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Daily Corinthian Vol. 117, No. 280
• Corinth, Mississippi •
Partly sunny Today
Tonight
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22 pages • Two sections
City inks C-Spire franchise agreement Woman BY JEBB JOHNSTON jjohnston@dailycorinthian.com
Corinth recently inked a franchise agreement with Telepak Networks / C Spire Fiber in anticipation of the launch of gigabit fiber Internet service with television and phone service.
The franchise agreement deals with the television and phone service that will be available to Internet subscribers. The Board of Aldermen approved a franchise agreement for a term of 25 years with the fee paid to the city for video
services gradually kicking in over time. No fee will be paid during the first five years. The contract says Telepak will pay 2.5 percent during years six through 10, and a fee of 5 percent will be paid thereafter from the sale of video services.
The contract says the company will pay those amounts or the lowest percentage payable by a third-party provider of video services, whichever is lesser. The franchise agreement also calls for Telepak to pay 2 Please see C-SPIRE | 2A
dies in crash BY JEBB JOHNSTON
Arts Council to present holiday concert BY JEBB JOHNSTON jjohnston@dailycorinthian.com
It’s not too early for a jolt of Christmas cheer. The Corinth Area Arts Council is planning the seventh annual installment of “It’s the Most Wonderful Time of the Year,� a community Christmas concert set for 7 p.m. Dec. 3 at the Corinth Coliseum Civic Center. The event, which serves as a fundraiser for upkeep of the historic building, has enjoyed big crowds. “The community looks forward to this event every year,� said Arts Council President Cindy Mathis. “Families take
2013 Christmas Basket Fund “A Community Tradition�
Food basket drive needs donations BY BRANT SAPPINGTON bsappington@dailycorinthian.com
As the deadline nears for applications for the 2013 Rotary Club/Daily Corinthian Christmas Basket Fund effort organizers are calling on the community to help them feed those in need this holiday season. Applications for the 18th annual project must be turned in by 5 p.m. Tuesday at the Daily Corinthian office on South Harper Road. Mailed applications must be postmarked by Monday. The annual project provides Please see DONATIONS | 2A
this evening to come enjoy the beginning of the Christmas season together.� The show features a mix of traditional and contemporary numbers. This year’s program will also include a comedic piece on Christmas by Scott and Jackie Huskey. Several new performers join the lineup, including soloists Beth Mitchell, Brenda Barber and Anna Kate McEllhiney. “It is exciting to discover and feature new talent for this show,� said Mathis. Groups of all ages are involved, including an adult Please see CONCERT | 2A
Staff photo by Jebb Johnston
Jerry Pham (from left), Christian Leppan, Olivia Edmonson and Ja’myiah McGee practice singing “Rockin’ Around the Christmas Tree� at Corinth Elementary School Friday morning. Along with the rest of the class, they will participate in the Dec. 3 Christmas concert at the Corinth Coliseum Civic Center.
jjohnston@dailycorinthian.com
A Tennessee woman died in a crash Friday on Highway 72 just west of Corinth. Coroner Jay Jones identified the woman as Vernell Sellers, 77, of Jackson, Tenn. He said she was originally from Corinth. The crash happened about 5:35 p.m. on U.S. 72 at County Road 735 near Glidewell Trailer Sales. The Mississippi Highway Patrol said it appeared Sellers attempted to turn off Road 735 onto the highway and entered the path of a westbound 1997 Chevrolet pickup driven by Steven Gray, 34, of Corinth. Sellers, driving a 2005 Nissan Altima, died at the scene, and Gray was uninjured. MHP said the investigation remains open. Funeral arrangements for Sellers are pending.
Party collects gifts for children’s hospital BY HEATHER SMITH hsmith@dailycorinthian.com
As Lane Bryant celebrated his 9th birthday, he and his mother used the opportunity to help other children who are staying in a children’s hospital. During Lane’s birthday party on Nov. 8, he and his family decided to go west of the Mississippi River this year to help children in the same situation. Gifts brought to the birthday party are being donated to the Shriners Children’s Hospital in Shreveport, La., said Lane’s mother, Jamie Bryant. This year, Lane had a holiday birthday party full of fun. “He had a Disney/Christmas birthday party where we had Santa Claus and elves. We had crafts and story time. We had movie time as well as a snack and drink bar, which is where Lane collected his gifts. Between 20 and 25 children were able to attend and they attended in their pajamas,� explained Lane’s mother. Bryant is still collecting presents for the Shriners’ Hospital. “I will collect presents up until February and that is when we go back to the Shriners. We collected around 30 presents at his birthday party and we are still collecting,� said Bryant.
Lane Bryant and his family are collected gifts for the Shriners Children’s Hospital. “I came up with the idea to donate the presents to the hospital. We are so blessed and people are so good to us, that we just want to give back,� the grateful mother explained. Those who attended the party were treated to a day of fun and excitement. “The kids painted ornaments and wrote letters to
Index Stocks......8A Classified......4B Comics Inside State......5A
Santa. They made hand prints and enjoyed movie time at ‘Donald and Daisy’s Drive-In’. We made cars that had the Disney characters on them where the children sat in the cars and watched a movie,� said Bryant. Lane and the other children really enjoyed the party, she said. Lane donated to Shriner’s in
a different way than he did for LeBonheur Children’s Hospital in Memphis last year. “Last year, we had to do an event. We had to set up at LeBonheur and the kids had to come to Lane. This time, when we go to the Shriner’s, Lane will distribute the gifts himPlease see PARTY | 2A
On this day in history 150 years ago
Weather......9A Obituaries......6A Opinion......4A Sports....10A
“The Battle Above the Clouds.� Hooker’s corps scales the heights of Lookout Mountain and attacks the Confederate defenders overlooking Chattanooga. The Southerners abandon the position leaving Bragg’s left and rear open to attack.
HWY 72 EAST â&#x20AC;˘ CORINTH, MS 662-286-6006 1-800-286-6006 $// '($/6 3$<0(176 $5( 3/86 7$;(6 7,7/( 67$7( ,163(&7,21 67,&.(5 '2&80(17 352&(66,1* )(( 3/($6( 81'(567$1' 7+(6( $5( 127 ,1&/8'(' ,1 7+( 35,&( 25 3$<0(17 /,67(' $// '($/(5 ',6&28176 0$18)$&785(6Âś 5(%$7(6 $/5($'< $33/,(' 72 385&+$6( 35,&( 81/(66 63(&,),(' 35,25 '($/6 (;&/8'(' )520 '($/(5 672&. 21/< 12 '($/(5 75$16)(56 $7 7+(6( 35,&(6 $&78$/ 9(+,&/( 0$< ',))(5 )520 3,&785( '8( 72 38%/,&$7,21 '($'/,1(6 9(+,&/( 0$< %( $/5($'< %( 62/' 3$<0(176 ),*85(' $7 02 $35 7,(5 &5(',7 5$7,1* : $ & 7 21/< A,1&/8'(6 7+( &+5<6/(5 75$'( ,1 5(%$7( %2186 :+,&+ 5(48,5(6 <28 72 75$'( ,1 $ 48$/,),(' 9(+,&/( 72 *(7 7+( 35,&( 25 3$<0(17 6+2:1 6(( 6$/(63(5621 )25 48$/,)<,1* '(7$,/6 ,1&/8'(6 7+( &+5<6/(5 &$3,7$/ ),1$1&( 5(%$7( :+,&+ 5(48,5(6 <28 72 ),1$1&( 7+( 385&+$6( :,7+ &+5<6/(5 &$3,7$/ 72 *(7 7+( 35,&( 25 3$<0(17 6+2:1 : $ & 7 21/< 6(( 6$/(63(5621 )25 48$/,)<,1* '(7$,/6 5(&(17 &2//(*( *5$'6 25 83&20,1* &2//(*( *5$'6 0$< %( (/,*,%/( 72 6$9( $127+(5 2)) 285 $/5($'< /2: 35,&(6 &(57$,1 7(506 &21',7,216 $33/< 6(( 6$/(63(5621 )25 &203/(7( 48$/,)<,1* '(7$,/6 *22' 7,//
2A • Daily Corinthian
Local/Region
Sunday, November 24, 2013
Police urge holiday safety
DONATIONS CONTINUED FROM 1A
approximately 1,000 boxes filled with food and other necessities to assist struggling families during the Christmas season. The community fundraising goal for this year’s effort is $25,000 and with the Dec. 7 distribution day looming closer donations are needed to support the project. More people than ever are expected to be seeking help from the program. “Many people in our community are still facing some tough economic situations and as the holidays approach their situations get even tougher. Based on the number of applications received thus far, we anticipate a record number of people with be applying for the Christmas Baskets, that’s why we need everyone’s donation, large or small. We need
to raise $25,000 this year from private donations to pay for the baskets,” said Daily Corinthian Publisher Reece Terry. “Baskets will be given away on December 7, so we need your donation early.” Donations may be made in memory or in honor of an individual or group. All donations will be acknowledged in the newspaper in a daily update published on the front page throughout the holidays. Donations may be mailed to Daily Corinthian Christmas Basket Fund, P.O. Box 10, Corinth, MS 38835 or dropped off at the newspaper office. Applications may be dropped off at the office or mailed to the above address. Once the application process is complete, those approved to receive a basket will be notified by phone prior to the distribution date.
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BY JEBB JOHNSTON jjohnston@dailycorinthian.com
One of the biggest shopping weeks of the year is at hand, presenting opportunities for bargain hunters and thieves alike. Police Chief David Lancaster said the police department will step up its patrols of retail areas for Black Friday, and he encourages shoppers to keep an eye out for their own safety. “One of the best things people can do to protect themselves is to go shopping in a group with friends or family,” he said. “A thief is less likely to approach a group of people than someone who is alone.” Whether lining up for 4 a.m. doorbuster sales or shopping in the evening, shoppers should park in well-lit
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areas. “People need to be alert when they are going into a store and coming back to their vehicle,” he said. Detective Capt. Ralph Dance said one of the biggest threats at this time of the year is having a purse snatched out of a shopping cart while the owner’s attention is elsewhere. “Never leave your purse their unattended or open where somebody can reach in and grab your wallet,” he said. Unattended purchases left inside a vehicle are also an invitation to thieves. He advises to always lock purchases in the trunk so they are out of sight. Officials suggest not carrying large amounts of cash and to consider keeping cash in a front pocket or coat pocket rather than a back pants pocket.
C-SPIRE Malarie Leonard, bride-elect of Mr. Caleb Satterfield School district settles with former leader CONTINUED FROM 1A
percent of gross revenue from the sale of local phone service. Franchise fee payments will be paid within 60 days of the end of each quarter. A 1 percent per month penalty applies to late payments. The payments are subject to audit by
the city no more than once per calendar
November 2, 2013 year.
Associated Press
Telepak is required to carry comprehensive general liability insurance of $1 million. The Associated Press reported that four other cities have entered a franchise agreement with C Spire — Clinton, Ridgeland, Quitman and McComb.
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Ready for Christmas
COLUMBUS — The Columbus School District has settled a dispute with former Superintendent Martha Liddell. The Commercial Dispatch reports that this week’s settlement cancels a termination hearing that was sched-
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CONCERT
doctors,” said Lane’s mother. Jamie explained her self,” said Bryant. “He will go to the hospital feelings about donatpart instead of the clinic ing to the hospital and and give the toys to the about Lane. “It is better to give kids. People give a lot at Christmas time, but than to receive. Lane we wanted to do some- is such a blessing to people and he is such a thing after Christmas.” Bryant had a heart- joy. With them not even felt reason for donating giving Lane a chance of to the Shriner’s Chil- living, and he is 9 years old now, he has proven dren’s Hospital. “We see other chil- the doctors wrong,” dren who are less for- she said. “He is doing tunate than Lane and things the doctors said they have always been he would never do. so good to us, so we de- Lane is the joy of our G G GGGGGGGGGGG G G GGGGGGGGGG cided on the Shriner’s. lives.” ]]YUY_]UY_YXGQGt¥zG`aZW¥\aZWGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGG 662.286.2821 * M~S 9:30~5:30 Lane loves the ShriLane’s parents are ]]YUY_]UY_YXGQGt¥zG`aZW¥\aZWGGGGGGGGG GGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGG ner’s and he loves goJames and Jamie Bry G ¥G U U G Y_^U]_Y[G Open Sundays 1-5 beginning Dec. 1 G ¥G U U G Y_^U]_Y[G G ¥G U U G Y_^U]_Y[G ing there. He loves his ant and he goes to therapist there and his school at Kossuth. hG G G G G G G G G G UG Malarie Leonard, bride-elect of Mr. Caleb Satterfield Malarie Leonard, Novemberbride-elect 2, 2013of Mr. Caleb Satterfield November 2, 2013
uled for later this month and brings to an official end Liddell’s employment with the school system. Under the terms of the settlement, the school district will pay Liddell $10,000. Officials say all other terms of the agreement are confidential.
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community ensemble, the men’s quartet from First Baptist Church, the girls’ and mixed choirs of Corinth Middle School, the Music Makers of Alcorn Central Elementary School and the Corinth Elementary School second-grade challenge class. The CES challenge class students spent some time Friday morning rehearsing their rendition of “Rockin’ Around the Christmas Tree” for the show. The challenge class has participated for about the last five years. “We are not a music class — we are an academic class — but we enjoy doing mu-
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sic sometimes,” said teacher Ann Woodhouse. The handbell choirs of First United Methodist Church and First Presbyterian Church will participate, and the Turning Point Dance Academy and Contemporary Arts Center dancers will bring some motion to the stage. Director Volante Jones will perform a solo. Proceeds from the show have helped with projects such as improvements to the seating in the 1924 theater building. Current needs include some plaster repair and painting, said Mathis. Admission is $10 at the door and free for children under 12.
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3A • Daily Corinthian
Local/Region
Today in History Today is Sunday, Nov. 24, the 328th day of 2013. There are 37 days left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in History: On Nov. 24, 1963, Jack Ruby shot and mortally wounded Lee Harvey Oswald, the accused assassin of President John F. Kennedy, in a scene captured on live television.
On this date: In 1784, Zachary Taylor, the 12th president of the United States, was born in Orange County, Virginia. In 1859, British naturalist Charles Darwin published “On the Origin of Species,” which explained his theory of evolution. In 1863, the Civil War battle for Lookout Mountain began in Tennessee; Union forces succeeded in taking the mountain from the Confederates. In 1941, the U.S. Supreme Court, in Edwards v. California, unanimously struck down a California law prohibiting people from bringing impoverished non-residents into the state. In 1944, during World War II, U.S. bombers based on Saipan attacked Tokyo in the first raid against the Japanese capital by land-based planes. In 1947, a group of writers, producers and directors that became known as the “Hollywood Ten” was cited for contempt of Congress for refusing to answer questions about alleged Communist influence in the movie industry. In 1950, the musical “Guys and Dolls,” based on the writings of Damon Runyon and featuring songs by Frank Loesser, opened on Broadway. In 1971, hijacker “D.B. Cooper” parachuted from a Northwest Airlines 727 over Washington state with $200,000 dollars in ransom — his fate remains unknown. In 1982, Barack Hussein Obama Sr., a Kenyan government economist and father of the president, was killed in an automobile crash in Nairobi. In 1987, the United States and the Soviet Union agreed on terms to scrap shorter- and mediumrange missiles. In 1991, rock singer Freddie Mercury died in London at age 45 of AIDS-related pneumonia. In 2000, The U.S. Supreme Court stepped into the bitter, overtime struggle for the White House, agreeing to consider George W. Bush’s appeal against the hand recounting of ballots in Florida.
Sunday, November 24, 2013
Police: Meth bound for Corinth Associated Press
RUSSELVILLE, Ark. — Arkansas State Police arrested three men last weekend who police believe were on their way to Corinth with a large quantity of methamphetamine. The three Mississippi men were each ordered held in lieu of $1 million cash after they were accused of trafficking a large amount of illegal drugs. On Saturday, Nov. 16,
an Arkansas State Police (ASP) trooper pulled over a vehicle for a lane violation on Interstate 40 west of Russellville, Ark. The vehicle was occupied by Timothy Deshazier, 37, Michael Smith, 45, and Michael McPherson, 47, all of whom appeared nervous, according to a police report. The officer noted in the report the three men had bad stories and De-
shazier, the driver, gave consent to search the vehicle. The officer found a soda can with a false compartment containing a small amount of methamphetamine in the rear floorboard of the vehicle. In the right rear quarter panel of the vehicle, a large bundle of meth was found. The ASP seized 5 pounds 14 ounces of meth from the vehicle with a street value of more than
$266,000. The men were in a rental car with a San Diego, Calif., origin and possible destination of Corinth. Press reports in Arkansas said the men are from Corinth. All three men appeared in felony bond hearings Wednesday. If charged, they will appear Dec. 16 in Circuit Court. Deshazier said Wednesday he did not know the drugs were in the car.
Region Briefs Prentiss school board approves transfer policy BOONEVILLE — Prentiss County School Board members approved a new policy on transfer students from other districts and learned of a change in state policy that will affect the athletic eligibility of some district students during their regular meeting on Monday. A rule change by the Mississippi High School Activities Association will allow students at Marietta and Hills Chapel elementary schools to participate in high school sports, negating a decision made earlier this year by the Prentiss County School Board which appeared to prevent those students from playing at the higher level. School Board President Ronny Kesler told his fellow board members the change in the new version of the MHSAA handbook apparently allows students at the county’s two elementary-only campuses to play high school sports at any of the county’s high schools without the schools being officially designated as feeder schools by the board. However,
once any student at any school in a lower grade plays a sport at the high school level they must continue to play for that school and no other or the MHSAA rules on transfers apply. Kesler said he wanted to be sure the public and the board were aware of the change in policy. In April the board voted against designating the two elementary schools as official “feeder schools” for New Site High School following heated discussion at a series of board meetings. At that time, under MHSAA rules, without the feeder school designation students at the two schools would not be allowed to play on high school teams.
Arkansas woman arrested for Medicare fraud MICHIE, Tenn. — A 57-year-old Arkansas woman pleaded guilty to a pair of counts as a result of a Medicare fraud scheme on Thursday, according to a release by the U.S. Attorney. Rebecca Christain, of Mountain Home, Ark., pleaded guilty to a two-
count federal information charging her with one count of health care fraud and one count of money laundering in relation to a Medicare fraud scheme, announced U.S. Attorney Edward L. Stanton III. According to the facts alleged in the information and statements made during her guilty plea, Christain was the owner of Sleep Analysts, Inc. and a subsidiary company, Pulmonary Solutions. Pulmonary Solutions had area offices in Michie and Savannah. From October 2008 to December 2009, Christain allegedly devised a scheme to defraud the Medicare program by hiring unlicensed individuals to perform services that were billed to Medicare as respiratory therapy services, and by instructing her staff to falsify records setting forth the amount of time during which services were provided. In total, Christain caused fraudulent claims in excess of $1,000,000 to be paid by Medicare and Medicaid for fraudulently billed respiratory therapy services. Christain is to be sentenced on Feb. 20 in Jackson.
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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.
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Opinion
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4A • Sunday, November 24, 2013
Corinth, Miss.
JFK conspiracy in plain sight For all these years, they’ve hidden the truth about the Kennedy assassination. It didn’t require a conspiracy. It just took repeating a falsehood until it became conventional wisdom. The myth about the Kennedy assassination is that President John F. Kennedy, at great personal risk, traveled to Dallas, aka the City of Hate, and was somehow murdered by an atmosphere of Rich intolerance. The truth is that was shot by a communist. Lowry heAs James Piereson writes National in his brilliant book “Camelot Review and the Cultural Revolution,” liberals had the choice after the assassination to make Kennedy a martyr to civil rights or admit that he was a casualty of the Cold War. They found the notion of Kennedy dying for racial progress much more congenial and useful, even though it depended on a rank distortion. The interpretive misdirection began in the immediate aftermath of Lee Harvey Oswald’s act of murder. Pundits and analysts still follow the well-worn script, often boiling down their indictment to one word: Dallas. The epigraph of the new book “Dallas 1963” is a letter to the mayor at the time: “Dallas, the city that virtually invited the poor insignificant soul who blotted out the life of President Kennedy to do it in Dallas.” Slate calls a letter to Kennedy’s press secretary warning JFK not to visit Dallas because he might be killed by a right-wing mob “eerily prophetic,” which would be unassailably true ... if Kennedy had been killed by a right-wing mob. In a New York Times op-ed, history scholar James McAuley calls Dallas “the city that willed the death of the president.” Who knew that municipalities had such frightening powers? George W. Bush is lucky he wasn’t killed in office by Burlington, Vt., or Berkeley, Calif. In a news report, Timesman Manny Fernandez writes of the “painful, embarrassing memories of the angry anti-Washington culture that flourished here 50 years ago — and now seems a permanent part of the national mood.” Get it? The rancid political culture of Dallas that was responsible for the death of Kennedy lives on today in the tea party, which needs to be stopped before it kills again. There are at least two problems with all this. The first is that cities don’t kill people. Neither does political hostility. There was plenty of kookery, racism and ugliness in Dallas circa 1963 — and much derision and abuse of Kennedy — but none of those things picked up a rifle and shot the president of the United States. The second — and amazingly enough, saying it still carries a subversive hint of revisionism — is that Oswald was a thoroughgoing communist. As Piereson recounts, Oswald tried to defect to the Soviet Union. He told a reporter that his reasons were “purely political.” Trying to renounce his citizenship, he gave a note to an official at the U.S. Embassy in the Soviet Union that said, “I affirm my allegiance to the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics” and “I am a Marxist.” Eventually, he returned to the United States and grew disillusioned with the Soviet Union but not with the idea of revolution as exemplified by Fidel Castro’s Cuba. He subscribed to The Militant, published by the Socialist Workers Party, and the Daily Worker, published by the Communist Party. He posed for a photograph holding both publications and the rifle he would use to shoot Kennedy. Oswald had hoped to travel to Cuba and serve in Castro’s government. To establish his bona fides, he set up a chapter of the “Fair Play for Cuba” committee during a stay in New Orleans. He traveled to Mexico City and visited the Cuban and Soviet embassies in his bid to get to Cuba. He was still trying to navigate the bureaucracy when he heard Kennedy would be visiting Dallas. The Kennedy assassination has always invited elaborate theories about a cover-up of the truth about that awful day. But it’s not complicated. The lie has always been in plain sight. Rich Lowry can be reached via e-mail: comments.lowry@nationalreview.com.
