Prentiss County Northeast features photographer’s work
Tishomingo County Volunteer work day planned in park
McNairy County TWRA hosts hunter safety class
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Daily Corinthian
Thursday Oct. 22,
2015
75 cents
Vol. 119, No. 253
Sunshine Today
Tonight
80
55
0% chance of rain
• Corinth, Mississippi • 18 pages • One section
School board backs Initiative 42 the Nov. 3 general election as Initiative 42. During their October meeting, the five-person board answered a survey provided by the Mississippi School Boards Association, which included the
BY ZACK STEEN zsteen@dailycorinthian.com
Alcorn School District board members are supporting the full funding of the Mississippi Adequate Education Program (MAEP), which will appear on
MAEP full funding question. If Initiative 42 is passed, it will require the legislature to fund MAEP and K-12 education without raising taxes. The goal is to force the legislature over time, depending on the growth,
to fully fund MAEP. Public education in Mississippi has not been fully funded in more than six years. In June, ASD Finance Director Kimberly Woodard said the local school district had been
under funded about $1.5 million this year. Opposition says if Initiative 42 is passed, then it would shift educational decisions from the Please see INITIATIVE | 2
BBB says beware of ‘reward’ scam BY STEVE BEAVERS sbeavers@dailycorinthian.com
A woman didn’t take the bait. A day after receiving a postcard in the mail notifying her of an unclaimed award, the woman wants others to not be taken in by scammers. The woman’s postcard doesn’t identify where it came from. On the card it states the woman can claim her reward by Nov. 6 if she calls 1-855-272-0169. The $100 prize is listed as being good at Walmart, Target and many other stores.
The Better Business Bureau advises to never provide personal information to claim “prizes” in contests that you never entered. Also never pay a fee to get something that is “free.” Lastly, avoid signing up for “free trials” for unfamiliar services or with unfamiliar businesses. “I didn’t respond to it because it didn’t say where it came from,” said the woman. “My daughter looked it up on the Internet and it is similar to other scams.” Please see SCAM | 2
‘Moses’ building has a new owner BY JEBB JOHNSTON jjohnston@dailycorinthian.com
“Old Moses” has a new owner. Justin Sumler appeared before the Corinth Board of Mayor and Aldermen on Tuesday to report on progress with cleaning up the large, fire-damaged commercial property at South Tate and U.S. Highway 72. Previous owner Leon Williams transferred ownership to Sumler, his grandson.
Photo compliments of Bill Avery
Twisted clowns harvest body parts for cold cuts at the Haunted Theatre’s butcher shop.
Scary fundraiser supports Coliseum Council presents their first ever Haunted Theatre. Making its debut to the public on Thursday, Oct. 22 from 7 to 9 p.m., the spirited venue will be filled with dolls, ghosts, zom-
BY KIMBERLY SHELTON kshelton@dailycorinthian.com
Blood-curdling shrieks will echo through the halls of the historic Coliseum Civic Center as the Corinth Area Arts
bies, witches and other ghouls. Encore presentations will be held from 7 to 10 p.m. on Friday, Oct. 23–Saturday, Oct. 24; Please see HAUNTED | 2
Sumler told the board he wanted to get the property in his name in order to take control of the cleanup. An asbestos inspection was conducted last Thursday, and any further action hinges on the results, which Sumler had not yet received. Sumler said he has financing lined up to proceed with cleanup. The board requested he rePlease see BOARD | 6
Farmers use drones to monitor yields BY STEVE BEAVERS sbeavers@dailycorinthian.com
An eye in the sky. Farmers are now turning to the method to increase crop yields. Several individuals got to hear about the effect drones can have on farming during a stop on The Alliance 2015 Agriculture & Forestry Tour on Tuesday. Will Gotcher, an Integrated Solutions Consultant with TriGreen Equipment in Leighton, Ala., showcased the Pacesetter model during the second of three stops on the tour. “We took on drones over a year ago,” said Gotcher dur-
ing the presentation at Ely and Tim Mitchell Farms. “They can benefit farmers in such ways as drainage assessments, seed stand counts, early yield estimates and weed and insect pressures.” The Mitchells have used a drone once. “It took a lot of walking steps away,” said Tim Mitchell. “The drone we used covered over 100 acres in 30 minutes.” That saves a great deal of time when you have a 4,000-acre farm such as the Mitchells. “We are thinking about purchasing one because you are always looking for an easier way
in farming,” said Mitchell. “You can’t realize the full effect a drone is going to have,” said Patrick Poindexter, County Director with the Mississippi State Extension Service. “Drones lead to a whole different level of data it can capture from fields.” Farmers are leaning toward the use of drones, according to Louis Wasson, Senior Extension Associate Geosystems Research Institute at Mississippi State University. “We know there is an interest, but what we don’t know is who Please see TOUR | 6
Staff photo by Steve Beavers
Local farmer Tim Mitchell (right) talks with Will Gotcher, an Integrated Solutions Consultant with TriGreen Equipment, about the benefits of using a drone in farming.
25 years ago
10 years ago
Kossuth Elementary School students take advantage of hightech new learning tools as the school unveils a new computer lab. Principal Charles Allen says the lab includes 24 new IBM computers used for a variety of classes.
The Alcorn County chapter of the American Red Cross marks a fundraising milestone. Executive Director Gwen Spain announces over $80,000 has been raised locally for hurricane relief efforts.
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Thursday, October 22, 2015
Jail trustee is arrested
HAUNTED CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
from 7 to 9 p.m. on Thursday, Oct. 29; and from 7 to 10 p.m. on Friday, Oct. 30–Saturday, Oct. 31. The ghostly attractions and creepy contortions are recommended only for those 10 and up as they are a bit too scary for young ones. Complete with butcher shop, cemetery, funeral parlor and haunted tunnel, the Haunted Theatre will resurrect the dead for a bone-chilling experience patrons won’t soon forget. “We are trying to keep costs at a minimum so more can be saved to support the building through the year,” said CAAC Committee Member Myra Byrnes. “Utility bills are enormous now for a building this size, not to mention the restoration costs of plaster walls, carpet, equipment, etc.” Not for the faint of heart, the cost to enter is $10 per person at the door. Proceeds from the event will help provide for the Coliseum’s upkeep. Donations will also be accepted. “Enter if you dare”, reads the warning posted overhead. Those unable to climb stairs or tolerate flashing lights and fog machines are forewarned. “This is my first time to participate in a haunted house attraction of any kind and I am super excited to have been chosen to ‘direct’ a room in The Haunted Theatre,” said Scene Director June Plaxco. There is a huge, community-wide crew working to bring this event to ‘life’.” Various directors have cast their stories or vignettes from volunteer actors. Each group will work together to portray a spinetingling scene that will haunt spectators’ dreams, according to Plaxco. “The Haunted Theatre at the historic Coliseum will be a real adventure. I doubt very seriously that many have been through most of the building,” she said. “Guests will climb to the tippy-top balcony to begin their journey which will wind through most of the magnificent structure.” “There are things to challenge reality at every turn,” she added. “Everyone who comes to be creeped out and terrified should be proud to know their screams are contributing to the longevity this sunning, local landmark.” (For more information call or text Barbara Trapp at 662-808-0267
Staff Report
A trustee has been charged with attempting to bring drugs into the Alcorn County Jail. Christopher Jones, 30, of 22 County Road 327, Corinth was stopped by jailers over the weekend as he entered the facility. A search of Jones turned up marijuana and methamphetamine. Officers with the Alcorn Narcot- Jones ics Unit were called to the scene and Jones was charged with two counts of introducing drugs into a county jail. Bond has yet to be set.
If Initiative 42 is passed, it will require the legislature to fund MAEP and K-12 education without raising taxes. The goal is to force the legislature over time, depending on the growth, to fully fund MAEP. Staff photos by Kimberly Shelton
A skeletal bellhop greets guests as they enter the Haunted Theatre.
INITIATIVE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
legislature to a Jackson judge, which could mean less local control of public education. The board also supports that the legislation change the formula for the way MAEP money is funded to schools. Currently funding is determined by average daily attendance. “I was unaware until now that every morning, each school’s attendance is reported to the state,” said board president Mary Coleman. Superintendent Gina Rogers Smith said that is why so much focus and stress is placed on attendance within the district. ASD supports a legislation change to total enrollment for MAEP funding. The board also supports the continued implementation of the Mississippi Collegeand-Career Ready Stan-
dards (Core Standards) and the requiring of school districts to transition from an elected to an appointed superintendent. Board members chose to support consolidating school districts that have chronically failing schools, consolidating school districts based on the number of school districts within the county and consolidating school districts based on student enrollment. Items the local board chose to oppose included the requirement that all school board members be elected, legislation restricting local control of school boards and the removal of school boards from the school personnel hiring process. The survey, which was sent to every school district in the state, is meant to help MSBA direct its lobbying efforts during the 2016 Legislative Session.
SCAM CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
A wicked witch, complete with rosy apple and toothy grin, lurks in the entryway of the Haunted Theatre. or Myra Byrnes at 662603-5776. Leave a message if there is no answer
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Local/Region
Thursday, October 22, 2015
Today in History Today is Thursday, October 22, the 295th day of 2015. There are 70 days left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in History: On October 22, 1962, in a nationally broadcast address, President John F. Kennedy revealed the presence of Soviet-built missile bases under construction in Cuba and announced a quarantine of all offensive military equipment being shipped to the Communist island nation.
On this date: In 1836, Sam Houston was inaugurated as the first constitutionally elected president of the Republic of Texas. In 1883, the original Metropolitan Opera House in New York held its grand opening with a performance of Gounod’s “Faust.” In 1915, Israeli statesman Yitzhak Shamir was born in Ruzinoy, Poland, in present-day Belarus. In 1928, Republican presidential nominee Herbert Hoover spoke of the “American system of rugged individualism” in a speech at New York’s Madison Square Garden. In 1934, bank robber Charles “Pretty Boy” Floyd was shot to death by federal agents and local police at a farm near East Liverpool, Ohio. In 1953, the FrancoLao Treaty of Amity and Association effectively made Laos an independent member of the French Union. In 1979, the U.S. government allowed the deposed Shah of Iran to travel to New York for medical treatment — a decision that precipitated the Iran hostage crisis. French conductor and music teacher Nadia Boulanger died in Paris. In 1981, the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization was decertified by the federal government for its strike the previous August. In 1986, President Ronald Reagan signed into law sweeping taxoverhaul legislation. In 1991, the European Community and the European Free Trade Association concluded a landmark accord to create a free trade zone of 19 nations by 1993.
Ten years ago: Hurricane Wilma punished Mexico’s Caribbean coastline for a second day. Meanwhile, a record 22nd tropical storm of the season formed about 125 miles off the Dominican Republic; because the annual list of storm names had already been exhausted, forecasters called the new system Tropical Storm Alpha.
Daily Corinthian • 3
Across the Region Early voting underway in Selmer
TWRA will hold education course
SELMER, Tenn. — Early voting is underway in the city of Selmer. According to the McNairy County Election Commission, there are three alderman positions on the ballot. Voters will also decide whether wine can be sold in grocery stores and if restaurants can serve alcohol. Early votes can be cast at the McNairy County Election Commission office through Oct. 29 for the Nov. 3 election day.
SELMER, Tenn. — The Tennessee Wildlife Resource Agency (TWRA) will hold a Hunter Education Course on Saturday, Oct. 24 and Sunday, Oct. 25 at the Highlands Church in Finger. The two-day class will begin at 8 a.m. on Saturday and at 2 p.m. on Sunday. Students must attend both days to receive credit for the class. All students planning on taking the class must register online at tn.wildlife.org. When you go to the website, click on Hunter Education for more information on the class. Those who do not have internet access may call the regional office of TWRA at 1-800-372-3928. The directions to Highlands Church are on the website. The Hunter Education class is free and the student must be 9-years-old to be eligible for the course.
Turnip green queen crowned BOONEVILLE — Darlene Hurt was chosen as grand champion of the 2015 International Turnip Green Cookoff held Saturday during Booneville’s annual Fall Festival. Hurt received a $500 check and will represent the competition during the annual Booneville Christmas Parade. Donzia Miller was selected as reserve grand champion and received a $250 check. Myra Short received honorable mention at the event. Andy Lee of WTVA, Mississippi Supreme Court Justice David Chandler and poet Patricia Neely Dorsey served as judges for the event which raised money this year for the Booneville Boys and Girls Club.
Volunteer work day planned TISHOMINGO — A voluntary work day has been set for “The Nature Center” Project at Tishomingo State Park from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 24 at The Old Nature Center & Museum at Tishomingo State Park. The scope of work will include: general cleaning, sweeping, mopping, window cleaning, pressure washing, exterior painting, removal of old shrubs and landscaping materials, tree pruning, chimney sweep, repair of fireplace brick, and general lawn maintenance work. Suggested items to bring are a sack lunch; paint brushes and scrapers; safety glasses; dust masks; gloves; leaf rakes or blowers; chainsaws or pole saws; and a weed eater with brush cutter attachment. All participants will be required to sign a waiver of liability form. (For more information contact the park office at 662-438-6914, Terry Harp at terryh@ mdwfp.state.ms.us or Charlotte Lard at charlottem@mdwfp.state. ms.us)
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Renasant buys KeyWorth Bank TUPELO — Renasant Corp. will acquire Georgia-based KeyWorth Bank for $59 million in stock. The banks announced the merger Tuesday, just after Tupelo-based Renasant announced its quarterly earnings. The merger will bulk up the presence of Renasant in Atlanta’s affluent northern suburbs. Renasant has been gobbling up other banks, acquiring seven in the last 11 years. Renasant says the acquisition would boost profits immediately.
Congressman Kelly hosts Academy Day TUPELO — U.S. Congressman Trent Kelley will host the Annual Military Service Academy Day from 10 a.m. until noon on Saturday, Oct. 31. at Army Aviation Support Facility #2, located at 3005 West Jackson Street in Tupelo. The event is open to middle and high school students and their fami-
lies, school officials, or interested citizens who want to learn about the five United States military academies and their admissions process. (For more information contact the Military Academy Liason at 662841-8808.)
Savannah police ticketing up SAVANNAH, Tenn. — Police officers in the City of Savannah are writing an unusual number of tickets, not for what drivers are doing, but for what they don’t have. According to Chief Gary Will Jr., his officers have written more than 460 tickets this year to drivers without insurance. Another 200plus tickets have been written to people either driving with a suspended license or those driving who have never been issued a license. In January 2016, police said state law will allow any officer in Tennessee to have a driver’s vehicle towed if they’re driving without a license.
Most wanted man will serve time NEW ALBANY — A man who was once the subject of a nationwide manhunt while on the run with his wife is serving his time in a Mississippi prison. Ramon Barreto, 35, is serving 18 years in prison after pleading guilty to six counts of child endangerment, three counts of felony child abuse and manslaughter. He entered guilty pleas in Union County Circuit Court in July and is currently being held in the Walnut Grove Correctional Facility in central Mississippi. Barreto and his wife, Janet, were arrested in December of 2008 by Union County authorities in connection with the death of their two-yearold adopted daughter. After posting bond, the Barretos left Mississippi sparking a nationwide manhunt and a feature on the television show America’s Most Wanted. Janet Barreto was
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added to the U. S. Marshals Service 15 Most Wanted Fugitives list in June of 2013. The couple was thought to be living in California at the time. They were later captured in Portland, Oregon, in August 2014. Janet pleaded guilty in September 2014 to six counts of child endangerment, three counts of felony child abuse and manslaughter. She was ordered to serve 25 years in prison and died in December while serving her time.
Selmer gets mobile app SELMER, Tenn. — The city of Selmer is now at the fingertips of anyone with a smartphone or tablet. A new app highlights places to eat, shop, and buy a home, among many other things. Bryan Huff is the man behind the app. Selmer Mayor John Smith tasked him with creating the online avenue. After consulting with multiple companies, learning about generating computer codes, and having to learn Android and iPhone technology, Huff has Selmer on the technological map. Local business owners hope the app will bring in old friends and new sales. Huff said the app still isn’t completed, and may not ever be because of all the possibilities of growth. The mayor said he hopes it not only brings tourists into Selmer, but brings the community closer together. Other cities in Tennessee, like Memphis and Nashville, have already gone mobile. With a population of about 4,500 residents, many hope an app will help Selmer stand out. Huff said he’s confident the community response will be positive. Since its launch just more than a week ago, the app has been downloaded more than 200 times. Huff said the app development cost the city about $4,000. Anyone who wants the app can download it for
free on the App store for iPhones and on Google Play for Android devices.
Law turns police threats into felonies BOLIVAR, Tenn. — Hardeman County commissioners approved an unprecedented measure Tuesday night. The commission approved a resolution created by Hardeman County Mayor Jimmy Sain. It makes any type of threat to a law enforcement officer a felony. The Tennessee Blue Line Crossing Resolution would make threatening an officer a Class E felony. It includes verbal threats along with any threats made over social media websites and apps. Commissioners approved the resolution with a 13-1 vote. Hardeman County plans to go to the state legislation board in January in hopes of making it a state law.
Airline troubles continue in Tupelo TUPELO — At least four airlines are expected to submit bids to provide air service in Tupelo. An airline consultant is working with the Tupelo Airport Authority to gather interest from airlines to submit RFQs (requests for proposal) to the DOT, which would subsidize the service through the Essential Air Service program. SeaPort last year agreed to a two-year contract to provide 30 weekly roundtrip flights to Nashville and Memphis from Tupelo for $2.5 million a year, but the service has been plagued by late flights and cancelations since operations began last October. Last month, only 28 passengers flew out of Tupelo. SeaPort requested in August that it end its service this Friday. But the DOT last month ordered it to continue flying through Dec. 28. However, that message hasn’t apparently been filtered down to the SeaPort employees in Tupelo, who said they’ve been told Friday is their last day.
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Opinion
Reece Terry, publisher
Mark Boehler, editor
4 • Thursday, October 22, 2015
Corinth, Miss.
What is a nice girlie mag to do? Forget, for a moment, all the other casualties of the Internet revolution. Forget vanishing newspapers, the anachronistic so-called hard copy. And never you mind all those youngsters becoming obese and diabetic from sitting zombielike in front of screens. They’d probably get to that sad state as adults, anyhow. Forget the loss of thousands of jobs as computers make humans irrelevant. And who cares if now we all have the attention spans of gnats and the Rheta conversational skills of TrapJohnson pist monks? All of that is minor comColumnist pared with the latest loss foisted on mankind – yes, I meant “mankind” not “humankind” – by the Age of the Internet. Playboy magazine is banning nudes. Yes, it’s true. The porno mag that launched a thousand lusts in millions of hearts has decided that it must do something after dramatic drops in subscribers. The wish book reportedly trails even AARP magazine, which gamely tells retired people how to stay healthy and relevant and puts old movie stars who manage to stay lean on its cover. “You’re now one click away from every sex act imaginable for free,” said Scott Flanders, Playboy chief executive. He told The New York Times that nudity in the most famous of the girlie mags is “just passe at this juncture.” Why pay to ride the bucky horse outside the grocery store when for free you can climb aboard American Pharaoh? In other words, for this day and age, Playboy is far too tame. So the magazine that was born the same year as I was, 1953, must embrace its other strengths, the stories and interviews that used to be the wink-wink joke. “Oh, I read Playboy for the interviews ....” Flanders didn’t even mention dating apps like Tinder that take the lusting out of the heart and into the realm of reality. Vanity Fair recently reported on the “hookup culture” and talked to young men at bars swiping Tinder with an addict’s fervor. It made for tragic reading, unless you are a young man at a bar swiping Tinder. “You could talk to two or three girls at a bar and pick the best one, or you can swipe a couple hundred people a day .... It’s setting up two or three Tinder dates a week and, chances are, sleeping with all of them, so you could rack up 100 girls you’ve slept with in a year ....” So said one young man all eaten up with romance and sensitivity, not to mention math skills. But back to Playboy, which is beginning to look like the John Boehner of sex tools, familiar and perhaps not-so-awful in retrospect. A regular intellectual in comparison with, say, Kevin McCarthy, Mister Malaprops. At least Playboy has those cartoons and important interviews. When Playboy goes PG-13, changes its format and becomes a magazine you can take home to Mom, what will happen to its demographics? Well, Flanders has precedent. He told The Times that the Playboy website already had dispensed with nudity, and the average age of its reader dropped from 47 to just over 30. Web traffic jumped by 12 million users per month. It lost a few dirty older men and attracted some young ones desperate for more substance. (To find out more about Daily Corinthian columnist Rheta Grimsley Johnson and her books, visit www.rhetagrimsleyjohnsonbooks.com.)
Prayer for today Gracious Father, help me to understand that while I may be content to rest with what I have gathered, I cannot preserve the strength of my soul unless I share my possessions. Give me a passion for humanity that will advance gifts through love, and offer service without the need of an appeal. Amen.
A verse to share “Thy words were found, and I did eat them; and thy word was unto me the joy and rejoicing of mine heart: for I am called by thy name, O LORD God of hosts.” — Jeremiah 15:16
Letters Policy Include your full signature, home address and telephone number on the letter for verification. All letters are subject to editing before publication, especially those beyond 600 words in length. Send to: Letters to the editor, Daily Corinthian, P.O. Box 1800, Corinth, Miss. 38835. Letters may also be e-mailed to: letters@daily corinthian.com. Email is the preferred method.
Another meeting of unlike minds When President Obama meets in Washington November 9 with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, I would imagine Netanyahu’s main concern will be to find out exactly what the U.S. means by “infringement” as it applies to the Iran nuclear agreement. What exactly will the U.S. do when, not if, Iran violates the deal? What if Israel and the U.S. disagree as to whether there has been a violation? Former Israeli ambassador to the United States, Zalman Shoval, spoke with me last week following his address to the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) in Washington. Given the president’s reluctance to do much in response to various foreign challenges, Shoval is not optimistic the U.S. will do more than drop resolutions on the Iranian regime should it continue working to finish building a nuclear bomb and a missile system to deliver it to its chosen targets – Israel and possibly
the U.S. One can imagine a scenario in which Iran attacks Israel and threatens to launch Cal a missile at Thomas one or more U.S. cities, Columnist possibly with the assistance of North Korea, which has already threatened such an attack and sides with Israel’s enemies. At a minimum, Iranian agents already in the U.S. might ignite terrorist attacks, causing panic and damage to the economy. In Shoval’s address, he noted that 85 percent of all Israelis see a nuclear Iran as an “existential threat” – and about the same number think the deal with Iran will do nothing to keep them from getting a nuclear bomb. The polls cut across Israel’s multiple political parties in a rare display of unity. Shoval told the CSIS audience that Iran sees the nuclear deal with the U.S.
and five other countries differently: “...(Iran) feels itself encouraged (and) emboldened by the nuclear deal and by American attitudes, to escalate not only its support for Hezbollah, Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad – as well as for President Assad in Syria – but also in confronting American intentions and activities directly or indirectly in Iraq, Yemen and in the Gulf states.” This is key. Even in the unlikely event the Iranians live up to the agreement and don’t surreptitiously continue work on a nuclear bomb, they can keep on fomenting terrorism through their various proxy groups. Shoval noted that there have been sharp disagreements on policy issues between the U.S. and Israel over many years, but this one is different. Referring to the Iran nuke deal, he said, “Iran was seen by the president as a major, the major diplomatic international achievement of his whole presidency and he wouldn’t let anything come
against it – while in Jerusalem there is a patriotic and historically minded prime minister who is convinced that Israel and the Jewish people face for the second time in modern history, an existential threat from a country whose leadership is serious in its declared intentions to wipe the Jewish state off the face of the earth – and is soon to be in possession of the means to do this – means which even Hitler didn’t have. For this he was willing to risk much of his political capital in the U.S. ... and even risk temporarily, the comfortable warmth of the bipartisan relationship.” President Obama is fond of assuring Israel that he has their back. Given the likelihood Iran will violate the agreement and continue underwriting terrorism, Netanyahu should make sure that when the president pats him on the back, he isn’t holding a knife. (Readers may email Cal Thomas at tcaeditors@ tribpub.com.)
GOP wolves looking for sheep A wolf in sheep’s clothing is still a wolf. And no matter how “amiable” and “personable” and “affable” Ben Carson is supposed to be, he is still a wolf. Some find his utter cluelessness on the major issues of the day both charming and refreshing. It will be far less so if he is president of the United States. Why even worry about this? Because he is in a virtual tie for first place with Donald Trump to be the presidential nominee of the Republican Party in 2016. If the GOP gold standard this presidential cycle is finding outsiders who have no experience in government, Carson looks as if he is 24 karats. He is not some pol who has wasted his time learning about domestic policy, foreign policy, economic policy or pretty much any policy. He was a successful brain surgeon, which has led some to speculate that for every brain he operated on, he gave up a small part of his own. He is the master of the irresponsible, sometimes bigoted, statement. He “would not advocate that we put a Muslim in charge of this nation.” And should a Muslim try to become president, Carson has this warning: “You have to reject the te-
Reece Terry
Mark Boehler
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nets of Islam. Yes, you have to.” Carson also has stated that had Jews in GerRoger many been Simon armed, they might have Columnist prevented or at least mitigated the Holocaust. Does Carson know that Jews were only 0.75 percent of the German population in 1933, when Adolf Hitler came to power, and could not possibly have fought an armed struggle against the SA, the SS, the Wehrmacht and those civilians who became Hitler’s “willing executioners”? I doubt it. And I doubt he cares. He is not a details kind of guy. He is big-picture. Those nine people murdered at Umpqua Community College in Oregon this month? Carson says they should have just swarmed the guy. “Not only would I probably not cooperate with him, I would not just stand there and let him shoot me,” Carson said bravely. “I would say, ‘Hey, guys, everybody attack him. He may shoot me, but he can’t get us all.’” There is some evidence, however, that Carson would not have risked his life at
all, preferring instead to risk the lives of others. “I have had a gun held on me, when I was in a Popeyes (in Baltimore),” Carson told Karen Hunter on Sirius XM Radio recently. “Guy comes in, puts the gun in my ribs, and I just said, ‘I believe that you want the guy behind the counter.’” Too bad all those Jews in Germany couldn’t have found a guy behind the counter. Yet Carson is an amiable man. A personable man. An affable man. Besides, Trump is still beating him by a few points. Though, it should be remembered that Trump gained popularity through hateful comments. He attacks Mexicans as rapists. He attacks American POWs in Vietnam. He repeatedly attacks some women for being “fat pigs,” “dogs,” “slobs” and “disgusting animals.” Boom! Wham! Zowie! Trump zooms to the top of the polls and stays there. Here is Fox News’ Chris Wallace after interviewing Trump on Sunday. “All of us dismissed Trump early on,” Wallace said. “A summer fling, momentary amusement. As I watch that interview and I heard what he had to say about the country and about trade and about
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losing and just the sheer force of his personality, I am beginning to believe he could be elected president of the United States.” So they are breaking out the Kool-Aid at Fox News. And they want us to drink it. But I think I will take a pass. There is a reason Trump and Carson command nearly half of the Republican vote, and it has nothing to do with quiet charm or force of personality. The Republican Party has peddled xenophobia, misogyny and willful ignorance to the public year after year. So it is not surprising that it has come up with xenophobic, misogynistic and willfully ignorant candidates. Nor is it surprising that these candidates have risen to the top. But I don’t think the rest of America is going to follow them. I don’t think we are that kind of country. The Republicans have lost the popular vote in five of the past six presidential elections. They now appear determined to make it six out of seven. (Roger Simon is chief political columnist of politico.com, an award-winning journalist and a New York Times best selling author.)
