Arts Pavilion and spent $60,000 to transform it with a façade modeled on the Great Mosque in Cordoba, a mosaic-tile floor and a small theater where an introductory video could be shown. A Moroccan fountain was imported to infuse the space with the sound of flowing water.

To produce the exhibit, Rashid and Al-Turk hired CommArts, a local design studio whose principals put other jobs on hold to meet the idealistic deadline. CommArts recreated a period marketplace, or suq, and a diminutive mosque with a 200-year-old minbar (pulpit), a mihrab (prayer niche) and a lofty, 200-year-old door painted with calligraphic motifs. By the time the job was done, mounting the companion exhibition cost $250,000 —more than two-thirds of which came from the mosque community—as well as the same amount again in materials and other donations in kind from the congregation, other religious and cultural institutions, businesses, and local and state governments.

“The Majesty of Spain” opened on March 15, 2001; “Islamic Moorish Spain: Its Legacy to Europe and the West” opened exactly one month later.

“The focus of Muslim Spain is very germane to humanities studies because it’s a case study of a tolerant society of high achievement and reciprocal scholarship among Christians, Jews and Muslims,” says Steve Smith, a professor of religious studies at Millsaps College, one of the several educational institutions aligned with the museum.

More than 30,000 people visited “Islamic Moorish Spain” that year, and half of them were students. And then there came 9/11, which brought a dramatically heightened sense of the need for education about Muslim culture—and also brought a brick, delivered through the museum’s storefront window two nights after the attacks. Instead of discouraging the exhibition’s organizers, the incident elicited support for them from civic leaders and the community.

Rashid and Al-Turk decided then to make their onetime exhibit into a permanent part of Jackson’s cultural landscape. They purchased the exhibit from the mosque and transferred it to a new nonprofit organization, with Rashid as executive director and Al-Turk as chairman of the board. Thus was founded the International Museum of Muslim Cultures—the first of its kind anywhere in the United States—in Jackson, Mississippi, a city with a population of 180,000.

“It kind of breaks a stereotype,” says William Winter, who served as Mississippi’s governor from 1980 to 1984. Winter later chaired President Bill Clinton’s town meetings on race and founded the William Winter Institute for Racial Reconciliation at the University of Mississippi. “It’s at odds with what the average American would think about Jackson, Mississippi. But the fact that [the museum] is located here says a lot about the old provincial stereotype: It’s not the same stereotype anymore.”

Just as the creators of the International Museum of Muslim Cultures put forth Muslim Al-Andalus as a historical model of intercultural cooperation, they hope the museum itself will also serve as such a model. Already it has forged new alliances across the divide that separates the immigrant Muslim community from African-American Muslims.



Masjid Muhammad was Jackson’s first mosque, founded as an all-Black institution. But times changed, and in 2000 the mosque restructured to reach out to the larger Muslim community, a move led in part by Rashid and her husband, Sababu Rashid. Al-Turk was elected to the mosque’s board of trustees, along with a Pakistani and a Sudanese. This step, says Rashid, laid the groundwork for the museum. “When we practice Islam, each culture brings a different aspect to the broader Islamic community,” says Rashid.

Rashid leads the museum with a genial, easygoing earnestness. (Her surname, which she chose when she embraced Islam in 1976, means “wise.”) She says she’s learned life lessons through Islam, and she teaches these through the museum: the importance of learning, self-empowerment and intercultural connection.

Rashid was one of 15 siblings (only 11 lived) who were raised sharecropping the Mississippi Delta in the harsh times of the 1950’s. “Any Black person around here, you say ‘the Delta’ and they know what you mean,” she says. It was so bad that once, for reasons she was too young to know, her father had to move the family to a new home under cover of darkness. She received little schooling as a young girl because she had to work through harvest time, which often stretched through December. When Rashid could finally enroll in school full-time, she never missed a single day thereafter, from fourth grade until she graduated.


Couches, and a model tea set, lend atmosphere to the exhibit "Islamic Moorish Spain."

“Once given an opportunity, any individual can learn, can excel,” Rashid says. “That is the whole concept behind Islam. The first revelation to the Prophet Mohammed is, ‘Read!’”

To help local students, the museum has conducted annual teacher-training workshops, and it has influenced the inclusion of Islamic materials in regional colleges and universities. Muslim educator Audrey Shabbas, who has taught tens of thousands of teachers nationwide, has been one of the museum’s consultants from the beginning, and the museum has made use of her curriculum “A Medieval Banquet in the Alhambra Palace.”

“We’re not trying to sell the religion here,” says Rashid. “We’re trying to educate.” But it doesn’t come easy, because neither mainstream Muslims nor African-Americans have much history of museum involvement.

“The focus of the immigrant Muslim community has been on mosques and schools,” Al-Turk says. “Historically they have not been as focused on cultural outreach. If you say you want to build a mosque, they’ll cut you a check right off. If you say you want to build a museum, they say, ‘What the heck do you want to do that for?’”

Even as the museum is devoted to the mainstreaming of Muslim culture, Rashid also sees its mission as part of the larger goal of Black empowerment for which she’s worked all her life. In particular, she hopes the museum’s second show, “The Legacy of Timbuktu: Wonders of the Written Word,” scheduled for this year, will serve this goal. Focus- ing on medieval scholarship in the West African city of Timbuktu, it will showcase manuscripts lent by the Mamma Haidara Memorial Library there that have only recently come to light after families hid them from centuries of colonial governments. In a curatorial coup, the International Museum of Muslim Cultures will be the first us museum to show the manuscripts. The show will also include background on Islam coming to Africa, as well as an unblinking examination of the Saharan slave trade.