Prayer for today Gracious Lord, may I not spend most in equipment and forget the tides, which may desert me on the sands, or the rocks in the channels, which may crush the finest vessel. May I be prepared for the hard knocks if they come, but may I know how to keep clear of them. Amen.
A verse to share “I beseech you, brethren, (ye know the house of Stephanas, that it is the firstfruits of Achaia, and that they have addicted themselves to the ministry of the saints,) That ye submit yourselves unto such, and to every one that helpeth with us, and laboureth.” — 1 Corinthians 16:15-16
What happens in Vegas Editor’s Note: Bill O’Reilly is on vacation. The following column was originally published in December 2012. LAS VEGAS – This is a town that looks better at night. Millions of lights pierce the darkness creating a visual that is both energetic and trance-inducing. The multilayered lightshow is dazzling and unique in America. But when the sun comes up, Las Vegas speaks directly to the recession. Halfcompleted buildings loom over the landscape like giant steel skeletons. Some developers ran out of money and simply walked away leaving huge, hulking abandoned structures to absorb the desert wind. But just down Las Vegas Blvd. are the winners: lavish hotels that cater to one’s every need. This is a city that best defines the two Americas and our very competitive capitalistic system. If you want to understand the free marketplace, Las Vegas is an excellent classroom. Millions of hardworking
folks come here to have fun. In order to maximize the entertainment, you have to Bill spend monO’Reilly ey. Whether you spend it The O’Reilly Factor on gambling, live shows or fine dining, it’s up to you. The money flow supports tens of thousands of service workers and, at a much higher level, the movers who run the tourist businesses. If you can’t make a decent living in Vegas, you are in major trouble. Responsible workers are sorely needed. But still there is destitution on display. Addiction is the primary driver of that, although laziness is featured, as well. Some of the poor in this town simply want to play all the time. And they pay a price for that, as prosperity eludes them. Some of the have-nots sit on sidewalks hoping for money from passersby. Sometimes, gamblers give
the beggars casino chips. Panhandlers say the best time for them is after midnight when the winners emerge from the gambling dens. Redistribution is much easier when you’ve just run the table. President Obama should spend some time in Vegas. Maybe then he would understand capitalism better. No matter how many handouts the panhandlers get, their circumstances rarely change. The money is mostly used to feed their compulsions. On the other end, the rich 1 percenters hustling the gambling tables are trying to increase their affluence by taking chances. In the process, they are providing salaries for the hardworking men and women who keep the entertainment establishments running. Bottom line: Both the wealthy and the poor in Vegas are exercising their personal freedoms. From observing the action in Vegas, Obama might finally realize that it’s freedom of choice that most
often dictates who fails and who succeeds in the capitalistic system. In Vegas, no outcomes are guaranteed and no government can level the playing field. Prosperity or lack thereof is all about individual decisionmaking. But the president would most likely never admit that, because it goes against his belief that government can impose a form of social justice by forcibly redistributing the wages of the successful. For Barack Obama, what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas. Veteran TV news anchor Bill O’Reilly is host of the Fox News show “The O’Reilly Factor” and author of the book “Pinheads and Patriots: Where You Stand in the Age of Obama.” To find out more about Bill O’Reilly, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www. creators.com. This column originates on the website www.billoreilly.com.
For Obamacare architects, problems are features, not bugs The defects of the Obamacare website have become well known. But the problems with the law go further than the website. These problems are not incidental, but central to its design and the intentions of its architects. Many Obamacare backers, including Barack Obama, would prefer “single-payer” health insurance. The government would pay for everything and you would get health care for free. There is an inconsistency here with the way we treat other things regarded as the basics of life — food, shelter, clothing. Government subsidizes food purchases only for some — though a sharply increasing number in the Obama years — through food stamps. It also has subsidized housing through loan guarantees and laws encouraging mortgages for the uncreditworthy – policies that resulted in the financial crisis of 2008-09. Government hasn’t yet proposed subsidizing the purchase of clothing. But the thought is that health care, imposing disproportionate costs on some individuals, should be provided for free. Obamacare’s architects knew the votes weren’t there for single-payer insurance, so they fashioned their health care legislation and regulations to reduce out-of-pocket costs for people with different health care needs. Insurance policies have to include coverage for servic-
Reece Terry
Mark Boehler
publisher rterry@dailycorinthian.com
editor editor@dailycorinthian.com
Willie Walker
Roger Delgado
circulation manager circdirector@dailycorinthian.com
press foreman
es that many consumers will not need, including maternity coverage and mental Michael health treatBarone ments. E v e n Columnist Obamacare enthusiasts, such as Harold Pollack of the University of Chicago, suggest that the administration should “revisit just how minimal the most minimal insurance policies should be.” But that would work against the Obamacare goal of moving everyone toward paying less out of pocket for health care. Even more egregious is Obamacare’s requirement that policies for one age group cost no more than three times the cost for another. In practice, this means that young consumers, who incur few heath care costs, are asked to subsidize people in old age groups, who incur many more. This is the opposite of the progressive economic redistribution, which American liberals usually favor. People in their 20s tend to have negative net worths. They owe more — in consumer debt, on college loans — than they have in bank accounts, home equity and financial assets. In contrast, people in the 55-64 age group, the oldest covered by Obamacare, tend to have relatively high net worths. Federal Reserve
wealth statistics consistently show that Americans reach their peak net worth in these years. After age 65, they start spending that net worth down. So why did the Obamacare architects want to take from the poor and give to the relatively rich? Because they want to make health insurance less like insurance — which protects you against unlikely and unwelcome events — and more like an entitlement. Equalizing premiums tends to move in that direction. The fact that Obamacare policies are like auto insurance policies that cover oil changes is, for the Obamacare architects, a feature — not a bug. Of course, reducing health care outlays once the insurance premium is paid makes health care consumers less price-conscious. It means that market mechanisms that have reduced the cost of noninsurable treatments — cosmetic surgery, Lasik treatments – will not be operating. And it increases the likelihood that health care providers will act like the callous unionized employees in Britain’s National Health Service who let patients in the Mid Staffordshire hospitals die unattended or lie in their own waste. The problem for Obamacare architects is that people are resisting being conscripted into their service. The low penalties for remaining uninsured in early years, plus the difficulty of
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using healthcare.gov, mean that many young people are not signing up. This means that insurers will likely be stuck with a group of subscribers who are relatively sick and will have to raise premiums sharply next year to avoid losses – the death spiral you have been reading about. It also means that others, particularly those not eligible for subsidies, may go shopping outside the website for policies that cover catastrophic costs and leave them free to decide whether and how much to spend on routine care. The Obama administration’s response has been lawlessness — suspending the law on employer mandates, subsidy verification, subsidies for federal health exchange policies and availability of pre-existing policies. The insightful liberal journalist Thomas Edsall asks on his New York Times blog, “Is the federal government capable of managing the provision of a fundamental service through an extraordinarily complex system?” The answer, on health care as on food, shelter and clothing, seems to be “no.” Daily Corinthian columnist Michael Barone is senior political analyst for The Washington Examiner, a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, a Fox News Channel contributor and a coauthor of The Almanac of American Politics.
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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.
5A • Daily Corinthian
State/Nation
Nation Briefs Associated Press
Newspaper: Sorry for panning address HARRISBURG, Pa. — It took 150 years, but a Pennsylvania newspaper said Thursday it should have recognized the greatness of President Abraham Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address at the time it was delivered. The Patriot-News of Harrisburg, about 35 miles northeast of Gettysburg, retracted a dismissive editorial penned by its Civil War-era predecessor, The Harrisburg Patriot & Union. The president’s speech is now considered a triumph of American oratory. The retraction, which echoes Lincoln’s nowfamiliar language, said the newspaper’s November 1863 coverage was wrong when it described the speech as “silly remarks” that deserved a “veil of oblivion.” The paper now says it regrets the error of not seeing its “momentous importance, timeless eloquence and lasting significance.” “By today’s words alone, we cannot exalt, we cannot hallow, we cannot venerate this sacred text, for a grateful nation long ago came to view those words with reverence, without guidance from this chagrined member of the mainstream media,” the paper wrote, echoing the words of the address. Separately, the paper also recounted how it covered the dedication
of the national cemetery, nearly five months after the pivotal battle in which federal forces repelled a Confederate Army advance from Virginia into Pennsylvania. More than 3,500 Union soldiers killed in the battle are buried there. During the Civil War, the Patriot & Union was a Democratic newspaper that was staunchly opposed to Lincoln.
Guilty plea in bird deaths is a first WASHINGTON — A major U.S. power company has pleaded guilty to killing eagles and other birds at two Wyoming wind farms and agreed to pay $1 million as part of the first enforcement of environmental laws protecting birds against wind energy facilities. Until the settlement announced Friday with Duke Energy Corp. and its renewable energy arm, not a single wind energy company had been prosecuted for a death of an eagle or other protected bird — even though each death is a violation of federal law, unless a company has a federal permit. Not a single wind energy facility has obtained a permit. The Charlotte, N.C.based company pleaded guilty to killing 14 eagles and 149 other birds at its Top of the World and Campbell Hill wind farms outside Casper, Wyo. All the deaths, which included golden eagles, hawks, blackbirds, wrens and
sparrows, occurred from 2009 to 2013. “Wind energy is not green if it is killing hundreds of thousands of birds,” said George Fenwick, president of the American Bird Conservancy, which supports properly sited wind farms. “The unfortunate reality is that the flagrant violations of the law seen in this case are widespread.” There could be more enforcement. The Fish and Wildlife Service is investigating 18 birddeath cases involving wind-power facilities, and about a half-dozen have been referred to the Justice Department. Wind farms are clusters of turbines as tall as 30-story buildings, with spinning rotors as wide as a passenger jet’s wingspan. Though the blades appear to move slowly, they can reach speeds up to 170 mph at the tips, creating tornado-like vortexes. Eagles are especially vulnerable because they don’t look up as they scan the ground for food, failing to notice the blades until it’s too late. “No form of energy generation, or human activity for that matter, is completely free of impacts, and wind energy is no exception,” the American Wind Energy Association said in a statement. The case against Duke Energy and Duke Energy Renewables Inc. was the first prosecuted under the Migratory Bird Treaty Act against a wind energy company.
Sunday, November 24, 2013
State Briefs Associated Press
Texan gets prison in fraud plot probe GULFPORT — A Texas man has been sentenced to more than four years in prison for his role in a scheme to defraud customers of a bogus shipping business that he claimed to operate in south Mississippi. U.S. District Judge Walter J. Gex III also on Thursday ordered 35-year-old Dustin Lee Griswold, of Channelview, Texas, to pay more than $623,000 in restitution to several businesses that weren’t paid for their services. The Sun Herald reports that Griswold and his wife, 37-year-old Jennifer Griswold, pleaded guilty in August for their roles in the fraud investigation. Gex sentenced Dustin Lee Griswold to 51 months in prison for his guilty plea to a charge of conspiring to commit wire fraud. Jennifer Griswold, who pleaded guilty to a charge of misprision of a felony, was sentenced earlier this month to seven months in prison. Prosecutors have said the couple took payments from clients, but hired other companies to move their freight and failed to pay the delivery companies.
Tour stop to honor black soldiers at site BALDWYN — Brice’s Crossroad Battlefield officials are hoping to add a tour stop to honor black soldiers who
fought in the Civil War battle in north Mississippi. “Nothing has been decided; this is only a concept at this point,” said Edwina Carpenter, the director of the Mississippi’s Final Stands Interpretive Center, which includes the Battle of Brice’s Crossroads and the Battle of Tupelo/ Harrisburg. Carpenter tells the Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal that under consideration are three markers — or “waystops” — plus a monument, perhaps a statue, of some kind to mark units of the United States Colored Troops. The proposed memorial would honor the soldiers of the 55th and 59th U.S. Colored Infantry and Company F of the 2nd United States Colored Artillery. The tour stop would sit on about five acres set aside off County Road 166 in Union County, near the site of the Holland House and the first line of defense they formed during the battle. The units served as a rear guard to protect some 250 wagons and ambulances. “The memorial would honor these brave soldiers; it’s something we’ve talked about for a long time,” Carpenter said. The next step is to take the concept plan to the battlefield commission and get their input, she said. “We estimate the cost would be around $25,000 to $30,000,” she said.
Abortion clinic owner in legal fight JACKSON — Abortion clinic owner Diane Derzis has stared down protesters, laughed off those who call her “baby killer” and smiled through clenched teeth while bantering with people who want to close her centers in the South. She has been an abortion rights advocate for decades and owned clinics since 1996, but Derzis is facing some of the biggest political and legal pressure she has ever seen. She spars with pastors and politicians alike, and her latest fight is to keep open her Mississippi clinic, the last one remaining in the state. Derzis is in a legal battle over a 2012 state law that requires the Mississippi clinic’s physicians to have admitting privileges at a local hospital. The fight is similar to one playing out in Texas, where a third of the state’s abortion clinics have closed since a law there was enacted earlier this year. The U.S. Supreme Court said this past week the Texas law can remain in effect while a lawsuit is heard. The laws are the latest in a series of state-level restrictions across country. Supporters say they are designed to protect women’s health, while opponents say they chip away at the right to abortion established 40 years ago by the Supreme Court’s Roe v. Wade decision.
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6A • Sunday, November 24, 2013 • Daily Corinthian
Deaths
State Briefs it up again in 2015,” he said. “We have every intention of doing that.” The decision, however, has left some folks associated with the Abbey puzzled and concerned for the program’s future. “I hope very much it will go on.” said retired USM French professor Elizabeth Anglin, who has both taught in the program and acted as an on-site manager. “I don’t fault anyone because I don’t know what happened,” she added. The Abbey is not USM’s biggest study abroad program in terms of student numbers. It is one of the university’s most recognizable programs. “I’ve known some students who came to USM because of the Abbey program,” Anglin said. “They knew what they wanted to do as soon as they got here, and they were ready.”
Associated Press
Kathy Julen
GLEN — Funeral services for Katheryn Ileen Seabolt Julen, 71, are set for 2 p.m. today at Magnolia Funeral Home Chapel of Memories with burial at Burnsville City Cemetery. Visitation is from noon to service time. Mrs. Julen died Tuesday, Nov. 19, 2013, at her home. She was a retired LPN who worked for Dr. Welch for many years. She loved her family and friends and taking care of them, especially her children and grandchildren. She enjoyed traveling and visiting her family in West Virginia. She was a Baptist. Survivors include two brothers, Jerry Seabolt of Chicago and Gerald Seabolt of Ripley, W.V.; two sisters, Judy Neville (Roger) of Sandyville, W.V., and Ginny Brisendine (Jack) of Paden City, W.V.; two grandchildren, Sheena Parker and Cody Parker; a great-granddaughter, Ava Leigh Parker; caregiver Audie Parker of Corinth; and numerous nieces, nephews, other relatives and a host of friends. She was preceded in death by her husband, Charles Ray Julen; a son, Jerry Ray Julen; a daughter, Lisa Annette Parker Choate; her parents, Jerry and Hazel Carpenter Seabolt; brothers Darrell “Bud” Seabolt, David Seabolt, Bobby Seabolt and Eugene Seabolt; and sisters Dorothy Marie Richards and Emma Louise DeVore. Bro. Ronald Choate will officiate the service. For on-line condolences: magnoliafuneralhome.net
William B. Barton
Funeral services for William B. Barton, 59, of Corinth, are set for 11 a.m. Wednesday at Oak Grove CME Church with burial at Danville Cemetery. Mr. Barton died Wednesday, Nov. 20, 2013, at his home. Born March 5, 1954, he worked at Caterpillar for nine years and was a member of Danville CME Church. Survivors include his friend, Sabra Walker; children Christy Barton, Kenneth Barton, Bobby Barton and Tyrone Barton, all of Corinth, and Barbara Barton of Jackson, Tenn.; siblings Dianne Barton, Mildred Barton and Daniel Barton, all of Corinth; and grandchildren Sean Barton, Jorden and Jaydon Spence, Kimberlard and Zoe Barton, and Javoy, Ciara, Christian and Kingston Barton. He was preceded in death by his parents, Willie and Ester Barton; sisters Linda Turner and Meria Graham; and grandparents Henry Barton & Pearlie Barton and Paul & Fannie Patterson. The Rev. Leroy Harris will officiate the service. Patterson Memorial Chapel is in charge of arrangements.
Obituary Policy The Daily Corinthian include the following information in obituaries: The name, age, city of residence of the deceased; when, where and manner of death of the deceased; time and location of funeral service; name of officiant; time and location of visitation; time and location of memorial services; biographical information can include date of birth, education, place of employment/occupation, military service and church membership; survivors can include spouse, children, parents, grandparents, siblings (step included), and grandchildren, great-grandchildren can be listed by number only; preceded in death can include spouse, children, parents, grandparents, siblings (step included), grandchildren; great-grandchildren can be listed by number only. No other information will be included. All obituaries (complete and incomplete) will be due no later than 4 p.m. on the day prior to its publication.
Work Hard Rest Easy
USM’s Abbey program suspended for 2014 HATTIESBURG — For University of Southern Mississippi junior Courtney McMullen, studying at the Abbey program in France this past spring was a life-changing experience. In fact, she and her college roommates have had a hard time letting go ever since. “We all sit around and watch French movies on Netflix, try to speak French to each other and attempt to cook French food — sometimes rather badly,” said McMullen. The Abbey, one of USM’s most prominent study-abroad programs, has brought more than 550 students to France through a consortium of universities since it was formed in 2002. A budget deficit within the program, combined with uncertain leadership in USM’s international studies office, has prompted university officials to suspend the Abbey program for spring 2014. It will be back, said USM Miss Provost Denis Wiesenburg. He said the university needs time to re-examine the program’s financial operations and find new directors for both the program and Center for International Education that houses it. “We’re just not in a position to do anything other than suspend what we’re doing and then spin
FEMA forgives Gulfport’s $16 million disaster loan GULFPORT — The Federal Emergency Management Agency has agreed to forgive a $16.4 million loan that Gulfport received after Hurricane Katrina slammed into the Gulf Coast in 2005. The Sun Herald reports that Mayor Billy Hewes notified Gulfport city council members about FEMA’s decision. Gulfport had been setting aside money to repay the community
disaster loan. Hewes says he and council members will discuss how that money can be used to cover other city expenses. Gulfport and other Gulf Coast municipalities had previous loanforgiveness requests denied before FEMA changed its rules in the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy, which devastated parts of the East Coast in 2012. A letter from a FEMA official said Gulfport had demonstrated that the city incurred a total loss of nearly $30 million from Katrina.
Starkville police chief put on paid leave STARKVILLE — Starkville police Chief David Lindley has been placed on paid administrative leave, though a reason for the move wasn’t immediately disclosed. Starkville Mayor Parker Wiseman tells local television stations that the city’s Board of Aldermen decided to place Lindley on leave during a closed-door meeting Friday. Wiseman didn’t give a reason for the decision, saying he can’t comment on personnel matters. He didn’t immediately respond to a telephone call and email from The Associated Press on Saturday. The TV stations report that former Assistant Police Chief John Outlaw will serve as interim chief in Lindley’s absence.
Nation Briefs FCC changes its rules, “we will study it along with feedback from customers and crews.” American Airlines has offered a similar approach. So has JetBlue, which says it would “welcome the opportunity to explore” voice calls but “would prioritize making the cabin comfortable and welcoming for all.”
Associated Press
If government backs in-flight calls, will the airlines? NEW YORK — The Federal Communications Commission might be ready to permit cellphone calls in flight. But what about the airlines? Old concerns about electronics being a danger to airplane navigation have been debunked. And airlines could make some extra cash charging passengers to call a loved one from 35,000 feet. But that extra money might not be worth the backlash from fliers who view overly chatty neighbors as another inconvenience to go along with smaller seats and stuffed overhead bins. “Common courtesy goes out the window when people step in that metal tube,” says James Patrick II, a frequent flier from Newnan, Ga. “You think the debates and fistfights over reclining the seat back was bad. Wait until guys start slugging it out over someone talking too loud on the phone.” That’s one of the reasons the country’s largest flight attendant union has come out against allowing calls in flight. The FCC is proposing to lift an existing ban, and airlines would have to decide whether to let passengers make calls. The ban would remain in effect during takeoff and landing. Delta Air Lines is the only major airline to explicitly state that voice calls won’t be allowed on its flights, even if the FCC allows it. Delta says years of feedback from customers show “the overwhelming sentiment” is to continue prohibiting calls. Other airlines aren’t as firm. United Airlines says that if the
‘Catching Fire’ ablaze with $135 million opening LOS ANGELES — “The Hunger Games: Catching Fire” is a scorching hit at the box office. Lionsgate has released early numbers on what’s expected to be one of the biggest November openings ever. “Catching Fire” has grossed $70.5 million domestically and $64 million internationally, bringing its total to $135 million, the studio reported Saturday. Numbers were from Friday’s opening day, but includes some scattered preview shows Thursday. Totals for “Catching Fire” are expected to reach $150 million domestically over the weekend, though some reports estimated a $170 million opener.