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Editorials represent the voice of the Daily Corinthian. Editorial columns, letters to the editor and other articles that appear on this page represent the opinions of the writers and the Daily Corinthian may or may not agree.
Daily Corinthian • Thursday, October 22, 2015 • 5
The work of photographer Joey Wilder will be on display through next month at the art gallery at Northeast Mississippi Community College.
Northeast photo exhibit features Aggie Band qualifies for contest work from Wilder Kossuth High School Aggie Band
The Kossuth High School Aggie Band received Superior Ratings at the Mississippi State Marching Evaluations in Tupelo on Oct. 10 and qualified to compete for a State Championship. On Saturday, Oct. 24, the Aggie Band will compete with 5 other 3A
bands at Pearl High School for the right to be called State Champion. The MHSAA-MBA State Marching Championship is an annual event to select the best high school band in each of 6 classifications. The band will perform at 2:45 p.m. with the full awards ceremony being held at
4:15 p.m. at the Pearl High School Stadium. Kossuth has competed several times over the past few years finishing as high as 3rd place. Medals will be awarded to 1st, 2nd and 3rd place bands. Band directors are Brandon Harvell and Dianne Cole.
Biggersville Junior High Homecoming Court The Biggersville Junior High School Homecoming court will be presented at 6:30 p.m. Friday prior to the Lions contest with Houlka. Members of the homecoming court are (from left) Patience Hite – 7th Grade Maid; Lynleigh Crabb – Football Maid; Canasyia Barton – Queen; Molly Rhodes – Princess; and Zianna Taylor – 8th Grade Maid.
BHS Meets the Wizard of Oz Biggersville High School is in search of the Emerald City this week in an effort to ramp up school spirit for Friday night’s homecoming game against Houlka. Colby Crenshaw, Callie Estes, Blaklie Mitchell and Taylor Durham traveled the Yellow Brick Road in costume Tuesday and visited Biggersville Elementary as the main characters in the classic tale of “The Wizard of Oz.” Classroom doors and hallways at the high school have been decorated and competitions held this week to increase student involvement. Dress up days included Twin Day or Which Witch is Which? on Wednesday, Color War Thursday and School Spirit Day Friday. Other events at the BHS campus this week include a Talent Show at 12:45 p.m. today in the gym, the first junior high basketball games at 5:30 p.m. today and a homecoming parade and pep rally to follow on Friday morning at 9:15 a.m. Biggersville eighth graders are also sponsoring a canned food drive for the holidays, which began Monday.
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An exhibit of Photography by Joey Wilder will hang in the Anderson Hall Art Gallery on the Northeast Mississippi Community College Booneville campus now through Nov 19. Wilder is a native Mississippian, having lived in northeast Mississippi most of his life. He went to high school in Tennessee, where he fell in love with the beauty that state had to offer. He graduated from McNairy Central High School in Selmer, Tenn. in 1993. He went on to graduate East Mississippi Community College in 1999 with an associate’s degree in Mortuary Science and Northeast Mississippi Community College in 2009 with an Associates of Applied Science in Nursing. He currently works as a Registered Nurse in the Surgical Intensive Care Unit at Magnolia Regional Health Center in Corinth. He lives in Booneville with Jennifer, his wife of 20 years, and their two children, Myles and Lorelai. Joey’s interest in photography grew quickly after the birth of his son Myles in 2010. His daughter Lorelai was born in 2012 and was quickly added to the beautiful subjects to photograph. In between baby and family photos, Wilder began capturing landscape, nature and wildlife images, subjects that continue to be his area of focus. Being an avid hunter and outdoorsman, it was only natural that when he wanted to learn more about his camera, the open terrain was his first
“I would like to send out a huge and heartfelt thank you to my family and friends who have supported and encouraged me along the way.” Joey Wilder Photographer choice to photograph. He is a self-taught artist with no formal education in photography, only a passion to learn more. Included in Wilder’s prints are scenes and settings from areas as close as his backyard in Booneville, to places all around the southeastern United States. He has recently had the opportunity to work in areas of the west and mid-western parts of the country. His personal favorite area to capture is the vast mountain ranges located in eastern Tennessee and western North Carolina. “I would like to send out a huge and heartfelt thank you to my family and friends who have supported and encouraged me along the way,” Wilder said. Gallery hours are Monday through Thursday 8 a.m. until 3:30 p.m. For more information contact Terry Anderson at 662-72-7336 or by email at tfanderson@nemcc.edu.
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We understand what it means to be “out of” one thing and “into” something else. We often hear it said of someone, vocationally; “Oh he’s out of one thing and into something else.” It might be said of those who, by their choices, wind up on the wrong side of the law. Maybe it is our place of residence; out of one, and into another. We simply mean that one has changed something about his or her life. Paul wrote of the thanks that would be given to God the Father, “who made us meet (qualified, NASB) to be partakers of the inheritance of the saints in light; who delivered us out of the power of darkness, and translated (transferred, NASB) us into the kingdom of the Son of his love. (Colossians 1:13 ASV 1901) This is not a physical, or geographical move, but a spiritual move out of the power, bondage, and rule of Satan in one’s life, into the rule, authority, and lordship of Jesus, made possible by the grace, or unmerited, favor of God, “in order to present you before him, holy and blameless, and beyond reproach,” (Colossians 1:22) “having been buried with Him in baptism, in which you were also raised up with Him, through faith in the working of God who raised Him from the dead.” (Colossians 2:12 NASB) But in addition to being in a new spiritual relationship, we have been “redirected” in our purposes. In Ephesians 2:10, after discussing salvation by grace and faith, (verses 8 and 9) Paul says, “For we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus unto good works, which God hath before ordained that we should walk in them.” (KJV) Further, when Paul wrote to Titus, he spoke of the “great God and our Savior Jesus Christ, who gave himself for us, that we might redeem us from all iniquity, and purify unto himself a peculiar people (a people for his own possession, ASV 1901) zealous of good works.” (Titus 2:13, 14) The child of God is to “put to death” the deeds of the flesh, and “seek things above”. Because he has been moved out of Satan’s kingdom and into the kingdom of Jesus. (Colossians 3:1 ff) The old song says, “Out of my bondage, sorrow and night, Jesus I come, Jesus I come; into thy freedom, gladness and light, Jesus I come to thee; Out of my sickness into thy health, Out of my want and into thy wealth, Out of my sin and into Thyself, Jesus I come to thee.” Do you need to move to a new kingdom? We invite you to study and worship with us at the Danville Church of Christ.
DanvilleTimChurch of Christ Carothers- Minister 481 cr 409 Corinth MS • c/o 471 cr 513, Rienzi MS • 662-287-0312
6 • Thursday, October 22, 2015 • Daily Corinthian
Making science fly, float at Selmer Middle If you’d walked into long distance, Ms. Glenn Selmer Middle School’s (who teaches math) gym a couple weeks ago, would head out with her you’d have discovered tape measure. I strolled over to inrows of colorful egg-crash carts lined up on the spect the posters the students had drawn bleachers to your to present the left, a wall of posthistory and funcers on your right, tioning of the Six and the glossy surSimple Machines face of the gymnathat they’ve been sium’s floor sprinstudying. Mankled with dozens of kind has been usminiature marshRyland ing the wheel and mallows. Bruhwiler axle for thousands Seventh graders from Kari Hughes’ Columnist of years to make work easier. And science classes the lever. The pulknelt alongside the court shooting catapults ley. The inclined plane. they’d made from wood- The wedge‌. The wedge? en tongue depressors I’d never thought of (like big popsicle sticks) and rubber bands and a wedge as a “machineâ€? plastic spoons. They’d set when I’d tuck one beneath a marshmallow into the a door to hold it open or bowl of the spoon, press when I’d watch my husit down to the ground, band use one to split logs and let’er rip. Marshmal- for firewood. In fact, as lows sailed through the the poster reminded me, air faster than the eye the metal head of an axe is a wedge, too. could follow. They’re so much a part I enjoyed the babble of excited voices. The con- of our everyday lives, we trolled chaos. And I loved forget that somebody acthe fact that most of the tually invented them way moms and dads instant- back when. The great ly squatted beside their mathematician Archimekids and watched intent- des, for instance, was the ly or helped any way they first to describe the screw (Machine Number Six) could. Then word got around back in ancient Greece, that if you used more though no one knows exrubber bands, your actly who dreamed it up. Since I was a kid mymarshmallow would fly farther. Half a dozen stu- self, I’ve always thought dents rushed to a work that screws were neat. table to take their cata- Much better than nails. pults apart so they could You could undo a screw. And use it again. One reassemble them. Each time a plump poster pointed out that “projectileâ€? went an extra it’s composed of a bolt
and threads. Okay. That’s pretty obvious. But if I hadn’t studied that poster, I couldn’t have pointed out that the threads circle the bolt in a helix, not in a spiral. Hmmm. I had to think that one out. Eventually, I wandered over to check out the egg-crash carts, a project these science students had worked on earlier this year. Their challenge was to design and build a cart that would keep its occupant (an egg) from cracking when their cart rolled down a sevenfoot ramp and smashed against the classroom wall. Did I mention that those eggs were not hardboiled? They were raw. That, Ms. Hughes said, was part of the excitement. Most looked like tiny go-carts, very colorful and clever, especially the ones that sported feathers. I’m not sure whether the feathers were meant to act as “air brakes� or if they were just for decoration, but they certainly added a jaunty air. I’d like to have seen the carts in action, but they’d already been raced, and quite a few, in fact, were falling apart. I have a feeling they’d been thoroughly tested. While the catapult contest continued under Ms. Duncan’s supervision, Ms. Hughes led me down the hall to the library, where Mr. Williams’ fifth graders had gathered around tanks of water.
His students were supposed to create Flotation Devices any way they wanted to from the styrofoam cups, popsicle sticks, rubber bands, clothespins, Scotch tape, and multicolored straws that were strewn across each table. The winner would be the device that could: 1. Actually float. 2. And carry the most weight. To test them, Mr. Williams had a set of weights that were piled, one at a time, onto each “raft.� Here again, moms and dads were pitching in enthusiastically. I don’t think it was just because each wanted his or her child to win. I think all those popsicle sticks and so on brought out the kid — and the inventor — in young and old. Every table approached the problem differently. One father/ daughter combo had set several cups inside a plastic bag, but it had gotten waterlogged, so they were busy draining them out. Another kid’s device looked like a giant insect with plastic straws for legs. Its maker set it in the tank to show me how nicely it floated. Mr. Williams placed a weight on it, and it held. Second weight, and that “bug� promptly rolled over. Oops. The student sighed and pulled it out. “Gotta put straws on the sides, too,� he said, and set to work. One little girl looked
sadly dejected. Her mother’s hands still flew. “How many times,� Mom demanded, “do you think the guy who invented the cell phone had to keep trying?� On that heartening note, Ms. Hughes and I headed back to the gym where the catapult contest had just reached its conclusion. Dustin Sickelbaugh had won at 47 feet, but after time was called, Ty Taylor’s marshmallow made it to 50, so Ms. Hughes decided to call it a tie. Bravo for both young men! Then for the final event. A test! Earlier, the students had composed multiplechoice questions based on information from their posters. (For example, “An inclined plane can be found: A. In the forest. B. In the bottom of a bathtub. C. On a table leg. D. On bacon.�) They’d turned their questions in to Ms. Hughes, and she had typed up ten of them. So the kids and their parents took the quiz, walking back and forth along the wall, scanning the posters for the answers. I hope they learned as much as I did. My only regret is that I didn’t make it back to the library to see whose Flotation Device was the winner! (Daily Corinthian columnist Ryland Bruhwiler lives on a farm in south McNairy County.)
Fall show, bridal school scheduled in Olive Branch MEMPHIS — MidSouth shows will present their Fall Wedding Show and Bridal School from 1 to 5 p.m. on Sunday, Oct. 25 at the Whispering Woods Hotel and Con-
ference Center, located in South-East Memphis at 7300 Hacks Cross Road in Olive Branch. Discounted and a limited number of free tickets (a $15 value) are
available from local businesses and at www.midsouthweddingshow.com. The first 100 brides will recieve a free High Quality Custom Print on frame-less glass of their
We’re Not the
“Unemployment Office� Anymore!
favorite wedding photo, a $200 value – courtesy of Symbolize it! Free engagement photos will be done at the show by Guest Star Studios so guests show make plans to dress up. There will also be free wedding planners, courtesy of OneWed.com. There will be multiple fashion shows, wedding planning seminars
hosted by local wedding experts, music, entertainment, games, prizes, and the most fun four hours of wedding planning ever. (For more information contact Kirk houston of Mid-South Shows by phone at 901-368-6782 or by email at midsouthshows@earthlink.net. Also, visit their website at www.MidSouthWeddingShow.com.)
Artist’s reception to be held MEMPHIS — Oxford, Mississippibased fiber artist Andi Bedsworth invites all friends and Memphis arts community members to Otherlands Coffee Bar, 641 S. Cooper Street in Memphis, for an opening reception of her exhibition on from
5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 5. Andi’s work combines collage — using fiber — with painting. Her incorporation of sewing techniques (a craft discipline) in her paintings blurs the line that usually separates 2-Dimensional artists.
Deaths Dee Hancock Jr.
Dee Hancock Jr., 78, died Wednesday, October 21, 2015. Arrangement are incomplete with Corinthian Funeral Home.
Stella ‘Granny’ Rinehart
RIENZI — Funeral services for Stella Louise “Granny� Rinehart, 72, are set for 1 p.m. Friday at Magnolia Funeral Home Chapel of Memories with burial in Sardis Primitive Baptist Church Cemetery. Mrs. Rinehart died Tuesday, October 20, 2015 at Magnolia Regional Health Center. Born August 5, 1943, she retired as a factory worker f r o m Kimberly-Clark. She was a Rinehart member of Sardis Primitive Baptist Church. Survivors include her husband of 53 years, George Rinehart of Rienzi; sons, Phil Rinehart (Rhonda) of Corinth and Scott Rinehart (Rachel) of Rienzi; daughters, Penny McDonald (Terry) of Corinth and Joan Cooper (Hal) of Corinth; and grandchildren, Amy Hammock (D.J.), Nikki Paine (Lee), Daniel Cooper, Zach Cooper, Hannah Rinehart, Maecy Rinehart, Skyler Rinehart, Kaitlin Rinehart, Braxton Tucker, Wesley Baker and Libby Hammock. She was preceded in death by her parents, Monroe Hughes and Alma Guin Hughes. Bro. Steve Leggett, Bro. Pete Perry and Bro. Cecil Woodruff will officiate. Visitation is 5-8 p.m. tonight and from noon until service time Friday.
Obituary Policy All obituaries (complete and incomplete) will be due no later than 4 p.m. on the day prior to its publication. Obituaries will only be accepted from funeral homes. All obituaries must contain a signature of the family member making the funeral arrangements.
TOUR CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
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is taking advantage of it,â&#x20AC;? said Wasson. Stop one on the annual tour was a look at the success of Project 319 on County Road 605 near the Kenneth Martin Farm. The project provides funds to assist local soil and water conservation districts with programs to help local farmers improve and protect soil and water quality. Natural Resources Conservation Service Technician Shane Huff talked about how the project has
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spent in the Tarebreeches Creek watershed through the 319 program, according Huff. The final stop was to see permanent firelanes at the Francis McNair Farm. A permanent firelane is a strip of bare earth, green nonflammable grasses and forbes or any combination of fire-resistant vegetation and nonflammable materials and used to slow or stop the spread of fire on to areas where fire is excluded. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Firelanes are really important now with us being under a fire ban,â&#x20AC;? said Poindexter.
sue after tenants moved out. Located at the corner of Washington and Shiloh, the property became overgrown and had debris left behind by the former tenants. Neighbor Lila Cook, whom the city credited with doing some cleanup on the property herself, said it is also infested with bugs. The board voted to adjudicate, allowing the city to proceed with cleanup and adding the cost to the ownerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s tax bill. The board also voted
to adjudicate properties at 1806 Third Street and 1901 North Parkway. The board gave 30-day extensions for 1610 Meigg Street and 1806 Third Street and dismissed action on 117 Melody Lane, 1607 Strickland Street and 1208 Main Street. â&#x20AC;˘ The board approved the usual street closures for the Christmas parade, which is set for Dec. 5 at 5 p.m. â&#x20AC;˘ Aldermen reappointed Dave Huwe to The Alliance Board of Directors.
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helped local farmer Steve Wilbanks. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Water had formed from flooding to cut off land used by the farmer,â&#x20AC;? said Huff. Project 319 called for the building of an overflow pipe on a slope. A concrete box was constructed to catch water so it could exit the field in a safe manner, according to NRCSâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Sandy Mitchell â&#x20AC;&#x153;It took care of the gully problem and allowed the farmer to access the whole field,â&#x20AC;? said Mitchell. Over $300,000 in costshare funds have been
turn with another update at the Nov. 17 meeting. Citing safety concerns, the city recently sent a letter to the owner requesting cleanup of the property, which had a large fire on April 1. In other business: â&#x20AC;˘ A couple of neighbors were present for the public hearing on adjudication of a residential rental property at 1616 Washington Street, which recently became an is-
Thursday, October 22, 2015
State/Nation
Across the Nation Associated Press
House GOP floats debt limit options WASHINGTON — Washington is barreling toward a deadline to raise the government’s borrowing cap and avert a first-ever default on U.S. payments, but there’s no sign yet on Capitol Hill of a viable solution. Instead, the Republican-controlled House is moving ahead on tea party-blessed legislation related to the debt limit that has no chance of making it through the Senate, much less of being signed by President Barack Obama. Credit markets are already nervous about the lack of progress as a Nov. 3 Treasury Department deadline looms. That’s when the government’s ability to use accounting steps to pay its bills for veterans, Social Security recipients, federal employees and others will run out and the government would have a dangerously small fiscal cushion. “There is no margin for error,” Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew said Wednesday at a conference sponsored by the Center for American Progress. “After Nov. 3, we cannot borrow any more money. We will be operating on a cash basis. Some days we will have enough cash to pay our bills. Other days we won’t. Going past Nov. 3 is irresponsible.”
Man gets stolen car back 30 years later NORTH CANTON, Ohio — A northeastern Ohio man has been reunited with his car after it was reported stolen more than 30 years ago. The (Canton) Repository reports that 52-yearold Ron Reolfi bought the 1968 Chevrolet Camaro for around $600 when he was 19. The North Canton man last saw the car on Oct. 24, 1981. He parked it outside a grocery store where he worked, and it was gone 20 minutes later. He says someone in Maryland sold the car to a person in Delaware. Authorities were then alerted that it had been stolen.
Biden says he won’t run for president WASHINGTON — Vice President Joe Biden declared Wednesday he won’t run for president in 2016, ending a monthslong flirtation with a third White House campaign and setting him on a glide path toward the end of his decades-long political career. Biden’s decision bolsters Hillary Rodham Clinton’s standing as the front-runner by sparing her a challenge from the popular vice president. In an extraordinary appearance in the White House Rose Garden, Biden said he always
knew that the window for a viable campaign might close before he could determine whether his family was emotionally prepared for another campaign so soon after the death of his son Beau from brain cancer in May. Biden said his family was prepared to back him, but that he nonetheless would not be a candidate. “Unfortunately, I believe we’re out of time,” he said, flanked by President Barack Obama and Biden’s wife, Jill. Biden did not endorse Clinton or any of the other Democratic candidates. Instead, he used the announcement to outline the path he said the party should take in the 2016 campaign, including a call for them to run on Obama’s record. In what could have been a campaign speech, Biden deplored the influence of unlimited contributions on politics, called for expanding access to college educations and called on Democrats to recognize that while Republicans may be the opposition, they are “not our enemy.”
Woman gets radar ticket for stolen SUV DENVER — A Denver woman says police mailed her a ticket after photo radar caught her SUV speeding. But it wasn’t her behind the wheel — the vehicle was stolen weeks before. Denver news station KMGH-TV reported this week that Melissa Gonzales got the ticket showing her 2014 Ford Explorer going 85 in a 45-mph zone on Sept. 15, about two weeks after it was taken from outside her home. She hopes someone recognizes the four males in the photo, but she says it’s a little upsetting to see them smiling. Gonzales says her SUV also got a parking ticket and triggered a $9.20 toll in the Denver area last month. Both were mailed to her. She says the paper trail makes it seem like whoever is driving wants to be found.
Obama: U.S. tackles medicine abuse CHARLESTON, W.Va. — Traveling to a region in the throes of a drug abuse crisis, President Barack Obama promised Wednesday to use his bully pulpit and federal programs to try to combat the “epidemic” of heroin use and prescription painkiller abuse that is upending communities across the country. On stage at a crowded community center, Obama heard from advocates, health care workers, law enforcement officials and policy makers about the depth of a problem that has long simmered at the state level but just recently risen to the national political stage.
Daily Corinthian • 7
Across the State Associated Press
ACLU sues Biloxi, challenges jailings JACKSON — Three people sued the city of Biloxi on Wednesday, saying police unconstitutionally jailed them for their inability to pay court fines. Represented by the American Civil Liberties Union, the federal lawsuit is the latest in a series nationwide to claim that authorities are ignoring constitutional protections against imprisoning poor people for unpaid fines. A similar suit was filed last week alleging illegal detentions in Jackson. “These two cases are
really part of what is a nationwide scourge of debtors’ prisons,” said Nusrat Choudhury, a lawyer for the ACLU. The suit is also another in a series of attacks against Judicial Correction Services, which until last year was Biloxi’s for-profit probation service. Although Judicial Correction Services stopped doing business in Biloxi last year, the suit alleges that a debt collection agency and a new private probation company — Court Programs Inc. — continue to threaten debtors with jail. Biloxi spokesman Vincent Creel said Wednesday that the city had yet
to receive the lawsuit.
Natchez house on endangered list NATCHEZ — One historic house in Natchez may be on the brink of extinction. The Natchez Democrat reports Melmont, a two-story Greek revival house has been named this week to the 10 Most Endangered Historic Places in Mississippi list by the Mississippi Heritage Trust — a nonprofit organization that supports historic preservation efforts throughout the state. Lolly Barnes, MHT executive director, said the trust takes nominations
for the list annually. After receiving nominations, state preservationists review nominations and determine the list. This year, the Historic Natchez Foundation nominated Melmont. “Melmont has been a concern over the years,” said Mimi Miller, director of the Historic Natchez Foundation. “It has severe structure problems.” HNF’s nomination suggested Melmont’s major structural issues stem from the house’s modern modifications, which includes the use of Portland cement to repair the house’s stucco exterior.
SALUTE OR PAY TRIBUTE TO YOUR SPECIAL VETERAN IN OUR SPECIAL VETERAN’S DAY ISSUE COMING SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 2015 As part of our special Veteran’s Day Issue, we will publish photos of local Veterans living and deceased.
$10.00 PER PHOTO
SAMUEL D. SMITH U.S. Army 1967-1970
one person per photo. All photos must be submitted by 5 p.m. on Monday Nov. 2, 2015.