Rashid sees in the manuscripts a profound rebuke to the common misconception that Africa had no written cultural history. Quite the opposite, she says: It boasted one of the leading centers of scholarship and learning of its time.

“We’re not just talking about a historical exhibit. We’re talking about using history and culture to give you dignity and purpose to move into the future,” Rashid says. “Studies have shown that if you raise someone up telling them that they came from zero, how are they going to garner the self-esteem to say they are the equal of all other cultures?

“I’d like to see this exhibition promote ideas that would make African-Americans feel more empowered. I don’t think reconciliation can take place until African-Americans feel whole and healed and empowered. For the general public, the exhibition is going to impact historical and cultural literacy. And for non-African-Americans, it’s important to know that not everything they’ve been told all these years is true.”


Jackson health worker Janice Evans called her visit to the museum "my first experience with Muslim culture."


A qanum (harp), rikk or daff (tambourine) and 'ud (predecessor of the guitar) help highlight the diverse cultural legacy of Al-Andalus.

To oversee development of the Timbuktu show, the museum has assembled scholars from institutions ranging from the Institute of Global Cultural Studies at Binghamton University in New York to Howard University in Washington, D.C., as well as professional, cultural and political advisors. “The true message we’re dealing with is bringing the other communities into the exhibit,” says Al-Turk. Among local educational institutions, Jackson State University and Tougaloo College, both historically Black institutions, have become extensively involved, as well as Millsaps College and the University of Mississippi.

“Exposure to the wealth of knowledge and the literary and scientific contributions of the Muslim cultures will inspire scholars,” says Beverly Hogan, president of Tougaloo. “Sharing this knowledge with African-Americans will give them a sense of their history and the magnificent contributions of their people. Thus their sense of self and purpose will become stronger, and their place in world affairs will be institutionalized in their minds and actions.”

Recent weeks have brought a setback to future plans— but one that Al-Turk and Rashid hope can be turned into an opportunity: The city has marked the current building for demolition to help make way for the capital’s new convention center. In response, the museum has launched a $15-million capital campaign to raise a building of its own. Meanwhile, the “Timbuktu” exhibition will tour sites around the country: Plans have already been made for it to visit the DuSable Museum of African-American History in Chicago.

“One principle of Islam is that God created all of us equal, teaching respect for all human beings,” says Al-Turk. “We are living in a world today where actual or perceived conflicts between Muslims and the West can only be addressed by peaceful cooperation and education.”

https://archive.aramcoworld.com/issu...lim.museum.htm

Last edited by vetteking; Dec 30, 2023 at 11:36 AM.
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  #359  
Old Posted Dec 30, 2023, 12:02 PM
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Jackson restaurant Stamps Super Burgers awarded grant from National Trust of Historic Preservation

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Grant used to make renovations to decades old staple

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JACKSON, Miss. —
A local Jackson burger staple has received grant funding to help make renovations to their decades old restaurant.

The National Trust of Historic Preservation awarded Stamps Super Burgers (https://www.facebook.com/StampsSuperBurgers) funding.

Stamps, which is located on Dalton Street near the Jackson State University campus, used the funds to repair and replace siding on the building where it had started to wither and lose paint. The owner also repaired the framing around the windows and refurbished the building's signature sign that greet customers reading, "The Original Big Burger, The Best in Town."






"It is really really important for us to maintain being a pillar here in the community...we consider stamps burger a sense of place it provides a sense of place...and when folks are traveling through and looking for a place to eat they often times stop here and we are a really good first impressions for folks," said Stamps Burgers' Operations Manager, Phil Stamps II.

Stamps Super Burger was one of 25 locations across the country chosen to receive the grant to make renovations.

Stamps opening in Jackson in 1986.

https://www.wapt.com/article/local-j...ation/42599046
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  #360  
Old Posted Dec 30, 2023, 1:28 PM
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I-55 Frontage Road Cleanup Continues




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Northsiders have taken matters into their own hands and started cleaning up I-55 by themselves since the government has fallen down in the job. A group of private citizens have donated $11,500 so far to clean up the Northside the along I-55 frontage road. Northsider LOCKE WARD is leading the fundraising charge. Casey Bridge's company Casey Can Home Services is doing the work.
https://www.northsidesun.com/local-c...&e_sort_order=
Madison Mayor's Dream of New City Hall Becoming Reality



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Madison Mayor Mary Hawkins-Butler will soon realize her vision of transforming the old Madison-Ridgeland School into City Hall and the anchor for the surrounding 17-acre town center. Renovations began in March 2021 on the building that is part of the $100-million development named Madison at Main in downtown Madison. “We’re hoping to start moving into the new City Hall by the end of F...
https://www.northsidesun.com/madison...&e_sort_order=
More pictures from Mid-State Construction's facebook page:








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Mid State Construction is in Madison.
·
MADISON CITY HALL
Got the demo in full swing at #madisonthecity city hall. Keep an eye out for this beautiful renovation coming. @belindastewartarchitects
#midstateconstruction #webuildtrust #mississippivonstruction #construction #contractors #contractorsofinstagram #commercialbuild #architecture #building #engineering # #constructionworker #constructioncompany #builders #constructionsite #constructionlife #Generalcontractor #ABC #AGC #awardwinning

https://www.facebook.com/midstatecon...bhHYWatDc6kqbl
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