Powerful storm system blasts US West; 5 killed LAS VEGAS — A powerful storm system marched toward New Mexico on Saturday with predictions of widespread snow, freezing temperatures and gusty winds after leaving parts of the Western U.S. soaked. The fierce weather has led to at least five deaths, with flooding and water rescues reported in California, stranded drivers in Nevada and hundreds of crashes
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among desert dwellers in Arizona and New Mexico. Snowplows worked overnight and early Saturday to clear roads across northern Arizona and New Mexico as transportation officials warned travelers to reconsider their plans. Jennifer Palucki, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Albuquerque, called the approaching weather a “big kahuna” of a storm. “All that arctic air across New Mexico laid the groundwork. Then we have this bigger upperlevel storm system over southern California and ahead of that is this nice stream of moisture coming up over New Mexico,” she said. “That makes for a good recipe for snow.”
JFK’s death overshadowed Ohio nursing home fire TOLEDO, Ohio — While an anguished nation slept in the hours after the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, flames tore through a nursing home in rural northern Ohio, killing 63 people in what remains one of the worst such fires in U.S. history. Many victims had been restrained to their beds or trapped behind wheelchairs that were too wide for the exits. Investigators later blamed faulty wiring and found the nursing home didn’t have an evacuation plan. Overshadowed by the shooting in Dallas 50 years ago and largely forgotten today, that deadly fire — along with a string of other nursing home fires in the 1960s — helped bring about better federal and state oversight and uniform safety rules for the industry.
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Daily Corinthian • Sunday, November 24, 2013 • 7A
Kossuth FFA brings home national honors LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Members of the Kossuth FFA Chapter in Mississippi were one of 43 teams participating in the National FFA Farm Business Management Career Development Event (CDE). The event was held in conjunction with the 86th National FFA Convention in Louisville. The team, led by advisor Brad Gillmore, was awarded a Bronze emblem. Members also competed for individual awards with 165 other participants. Kaitlin Crum received a Bronze emblem, Kristen Jacobs received a Silver emblem, and Terry Michaels received a Silver emblem. The top ten individuals and the national winning team received cash awards to recognize their success in the event. The coaches of the top two teams were named Farm Business Fellows. The cash awards and the farm business management event are sponsored by John Deere as a special project of the National FFA Foundation. Amy Allen, manager of corporate contributions at John Deere, states, “Feeding some nine billion people by mid-century brings with it un-
Kossuth FFA members Kaitlin Crum, Kristen Jacobs and Terry Michaels are with with chapter advisor Brad Gillmore at the National FFA Farm Business Management Career Development event held in Louisville. precedented challenges for today’s farmers. Farm business management skills will help producers prepare to meet these critical needs.” The National FFA Farm
Business Management CDE is designed to test the ability of students to apply economic principles and concepts in analyzing farm and ranch business management
decisions. Participants respond to questions concerning economic principles in farm business management as well as a problem-solving analysis section. Each team in the
event has competed with other chapters in their state for the privilege of participating in the national event. The event, held at the Galt House Hotel in Lou-
isville, Ky., is one of many educational activities at the National FFA Convention & Expo in which FFA members practice the lessons learned in agricultural education classes. The National FFA Organization is a national youth organization of 557,318 student members as part of 7,498 local FFA chapters in all 50 states, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. The FFA mission is to make a positive difference in the lives of students by developing their potential for premier leadership, personal growth and career success through agricultural education. The National FFA Organization operates under a federal charter granted by the 81st United States Congress and it is an integral part of public instruction in agriculture. The U.S. Department of Education provides leadership and helps set direction for FFA as a service to state and local agricultural education programs. For more, visit the National FFA Organization online at www.ffa.org, on Facebook, Twitter and the official National FFA Organization blog.
Don’t worry; hang in there during those tough times There are times when dealing with challenges feels like an endurance test. You become tired, worn out, frustrated, irritable, and your outlook turns negative. Everyone goes through these periods. You can’t avoid them but you can learn to hang in there until you get out. When in this mode, your perception becomes clouded. Your judgment is compromised. Ironically, when you feel as if you are hanging on by your fingernails and can’t do so much longer, is often the stage where a turning point is just around the corner. It’s especially at these times when you must hang in there a little longer. Here are some practical strategies to help you hang in there. You are not unique in having to deal with challenges. Everyone goes through this process. Successful people utilize these strategies to hang in there as long as necessary. Don’t foster a victim mentality. You are not helpless. There are situations outside your control but your response is up to you. Wallowing in a “woe
is me” attitude only exacerbates your level of frustration. D o n ’ t Bryan waste time Golden and energy worrying. Dare to Live Without Limits It will drain you. Put your effort into being proactive. People with a victim mentality are passive. Remember that worry is like being in a rocking chair; it’s a lot of activity that doesn’t get you anywhere. Don’t become paralyzed by fear. Trepidation of the unknown is normal. Consider the worst case scenario. Most of the time, it is not as bad as you think. Progress is possible only when you venture into the unknown. Keep things in perspective. As your endurance wanes, situations become magnified out of proportion. Take a step back in order to look at things more objectively. How would you be viewing the same situation if it were affecting someone else? What advice would you offer them? Give yourself
a mental break by not thinking about your situation for a while. When you go back to it, you will have a fresh, more realistic outlook. Learn from your past. You don’t have to relive it. We all have had bad experiences. Don’t become jaded. The only direction in life is forward. Don’t waste time lamenting the past. Focus on what you have, not what you are lacking. A common syndrome is people ignoring their assets while fretting over perceived liabilities. An appreciation for the good things in your life helps you maintain a positive attitude. A positive outlook helps you hang in there. There are situations where you have to cut lose and move on. This
strategy is not the same as giving up. Rather, it’s recognizing there is nothing more you can do. Instead of becoming mired in a no win situation, you choose to move forward with your life. Don’t let others make decisions for you. When frazzled, you become more desperate for solutions. As a result, there is a tendency to take suggestions from people who, although well meaning, don’t have the needed expertise or insight you require. Any decisions you make must be your own. You are the only one responsible for your actions. Blaming others for bad advice gets you nowhere. Anything worthwhile takes effort. The loftier your goals, the bigger the challenges you will
have to deal with. It’s essential for you to be able to hang in there until you discover appropriate solutions. Since you never know how close you are to success, giving up is not an option. The strategies listed here will all help you hang in there when applied. The next column will offer some more suggestions for hanging in there.
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HUNGER GAMES: CATCHING FIRE (PG-13) 1:00 1:30 2:30 4:10 4:40 NP HUNGER GAMES: CATCHING FIRE (PG-13) DELIVERY MAN (PG-13)
THE BEST MAN HOLIDAY (R) THOR: THE DARK WORLD (3-D) (PG-13)
6:50 7:20 7:50 10:00 NP 1:10 4:25 7:30 9:55 NP 1:20 4:20 7:15 10:00 NP 1:15 4:15 7:10 9:50 NP
THOR: THE DARK WORLD (NON 3-D) (PG-13) 1:35 4:35 7:30 10:00 NP
LAST VEGAS (PG-13)
1:30 4:30 7:20 9:55
FREE BIRDS (NON 3-D) (PG)
1:00 4:05 7:05 9:15
JACKASS PRESENTS BAD GRANDPA (R)
1:35 4:35 7:35 9:45
Daily Corinthian columnist Bryan Golden is a management consultant, motivational speaker, author, and adjunct professor. E-mail Bryan at bryan@columnist.com.
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Jericho Sports Ministry at Tate Baptist Church Announces open sign ups for the upcoming basketball season. Cost is $35 for each player (includes jersey). Ages are from 4 years to 16 years old. Practices will begin on December 9th. Season starts January 4th, lasting 6 weeks. Some games will be played on Friday night this year to accommodate the increased numbers of players we have had through the last several years. Mandatory player evaluations will be on December 2nd or 3rd from 6-8 pm at Tate Baptist Church
Stop By Or Call Tate Baptist Church at 286-2935 or Dr. Mike Weeden’s office at 286-8860 for sign-up or more information. Sign-Up deadline is November 30.
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We at the Daily Corinthian are proud to present a very select choice of local businesses to help make your wedding event a great success. Local businesses make sense and offer you a personal touch you’d be hard pressed to find from a large, out-of-market company.
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8A • Sunday, November 24, 2013 • Daily Corinthian
THE WEEK IN REVIEW WEEKLY DOW JONES Dow Jones industrials Close: 16,064.77 1-week change: 103.07 (0.6%) 16,500
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Name
Pretium g DirGMBear DirDGdBr s ChinaEAir ChinaSoAir USEC rs EqualEn g WalkerDun LaZBoy JinkoSolar
5.32+2.19 +70.0 62.32+15.01 +31.7 42.00+8.62 +25.8 21.18+3.18 +17.7 21.88+3.27 +17.6 9.46+1.37 +16.9 5.10 +.70 +15.9 16.08+2.20 +15.9 28.57+3.80 +15.3 33.89+4.39 +14.9
LiberMed 3.10 +.95 +44.2 ERBA Diag 2.74 +.75 +37.7 GastarExp 5.59+1.12 +25.1 Fibrocell rs 4.20 +.80 +23.5 Univ Insur 9.46+1.42 +17.7 Medgen wt 3.00 +.45 +17.6 AltisrcAst 719.00+101.00+16.3 Air Inds 9.34+1.28 +15.9 AlphaPro 2.04 +.26 +14.6 ChiRivet 43.20+5.20 +13.7
Last Chg %Chg
Name
Last Chg %Chg
Intelliph Aetrium rs InterCld wt Crdiom grs AriadP DexMedia n Unilife HorizPhm Mediabist ZhoneTech
3.64+1.80 6.19+2.89 7.75+3.32 6.68+2.80 3.78+1.29 7.52+2.38 4.03+1.21 6.49+1.91 2.52 +.74 5.55+1.63
+97.8 +87.6 +74.9 +72.2 +51.8 +46.3 +42.9 +41.7 +41.6 +41.6
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)
Name
Last Chg %Chg
Name
Last Chg %Chg
Name
Last Chg %Chg
ViolinM n Voxeljet n LightBox n DirGMnBull DxGldBll rs Chegg n Molycp pfA Gain Cap EKodak wt NoahHldgs
3.11-2.61 -45.6 35.86-23.13 -39.2 7.00-3.74 -34.8 19.20-7.13 -27.1 32.86-9.40 -22.2 7.49-1.64 -18.0 14.50-2.95 -16.9 8.86-1.72 -16.3 10.50-2.03 -16.2 20.38-3.85 -15.9
FAB Univ Organovo SparkNet Oragenics NanoViric ComndSec InstFnMkts AlldNevG ImpacMtg SandstG g
3.07-2.22 9.15-3.35 5.39-1.44 2.75 -.57 4.57 -.89 2.18 -.42 2.35 -.40 3.32 -.55 5.01 -.82 4.41 -.70
ARC Grp VandaPhm BiostarPh Liquidity SkystarBio ConatusP n ChinaSun h FreshMkt VisnChina NetElem
15.99-17.24 -51.9 11.06-3.53 -24.2 2.00 -.60 -23.1 21.83-6.12 -21.9 3.81-1.04 -21.4 6.07-1.60 -20.9 6.27-1.55 -19.8 40.87-9.75 -19.3 8.69-1.95 -18.3 2.47 -.55 -18.2
-42.0 -26.8 -21.1 -17.2 -16.3 -16.2 -14.5 -14.2 -14.1 -13.7
MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) Name
Vol (00) Last Chg
BkofAm 6576559 15.64 S&P500ETF 4296001180.81 iShEMkts 2896801 42.05 Penney 2133657 8.87 MktVGold 1747907 22.25 iShR2K 1745722111.85 SPDR Fncl 1592165 21.49 GenElec 1563394 27.08 iShJapan 1545820 12.16 FordM 1507267 17.01
+.72 +.76 -.20 -.16 -1.88 +1.02 +.36 -.12 -.05 -.06
Name
Vol (00) Last Chg
Organovo AlldNevG CheniereEn NwGold g InovioPhm FAB Univ B2gold g NovaGld g GranTrra g GastarExp
845259 220590 183436 165698 160665 159635 82629 80204 65131 63588
9.15 3.32 39.98 5.29 2.14 3.07 2.04 2.19 7.49 5.59
Name
-3.35 -.55 -1.95 -.28 +.14 -2.22 -.27 -.17 +.18 +1.12
Vol (00) Last Chg
Facebook 2864233 MicronT 2718513 Cisco 2464409 Intel 1866780 Zynga 1840150 Microsoft 1768983 SiriusXM 1498256 PwShs QQQ 1392364 Groupon 1103772 Yahoo 1000857
46.23 20.19 21.46 23.87 4.38 37.57 3.68 83.99 9.12 36.49
-2.78 +.73 -.08 -.65 +.36 +.01 -.18 +.03 -1.59 +1.02
STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST Wk Wk YTD Chg %Chg%Chg
Name
Ex
Div
Last
AFLAC AT&T Inc AlcatelLuc Alcoa AlliantTch Aon plc AriadP BP PLC BcpSouth BkofAm B iPVix rs BarrickG Bemis Caterpillar Checkpnt Chevron Cisco Citigroup CocaCola Comcast Deere Dover DowChm eBay EMC Cp EnPro ExxonMbl Facebook FstHorizon FordM FrkUnv FredsInc GenElec GenMotors Groupon iShBrazil iShJapan iShChinaLC iShEMkts iShR2K Intel IBM
NY NY NY NY NY NY Nasd NY NY NY NY NY NY NY NY NY Nasd NY NY Nasd NY NY NY Nasd NY NY NY Nasd NY NY NY Nasd NY NY Nasd NY NY NY NY NY Nasd NY
1.48 1.80 ... .12 1.04 .70 ... 2.28 .20 .04 ... .20 1.04 2.40 ... 4.00 .68 .04 1.12 .78 2.04 1.50 1.28 ... .40 ... 2.52 ... .20 .40 .47 .24 .76 ... ... 1.36 .15 .93 .77 1.70 .90 3.80
66.57 -.54 -0.8 +25.3 35.42 -.01 ... +5.1 4.02 -.14 -3.4 +189.2 9.24 +.21 +2.3 +6.5 119.85 +3.44 +3.0 +93.4 82.55 +.97 +1.2 +48.4 3.78 +1.29 +51.8 -80.3 48.03 +.85 +1.8 +15.3 23.72 +.99 +4.4 +63.1 15.64 +.72 +4.8 +34.7 44.45 -2.58 -5.5 -65.1 16.38 -1.69 -9.4 -53.2 39.54 +.39 +1.0 +18.2 82.88 -.86 -1.0 -7.5 14.21 +.07 +0.5 +32.3 124.03 +3.97 +3.3 +14.7 21.46 -.08 -0.3 +9.2 52.41 +2.01 +4.0 +32.5 40.43 +.21 +0.5 +11.5 49.52 +1.79 +3.8 +32.5 84.77 +1.94 +2.3 -1.9 93.41 +.11 +0.1 +42.2 39.66 -.57 -1.4 +22.7 50.33 -2.27 -4.3 -1.3 24.09 +.09 +0.4 -4.8 56.00 -1.31 -2.3 +36.9 95.01 -.26 -0.3 +9.8 46.23 -2.78 -5.7 +73.7 11.50 +.29 +2.6 +16.0 17.01 -.06 -0.4 +31.4 7.01 -.02 -0.3 -.7 16.70 +.49 +3.0 +25.5 27.08 -.12 -0.4 +29.0 37.63 -1.14 -2.9 +30.5 9.12 -1.59 -14.8 +87.7 48.13 -.47 -1.0 -14.0 12.16 -.05 -0.4 +24.7 39.96 +1.52 +4.0 -1.2 42.05 -.20 -0.5 -5.2 111.85 +1.02 +0.9 +32.7 23.87 -.65 -2.7 +15.8 181.30 -1.89 -1.0 -5.4
Name
Ex
Div
JPMorgCh KimbClk Kroger Lowes MktVGold McDnlds MeadWvco MicronT Microsoft NY Times NiSource NokiaCp NorthropG Organovo Penney PepsiCo Petrobras Pfizer PwShs QQQ ProctGam RadioShk RegionsFn RiteAid S&P500ETF SearsHldgs Sherwin SiriusXM SouthnCo Sprint n SPDR Fncl TecumsehB TecumsehA TeslaMot Torchmark Vale SA VangEmg WalMart Wendys Co Weyerhsr Xerox Yahoo Zynga
NY 1.52 NY 3.24 NY .66 NY .72 NY .46 NY 3.24 NY 1.00 Nasd ... Nasd 1.12 NY .16 NY 1.00 NY ... NY 2.44 Amex ... NY ... NY 2.27 NY .27 NY .96 Nasd .98 NY 2.41 NY ... NY .12 NY ... NY 3.39 Nasd ... NY 2.00 Nasd .05 NY 2.03 NY ... NY .32 Nasd ... Nasd ... Nasd ... NY .68 NY .78 NY 1.38 NY 1.88 Nasd .20 NY .88 NY .23 Nasd ... Nasd ...
Last
Wk Wk YTD Chg %Chg%Chg
57.46 +2.59 +4.7 +31.6 109.00 -.26 -0.2 +29.1 42.39 -.21 -0.5 +62.9 47.90 -3.87 -7.5 +34.9 22.25 -1.88 -7.8 -52.0 98.27 +1.35 +1.4 +11.4 35.19 +.66 +1.9 +10.4 20.19 +.73 +3.7 +218.5 37.57 +.01 ... +40.7 13.96 +.35 +2.6 +63.7 31.86 -.59 -1.8 +28.0 8.09 +.09 +1.1 +104.8 112.01 +2.48 +2.3 +65.7 9.15 -3.35 -26.8 +251.9 8.87 -.16 -1.8 -55.0 85.74 -.29 -0.3 +25.3 17.50 +.23 +1.3 -10.1 32.12 -.08 -0.2 +28.1 83.99 +.03 ... +29.0 84.95 +.11 +0.1 +25.1 2.85 +.02 +0.7 +34.4 9.86 +.01 +0.1 +38.3 5.40 +.14 +2.7 +297.1 180.81 +.76 +0.4 +27.0 61.34 -3.05 -4.7 +48.3 187.57 +.70 +0.4 +21.9 3.68 -.18 -4.7 +27.3 41.23 -1.19 -2.8 -3.7 7.83 +.41 +5.5 +41.1 21.49 +.36 +1.7 +31.1 8.55 +.68 +8.6 +85.9 9.10 +.99 +12.2 +97.0 121.38-14.07 -10.4 +258.4 75.41 -.01 ... +46.4 15.46 -.31 -2.0 -26.2 41.35 -.26 -0.6 -7.1 79.81 +.59 +0.7 +17.0 8.68 -.27 -3.0 +84.7 29.56 -.18 -0.6 +6.3 11.22 +.18 +1.6 +64.5 36.49 +1.02 +2.9 +83.4 4.38 +.36 +9.0 +85.6
AGRICULTURE FUTURES WkHigh WkLow Settle WkChg CORN 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Dec 13 Mar 14 May 14 Jul 14 Sep 14 Dec 14 Mar 15
426.75 410.75 432.25 420 440 428.25 447.25 435.50 452.75 442 460 450 469 460
422.25 429.25 437.25 444.25 450 457.75 467.50
+.25 -1.25 -1.25 -1.50 -1.75 -2 -2.25
133.37 134.65 135.00 129.05 127.40 129.52 129.40
130.64 131.25 127.82 126.42 124.97 127.35 128.05
HOGS-Lean 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb.