I give my permission to publish the enclosed information in the Daily Corinthian Veteran’s Day issue. Signature________________________Phone___________________ Relationship to person in picture:______________________________ Veteran’s Name___________________________________________ Branch of Service__________________________________________ Years of Service, ex. 1967-1970_______________________________ Credit/debit card #_________________________________________ Exp. date___________Name & Address associated w/ card_______________ ________________________________________________________ Cash_____________________Check#_________________________ Mail to Veterans Picture, c/o The Daily Corinthian, P.O. Box 1800, Corinth, MS 38835, bring by 1607 S. Harper Rd. 38834. You may email picture & info to: classad@dailycorinthian.com
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A-B-C-D ABB Ltd ... ACE Ltd 14 AES Corp 9 AK Steel dd AT&T Inc 34 AU Optron ... AbbottLab 14 AbbVie 43 ActivsBliz 26 AdobeSy 92 AMD dd Aegon ... Aeropostl dd AEtern g h dd Aetna 16 Agilent 44 AlcatelLuc ... Alcoa 14 Alibaba 44 AllegTch dd Allergan dd Allstate 10 AlpAlerMLP q Altria 23 Amazon dd Ambev ... AMovilL 23 AmAirlines 8 AmCapLtd 13 AEagleOut 17 AEP 17 AmExp 13 AmIntlGrp 12 Amgen 20 AmicusTh dd Amphenol 22 AnalogDev 24 AngiesList 69 AnglogldA ... Annaly cc Anthem 14 Apache dd Apple Inc 13 ApldMatl 15 ArcelorMit dd ArcosDor dd ArmHld ... AsecntSol dd AstraZen s 21 Atmel cc AtwoodOcn 3 AvagoTch 51 Avon dd BB&T Cp 13 BP PLC dd Baidu 24 BakrHu 56 BcoBrad s ... BcoSantSA ... BkofAm 12 BkNYMel 14 B iPVixST q BarrickG 17 BasicEnSv dd Baxalta n ... Baxter s 9 BaytexE g dd Biogen 19 BioMedR 24 BlackBerry dd Blackstone 13 Boeing 19 BostonSci cc Brinker 15 BrMySq 58 Broadcom 29 Brookdale dd CA Inc 15 CBS B 14 CIT Grp 7 CSX 14 CVS Health 25 CblvsnNY 37 CabotO&G 36 CalifRes n ... CallonPet 76 Calpine 8 CdnNRs gs ... CapOne 10 CardnlHlth 20 Carlisle 20 Carnival 29 Caterpillar 12 Celestic g 14 44 Celgene Cemex ... Cempra dd CenovusE dd CenterPnt 16 CentAl 2 CntryLink 22 Cepheid dd ChesEng dd Chevron 14 Cigna 17 Cirrus 28 Cisco 16 Citigroup 12 CitizFincl 16 CliffsNRs dd Coach 19 CocaCola 25 Comcast 18 ConAgra 27 ConcHcre g 36 ConocoPhil 24 ConsolEngy dd ContlRescs 24 Corning 10 CSVLgNG rs q CSVLgCrd rs q CSVInvNG q CSVelIVST q CSVixSh rs q CredSuiss ... Cree Inc dd CrestwdEq 46 CrwnCstle 19 CypSemi dd DDR Corp dd DR Horton 17 DanaHldg 9 Danaher 25 Deere 12 DeltaAir 11 DenburyR 2 Depomed 23 DevonE dd DirSPBear q DxSCBear rs q DxGBull rs q DxFnBull s q DxBiotBull q DirDGldBr q DrxSCBull q Discover 11 Disney 23 DomRescs 21 Dover 14 DowChm 14 DryShips h dd DuPont 17 DukeEngy 18
Chg FifthThird FireEye FstData n -.11 FT DWF5 +2.53 Fitbit n -.12 Flextrn -.18 FordM -.15 FrankRes -.05 FrptMcM +.46 FrontierCm -1.00 FultonFncl -.04 GATX -.71 Gap +.08 GenDynam -.15 GenElec +.01 GenGrPrp -.00 GenMotors -3.54 Gentex s -.42 Genworth -.01 Gerdau -.30 GileadSci -2.31 GlaxoSKln -1.39 GoldFLtd -4.42 Goldcrp g -.79 GoldmanS -.23 GoPro +.10 GraphPkg -5.11 GrtBasSci -.06 Groupon -.43 GpTelevisa -.48 HCA Hldg +.01 HD Supply -.63 HalconRes +.28 Hallibrtn -.44 Hanesbds s -.04 HarleyD -.36 HeclaM -.49 HelixEn -2.98 Hertz +1.35 HewlettP +.71 Hilton -.51 HimaxTch -.03 HollyFront -5.45 Hologic -.84 HomeDp -.01 HonwllIntl -.12 HopFedBc -.04 HorizPhm +.09 HostHotls +2.06 HudsCity +.00 Humana -.46 HuntBncsh -.06 Huntsmn -.31 +.61 -.09 IAMGld g -.47 ICICI Bk s +.17 iShGold -3.58 iShBrazil +1.24 iShEMU -.08 iShJapan +.01 iSTaiwn -.30 iShSilver -.41 iShChinaLC +1.34 iSCorSP500 -.38 iShEMkts -.26 iSh20 yrT -.36 iSh7-10yTB +1.34 iSh1-3yTB -.06 iS Eafe +10.53 iShiBxHYB -.02 iShNsdqBio -.12 iSR1KVal +.26 iShFltRtB +2.31 iShR2K iSh3-7yTrB +.14 iShREst -1.38 iShHmCnst -.12 ITW -.25 Infosys s -.66 IngrmM -.77 InsysTher s -.28 Intel -.27 IBM -.31 IntPap -.17 Interpublic -1.10 iSh UK -.21 iShCorEM -.09 ItauUnibH -.48 JD.com -.77 JPMorgCh -.90 Jabil -.70 JanusCap -7.28 Jarden s -.21 JetBlue -.60 JohnJn -2.13 JoyGlbl -.32 JnprNtwk -.25 KLA Tnc -.58 KeryxBio -1.02 Keycorp +.18 KindMorg -.23 Kinross g -.05 Kohls -2.23 Kroger s -.32 LamResrch -.66 LVSands -5.60 Lattice +2.16 LibtyGlobC -.22 LinearTch -1.03 LockhdM -.22 Lowes -.06 LyonBas A
18.03 113.58 10.76 2.53 33.60 2.96 42.20 53.83 33.78 86.13 2.10 5.89 .60 .06 108.28 35.90 3.74 9.11 69.48 13.61 259.00 60.65 13.62 59.84 555.77 4.92 16.80 44.31 12.51 15.35 58.94 76.51 60.23 150.09 6.17 50.43 61.75 6.94 8.57 10.18 142.79 45.08 113.76 16.07 5.89 3.18 46.83 .18 30.47 8.61 17.78 120.50 3.70 36.28 35.14 149.63 54.41 5.36 5.67 15.90 40.84 20.29 7.51 3.63 31.73 35.60 4.19 276.34 23.35 7.08 33.62 141.19 17.19 47.81 62.51 51.56 22.33 27.71 43.18 39.88 27.49 103.29 32.77 22.34 3.99 8.34 15.76 23.21 73.68 78.03 84.11 51.46 69.67 10.98 115.92 7.49 17.04 15.15 18.77 4.63 27.20 30.02 7.87 89.33 136.61 32.89 28.28 51.81 23.17 2.60 30.06 42.19 -.10 61.11 -.44 41.30 +.23 23.12 -4.07 52.97 -.57 9.65 -.68 33.87 -1.38 16.71 -.14 5.35 -.50 9.83 -.64 9.04 +.75 29.51 -2.20 7.38 +.88 24.98 -.98 23.96 -.95 2.78 -.03 83.13 -.04 9.44 -.24 16.58 -.08 31.33 +.21 16.78 -.41 89.12 -.31 76.65 +.26 49.44 -.71 3.57 -.17 16.12 -.95 43.90 -1.79 18.32 +.34 46.15 +2.03 41.73 -3.87 28.33 -.73 17.29 -.03 13.75 +1.11 66.16 -3.16 54.99 +.27 110.09 +.25 73.92 +.23 61.88 +.35 47.48 -.21 .18 -.02 57.28 +.09 73.86 +.16
E-F-G-H
Today
eBay s EMC Cp EOG Rescs EP Energy Eaton EldorGld g EliLilly EmersonEl EmpDist EnCana g Endo Intl EnrgyRec EgyTrEq s ENSCO EntProdPt Eros Intl ExactSci h ExcoRes Exelixis Exelon ExpScripts ExxonMbl FMC Tech Facebook FedExCp Ferrari n FiatChrys
13 24.21 -.21 21 25.77 -1.72 21 83.78 -1.09 9 5.85 -.18 12 52.52 +.15 dd 3.82 -.16 40 77.01 -.78 13 46.29 +.17 18 23.71 -.22 34 8.14 -.33 dd 54.46 -8.37 dd 6.75 -.57 27 22.15 -.58 dd 16.21 -.45 21 27.13 -.77 60 17.89 -2.36 dd 8.02 +.26 dd 1.28 -.08 dd 5.49 -.03 11 30.46 -.12 28 86.25 -.84 14 80.21 -.62 14 32.76 -1.30 99 97.11 +.11 46 155.98 +1.98 ... 55.00 ... 15.20 -.74
33 14.32 18.28 -.55 PattUTI 28.76 -1.53 PayPal n ... 33.83 15.36 -.04 Pearson ... 15.32 22.42 -.17 PnnNGm dd 16.87 36.82 -1.68 PennWst g ... 1.10 11.48 -.31 Penney dd 9.81 15.41 +.03 Pentair 46 53.96 37.94 -.24 PeopUtdF 19 15.90 11.95 -.29 PepsiCo 30 100.25 5.29 -.03 PetrbrsA ... 3.90 12.79 +.45 Petrobras ... 4.78 45.80 -.87 Pfizer 24 33.46 26.98 -.17 PhilipMor 18 88.98 143.09 +1.84 PiperJaf 10 36.01 28.85 +.07 PlatfmSpc dd 11.73 27.84 Polaris 16 107.83 35.42 +1.94 Potash 12 21.08 15.55 -.47 PwShs QQQ q 107.52 4.94 -.13 PrecDrill 11 4.46 1.57 +.01 ProShtS&P q 21.36 101.73 +.07 ProUltSP s q 61.63 40.86 -.30 PrUltPQQQ q 102.74 2.72 -.17 PUltSP500 s q 60.83 15.03 -.38 PUVixST rs q 33.50 179.70 -5.81 PrUCrude rs q 21.79 29.06 -1.25 ProShtVix q 57.76 13.48 -.16 ProctGam 29 73.59 .08 -.01 ProgsvCp 15 32.68 3.64 -.13 ProUShSP q 20.92 26.35 -.59 PUShtQQQ q 33.00 71.20 -1.22 PShtQQQ q 22.02 29.40 +.83 PUShtSPX q 34.21 .84 -.09 PulteGrp 14 19.45 38.40 +.72 28.01 +.24 Q-R-S-T 47.03 -1.22 QEP Res 46 15.75 2.27 -.14 QlikTech dd 33.62 6.55 +.01 Qualcom 16 58.97 19.11 -.39 QuantaSvc 16 19.55 28.23 -.33 RadianGrp 5 15.75 24.55 -.37 Rambus 6 10.39 6.28 -.53 RangeRs 48 33.30 45.99 -.41 RegionsFn 13 9.03 37.26 -.22 123.30 +.45 ReynAm s 18 47.36 dd 16.64 98.77 +.49 RiceEngy 24 6.22 11.89 +.01 RiteAid Rowan dd 19.18 14.83 -.43 17.12 -.57 RoyDShllA 13 55.08 23 53.24 9.57 -.07 RymanHP 14 7.06 177.15 -8.77 SLM Cp SM Energy 15 36.01 10.62 -.20 q 171.48 11.24 -.25 SpdrDJIA SpdrGold q 111.73 I-J-K-L S&P500ETF q 201.85 q 64.33 dd 1.92 -.11 SpdrBiot s q 36.18 ... 8.94 -.14 SpdrHome q 11.27 -.11 SpdrShTHiY q 27.34 q 36.46 q 22.89 -.30 SpdrLehHY q 36.47 -.04 SpdrS&P RB q 41.42 q 45.76 q 12.24 +.16 SpdrRetl s q 36.94 q 14.06 -.22 SpdrOGEx q 14.99 -.20 StJude 17 62.30 q 38.85 -.58 Salesforce ... 75.83 q 203.00 -1.19 SanDisk 31 76.78 q 35.35 -.52 SandRdge dd .37 q 124.05 +1.22 Sanofi ... 49.15 q 107.98 +.37 Schlmbrg 26 75.63 q 85.01 +.03 Schwab 29 28.86 q 60.77 -.03 SeadrillLtd 3 6.73 q 85.50 -.09 SeagateT 7 37.13 q 304.46 -1.50 SensataT 34 45.92 q 98.40 -.65 SilvWhtn g 23 13.56 q 50.36 -.05 SiriusXM 43 3.91 q 113.72 -1.76 Skechers s 33 45.71 q 124.62 +.11 SkywksSol 20 77.67 q 75.77 -.27 SmithAO 27 68.67 q 27.89 +.01 SolarWinds 51 58.31 17 85.55 +.42 SouthnCo 19 46.08 11 17.65 -.40 SwstAirl 17 41.04 23 28.77 -.25 SwstnEngy 9 12.40 49 23.66 -.70 SpectraEn 20 28.74 14 33.37 -.07 SpiritRltC 33 9.92 9 140.92 +.28 Sprint dd 4.34 17 41.20 -.24 SP Matls q 43.46 18 21.72 +.33 SP HlthC q 68.29 q 17.43 -.11 SP CnSt q 49.83 q 42.84 -.52 SP Consum q 78.21 ... 6.68 -.12 SP Engy q 67.21 dd 26.01 -.52 SPDR Fncl q 23.50 11 62.06 -.46 SP Inds q 52.98 15 22.61 -.54 q 41.70 SP Tech 15 14.27 -.33 SP Util q 44.87 43 48.04 -1.10 Staples cc 12.58 18 24.26 -.31 18 97.63 +.04 Starbucks s 28 60.53 7 16.19 -.21 Statoil ASA ... 16.94 39 17.69 dd 29.80 -.44 StlDynam 28 63.98 +10.12 StratHotels cc 14.07 Stryker 41 99.79 dd 4.62 +.02 ... 28.17 12 13.04 -.26 Suncor g 7.82 41 31.42 -.51 SunEdison dd 12 40.23 dd 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11 9.09 -.13 U-V-W-X-Y-Z Masco 12 26.85 +.18 MasterCrd 29 96.60 -1.07 USG cc 25.93 Mattel 27 23.85 +.07 UTiWrldwd dd 7.08 MaximIntg 55 39.44 -.10 UltraPt g 4 6.71 McDnlds 23 102.54 -1.30 UnderArmr cc 99.15 MeadJohn 21 75.10 +.34 UnionPac 16 93.41 Medtrnic 31 73.42 -.22 UtdContl 8 54.55 Merck 15 50.59 +.20 UPS B 25 105.26 MetLife 9 49.09 -.21 UtdRentals 11 67.20 MKors 9 39.60 -.30 US Bancrp 13 41.10 MicronT 7 16.43 -.66 US NGas q 10.95 Microsoft 32 47.20 -.57 US OilFd q 14.43 Mondelez 36 45.45 -.29 USSteel dd 10.85 Monsanto 19 91.62 +.42 UtdTech 15 97.97 MorgStan 11 31.48 -.77 UtdhlthGp 19 118.11 Mosaic 10 34.41 -.35 Vale SA ... 4.51 Mylan NV 19 40.89 -1.66 Vale SA pf ... 3.71 NRG Egy 59 14.80 -.45 ValeantPh 67 118.61 Nabors dd 10.20 -.40 ValeroE 7 59.30 NBGreece ... .91 +.10 VangREIT q 80.80 NOilVarco 9 39.20 -.22 VangEmg q 35.40 Navient 5 12.89 +.23 VangFTSE q 37.82 NeoGenom dd 7.08 +1.40 Vereit ... 8.49 NetApp 24 33.40 -.32 VerizonCm 18 44.86 Netflix s cc 97.96 -1.03 ViacomB 11 48.52 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-.74 YoukuTud 32 73.56 PPL Corp 12 34.25 -.03 YumBrnds 45 41.66 PackAmer 12 64.30 -3.92 Zoetis dd 2.37 Pandora dd 19.26 -.07 Zynga 11 dd ... q ... 12 17 10 dd dd 15 9 10 17 dd 19 13 16 dd ... 11 ... ... dd 12 23 18 ... 30 ... 14 ... dd 47 31 13 dd 20 dd 12 37 23 11 79 24 17 22 cc 18 42 26 13 19
-.57 -1.47 -.03 -.29 -.33 +.39 -2.58 -.18 -.27 -.14 -.11 -.40 +.20 -.97 -.05 -1.57 -.53 -1.00 -1.24 +.02 -.17 -.02 -.05 -.76 -.59 -1.30 -6.06 -1.70 +1.59 -.04 -.14 +.08 -.49 -.13 -1.39 -1.05 -.46 -.11 -.78 -.62 -2.12 +8.11 +.11 -.34 -.69 -.24 -.09 -.02 -.39 -.62 +.01 -.35 -.84 -.17 +.01 -.32 -.09 +.09 -.35 -.20 -.16 -.03 +.58 -.19 -1.17 -.26 -.12 -.13 -.28 +.12 -1.30 +.45 -.48 -.30 -2.71 -.09 +2.00 +.17 -.91 -.96 +.31 -2.94 +.03 -.53 -1.51 +.71 -6.87 -.60 -.10 -.03 +1.75 -.33 -1.61 -.25 -.01 -.79 -.82 -.33 -1.20 +.70 +.99 -.15 -.36 -.30 -.54 +2.35 -2.31 +.05 +.06 -28.13 -.78 -.30 -.52 -.03 +.05 -.38 -.81 -.28 -.65 -.82 -13.34 -1.08 -.59 -.11 -.70 +.73 -.21 -2.85 +.04 -3.42 +.04 -1.07 -.98 +.06 +.77 -1.48 -2.45 +.05 -.07 -1.71 -.15 -.10 +.53 -1.43 -.01
YOUR FUNDS
Our clients’ interests come first.
-.33 -1.04 -3.07 -.84 -.02 -.07 -.10 -.21 -.02 -.19 -.16 -.54 +.26 -1.54 -.51 -12.27 -.64 -.66 -.14 +.15 -.72 -1.68 -1.08 +4.07 -.93 -4.21 -.18 -.26 +.27 +.40 +.36 +.60 +.03
Eric M Rutledge, CFP®, AAMS® Financial Advisor 1500 Harper Road Suit 1 Corinth, MS 38834 662-287-1409
Steven D Hefner, CFP® Financial Advisor 413 Cruise Street Corinth, MS 38834 662-287-4471
Chris Marshall Financial Advisor 401 E. Waldron Street Corinth, MS 38834 662-287-7885
www.edwardjones.com
Member SIPC
United upended boards of United and Continental Airlines. He said the right things about United needing to fix problems with customer service and repair rocky labor relations. United’s stock jumped when it announced extensions of lucrative credit-card deals. Then the second bolt hit last week, when Munoz wound up in the hospital. United took four days to confirm that he had suffered a heart attack and would be taking medical leave. General counsel Brett Hart was named acting CEO. Hart too is a relative newcomer to the airline business, having joined United in 2010 from Sara Lee. S&P Capital IQ downgraded United on Tuesday to “buy” from “strong buy,” saying T it would have preferred somebody with more experience in finance, operations or o customer service, where the airline “is most in need of improving.”
United Airlines now has its third CEO in the last two months, and the turbulence in the executive suite is bad news for the airline’s shareholders. The first shock came Sept. 8, when United Continental Holdings announced that CEO Jeff Smisek was out — fallout from an ongoing investigation into whether the airline sought favors from the head of an agency that operates New York-area airports. Smisek’s replacement, railroad executive Oscar Munoz, had limited experience in the airline business but had spent 11 years on the
Performance since Aug. 31 20%
Losing altitude
American Airlines Group +13.7%
AAL
United Continental’s stock has sunk while rivals have climbed amid turmoil in its corner office.
0
Delta Airlines +12.9 Southwest Airlines +11.8
LUV
DAL UAL
United Continental -4.2
Brett Hart named acting CEO; Munoz on leave after heart attack
Jeff Smisek ousted; Oscar Munoz hired as CEO Munoz says Continental merger fell short of promises -20 Sept.
Oct.
Source: FactSet
David Koenig; J. Paschke • AP
INDEXES 52-Week High Low 18,351.36 15,370.33 9,310.22 7,452.70 657.17 539.96 11,254.87 9,509.59 5,231.94 4,248.22 2,134.72 1,867.01 1,551.28 1,319.12 22,537.15 19,619.26 1,296.00 1,078.50
Net YTD Last Chg %Chg %Chg 17,168.61 -48.50 -.28 -3.67 8,118.93 -39.60 -.49 -11.17 598.31 -1.08 -.18 -3.20 10,306.44 -76.98 -.74 -4.92 4,840.12 -40.85 -.84 +2.20 2,018.94 -11.83 -.58 -1.94 1,422.22 -16.13 -1.12 -2.08 21,093.24 -162.97 -.77 -2.66 1,144.94 -18.33 -1.58 -4.96
Name Dow Industrials Dow Transportation Dow Utilities NYSE Composite Nasdaq Composite S&P 500 S&P MidCap Wilshire 5000 Russell 2000
Dow Jones industrials
17,320
Close: 17,168.61 Change: -48.50 (-0.3%)
17,080 16,840
18,400
52-wk %Chg +4.30 -2.32 +3.86 -.95 +10.43 +4.77 +5.18 +3.87 +4.38
10 DAYS
17,600 16,800 16,000 15,200
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
Last 13.91
YTD Chg %Chg +.03 -6.5
STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST Name AFLAC AT&T Inc AerojetR AirProd AlliantEgy AEP AmeriBrgn ATMOS BB&T Cp BP PLC BcpSouth Caterpillar Chevron CocaCola Comcast CrackerB Deere Dillards Dover EnPro FordM FredsInc FullerHB GenElec Goodyear HonwllIntl Intel Jabil KimbClk Kroger s Lowes McDnlds
Div 1.56 1.88 ... 3.24 2.20 2.24f 1.16 1.56 1.08 2.40 .40f 3.08 4.28 1.32 1.00 4.40a 2.40 .28f 1.68f .80 .60 .24 .52 .92 .28f 2.07 .96 .32 3.52 .42f 1.12 3.40
PE 10 34 ... 27 18 17 ... 20 13 ... 17 12 14 25 18 20 12 12 14 ... 17 ... 25 ... 3 17 14 15 63 20 25 23
YTD Chg %Chg Name Div .48 +.06 +.4 OldNBcp -.15 ... Penney ... -.12 -9.6 PennyMac 1.88m -1.81 -6.0 -.38 -8.4 PepsiCo 2.81 +.28 -2.9 PilgrimsP 5.77e -.47 +2.8 .24 -.19 +8.2 RegionsFn -.47 -6.7 SbdCp 3.00 +.17 -7.8 SearsHldgs ... -.45 +5.5 2.68 -.60 -23.9 Sherwin -.66 -20.4 SiriusXM ... -.10 -.1 SouthnCo 2.17 -.44 +5.3 .44e -3.41 -2.3 SPDR Fncl +.26 -13.4 Torchmark .54 -1.35 -26.4 Total SA 2.93e +.35 -13.7 -.85 -29.9 US Bancrp 1.02f +.03 -.6 WalMart 1.96 -.12 -21.4 WellsFargo 1.50 -.52 -17.0 .22 +.07 +14.2 Wendys Co -.09 +13.7 WestlkChm .73f +.49 -1.2 -.07 -8.0 WestRock n 1.50 1.24 -.54 +3.6 Weyerhsr +.87 +2.2 Xerox .28 +.36 +18.6 ... -.12 +5.7 YRC Wwde ... -1.30 +9.4 Yahoo
Last 61.34 33.60 16.54 135.54 60.82 58.94 92.71 60.31 36.28 35.14 23.74 69.67 89.33 42.19 61.11 137.50 76.65 92.11 61.88 44.02 15.41 13.68 36.96 28.85 32.49 98.77 33.37 22.61 118.09 38.08 72.72 102.54
PE 15 ...
9.81
-.07
+51.4
10
15.07
-.05
-28.5
30 100.25
-.02
+6.0 -30.8
6
19.15
+.13
13
9.03
-.18
-14.5
13 3133.36 -34.64
-25.4
...
-27.2
24.02
-.63
24 238.36
-1.24
-9.4
43
3.91
-.11
+11.7
19
46.08
+.11
-6.2
...
23.50
-.17
-5.0
14
57.62
-.45
+6.4
...
50.35
-.10
-1.7
13
41.10
-.15
-8.6
12
58.64
-.11
-31.7
13
53.12
+.04
-3.1
31
8.86
-.30
-1.9
12
58.16
-1.15
-4.8
...
52.57
-1.19
-17.1
28
29.22
+.08
-18.6
18
10.16
-.07
-26.7
71
16.31
-.12
-27.5
...
31.12
-1.71
-38.4
MARKET SUMMARY MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) Name ValeantPh GenElec BkofAm EMC Cp MicronT Apple Inc SiriusXM GenMotors Pfizer FordM
Vol (00) 883946 647635 640922 596478 475971 413074 402310 352182 324379 322298
GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)
Last Chg Name 118.61 -28.13 28.85 +.07 15.90 -.30 25.77 -1.72 16.43 -.66 113.76 -.01 3.91 -.11 35.42 +1.94 33.46 -.54 15.41 +.03
Benitec wt NeoGenom NwstBio wt KLA Tnc BelFuse A SolarWinds NatlHld rs Stepan NwstBioth HeritCryst
Last
Chg
3.34 7.08 4.20 63.98 21.80 58.31 2.58 52.92 5.28 10.98
+.77 +1.40 +.81 +10.12 +3.18 +8.11 +.30 +6.18 +.60 +1.14
NYSE DIARY Advanced Declined Unchanged
899 Total issues 2,221 New Highs 104 New Lows Volume
Last
Chg
%Chg
VMware 55.42 -13.34 ValeantPh 118.61 -28.13 Pearson 15.32 -3.07 Celestic g 10.98 -2.13 WtWatch 15.40 -2.85 IntlShip 2.00 -.36 ConcHcre g 23.12 -4.07 WSI Inds 4.62 -.72 Endo Intl 54.46 -8.37 ReprosTh 6.27 -.94
-19.4 -19.2 -16.7 -16.2 -15.6 -15.3 -15.0 -13.5 -13.3 -13.0
NASDAQ DIARY
3,578,250,229
Economic barometer
today.
A measure of the U.S. economy’s future growth is expected to have held steady last month. Economists anticipate that the Conference Board will report today that its index of leading indicators was unchanged in September after edging higher a month earlier. The index, derived from data that for the most part have already been reported, is designed to anticipate economic conditions three to six months out.
