Starkville Daily News

EMCC welding students awarded competitiv­e scholarshi­ps

- For Starkville Daily News

MAYHEW — The American Welding Society (AWS) Foundation has awarded scholarshi­ps to three students enrolled in welding programs offered at East Mississipp­i Community College's Golden Triangle campus.

“I believe this is the first time we have had three AWS scholarshi­p recipients at the same time,” EMCC Welding Technology instructor Gary Gammill said. “We are absolutely thrilled any time our students receive a scholarshi­p award from an outside organizati­on.”

Abigail Weaver of Columbus is the AWS Foundation's 2020-21 recipient of the $1,500 Saf-t-cart Scholarshi­p, which is dedicated to Jimmy Walker Sr., the founder of Saf-t-cart, a Clarksdale, Mississipp­i company that manufactur­es cylinder carts, truck beds and trailers, among other things.

Levi Mason of Columbus and Foley Daves of Carroll County, Mississipp­i each received $1,000 district scholarshi­ps from AWS.

Daves and Weaver will complete their EMCC Welding & Fabricatio­n certificat­e this fall and plan to additional­ly earn an Associate of Applied Science degree from the college's Welding Technology program, in which Mason is enrolled.

“I was really excited when I learned I had been awarded the scholarshi­p,” said Weaver, a Greenville, South Carolina native who decided to attend EMCC after touring the college while visiting family in the area.

“I fell in love with the school and just kind of rolled with it from there,” Weaver said.

The AWS Foundation awards hundreds of thousands of dollars in scholarshi­ps nationwide each year to students attending trade schools, community colleges and four-year universiti­es. The applicatio­n process for the competitiv­e scholarshi­ps is rigorous.

“The American Welding Society is a great organizati­on and as an educator I am grateful they provide these scholarshi­p opportunit­ies,” Gammill said. “I would encourage students enrolled in a welding program to visit their website at aws.org and apply for available scholarshi­ps.”

EMCC is located within the American Welding Society's District 8, which is comprised of north Mississipp­i, all of Tennessee and portions of Arkansas, Missouri, North Carolina, South Carolina and southern Kentucky.

AWS awards 10 scholarshi­ps of $1,000 for each of its districts and two of the 10 District 8 scholarshi­ps went to EMCC students Daves and Mason.

“My classes at EMCC are going really good so far and I am learning a lot,” said Daves, who drives 1.5 hours each way to attend school. “I chose welding because I have always enjoyed working with my hands and I don't like being cooped up inside. I can make pretty good money when I graduate and can work for myself.”

Mason's father is in constructi­on and his grandfathe­r owns an electrical business. He tried his hand in both those fields, but found he preferred welding.

“I started logging and there were things that would break down, “Mason said. “I would go get the welder and fix it. It was something I enjoyed doing and could see myself doing in the future.”

EMCC offers a two-semester technical certificat­e in Welding & Metal Fabricatio­n and a four-semester associate's degree Welding Technology at both the college's Golden Triangle and Scooba campuses.

For more informatio­n about welding programs offered at the Golden Triangle campus, contact Gammill at ggammill@eastms.edu, Cliff Sanders at jsanders@eastms.edu or Jonathan Morrison at jmorrison@eastms.edu. For informatio­n about welding programs at the Scooba campus, contact Shane Mcdaniel at amcdaniel@eastms.edu.

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