Jan 14 Mar 14 May 14 Jul 14 Aug 14 Sep 14 Nov 14
Dec 13 Feb 14 Apr 14 May 14 Jun 14 Jul 14 Aug 14
1268.25 1319.50 +39 1256.25 1306 +40.25 1245 1290.50 +40.25 1241.25 1284 +39 1226 1261 +32.50 1179.50 1206.75 +21.25 1146 1167 +13.50
WHEAT 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Dec 13 Mar 14 May 14 Jul 14 Sep 14 Dec 14 Mar 15
654.75 663 666.25 661.75 668.50 680 683.25
641.50 652 655.50 652.25 660.50 670.50 676.25
649.50 657 661.25 659 666.75 677.75 682.75
86.67 91.20 93.90 97.85 99.52 97.82 95.57
84.92 82.45 91.82 97.00 98.10 96.50 94.40
131.47 131.80 132.57 127.07 125.90 128.12 129.00
-1.93 -3.00 -2.45 -1.90 -1.50 -1.40 -1.30
85.62 89.67 93.00 97.82 99.40 97.75 95.55
-.28 -.60 +.55 +.60 +.75 +.85 +.65
+5 +2.50 +2.75 +3.25 +2.75 +2.25 +1.25
Dec 13 Mar 14 May 14 Jul 14 Oct 14 Dec 14 Mar 15
77.44 79.45 79.85 80.29 77.24 77.29 76.26
73.79 76.65 77.18 77.74 76.02 75.46 76.24
75.21 77.23 77.68 78.21 76.30 75.86 76.24
-1.91 -.97 -1.03 -1.08 -.63 -.68 -.39
MUTUAL FUNDS Obj
PIMCO TotRetIs Vanguard TotStIdx Vanguard InstIdxI Vanguard TotStIAdm Vanguard 500Adml Fidelity Contra Vanguard InstPlus American Funds GrthAmA m American Funds IncAmerA m American Funds CapIncBuA m Vanguard TotStIIns American Funds CpWldGrIA m American Funds InvCoAmA m Dodge & Cox Stock Dodge & Cox IntlStk Vanguard WelltnAdm
CI LB LB LB LB LG LB LG MA IH LB WS LB LV FB MA
JACKSON — Developing industrial parks can cost a lot of money, and there are certainly never any guarantees of a return on the taxpayer’s investment. What are the pros and cons of deciding to invest in the infrastructure needed to attract industrial and business development? There is a saying: “No site, no project.” “Ready-to-go sites separate communities into winners and losers at the beginning of the location process,” said David Rumbarger, president of the Community De-
velopment Foundation in Tupelo. “The better prepared the community and the site, the more likely a community is to make a candidate list for a prospect visit. And in the current economic development market, the site must be fully prepared.” Many regional utilities have used versions of certified site programs to motivate and encourage communities to focus on this aspect of community preparation. CDF’s supplier, the Tennessee Valley Authority, was one of the first to recognize and put money into sites. “Lee County has successfully developed five
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COTTON 2 50,000 lbs.- cents per lb.
Tables show seven most current contracts for each future. Grains traded on Chicago Board of Trade; livestock on Chicago Mercantile Exchange; and cotton on New York Cotton Exchange.
Name
BY BECKY GILLETTE Mississippi Business Journal
WkHigh WkLow Settle WkChg
Dec 13 Feb 14 Apr 14 Jun 14 Aug 14 Oct 14 Dec 14
Total Assets ($Mlns) NAV 156,460 100,321 84,319 80,969 76,763 71,861 69,360 67,951 66,549 65,601 59,270 54,042 53,052 51,681 51,515 50,772
10.89 45.60 165.81 45.62 166.91 99.94 165.83 44.42 20.50 58.23 45.63 44.45 38.27 164.31 42.72 67.76
Total Return/Rank 4-wk 12-mo 5-year
Pct Min Init Load Invt
+0.1 +2.5 +3.1 +2.5 +3.1 +1.9 +3.1 +1.8 +0.9 -0.2 +2.5 +0.6 +2.6 +3.5 -0.2 +2.1
NL 1,000,000 NL 3,000 NL 5,000,000 NL 10,000 NL 10,000 NL 2,500 NL200,000,000 5.75 250 5.75 250 5.75 250 NL 5,000,000 5.75 250 5.75 250 NL 2,500 NL 2,500 NL 50,000
-0.2/B +33.9/B +32.6/C +34.0/B +32.6/C +33.0/C +32.6/C +33.8/B +19.2/C +16.1/C +34.0/B +27.3/C +32.1/C +43.7/A +33.5/A +20.7/B
+8.2/B +21.4/A +20.3/B +21.5/A +20.3/B +20.5/C +20.3/B +20.4/C +16.5/A +13.7/C +21.5/A +17.1/D +18.1/D +22.7/A +20.0/A +16.1/B
CA -Conservative Allocation, CI -Intermediate-Term Bond, ES -Europe Stock, FB -Foreign Large Blend, FG -Foreign LargeGrowth, FV -Foreign Large Value, IH -World Allocation, LB -Large Blend, LG -Large Growth, LV -Large Value, MA -Moderate Allocation, MB -Mid-Cap Blend, MV - Mid-Cap Value, SH -Specialty-heath, WS -World Stock, Total Return: Chng in NAV with dividends reinvested. Rank: How fund performed vs. others with same objective: A is in top 20%, E in bottom 20%. Min Init Invt: Minimum $ needed to invest in fund. Source: Morningstar. Stock Footnotes: g = Dividends and earnings in Canadian dollars. h = Does not meet continued-listing standards. lf = Late filing with SEC. n = New in past 52 weeks. pf = Preferred. rs = Stock has undergone a reverse stock split of at least 50 percent within the past year. rt = Right to buy security at a specified price. s = Stock has split by at least 20 percent within the last year. un = Units. vj = In bankruptcy or receivership. wd = When distributed. wi = When issued. wt = Warrants. Mutual Fund Footnotes: b = Fee covering market costs is paid from fund assets. d = Deferred sales charge, or redemption fee. f = front load (sales charges). m = Multiple fees are charged. NA = not available. p = previous day’s net asset value. s = fund split shares during the week. x = fund paid a distribution during the week.Gainers and Losers must be worth at least $2 to be listed in tables at left. Most Actives must be worth at least $1. Volume in hundreds of shares. Source: The Associated Press. Sales figures are unofficial.
toric Booneville Hardware building in downtown Booneville to help create a focal point in the downtown area. “This is the beginning. We look forward to the upcoming year and future endeavors,” Anerton said, noting ACCO plans to continue to move forward with the Corporate Giving Program in 2014 as it partners with the community. Booneville Mayor Derrick Blythe thanked ACCO Brands for the generosity of the Corporate Giving Program and the commitment shown to the community. “It’s overwhelming,” Blythe said. “We’ll see great things happening.” Leon Hays, Executive Director of the Prentiss County Development Association, also expressed thanks to ACCO. “I was taken aback by their generosity,” Hays said. In addition to Christina Lawless and Alisha Anerton, other ACCO officials attending the presentation included Bob Alley, Indirect Manufacturing General Manager; Chuck Milner, Indirect Logistics General Manager; and Tammy Freeman, Human Resources Generalist. The predecessors of ACCO Brands’ Booneville facility have been a manufacturing presence in Booneville since 1969. The local facility joined the ACCO Brands family in 2005. Brands produced here are Quartet and Wilson Jones while brands managed here are Kensington, Day-Timer and GBC. Items produced in Booneville include ring binders, custom speciality binders, dry erase boards and cork boards. The square footage of manufacturing and distribution facilities is 885,500 while the number of employees is around 531.
Strategies geared toward prospects
CATTLE 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb.
SOYBEANS 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel 1322 1307.25 1291 1284.25 1261.25 1207 1169
BOONEVILLE — ACCO Brands in Booneville proved its commitment to Booneville and Prentiss County last Thursday by donating a total of $80,000 to eight organizations that will touch thousands of people in the community through their outreach efforts. “We’ve been blessed to give back to our community,” said Christina Lawless, Senior Human Resources Business Manager. ACCO Brands is one of Prentiss County’s largest employers with around 531 employees. Company officials said while ACCO has a great community presence, its goal is to make that presence even stronger. “We are honored to be a part of this community and are committed to continuing our support of those organizations that work to make this a better community,” said Lawless. The presentation took place in Booneville City Hall amidst much applause as the donations were announced. This gift of $80,000 is in addition to employee donations raised through giving campaigns. Organizations tapped to receive donations from the ACCO Brands Corporate Giving Program were the American Cancer Society, Main Street Association, Booneville School District, Goodfellows, Boys and Girls Club, Junior Auxiliary, United Way and Booneville Cultural Arts. Alisha Anerton, ACCO Human Resources Generalist, announced the funding as follows: ■ American Cancer Society Relay for Life, $4,000. Additionally, ACCO Brands employees raised $6,000 for the Prentiss County Re-
lay for Life that impacts over 3,000 individuals in Prentiss County. ■ Main Street Association, $5,000. ACCO Brands will be sponsoring a community tree lighting ceremony downtown in partnership with the Main Street Association. (The Community Christmas Tree Lighting has been set for Sunday, Dec. 1, at 5 p.m. in the triangle area in downtown Booneville.) ■ Booneville School District, $7,500. Of this donation, $2,500 goes toward the Academic Awards Banquet/sponsor Student of the Month and $5,000 will go toward the indoor baseball/softball practice facility. There are 1,200 students within the Booneville School District. ■ Prentiss County Goodfellows, $7,500. The Goodfellows provide food baskets to those in need during the holiday season (600 to 800 families). ■ Boys & Girls Club, $10,000, which will help propel the S.T.E.M. and Literacy Programs (computers, software, art contest supplies). This serves students 4th grade and up. ■ Junior Auxiliary, $11,000, to go toward sponsoring family meals (deep freezer/food) and Angel Tree. ACCO Brands sponsored a deep freezer and money to make food to fill the freezer for the Fall Festival. ACCO plans to support the Angel Tree program by sponsoring 80 angels and the employees will be partnering with Junior Auxiliary to purchase items for those in need. ■ United Way, $15,000, with the money designated to go toward the organizations within Prentiss County served by United Way. ■ Booneville Cultural Arts, $20,000, to help with the restoration and beautification of the his-
106 West College Street, Booneville, MS
Let’s schedule your year-end review. Eric M Rutledge, AAMS®, CFP® Financial Advisor 1500 Harper Road Suite 1 Corinth, MS 38834 662-287-1409
industrial parks with more than 3,000 acres of industrial land since 1948,” Rumbarger said. “Today, there is more than 22 million square feet of industrial space with less than a six percent vacancy rate. There are 39 industries in Lee County industrial parks that employ more than 8,500 persons.” When looking at the “pro” side of developing industrial parks, the Golden Triangle Development Link is the poster child for success in Mississippi. “We have purchased/ developed almost 6,000 acres in the last ten years,” said Link CEO Joe Max Higgins Jr. “We currently have options on another 1,000 acres that are strategically located. We have installed more than $200 million in infrastructure (water/ sewer/rail/roads). We have secured investment of $4.5 billion and have created 5,600 jobs. In Lowndes alone we are putting almost $20 million into the school and city/ county coffers annually.” His philosophy is, if you don’t have product, you are not going to win. “But you must have resources other than the product to win, you must have an adequately funded and staffed organization and also the ability to offer a competitive incentive package in addition to what the state might offer,” Higgins said.
Angela Curry, executive director of the Greenwood-Leflore Industrial Board, said it is important that parks be strategically located and geared toward the types of industry that you want to attract. “We are very fortunate to have several industrial parks in our county,” Curry said. “The GreenwoodLeflore Industrial Park, located at the intersection of Highways 82 and 49, is our most prominent park. It is home to major industry such as Milwaukee Electric Tool Company, HDW, Inc. and The John Richard Company, among others.” The Airport Industrial Park markets to aviationrelated companies and currently houses GE Capital Aviation Services. The Itta Bena Industrial Park located in West Leflore County is geared toward retail and service sector industry. “This park is strategically located off of Highway 82 West, adjacent to the Leflore County Incubator and Mississippi Valley State University,” Curry said. “The Rising Sun Industrial Park located off Highway 49 South is ideal for ag related industry such as Express Grain that currently sits on about 150 acres.” Curry said industrial parks are great assets for communities looking to recruit new business and industry, as some projects require green space for new construction.
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Daily Corinthian • Sunday, November 24, 2013 • 9A
Turkey stuffed with dressing is also dressed with stuffing DEAR ABBY: My husband and I have the same argument every year around Thanksgiving. He says there is a difference between stuffing and dressing. I say they’re the same thing, except that stuffing is baked in the turkey, while dressing is baked separately in a casserole dish. My husband insists I’m wrong -- that the difference has nothing to do with how it’s cooked. He thinks stuffing is made with regular bread, while dressing is made with cornbread. The debate is driving me crazy. Will you please tell me who is right? -- STUFFING VS. DRESSING IN OHIO DEAR STUFFING VS. DRESSING: The terms “dressing” and “stuffing” are interchangeable. They refer to a seasoned mixture used to stuff meat or poultry. It makes no difference what kind of bread is used. Some tips: If you plan to stuff your turkey, be sure all the ingredients are pre-cooked (i.e. vegetables, fruit, meat, seafood). Using pasteurized liquid eggs is safer than using raw eggs. The bird should be loosely stuffed, not packed because stuffing expands while cooking, and the turkey should be stuffed right before it is put into the oven, never ahead of time. The stuffing takes the longest of the bird’s components to reach the desired safe tempera-
ture (165 degrees). Once the stuffing is in the turkey, it should not be removed until the turkey is ready Abigail toDbe Ecarved. A R Van Buren ABBY: My husband and Dear Abby I have lived here for 20 years, and so have our lovely, gracious and caring neighbors. We haven’t had any new neighbors for years -- until now. My husband has met the couple in passing, but I haven’t yet. There has been a lot of activity over there, what with moving in, etc. As a neighbor, when and how should I approach them and offer my welcome to the neighborhood? Should I bring them something? If so, what’s the best thing? -- KATE IN QUINCY, MASS. DEAR KATE: I can tell by your question that the folks in your neighborhood are indeed “lovely, gracious and caring.” The first thing you should bring the new neighbors is a warm smile. And it wouldn’t hurt if along with it you brought a plate of edible treats and an offer to refer them to the nearest market, dry cleaner, your shoe repair shop and a reliable
plumber. DEAR ABBY: My dad came into my room and told me he and my mom were having problems -- that they were thinking about getting divorced. I can’t imagine living without them or having to choose who I want to live with. Every child needs her mother, but Dad is the one who has always been there for me. Should I just live with my grandparents and see how that works out? What should I do? -- BAFFLED IN THE SOUTH DEAR BAFFLED: It was wrong of your father to talk to you about this before anything had been decided between him and your mother. I realize that my telling you not to worry about this would do no good because being upset is perfectly natural in these circumstances. Your father may have spoken prematurely, so KEEP THAT IN MIND. You should talk to both of your parents about this. If you are close to your grandparents, discuss it with them, too, since you feel you might like to live with them to avoid hurting either parent. Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Write Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.
Horoscopes ARIES (March 21-April 19). The questions you ask will bring about the answers you already have in your head. To find out the truth, a person has to let go of preconceived notions and go in with an open mind. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). What’s more boring than saying nothing? Saying everything! So many people will seem to find you interesting today, and this is because you listen slightly more than you talk. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). Some small piece of information you once believed will now prove false, casting doubt on the other things you thought you knew. Take this as a sign of positive growth. CANCER (June 22-July 22). You have made an impression that you were not aware you were making. Someone will be happy to see you -- and much happier than appearances suggest, because this person is trying to
play it cool. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). You will be working with a kind of map. It won’t take you to a physical place; it will take you to a beautiful place inside your psyche. You can use it to get back whenever you need to. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Some pleasures seem universal, but be careful not to impose your idea of a good time on anyone else. You’ll deal with many different types of people, and each one has a unique version of fun. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). You will thrive artistically, though not publicly. You’ll explore your talent in a safe environment, delighting in the work. Don’t show anyone until you’re sure it’s ready. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). It’s as though you can project yourself into the future. You’ll take preventive measures and prepare well for an upcoming event. All of this thinking ahead will make you a star when it’s
your turn to shine. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). You’ll feel motivated to change a pattern. Today’s action eventually will turn into a good habit. You quickly will get better at whatever you do repeatedly. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Check in with your higher mind before you follow the group. You’re likely to think of a better way. Groups of people have been known to do rather crazy things that individual people wouldn’t. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). You may not be aware of what you value until today’s events point it out to you. Humor and amusement are higher on the list than last week. Levity is what keeps your soul unfettered. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). It’s said that ideas are more powerful than things, and yet you could make a compelling argument in the other direction today. The action will be stalled until a key material is obtained.
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Coming Up In The Daily Corinthian Over 80 walkers and runners in the Corinth Medical Specialists Rudolph Fun Fun 5K on Saturday helped raised over $3,500 for the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation (JDRF). See Editor Mark Boehler’s story and photos coming Tuesday.
10A • Daily Corinthian
Top 25 results No. 1 Alabama (11-0) beat Chattanooga 49-0. Next: at No. 6 Auburn, Saturday. No. 2 Florida State (11-0) beat Idaho 80-14. Next: at Florida, Saturday. No. 3 Baylor (9-1) lost to No. 11 Oklahoma State 49-17. Next: at TCU, Saturday. No. 4 Ohio State (11-0) beat Indiana 42-14. Next: at Michigan, Saturday. No. 5 Oregon (9-2) lost to Arizona 42-16. Next: vs. Oregon State, Friday. No. 6 Auburn (10-1) did not play. Next: vs. No. 1 Alabama, Saturday. No. 7 Clemson (10-1) beat The Citadel 52-6. Next: at No. 12 South Carolina, Saturday. No. 8 Missouri (10-1) beat No. 24 Mississippi 24-10. Next: vs. No. 9 Texas A&M, Saturday. No. 9 Texas A&M (8-3) lost to No. 18 LSU 3410. Next: at No. 8 Missouri, Saturday. No. 10 Stanford (9-2) beat California 63-13. Next: vs. Notre Dame, Saturday. No. 11 Oklahoma State (10-1) beat No. 3 Baylor 49-17. Next: vs. No. 22 Oklahoma, Saturday, Dec. 7. No. 12 South Carolina (9-2) beat Coastal Carolina 70-10. Next: vs. No. 7 Clemson, Saturday. No. 13 Michigan State (10-1) beat Northwestern 30-6. Next: vs. Minnesota, Saturday. No. 14 UCLA (8-3) lost to No. 19 Arizona State 38-33. Next: at No. 23 Southern Cal, Saturday. No. 15 Fresno State (10-0) beat New Mexico 69-28. Next: at San Jose State, Friday. No. 16 Wisconsin (9-2) beat Minnesota 20-7. Next: vs. Penn State, Saturday. No. 17 UCF (9-1) beat Rutgers 41-17, Thursday. Next: vs. South Florida, Friday. No. 18 LSU (8-3) beat No. 9 Texas A&M 34-10. Next: vs. Arkansas, Friday. No. 19 Arizona State (9-2) beat No. 14 UCLA 38-33. Next: vs. Arizona, Saturday. No. 20 Northern Illinois (11-0) beat Toledo 35-17, Wednesday. Next: vs. Western Michigan, Tuesday. No. 21 Louisville (10-1) beat Memphis 24-17. Next: at Cincinnati, Thursday, Dec. 5. No. 22 Oklahoma (9-2) beat Kansas State 4131. Next: at No. 11 Oklahoma State, Saturday, Dec. 7. No. 23 Southern Cal (8-3) at Colorado. Next: vs. No. 14 UCLA, Saturday. No. 24 Mississippi (7-4) lost to No. 8 Missouri 24-10. Next: at Mississippi State, Thursday. No. 25 Duke (9-2) beat Wake Forest 28-21. Next: at North Carolina, Saturday.
Vandy rallies for 14-10 win over Vols BY STEVE MEGARGEE Associated Press
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — In his wildest dreams, Vanderbilt quarterback Patton Robinette couldn’t have imagined a happier homecoming. In its worst nightmares, Tennessee couldn’t have pictured a more heartbreaking home finale. Robinette, who grew up about 20 miles from Tennessee’s campus in Maryville, Tenn., ran for a 5-yard touchdown with 16 seconds remaining Saturday as Vanderbilt rallied for a 1410 victory over the Volunteers. Vanderbilt’s winning drive was kept alive after Tennessee’s fourth-and-inches stop of quarterback Austyn Carta-Samuels in the final minute was overturned on replay, giving Vanderbilt a first down at the Tennessee 33. “It was huge for us,” Robinette said. “The fact I’m from Maryville just made it even sweeter.” Vanderbilt (7-4, 4-4 SEC) overcame four turnovers to beat Tennessee for the second straight year, giving the Commodores consecutive victories over their in-state rivals for the first time since winning six straight over the Volunteers from 1920-26. The Commodores’ 16 wins over the last two years are their most over a two-season stretch since 1927-28. “We started the game out on certain sides of the ball trying our hardest to lose the game,” Vanderbilt coach James Franklin said. “But the thing that I think is so special about this team is this team knows how to win. Over the last three years, we’ve created a culture that the players expect to win and they find ways to win. Sometimes it’s not always pretty.” The Vols (4-7, 1-6) fell out of bowl contention and clinched their fourth straight losing season, something that hasn’t happened at Tennessee since 1903-06. “What do you think it is like?” Tennessee coach Butch Jones said. “You have 28 seniors who have given everything to this football program. Yeah it is emotional because you put a lot of effort and work into it. I feel for these kids who have done everything we have asked of them. Unfortunately we came up short today.” Just a few minutes before Robinette’s winning touchdown, Tennessee was celebrating an apparent victory. Neyland Stadium’s partisan crowd of 97,223 was in a frenzy after the Vols apparently stopped Carta-Samuels for no gain, but Vanderbilt maintained possession after replay official Ben Oldham determined Carta-Samuels had crossed the first-down marker. Jones declined to comment on the officiating after the game. Hood said he wasn’t surprised the call was overturned because of all the breaks that have gone against the Vols.
Sports
Sunday, November 24, 2013
Mississippi State edges Arkansas in OT BY CHRIS MURRAY Associated Press
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — Mississippi State finally got the best of Arkansas in an overtime game and in the state of Arkansas. Damian Williams scored on a 25-yard touchdown run on the first play of overtime, and the Mississippi State defense made it stand, as the Bulldogs defeated Arkansas 24-17 on Saturday before a crowd of 45,198 at War Memorial Stadium. Mississippi State (5-6, 2-5 Southeastern Conference) got an interception by Taveze Calhoun on fourth down to seal the victory and keep its bowl hopes alive. Arkansas gained only one yard on its first three plays, and Calhoun stepped in front of the receiver and snared Brandon Allen’s pass, returning it across midfield before being tackled.