Source: FactSet
+30.0 +24.6 +23.9 +18.8 +17.1 +16.2 +13.2 +13.2 +12.8 +11.6
3,224 Advanced 73 Declined 45 Unchanged
Google’s new name
GOOGL $671.80 Wall Street is expecting more $800 profit gains from Alphabet, the $532.38 company formerly known as 600 Google. Alphabet, which still owns the ’14 ubiquitous Google search engine, 400 has been expanding into more est. Operating $6.35 $7.20 experimental areas, such as EPS self-driving cars and Internet-beam3Q ’14 3Q ’15 ing balloons. It’s also ramping up its Price-earnings ratio: 33 bid to compete with Microsoft’s based on past 12-month results lucrative Office software. Alphabet Dividend: none reports its latest financial results
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)
%Chg Name
714 Total issues 2,061 New Highs 133 New Lows Volume
2,908 57 78
1,852,571,592
YTD Name NAV Chg %Rtn AMG YacktmanSvc d23.68 -0.11 -5.7 YkmFcsSvc d 24.41 -0.10 -5.7 AQR MaFtStrI 10.94 +0.07 +2.9 Advisors’ Inner Crcl EGrthIns 21.53 -0.12 +6.2 American Beacon LgCpVlIs 27.73 -0.16 -4.8 American Century EqIncInv 8.51 -0.01 -1.2 InvGrInv 29.40 -0.12 +2.2 UltraInv 36.52 -0.24 +5.0 ValueInv 8.19 -0.05 -3.9 American Funds AMCAPA m 26.86 -0.26 -0.9 AmBalA m 24.55 -0.05 +0.8 BondA m 12.80 +0.03 +1.4 CapIncBuA m 57.62 -0.19 -0.8 ... -1.7 CapWldBdA m19.46 CpWldGrIA m 45.11 -0.16 -0.5 EurPacGrA m 47.77 -0.15 +1.4 FnInvA m 51.62 -0.25 +1.2 GlbBalA m 29.60 -0.07 -1.0 GrthAmA m 43.64 -0.34 +2.2 HiIncA m 10.00 -0.01 -2.3 IncAmerA m 20.71 -0.03 -1.8 IntBdAmA m 13.61 +0.01 +1.8 IntlGrInA m 29.76 -0.12 -4.2 InvCoAmA m 35.92 -0.14 -1.3 MutualA m 35.32 -0.12 -3.4 NewEconA m 37.28 -0.28 +1.4 NewPerspA m 37.63 -0.17 +3.7 NwWrldA m 50.72 -0.26 -5.2 SmCpWldA m 46.22 -0.37 +2.0 TaxEBdAmA m13.02 +0.01 +1.9 WAMutInvA m 39.77 -0.11 -1.5 Artisan Intl d 28.30 -0.09 -5.5 IntlI d 28.53 -0.09 -5.4 IntlVal d 34.34 -0.12 +0.4 MdCpVal 23.15 -0.19 -6.0 MidCapI 48.00 -0.44 +0.2 BBH CoreSelN d 22.15 -0.17 -2.4 Baird AggrInst 10.80 +0.03 +1.7 CrPlBInst 11.09 +0.02 +1.5 Bernstein DiversMui 14.50 ... +1.5 BlackRock Engy&ResA m 18.94 -0.49 -22.6 EqDivA m 24.07 -0.11 -2.2 EqDivI 24.12 -0.11 -2.0 GlLSCrI 10.40 -0.01 +0.3 GlobAlcA m 19.63 -0.04 -0.3 GlobAlcC m 18.00 -0.03 -0.9 GlobAlcI 19.75 -0.03 -0.1 HiYldBdIs 7.57 -0.01 +0.2 StIncInvA m 9.97 ... +0.1 StrIncIns 9.97 ... +0.3 Causeway IntlVlIns d 14.74 ... -0.3 Cohen & Steers Realty 73.14 -0.30 +4.6 Columbia 41.34 -0.02 -0.1 AcornIntZ AcornZ 29.87 -0.43 -1.8 Credit Suisse ComStrInstl 5.06 -0.03 -15.8 DFA 1YrFixInI 10.32 ... +0.5 2YrGlbFII 9.96 ... +0.6 5YrGlbFII 11.12 +0.01 +2.3 EmMkCrEqI 17.02 -0.16 -8.7 EmMktValI 22.65 -0.18 -11.2 EmMtSmCpI 18.75 -0.16 -4.7 11.70 +0.01 +1.9 IntCorEqI IntSmCapI 19.60 +0.07 +6.1 IntlSCoI 17.81 +0.02 +5.8 IntlValuI 16.96 +0.01 -1.7 RelEstScI 33.43 -0.12 +3.1 TAUSCrE2I 13.76 -0.13 -2.4 USCorEq1I 17.45 -0.14 -1.5 USCorEq2I 16.87 -0.16 -2.5 USLgCo 15.94 -0.09 -0.4 USLgValI 32.59 -0.32 -2.8 USMicroI 18.72 -0.29 -2.9 USSmValI 33.00 -0.51 -5.0 USSmallI 30.35 -0.45 -1.9 USTgtValInst 21.31 -0.32 -3.0 Davis NYVentA m 33.67 -0.34 +2.0 Delaware Invest ValueI 17.77 -0.09 -1.2 Dodge & Cox Bal 97.49 -0.71 -2.7 GlbStock 11.08 -0.12 -6.3 Income 13.52 +0.03 +0.2 IntlStk 39.46 -0.19 -6.3 Stock 169.66 -2.01 -4.4 DoubleLine TotRetBdN b 10.95 ... +2.7 Eaton Vance FltgRtI 8.69 ... +0.8 FPA Cres d 32.99 -0.15 -1.8 NewInc d 10.04 ... +0.7 Fairholme Funds Fairhome d 35.30 -0.42 +0.6 Federated StrValI 6.04 -0.01 +4.6 ToRetIs 10.87 +0.02 +1.1 Fidelity AstMgr20 13.13 ... +0.4 AstMgr50 16.81 -0.05 -0.1 Bal 21.20 -0.11 -0.3 Bal K 21.20 -0.11 -0.3 BlChGrow 66.87 -0.55 +2.8 BlChGrowK 66.95 -0.55 +2.9 CapApr 35.68 -0.27 -1.0 CapInc d 9.44 -0.02 +1.3 Contra 101.15 -0.69 +4.2 ContraK 101.15 -0.69 +4.3 DivGrow 30.29 -0.18 -1.8 DivrIntl d 35.67 -0.06 +3.5 DivrIntlK d 35.64 -0.06 +3.6 EqInc 54.39 -0.23 -3.2 EqInc II 25.72 -0.10 -2.1 FF2015 12.38 -0.04 +0.2 FF2035 12.92 -0.08 -0.2 FF2040 9.09 -0.05 -0.2 FltRtHiIn d 9.43 ... +1.1 FrdmK2015 13.35 -0.04 +0.3 FrdmK2020 14.01 -0.05 +0.3 FrdmK2025 14.59 -0.06 +0.2 FrdmK2030 14.83 -0.08 FrdmK2035 15.24 -0.09 -0.1 FrdmK2040 15.28 -0.09 -0.1 FrdmK2045 15.70 -0.09 -0.1 FrdmK2050 15.81 -0.09 -0.1 Free2010 15.14 -0.04 +0.3 Free2020 15.07 -0.05 +0.2 Free2025 12.88 -0.05 +0.1 Free2030 15.74 -0.08 GNMA 11.60 ... +1.5 GrowCo 135.20 -1.15 +2.7 GrowInc 28.92 -0.19 -2.9 GrthCmpK 135.13 -1.15 +2.8 HiInc d 8.48 ... -0.4 IntMuniInc d 10.46 ... +1.2 IntlDisc d 39.87 +0.02 +4.9 InvGrdBd 7.78 +0.02 +0.5 LatinAm d 17.96 -0.18 -24.5 LowPrStkK d 48.70 -0.39 +0.8 LowPriStk d 48.73 -0.40 +0.7 Magellan 90.32 -0.71 +0.8 MidCap d 35.31 -0.33 -0.6 MuniInc d 13.41 ... +1.9 OTC 78.16 -0.72 +3.1 Puritan 20.09 -0.08 +0.2 PuritanK 20.08 -0.08 +0.3 SASEqF 13.64 -0.09 -1.0 SEMF 15.45 -0.16 -7.4 SInvGrBdF 11.26 +0.02 +1.0 STMIdxF d 59.25 -0.43 -0.8 SersEmgMkts 15.40 -0.15 -7.6 SesAl-SctrEqt 13.63 -0.10 -1.3 SesInmGrdBd 11.26 +0.02 +0.9 ShTmBond 8.60 ... +1.0 SmCapDisc d 28.10 -0.41 -2.2 StkSelec 34.67 -0.30 -1.8 StratInc 10.46 ... +0.7 Tel&Util 22.80 -0.15 -4.1 TotalBd 10.50 +0.02 +1.2 USBdIdx 11.68 +0.03 +1.7 USBdIdxInv 11.68 +0.03 +1.5 Value 109.51 -0.96 -3.3 Fidelity Advisor NewInsA m 26.86 -0.21 +1.3 NewInsI 27.40 -0.21 +1.5 Fidelity Select Biotech d 218.09 -1.29 +1.0 HealtCar d 205.42 -2.88 -1.9
seasonally adjusted percent change 0.6%
0.4
0.2 est. flat
flat A
M
J
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GrowIncA m 20.05 -0.19 NewOpp 79.20 -0.64 Schwab 1000Inv d 52.15 -0.34 FUSLgCInl d 14.82 -0.09 S&P500Sel d 32.03 -0.19 Sequoia Sequoia 221.21 -10.02 T Rowe Price BlChpGr 71.00 -0.73 CapApprec 27.22 -0.14 EmMktBd d 11.69 -0.03 EmMktStk d 30.09 -0.29 EqIndex d 54.36 -0.31 EqtyInc 30.20 -0.18 GrowStk 55.14 -0.62 HealthSci 71.61 -1.16 HiYield d 6.48 ... InsLgCpGr 28.76 -0.33 IntlBnd d 8.52 -0.01 IntlGrInc d 13.75 ... IntlStk d 15.71 -0.06 LatinAm d 17.07 -0.14 MidCapE 45.32 -0.35 MidCapVa 28.13 -0.29 79.10 -0.57 MidCpGr NewHoriz 44.97 -0.52 NewIncome 9.50 +0.02 OrseaStk d 9.48 -0.01 R2015 14.47 -0.05 R2025 15.72 -0.08 R2035 16.67 -0.10 ReaAsset d 9.86 -0.08 Real d 27.59 -0.14 Rtmt2010 17.74 -0.04 Rtmt2020 20.73 -0.08 Rtmt2030 23.03 -0.13 Rtmt2040 23.91 -0.16 Rtmt2045 15.99 -0.11 ShTmBond 4.75 +0.01 SmCpStk 42.56 -0.62 SmCpVal d 45.43 -0.61 SpecInc 12.29 -0.01 Value 33.33 -0.32 TCW TotRetBdI 10.33 +0.01 TIAA-CREF BdIdxInst 10.89 +0.02 EqIx 15.39 -0.12 IntlE 17.75 ... Templeton InFEqSeS 20.33 +0.06 Thornburg IncBldA m 19.90 -0.07 IncBldC m 19.89 -0.07 IntlI 29.20 -0.02 LtdTMul 14.55 +0.01 Tweedy, Browne GlobVal d 26.09 ... Vanguard 500Adml 186.44 -1.07 500Inv 186.43 -1.07 BalIdxAdm 29.31 -0.10 BalIdxIns 29.31 -0.10 BdMktInstPls 10.81 +0.02 CAITAdml 11.78 ... CapOpAdml 119.21 -0.54 DevMktIdxAdm 12.16 +0.01 DevMktIdxInstl 12.17 +0.01 DivGr 22.76 -0.05 EmMktIAdm 29.56 -0.31 EnergyAdm 88.01 -1.22 EqInc 30.31 -0.10 EqIncAdml 63.53 -0.21 ExplAdml 82.42 -1.25 ExtdIdAdm 64.22 -0.89 ExtdIdIst 64.22 -0.89 GNMA 10.74 +0.01 GNMAAdml 10.74 +0.01 GrthIdAdm 54.28 -0.36 54.28 -0.36 GrthIstId HYCorAdml 5.80 +0.01 HltCrAdml 91.11 -1.04 HlthCare 215.92 -2.47 ITBondAdm 11.53 +0.03 ITGradeAd 9.82 +0.02 ITrsyAdml 11.54 +0.02 InfPrtAdm 25.73 +0.02 InfPrtI 10.48 ... InflaPro 13.10 +0.01 InstIdxI 184.62 -1.06 InstPlus 184.64 -1.05 InstTStPl 45.66 -0.33 IntlGr 21.48 -0.06 IntlGrAdm 68.34 -0.21 IntlStkIdxAdm 25.26 -0.07 IntlStkIdxI 101.03 -0.28 IntlStkIdxIPls 101.04 -0.28 IntlVal 33.11 -0.08 LTGradeAd 10.20 +0.08 LifeCon 18.26 -0.01 LifeGro 28.37 -0.12 LifeMod 23.85 -0.06 MidCpAdml 150.30 -1.43 MidCpIst 33.20 -0.32 MorgAdml 81.66 -0.68 MuHYAdml 11.20 +0.01 MuInt 14.19 +0.01 MuIntAdml 14.19 +0.01 MuLTAdml 11.64 +0.01 MuLtdAdml 11.04 ... MuShtAdml 15.83 ... PrecMtls 7.42 -0.15 Prmcp 101.36 -0.26 PrmcpAdml 105.06 -0.27 PrmcpCorI 21.24 -0.06 REITIdxAd 114.55 -0.40 REITIdxInst 17.73 -0.06 S/TBdIdxInstl 10.55 +0.01 STBondAdm 10.55 +0.01 STCor 10.67 +0.01 STFedAdml 10.82 ... STGradeAd 10.67 +0.01 STIGradeI 10.67 +0.01 STsryAdml 10.75 ... SelValu 27.52 -0.30 ShTmInfPtScIxIv24.26 ... SmCpGrIdxAdm42.85 -0.61 SmCpIdAdm 53.90 -0.73 SmCpIdIst 53.90 -0.73 SmCpValIdxAdm43.64 -0.57 Star 24.42 -0.06 StratgcEq 32.12 -0.31 TgtRe2010 26.43 -0.02 TgtRe2015 15.31 -0.03 TgtRe2020 28.44 -0.07 TgtRe2025 16.49 -0.05 TgtRe2030 28.91 -0.11 TgtRe2035 17.72 -0.07 TgtRe2040 29.47 -0.14 TgtRe2045 18.47 -0.09 TgtRe2050 29.32 -0.15 TgtRetInc 12.82 ... TlIntlBdIdxAdm 21.19 +0.05 TlIntlBdIdxInst 31.80 +0.07 TlIntlBdIdxInv 10.60 +0.03 TotBdAdml 10.81 +0.02 TotBdInst 10.81 +0.02 TotBdMkInv 10.81 +0.02 TotIntl 15.10 -0.05 TotStIAdm 50.46 -0.37 TotStIIns 50.47 -0.36 TotStIdx 50.44 -0.37 TxMCapAdm 102.68 -0.70 ValIdxAdm 31.48 -0.18 ValIdxIns 31.48 -0.18 WellsI 25.32 +0.02 WellsIAdm 61.33 +0.05 Welltn 38.38 -0.07 WelltnAdm 66.29 -0.12 WndsIIAdm 63.70 -0.39 Wndsr 20.64 -0.16 WndsrAdml 69.62 -0.54 WndsrII 35.89 -0.22 Virtus EmgMktsIs 9.48 -0.05 Waddell & Reed Adv AccumA m 10.65 -0.10 SciTechA m 14.28 -0.20
The shipping blues
Leading indicators
0.0
Thursday, October 22, 2015
J 2015
A
S
Source: FactSet
Union Pacific delivers results for the third quarter today. The railroad is expected to report lower earnings versus the same quarter a year earlier. Union Pacific has been hurt by a sharp decline in the amount of coal shipped by railroads. In August, the company announced plans to cut hundreds of management jobs and projected that demand for coal would remain weak for the rest of the year.
-6.7 -1.6 -0.6 -3.1 -0.4 -5.0 +5.5 +4.2 +1.8 -7.1 -0.5 -6.5 +6.1 +5.3 +0.2 +4.7 -3.2 -0.1 +0.6 -22.2 +5.1 -2.4 +4.9 +2.7 +1.2 +0.6 +0.1 +0.1 -8.8 +4.3 +0.1 +0.1
-0.1 +1.1 -4.0 -2.9 -0.6 -3.8 +1.8 +1.6 -0.8 +1.8 +1.5 -1.7 -2.3 +7.7 +1.5 +0.2 -0.3 -0.4 +0.2 +0.2 +1.4 +2.1 -2.1 +2.1 +2.1 +1.0 -8.9 -12.6 -0.9 -0.8 -4.7 -2.8 -2.7 +1.6 +1.7 +2.0 +2.0 +1.8 +4.9 +4.9 +2.8 +2.5 +3.0 -0.5 -0.5 -0.6 -0.3 -0.3 -0.8 -0.3 -0.2 -1.0 -1.0 -1.0 -2.5 -1.1 +0.5 -0.6 -0.8 -0.8 +4.0 +2.4 +1.8 +1.9 +2.2 +1.3 +0.6 -17.7 -1.4 -1.4 -1.8 +2.4 +2.4 +1.8 +1.8 +1.6 +1.4 +1.7 +1.8 +1.2 -3.0 +0.3 -2.6 -2.6 -2.6 -2.7 -0.1 -0.2 +0.4 +0.1 -0.1 -0.2 -0.4 -0.7 -1.0 -1.0 -1.0 +0.5 +0.9 +0.9 +0.9 +1.4 +1.4 +1.4 -1.1 -0.8 -0.8 -0.9 +0.2 -2.6 -2.6 +1.2 +1.2 -0.1 -0.1 -2.7 -3.0 -2.9 -2.8 -4.1 +1.1 -4.7
9 • Daily Corinthian
Variety
Thursday, October 22, 2015
Crossword
BEETLE BAILEY
Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis
BLONDIE
HI & LOIS
BC
ACROSS 1 Lead-ins to some online games 4 Magnetic induction unit 9 Nobelist Curie 14 Petal plucker’s word 15 Use at the table 16 Dunderhead 17 Ditty from 1970s’80s NFL wide receiver Lynn? 19 Replicate 20 Fighting against 21 Rarely seen item on casual Friday 22 Enjoy Whistler 23 Rule 25 Unwinding places for actor Russell? 30 Sagittarius, e.g. 32 Sign of hope 33 See 8-Down 34 Mass __ 37 Wander 38 Tough spot for actor Walter? 40 Computer menu heading 42 Hockey positions 43 Big club in Atlantic City? 44 Neurologist’s printout, briefly 45 Find out about 49 Easter adornment made by politician Dan? 53 Gretzky, during most of the ’80s 54 Foreign __ 55 __ Cruces 57 Not 58 Emulate Whistler 61 Facial feature of actor Ethan? 63 Bike wheel feature 64 “Little Miss Sunshine” Oscar winner 65 Rebellious Turner 66 Structural support 67 Kids around 68 Some municipal trains DOWN 1 “Broken Arrow” co-star 2 Wet blanket 3 Radio problem
WIZARD OF ID
DILBERT
GARFIELD
FORT KNOX
PICKLES
4 Notable Downing Street number 5 “__ of Eden” 6 Stiff-upper-lip type 7 Hardly a social butterfly 8 With 33-Across, “Life of Pi” director 9 Pluto’s master 10 Improvise in a sketch 11 2014 World Cup city 12 Charged particle 13 Printemps follower 18 Lingerie purchase 22 Bundled up 24 Pi Day celebrant, stereotypically 26 Circular gasket 27 Soothing succulent 28 Accelerate, with “up” 29 Understand 31 Common allergen 35 Mont Blanc covering 36 Emilio Estevez, to Martin Sheen
37 “Goosebumps” series author 38 Court answer 39 Twistable treat 40 Website help sect. 41 Post-op area 44 Privileged groups 46 Stand-up comic Boosler 47 Breakfast choice 48 No-tell motel meetings 50 Pulls hard
51 Intimidating look 52 Rubbernecks 56 Monty Python segment 58 Vancouver setting: Abbr. 59 30-day mo. 60 Note from one who’s short 61 “The __”: Uris novel 62 “No, No, Nanette” foursome
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:
xwordeditor@aol.com
By David Poole ©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
10/22/15
10/22/15
Pets can provide more than companionship In fact, only a handful Dear Annie: My wife Annie’s ten. showed up for the service, and I are in our mid-70s including the men pressed and have no children. into service as pallbearHowever, we have had Mailbox ers and the women who pets, mostly cats, for all of our 50 years together. About 13 years ago, we bought an 8-week-old female Boston terrier puppy. A few months later a friend called us about a female Boston terrier that he could not keep and offered it to us. We took it on a trial basis, and since it got along well with our dog (and our two cats), we ended up keeping it. We loved them both like they were our children. They rarely barked, got along great with adult and child visitors and loved being in the car. They were the best pets we ever had. We loved them. Both dogs were under the regular care of a vet. About a month ago, Spunky died in her sleep. It was devastating to lose her. Then, two weeks later, Petunia died. We are truly heartbroken. I want to get another puppy or young dog as soon as possible. However, the problem is my wife. She misses these dogs as much as I do, but feels we are too old to get another dog. What do you think we should do? — Grieving for Our Pets Dear Grieving: Our condolences on the loss of your beloved animals. Multiple studies have shown
that seniors greatly benefit from having pets to love and care for. But do keep in mind that puppies are generally more work than older dogs. Your wife may not feel up to the task. Please discuss it with her and consider the possibility of adopting an older dog. You might also take into account the likelihood of your someday moving into a senior facility that does not allow animals. Some seniors handle this by having a friend or relative agree to take the animals when they can no longer care for them. Dear Annie: Last month, a dear friend died. He lived in another state, but he was buried here. His family had once been a large part of our community, but none of them has lived in our town for 30 years. His widow spent a great deal of money on funeral arrangements and meals for the crowd that she expected to attend. I told her that only a few people would remember her husband, but she didn’t lis-
helped serve the meal afterward. The widow could not believe that cousins, nieces and nephews from out of state did not pay their last respects to her husband. I reminded her that they, too, were in their 80s and would find it difficult to travel. I feel terribly guilty that I couldn’t do more to curb the widow’s expectations of a grand send-off for her husband and prevent her heartbreak. Maybe this letter will remind others to listen to the people who reside in their former hometowns before they make plans. Then I will have done something to avert such a disaster in the future. — An Avid Reader Dear Reader: There is no reason for you to feel guilty. You did your best to dissuade this woman, but she was in denial. We hope your warning helps others. Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please email your questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254.
10 • Thursday, October 22, 2015 • Daily Corinthian
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Coming Up In The Daily Corinthian Presentation of the Daily Corinthian’s family of quality magazines continues with Crossroads Magazine Holiday Edition coming out on Saturday, Nov. 21.
Education is the first step to leaving a life of crime D E A R ABBY: I am 21 and come from a family of crime involving drugs and violence. I was taken Abigail Van Buren by the state as a child in need of care Dear Abby at 14. I’ve been in and out of juvie and did 18 months in juvenile prison. I’m now sitting in adult county jail. I’m going to get one more chance, according to the judge. Where can I get help if I want to live a rightful life and fix mine? With very little income, I only know how to make money illegally, which is more than many people make in two or three years. I want to do right this time. What’s your advice? -STUCK IN CRIME IN KANSAS DEAR STUCK: My advice is to finish your education. At the very minimum, get your GED. Fight the temptation to go for “easy money” and find a mentor who can steer you toward constructive activities and op-
portunities. A place to look would be one of the prison ministries. You are still young and have your whole life ahead of you. It will be far smoother and more successful if you don’t add to your criminal record. DEAR ABBY: My 10-year-old daughter and I enjoy hosting sleepovers for her friends from school. Over the last few years, her circle of friends has increased, as have the dietary needs of said friends. It went from simple meals like macaroni and cheese, pizza or hamburgers to parents requesting glutenfree cookies, soy milk, almond milk, and other demands that drive me crazy. I’m willing to accommodate to a point, providing vegetarian options and no nuts, but for parents to demand that I spend (what seems like) hundreds of dollars on food my family and I never eat is insane. The last time this happened, I asked the parent -- nicely -- to provide a small container that I could store in my fridge for the girl to use for her soy milk. The woman became irate, called me thoughtless and wouldn’t let her daughter come! I don’t know what I did wrong,
but apparently I made some faux pas because the same thing happened with a different girl who wanted gluten-free everything. Abby, what should I do or say in these situations? I usually provide snacks and such that fit most diets, but a lot of times the main course contains gluten, dairy, etc., and I don’t want to go broke buying select types of food for one kid. -- SALLY IN WASHINGTON, D.C. DEAR SALLY: You did nothing wrong. Asking the mother to have her daughter bring a quart of soy milk with her was not rude, and the same is true for the mother of the girl who has an intolerance for gluten. The parents of children with food allergies should be used to the routine of providing allowable foods for them to bring when they will be eating away from home, and for you to have received the reaction you did was over the top. Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.
Horoscopes ARIES (March 21-April 19). Does it feel like the only thing holding you back from the one you love is timing? If so, that will improve this afternoon. Stay in the moment that’s unfolding instead of wishing you were in another one. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). The rewards of your latest effort are trickling in. This is something to celebrate! Do be brief about it, though, because there’s much, much more work to be done to take advantage of this momentum. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). Helping people makes you happy, but you don’t live to serve. Get out and get served, if only to remind yourself of this. You’ll have more to give when you feel taken care of, too. CANCER (June 22-July 22). What you know about one small area of life is the ticket to understanding how many things work. So don’t underestimate your importance to a project or organization and to the world at large.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). If you had to sit down and figure out how to be you, you couldn’t come up with half of the talents, tendencies and endearing quirks you possess. Just do what’s innate today, and you’ll be brilliant. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Once you give your word, you honor it. Therefore, as a rule, you don’t give your word easily. You’ll be asked (by someone who is pretty charismatic) for a casual agreement. Resist. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). You won’t always be guided by a shining beacon. Deciding who you are can be a process of elimination. You know you’re not a person who likes this, that or the other. What’s next to try out? SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Don’t spend your time like the political parties do, each proving the other is unfit to lead. The real question is: Who can get the job done? Show that it’s you. Get in there and do it. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec.
