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Tuesday, October 17, 2017

Mississippi Delta Community College is a community college serving the Mississippi Delta region with its main campus in Moorhead, Mississippi. It also offers courses at locations in Drew, Greenville, Greenwood, and Indianola. Its mascot is the Trojan warrior. As of 2017 the college's president is Dr. Larry Nabors. It has an enrollment of 3,491 students.

History



source : www.letsgoicc.com

Originally called Sunflower Junior College, the college was formed in conjunction with Sunflower County Agricultural High School in 1927. With its first freshman class enrolling that September, the college became a fully accredited junior college by the Accrediting Commission of the Senior Colleges of Mississippi in April 1928. The name was changed to Mississippi Delta Junior College in 1960 and to Mississippi Delta Community College in 1989.

Service area



source : www.meridianstar.com

The official service area of the college includes Bolivar, Humphreys, Issaquena, Leflore, Sharkey, Sunflower, and Washington counties. Coahoma County was originally in the college's service area, but the Mississippi Legislature removed it effective July 1, 1995, and it is now served by the Coahoma Community College.

Main campus



source : www.city-data.com

The main campus is located in Moorhead, Mississippi.

Administrative and educational facilities

Stauffer-Wood Administration Building houses administrative functions. The 11,000-square-foot (1,000 m2) facility is located on the southern border of the college and was named after Sherman Stauffer and Pete Wood, respectively an assistant to the president of the college and business manager, and a former agriculture teacher who had graduated from the college. The building was built as an armory of the National Guard and in 1997 was renovated into its current purpose.

The Jack E. Harper Jr. Science Building, built in 1998 and named after Jack E. Harper, Jr., a Sunflower County man who served on the college's board of trustees, houses science classes. Office space, eight laboratories, and nine classrooms are located in 26,700 square feet (2,480 m2) of space.

Allen-Foley Career-Technical Complex houses career and technical education (CATE) classrooms and laboratories; it houses the Dr. Farilyn Bell ABE/GED Classroom which houses General Education Development (GED) and Adult Basic Education (ABE) classes. The building's namesakes, Otis W. Allen and Charles Foley, were a Leflore County man who served on the college's board of education and the dean of the Career-Technical Center of the college, respectively. The ABE/GED classroom was named after the college's first ABE and GED program director. Allen-Foley was built in 1977 and remodeled for GED and ABE classes in 2005.

The Horton Building, built in 1968, houses instructors' offices, two computer labs, classrooms, and laboratories. It was named after a previous president of the university, W. B. Horton.

Stanny Sanders Library, built in 1972, is the college's library. It was named after a Leflore County woman who was on the college's board of representatives. The facility; which has a room dedicated to the Community College Network, study rooms, a media center, and the College Center of Learning; has 482 seats available for patrons.

The Greer-Stafford Allied Health Building, built in 1993, houses medical and dental classes and laboratories; the 32,000-square-foot (3,000 m2) Dr. Arthur Richter Dental Hygiene Clinic houses the dental hygiene classes. It was named after H.T. Greer and Sam Stafford, respectively a Sharkey County man who served on the college's board of trustees and a vice president. The dental hygiene clinic addition opened in 2001.

The Yeates Fine Arts Building, built in 1973, houses the college's fine arts classes and includes the M. E. Tharp Auditorium, Joe Abrams Band Hall, Jean Abrams Art Gallery, and Merle Tolbert Piano Lab. It was named after a music teacher, Mildred Yeates.

Tanner Hall, built in 1963, houses the Campus Safety department, as well as classrooms and laboratories. Its namesake is a Sunflower County man who became a member of the college's board of trustees, E. A. Tanner. The college installed a computer lab in the building in 1994.

Student services and recreational facilities

The Vandiver Student Union houses the Office of Student Services, student government facilities, a locker room and sports facility, the Chief William P. Lacy Campus Police Office, the campus bookstore, and a student dining facility. The building itself was named after Sunflower Junior College's first president, Joseph S. Vandiver; and the police office was named after the college law enforcement agency's first chief of police.

Boggs-Scroggins Student Center houses services for students.

The Herman A. Thigpin Cafeteria, which has seating for over 400 students, was constructed in 1986 and named after an academic dean and science teacher. It has about 16,000 square feet (1,500 m2) of area.

J.T. Hall Coliseum, constructed in 1976, houses the athletic director's offices; an about 1,000 seat multipurpose hall used for basketball games; the Helen Allen Dance Studio, a performing arts performance and practice area; and the Sports Hall of Fame Room. It was named after Dr. James Terry Hall, who once served as the president of the university.

The Jimmy Bellipanni Baseball Complex, named after an athletic director and coach at the college, was built in 1974. As of 2010 the complex's fence is made of cypress.

In 1980 the Women's Softball Field opened.

The campus also includes the Maintenance Building.

There is a Baptist Student Union on the college grounds.

Residential facilities

Active dormitory buildings for students include Edwards-Stonestreet Dormitory (for men) and Hargett-Lee Dormitory (for women).

Hargett-Lee Women's Residence Hall is one of the facilities for female students.

Edwards-Stonestreet Men's Dormitory, named after Lum Edwards and J. D. Stonestreet, respectively the former superintendent of education of a county government and a coach of American football and mathematics teacher, is along the college's eastern edge and has a capacity for 258 students. The college described the facility as "a motel style [sic] structure".

The university also has housing for faculty members and the president's home. These facilities are within the Sunflower County School District, and dependents of faculty and staff living on campus would be assigned to James Rosser Elementary School and Moorhead Middle School.

Stennis-Penrod Leta Dormitory, a.k.a. Stennis-Penrod Women's Dormitory, named after a science teacher and a mathematics teacher, Janie Stennis and Noble Penrod, had a capacity of 201 students. It resided along Trojan Lake's northern edge.

Other campuses



Other campuses include:

  • The MDCC Charles W. Capps Jr. Technology Center, a 30,000-square-foot (2,800 m2) facility in Indianola, opened in 2001. It provides CATE education to businesses. It is named after the chairperson of the Mississippi House of Representatives Appropriations Committee, Charles W. Capps Jr., from Cleveland.
  • Greenville Higher Education Center (GHEC), which has classes from MDCC, Delta State University, and Mississippi Valley State University
  • Greenwood Center, occupying 10,000 square feet (930 m2) of leased space on a facility on Park Avenue. It first opened in Late 2003 in 5,000 square feet (460 m2) of leased space in a facility in Downtown Greenwood; the lease agreement for that facility was signed early that year. In the Summer of 2005 the center moved to its current location
  • The Drew Center, which began operations in Spring 2006

References



External links



  • Mississippi Delta Community College
  • Mississippi Delta Community College Blackboard Academic Suite



 
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