Williams alternated with Tyler Russell at quarterback throughout the game. While Russell is the better passing option, Williams showed what he can do with his legs, following the blocking of his offensive line and running back Josh Robinson into the end zone. “I love to be in those types of situations,” Williams said. “That’s the type of guy I am. I know the offensive line and the rest of the guys were going to help me get through it and they did.” The Bulldogs lost to Arkansas in overtime contests in 1996, 2000 and 2010, all in Starkville, Miss., and had never defeated the Razorbacks in Arkansas. Mississippi State’s best result in the Natural State was a 13-13 tie in 1993. Arkansas still leads the all-time series 15-8-1. The Bulldogs can become bowl eli-
gible with a win over rival Ole Miss on Thanksgiving night in Starkville. “Our guys had a lot working against them today, a bangedup, beat-up team,” Mississippi State coach Dan Mullen said. “A lot of things didn’t go our way. They had years of history going against them, and those guys kept battling and they found a way to win.” Mississippi State had a chance to win the game in regulation, but Devon Bell’s 42-yard field goal drifted wide right with 24 seconds remaining. That came after Arkansas (3-8, 0-7) failed to cash in on its own chance to take the lead late in regulation. With the score tied 17-17, Allen passed to Jeremy Sprinkle for 44 yards to the Mississippi State 12. But Alex Collins fumbled on the next play, and Nickoe Whitley recovered for the Bulldogs at the Arkansas 9.
Arkansas led 10-0 in the first half, but was unable to maintain the lead and lost its eighth consecutive game for the first time in school history. The only game between Arkansas and its first winless SEC season is Friday’s season finale at LSU. After a first half that ended in a 10-10 tie, the Razorbacks took a 17-10 lead on a 22yard run by Julian Horton in the third quarter on an end around. The Bulldogs answered immediately, covering 75 yards in 11 plays, as Russell connected with Jameon Lewis for a 5-yard touchdown on third down to knot the score. The Razorbacks took the opening kick and went 56 yards for a touchdown. After Korliss Marshall’s kick return gave it a short field, Arkansas quickly moved into Mississippi State Please see MSU | 11A
Magee, No. 9 LSU upend Texas A&M BY BRETT MARTEL Associated Press
BATON ROUGE, La. — Les Miles loves calling Death Valley the place opponents’ dreams go to die. The same might someday be said about Johnny Manziel’s bid for a second Heisman Trophy. Terrence Magee piled up a career-high 149 yards rushing, LSU’s defense pulled the plug on Johnny Football and Texas A&M’s video-game offense, and No. 18 LSU energized Tiger Stadium with a commanding 34-10 victory over the ninth-ranked Aggies on Saturday. “We just got punched in the mouth tonight and it wasn’t fun,” Manziel said. “It wasn’t fun to get beat like that. We will see how we handle adversity. This team with a bunch of young guys — we just have to see how they bounce back.” What was likely Manziel’s only visit to Tiger Stadium (he could turn pro next year) was among the worst outings of his otherwise brilliant career. He passed for 224 yards and a TD, but completed only 16 of 41 attempts, was sacked twice and intercepted twice as the Aggies’ road winning streak ended at 10. Two weeks ago, LSU’s
young defense appeared ground down in the second half of a 38-17 loss at Alabama, begging the question of how vulnerable the unit might be against Texas A&M (8-3, 4-3 Southeastern Conference), whose SEC-leading offense came in averaging a whopping 578 yards and 49.2 points per game. Instead, the Tigers (8-3, 4-3) became the first to shut out Manziel in a first quarter since September of 2012, and ended A&M’s 13-game streak of scoring 40 or more points. The Aggies’ point and yardage totals were their lowest since coach Kevin Sumlin arrived last season, when Manziel, the 2012 Heisman Trophy winner, became the starting quarterback as a redshirt freshman. Miles, given the game ball by his players, counted himself among the least surprised by way the Tigers made Manziel’s visit a miserable one. “They look forward to playing a quality opponent with marquee written all over it,” LSU’s coach said. “Competition: It’s a long word and there’s a lot to it. ... This is a team that knows how to play in big games and will fight you.
“The defense rushed and maintained leverage and we put speed on the field and covered,” Miles added. “That’s the kind of LSU defense that we’re used to.” The Tigers gave some credit to Odell Beckham, who’s been named a semifinalist for the Biletnikoff Award, given to the nation’s top receiver. His five catches for 50 yards helped, but it was his work imitating Manziel with the scout team in practice that gave LSU’s defense a good sense of how to contain a dynamic scrambler. “Odell may be faster than the opponent’s quarterback,” Miles said. “He’s as elusive as anybody I’ve ever known.” The Aggies’ Biletnikoff candidate, Mike Evans, was held to four catches for 51 yards by freshman Rashard Robinson, who also made his first career interception. New Orleans Saints coach Sean Payton was among the 92,949 in attendance, eager to get a firsthand look at two of the top quarterbacks in college football. He may have left more impressed with LSU’s Zach Mettenberger, who completed 11-of-20 passes for 193 yards and two touchdowns
without an interception in chilly, wet and windy conditions. He found Jarvis Landry four times for 87 yards, including touchdowns of 40 and 10 yards. LSU piled up 324 yards on 55 carries, with Magee and Kenny Hilliard each powering in for short scores. LSU also outgained Texas A&M in total yards, 517-299. “With the weather conditions tonight, that was something that kind of had to happen,” Magee said. “We wanted to keep Johnny off the field and the only way to do that was to keep the ball on the ground and let the clock run.” LSU finished with a timeof-possession advantage of 40:19 to 19:41. That kept the defense fresh, and it showed. In the first half, the Tigers ended one Aggies drive by pressuring Manziel into an errant pass on a fourth-down stop from the LSU 3. Later, Danielle Hunter’s sack forced A&M to settle for Josh Lambo’s 41-yard field goal. Senior safety Craig Loston intercepted Manziel in the end zone in the fourth quarter. The temperature at kickoff was 51 degrees, with a chilly breeze .
Mississippi falters at home against Tigers BY DAVID BRANDT Associated Press
OXFORD, Miss. — The Missouri Tigers might not have a roster full of superstars. But as a collective they’re an awfully tough bunch to beat, and the Tigers are now one victory away from playing for a Southeastern Conference championship in just their second season in the league. Henry Josey rushed for two touchdowns, Marcus Murphy added another and No. 8 Missouri rolled to a 24-10 victory over No. 24 Mississippi on Saturday night. “To say I’m proud of my football team and my staff would be an understatement,” Missouri coach Gary Pinkel said. “They battle every time they play. They prepare well and focus at a very high level.” The Tigers strolled into a hostile environment at Vaught-Hemingway Stadium and never flinched, jumping
out to a 17-3 lead by halftime for the relatively easy victory. Now the big one awaits for the Tigers (10-1, 6-1 Southeastern Conference). The Tigers host Texas A&M next weekend, with a win clinching the SEC’s East Division title. James Franklin completed 12 of 19 passes for 142 yards and an interception in his first start since a shoulder injury caused him to miss four games. “I thought he did an outstanding job,” Pinkel said. “The guy hadn’t played in six weeks and there was a lot of pressure on him to play well.” The loss snapped a fourgame winning streak for Ole Miss (7-4, 3-4). Bo Wallace threw for 244 yards and an interception, but was battling an illness for much of the game and struggled during the second half. Donte Moncrief caught six passes for 115 yards, but dropped what would have
been a touchdown pass in the fourth quarter. Ole Miss made three trips to the red zone, but managed just three points. “It’s impossible to beat a top 10 team when you get in the red zone and don’t score touchdowns or points,” Ole Miss coach Hugh Freeze said. “... If you don’t score some points in the red zone against that team you aren’t going to win.” It’s the fourth 10-win season for Missouri in the past seven years and was coach Gary Pinkel’s 100th win with the Tigers. The Tigers’ used a deep running back rotation to slowly wear down the Ole Miss defense. Josey had most of the big plays, but Russell Hansbrough and Murphy combined for 99 more yards, helping Missouri shorten the game in the second half with time-consuming drives. Missouri jumped out to a 7-0 lead early in the first quar-
ter after a blistering eightplay, 72-yard drive that took less than three minutes. Andrew Baggett added a 33-yard field goal and Murphy scored on a 3-yard run in the second quarter as the Tigers took a 17-3 halftime lead. The Tigers finished with 485 total yards, including 260 on the ground. “We’re just a focused team,” Missouri linebacker Andrew Wilson said. “The coaches did a good job keeping us focused. We had a great gameplan. We knew what we had to do.” Franklin — making his first start since suffering a shoulder injury Oct. 12 — completed 7 of 7 passes for 89 yards in the first half. The Ole Miss offense had a few opportunities to match Missouri, but kept blowing opportunities in the red zone. The litany of errors included two false start penalties, one blocked field goal attempt and several unsuccessful running plays.
Murray hurts knee, Georgia routs Kentucky BY CHARLES ODUM Associated Press
ATHENS, Ga. — This was supposed to be the night Aaron Murray was celebrated for the toughness that helped him shine as one of the most prolific quarterbacks in SEC history. Instead, Murray had to be carried off the field with a knee injury that coach Mark Richt said sapped much of the joy out of Georgia’s lopsided
win over Kentucky. Murray threw four firsthalf touchdown passes before hurting his left knee, leaving backup Hutson Mason to play the second half in Georgia’s 59-17 rout of Kentucky on Saturday night. Propped up by trainers, Murray couldn’t put weight on his left leg as he was taken to the locker room late in the first half of his final home game.
It was a sobering sight for Richt after Murray made his 52nd consecutive start. “It’s just sickening,” Richt said. “I really had a hard time enjoying the rest of the game. ... It’s kind of a crummy feeling when you think of what Aaron is going through right now.” Todd Gurley ran for 77 yards and had five catches for 90 yards, including touchdown receptions for 16 and
24 yards, for Georgia (7-4, 5-3 Southeastern Conference). Murray, who has the most yards passing and TD passes in SEC history, began limping in the second quarter following a 28-yard run. Already favoring the left knee, Murray left the game after he was hit by defensive end Za’Darius Smith following a pass that was intercepted by Khalid Henderson with 2:17 remaining in the half.
Scoreboard
Sunday, November 24, 2013
Basketball
MSU
NBA standinsg, schedule CONTINUED FROM 10A
territory. Javontee Herndon scored, also on an end around, and Arkansas led 7-0. Zach Hocker added a career-best 54-yard field goal in the second quarter to make it 10-0. “You can see what (Arkansas) is trying to build and how they’re trying to build it,” Mullen said. “They have a tough, physical defensive line that makes plays and a big, physical offensive line.” The Bulldogs countered in the final minutes of the second quarter. Bell’s 24yard field goal got them on the scoreboard with 5:08 left. Russell then found LaDarius Perkins on a play action down the middle of the field for a 30-yard touchdown to pull the Bulldogs even. That touchdown drive began when Arkansas failed to convert on a fake punt.Sam Irwin-Hill was dropped for a 4-yard loss on what was a curious call with the way Arkansas’ defense was playing and having the wind at its back. “Mississippi State runs ‘punt safe’ quite a bit,” Arkansas coach Bret Bielema said. “We thought we had a very, very good look. It was the look that we wanted and we gave it the green light, and obviously missed a critical block. “If I had it to do all over again, I obviously wouldn’t do it.” Russell completed 18 of 28 passes for 263 yards and two scores before leaving the game late in regulation with an apparent shoulder injury. Robinson had 17 carries for 101 yards. Arkansas rushed for 225 yards as a team, spread out among nine ball carriers, but managed only 114 yards passing.
EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Pct GB Toronto 6 7 .462 — Philadelphia 6 9 .400 1 Boston 5 10 .333 2 New York 3 9 .250 2½ Brooklyn 3 9 .250 2½ Southeast Division W L Pct GB Miami 10 3 .769 — Atlanta 8 6 .571 2½ Charlotte 7 7 .500 3½ Washington 5 8 .385 5 Orlando 4 8 .333 5½ Central Division W L Pct GB Indiana 12 1 .923 — Chicago 6 5 .545 5 Detroit 4 8 .333 7½ Cleveland 4 10 .286 8½ Milwaukee 2 10 .167 9½ WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division W L Pct GB San Antonio 12 1 .923 — Dallas 9 5 .643 3½ Houston 9 5 .643 3½ Memphis 7 6 .538 5 New Orleans 6 6 .500 5½ Northwest Division W L Pct GB Portland 11 2 .846 — Oklahoma City 8 3 .727 2 Minnesota 8 7 .533 4 Denver 6 6 .500 4½ Utah 1 13 .071 10½ Pacific Division W L Pct GB L.A. Clippers 9 5 .643 — Golden State 8 5 .615 ½ Phoenix 6 6 .500 2 L.A. Lakers 6 7 .462 2½ Sacramento 4 8 .333 4 ___ Friday’s games Philadelphia 115, Milwaukee 107, OT Phoenix 98, Charlotte 91 Toronto 96, Washington 88 Indiana 97, Boston 82 Atlanta 96, Detroit 89 Minnesota 111, Brooklyn 81 San Antonio 102, Memphis 86 New Orleans 104, Cleveland 100 Dallas 103, Utah 93 Portland 98, Chicago 95 L.A. Lakers 102, Golden State 95 Saturday’s Games L.A. Clippers 103, Sacramento 102 Indiana 106, Philadelphia 98 Washington 98, New York 89 Miami 101, Orlando 99 Boston 94, Atlanta 87 Houston 112, Minnesota 101 Charlotte 96, Milwaukee 72 San Antonio 126, Cleveland 96 Denver 102, Dallas 100 Portland at Golden State, (n) Today’s Games Detroit at Brooklyn, 1 p.m. Chicago at L.A. Clippers, 2:30 p.m. Phoenix at Orlando, 5 p.m. Utah at Oklahoma City, 6 p.m. Sacramento at L.A. Lakers, 8:30 p.m. Monday’s Games Minnesota at Indiana, 6 p.m. Boston at Charlotte, 6 p.m. Phoenix at Miami, 6:30 p.m. Milwaukee at Detroit, 6:30 p.m. Houston at Memphis, 7 p.m. Denver at Dallas, 7:30 p.m. New Orleans at San Antonio, 7:30 p.m. Chicago at Utah, 8 p.m. New York at Portland, 9 p.m.
Friday men’s
Bucknell 77, Albany (NY) 64 Colgate 81, St. Francis (Pa.) 64 Iona 89, George Mason 73 Mount St. Mary’s 68, American U. 64 NJIT 91, Lafayette 88, OT Navy 73, UMBC 58 Radford 69, Binghamton 63 Rhode Island 79, Mass.-Lowell 68 Rider 89, CCSU 73 Sacred Heart 85, Fordham 73 St. Peter’s 67, Fairleigh Dickinson 63 West Virginia 88, Presbyterian 55 William & Mary 72, Rutgers 62 SOUTH Auburn 75, Murray St. 67 Boise St. 100, New Orleans 80 Coll. of Charleston 89, Furman 55 ETSU 66, Stephen F. Austin 58 Florida Gulf Coast 79, Ave Maria 56 Jacksonville 76, Florida A&M 72 Marshall 96, UNC Wilmington 78 Memphis 98, Nicholls St. 59 Mercer 81, Yale 54 Milwaukee 70, Tennessee Tech 63 Old Dominion 86, Georgia Southern 69 SC State 88, Voorhees 74 South Alabama 74, Wright St. 70 Southern Miss. 67, Houston Baptist 62 Virginia 75, Liberty 53 W. Kentucky 67, Samford 64 Winthrop 96, Va. Intermont 62 MIDWEST Austin Peay 78, Montana St. 72 Butler 59, Ball St. 58 Cent. Michigan 90, CS Northridge 76 Cleveland St. 87, Robert Morris 74 Creighton 82, Tulsa 72 Drake 88, Nebraska-Omaha 80 E. Illinois 89, Roosevelt 67 E. Michigan 74, Texas-Arlington 69 Evansville 91, Anderson (Ind.) 68 Green Bay 92, Minn. Duluth 57 Kent St. 102, Niagara 97 Missouri 72, Gardner-Webb 63 Ohio 85, Heidelberg 57 SC-Upstate 72, W. Carolina 58 Saint Louis 74, Bowling Green 47 Stony Brook 67, FAU 61 Toledo 80, Detroit 78 Valparaiso 81, James Madison 49 Wilmington (Ohio) 65, Miami (Ohio) 63 Wisconsin 76, Oral Roberts 67 SOUTHWEST Abilene Christian 78, N. New Mexico 56 New Mexico St. 77, UTEP 68 Princeton 70, Rice 56 UTSA 87, Texas A&M-CC 76 FAR WEST Boston U. 74, UC Irvine 68 Columbia 65, Idaho 60 E. Washington 102, LIU Brooklyn 70 Grand Canyon 78, Lamar 69 N. Arizona 83, San Diego Christian 59 Pepperdine 58, Utah Valley 53 Portland St. 77, SIU-Edwardsville 74 San Jose St. 81, Cal St.-Fullerton 59 UC Davis 64, Loyola of Chicago 61, OT UC Riverside 74, S. Utah 59 Utah 71, Savannah St. 57 Utah St. 87, Mississippi St. 68 TOURNAMENT Coaches vs. Cancer Classic Third Place Seton Hall 68, Virginia Tech 67 Hall of Fame Tip-off-Naismith First Round Louisville 71, Fairfield 57 North Carolina 82, Richmond 72 Belmont 81, Holy Cross 70 Hofstra 81, Hartford 78 Maui Invitational-Conway First Round Coastal Carolina 70, St. Francis (NY) 59 Louisiana-Lafayette 84, Oakland 75 USVI Paradise Jam First Round Loyola Marymount 76, Marist 70 Vanderbilt 75, Morgan St. 66
college scores EAST
Football Saturday’s scores EAST Brown 48, Columbia 7 Bryant 29, CCSU 16 Cornell 42, Penn 41 Dartmouth 28, Princeton 24 Duquesne 33, Monmouth (NJ) 23 Fordham 56, Colgate 19 Georgetown 28, Holy Cross 21 Harvard 34, Yale 7 Lafayette 50, Lehigh 28 Nebraska 23, Penn St. 20, OT New Hampshire 24, Maine 3 Pittsburgh 17, Syracuse 16 St. Francis (Pa.) 23, Robert Morris 3 Stony Brook 24, Albany (NY) 3 Towson 28, James Madison 17 UConn 28, Temple 21 Villanova 35, Delaware 34 SOUTH Alabama 49, Chattanooga 0 Appalachian St. 48, W. Carolina 27 Bethune-Cookman 29, Florida A&M 10 Boston College 29, Maryland 26 Bucknell 35, VMI 23 Campbell 47, Davidson 14 Charlotte 61, Morehead St. 17 Clemson 52, The Citadel 6 Duke 28, Wake Forest 21 E. Illinois 70, UT-Martin 22 East Carolina 42, NC State 28 FAU 55, New Mexico St. 10 Florida St. 80, Idaho 14 Furman 27, Wofford 14 Gardner-Webb 20, Presbyterian 13 Georgia 59, Kentucky 17 Georgia Southern 26, Florida 20 Georgia Tech 66, Alabama A&M 7 Howard 42, Hampton 39, 2OT Jacksonville St. 42, SE Missouri 34 LSU 34, Texas A&M 10 Liberty 56, Charleston Southern 14 Louisville 24, Memphis 17 Marshall 48, FIU 10 Mercer 41, Stetson 14 Miami 45, Virginia 26 Middle Tennessee 42, Southern Miss. 21 Missouri 24, Mississippi 10 Morgan St. 31, Delaware St. 26 Murray St. 34, E. Kentucky 27, OT NC A&T 28, NC Central 0 North Carolina 80, Old Dominion 20 Northwestern St. 40, Stephen F. Austin 27 Richmond 31, William & Mary 20 SC State 17, Norfolk St. 3 SMU 16, South Florida 6 Samford 33, Elon 32 South Alabama 36, Louisiana-Monroe 14 South Carolina 70, Coastal Carolina 10 Tennessee Tech 34, Austin Peay 0 Tulane 45, UTEP 3 Tulsa 24, Louisiana Tech 14 Vanderbilt 14, Tennessee 10 MIDWEST Bowling Green 58, E. Michigan 7 Cent. Michigan 37, UMass 0 Illinois 20, Purdue 16 Iowa 24, Michigan 21 Iowa St. 34, Kansas 0 Michigan St. 30, Northwestern 6 N. Dakota St. 42, South Dakota 0 N. Iowa 28, W. Illinois 13 Notre Dame 23, BYU 13 Ohio St. 42, Indiana 14 Oklahoma 41, Kansas St. 31 S. Dakota St. 42, Youngstown St. 13 S. Illinois 31, Indiana St. 9 Wisconsin 20, Minnesota 7 SOUTHWEST Arkansas St. 35, Georgia St. 33 Cent. Arkansas 49, Sam Houston St. 31 Cincinnati 24, Houston 17 McNeese St. 42, Lamar 38 Mississippi St. 24, Arkansas 17, OT Oklahoma St. 49, Baylor 17 Prairie View 43, Ark.-Pine Bluff 23 UTSA 21, North Texas 13
W. Kentucky 38, Texas St. 7 FAR WEST Arizona 42, Oregon 16 Arizona St. 38, UCLA 33 Cal Poly 42, N. Colorado 14 E. Washington 42, Portland St. 41 Fresno St. 69, New Mexico 28 Montana 28, Montana St. 14 N. Arizona 20, S. Utah 10 Stanford 63, California 13 UC Davis 34, Sacramento St. 7 Utah St. 13, Colorado St. 0 Washington St. 49, Utah 37 Weber St. 32, Idaho St. 7 Wyoming 59, Hawaii 56, OT
NFL schedule AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA New England 7 3 0 .700 254 199 N.Y. Jets 5 5 0 .500 183 268 Miami 5 5 0 .500 213 225 Buffalo 4 7 0 .364 236 273 South W L T Pct PF PA Indianapolis 7 3 0 .700 252 220 Tennessee 4 6 0 .400 227 226 Houston 2 8 0 .200 193 276 Jacksonville 1 9 0 .100 129 318 North W L T Pct PF PA Cincinnati 7 4 0 .636 275 206 Pittsburgh 4 6 0 .400 216 245 Baltimore 4 6 0 .400 208 212 Cleveland 4 6 0 .400 192 238 West W L T Pct PF PA Denver 9 1 0 .900 398 255 Kansas City 9 1 0 .900 232 138 Oakland 4 6 0 .400 194 246 San Diego 4 6 0 .400 228 222 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA Philadelphia 6 5 0 .545 276 260 Dallas 5 5 0 .500 274 258 N.Y. Giants 4 6 0 .400 192 256 Washington 3 7 0 .300 246 311 South W L T Pct PF PA New Orleans 9 2 0 .818 305 196 Carolina 7 3 0 .700 238 135 Tampa Bay 2 8 0 .200 187 237 Atlanta 2 9 0 .182 227 309 North W L T Pct PF PA Detroit 6 4 0 .600 265 253 Chicago 6 4 0 .600 282 267 Green Bay 5 5 0 .500 258 239 Minnesota 2 8 0 .200 240 320 West W L T Pct PF PA Seattle 10 1 0 .909 306 179 San Francisco 6 4 0 .600 247 178 Arizona 6 4 0 .600 214 212 St. Louis 4 6 0 .400 224 234 Sunday’s Games Minnesota at Green Bay, Noon Jacksonville at Houston, Noon San Diego at Kansas City, Noon Chicago at St. Louis, Noon Pittsburgh at Cleveland, Noon Tampa Bay at Detroit, Noon N.Y. Jets at Baltimore, Noon Carolina at Miami, Noon Tennessee at Oakland, 4:05 p.m. Indianapolis at Arizona, 4:05 p.m. Dallas at N.Y. Giants, 4:25 p.m. Denver at New England, 8:30 p.m. Open: Buffalo, Cincinnati, Philadelphia, Seattle Monday’s Game San Francisco at Washington, 7:40 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 28 Green Bay at Detroit, 11:30 a.m. Oakland at Dallas, 3:30 p.m. Pittsburgh at Baltimore, 7:30 p.m.