21). It would appear that you need more money to accomplish a goal. This is only halftrue. Money will be necessary, yes, but what’s more crucial is a clearer vision. Once you get that, the money comes rolling in. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). A Dutch proverb says, “A handful of patience is worth more than a bushel of brains.” Stick to the simple plan, and work it until it’s complete. Success! AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Design, engineering, moving well in your environment -- it all matters to your day’s ambitions in both big and small ways. For instance, comfortable shoes can affect your destiny. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). People say a lot of things. Sometimes they just can’t live up to their words. If you disregard what a person says and carry on your relationship based strictly on what the person does, you’ll be better off.
Daily Corinthian • Thursday, October 22, 2015 • 11
0107 SPECIAL NOTICE
ANNOUNCEMENTS
0142 LOST
LOST
LARRY MEEKS. JUSTICE COURT JUDGE FOR FAIR & HONEST DECISIONS
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0142 LOST 2 DOGS, light gray & dark gray, 1 medium & 1 small, both Male. Five Points area. 662-4158296 Leave message. 7 YR old black cat w/ some white under belly. Slick hair, declawed. Answ to Ciara. Missing 10/4 Webster St. 4158641.
Take stock in America. Buy U.S. Savings Bonds. 0220 MEDICAL/DENTAL
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SERVICES
ATTN: CANDIDATES List your name and office under the political listing for only $190.00. Runs every publishing day until final election. Come by the Daily Corinthian office at 1807 S. Harper Rd. or call 662-287-6111 for more info. Must be paid in advance.
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This is a paid political advertisement which is intended as a public service for the voters. It has been submitted to and approved and submitted by each political candidate listed below or by the candidate’s campaign manager or assistant manager. This listing is not intended to suggest or imply that these are the only candidates for these offices.
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12 â&#x20AC;˘ Thursday, October 22, 2015 â&#x20AC;˘ Daily Corinthian GARAGE /ESTATE SALES
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MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE
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7+856 )5, 08/7, )$0,/< &5 PL SDVW 9): IROORZ VLJQV 1DPH EUDQG FOWKV WRROV $// 0867 *2
Weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll Put Collision Damage in Reverse
Corinth Collision Center 810 S. Parkway
662.594.1023
Property Directory
0710
Patti's Property Rentals
HOME FOR LEASE Golf Villa Shiloh Falls Pickwick 3BR/ 3BA, Loft, Fireplace Deck, 2 car garage, gated community $1200.00 per month Minimum 12 month Lease
10 CR 236 3 BR 1 1/2 Bath $675.00 $500.00 Deposit
662-279-7453 662-808-5229
References required
662-279-0935
10AM-6PM
House for sale in Hinkle/Rienzi area. $152,000 REDUCED 3BR, 2 bath. 3,000 sq. ft Metal roof. 13 acres (fenced) big barn w/ stalls, 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122;x40â&#x20AC;&#x2122; shop w/gas, electrical & 2 roll-up doors, spring-fed pond, 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; above ground pool, large patio, finished basement, sunroom, 2 car garage. Hardwood floors throughout. Beautiful landscape. Call (662) 415-0420
1903 Princess Anne Drive â&#x20AC;˘ 3 bedroom â&#x20AC;˘ 1 bath â&#x20AC;˘ Fenced-in back yard $85,000.00 662-415-8666 Owner financing after down payment
(2) adjoining lots for sale. one 95 feet front on Buchanan and Childs street, one 75 feet by 95 feet deep at 1300 block of Childs Street. $22,500 for both lots. Lot on Pinecrest north of KCS railroad, 1/4 acre, $12,500 obo. Metal building, 60 ft by 40 ft, new paint, insulated, all utilities available on one full acre, East Proper Street in Corinth City limits, zoned Commercial, $75,500. 40 acres plus or minus, Frontage on North Polk Street just north of Madison Street and Polk intersection. South property line abuts North Hills Subdivision. City sewer runs inside property line on north side. $169,000 Call 662 415 7755
BURNSVILLE 40 ACRES OF WOODED LAND
D L O S$80,000
CALL 662-808-9313 OR 415-5071
3$8/$ '((1 9LVLWLQJ /LIW 7RS &RIIHH 7DEOH 0RG HO /LNH 1HZ DIWHU SP 3(5,'27 ',$021' 5LQJ . JROG VHWWLQJ &XVWRP GHVLJQ OHDI FORYHU 6L]H RU 3/$<67$7,21 JDPHV 35()250(' *2/'),6+ SRQG QR KROHV RU OHDNV &DOO 352)(66,21$/ .$5$2., PDFKLQH KDV GXDO FDV VHWWHV FG :RUNV SHU IHFW +DV UHPRWH
MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE :, JDPHV :20(1 6 6NLUW 6XLWV 6] HDFK 2%2 :22'6 $&2867,& (OHF WULF *XLWDU 0LQW &RQG 2QERDUG WXQHU /RRNV VRXQGV OLNH D 0DUWLQ ),50 <287+ %$6.(7 %DOO *RDO LQ ER[ EDFN ERDUG
REAL ESTATE FOR RENT
UNFURNISHED 0610 APARTMENTS :($9(5 $376 1 &DVV %5 SRUFK Z G XWLO
FURNISHED 0615 APARTMENTS %(' 87, :L)L 6DW GHS UHI PLQ IURP KRVSLWDO /HDYH PHVV
HOMES FOR 0620 RENT %5 %$ DOO DSSO LQFO ( WK PR GHS
MOBILE HOMES 0675 FOR RENT REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
HOMES FOR 0710 SALE HUD PUBLISHERâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S NOTICE All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation, or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or intention to make any such preferences, limitations or discrimination. State laws forbid discrimination in the sale, rental, or advertising of real estate based on factors in addition to those protected under federal law. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis.
MOBILE HOMES 0741 FOR SALE ; %5 %DWK &+ $ *RRG &RQG
TRANSPORTATION
TRUCKS FOR 0864 SALE
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REVERSE YOUR AD FOR $1.00 LEGALS EXTRA Call 662-287-6111 for details. 0955 LEGALS 5,',1* 02:(5 EUDQG STATE OF MISSISSIPPI ) QHZ .RKOHU KS PRWRU ) NOTICE OF SUBSTI58*(5 ULIOH TUTED TRUSTEEâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S SALE COUNTY OF ALCORN ) 6$1<2 ,1 7 9 WHEREAS, on April
6&227(5 6725( 6FRRW 16, 2014, Lester Tucker, Jr., executed a promissory note HU payable to the order of Regions Bank d/b/a Regions 6+$5. 9$&880 &OHDQHU Mortgage; and 1HYHU 8VHG WHEREAS, the afore said promissory note was se6,1*/( $;(/ 7UDLOHU p r cured by a Deed of Trust dated April 1xecuted by [ p Lester Tucker, Jr., An unmar60$// 52// 7RS 'HVN ried man, to Regions Bank d/b/a Regions Mortgage, the *RRG VKDSH same having been recorded on April 21, 2014, as Instru62)$ $1' /RYHVHDW ment Number 201401586 in 9HU\ &OHDQ *UHDW FRQG the land records of Alcorn County, Mississippi, Denise 62/,' 2$. 79 FDELQHW McLaurin, Trustee; and WHEREAS, Thad J. RU FDQ EH XVHG LQ NLW FKHQ RU EHGURRP IRU Mueller was substituted as VWRUDJH JUHDW FRQGL trustee in the place and stead WLRQ of Denise McLaurin by Substitution of Trustee dated September 9, 2015, executed 621< 3/$<67$7,21 by Regions Bank, as the beneKDV PHPRU\ FDUG RQH ficiary under said Deed of FRQWUROOHU QR SRZHU Trust, the same having been FRUG recorded on September 16, 6:,1* '28%/( FKDLU 2015, as Instrument Number 201503925 in the land re cords of Alcorn County, Mis7(/(9,6,21 127 IODW sissippi; and VFUHHQ WHEREAS, default hav ing occurred under the terms 7(/(9,6,21 127 IODW and conditions of the said promissory note and deed of VFUHHQ trust and the holder having declared the entire balance 7+20$6 $0 )0 5$',2 due and payable; and &$66(77( 3/$<(5 $ WHEREAS, Regions Bank 5(3/,&$ 2) 7+( $1 d/b/a Regions Mortgage, hav7,48( 9(56,21 :25.6 ing directed the undersigned *5($7 Substituted Trustee to sell 7:,1 6,=( PHPRU\ IRDP the property under the terms PDWWUHVV 1HYHU 8VHG and by authority conferred in the said deed of trust and by the laws of the State of Mis7:2 7,5(6 [ sissippi; now therefore, RQH 0LFKHOLQ 7LUH /LNH I, Thad J. Mueller, Substi1HZ 3 5 tuted Trustee, shall on the 30th day of October, 2015,
Substituted Trustee to sell the property under the terms and by authority conferred in the said deed of trust and by the laws of the State of Mississippi; now therefore, I, Thad J. Mueller, SubstiLEGALSshall on the 0955 Trustee, tuted 30th day of October, 2015, during the legal hours between the hours of 11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m., offer for sale and will sell at public outcry to the highest and best bidder for cash at the Front Door of the Alcorn County Courthouse located in Corinth, Mississippi, the following described property located and situated in Alcorn County, Mississippi, to wit: Situated in the County of Alcorn, State of Mississippi, to-wit: TRACT NO. 1: Commencing at the Southeast corner of the Southeast Quarter of Section 9, Township 2 South, Range 8 East; thence run West 3 rods; thence run in a Northwesterly direction along the West line of the property conveyed by J. W. McLemore and wife, to Jepp Thomas by deed dated October 30, 1943, and recorded in the Chancery Clerk’s Office of Alcorn County, Mississippi, in Deed book 69 at pages 432-433, a distance of 100 feet, more 868 or less, to the center line of a AUTOMOBILES creek which runs into Clear Creek for a true Point of Beginning; thence continue to run in a Northwesterly direction along the West line of the property c o n v e y e2009 d by J. W. McLemore and wife, Pontiac G6to Jepp Thomas by the Super Nice, Really Clean, deed referred to above Oil changed regularly, a distance Good coldof air350 andfeet; has good tires. thence run in a160k westerly direction parallel Asking with the center line of $5400. OBO the creek referred to CALL/TEXT above, a distance of 120 feet;DANIEL thence run @ in a Southeasterly direction 662-319-7145 parallel with the West line of the tract of land conveyed by J. W. McLemore and wife, to Jepp Thomas as referred to above, a distance of 350 feet to the center line of the creek referred to above; thence run in a Easterly direction along the center line of said creek, a distance of 120 feet to the Beginning Point, containing one acres, more or less.
Office of Alcorn Situated in the County County, Mississippi, in of Alcorn, State of Mis- Deed book 69 at pages sissippi, to-wit: 432-433, a distance of 100 feet, more or less, TRACT NO. 1: Com- to the center line of a mencing at the South- creek which runs into 0955 LEGALS e0955 a s t LEGALS c o r n e r o f t h e Clear Creek for a true Southeast Quarter of P o i n t o f B e g i n n i n g ; Section 9, Township 2 thence continue to run South, Range 8 East; in a Northwesterly dirthence run West 3 rods; ection along the West thence run in a North- line of the property westerly direction along c o n v e y e d b y J . W . the West line of the McLemore and wife, to property conveyed by J. Jepp Thomas by the W. McLemore and wife, deed referred to above t o J e p p T h o m a s b y a distance of 350 feet; deed dated October 30, thence run in a west1943, and recorded in erly direction parallel the Chancery Clerk’s with the center line of O f f i c e o f A l c o r n the creek referred to County, Mississippi, in above, a distance of 120 Deed book 69 at pages feet; thence run in a 432-433, a distance of Southeasterly direction 100 feet, more or less, parallel with the West to the center line of a line of the tract of land creek which runs into c o n v e y e d b y J . W . Clear Creek for a true McLemore and wife, to P o i n t o f B e g i n n i n g ; Jepp Thomas as rethence continue to run ferred to above, a disin a Northwesterly dir- tance of 350 feet to the ection along the West center line of the creek line of the property r e f e r r e d t o a b o v e ; c o n v e y e d b y J . W . thence run in a EastMcLemore and wife, to erly direction along the Jepp Thomas by the c e n t e r l i n e o f s a i d deed referred to above creek, a distance of 120 a distance of 350 feet; feet to the Beginning thence run in a west- Point, containing one erly direction parallel acres, more or less. with the center line of the creek referred to TRACT NO. 2: Beginabove, a distance of 120 ning at the Southeast feet; thence run in a corner of the SouthSoutheasterly direction east Quarter of Section parallel with the West 9, Township 2, Range 8, line of the tract of land run North 8 rods to the conveyed by J. W. center of a creek; McLemore and wife, to thence on Nor th 12 Jepp Thomas as re- rods for a point of beferred to above, a dis- g i n n i n g ; t h e n c e o n tance of 350 feet to the N o r t h 8 - 1 / 2 r o d s ; center line of the creek thence West 8 rods; referred to above; thence South 8-1/2 thence run in a East- rods; thence East 8 rods 2004 Hummer erly direction alongH2 the to the Point of Beginc e n t e r l i n e o f s a i d ning, lying and being in miles creek,134,514 a distance of 120 Alcorn County, Missisfeet to the Beginning sippi. New Tires Point, containing one 100K Miles Justmore serviced and The above described acres, or less. Never ready for the road. propertyBeeWrecked is subject to TRACT NO. 2: Begin- the rights of way for CallSoutheast @ public road and any and ning at the corner of the South- all restriction, ease662-664-0210 east Quarter of Section ments and covenants of 9, Township 2, Range 8, record. run North 8 rods to the center of a creek; As the undersigned Subthence on North 12 stituted Trustee, I will conrods for a point of be- vey only such title as is vesg i n n i n g ; t h e n c e o n ted in me under said deed of N o r t h 8 - 1 / 2 r o d s ; trust. thence West 8 rods; This the 22nd day of thence South 8-1/2 rods; thence East 8 rods September, New tires,2015. paint, seats, to the Point of Beginand window & door ning, lying and being in seals. Engine like new, Mueller4x4, roll-bar, Alcorn County, Missis- Thad 3 J.speed, Thad J. Mueller, Substituted sippi. wench. Trustee Great Shape! The 00 aboveMiles, described Red property is Kept, subject to Thad J. Mueller Garage it has beenof babied. the rights way for 112 East Bankhead Street, maintenance public All road and any and Ste. A records available. all restriction, ease- New Albany, MS 38652 Callcovenants or Text: of 662-534-6326 ments and record. 662-594-5830 4tc 10/8, 15, 22, 29 As the undersigned Substituted Trustee, I will con- 15029 vey only such title as is vested in me under said deed of trust.
the creek referred to above, a distance of 120 feet; thence run in a Southeasterly direction parallel with the West line of the tract of land conveyed by J. W. 0955 LEGALS McLemore and wife, to Jepp Thomas as referred to above, a distance of 350 feet to the center line of the creek referred to above; thence run in a Easterly direction along the center line of said creek, a distance of 120 feet to the Beginning Point, containing one acres, more or less. TRACT NO. 2: Beginning at the Southeast corner of the Southeast Quarter of Section 9, Township 2, Range 8, run North 8 rods to the center of a creek; thence on North 12 rods for a point of beginning; thence on North 8-1/2 rods; thence West 8 rods; thence South 8-1/2 rods; thence East 8 rods to the Point of Beginning, lying and being in Alcorn County, Mississippi.
TRACT NO. 2: Beginning at the Southeast corner of the Southeast Quarter of Section 9, Township 2, Range 8, run North 8 rods to the center of a creek; 0955 LEGALS thence on North 12 rods for a point of beginning; thence on North 8-1/2 rods; thence West 8 rods; thence South 8-1/2 rods; thence East 8 rods to the Point of Beginning, lying and being in Alcorn County, Mississippi. The above described property is subject to the rights of way for public road and any and all restriction, easements and covenants of record.
the rights of way for public road and any and all restriction, easements and covenants of record. Daily Corinthian As the undersigned Sub0955 LEGALS stituted Trustee, I will convey only such title as is vested in me under said deed of trust. This the 22nd day of September, 2015. Thad J. Mueller Thad J. Mueller, Substituted Trustee Thad J. Mueller 112 East Bankhead Street, Ste. A New Albany, MS 38652 662-534-6326 4tc 10/8, 15, 22, 29
As the undersigned Substituted Trustee, I will con- 15029 vey only such title as is vested in me under said deed of trust.
s e l a S GUARANTEEDAuto
This the 22nd day of September, 2015.
Thad J. Mueller Thad J. Mueller, Substituted Trustee
Advertise your CAR, TRUCK, SUV, BOAT, TRACTOR, MOTORCYCLE, RV & ATV here for The above described is subject to NO Thad J. Mueller $39.95 UNTIL SOLD! Ad should include photo, descriptionproperty and price. PLEASE the rights of way for 112 East Bankhead Street, DEALERS & NON-TRANSFERABLE! NO REFUNDS. public road and any and Ste. A Single item only. Payment in advance. Call 287-6147all to restriction, place youreasead. New Albany, MS 38652
D L SO
2010 Maxima LOADED 73,000 mi. GREAT TRACT NO. 2: CAR Beginning at the Southeast $15,000 corner of the South-
CED REDU
2006 Jeep Liberty
$13,900 OBO
1997 Mustang
1998 PORSCHE BOXSTER
This the 22nd day of 6 cyl.,2015. 5 speed September,
Convertible Leather Seat Covers Thad J. Mueller Original Thad J. All Mueller, Substituted Trustee Electric Windows & Seats Thad J. Mueller East Bankhead 88,000 milesStreet, $7500.00 OBO 112 $8200 OBO Ste. A
662-664-0357
$15,000. OBO 664-6484
New Albany, MS 38652 662-534-6326
2004 Cadillac Seville SLS Loaded, leather, sunroof, chrome wheels.
89,000 Miles $5500. Call 662-603-1290
2012 Jeep Wrangler 4WD
10,000
$
731-607-3172
GT
01 JEEP 4.0
4,000.00
$8,600
662-664-0357
662-643-3565
2010 Chevy 2003 Mustang GT Equinox LS SVT Cobra Clone This the 22nd day of Tuned 4.6 Engine September, 2015. 5 Speed Thad J. Mueller Lowered Thad J. Mueller, Substituted 130K Miles, Trustee4:10 Gears Fully Loaded GREAT Condition! Power & Air ThadAll J. Mueller 112 East Bankhead Street, $10,000 $10,500 Ste. A $6500. 662-415-8343 New Albany, MS 38652 662-415-0149 662-534-6326 or 415-7205
For Sale or Trade 1978 Mercedes 6.9 Motor 135,000 miles. Only made 450 that year. $2,500. OBO Selling due to health reasons. Harry Dixon 286-6359
REDUCED Antique 1986 FORD F350 XL- Dualley, 7.3 Diesel, new tires, Paint, Lots of Extras, 164,803 Miles, Motor runs well. 2nd Owner, $3500.00Serious inquiries only. 662-287-8894
2004 BMW
• 3.0L • 155K miles • New tires
$12,900 OBO Just serviced and ready for the road. Call @
662-664-0210
4tc 10/8, 15, 22, 29 15029
1973 Jeep 1989 Mercedes Benz 300 CE Commando
east Quarter of Section 9, Township 2, Range 8, run North 8 rods to the center of a creek; thence on North 12 rods for a point of beginning; thence on North 8-1/2 rods; thence West 8 rods; thence South 8-1/2 This the 22nd day of rods; thence East 8 rods September, 2015. to the Point of BeginBlack ning, lying and being in LikeCounty, new onMissisthe Thad J. Mueller Alcorn sippi. Thad J. Mueller, Substituted inside and out. Trustee New top TheRuns above described Great, good front & rear bumper property is subject to Thad J. Mueller tires, 114K miles the rights of way for 112 East Bankhead Street, Custom Jeep radio public road and any and Ste. A and CD all $restriction, ease- New Albany, MS player 38652 ments and covenants of 662-534-6326 $9,200 record. 4tc 10/8, 15, 22, 29 As the undersigned Substituted Trustee, I will con- 15029 vey only such title as is vested in me under said deed of trust.
287-7424
ments and covenants of 662-534-6326 record. 4tc 10/8, 15, 22, 29 As the undersigned Substituted Trustee, I will con- 15029 vey only such title as is vested in me under said deed of trust.
145K miles, Rear bucket seats, Champagne color, Excellent Condition. Diligently maintained. $4000.00 $5000.00 662-415-2657
1985 Mustang GT, 2005 Honda Element
EX, 4D, VIN 5J6YH18645L001419, Milage, 107,400, one owner, local, Pwr Locks, Windows, Steering, RW defogger, A/C, Rear window wiper, Cruise, Tilt. AM/FM Stereo. Premium sound sys, Anti-social brakes, Alum Alloy wheels, Sat radio, CD, Pwr mirrors, Bucket seats, MP3 player, Keyless entry. $7250.
662 287 4848
HO, 5 Speed, Convertible, Mileage 7500 !! Second owner Last year of carburetor, All original. $16,500
662-287-4848
864 TRUCKS/VANS/ SUV’S
2011 GMC CANYON-RED REG. CAB, 2 WD 2006 Express 2500 6.6 Diesel Runs 78,380 MILES and drives great. 172,000 miles. A/C and new tires Well serviced! $8500.00 662-594-1860
1976 F115 428 Motor
$11,900 OBO
$3,500.
662-462-7790
662-808-9313 662-415-5071
2012 HONDA FOREMAN 500 4x4, 183 miles, $4,800.00 662-665-5363
1500 Goldwing Honda
78,000 original miles,new tires.
$4500
662-284-9487
D L SO
and the holder of said Deed of Trust, having requested the undersigned so to do, on the 29TH day of October, 2015, I will during the lawful hours of between 11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m., at public outcry, offer for sale and will sell, at the south front door of the Alcorn County Courthouse at Corinth, Mississippi, for cash to the highest bidder, the following described land and property situated in Alcorn County, Mississippi, to-wit:
1950 Buick 78,400 miles $4200.00 or Trade All Original
Lying and being in the Northwest Quarter of Section 27, Township 1 South, Range 7 East, 1994 Z28 CAMARO County of Alcorn, State of Mississippi, more parLT-1 ENGINE ticularly described as REBUILT follows:
TRANSMISSION
Commencing at the NEW TIRES Northwest corner of 119,000 ACTUAL MILES the East one-half of the Northwest Quarter of $3500.00 Section 27, Township 1 662-286-9098 South, Range 7 East, Alcorn County, Mississippi; thence run South 12 feet to the South right-of-way of County Road 708 and the point of beginning; thence Lying and being in the run South along a fence Northwest Quarter of 389 feet; thence run Section 27, Township 1 East 210 feet; thence South, Range 7 East, County of Alcorn, State run North 416.94 feet to of Mississippi, more par- the South right-of-way line of County Road 708; ticularly described as thence run South 82 defollows: 54,00025miles, 4.2 V-6, grees minutes West along said right-of-way automatic, new tires, Commencing at the line 211.85 feetAC, to runs the dark blue, cold Northwest corner of of beginning, the East one-half of the point and drives like new. containing 1.94 acres, Northwest Quarter of more or less. Section 27, Township 1 FIRM South, Range 7 East, Alcorn County, Mississippi; thence run South I will only convey such title as is vested in me 12 feet to the South right-of-way of County as Substitute Trustee. Road 708 and the point WITNESS MY SIGNATURE, of beginning; thence run South along a fence this 24th day of September, 2015. 389 feet; thence run East 210 feet; thence run North 416.94 feet to the South right-of-way Emily Kaye Courteau line of County Road 708; Substitute Trustee Nissan Quest 855 S Pear Orchard Rd., thence run South 82 de- 1994 Ste. 404, Bldg. 400 grees 25 minutes West New Lifters, along said right-of-way Ridgeland, MS 39157 (318)Cam, 330-9020 Head, line 211.85 feet to the point of beginning, Struts and Shocks. rcs/F15-0957 IN GOOD CONDITION containing 1.94 acres, $2000. more or less. 731-645-8339 OR PUBLISH: 10-1-2015 / 10Call /603-9446 8-2015 10-15-2015 / 10731-453-5239 22-2015 I will only convey such
662-415-3408
MILES 116,700
$13,500.
(662)287-7797
D L SO
2008 FORD F150 STX
$
8950
662-665-1995
MORRIS &832 ASSOCIATES ATTORNEYS AT LAW Motorcycles/ATV’S WITNESS MY SIGNATURE, 2309 Oliver Road Monroe, LA 71201 this 24th day of 318-330-9020 September, 2015.
2005 Lincoln LS Sport V8 Ultimate
662-286-1717
WHEREAS, on the 11th day of September, 2015, the Holder of said Deed of Trust substituted and appointed Emily Kaye Courteau by instrument recorded in the office of the aforesaid Chancery Clerk in InWHEREAS, by various as- strument# 201503953; and signments on record said Deed of Trust was WHEREAS, default havultimately assigned to ing been made in the Lakeview Loan Servicing, LLC by instrument payments of the indebtedness secured by recorded in the office the said Deed of Trust, of the aforesaid Chanand the holder of said cery Clerk in InstruDeed of Trust, having ment# 201305176; and requested the undersigned so to do, on the WHEREAS, on the 11th 2004 Nissan day of September, 2015, 29TH day of October, I will during the Quest 104,000 the Holder of said Deed 2015, 2003 FORD and lawful miles,hours cold of ac, new of Trust substituted between 11:00 a.m. and appointed Emily Kaye tires, fully loaded, TAURUS 4:00 p.m., at public outCourteau by instrudvd entertainment cry, offer for sale and 142100 MILES ment recorded in the system, runssouth and will sell, at the office of the aforesaid $3500.00 front door of4850.00 the Allooks great, Chancery Clerk in Incorn662-665-1995 County Courtstrument# 201503953; 662-665-5720 house at Corinth, Misand sissippi, for cash to the highest bidder, the folWHEREAS, default havlowing described land ing been made in the and property situated payments of the indebtedness secured by in Alcorn County, Mississippi, to-wit: the said Deed of Trust,
title as is vested in me as Substitute Trustee.
15029
$2500/OBO
WHEREAS, by various assignments on record said Deed of Trust was ultimately assigned to Lakeview Loan Servicing, LLC by instrument recorded in the office of the aforesaid Chancery Clerk in Instrument# 201305176; and
06 Chevy Trailblazer 1987 Power FORD 250 DIESEL everything! UTILITY SERVICE TRUCK Good heat $4000. and Air $3,250 OBO 662-319-7145
4tc 10/8, 15, 22, 29
1987 FORD BRONCO ALL ORIGINAL VINTAGE! RUNS & DRIVES GOOD
Married Woman and Ruthie W Miller, A Single Woman and Kris S. Rorie, A Married Man, executed and delivered a certain Deed of Trust unto T. Harris Collier, III, Trustee for Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., as nominee for Trustmark National Bank, Beneficiary, to secure an indebtedness therein described, which Deed of Trust is recorded in the office of the Chancery Clerk of Alcorn County, Mississippi in Instrument# 200604865; and
2008 LEXUS RX350 (GOLD)
Very Fast
95’ 2001 Nissan Xterra CHEVY FOR SALE ASTRO Needs a little work. Cargo Van Good, Sound Good Bargain! Van Call: $2700 662-643-3084 872-3070
day of August, 2006, and acknowledged on the 18th day of August, 2006, Holly N Rorie, A • Thursday, October 22, 2015and • 13 Married Woman Ruthie W Miller, A Single Woman and Kris S. RorLEGALSMan, ex0955 LEGALS 0955 ie, A Married ecuted and delivered a certain Deed of Trust unto T. Harris Collier, III, 0955 LEGALS Trustee for Mortgage Electronic Registration Substitute Trustee’s Systems, Inc., as nominee for Trustmark NaNotice of Sale tional Bank, Beneficiary, to secure an indebtedSTATE OF MISSISSIPPI ness therein described, COUNTY OF Alcorn which Deed of Trust is recorded in the office WHEREAS, on the 18th day of August, 2006, and of the Chancery Clerk of Alcorn County, Missisacknowledged on the sippi in Instrument# 18th day of August, 200604865; and 2006, Holly N Rorie, A
2014 Jeep Wrangler Approx 15000 miles BOUGHT NEW, Complete History, Loaded, 4x4, All power, Phone, CD, DVD, Satellite, Auto, Removable Tops, Step Bars, Dark Tint, Red - Black, (LIKE NEW) IUKA
256-577-1349 $28,500.00
2012 Banshee Bighorn Side-by-Side 4 X 4 w/ Wench AM/FM w/ CD
$7200.00 OBO
662-664-0357
1998 CHEVY CUSTOM VAN 136,200 mi. Well Maintained Looks & Runs Great
$6,500.00 662-415-9062
D L SO
One local owner, dealer serviced, all factory options, navigation, premium sound, sunroof, leather seats, almost new tires, 105,000 mi $6,500 662 286 5668
2003 CHEVY 2500 HDLT CREW CAB 4X4 Emily Kaye Courteau 2010 GMC Ext-Cab P.U. New tires, Tool Box, Towing Pkg., Bed Liner, Running Boards, Fog Lights, P. Windows, P. Door Locks, Tilt
$14,900.
Call 662-255-3511
662-286-6750
662-287-7415 662-415-5163
PUBLISH: 10-1-2015 / 108-2015 / 10-15-2015 / 1022-2015
$18,500.00
662-284-8200
MORRIS & ASSOCIATES ATTORNEYS AT LAW 2309 Oliver Road Monroe, LA 71201 1990 Harley 318-330-9020
2002 Harley Fat Boy, color: purple, 27,965 miles, $7,900 OBO Just serviced, good or new tires, brakes, ready for the road. Call @ 662-664-0210
2013 Arctic Cat
Davidson Custom Soft-Tail $9000
15033
2006 Kawasaki Vulcan 1600 13,500 Miles, Serviced in November, New Back Tire, Cobra Pipes, Slingshot Windshield
$4295 OBO 662-212-2451
2008 Harley Davidson Electra Glide Classic Black w/lots of Chrome 21,600 miles $14,900 662-286-6750
2006 YAMAHA 1700 GREAT CONDITION! APPROX. 26,000 MILES $4350 (NO TRADES) 662-665-0930 662-284-8251
2000 POLARIS MAGNUM 325 4X4 4 WHEELER
2007 Yamaha VStar 1100 21,900 miles $4,500 Bat-wing Faring and Hog Tunes
1995 K2500 4X4 Good Condition Runs Great, New Tires 176K miles $3500.
VORTEC 8100 V8 ALLISON TRANSMISSION EXCEL. COND. rcs/F15-0957 32K MILES
Substitute Trustee 855 S Pear Orchard Rd., Ste. 404, Bldg. 400 Ridgeland, MS 39157 (318) 330-9020
15033
YAMAHA V STAR 650 22,883 MILES $2,850.00 665-1288
2nd Owner, Great Condition Has a Mossy Oak Cover over the body put on when it was bought new. Everything Works. Used for hunting & around the house, Never for mud riding. $1500 Firm. If I don’t answer, text me and I will contact you. 662-415-7154
2003 100 yr. Anniversary 883 Harley Sportster, color: blue, 14,500 miles, $4,900. OBO. Just serviced, good or new tires, brakes, ready for the road. Call @ 662-664-0210
1999 Harley Classic Touring, loaded, color: blue, lots of extras. 70,645 Hwy. miles, $7,900.00 OBO Just serviced, good or new tires, brakes, ready for the road. Call @ 662-664-0210
1949 Harley Davidson Panhead $9000 OBO
308 miles 4 Seater w/seat belts Phone charger outlet Driven approx. 10 times Excellent Condition Wench (front bumper)
662-808-2994
(662)279-0801
14 â&#x20AC;˘ Thursday, October 22, 2015 â&#x20AC;˘ Daily Corinthian
0955 LEGALS
0955 LEGALS
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0955 LEGALS
0955 LEGALS
SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
TO: ANY AND ALL , ZLOO RQO\ FRQYH\ VXFK UNKNOWN HEIRS AT WLWOH DV LV YHVWHG LQ PH LAW OF RICHARD S. DV 6XEVWLWXWH 7UXVWHH WOODRUFF, DECEASED, who are nonresidents of the :,71(66 0< 6,*1$785( State of Mississippi or cannot WKLV WK GD\ RI be found therein after dili6HSWHPEHU gent search and inquiry and whose post office addresses and street addresses are un(PLO\ .D\H &RXUWHDX known after diligent search 6XEVWLWXWH 7UXVWHH and inquiry. 6 3HDU 2UFKDUG 5G 6WH %OGJ You have been made 5LGJHODQG 06 defendants in this suit filed in this Court by Trustmark National Bank seeking to quiet UFV ) and confirm title, to remove clouds on title, and other re38%/,6+ lief. Defendants other than you in this action are: Any Administrator of the Estate of Richard S. Woodruff, De0255,6 $662&,$7(6 ceased, Madison Brooke $77251(<6 $7 /$: Woodruff, a Minor, by and 2OLYHU 5RDG through her mother, Lori P. 0RQURH /$ Woodruff nka Lori Henson, Michael E. Maxcy, Susan Woodruff Maxcy, Richard Sowell and Federal Express Freight, Inc., a subsidiary of Federal Express Corporation. IN THE CHANCERY COURT OF ALCORN You are required to COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI mail or hand deliver a written response to the Complaint to Quiet and Confirm TRUSTMARK NATIONAL Title, to Remove Clouds on Title, and for Other Relief BANK and T. HARRIS COLLIER, III, filed against you in the action in his capacity as Trustee to J. Mark Franklin, III, Attorney for Plaintiff, whose post PLAINTIFFS office address is Post Office Civil Action No. 2015-0396- Box 2488, Ridgeland, Mississippi 39158-2488 and whose 02-H street address is 368 HighY land Colony Parkway, RidgeANY ADMINISTRATOR OF land, Mississippi 39157. THE ESTATE OF YOUR RESPONSE RICHARD S. WOODRUFF, MUST BE MAILED OR DEDECEASED; ANY AND ALL UN- LIVERED NOT LATER KNOWN HEIRS AT LAW T H A N T H I R T Y D A Y S OF RICHARD S. WOOD- AFTER THE 8th DAY OF October, 2015, WHICH IS RUFF, DECEASED; M A D I S O N B R O O K E THE DATE OF THE FIRST WOODRUFF, a Minor, by P U B L I C A T I O N O F T H E and through her mother, SUMMONS. IF YOUR RELORI P. WOODRUFF aka SPONSE IS NOT MAILED OR DELIVERED, A JUDGLORI HENSON; M I C H A E L E . M A X C Y , MENT BY DEFAULT WILL SUSAN WOODRUFF MAX- B E E N T E R E D A G A I N S T YOU FOR THE RELIEF DECY, MANDED IN THE COMRICHARD SOWELL and F E D E R A L E X P R E S S PLAINT. FREIGHT, INC., a subsidiary You must also file the of FEDERAL EXPRESS COR- original of your Response P O R A T I O N with the Clerk of this Court D E F E N D A N T S within a reasonable time afterward.
0955 LEGALS
0955 LEGALS
strument recorded in the ofIssued under my hand fice of the aforesaid Chanand the seal of said Court, cery Clerk in Instrument# this 1 st day of October, 201504164; and 2015. WHEREAS, the subject deed Honorable Bobby Marolt of trust was reformed by Alcorn County Chancery judgment rendered in the matter styled CitiMortgage, Court Inc. v Elaine Dildy, Cause No. Post Office Box 69 2012-0604-02-L of the ChanCorinth, Mississippi 38835 cery Court of Alcorn County, By: W. J u s t i c e Mississippi, rendered on the14th day of December, DEPUTY CLERK 2013, said judgment reforming the Legal description of that certain Deed of Trust appearing in the Alcorn County land records at, Instrument# Publication Dates: 10/8/2015; 201101102. Said judgment appearing in the Alcorn 10/15/2015; 10/22/2015 J. Mark Franklin, III, MSB# County Chancery Clerkâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s land records in Instrument# 5512 201306251 on December 30, McKAY LAWLER FRANK 2013; and & FOREMAN, PLLC Post Office Box 2488 Ridgeland, Mississippi 39158- WHEREAS, default having been made in the payments of 2488 the indebtedness secured by Telephone (601) 572-8778 the said Deed of Trust, and Telefax (601) 572-8440 the holder of said Deed of Trust, having requested the 15046 undersigned so to do, on the 29th day of October, 2015, I will during the lawful hours of Substitute Trusteeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Notice between 11:00 a.m. and 4:00 of Sale p.m., at public outcry, offer for sale and will sell, at the STATE OF MISSISSIPPI south front door of the AlCOUNTY OF Alcorn corn County Courthouse at WHEREAS, on the 7th day of Corinth, Mississippi, for cash March, 2011, and acknow- to the highest bidder, the folledged on the 7th day of lowing described land and March, 2011, Elaine Dildy, an property situated in Alcorn unmarried woman, executed County, Mississippi, to-wit: and delivered a certain Deed of Trust unto Cecil D. McCle- The land referred to herein llan, III, Trustee for Mortgage below is situated in the Electronic Registration Sys- County of Alcorn, State of tems, Inc., as nominee for Mississippi, and is described as Residential Finance Corpora- follows: tion, Beneficiary, to secure an indebtedness therein de- Situated in the County of Alscribed, which Deed of Trust corn, State of Mississippi, tois recorded in the office of wit; the Chancery Clerk of Alcorn County, Mississippi in In- Commencing at the Southeast corner of the Southwest strument# 201101102; and Quarter of Section 34, TownWHEREAS, on the 10th day ship 1 South, Range 8 East, of May, 2012, Mortgage Elec- Alcorn County, Mississippi; tronic Registration Systems, thence run West 165 feet, Inc., as nominee for Residen- more or less, to the centertial Finance Corporation, as- line of a ditch at the Southsigned said Deed of Trust un- east corner of the property to Citimortgage, Inc., by in- conveyed by W.C. Sweat, Jr. strument recorded in the of- et al to Orba Jones and C.L. fice of the aforesaid Chan- Jones by Deed dated June 11, cery Clerk in Instrument# 1971, and recorded in the Chancery Clerkâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Office of Al201202325; and corn County, Mississippi, in WHEREAS, on the 18th day Deed Book 155 at Pages 454of September, 2015, the 456; thence run North 12 deHolder of said Deed of Trust grees 45 minutes East along substituted and appointed said centerline 30 feet, more Emily Kaye Courteau by in- or less, to the North right-of-
s e l a S GUARANTEEDAuto
way line of Pittman Road; thence run South 89 degrees 07 minutes West along the North right-of-way line of Pittman Road 404.5 feet to the Point of Beginning; thence run North 2 degrees 34 minutes East 340.0 feet; thence run North 1 degree 00 minutes West 229.0 feet; thence run North 1 degrees 00 minutes West 59.3 feet to the centerline of a ditch; thence run North 89 degrees 32 minutes West 69.6 feet along the centerline of said ditch; thence run North 87 degrees 24 minutes West 61.00 feet along the centerline of said ditch; thence run North 85 degrees 55 minutes West 101.3 feet along the centerline of said ditch; thence run North 79 degrees 47 minutes West 102.4 feet along the centerline of said ditch; thence run South 10 feet to an iron pin; thence run South 641.0 feet to the North right-of-way line of Pittman Road; thence run along said North right-of-way line of Pittman Road; thence run along said North right-of-way line South 89 degrees 00 minutes East 321.2 feet to the Point of Beginning, less and except the West 6.7 feet of the above described property, containing 4.73 acres, more or less.
0955 LEGALS NOTICE TO CREDITORS NOTICE is hereby given that Letters Testamentary have been on this day granted to the undersigned, Robert Palmer, on the estate of Jerry Palmer, deceased, by the Chancery Court of Alcorn County, Mississippi, and all persons having claims against said estate are required to have the same probated and registered by the Clerk of said Court within ninety (90) days after the date of the first publication of this notice or the same shall be forever barred. The first day of the publication of this notice is the 22nd day of October, 2015.
0955 LEGALS County, Mississippi, and all persons having claims against said estate are required to have the same probated and registered by the Clerk of said Court within ninety (90) days after the date of the first publication of this notice or the same shall be forever barred. The first day of the publication of this notice is the 22nd day of October, 2015. WITNESS our signatures on this 20th day of October, 2015. PEGGY THEIS BARBARA COUNTS CO-EXECUTRICES OF THE ESTATE OF RAYMOND L. MANESS, DECEASED
WITNESS my signa- 46648.WPD ture on this 20th day of 3 tc 10/22, 29, 11/5/2015 October, 2015. Donald Downs P.O. Box 1618 Corinth, MS 38835 OF THE ESTATE OF 287-8088 JERRY PALMER, 15068 DECEASED ROBERT PALMER, EXECUTOR
46651.WPD 3 tc 10/22, 29, 11/5/2015
I will only convey such title as is vested in me as Substitute Donald Downs Trustee. P.O. Box 1618 Corinth, MS 38835 WITNESS MY SIGNATURE, 287-8088 this 6th day of October, 2015. 15067 Emily Kaye Courteau
HOME SERVICE DIRECTORY
HOME IMPROVEMENT & REPAIR $// 352 +RPH 0DLQWHQ DQFH DQG 5HSDLU
Substitute Trustee IN THE CHANCERY LAWN/LANDSCAPE/ 855 S Pear Orchard Rd., Ste. COURT OF ALCORN TREE SVC 404, Bldg. 400 COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI 5,&+$5'621 6 /DZQ Ridgeland, MS 39157 6HUYLFH )DOO /DZQ &OHDQ (318) 330-9020 RE: LAST WILL AND 8S rcs/F15-0949 TESTAMENT OF STORAGE, INDOOR/ PUBLISH: 10-8-2015 / 10-15- RAYMOND L. MANESS, 2015 / 10-22-2015 DECEASED OUTDOOR NO. 2015-0571-02 $0(5,&$1 15050 NOTICE TO 0,1, 6725$*( CREDITORS 6 7DWH IN THE CHANCERY $FURVV )URP NOTICE is hereby COURT OF ALCORN :RUOG &RORU COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI given that Letters Test amentary have been on this day granted to the 0255,6 &580 0,1, 6725$*( RE: LAST WILL AND u n d e r s i g n e d , P e g g y TESTAMENT O F Theis and Barbara JERRY PALMER, DE- Counts, on the estate of Raymond L. Maness, CEASED PROFESSIONAL deceased, by the ChanNO. 2015-0572-02 SERVICE DIRECTORY cery Court of Alcorn
VEHICLE DIRECTORY
REDUCED Sportsman Camper Queen Bed, Couch sleeps 2, lots of cabinets, pulled 6 times, non-smoker, clean as new on the inside.
$9,500.00 $8500.00 287-3461 or 396-1678
1992 SWINGER CLASS A MOTOR HOME
SOLD
CAMPING TRAILER
2009 WILDWOOD WITH QUEEN BED & TWO BUNK BEDS. $8900.00 256-585-0602 (CELL) 731-632-4296(HOME)
2011 AR-ONE Star Craft, 14ft. Fridge/AC, Stove, Microwave, Full bath, immaculate condition. ReďŹ nance or payoff (prox. $5300) @ Trustmark, payments $198. Excellent starter for small family. 284-0138
32 FT., LOW MILES, NEW TIRES, VG COND. $6500.00 OBO 660-0242 OR 656-0750
â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;07 Dolphin LX RV, 37â&#x20AC;&#x2122; REDUCED 2006 WILDERNESS CAMPER 29 FT.
SOLD
5TH WHEEL LARGE SLIDE OUT FULLY EQUIPPED NON-SMOKING OWNER IUKA
gas burner, workhorse eng., 2 slideouts, full body paint, walk-in shower, SS sinks & s/s refrig w/im, Onar Marq gold 7000 gen., 3-ton cntrl. unit, back-up camera, auto. leveling, 2-flat screen TVs, Allison 6-spd. A.T., 10 cd stereo w/s.s, 2-leather capt. seats & 1 lthr recliner, auto. awning, qn bed, table & couch (fold into bed), micro/conv oven, less than 5k mi.
CED U D E R $65,000 662-415-0590
CALL 662-423-1727
2005 AIRSTREAM LAND YACHT 30 ft., with slide out & built-in TV antenna, 2 TVâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s, 7400 miles.
$75,000. 662-287-7734
Excaliber made by Georgi Boy 1985 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; long motor home, new tires, Price negotiable.
662-660-3433
470 TRACTORS/FARM EQUIP.
1990 Allegro Motor Home
SOLD
Excellent Condition Brand New Refrigerator New Tires & Hot Water Heater. Sleeps Six 7,900 ACTUAL MILES $12,500. OBO Must See!! Call 662-665-1420
30' MOTOR HOME 1988 FORD 2003 CHEROKEE 285 SLEEPS 8 EXCELLENT CONDITION EVERYTHING WORKS 5TH WHEEL W/GOOSE NECK ADAPTER CENTRAL HEAT & AIR ALL NEW TIRES & NEW ELECTRIC JACK ON TRAILER
$8995 Call Richard 662-664-4927
LD 51,000 SOMILES SLEEPS 6
$4300 662-415-5247
WINNEBAGO JOURNEY CLASS A , RV 2000 MODEL 34.9 FT. LONG 50 AMP HOOKUP CUMMINS DIESEL FREIGHTLINER CHASSIS LARGE SLIDE OUT ONAN QUIET GENERATOR VERY WELL KEPT. ,500. 662-728-2628
CAMPER & TRUCK 2007 F250 Super Duty Power Stroke Diesel Truck
SOLD
2006 Forest River 30 Ft. Camper.
Both for $10,000 Call 662-462-3754
WINNEBAGO MOTOR HOME 1989 40' Queen Size Bed 1 Bath Sleeps 6-7 people comfortably
$8500 662-808-9313
1997 New Holland 3930 Tractor 1400 Hours
$8500.00 731-926-0006
Older Model Ford Tractor with 2 Row Equipment. $6000.00 662-286-6571 662-286-3924 COMMERCIAL
1993 John Deere 5300 Tractor
w/ John Deere loader. 2900 Hours
$10,500
731-926-0006
Tractor For Sale!
TRACTOR FOR SALE JOHN DEERE 40-20 NEW PUMPS, GOOD TIRES RETIRED FROM FARMING $14,000 662-419-1587
2009 TT45A New Holland Tractor 335 Hours 8 x 2 Speed, non-Synchro Mesh Transmission. Roll over protective structure, hydrolic power lift. Like New Condition, owner deceased, Kossuth Area. $12,500- 662-424-3701
601 FORD WORKMASTER
John Deere 16-30 New injectors & Fuel Pump Good Tires
EXCELLENT CONDITION
$6500.00 662-419-1587
731-453-5239 731-645-8339
$3,500
W & W HORSE OR CATTLE TRAILER ALL ALUMINUM LIKE NEW $7000. 731-453-5239 731-645-8339
1956 FORD 600 5 SPEED POWER STEERING REMOTE HYDRAULICS GOOD TIRES GOOD CONDITION
$4,200 662-287-4514
Hyster Forklift Narrow Aisle 24 Volt Battery 3650.00 287-1464
804 BOATS
JOHN DEERE X300 RIDING LAWN MOWER
Clark Forklift 8,000 lbs, outside tires Good Condition $15,000
662-287-1464 1989 FOXCRAFT 18â&#x20AC;&#x2122; long, 120 HP Johnson mtr., trailer & mtr., new paint, new transel, 2 live wells, hot foot control.
$6500.
662-596-5053
19 Hours (Like New), 42 Inch Cutting Deck, 8 Yard Trailer, Grass Dethatcher & Soil Aerator Attachments $
53' STEP DECK TRAILER CUSTOM BUILT TO HAUL 3 CREW CAB 1 TON TRUCKS.
SOLD
ALL FOR
2500 OBO
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15 â&#x20AC;˘ Thursday, October 22, 2015 â&#x20AC;˘ Daily Corinthian
WWW.ATHLONSPORTS.COM
INSIDESUNDAY
WEEK 7 SCHEDULE Donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t forget to follow us! @ AthlonSports / AthlonSports
A WEEKLY SPIN AROUND THE NFL
@ AthlonSports
Thursday, Oct. 22 Seattle at San Francisco Sunday, Oct. 25 Buffalo vs. Jacksonville (London) Tampa Bay at Washington Atlanta at Tennessee New Orleans at Indianapolis Minnesota at Detroit Pittsburgh at Kansas City Cleveland at St. Louis Houston at Miami N.Y. Jets at New England Oakland at San Diego Dallas at N.Y. Giants Philadelphia at Carolina Monday, Oct. 26 Baltimore at Arizona
8:25 p.m. 9:30 a.m. 1 p.m. 1 p.m. 1 p.m. 1 p.m. 1 p.m. 1 p.m. 1 p.m. 1 p.m. 4:05 p.m. 4:25 p.m. 8:30 p.m. 8:30 p.m.
Bye: Chicago, Cincinnati, Denver, Green Bay
CANâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;T MISS MATCHUPS N.Y. Jets (4â&#x20AC;&#x201C;1) at New England (5â&#x20AC;&#x201C;0) If you say you had this one circled as a showdown for the AFC East lead when the season started, well, youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re lying. Few predicted big things for the Jets. But the defense is back on top of the league, Chris Ivory is carrying the ground game (see below), and Brandon Marshall has found new life (102 yards receiving per game). Ryan Fitzpatrick still throws too many interceptions, but heâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s been sacked only twice. Dallas (2â&#x20AC;&#x201C;3) at N.Y. Giants (3â&#x20AC;&#x201C;3) Dallas has just two wins and is still missing Tony Romo and Dez Bryant, but the Giants may be more desperate. The Cowboys are 2â&#x20AC;&#x201C;0 in the NFC East, while the Giants already have two division losses. Dallas turns to Matt Cassel at quarterback but really needs more from its defense. Opponents are averaging more than 400 yards per game since Romo went down, and the Cowboys have zero takeaways during the current three-game losing streak.
Cam Newton rallied the Panthers past the Seahawks with two fourth-quarter touchdown drives.