Hockey NHL standings, schedule EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division
Daily Corinthian • 11A GP W L OT Pts GF GA 23 15 6 2 32 64 43 23 14 8 1 29 66 54 23 14 8 1 29 67 61 24 13 9 2 28 64 51 24 10 7 7 27 60 69 23 9 10 4 22 67 73 24 6 13 5 17 53 80 24 5 18 1 11 43 76 Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Pittsburgh 24 15 9 0 30 69 54 Washington 24 12 10 2 26 72 68 N.Y. Rangers 23 12 11 0 24 48 54 New Jersey 22 9 8 5 23 48 53 Philadelphia 22 10 10 2 22 49 53 Carolina 23 8 10 5 21 45 66 Columbus 23 8 12 3 19 56 71 N.Y. Islanders 24 8 13 3 19 68 82 WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA St. Louis 22 16 3 3 35 79 50 Chicago 23 15 4 4 34 85 69 Minnesota 24 15 5 4 34 64 55 Colorado 21 16 5 0 32 68 45 Dallas 22 11 9 2 24 61 65 Nashville 23 11 10 2 24 52 67 Winnipeg 25 10 11 4 24 66 75 Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Anaheim 26 17 6 3 37 80 65 San Jose 22 14 3 5 33 77 51 Los Angeles 23 15 6 2 32 64 50 Phoenix 23 14 5 4 32 78 74 Vancouver 24 12 8 4 28 64 63 Calgary 23 8 11 4 20 64 84 Edmonton 24 7 15 2 16 64 84 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. ––– Saturday’s Games Minnesota 3, Winnipeg 2, SO Toronto 2, Washington 1, SO Boston 3, Carolina 2, OT Montreal 3, Pittsburgh 2 Ottawa 4, Detroit 2 Philadelphia 5, N.Y. Islanders 2 N.Y. Rangers 2, Nashville 0 Anaheim 4, Phoenix 2 St. Louis 6, Dallas 1 Chicago at Vancouver, (n) Colorado at Los Angeles, (n) New Jersey at San Jose, (n) Today’s Games Detroit at Buffalo, 4 p.m. Ottawa at Carolina, 4 p.m. Monday’s Games Pittsburgh at Boston, 6 p.m. Columbus at Toronto, 6 p.m. Winnipeg at New Jersey, 6 p.m. N.Y. Rangers at Tampa Bay, 6:30 p.m. Philadelphia at Florida, 6:30 p.m. Minnesota at St. Louis, 7 p.m. Phoenix at Nashville, 7 p.m. Chicago at Edmonton, 8:30 p.m. Los Angeles at Vancouver, 9 p.m. Boston Toronto Tampa Bay Montreal Detroit Ottawa Florida Buffalo
Transactions Saturday’s deals BASEBALL American League TEXAS RANGERS — Agreed to terms with RHP Colby Lewis on a minor league contract. FOOTBALL National Football League GREEN BAY PACKERS — Placed CBs Casey Hayward and James Nixon on injured reserve. Activated S Sean Richardson and DE Jerel Worthy from the PUP list. NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS — Released RB Leon Washington. Signed DB Justin Green from the practice squad. OAKLAND RAIDERS — Signed WR Greg Jenkins from the practice squad. ST. LOUIS RAMS — Placed CB Cortland Finnegan and QB Brady Quinn on injured reserve. Activated S T.J. McDonald from injured reserve. Signed CB Quinton Pointer from the practice squad.
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12A • Sunday, November 24, 2013 • Daily Corinthian
Community Events Reminder Events need to be submitted at least two weeks prior to the event. Community events publishes on Wednesdays and Sundays and on Friday if space is available.
Garbage pickup For county residential garbage collection during Thanksgiving week, Alcorn County will pick up the Tuesday, Nov. 26, and Wednesday, Nov. 27, routes on Tuesday, Nov. 26. The Thursday, Nov. 28, and Friday, Nov. 29, routes will be picked up on Wednesday, Nov. 27. The Monday, Nov. 25, route will be picked up on the normal schedule.
Michie Celebration At the Nov. 25 Ramer vs. Michie junior high basketball game, Michie School will celebrate the school’s mascot of 64 years. All Michie Blue Devils are encouraged to attend. Honored guests will be members of Michie High School’s graduating classes and basketball teams from 1929-1969, MHS present and past administrators, coaches, school board members and Michie City officials. Activities will follow the girl’s basketball game with a hospitality room for the honored guests. The event is sponsored by the City of Michie.
Sports Ministry Jericho Sports Ministry at Tate Baptist Church announces open sign ups for the upcoming basketball season. Cost is $35 for each player (includes jersey). Ages are from 4 years to 16
years old. Practices will begin on December 9. Season starts January 4, lasting six weeks. Some games will be played on Friday night this year to accommodate the increased numbers of players. Mandatory player evaluations will be on Dec. 2 or 3 from 6-8 pm at Tate Baptist Church. For more information stop by or call Tate Baptist Church at 286-2935 or Dr. Mike Weeden’s office at 286-8860 for sign-up or more information. Sign-Up deadline is November 30.
Health careers Magnolia Regional Health Center will be offering sessions on how to prepare for a career in the health care field. Participants will receive information on the skills and behavior necessary to obtain a job in today’s workplace. It is open to anyone in the Crossroads area age 17 and up. Topics include interviewing, applications, resume, dress, ethics and more. Call 662-293-1200 to enroll. The classes will be held from 3 - 6:30 p.m. and available dates include Dec. 12 and Jan. 9.
Santa Visits Once again, Santa, Mrs. Santa,and the Elves will be in the outdoor Christmas Village in the Garden at the Generals Quarters at 924 Filmore St. downtown across from City Library, on Sat. Dec. 7, from 12:30 pm until 5 p.m., just before the parade starts. Bring the kids & camera for FREE family fun brought to you by Alcorn County Patriots. For info call
Bobby McDaniel 662415-6475 or Jay Anthony 662-286-3016.
Open house The Alcorn County Welcome Center will have its Annual Holiday Open House from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. on Monday, Dec. 2. Refreshments will be served at noon and Kay Bain will perform.
Pictures with Santa The Alcorn Central High School Fellowship of Christian Athletes will host pictures with Santa on Wednesday, Dec. 11 in the high school lobby from 8:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Pictures are $5 cash or checks payable to ACHS. All profits will go to FCA and the Lighthouse Foundation Toy Store. For more information call ACHS at 662-286-8720.
Farmington Parade The Farmington Christmas Parade will be Friday, Dec. 13, 2013, starting at 6 p.m. Registration forms are available at Farmington City Hall. The entrance fee is two cans of food to be distributed in the community. Bring entrance fee to Farmington City Hall 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday.
Lions Club The Corinth Breakfast Lions Club meets the first and third Monday of each month at 7 a.m. at Martha’s Menu.
Free Yoga Classes River Yoga, a ministry of River of Life Worship Center, has started a
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free Thankful Thursdays Yoga Class which will continue until Dec. 19. Class times are 6 p.m. They are free and open to anyone. The worship center is located behind Harper Square Shopping Center in Corinth. For more information contact Mary Killough at 622-4156216.
Candy Sale The Corinth Breakfast Lions Club is selling tins of King Leo Stick Candy for a fundraising project. These make a great gift for family, friends and coworkers. The sales support the club’s programs providing eyeglasses, eye surgery and hearing aids for those that can’t afford them. Tins are $10 each. Call 287-6799 or 603-5121 to order.
Christmas Concert “It’s the Most Wonderful Time of the Year,” the annual Christmas concert organized by the Corinth Area Arts Council, is set for 7 p.m. Dec. 3 at the Corinth Coliseum Civic Center on Taylor Street. Proceeds benefit upkeep of the historic theater building.
Little Rock Trip The McNairy County Senior Center is sponsoring a two-day getaway to Little Rock, Ark. on Dec. 3-4. Cost is $249 per person based on double occupancy and includes charter bus, four meals and one night’s lodging. The tour includes a visit to the Clinton Library, dinner theater, guided tour of the town and a tour and Christmas dinner the Marsgate Plantation. If interested contact Cindy at 731-632-0302 ASAP.
Excel By 5
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Excel By 5 is an innovative early childhood certification that emphasizes the important roles parents and early childcare educators play in the lives of children during their most formative years, ages 0-5 years old. It is a grass roots organization of volunteers and community leaders. The Excel By 5 team identifies and addresses children’s health issues by support families and assisting early care and education centers. Its mission is to give every child a chance to live up to his or her potential. Excel By 5 is looking for qualified and enthusiastic volunteers interested in art, music, literacy and early education for events at childcare centers, family community events and health fair events. If you would like to volunteer and mentor parents and children ages 0-5 years old, then contact Susan O’Connell at 662-286-6401 or visit our link at www.excelby5. com to learn more about The Corinth-Alcorn County Excel By 5.
Friday night music
Karaoke/ dance night VFW Post No. 3962 hosts a Karaoke Night every Friday at the post on Purdy School Rd. in Corinth. Karaoke begins at 8 p.m. with music by D.J. Lanny Cox. Lanny Cox also provides music at the VFW on Saturday Dance Night which begins at 8 p.m.
‘Just Plain Country’ Just Plain Country performs at the Tishomingo County Fairgrounds in Iuka every Saturday from 7-10 p.m. Good family
■ There is music every Friday night with the band, The Renegade, from 7-10 p.m. at the Guntown Community Center. This is a familyfriendly event. Joe Rickman and band will be performing country and gospel music at the American Legion building in Iuka every second and fourth Friday of the month at 7 p.m. This will be a familyfriendly event. Donations will be accepted.
Wreaths Across America American Legion Post 6 is remembering the sacrifices many have made to insure the freedom of Americans with the annual Wreaths Across America project. A ceremony to lay wreaths at the National Ceremony is set for Dec. 14 at 11 a.m. Cost is $15 per wreath with each sponsorship tax deductible. Specific grave orders can also be placed and are not limited to the Corinth National Cemetery. Deadline to place an order is Nov. 23. For more information contact ladies auxiliary member Carlean Parker at 662-462-3443 or carleanparker@yahoo.com.
Quilt fundraiser A quilt made by the Cross City Piecemakers Quilt Guild is up for grabs in support of the ongoing efforts to preserve the VerandahCurlee House Museum. Chances will be sold and can be purchased at the Corinth Area Convention and Visitors Bureau.
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Daily Corinthian • Sunday, November 24, 2013 • 13A
Study: Nuclear force feeling ‘burnout’ from work BY ROBERT BURNS AP National Security Writer
WASHINGTON — Key members of the Air Force’s nuclear missile force are feeling “burnout” from what they see as exhausting, unrewarding and stressful work, according to an unpublished study obtained by The Associated Press. The finding by researchers for RAND Corp. adds to indications that trouble inside the nuclear missile force runs deeper and wider than officials have acknowledged. The study, provided to the AP in draft form, also cites heightened levels of misconduct like spousal abuse and says court-martial rates in the nuclear missile force in 2011 and 2012 were more than twice as high as in the overall Air Force. These indicators add a new dimension to an emerging picture of malaise and worse inside the intercontinental ballistic missile force, an arm of the Air Force with a proud heritage but an uncertain future. Late last year the Air Force directed RAND, a federally funded research house, to conduct a threemonth study of attitudes among the men and
women inside the ICBM force. It found a toxic mix of frustration and aggravation, heightened by a sense of being unappreciated, overworked, micromanaged and at constant risk of failure. Remote and rarely seen, the ICBM force gets little public attention. The AP, however, this year has documented a string of missteps that call into question the management of a force that demands strict obedience to procedures. Gen. Mark Welsh, the Air Force chief of staff, said in an interview Wednesday that he sees no evidence of fundamental problems in the ICBM force. “There are issues like there are in every other mission area we have in the United States military, and we deal with the issues as they come up, and we deal with them pretty aggressively. But as far as getting the job done, they’re getting the job done — they do a great job of that every single day,” Welsh said. The AP was advised in May of the confidential RAND study, shortly after it was completed, by a person who said it should be made public to
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improve understanding of discontent within the ICBM force. After repeated inquiries, and shortly after the AP filed a Freedom of Information Act request for a PowerPoint outline, the Air Force provided it last Friday and arranged for RAND officials and two senior Air Force generals to explain it. Based on confidential small-group discussions last winter with about 100 launch control officers, security forces, missile maintenance workers and others who work in the missile fields — plus responses to confidential questionnaires — RAND found low job satisfaction and workers distressed by staff shortages, equipment flaws and what they felt were stifling management tactics. It also found what it termed “burnout.” In this context, “burnout” means feeling exhausted, cynical and ineffective on the job, according to Chaitra Hardison, RAND’s senior behavioral scientist and lead author of the study. She used a system of measure that asks people to rate on a scale of 1 to 7 — from “never” to “always” — how often in their work they experience certain feelings, including tired-
ness, hopelessness and a sense of being trapped. An average score of 4 or above is judged to put the person in the “burnout” range. One service member said: “We don’t care if things go properly. We just don’t want to get in trouble.” That person and all others who participated in the study were granted confidentiality by RAND in order to speak freely. The 13 launch officers who volunteered for the study scored an average of 4.4 on the burnout scale, tied for highest in the group. A group of 20 junior enlisted airmen assigned to missile security forces also scored 4.4. This has always been considered hard duty, in part due to the enormous responsibility of safely operating nuclear missiles, the most destructive weapons ever invented. In its Cold War heyday, an ICBM force twice as big as today’s was designed to deter the nuclear Armageddon that at times seemed all too possible amid a standoff with the Soviet Union and a relentless race to build more bombs. Today the nuclear threat is no longer promi-
nent among America’s security challenges. The arsenal has shrunk — in size and stature. The Air Force struggles to demonstrate the relevance of its aging ICBMs in a world worried more about terrorism and cyberwar and accustomed to 21st century weapons such as drones. This new reality is not lost on the young men and women who in most cases were “volunteered” for ICBM jobs. Andrew Neal, 28, who completed a four-year tour in September with F.E. Warren’s 90th Missile Wing in Wyoming, where he served as a Minuteman 3 launch officer, said he saw marked swings in morale. “Morale was low at times — very low,” Neal said in an interview, though he added that his comrades worked hard. Neal says his generation has a different view of nuclear weapons. “We all acknowledge their importance, but at the same time we really don’t think the mission is that critical,” Neal said, adding that his peers see the threat of full-scale nuclear war as “simply nonexistent.” So “we practice for all-out nuclear war, but we know that isn’t go-
ing to happen.” Every hour of every day, 90 launch officers are on duty in underground command posts that control Minuteman 3 missiles. Inside each buried capsule are two officers responsible for 10 missiles, each in a separate silo, armed with one or more nuclear warheads and ready for launch within minutes. They await a presidential launch order that has never arrived in the more than 50-year history of American ICBMs. The duty can be tiresome, with long hours, limited opportunities for career advancement and the constraints of life in remote areas of the northcentral U.S., like Minot Air Force Base, N.D. In his doctoral dissertation, published in 2010 after he finished a four-year tour with the 91st Missile Wing at Minot, Christopher J. Ewing said 71 of the 99 launch officers he surveyed there had not chosen that assignment. RAND was looking for possible explanations for a trend worrying the Air Force — higher levels of personal and professional misconduct within the ICBM force relative to the rest of the Air Force.
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14A • Sunday, November 24, 2013 • Daily Corinthian
Ex-AP writer recalls serving as Oswald pallbearer BY MIKE COCHRAN Associated Press
FORT WORTH, Texas — On a gloomy November afternoon, I helped carry the inexpensive wooden casket of Lee Harvey Oswald to a grave on a slight rise dotted with dying grass. With no mourners around to serve as pallbearers, it was a task that fell to me and a few other reporters covering the funeral of John F. Kennedy’s assassin. Fifty years later, I remain a reluctant and minor footnote in American history. It was a story that began with a tip: Oswald would
With no mourners around to serve as pallbearers, it was a task that fell to me and a few other reporters covering the funeral of John F. Kennedy’s assassin. Fifty years later, I remain a reluctant and minor footnote in American history. be buried at Rose Hill Cemetery in Fort Worth, where he had spent part of his childhood, just one day after nightclub owner Jack Ruby shot and killed him during a jail transfer on Nov. 24, 1963, itself
just two days after Kennedy’s death. As the Fort Worth correspondent for The Associated Press, I drew the assignment. I arrived to discover dozens of police and fed-
I arrived to discover dozens of police and federal agents, writers and photographers, but no mourners waiting to bid Oswald goodbye or good riddance. eral agents, writers and photographers, but no mourners waiting to bid Oswald goodbye or good riddance. A police escort delivered Oswald’s casket in the early afternoon. Much later, officers arrived with his family: mother Marguerite, brother Robert, widow Marina and her two
daughters, June Lee, 2, and infant Rachel. No one else would follow; even the minister failed to show. Shaking his head ever so slightly, Jerry Flemmons of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram turned to me and said, “Cochran, if we’re gonna write a story about the burial of Lee Harvey
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Oswald, we’re gonna have to bury the son of a bitch ourselves.” Sure enough, officials asked the gathered reporters to serve as pallbearers. I was among the first they asked, my reply not just “No!” but “Hell no!” Then Preston McGraw of United Press International stepped forward and volunteered, and with my top competition for scoops accepting the duty, I realized my error and joined McGraw and other reporters. The ceremony itself was as brief as it was simple. The Rev. Louis Saunders, executive secretary of the Fort Worth Council of Churches, had been drafted to fill in for the missing minister. His words — “we are not here to judge, only to commit for burial Lee Harvey Oswald” — were barely audible, mingled with muffled sobs by Oswald’s mother and widow. Her eyes red and swollen, Marina Oswald stepped beside her husband’s casket and quietly whispered something. Not long after the nation’s slain president was laid to rest at Arlington National Cemetery with tearful family members and millions of television viewers around the world looking on, Oswald’s body was lowered into his grave at 4:28 p.m. For years, I would continue to report on the assassination, interviewing Oswald’s mother, investigating conspiracy theories and writing stories on the anniversary of that dreadful day in Dallas. For one of the first of those anniversary stories, I wanted to interview Oswald’s widow. She had remarried, moved to suburban Dallas and rarely spoke to reporters. Her new husband had reportedly brandished a pistol and chased one away. Early on a cloudy November morning, I staked out their house and trudged up the steps after he left for work. I had not called ahead, but identified myself as an AP reporter when Marina Oswald opened the door. “I am no longer news,” she said, making it clear she did not intend to talk with me. She was slim and blonde, with arresting eyes of an intense bluegreen and a distinctive Russian accent. She was 24 and I must have stared like a smitten dolt. “Is something wrong?” she asked. Embarrassed, I babbled something about not having seen her since that day at Rose Hill. “You were there?” she asked. I told her I was a pallbearer. Surprised, she said the least she could do was invite me in for coffee. Several hours later, we were still talking and smoking. Denied cigarettes by Oswald during their marriage, she was now a chain smoker. “Have you ever tried to analyze yourself?” she asked me at one point, then added: “It’s very hard to do.” Asked about the Warren Commission’s conclusion that her husband was the lone assassin, she said: “I think about it a lot. I try to forget. It is very difficult. It is like a nightmare. ... I have nightmares.” Years later, in 1983, when working on a story about the 20th anniversary, I interviewed Marina Oswald for the second and last time. She was no less candid and still a heavy smoker. “For a while I thought it would all blow over, just go away,” she said. “But now I accept the fact that I must live with this the rest of my life. “I may still be naive, but I’m not stupid.” (Mike Cochran was AP’s Fort Worth correspondent in 1963 and retired from the company in 1999.)