THESE CATS ARE FOR REAL Carolina Panthers silencing doubters as they roll on unbeaten
T
his was supposed to be the game. was impresive: 11-of-13 for 157 yards. Olsen caught three passes for 70 Sure, Carolina was 4â&#x20AC;&#x201C;0 and coming off a bye week to rest and \DUGV RQ WKH Ă&#x20AC; QDO WZR GULYHV EXW 1HZWRQ ZDVQ¡W IRUFLQJ KLP WKH EDOO prepare for a trip to Seattle. And the Seahawks were 2â&#x20AC;&#x201C;3 and Included were 10 straight completions to seven different receivers. reeling after blowing a big lead in a physical overtime loss at The Carolina defense was bolstered by the return of star linebacker Cincinnati. /XNH .XHFKO\ ZKR UDFNHG XS WDFNOHV LQ KLV Ă&#x20AC; UVW JDPH VLQFH OHDY But this was the game that was supposed to expose the Panthers as preing the season opener with a concussion. The unit kept Carolina in the tenders. They were unbeaten only thanks to a very soft schedule, right? JDPH E\ DOORZLQJ QR Ă&#x20AC; UVW GRZQV DQG TXLFNO\ IRUFLQJ Ă&#x20AC; HOG JRDOV DIWHU And Seattle had held a fourth-quarter lead in every game ERWK 1HZWRQ LQWHUFHSLRQV JDYH 6HDWWOH JUHDW Ă&#x20AC; HOG SRVLWLRQ this season. The Seahawks have been to consecutive Super %XW IRU WKH Ă&#x20AC; UVW WLPH WKLV VHDVRQ WKH 3DQWKHUV GLG QRW Bowls, and theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;d have the 12th Man behind them. Theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;d force a turnover, and that may illustrate why these are not beat the Panthers and all would be right in the world ... or just the same old Panthers. at least in the NFC playoff race. Carolina has been a pretty predictable team since NewIn fact, last week in this very space, we declared Carotonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s arrival in 2011. Like just about every team, when OLQD WR EH WKH XQEHDWHQ WHDP PRVW OLNHO\ WR ORVH Ă&#x20AC; UVW the Panthers stick to old-school football values â&#x20AC;&#x201D; play And for a while, everything went according to script. good defense, take the ball away while protecting the ball Seattle held a 23â&#x20AC;&#x201C;14 fourth-quarter lead and seemed \RXUVHOI Âł WKH\ DUH XVXDOO\ VXFFHVVIXO %XW LQ WKH ODVW Ă&#x20AC; YH SRLVHG WR KDQG &DUROLQD LWV Ă&#x20AC; UVW ORVV &DP 1HZWRQ ZDV seasons, Carolina has been dominant, going 27â&#x20AC;&#x201C;4â&#x20AC;&#x201C;1 when John Gworek 9-for-23 for 112 yards, no touchdowns and two intercepwinning the turnover battle. When the Panthers donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t win Athlon Sports tions. Same old Cam, same old Panthers. the turnover battle, they are 10â&#x20AC;&#x201C;27. Senior Editor @JohnGworek Or not. Taking over at his own 20 with 8:08 left, NewNewton has started all but two games in that stretch and WRQ KLW Ă&#x20AC; YH VWUDLJKW SDVVHV DIWHU DQ LQLWLDO LQFRPSOHWLRQ is 35â&#x20AC;&#x201C;31â&#x20AC;&#x201C;1 as a starting quarterback. But Sunday marked Jonathan Stewart capped the 80-yard drive with a 1-yard just the second time in his career that Carolina won a game touchdown run. The PAT was missed, but the Panthers ZLWKRXW WKH EHQHĂ&#x20AC; W RI D WDNHDZD\ SUHYLRXVO\ ² ,W ZDV were within three with 3:58 left. DOVR WKH Ă&#x20AC; UVW WLPH LQ 1HZWRQ¡V FDUHHU WKDW &DUROLQD ZRQ D JDPH LQ ZKLFK After a Seattle punt, Newton again went to work. Starting from his LW ZDV PLQXV RU ZRUVH LQ WXUQRYHU GLIIHUHQWLDO KDG EHHQ ² own 20 with 2:20 left, he hit three straight passes to move the ball into All of this isnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t to say our opinion of the Panthersâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; hot start has totally Seattle territory before being sacked with 1:20 left. After a timeout, NewFKDQJHG (YHQ ZLWK IRXU RI WKHLU QH[W Ă&#x20AC; YH JDPHV DW KRPH RGGV DUH WKH\ ton completed two more passes before spiking the ball at the Seattle 26 wonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t roll into Dallas undefeated on Thanksgiving. with 37 seconds left. The Seattle secondary may still be arguing about the But the win at Seattle does show that perhaps Carolina has a bigger next play, as Newton found star tight end Greg Olsen wide open for the margin for error than we thought. Newton struggled for three quarters. winning touchdown. The running game was nothing special. The defense didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t take the ball The Seahawks obviously were not on the same page and blew the covaway. Yet they won in a hostile environment against a good team. erage on the last play, but Newtonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s body of work on the last two drives Thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s looking more like a contender than a pretender.
NUMBERS GAME
115
As Chris Ivory goes, so go the New York Jets. The Jets are 4â&#x20AC;&#x201C;0 in games Ivory has played this season, averaging more than 170 yards rushing in those games. In the game Ivory missed, New York rushed for 47 yards and lost by a touchdown. Despite missing one game due to injury and the Jets already having had their bye, Ivory ranks third in the NFL in rushing with 460 yards. After his 146yard perfromance against Washington, his 115 yards per game leads the league, and his 5.5 yards per carry ranks third among running backs.
POWER RANKINGS
OUTSIDE THE HUDDLE Ben Roethlisberger was going to test his injured knee in practice this week in the hopes of returning for Pittsburghâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s game at Kansas City on Sunday. If he canâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t go, the Steelers will turn to Landry Jones, who led a comeback win against Arizona afer Michael Vick injured his hamstring on Sunday. Jones went 8-for-12 for 168 yards after taking over in the thrid quarter and threw touchdowns of 8 and 88 yards to Martavis Bryant. ... Buffalo could be without as many as six starters against Jacksonville, including quarterback Tyrod Taylor and both starting wideouts (Sammy Watkins, Percy Harvin). But a bigger loss may be defensive tackle Kyle WIlliams, who didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t make the trip to London after injuring his knee Sunday against Cincinnati. Williams is a big part of the leagueâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s ďŹ fth-ranked run defense, and the
Philadelphia (3â&#x20AC;&#x201C;3) at Carolina (5â&#x20AC;&#x201C;0) Carolina begins a three-game homestand after a big rally to win in Seattle. Good luck ďŹ guring out the Eagles. Already this season, they have blown two fourth-quarter leads, yet they also won a game in which they were outgained by more than 100 yards. Philly is never out of a game, but then neither is its opponent: The Eagles have 16 takeaways (secondmost in the NFL) but have also turned it over 14 times (also second in the league).
Bills pass rush has struggled even with him in there. After topping the NFL with 54 sacks in 2014, Buffalo has just nine sacks through six games, a 24-sack pace. ... The Lions became the last team to get in the win column this season with a 37â&#x20AC;&#x201C;34 win over Chicago in overtime. Matthew Stafford had a huge day (27-of-42, 405 yards, 4 TD, 1 INT), hooking up with Calvin Johnson six times for 166 yards and a touchdown. ... Overshadowed by a 27â&#x20AC;&#x201C;20 loss in Green Bay was a record-setting day for Philip Rivers of the Chargers. Rivers set San Diego records for completions (43), attempts (65) and passing yards (503). Rivers is completing a career-best 70.1 percent of his passes and leads the NFL in attempts (254), completions (178) and yards (2,117).
Thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s more like it Off to a 1â&#x20AC;&#x201C;3 start during which its defense had one sack and recorded just three takeaways, Miami ďŹ red head coach Joe Philbin and defensive coordinator Kevin Coyle. For one week anyway, things look to be turning around. In a 38â&#x20AC;&#x201C;10 win at Tennessee, the Dolphins racked up six sacks, including four by Pro Bowl DE Cameron Wake. Not only were they Wakeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s ďŹ rst sacks of the season, they were his ďŹ rst tackles. Miami also topped its previous season total by forcing four turnovers, one of them an interception returned for a touchdown by safety Reshad Jones.
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16.
Patriots Packers Bengals Broncos Panthers Falcons Jets Cardinals Steelers Vikings Eagles Giants Seahawks Chargers Bills Colts
17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32.
Rams Cowboys Browns Saints Texans Raiders Dolphins Redskins 49ers Buccaneers Bears Titans Chiefs Lions Ravens Jaguars
Photos: Newton: AP Images; Wake: Harrison McClary/Athlon Sports; Ivory: Bruce Schwartzman
Ramsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Cook says trade rumors didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t bother him The Associated Press
ST. LOUIS â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Jared Cook heard rumors he was on the trade block. The St. Louis Rams tight end wasnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t about to let it ruin his time off during the bye week. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Why am I letting somebody get in my head about something thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s nonexistent?â&#x20AC;? Cook said after practice Tuesday. Cook said he didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t worry about reports from various sources because he didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t hear from his agent or the team. He added there is a lot of media chatter these days, a lot of it with no substance.
â&#x20AC;&#x153;Everywhere in the world,â&#x20AC;? Cook said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s your choice to pay attention to it, itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s your choice to take in what theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re saying, or itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s your choice to ignore it.â&#x20AC;? Coach Jeff Fisher said the offense, ranked last overall in the NFL, needs improvement across the board heading into this weekâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s game against Cleveland. St. Louis (2-3) has lost three of four. Fisher said he spent part of the bye weekend where there is no Internet access, likely fishing in Montana. He wasnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t certain why the talk started and noted that
teams have inquired about several other players, too. â&#x20AC;&#x153;People call, people have injuries, people have interest,â&#x20AC;? Fisher said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;That happens all the time. We have no interest in trading Jared, heâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s a big part of our offense.â&#x20AC;? Kenny Britt, a wide receiver and close friend, said, â&#x20AC;&#x153;I donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t think we need to trade anybody. I think weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re going to win with these guys we have here, to tell you the truth.â&#x20AC;? The 6-foot-5, 254-pound Cook is in the third year of a four-year contract worth about $7 million per sea-
son. Heâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s been an effective pass catcher, with 15 receptions and an 11.3-yard average after topping 50 the previous two years, and in new offensive coordinator Frank Cignettiâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s system heâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s being asked to block a lot more. He arrived billed as a hybrid big-body slot receiver with occasional blocking duties. Cook said the new offense is making him more of a complete tight end, and likely raising his stock around the NFL. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s different but thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s what my job entails,â&#x20AC;? Cook said.
â&#x20AC;&#x153;Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m not a very selfish person, I just come to work, do my job and do what they ask me to do.â&#x20AC;? Fisher also was the subject of rumors during the bye week. His name came up in connection to the head coaching job at Southern California, his alma mater. He said heâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s loyal to owner Stan Kroenke, who is trying to break ties to St. Louis and move the franchise back to Los Angeles. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Yeah, Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve heard things,â&#x20AC;? Fisher said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I appreciate what anybody else is saying out there. But I made a commitment
to Stan here, and Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m going to finish, keep that commitment.â&#x20AC;? Heâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s optimistic about the Ramsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; chances in the muddled NFC West. Arizona leads at 4-2 and the Rams, Seahawks and 49ers have two wins â&#x20AC;&#x201D; and all of the competition has played one more game than St. Louis. But he was careful not to look past Cleveland. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I mean, thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s everybodyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s goal,â&#x20AC;? Fisher said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;But we just have to have a good week and get ready, do the best we can and see if we find a way to win this game.â&#x20AC;?
16 • Daily Corinthian
Local Schedule Friday Football Benton Co. @ Kossuth, 7 Houlka @ Biggersville, 7 Corinth @ Shannon, (WXRZ) Central @ New Site, 7 Booneville @ Belmont, 7 Tish County @ Amory, 7 Walnut @ Baldwyn, 7 Byhalia @ Ripley, 7 Falkner @ Coffeeville, 7 Coldwater @ Thrasher, 7 Liberty @ McNairy, 7:30
Saturday Volleyball Class II Playoffs Oxford @ Corinth, 2:30 Football Itawamba @ Gulf Coast, 3:30 Northeast @ Holmes, 4
Sports
Thursday, October 22, 2015
CHS hosting quarterfinal Saturday BY H. LEE SMITH II lsmith@dailycorinthian.com
The road to the Class II North Half volleyball championship goes through Corinth. The Lady Warriors (30-10) will host Oxford (28-8) Saturday afternoon at 2:30 in “The Teepee.” Admission is $7 as set by the Mississippi Activities Association and only state passes will be honored. The winner will face either Lafayette County or defending champion Lewisburg in the state semifinal on Tuesday. With the lowered numbered division getting the tiebreaker this time around, CHS — Division 1 — would host Lewisburg, but travel to Lafayette County since the Lady Commodores are on the
road Saturday. Corinth has beaten Lafayette County four times this season, winning 10 of 11 sets. Lewisburg, with won two Class I titles, beat Corinth 3-0 in the 2012 North Half championship. CHS is perfect in secondround contests. The Lady Warriors beat Caledonia 3-1 in 2012 and took a 3-2 decision over Lafayette County last season. Corinth lost its first playoff contest in 2011, falling 3-0 at home to St. Joseph’s. The Lady Warriors failed to make the playoffs in 2013, going 0-2 in the Division Tournament as a No. 1 seed. The Lady Warriors own a 12-3 mark at home this
season, with losses to Olive Branch and Ripley. Oxford was responsible for the first home setback — a 3-2 decision in Corinth’s home opener on Aug. 18. Oxford has compiled an 8-3 record in non-neutral contests away from home. Corinth has won 83 sets and lost just 30 in demolishing the previous school record for wins of 23 set in 2012. Oxford sits at 76-22 in terms of set victories. Both teams come in on a hot streak. Corinth has won nine of its last 10 matches, including four straight. After having to come out of the loser’s bracket to win the division tournament, Corinth has won nine of the 10 sets its
played. Oxford has won 12 of its last 13 contests, with the loss coming to Lafayette County on Oct. 8. Prior to that, the Lady Chargers had won 10 straight contests — all in straight sets. Aundrea Adams paced Corinth with 10 kills and four blocks in Tuesday’s win over Caledonia. The senior currently leads Class II (4A/5A) with 166 blocks and is second with 354 kills. Bailee Essary was credited with a teamhigh 14 assists in the openinground win. The junior sits fifth in Class II with 370 helpers. Both teams boast high rankings as complied by MaxPreps. Please see CHS | 17
Shorts Youth Basketball The Chewalla Baptist Basketball League is taking registrations for the season. Forms will soon be in the schools or you can contact Ross Shelton by e-mail Randyross19@yahoo.com for a form. League ages are 5-6th Grade. Fee is $20. The league is open to anyone that wants their child to play. You can also text Shelton at 731-610-0458.
MC Hall of Fame McNairy Central’s Sports Hall of Fame Banquet will be held Saturday, Oct. 24 in the commons at MCHS. The banquet will honor five new members into the Hall of Fame. The Class of 2015 includes the late Kenny Walker, Sherry Smith, Ross Shelton, Chad He’bert, and Wilburn Gene Ashe, will be inducted as the first contributor in the Sports Hall of Fame. A ticket will cost $15. You can buy tickets online at mchscats.org or from a committee member – Chris Whitten, Richie Bodiford, Ricky Whitaker, Mike Smith, Glenn Davis, Danny Hendrix, Dr. Martha Glover, and Lisa Forsythe.
CHS Baseball Raffle The Corinth Warrior Baseball team is having a raffle for a 32 quart “LIT” cooler. A $329 dollar value for $5 per entry. Drawing will take place at halftime on Oct. 30 at the last regular-season home football game. They will be set up to sell chances at every home game before that night or you may call Amp Marshall at 662212-4604.
Golf Tournament Shiloh Ridge Athletic Club will be hosting a 2-person Calculus Tournament on Saturday, Oct. 31. The tournament will be a shotgun start at 9 a.m. Tournament fee will be $30 per person and non-member green fee will be $25. All tournament fees put in player pool. Winners will receive cash. Call Pro Shop at 286-8000 for more info.
Halloween 5K The initial Trick-or-Trot 5K will be held Saturday, Oct. 31 at Big Hill Pond State Park beginning at 8 a.m. The run will benefit the Ramer Dixie Youth Baseball and Softball Leagues. This will be a great run through the manicured trails of the scenic Big Hill Pond State Park. Entry fee is $25. Halloween Hike: $15, ages 10-andunder free, but must be accompanied with registered adult. Treats will be given to children along the trail. For more information, visit the Facebook page at facebook.com/RDYTrickOrTrot. Phone: 731-610-1660 or e-mail RamerDixieYouth@yahoo.com.
Turkey Trot 5K The Corinth Warrior and Lady Warrior track team is hosting a 5K race on Saturday, Nov. 14 on the campus of Corinth High School Academic and Performing Arts Center. Entry fee is $20 before Nov. 5 and $25 on race day. Race, which includes eight age divisions, begins at 8 a.m. Race day registration will be held at 7 a.m.
Tiger Trot The Tiger Trot Run/Walk -- formerly the Turkey Trot -- will be held Nov. 14 at 200 Tennessee Street in Savannah, Tennessee. The event will benefit the Hardin County High School Cross-Country team. Applications can be downloaded at Shoalstrac.com. For more information, contact Deonne Ewoldt at 731412-7699 or Normdeonne3@gmail. com
Photo by Randy J. Williams
Bulldog Ball Hawk
Mississippi State redshirt freshman Brandon Bryant returns an interception 73 yards for a touchdown in the Bulldogs’ 45-20 Homecoming win over Louisiana Tech last week. MSU plays host to Kentucky in a 6:30 p.m. contest on Saturday.
Plaza Lanes Bowling League Score Results Monday Night Major 10-12-15 Outlaws 21.5-10.5 Shot Who? 19-13 Hughes Outdoor Marina 19-13 Scooter Thugs 19-13 Plaza Lanes 18-14 Two Old Couples 17.5-14.5 Bustin Pinz 15-17 Last Minute 15-17 Fun Bunch 13-19 Bowling Alley Hustlers 12-20 All In the Family 12-20 M Popeye’s Thugs 11-21
Fowler 249, Willy Fowler High Individual Series 245, Tommy Hughes 233, Ed Women: Martin 543, Fugitt Fowler 224, Eddie Ferguson 542. Rebel Volunteer 215, A.J. Baker 212, Otis Tay10-15-15 lor 202. Than Yoo Hoo 31-5 High Individual Game Sweeter Betty’s Krew 24-12 Women: Teresa Fugitt 232, MS Care Center 22.5-13.5 Bea Brents 202, Starr Martin KLCS -16 19.5-16.5 202, Christy Hickox 198, Be- Kimberly-Clark Corinth Automotive 19-17 linda Hardin 187. 18-18 High Individual Series Spoilers Russell’s Beef House 17.5-18.5 Men: Hughes 621, W. Fowler Price Masonry 17-19 High Individual Game 618, Baker 613, Harris 613, G. Just Havin Fun 15-21 Men: Tony Harris 252, Greg Fowler 612. Corinthian Inc. 13-23
Global Automotive Family Ties Flame Throwers
12.5-23.5 12-24 11-25
High Individual Game Men: Bebo Ligon 258, Justin Lumpkin 257, Dennis Patterson 244, Gene Silvestri 238, Bud Brooks 236, Freddie Gooch 234, Tony Harris 234, A.J. Baker 231, Adam Ellsworth 231. High Individual Game Women: April Lumpkin 217, Please see BOWLING | 17
SEC profile increases with new coaches The Associated Press
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — New Tennessee coach Rick Barnes shook hands with Southeastern Conference Commissioner Greg Sankey on his way out of the hotel in downtown Charlotte. “Long media day, really long,” Barnes said with smile. The SEC got a huge infusion of personality in first-year
conference coaches Barnes, Alabama’s Avery Johnson and Mississippi State’s Ben Howland. The trio add spice to a league with high-profile coaches capable of making an impact on the court — and on YouTube. There was Barnes earlier this month, slapping a cream pie into the face of Vols sophomore guard Detrick Mostella on his birthday
while teammates cackled and cheered. When Howland was asked about the change in lifestyle going from Pittsburgh and UCLA to Starkville, Mississippi, the self-professed smalltown guy cracked, “I didn’t make many operas in LA.” Johnson was the San Antonio Spurs’ all-time assists leader who spent six years
as an NBA coach with Dallas and Brooklyn. To his players, Johnson’s the target of comedian Kevin Hart who does a short, dead-on impersonation of the high-pitched coach. “That’s the first thing I looked up after I heard he was going to be our coach,” Alabama forward Shannon Hale Please see SEC | 17
Mariota misses practice, should play Sunday TERESA M. WALKER AP Pro Football Write
NASHVILLE, Tenn. —Titans quarterback Marcus Mariota did not practice Wednesday, giving the sprained MCL in his left knee a day of rest. The rookie was not wearing any protective gear on his injured leg as he talked about playing Sunday. No brace, not even a wrap for any support. Mariota said he would wear a brace if he must. He also said
his chances of playing against the Atlanta Falcons are pretty good, and he’s keeping up with treatment and preparing as if he will start his sixth NFL game. “You got to be able to show that you buy into what’s going on here, and I’m going to do my best to make sure that I’m prepared and hopefully can go on Sunday,” Mariota said. Mariota sprained the ligament in his knee when hit low
by Dolphins defensive end Olivier Vernon in last week’s 38-10 loss to Miami, and Vernon said Wednesday the NFL fined him for the hit. It’s the same knee Mariota sprained in 2013 at Oregon, and he played the final four games that season wearing a brace. “Having that same injury is going to help me with my treatment and how I feel,” Mariota said. Protecting the Heisman
Trophy winner and No. 2 pick overall in the draft could mean making sure Mariota misses a game — or more — to heal. Mariota was sacked five times, including the play where he was hurt, and he turned the ball over four times. His backup is Zach Mettenberger, who started six of seven games he played as a rookie without a victory. Please see MARIOTA | 17
17 â&#x20AC;˘ Daily Corinthian
Scoreboard
BOWLING
Auto racing
Saturday, Oct. 17: New York 4, Chicago 2
Sprint Cup schedule CONTINUED FROM PAGE 16
Christy Hickox 211, Teresa Fugitt 201. High Individual Series Men: Baker 650, Lumpkin 643, Ellsworth 624, Steve Price 621, Brooks 615, Ligon 607, Silvestri 606, Harris 605, Patterson 597. High Individual Series Women: Fugitt 566, Lumpkin 565, Hickox 526. Â Thursday Morning Coffee 10-15-15 Pals 27-9 Sids 26-10 Sticky Pins 22-14 Country Girls 21-15 Sweet Rolls 20.5-15.5 Grits 20-16 Cafe Mikeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s 20-16 Grayâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Insulation 19.5-16.5 Strugglinâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Ladies 19-17 Alley Kats 18-18 Strikettes 17-19 Wellness Center 16-18 Gutter Girls 12-24 IBEW 11.5-24.5 Comedians 11.5-24.5 Bowling Buddies 7-29
High Individual Game: Shirley Kiddy 214, Vera Reed 214, Teresa Fugitt 204, Judy Clement 196, Jackie Walkie 191. High Individual Series: Fugitt 568, Rhonda Hickox 528, Linda Skinner 524, Clement 510, Kiddy 508, Walker 508, Lorie Lebert 507.
Ladies Major Handicap 10-13-15 Mixed Nutz 20-12 Coca-Cola 20-12 Shrimp Boat 16-16 Fun Bunch 15-17 Shaklee Ladies 14-18 Three Ladies 11-21
High Individual Game: Rhonda Hickox 187, Peggy Wooten 187, Cindy Wooley 186, Patsy Wilson 186, Barbara Burcham 182. High Individual Series: Wilson 524, Cindy Wooley 501, Burcham 490. Church League 10-13-15 Crosswind 21-3 FAC Booneville 20-4 Antioch 15-9 Knockouts 13.5-10.5 Holy Rollers 12-12 Oakland Baptist 12-12 Harmony Hill 12-12 Vertical Church 9.5-14.5 High Rollers 5-19
High Individual Game Men: Tyler Corbin 280, Truman Williams 253, Willie Fowler 215, Dale Dees 208, Gene Silvestri 203. High Individual Game Women: Gator Johnson 185, Briana Bowen 177, Lorie Lebert 173. High Individual Series Men: Corbin 782, Williams 666, Fowler 613. High Individual Series Women: Lebert 505, Bowen 486, Johnson 481.
CHS CONTINUED FROM PAGE 16
Oxford is second, and Corinth third among the stateâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Class II schools. Overall Mississippi rankings put Oxford as No. 11 and Corinth at No. 15. Tuesdayâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Summary Corinth 3, Caledonia 0 Caledonia 20 11 11 -- 0 Corinth 25 25 25 -- 3
Aces (4): Sadie Mitchell 2, Madison Mayhall, Caroline Sleep-
er. Kills (28): Aundrea Adams 10, Sadie Mitchell 5, Bailee Essary 4, Sloan Weeden 4, Deanna King 2, Sierra Maness, Madison Mayhall, Victoria Smith. Assists (28): Bailee Essary 14, Caroline Sleeper 12, Miller Carlton, Sadie Mitchell. Digs (8): Madison Mayhall 3, Sadie Mitchell 3, Sierra Maness, Caroline Sleeper Blocks (7): Aundrea Adams 4, Sloan Weeden 3.
CAMPINGWORLD.COM 500 Site: Talladega, Alabama. Schedule: Friday, practice (NBC Sports Network, 1-2 p.m., 3:30-4:30 p.m.); Saturday, qualifying (NBC Sports Network, 3-5 p.m.); Sunday, race, 1:30 p.m. (NBC Sports Network, 1-5 p.m.). Track: Talladega Superspeedway (oval, 2.66 miles). Race distance: 500.08 miles, 188 laps. Last year: Brad Keselowski raced to the last of his six 2014 victories. Last week: Joey Logano won at Kansas Speedway for his second straight victory, spinning out Matt Kenseth to take the lead. Logano earned a spot in the third round of the Chase two weeks ago with his Charlotte win. Fast facts: The Chase field will be cut from 12 to eight after the race, the second-round finale and sixth event in the 10-race playoffs. The championship field will be cut to four after the ninth race. Drivers get a spot in the next round with a victory. Points are reset after each round and the title will be decided by finishing order in the Nov. 22 finale at Homestead. ... Denny Hamlin leads the points race for the remaining third-round spots, five points ahead of Kurt Busch. Carl Edwards is six points behind Hamlin, followed by Kevin Harvick (-11), Jeff Gordon (-11), Keselowski (-11), Martin Truex Jr. (-12), Kyle Busch (-18), Ryan Newman (-20), Dale Earnhardt (-43) and Kenseth (-47). ... Gordon, retiring after the season, and Earnhardt lead active drivers with six Talladega victories. Earnhardt won in May at the track and took the restrictor-plate race in July at sistertrack Daytona. Logano won the seasonopening Daytona 500. Next race: Goodyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Headache Relief Shot 500, Nov. 1, Martinsville Speedway, Martinsville, Virginia. Online: http://www.nascar.com CAMPING WORLD TRUCK FREDâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S 250 Site: Talladega, Alabama. Schedule: Friday, practice (Fox Sports 1, 2-2:55 p.m.); Saturday, qualifying (Fox Sports 1, 9:30- 11 a.m.), race, Noon (Fox Sports 1, 11:30-2:30 p.m.). Track: Talladega Superspeedway (oval, 2.66 miles). Race distance: 250.04 miles, 94 laps. Last year: Timothy Peters won in a twolap sprint to the finish. Last race: John Wes Townley won at Las Vegas on Oct. 3 for his first career victory. Fast facts: Erik Jones leads the standings, four points ahead of two-time defending series champion Matt Crafton and 12 in front of Tyler Reddick. Jones has two victories this year and also has won twice on the Xfinity Series. Reddick won the season-opening race at Daytona, Talladegaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s sister track. Next race: Kroger 200, Oct. 31, Martinsville Speedway, Martinsville, Virginia. Online: http://www.nascar.com
Baseball Postseason schedule LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) American League All games televised by FS1 Kansas City 3, Toronto 2 Friday, Oct. 16: Kansas City 5, Toronto 0 Saturday, Oct. 17: Kansas City 6, Toronto 3 Monday: Toronto 11, Kansas City 8 Tuesday: Kansas City 14, Toronto 2 Wednesday: Toronto 7, Kansas City 1 Friday: Toronto at Kansas City, 7:07 p.m. x-Saturday: Toronto at Kansas City, 7:07 p.m. National League All games televised by TBS New York 3, Chicago 0
Sunday, Oct. 18: New York 4, Chicago 1 Tuesday: New York 5, Chicago 2 Wodnesday: New York at Chicago x-Today: New York at Chicago, 7:07 p.m. x-Saturday: Chicago at New York, 3:07 p.m. x-Sunday: Chicago at New York, 7:07 p.m. WORLD SERIES (Best-of-7) All games televised by Fox Tuesday, Oct. 27: at American Wednesday, Oct. 28: at AL Friday, Oct. 30: at National League Saturday, Oct. 31: at NL x-Sunday, Nov. 1: at NL x-Tuesday, Nov. 3: at AL x-Wednesday, Nov. 4: at AL
Basketball NBA preseason EASTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GB 6 0 1.000 â&#x20AC;&#x201D; 4 1 .800 1½ 3 1 .750 2 3 1 .750 2 4 2 .667 2 4 2 .667 2 2 1 .667 2½ 3 2 .600 2½ 3 3 .500 3 3 4 .429 3½ 2 3 .400 3½ 2 3 .400 3½ 2 4 .333 4 2 4 .333 4 1 6 .143 5½ WESTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GB Memphis 4 0 1.000 â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Sacramento 5 1 .833 â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Oklahoma City 4 1 .800 ½ Denver 4 2 .667 1 Phoenix 3 2 .600 1½ Portland 3 3 .500 2 Houston 3 4 .429 2½ L.A. Clippers 2 3 .400 2½ New Orleans 2 3 .400 2½ Utah 2 4 .333 3 L.A. Lakers 2 4 .333 3 Golden State 2 4 .333 3 San Antonio 1 4 .200 3½ Minnesota 1 5 .167 4 Dallas 0 5 .000 4½ ___ Tuesdayâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Games Chicago 103, Indiana 94 Milwaukee 106, Minnesota 88 Phoenix 104, San Antonio 84 Oklahoma City 113, Utah 102 L.A. Clippers 130, Golden State 95 Wednesdayâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Games New Orleans at Orlando (n) Charlotte at Detroit (n) Memphis at Atlanta (n) Washington at Miami (n) Phoenix at Dallas (n) Todayâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Games Charlotte vs. Indiana at Fort Wayne, IN, 6 p.m. New York at Boston, 6:30 p.m. Denver at Utah, 8 p.m. Golden State vs. L.A. Lakers at Anaheim, CA, 9 p.m. Portland at L.A. Clippers, 9:30 p.m. Fridayâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Games Memphis at Orlando, 6 p.m. Philadelphia vs. Boston at Manchester, NH, 6:30 p.m. Washington vs. Toronto at Montreal, Quebec, 6:30 p.m. Atlanta at Detroit, 6:30 p.m. Dallas vs. Chicago at Lincoln, NE, 7 p.m. Miami at New Orleans, 7 p.m. Milwaukee at Minnesota, 7 p.m. Houston at San Antonio, 7:30 p.m. Charlotte Atlanta New York Washington Indiana Toronto Boston Orlando Miami Chicago Brooklyn Milwaukee Detroit Philadelphia Cleveland
Football
N.Y. Jets Buffalo Miami
Thursday, October 22, 2015
4 3 2
1 0 .800 129 75 3 0 .500 145 139 3 0 .400 103 111 South W L T Pct PF PA Indianapolis 3 3 0 .500 126 147 Houston 2 4 0 .333 128 155 Tennessee 1 4 0 .200 112 129 Jacksonville 1 5 0 .167 113 176 North W L T Pct PF PA Cincinnati 6 0 0 1.000 182 122 Pittsburgh 4 2 0 .667 145 108 Cleveland 2 4 0 .333 141 158 Baltimore 1 5 0 .167 143 162 West W L T Pct PF PA Denver 6 0 0 1.000 139 102 Oakland 2 3 0 .400 107 124 San Diego 2 4 0 .333 136 161 Kansas City 1 5 0 .167 127 159 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA Philadelphia 3 3 0 .500 144 110 N.Y. Giants 3 3 0 .500 139 136 Dallas 2 3 0 .400 101 131 Washington 2 4 0 .333 117 138 South W L T Pct PF PA Carolina 5 0 0 1.000 135 94 Atlanta 5 1 0 .833 183 143 Tampa Bay 2 3 0 .400 110 148 New Orleans 2 4 0 .333 134 164 North W L T Pct PF PA Green Bay 6 0 0 1.000 164 101 Minnesota 3 2 0 .600 96 83 Chicago 2 4 0 .333 120 179 Detroit 1 5 0 .167 120 172 West W L T Pct PF PA Arizona 4 2 0 .667 203 115 St. Louis 2 3 0 .400 84 113 Seattle 2 4 0 .333 134 125 San Francisco 2 4 0 .333 100 160 â&#x20AC;&#x201C;â&#x20AC;&#x201C;â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Mondayâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Game Philadelphia 27, N.Y. Giants 7a Todayâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s game Seattle at San Francisco, 7:25 p.m. Sunday Buffalo vs. Jacksonville at London, 8:30 a.m. Atlanta at Tennessee, Noon Pittsburgh at Kansas City, Noon Cleveland at St. Louis, Noon Tampa Bay at Washington, Noon Minnesota at Detroit, Noon Houston at Miami, Noon New Orleans at Indianapolis, Noon N.Y. Jets at New England, Noon Oakland at San Diego, 3:05 p.m. Dallas at N.Y. Giants, 3:25 p.m. Philadelphia at Carolina, 7:30 p.m. Open: Chicago, Cincinnati, Denver, Green Bay Monday, Oct. 26 Baltimore at Arizona, 7:30 p.m.
AP Top 25 schedule Today No. 20 California at UCLA, 8 p.m. No. 22 Temple at East Carolina, 6 p.m. Friday No. 18 Memphis at Tulsa, 7 p.m. Saturday No. 1 Ohio State at Rutgers, 7 p.m. No. 2 Baylor vs. Iowa State, 11 a.m. No. 3 Utah at Southern Cal, 6:30 p.m. No. 5 LSU vs. Western Kentucky, 6 p.m. No. 6 Clemson at Miami, 11 a.m. No. 7 Michigan State vs. Indiana, 2:30 p.m. No. 8 Alabama vs. Tennessee, 2:30 p.m. No. 9 Florida State at Georgia Tech, 6 p.m. No. 10 Stanford vs. Washington, 9:30 p.m. No. 14 Oklahoma State vs. Kansas, 2:30 p.m. No. 15 Texas A&M at No. 24 Mississippi, 6 p.m. No. 17 Oklahoma vs. Texas Tech, 2:30 p.m. No. 19 Toledo at UMass, 2 p.m. No. 21 Houston at UCF, 11 a.m. No. 23 Duke at Virginia Tech, 2:30 p.m. No. 25 Pittsburgh at Syracuse, 11 a.m.
Golf
NFL standings
PGA-FedExCup standings
AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA New England 5 0 0 1.000 183 103
Through Oct. 18 Rank Player Points YTD Money 1. Emiliano Grillo 500 $1,080,000
quarterback has to be able to move with no issues with his knee. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Heâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s had something like this before,â&#x20AC;? Whisenhunt said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;He has a good feeling for whatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s normal for him. I think youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve just got to walk the line of, heâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s a tough guy and he wants to play, and weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve got to make sure that heâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s OK to play.â&#x20AC;? Mariota already has thrown more touchdown passes than any rookie quarterback for this franchise except
Vince Young, who had 12 TDs in 2006. Mariota has thrown for 1,239 yards and is completing 64 percent of his passes. Heâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s also been sacked 19 times. The rookie quarterback said heâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s optimistic about practicing at some point this week. If he does play, heâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll be taking snaps from another rookie in center Andy Gallik, the Titansâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; sixth-round draft pick out of Boston College. Gallik replaced Brian Schwen-
2. Kevin Na 3. Jason Bohn 3. Justin Thomas 3. Tyrone Van Aswegen 6. Kyle Reifers 6. Patrick Rodgers 6. Justin Rose 6. Charl Schwartzel 10. Luke Guthrie 10. Smylie Kaufman 10. Andrew Loupe 10. Ryan Moore 10. Chris Stroud 10. Jhonattan Vegas 10. Will Wilcox 17. Daniel Berger 17. Lucas Glover 17. Fabian Gomez 17. Charles Howell III 17. Hideki Matsuyama 17. Chez Reavie 17. Brandt Snedeker 17. Brendan Steele 17. Hudson Swafford 26. Erik Compton 26. Rory McIlroy 26. Sean Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Hair 26. Brendon Todd 30. Mark Hubbard 30. William McGirt
300 145 145 145 89 89 89 89 63 63 63 63 63 63 63 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 44 44 44 44 41 41
$648,000 $312,000 $312,000 $312,000 $194,250 $194,250 $194,250 $194,250 $128,571 $128,571 $128,571 $128,571 $128,571 $128,571 $128,571 $73,333 $73,333 $73,333 $73,333 $73,333 $73,333 $73,333 $73,333 $73,333 $45,300 $45,300 $45,300 $45,300 $39,900 $39,900
LPGA money leaders Through Oct. 18 Trn 1. Lydia Ko 21 2. Inbee Park 22 3. Stacy Lewis 22 4. Lexi Thompson 21 5. Sei-Young Kim 23 6. Amy Yang 21 7. So Yeon Ryu 22 8. Shanshan Feng 18 9. Morgan Pressel 24 10. Anna Nordqvist 23 11. Brittany Lincicome 22 12. Hyo-Joo Kim 21 13. Na Yeon Choi 18 14. Cristie Kerr 23 15. Suzann Pettersen 19 16. Ha Na Jang 21 17. Minjee Lee 25 18. Chella Choi 26 19. Alison Lee 22 20. Mirim Lee 21 21. Mi Hyang Lee 25 22. Yani Tseng 23 23. Gerina Piller 24 24. Ilhee Lee 24 25. Mika Miyazato 21 26. Jessica Korda 21 27. Brittany Lang 25 28. Azahara Munoz 20 29. Lizette Salas 20 30. Jenny Shin 24
Money $2,416,753 $2,370,096 $1,679,559 $1,625,836 $1,408,723 $1,335,448 $1,073,180 $1,027,870 $930,790 $925,687 $875,165 $849,185 $776,806 $769,947 $740,385 $729,049 $697,736 $624,962 $620,998 $607,025 $602,484 $589,898 $574,559 $549,515 $546,339 $541,907 $530,786 $471,946 $462,744 $459,761
Champions: Schwab Cup leaders Through Oct. 18 Points 3,078 3,039 3,012 1,332 1,137 1,127 1,122 1,071 1,008 978 948 917 868 717 677 656 616 609 591 569 562 541 535 535 533 522 521 489 479 430
1. Colin Montgomerie 2. Jeff Maggert 3. Bernhard Langer 4. Marco Dawson 5. Kevin Sutherland 6. Esteban Toledo 7. Joe Durant 8. Billy Andrade 9. Woody Austin 10. Scott Dunlap 11. Tom Lehman 12. Lee Janzen 13. Kenny Perry 14. Michael Allen 15. Paul Goydos 16. Mark Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Meara 17. Tom Pernice Jr. 18. David Frost 19. Fred Couples 20. Olin Browne 21. Kirk Triplett 22. Miguel Angel Jimenez 23. Ian Woosnam 23. Gene Sauers 25. Bart Bryant 26. Wes Short, Jr. 27. Jeff Hart 28. Jeff Sluman 29. Russ Cochran 30. Grant Waite
Money $2,008,979 $2,158,236 $2,065,390 $1,036,694 $1,059,615 $1,095,472 $1,194,556 $1,073,021 $856,011 $1,070,385 $1,086,298 $859,998 $948,815 $909,025 $964,981 $797,964 $769,841 $848,340 $575,241 $877,767 $674,226 $554,576 $655,147 $612,220 $807,631 $715,739 $466,402 $634,314 $580,597 $360,003
MARIOTA
SEC CONTINUED FROM PAGE 16
quipped. And while they have the personalities to go toe-to-toe with the gregarious John Calipari, their goal is to challenge his Kentucky Wildcats for conference supremacy. The SEC is counting on the three, plus new Florida coach Mike White, to increase the league profile and presence in the NCAA Tournament.
Barnes reached the tournament 22 times in 27 combined seasons at Providence, Clemson and Texas, which he led to the Final Four in 2003. Howland has had 10 NCAA Tournament trips, including three straight Final Fours at UCLA. Along with his NBA playing and coaching career, Johnson was an ESPN analyst on TV almost every night.
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 16
The Titans (1-4) have lost four straight and 14 of their last 15 dating back to last season. Coach Ken Whisenhunt said Mariota is day to day and making progress. The rookie showed his toughness by not missing a play when being hurt and was only pulled within the final two minutes with the game out of reach. Deciding whether Mariota plays will mean the
ke, who was placed on injured reserve Tuesday after dislocating his left ankle two series after Mariota was hurt. Wide receiver Kendall Wright wants his quarterback coming back when heâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s healthy. â&#x20AC;&#x153;So if he plays this week, Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m going to be happy,â&#x20AC;? Wright said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Happy regardless if he does. But that gives us a lot of confidence to know what kind of guy weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re dealing with from a quarterback perspective.â&#x20AC;?
Legal Scene Your Crossroads Area Guide to Law Professionals ) ($ ) *
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18 • Thursday, October 22, 2015 • Daily Corinthian
GAME OF THE WEEK TENNESSEE (3-3) AT ALABAMA (6-1)
BY THE NUMBERS
POWER RANKINGS
When: 3:30 p.m. EDT Saturday Where: Bryant-Denny Stadium, Tuscaloosa, Ala. TV: CBS
STANDINGS (through Oct. 17) EAST Team Florida Georgia Kentucky Tennessee Missouri South Carolina Vanderbilt
SEC 4-1 3-2 2-2 1-3 1-2 1-4 0-3
All 6-1 5-2 4-2 3-4 4-2 3-4 2-4
T25 1-1 0-1 0-1 1-2 0-1 0-1 0-1
WEST Team LSU Alabama Texas A&M Ole Miss Mississippi State Arkansas Auburn
SEC 4-0 3-1 2-1 2-1 1-2 1-2 1-2
All 6-0 6-1 5-1 5-2 5-2 2-4 4-2
T25 1-0 1-1 0-1 1-1 0-2 0-3 0-1
INDIVIDUAL LEADERS (through Oct. 17) PASSING YARDS Chad Kelly, Ole Miss Dak Prescott, Mississippi State Kyle Allen, Texas A&M Brandon Allen, Arkansas Patrick Towles, Kentucky
2,234 1,700 1,537 1,536 1,512
PASSING TOUCHDOWNS Chad Kelly, Ole Miss Kyle Allen, Texas A&M Dak Prescott, Mississippi State Jake Coker, Alabama Brandon Allen, Arkansas Will Grier, Florida
16 14 11 11 10 10
RUSHING YARDS Leonard Fournette, LSU Derrick Henry, Alabama Nick Chubb, Georgia Alex Collins, Arkansas Peyton Barber, Auburn
1,202 901 747 682 650
RECEIVING YARDS Laquon Treadwell, Mississippi Christian Kirk, Texas A&M Pharoh Cooper, South Carolina Malcolm Mitchell, Georgia Trent Sherfield, Vanderbilt
654 609 587 505 483
SCORING Leonard Fournette, RB, LSU Derrick Henry, RB, Alabama Gary Wunderlich, PK, Ole Miss
84 72 62
TEAM STATISTICS (through Oct. 17) TOTAL OFFENSE Team Ole Miss Alabama Georgia Mississippi State LSU Texas A&M Florida Tennessee Arkansas South Carolina Vanderbilt Kentucky Auburn Missouri
Yds. 3,647 3,011 3,006 2,975 2,765 2,718 2,634 2,608 2,600 2,474 2,394 2,325 2,126 2,017
Pts./G 43.6 35.6 33.1 34.1 37.3 36.5 31.6 37.2 23.8 20.4 19.3 26.2 25.5 16.6
PASSING OFFENSE Team Yds. Ole Miss 2477 Mississippi State 1982 Florida 1747 Texas A&M 1746 Alabama 1620 Arkansas 1536 Kentucky 1512 Georgia 1497 Vanderbilt 1454 Missouri 1309 South Carolina 1297 Tennessee 1276 Auburn 1024 LSU 812
Yds./G 353.9 283.1 249.6 291.0 231.4 256.0 252.0 213.9 242.3 187.0 185.3 212.7 170.7 135.3
RUSHING OFFENSE Team Yds. LSU 1,953 Georgia 1,509 Alabama 1,391 Tennessee 1,332 South Carolina 1,177 Ole Miss 1,170 Auburn 1,102 Arkansas 1,064 Mississippi State 993 Texas A&M 972 Vanderbilt 940 Florida 887 Kentucky 813 Missouri 708
Yds./G 325.5 215.6 198.7 222.0 168.1 167.1 183.7 177.3 141.9 162.0 156.7 126.7 135.5 101.1
STARS OF THE WEEK ■ WR Pharoh Cooper,
South Carolina: Hauled in seven catches for 160 yards and the Gamecocks’ lone TD against Vanderbilt. ■ K Trent Domingue, Louisiana State: Ran in a fake field goal 16 yards for a score to give the Tigers the lead for good against Florida.
STAT OF THE WEEK
1 South Carolina interim coach Shawn Elliott is the first Gamecocks coach to win his first SEC game thanks to a 19-10 defeat of Vanderbilt.
TARGETING ... ... Legally. Tide look to control Vols by bottling up QB Dobbs KEYS FOR TENNESSEE Bye week payoff: Tennessee had two weeks to prepare for Alabama, so it presumably made a few tweaks with its extra time. Texas A&M didn’t see any sort of a bump from its bye-week “advantage” on the Crimson Tide last week. Perhaps things go differently for Butch Jones’ team as it looks to build off its victory over Georgia. Avoid turnovers: Again, just ask Texas A&M about the importance of this. The Aggies threw three interceptions that were returned for touchdowns in a 41-23 loss to Alabama. Tennessee had its problems earlier in the season, but giveaways weren’t one of them. The Volunteers’ five turnovers are the seventh-fewest in the country, and only Louisiana State has fewer among SEC teams.
2. Alabama (6-1): That loss to Mississippi looks worse and worse every time the Rebels go out and lose. (LW: 5) 3. Florida (6-1): Down its suspended starting QB, the surprising Gators fell by only a touchdown in Death Valley. (LW: 3) 4. Texas A&M (5-1): This encounter with ’Bama wasn’t 59-0 bad. But it won’t be Kyle Allen’s favorite moment after he threw 3 TDs to the Tide. (LW: 2) 5. Mississippi State (5-2): A reminder the Bulldogs still get Alabama and Mississippi at home. (LW: 6)
KEYS FOR ALABAMA Limit Dobbs: The obvious. Tennessee QB Joshua Dobbs doesn’t have absurd numbers, but he is averaging 5.0 yards per carry and has thrown just two interceptions in 169 passing attempts this season. The elusive Dobbs can make things happen on the ground, and he generally commits few truly damaging miscues. Even a defense as good as Alabama’s could have some problems dealing with him. Nullify Vols’ special teams: Tennessee has a nice set of special teams, ranking in the top 25 nationally in net punting, punt returns, kickoff returns and kickoff return defense. Plus, since struggling in the season opener, K Aaron Medley is 8-for-11 on field goals, including 8-for-9 from 45 yards and in. Tennessee could use the kicking game to help level things if Alabama isn’t careful.
—Capsules compiled by Patrick Stevens, for GateHouse Media
8. Georgia (5-2): The Bulldogs won with less than 10 points for the first time since the 1971 Gator Bowl. (LW: 8)
BEST OF THE REST THIS WEEK’S OTHER TOP GAMES
Auburn at Arkansas
Texas A&M at Mississippi
Kentucky at Mississippi St.
When: Noon EDT Saturday Where: Donald W. Reynolds Razorback Stadium, Fayetteville, Ark. TV: SEC Network Notes: Auburn (4-2, 1-2 SEC) might have saved any chance it had of salvaging something from its season with a 30-27 victory at Kentucky last Thursday. QB Sean White (17 of 27, 255 yards) looked comfortable against the Wildcats, and the Tigers converted White 11 of 18 third down attempts while earning their first conference victory of the season. Now comes the matter of dealing with one of the SEC’s other earlyseason disappointments. Arkansas (2-4, 1-2) comes out of its own bye week needing a winning record in the second half of its season just to reach a bowl game. That means Bret Bielema’s team can do no worse than split with Auburn, Mississippi, Louisiana State and Mississippi State over the next five weeks. Auburn has won back-toback games in the series, and none of the last six meetings between the schools has been decided by less than 17 points.
When: 7 p.m. EDT Saturday Where: Vaught-Hemingway Stadium, Oxford, Miss. TV: ESPN Notes: A week ago, this had the look of a high-profile game. That got deflated when Mississippi lost to Memphis and turnover-prone Texas A&M fell at home to Alabama. The Rebels (5-2, 2-1) are almost entirely out of the playoff discussion, but they are far from Allen finished as an SEC West contender so long as they can effectively sort out what went wrong in a 37-24 loss at Memphis. One big issue? Giving up 17 points in the final four minutes before halftime, including short TD drives off an interception and a turnover on downs. Texas A&M (5-1, 2-1) is also still in the SEC West picture, but its schedule soon turns for the better (three home games followed by a trip to Vanderbilt). Survive this trip and QB Kyle Allen and the Aggies can stay in the playoff discussion. The Aggies have won two of the teams’ three meetings since joining the SEC in 2012, but the Rebels snagged a 35-20 triumph in College Station last year.
When: 7:30 p.m. EDT Saturday Where: Scott Field, Starkville, Miss. TV: SEC Network Notes: Mississippi State (5-2, 1-2) is a bit of a forgotten team in the SEC (and back-to-back nonconference games in October pushed Dan Mullen’s team further out of mind). While it probably doesn’t have much of a shot at a conference title, a nine- or 10-win season still isn’t out of the Mullen question in QB Dak Prescott’s senior season. The Bulldogs can become bowl-eligible as they head into their bye week, but doing so against Kentucky (4-2, 2-2) isn’t a given. The Wildcats and QB Patrick Towles had moments both good and forgettable in a Thursday night loss to Auburn, but it’s a team that is increasingly capable of sticking with good opponents. Kentucky and Mississippi State are non-rotating crossover opponents, and the Bulldogs are 6-0 against the Wildcats under Mullen — accounting for a little more than a quarter of Mississippi State’s SEC victories since 2009.
ROUNDING IT OUT THE REST OF THE MATCHUPS TV SEC
Time 7 p.m.
6. Mississippi (5-2): Rebels leave the Magnolia State just one more time during the regular season. (LW: 4) 7. Tennessee (3-3): The Vols come off their bye to face Alabama, but the rest of the secondhalf schedule is considerably less imposing. (LW: 7)
PREDICTION Alabama 38-20: While Alabama is playing for the eighth consecutive week and Tennessee is coming off a bye, the Crimson Tide demonstrated last week that a similar difference made virtually no impact against Texas A&M. Though Tennessee is better, it has given up at least 24 points to every FBS team it has faced. For its part, Alabama has allowed 24 points just once (in its loss to Mississippi). Expect the Alabama defense to be the difference.
SATURDAY Time (EDT) Matchup 4 p.m. Missouri at Vanderbilt
1. LSU (6-0): The last unbeaten in the SEC, the Tigers defeated Florida with the help of a little Mad Hatter magic. (Last week: 1)
Matchup Western Kentucky at LSU
TV ESPNU
9. Auburn (4-2): Looked cohesive offensively after the bye. Despite giving up nearly 500 yards, the Tigers stopped Kentucky when they needed to. (LW: 9) 10. Kentucky (4-2): Couldn’t get to 5-1 with a tight loss to Auburn, and things aren’t getting much easier over the next three weeks. (LW: 10) 11. Arkansas (2-4): The Hogs finally get their first SEC game in Fayetteville. Bowl hopes dim considerably with a loss to Auburn (LW: 12) 12. Missouri (4-3): If the Tigers are going to crawl to a bowl bid, they’d better beat Vanderbilt this week. (LW: 11) 13. South Carolina (3-4): The bye arrives just after an interim coach for the Gamecocks, who still have Texas A&M, Florida and Clemson. (LW: 13) 14. Vanderbilt (2-4): The conference losing streak is at 11 games and counting for the Commodores. (LW: 14)
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