Daily Corinthian • Sunday, November 24, 2013 • 15A
Experts: HealthCare.gov fix needs time, money BY BREE FOWLER
“Will it eventually work? Yes, because they have to make it work. But it’ll be very expensive.”
AP Technology Writer
NEW YORK — Technology experts say healing what ails the Healthcare.gov website will be a tougher task than the Obama administration acknowledges. “It’s going to cost a lot of tax dollars to get this done,” says Bill Curtis, senior vice president and chief scientist at CAST, a French software analysis company with offices in the U.S. Curtis says programmers and systems analysts start fixing troubled websites by addressing the glitches they can see. But based on his analysis of the site, he believes the ongoing repairs are likely to reveal even deeper problems, making it tough to predict when all the site’s issues will be resolved. “Will it eventually work? Yes, because they have to make it work,” he says. “But it’ll be very expensive.” Curtis and other technology executives say the site’s problems are the result of poor management of its many working parts. They also believe, as Congressional testimony has revealed, the site suffered from a lack of testing once all its systems were in place. The federal health insurance exchange website —which cost taxpayers more than $600 million to build, according to the Government Accountability Office — has been crippled by technical problems since its Oct. 1 launch. Since then, everyone from top White House officials to the contractors who worked on the site have been called before congressional committees to determine what went wrong and who is to blame.
Bill Curtis Senior vice president and chief scientist at CAST The White House originally promised to have the site running smoothly by the end of November. But at a news conference last week, President Obama said he couldn’t guarantee that the site will be completely bug free by then. The HealthCare.gov site is supposed to serve as a marketplace where people can enter their personal information, search and sign up for required health care coverage. But the site is a patchwork quilt of sorts. It pulls together a slew of contributions from various government contractors and attempts to join the structure with the systems of participating insurance companies. Experts say the amount of information coursing through HealthCare.gov dwarfs that of any other government website, making it more similar to a high-traffic e-commerce operation such as Amazon.com or eBay. They contend the government didn’t design the site with the kind of retail-like infrastructure it needs to keep up with demand and failed to knit its pieces together in an efficient way. Curtis says visible parts of the website’s programming code reveal a host of analytic and data coordination failures — a red flag that the site wasn’t designed by people with a lot of experience building high-traffic websites. He notes that government projects are typi-
Shop offers tattoos for tips Associated Press
BERWICK, Pa. — The owner of a Pennsylvania tattoo shop that was broken into is putting up an unusual reward for information leading to arrests — free tattoos and piercings for life. Brandon George of Permanently Scarred Tattoos in Berwick posted the offer on his Facebook page after he found the door kicked in Thursday morn-
ing and a TV and other gear stolen. He said that the breakin cost him several thousand dollars. George says he thinks more than one person was involved because it would take several people to move his 70-inch TV and other equipment. As for the tattoo and piercing offer, he says, “I’d do that in a heartbeat. That offer is good.”
cally awarded to the lowest bid, a factor that limits the amount of money a contractor can make. As a result, bid-winners don’t always assign their top people to those jobs. Himanshu Sareen, CEO of Icreon Tech, a New York-based web and mobile design and development firm, says the government has made some progress fixing the site in recent weeks, but there are still big problems. He worries that the website is operating at half the capacity that it needs to. Indeed, fewer than
“If they ultimately get the website working, it’ll just be another thing that people who want it to fail will bring up. I don’t think this story has legs beyond that.” Wally Krantz Creative director for The Brand Union 27,000 people signed up for insurance through the federal website during the first month of open enrollment in the 36 states, according to federal health officials. Nearly 1 million more applied for coverage and were waiting to finalize decisions. Sareen says he’s shocked that so few people have been able to sign up. He says the government should focus on fixing the website’s telephone support centers,
the place where many frustrated insurance seekers are looking for help. Michael Smith, a vice president of product development and operations for Compuware Corp., says the site’s operations have improved significantly. Recent testing of HealthCare.gov’s visible parts done by Compuware APM show seven states with unacceptable response times, down from 26 states on Oct. 25. Even so, Smith says
the government needs to inform the public that it takes time and patience to fix problem websites. “They’re building something that’s never been built before, so there’s no prescription for how to do it,” Smith says. And there’s no better way to improve public opinion than to fix the site as quickly as possible, says Wally Krantz, creative director for The Brand Union, a global brand strategy consultancy that works with clients ranging from Time Warner Cable to The Coca-Cola Co. Krantz says people will forget about its technical problems once they get their insurance coverage. “If they ultimately get the website working, it’ll just be another thing that people who want it to fail will bring up,” Krantz says. “I don’t think this story has legs beyond that.”
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16A â&#x20AC;˘ Sunday, November 24, 2013 â&#x20AC;˘ Daily Corinthian
Congress honors American Indian code talkers BY HENRY C. JACKSON Associated Press
WASHINGTON â&#x20AC;&#x201D; For decades, the wartime service of 96-year-old Edmond Harjo and other American Indian â&#x20AC;&#x153;code talkersâ&#x20AC;? was something that wasnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t even officially acknowledged, let alone publically recognized. But on Wednesday, Harjo sat in the Capitolâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Emancipation Hall soaking in a standing ovation from hundreds of people â&#x20AC;&#x201D; after an introduction from House Speaker John Boehner. Harjo, a member of the Seminole Nation of Oklahoma, is one of the last surviving members of a group of American Indians who used their native language to outwit the enemy and protect U.S. battlefield communications during World Wars I and II. In a ceremony Wednesday, congressional leaders formally awarded the Congressional Gold Medal to American Indians known as code talkers hon-
oring the service of 33 tribes. From his seat, Lyle Cook watched the applause for Harjo and a procession of speeches proudly, with a lump in his throat. Cook is a member of the Cheyenne River Sioux in South Dakota. He said all he could think about were members of his tribe who served in World Wars I and II but didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t live to receive the formal recognition that has been more than 70 years in coming. â&#x20AC;&#x153;It is wonderful, but it is a bittersweet moment,â&#x20AC;? said Cook, 52, an Army veteran. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I wish they were here.â&#x20AC;? Code talkers were represented Wednesday by tribal delegations, many in traditional dress, who packed Emancipation Hall. They represented 33 tribes from states including Arizona, Iowa, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, Oklahoma, North Dakota, South Dakota and Wisconsin. Members of American Indi-
an tribes heroically exchanged sensitive military information by speaking to each other in their native tongues on the battlefield, eluding enemies trying to break U.S. military codes and dramatically speeding up the militaryâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s ability to communicate. Rep. Ron Kind, D-Wis., said the critical World War II battle of Iwo Jima would have been a far longer, and bloodier, engagement had it not been for the composed work of American Indians during the conflict. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Over 800 battle field communications went out with perfect accuracy,â&#x20AC;? Kind said of Iwo Jima. â&#x20AC;&#x153;It led to a quicker end to that conflict and it saved lives.â&#x20AC;? Their distinctive work during both world wars went unrecognized for decades in part because the military, which wanted to maintain its advantage, only declassified the program in 1968. Since then, formal recognition of the programâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s impor-
tance has come slowly. Congress awarded the Congressional Gold Medal to Navajo code talkers in 2000, then recognized others in 2008. But lawmakers from South Dakota, Oklahoma and other states have long pressed for more tribes to be formally recognized for their wartime contributions. Speaking Wednesday, Sen. Tim Johnson, D-S.D., said heâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;d spent more than 10 years pursuing more acknowledgment and was grateful to finally bring attention to groups that have studiously avoided publicity. â&#x20AC;&#x153;These men did not seek the limelight,â&#x20AC;? Johnson said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;And there is no question that their contributions were unparalleled.â&#x20AC;? One by one on Wednesday, members of Congress came to the stage to praise the bravery of the code talkers, some as young as 15 years old, who volunteered to serve on battlefields in Europe and Asia. They
credited them with saving thousands of lives, and praised their abiding sense of patriotism. Rep. Tom Cole, R-Okla., said the code talkers served bravely, behind enemy lines, even though they were â&#x20AC;&#x153;often barred from full participation in American life.â&#x20AC;? â&#x20AC;&#x153;They saved lives and they won battles,â&#x20AC;? said Cole, himself a member of the Chickasaw Nation. Boehner told the story of two American Indians, serving in the European theater, who did not know each other. They began to speak a tribal language to each other and their commanding officer overheard them. â&#x20AC;&#x153;He immediately put them to work on opposite ends of a radio,â&#x20AC;? Boehner said. As speakers finished their remarks, Boehner called representatives of the 33 tribes to the stage to receive their medals. The crowd delivered a thunderous standing ovation.
MAGNOLIA REGIONAL HEALTH CENTER would like to thank our community for all of your support over the last year. To show our heartfelt appreciation, please join us at the 2013 Winter Wonderland. Weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll have snacks, goodies, toys, games, and a very special guest. Thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s right, Santa will be joining us to check his list twice and find out whoâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s been naughty and nice! We will also hold a silent auction of beautifully decorated Christmas Trees, Holiday Wreaths and Holiday Decor. All proceeds benefit the Magnolia Foundation.
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Corinthian Clearance Center 2676 S. Harper Rd. â&#x20AC;˘ Corinth, MSâ&#x20AC;˘ (662) 696-3000 â&#x20AC;˘ between Wal-Mart and Hwy 45 By blinking light across from Tecumseh
History
1B • Daily Corinthian
Sunday, November 24, 2013
Corinth’s Last Commander Gen. John Dunlap Stevenson closed out Union occupation Tell the truth, the first roots, John had been the thing you did was look at pet of his grandmother the enormous mustache Ruth Lamb, a devout on the guy in the picture. Methodist and abolitionThat photo could be a ist, and she had much great lead-in for a story to do with forming the about outlandish Civil young man’s convictions. War facial hair, but it is When it came time to choose sides, John not. Maybe next chose to wear blue. week. Missouri was a Instead I want border state and to tell you about as such there were the man behind plenty of men the whiskers, a willing to supface that was well known on the Tom port either side. the 1st day of streets of Corinth Parson On June, 1861, less back in the day. than two months John Dunlap Park Ranger after Fort Sumter, Stevenson was John Stevenson about as Southern as you could get. He was was appointed Colonel of born in the Shenandoah the 7th Missouri Infantry. Valley of Virginia in 1821 Despite his experience and when it was time for and willingness to serve, school he was shipped off it would be a long while to Columbia, South Caro- before he saw any action. The regiment was shuflina. He returned home long enough to pass the fled from post to post in bar exam and then head- Central Missouri for the ed west to the wilds of better part of ten months and was finally shipped Missouri. He became a lawyer up the Tennessee River to in Franklin County and Pittsburg Landing. They when he was 25 he mar- arrived during the second ried Miss Hannah Lechter week of May, 1862, when of Lexington, VA. She was most of the army was fully the first cousin of John involved with the Siege of Lechter, the Confederate Corinth. Instead of joingovernor of the “Old Do- ing in the action they were minion” during the Civil left at the Shiloh battlefield and Col. Stevenson War. John’s first taste of was placed in command military life came in 1846 of the District of Savanwhen he became captain nah. Orders to break camp of a company of the First Missouri Regiment of came in mid-August and Mounted Volunteers. He the regiment was sent fought well in the Battle off to Jackson, TN where of Chihuahua (Sacramen- they became part of the to River) and spent most Union garrison. It was of the war in New Mexico. more of the same; boring When he came home, duty with no hope of any John entered the world action. That is until the 3rd of politics and was a frequent member of the Mis- of October when Earl souri legislature; he even Van Dorn’s army began spent a term as speaker of their attack on Corinth. General Grant was at his the Missouri Senate. As his state drew ever headquarters in Jackson closer to secession, John at the time and he threw surprised many folks for together a small brigade taking a stand as an un- consisting of the 7th Misapologetic Union man. souri and the 1st Kansas Despite his rich Southern and placed Stevenson in
Gen. John Dunlap Stevenson charge as brigade commander. They hopped on a train and made it as far as Bethel where they met up with more troops and division commander, Brig. Gen. James B. McPherson. The relief column made it to Corinth on October 4th a few hours after the battle had ended. The following morning, however, they led the Union pursuit of Van Dorn’s retreating army. Late in the afternoon they came upon Col. John S. Bowen’s Confederate brigade at Young’s Bridge on the Tuscumbia River. There was a nasty little fight, the last engagement of the Corinth Campaign. Three weeks later John was a brigadier general. Stevenson and his men returned to Jackson, but not for long. From November through the following July they were involved with all of the operations of Grant’s campaign to take Vicksburg. His attack against the Confederate left flank at the Battle of Champion Hill was considered the key to the Union victory. Not long after Vicksburg fell Stevenson was
given the reins to a reinforced division and was sent on a successful expedition to Monroe, Louisiana. Again, he did well and at the end of this assignment he was slated for duty at Corinth. It was the 12th of December 1863 and the city welcomed Gen. Stevenson, the final garrison commander of the District of Corinth. John was busy directing a number of major cavalry expeditions out of Camp Davies, but the truth was, Corinth was about to drop off the military map. Gen. William T. Sherman was preparing for his upcoming Meridian Campaign and a part of the plan was to shut down Corinth and use all of the garrison troops elsewhere. The city was no longer the strategically important rail hub it had once been and was scheduled to be abandoned by the North. Before that could happen there was a lot of work to be done. First, the Contraband Camp had to be emptied of its residents and sent to a new camp in Memphis. Most of the folks at the
camp were the families of the men serving in the 55th and 110th U.S.C.T. Their goods were carted to the railroad depot and trains sped them on their way to a camp that was every bit as nasty and squalid as Corinth had been organized. Then work crews were sent to all of the outlying camps to salvage as much lumber as they could and haul it to the trains. The Contraband Camp, Camp Davies, Camp Montgomery, Camp Robinett; they all came down. Anything that could not be hauled off was burned. The prison stockade around the Methodist Church could not be dismantled and both went up in flames. On the 25th of January the last of the Union troops headed west to Memphis. But not General Stevenson; he was sent east to Decatur, Alabama. There was a massive build-up of troops and supplies occurring in Chattanooga in preparation for the spring offensive into Georgia. Men and materials passed through Decatur in large numbers and it was John’s job to keep the Confederate cavalry away and the railroad tracks open. John waited patiently for his own orders to report to Chattanooga and a combat assignment, orders that never came. Apparently John had a falling out with General Sherman who was passing out the assignments for the upcoming expedition. He believed he had been slighted and in April of ’64 resigned his commission and left the army. He was not destined to stay a civilian for long. In August there was a chance meeting with Lieutenant General Grant in the lobby of Willard’s Hotel in Washington. Grant had a great deal of respect for the Missouri lawyer and within days John was reinstated as a brigadier general with orders to command the
District of Harper’s Ferry. It was a real plum of an assignment. Harper’s Ferry was at the lower (northern) end of the Shenandoah Valley and was the hub and base of operations for General Sheridan’s campaign to take the strategic valley. Though it was not a combat assignment, John was immersed in the operations and played a key role in the eventual Union victory. The end of the war found him in North Georgia where he administered the early operations of Reconstruction in the area. In 1866 his talents were recognized when the down-sized military appointed him Colonel in the Regular Army and set him at the head of the 30th U.S. Infantry. It was a true statement of his abilities as a soldier since most of the good jobs in the post-war army went to West Pointers. John retired in 1871 with the rank of brigadier and returned to his law practice in St. Louis. He held a number of minor public positions and passed away in 1897 with his beloved Hannah and two of his children by his side. Seeing as he was the last Union commander in Corinth it might be easy to blame him for the burning of the Corona College. You could never convince me he was responsible. Corinth resident W.E. Small told how the college was set afire hours after the Federals had pulled out of town. It was undoubtedly some random act of violence rather than a military order. His obituary read, “His heart was tender and loving, and the tear drops that would trickle down his weather-worn cheeks when recounting the pathetic incidents of the war told of qualities rarely manifested in the ordinary relations of life.” Rest well General.
Questions remain over Lincoln’s exact words BY ALLEN G. BREED AP National Writer
It was the biggest assignment of Joseph Ignatius Gilbert’s journalistic career — and he was in serious danger of blowing it. On Nov. 19, 1863, the 21-year-old Associated Press freelancer was standing before a “rude platform” overlooking the still-ravaged battlefield at Gettysburg, Pa. Towering above him was an almost mythic figure: Abraham Lincoln. By this time, Gilbert had been covering the president for two and a half long years of civil war. Three months earlier, he had written a dispatch about the Union rout of Gen. George Pickett from this very field, an event often called the “high-water mark of the Confederacy.” Lincoln had come to dedicate a portion of the battlefield — still strewn with equipment, clothing and horse skeletons — as a national cemetery.
Gilbert was dutifully taking down the president’s words in shorthand when something uncharacteristic happened. He became star-struck. “Fascinated by Lincoln’s intense earnestness and depth of feeling, I unconsciously stopped taking notes,” he would recall decades later, “and looked up at him just as he glanced from his manuscript with a faraway look in his eyes as if appealing from the few thousands before him to the invisible audience of countless millions whom his words were to reach.” Luckily for Gilbert, Lincoln graciously allowed his text to be copied while the ceremonies concluded. And “the press report was made from the copy,” the AP man noted. Brief as Lincoln’s speech was, many newspaper reports paraphrased or outright butchered it. In his new book, “Writing the Gettysburg Address,” Martin P. Johnson argues
that the fledgling “wire service” played a key role in ensuring that most Americans experienced the true power and poetry of their president’s words at a time when he desperately wanted to reach them. “The Gettysburg Address was not necessarily going to be an important text, if the first version published had been such a truncated version,” he says. But 150 years later, the debate continues over exactly what Lincoln said that day — and why it matters. “Four score and seven years ago ...” The speech contains about 250 words. Today, a listener with a smartphone could polish it off in 10 tweets or simply post the raw video on YouTube. But a century and a half ago, the news medium was a reporter taking notes with a pencil, most likely in shorthand.
Once finished, he would race to a telegraph office and hand over his dispatch to an operator, who would tap it out in Morse code. The story would travel to a newspaper office, where the series of dots and dashes were deciphered, then set in lead type. For a great many papers, the source of that text was the AP, and its “agents” — men like Gilbert. The goateed Gilbert was a “shorthand novice” in the state Senate at Harrisburg on Feb. 22, 1861, when he first heard the new president speak in the Pennsylvania capital. His dispatches appeared in the city’s Evening Telegraph. As he moved on to The Philadelphia Press and AP, the young scribe would have other opportunities to report on “the care worn President whose shoulders, Atlaslike, were carrying the pillars of the Republic.” So Gilbert was an old
hand at covering Lincoln when he joined the throngs assembling on Cemetery Hill in the fall of 1863. “The battlefield, on that sombre autumn day, was enveloped in gloom,” he wrote in a paper delivered at the 1917 convention of the National Shorthand Reporters’ Association in Cleveland. “Nature seemed to veil her face in sorrow for the awful tragedy enacted there.” Lincoln was not even the keynote speaker that day; that honor fell to former U.S. Sen. Edward Everett, who spoke for two hours. Lincoln’s address lasted barely two minutes. There are five known drafts of the speech in Lincoln’s own handwriting, each different from the other in some subtle or not-so-subtle way. The last, penned in March 1864, is the version chiseled in marble on the Lincoln Memorial. In 1894, Lincoln’s per-
sonal secretary, John Nicolay, published what he called “the autograph manuscript” of the Gettysburg Address. The first page was written in pen on lined stationery marked “Executive Mansion”; the second is in pencil on bluish foolscap. Johnson, an assistant history professor at Miami University in Ohio, concludes that this is the delivery or “battlefield draft” Lincoln pulled from his coat on the platform that day. John R. Sellers, retired curator of Civil War papers at the Library of Congress, which recently put the pages on display, agrees. But historian Gabor Boritt, author of “The Gettysburg Gospel,” argues that a version discovered in 1908 among the papers of John M. Hay, Lincoln’s assistant secretary, is the one from which the president read. Perhaps the most imPlease see LINCOLN | 3B
This Week in the Civil War Union scales Lookout Mountain in Battle above the Clouds The Associated Press
Editor’s Note: This series marking the 150th anniversary of the Civil War
draws primarily from wartime dispatches credited to The Associated Press or other accounts distributed through the AP and other historical sources. This week 150 years ago in the Civil War, Union troops scaled Lookout Mountain southwest of federally held Chattanooga, Tenn., and ousted Confederates dug in with artillery on the
heights. The attack by nearly 12,000 Union soldiers drove the Confederates off the mountaintop overlooking Chattanooga, effectively ending a siege of Union forces holding the city below. Fog covered the Union forces as they went up the 1,700-foot mountainside, aiding their offensive in what later would became known as “The Battle
Above the Clouds.” By late in the day on Nov. 24, 1863, Confederates under pressure of the Union offensive abandoned their artillery posts atop the summit and withdrew. A day later, Union forces would definitively break the Confederate siege lines ringing Chattanooga with another withering offensive, this one aimed at another height called Missionary Ridge.
2B â&#x20AC;˘ Sunday, November 24, 2013 â&#x20AC;˘ Daily Corinthian
Assistance Retiree breakfast The Caterpillar Retiree Breakfast is held the first Monday of each month at 7:30 a.m. at Marthaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Menu in Corinth.
Mississippi Youth Challenge Mississippi Youth Challenge Academy features a structured environment with a focus on job training, social skills and self-discipline. Other academic opportunities include high school diploma, college classes through a local university and nationally certified construction skills. The academy is designed to meet the needs of todayâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s â&#x20AC;&#x153;at riskâ&#x20AC;? youth. Both males and females, 16-18 years old, can apply. Applicants can earn their GEDs. Tuition is free. For more information, call 1-800-5076253 or visit www.ngycp. org/state/ms.
Volunteers needed â&#x2013; Hospice Advantage in Corinth is looking for volunteers in the surrounding area: Corinth, Tippah, Tishomingo and Prentiss County. Volunteering is a wonderful way to give back to your community and lend a helping hand to the elderly. For more information, call Carla Nelson, volunteer coordinator with Hospice Advantage on becoming a volunteer at 662-665-9185 or 662279-0435. The website is hospiceadvantage. com. â&#x2013; Magnolia Regional Hospice is currently seeking individuals or groups to be trained as volunteers. Hospice is a program of caring for individuals who are terminally ill and choose to re-
main at home with family or a caregiver. Some of the ministry opportunities for volunteers are sitting with the patient in their homes to allow the caregiver a break, grocery shopping, reading to a patient, craft opportunities, bereavement/grief support and in-office work. For more information, contact Lila Wade, volunteer coordinator at 662-293-1405 or 1-800843-7553. â&#x2013; Legacy Hospice is looking for volunteers. Legacy needs special people with special hearts and volunteers who are wanting to help others. Their duties will be helping with the support of patients and caregivers, writing letters, making phone calls, and community activities. There is a training period involved at no cost. If interested, contact Lanell Coln, volunteer coordinator at Legacy Hospice, 301 East Waldron St, Corinth or call 662-286-5333.
disaster relief. The Northeast Mississippi Chapter includes 16 counties. It is headquartered in Tupelo, with offices in Tishomingo, New Albany, Starkville and Columbus. Although Red Cross no longer has a Corinth office, the organization wants to stress it continues to offer services in Alcorn County. People seeking disaster assistance in Northeast Mississippi can call the Tupelo headquarters during office hours at 662-842-6101. The tollfree after hours phone line is 1-855-891-7325. The Red Crossâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; service line for the armed forces is 877-272-7337. They also offer health and safety training, including first aid, babysitting and CPR, as well as disaster training for businesses. To learn more about the Red Cross health and safety training call 1-800-733-2767.
going book sale inside the library. Hardback, paperback and audio books, and VHS and DVD donations to the library are always appreciated. For more information, call 287-2441.
Friendship class
Senior activities
The Friendship Class meets weekly on Thursday at 6:30 p.m. in the fellowship hall of the First Presbyterian Church on Shiloh Road. This group of mentally challenged adults and mentors enjoy sharing time together, games, crafts, singing and refreshments. For more information, call the church office at 286-6638.
GED version to expire
The First Presbyterian Senior Adult Ministry has two fitness classes available to senior adults. Judy Smelzer leads a stretching/toning class on Mondays at 9 a.m. in the fellowship hall. There is no charge. FPC is also hosting a Wii sports class for senior adults on Tuesdays at 9 a.m. There is no cost to participate. Call the church office at 286-6638 to register or Kimberly Grantham at 284-7498.
Red Cross The Northeast Mississippi Chapter of the Red Cross offers a wide variety of assistance and services, including
Story Hour Pre-school Story Hour is held each Thursday at 10 a.m. at the Corinth Library. Year-round art exhibits are also on display and educational non-profit groups meet in the auditorium monthly. The Corinth Friends of the Library hold their on-
Quilt Guild meets The Cross City Piecemakers Quilt Guild meets on the third Thursday of each month at the Homemakers Extension Office (beside the arena) Â at 1 p.m. Anyone interested in quilting (learning or collecting) Â is invited to attend. Â For more information, contact Sharon at 287-0987.
 Marine Corps League The Corinth Marine Corps League meets the first Tuesday of every month at Marthaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Menu, downtown Corinth, at 6 p.m.
GED test-takers who need to finish the current version of GED need to do so by the end of 2013. The GED test contains five parts that can be taken separately, but must all be passed to receive a high school credential. GED test-takers who have started the 2002 Series GED Test, but not finished and passed every section, have until the end of 2013 to do so. Otherwise, their scores will expire, and will have to start over again with the new 2014 GED test. Test-takers can find out more information by visiting the local adult education or GED class. In the Corinth area, contact the adult education instructor at
662-696-2314 or visit 1259 South Harper Rd. in Corinth.
Genealogy society The Alcorn County Genealogical Society is located at the southeast corner of the Alcorn County Courthouse basement in the old veteransâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; services office. It is open Tuesday-Friday from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m. The Society can be contacted at 662-286-0075 or email acgs2@att.net.
Support groups â&#x2013; The Crossroads Group of Narcotics Anonymous meets Monday, Wednesday and Friday at noon, and at 7 p.m., seven days a week, at 506 Cruise Street in Corinth. All meetings are non-smoking. The Northeast Mississippi area of Narcotics Anonymous Hotline is 662-841-9998. â&#x2013; A Narcotics Anonymous meeting is held on Tuesdays at 7 p.m. at the Johnson-FordMitchrell Community Center, 707 Spring Street in Iuka. Call 662279-6435 for directions. â&#x2013; The Corinth Downtown Group AA meets Sundays and Tuesdays at 8 p.m. at the First Baptist Church, 501 N. Main Street, Corinth. For more information for all area AA groups, please call 662-2122235. â&#x2013; An Alcoholics Anonymous meeting is held in Iuka at the old Chevy dealership building off old Hwy. 25 each Wednesday at 7 p.m. and Friday at 7:30 p.m. Alcoholics Anonymous is a fellowship of men and women whose common welfare is to stay sober and help others achieve sobriety. The Iuka meeting is an open
meeting, anyone who has a problem with alcohol or other substances is welcome to attend. For more information, call 662-660-3150. â&#x2013; The Alzheimerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Caregiver Support Group in Corinth is partnered with the Alzheimerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Association Mississippi Chapter. Keri Roaten is the facilitator. The group meets every first Thursday of each month at the Corinth Public Library, from 6-7 p.m. The group discusses the hardships of those caring for people effected by the disease and offer several different resources as well. For more information, contact k_roaten@hotmail. com or 662-594-5526. â&#x2013; The â&#x20AC;&#x153;Good Griefâ&#x20AC;? ministry of the HopewellIndian Springs United Methodist Charge is a collaborative effort of both churches and meets every Wednesday afternoon at 3 p.m. in the dining room of the Arbyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Restaurant, 706 Highway 72 East, Corinth. The ministry was established to support those who have experienced a devastating life event such as the death of a loved one, diagnosis of a terminal illness or condition, the loss of a spouse or parent through divorce, even the loss of a job or home. The ministry is non-denominational and open to all. There is no cost to attend and no obligation to continue. For more information, call Bro. Rick Wells, pastor of Hopewell and Indian Springs United Methodist Charge and facilitator at 662-5879602. â&#x2013; Al-Anon is a support group and fellowship of relatives and friends of alcoholics. The group meets at 7 p.m. on Mondays at 1st Baptist Church in Corinth.
Legal Scene Your Crossroads Area Guide to Law Professionals ) ($ ) *
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John O. Windsor A T T O R N E Y
Bankruptcy * Criminal Defense * Personal Injury
401 E. Waldron St. Corinth, MS
Call for an appointment:
662-872-0121
Contact Laura Holloway at 662-287-6111 ext. 308 to advertise your Law Firm on this page.
404 Waldron Street â&#x20AC;˘ Corinth, MS _________________________________________ ' 3
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662-286-9311 William W. Odom, Jr. Rhonda N. Allred Attorney at Law Attorney at Law bodom43@bellsouth.net rallred@bellsouth.net ___________________________________________ &'& # $ ) #(& , ! "' #" & # $ ' # & "#' " ' ", ' ' #" # +$ ' & ' " * ' " , * $ $ #$ # (" ' " ($' , # #(" " # ! ' #" ) ($#" %( &'
Come see us at our new location:
311 W. Eastport Street, Iuka, MS 38852 Tacey Clark Locke Attorney at Law
ComeTacey see usClark at our new location: Locke Telephone: (662) 424-5000 Attorney at Law
Telephone: (662) 424-5000 Ashlee Clark Cook
Ashlee Clark Cook Paralegal Paralegal
Chapter 7 Bankruptcy; Contested and Uncontested Divorces; Child Custody; Wills; Estates; Federal Court Litigation; Adoption; Personal Injury; Wrongful Death; Social Security; Deeds; Automobile Accidents and Insurance Disputes.
Daily Corinthian • Sunday, November 24, 2013 • 3B
Burnett, Downey take ‘The Bible’ music on the road BY CHRIS TALBOTT AP Music Writer
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Mark Burnett and Roma Downey’s “The Bible” franchise continues to grow in unexpected ways. Up next? A 16-city music tour featuring some of today’s most popular Christian acts. The tour begins next March following the nationwide theatrical release of “The Bible” companion film “Son of God,” and will feature music inspired by and visual components from the movie and miniseries.
“I think that music just has such a wonderful ability to connect and open your heart and the images from our film certainly are going to touch your heart,” Downey said. “So I think it’s just going to be a really beautiful, heartfelt experience all around for people to attend.” Attend they will, if previous reaction to “The Bible” continues to hold true. The five-part History miniseries was one of the surprise hits of 2013, averaging 11 million viewers for each episode last
spring in the U.S. Burnett and Downey have been rolling it out overseas as well — it’s playing in Hong Kong now and the United Kingdom is up next. “It has continued to ripple — splash really — around the world,” Downey said as the couple spoke publicly about the music tour for the first time Thursday by conference call. Burnett, producer of “The Voice,” ‘‘Survivor” and other reality shows, was in Cleveland, Ohio, and actress Downey was in Boston. Both were screening “Son of God” for
local religious and business leaders, looking to get support for the film before it opens Feb. 28. They plan to hit several more cities, and trailers for the movie will begin running in theaters next week. The film comprises previously aired material from “The Bible” intercut with new scenes shot concurrently with the miniseries in Morocco in 2012. The couple said they heard a calling from God to make the miniseries, and the franchise continues to take more and more of their lives. That’s some-
thing their friend, Pastor Rick Warren, warned them about. “Rick Warren said to me and Roma, ‘You know one of the most dangerous prayers that you can pray is, ‘Use me,’ because he will,’” Burnett said. “And we can see how that played out in our lives,” Downey said. “We’ve been working for God ever since.” The music tour will open March 20 at Warren’s Saddleback Church in Lake Forest, Calif., and will conclude April 13 in Baltimore. Francesca Bat-
tistelli, Sidewalk Prophets, Natalie Grant, Chris August, Meredith Andrews and Jason Gray will perform. Most of the concerts will be held at super churches and will include scenes from “The Bible” and “Son of God” mingled with photos of religious art and artifacts along with the music. “This has been a labor of love for us,” Downey said. “We didn’t need a job when we took this on. ... It’s a combination of everything we love, everything we believe — and we get to do it together.”
Wisconsin collector puts rare comics on the auction block BY TODD RICHMOND Associated Press
STEVENS POINT, Wis. — Holy auction block, Batman! Comic book collector and industry legend Mag-
gie Thompson of Wisconsin has decided to put some 500 pieces of her personal collection up for auction over the next few months. Nearly 90 issues went on the block Thurs-
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day, including the first issue of “The Avengers,” ‘‘Journey Into Mystery” No. 83, which features the first appearance of Thor, and the first issue of “The Incredible Hulk.”
News of the auction has comic lovers’ wallets tingling. The books are in exceptional condition; auctioneers expect the total collection could easily fetch $1 million by the time sales wrap up next year. Comic book collections going for $1 million aren’t unheard of, said J.C. Vaughn, vice president of publishing for Gemstone Publishing, which produces a comic book pricing guide. But it’s rare to find books from such a respected collector and in such good condition, he said. “What is unique is to get a pedigree collection from somebody of Maggie’s stature within the industry,” Vaughn said. Thompson, 70, has been collecting comic books since she was a girl in the 1940s. She married another comic book collector, Don Thompson, in 1962. Twenty years later they left Ohio, where Don Thompson had worked as a reporter, for Wisconsin to take over editing duties for an industry magazine, Comics Buyer’s Guide. They spent years working on the magazine. It grew into a paper-and-ink equivalent of a Facebook page, connecting comic fans, distributors, writers and artists across the country. Don Thompson died in 1994, and CBG folded in January. But Maggie Thompson is still as sharp as Wolverine’s claws. She blogs about industry happenings and can talk for hours about how comics have evolved from something parents abhorred to a part of mainstream culture. “Everybody knows, ‘With great power comes
great responsibility.’ They (even) have opinions on Loki!” she said, referring to Spider-Man’s catchphrase philosophy and Thor’s evil adopted brother, who has grown into one of the most popular comics villains after he was featured in the “Thor” and “Avengers” movies. She doesn’t know exactly how many comic books she has but estimates it’s tens of thousands. She used money from selling “Amazing Fantasy” No. 15, the first appearance of Spider-Man, and the first 100 issues of “The Amazing Spider-Man,” to build a vault-like storage addition on her home east of Stevens Point. Employees with Dallas-based Heritage Auction took 524 items from her collection in October. The auction house plans to sell them off in waves. Live and online bidding on the first 86 issues started Thursday in Beverly Hills, Calif. By the end of the day all 86 issues had sold, netting a total of $784,148. “The Avengers” No. 1 went for $89,625; “Journey Into Mystery” No. 83 sold for $77,675; and “The Incredible Hulk” No. 1 went for $58,256. The last item in the first wave, the original cover art for the fourth issue of “Conan the Barbarian,” was slated to go on the block Friday. It has already earned a $59,000 bid online. “You almost never see (a collection) with this type of, basically, love behind it,” said Mike Zapcic, assistant manager at Jay and Silent Bob’s Secret Stash comic book shop and one of the stars of AMC’s “Comic Book Men.”
“She wrote the book on collecting. She knew what to do with them. Even if she pulled them out every five years to read them, they’ve been read maybe five times. Not a lot of wear and tear on these things,” he said. Thompson isn’t going to part with the stories she loves completely. The auction house has agreed to sell her lower-grade copies of the issues she’s giving up. She wants to read them and use them for research without worrying about damaging them, she said. Selling “Journey Into Mystery” No. 83 at $80,000, for example, would give her enough money to purchase that series’ entire run at a lower grade, Steve Borock, the auction house’s consignment director, said. But she also wants to pay off a new car, perhaps remodel her kitchen, build a bigger retirement nest egg and care for her grandchildren, she said. And she’s not sentimental about it. “We are all temporary custodians,” she said. “Until they work out that eternal life, fountain-ofyouth thing, we only get to hold it for a little while. We get to hang it on the wall and say, ‘Oh, that’s fun.’” Thompson’s daughter, Valerie Thompson, said she was shocked to hear her mother was selling her comics. She said it’s about more than money. “She’s now in a place where she’s comfortable passing them on to the next generation,” she said. “She’s 70 at this point. Dad died 20 years ago. It’s for the next generation of collectors to treasure these things.”
Different versions either include or omit the word “poor” in “far above our poor power to add or detract.” “Poor” is missing from the Tribune version, Boritt notes. It’s included in the story published in the Philadelphia North American, which to Johnson “appears to be the closest approximation of the AP version as it was telegraphed from Gettysburg on the day of the speech.” Unfortunately, Gilbert’s personal account only muddies the waters. In the wire dispatches, the text is interrupted six times to note applause. But in 1917, Gilbert remembered no “tumultuous outbursts of enthusiasm accompanying the President’s utterances,” adding the cemetery was “not the place for it.” Boritt, director emeritus of the Civil War Institute at Gettysburg College, has concluded the recollection of the AP man, who died in 1924, “needs to be taken with a grain of salt.” In the end, does it really matter whether Lincoln said “the government” or just “government?” It certainly did to him. “The exact words are
important because they clearly reveal Lincoln’s thinking about the importance of the Civil War and the world historical importance of the struggle that he was engaged in,” says Johnson. “He was very clear about wanting to get the words correct, precise — because he knew that it was an important point.” Johnson says it is fortunate that the AP quickly reported the speech at full length. “We’d probably always have the delivery text, but that might never have been published during Lincoln’s lifetime,” he says. “So the Gettysburg Address might never have become such an important, iconic text for us if the AP had not been there reporting it properly.” In a paper prepared for Northern Kentucky University’s Six@Six lecture series, archivist Komor suggests that Gilbert’s greatest contribution to our understanding of the speech is perhaps his recollection of how Lincoln delivered the final lines: “that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.”
LINCOLN CONTINUED FROM 1B
portant difference among the address’s various permutations is the presence or absence of the phrase “under God.” Those words do not appear in either the Nicolay or Hay drafts, but they are present in the three other handwritten copieS.. They also appear in dispatches sent by Gilbert and shorthand stenographer Charles Hale, who was there for the Boston Daily Advertiser, leading Johnson, Boritt and others to conclude that Lincoln added them extemporaneously. Lincoln told his good friend, Kentuckian James Speed, that he continued to work on the speech after arriving in Gettysburg and had not had time to memorize it. He also acknowledged that he did not stick to the script in his hand. Due to “inevitable telegraphic variations,” says Johnson, there were almost as many versions in circulation “as there were newspapers that printed them.” No definitive “wire copy” survives in AP files, says company archivist Valerie Komor.
4Bâ&#x20AC;˘ Sunday, November 24, 2013 â&#x20AC;˘ Daily Corinthian
0248 OFFICE HELP
0121 CARD OF THANKS
The Family of
IT Specialist Job Opening
Roy G â&#x20AC;&#x153;Billâ&#x20AC;? Young Would like to express the appreciation to all who acknowledged us with the calls, flowers, food, visits and prayers during the loss of our love one. Thank you Dr. Leonard Pratt, Casey Redding and staff for all the caring and compassion that you had given. Magnolia hospital employees, thank you for caring for him. A special thank you to Tonya Gunn (respiratory therapist) for not only doing your job but making a friend forever. And while trying to give his wish to be at home, thank you Alliance Hospice for making that come true. May God Bless you all. Martha, Rory, Kay, Eddie & Kids
0515
Associate degree or 2-4 years experience in field required. Technologies used with this job include Postrgres SQL, Pyton, and Linux along with General Web Programming. ResumĂŠs can be sent to NCS Fulfillment Inc. 149 N. Railroad St. Selmer, TN 38375 Attention Human Resources
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SERVICES
BUSINESS & SERVICE GUIDE Daily Corinthian And The Community Profiles RUN YOUR AD In TheFOR $ ONLY 200 A MONTH ON THIS PAGE (Daily Corinthian Only 165) $
CHIROPRACTOR Your Comfort Is Our Calling
CrossRoads Heating & Cooling Dr. Jonathan R. Cooksey Neck Pain â&#x20AC;˘ Back Pain Disc Problems Spinal Decompression Therapy Most Insurance Accepted Mon., Tues., Wed. & Fri. 9-5 3334 N. Polk Street Corinth, MS 38834 (662) 286-9950
REMODELING OR NEW BUILDING You owe it to yourself to shop with us first. Examples:
White Pine Boards 1X6 or 1X8 50¢ Board Ft. Architectural Shingles â&#x20AC;&#x153;Will dress up any roof, just ask your roofer.â&#x20AC;? $62.95 sq.
Loans $20-$20,000
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New Construction, Home Remodeling & Repair. Licensed & Fair & following Jesus â&#x20AC;&#x153;The Carpenterâ&#x20AC;?
SHANE PRICE BUILDING, INC. 662-808-2380
- Fast & Reliable -
Heating & Cooling Help
Vinyl Floor Covering Best Selection Prices start @ $1.00 per yard.
All types of treated lumber in-stock. â&#x20AC;&#x153;NO ONE BEATS OUR PRICESâ&#x20AC;?
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TORNADO SHELTERS Large full size 6x12 tall x 6â&#x20AC;&#x2122;9â&#x20AC;? concrete
Final i Expense Life Insurance Long Term Care Medicare Supplements Part D Prescription Plan
Are you paying too much for your Medicare Supplement? Call me for a free quote. â&#x20AC;&#x153; I will always try to help youâ&#x20AC;? 1801 South Harper Road Harper Square Mall. Corinth, MS 38834
YANCEY DOZER SERVICE
Gold/Diamond Broker Specializing in Loose Diamonds
Top Soil, Fill Dirt, Sand Hauled, Land Clearing, Pond Repair, Bush Hog Work
Franzschnabl @yahoo.com
â&#x20AC;˘ SAME PHONE # & ADDRESS SINCE 1975 â&#x20AC;˘ LIFETIME WARRANTIED OWENS CORNING SHINGLES W/TRANSFERABLE WARRANTY (NO SECONDS) â&#x20AC;˘ METAL, TORCHDOWN, EPDM, SLATE, TILE, SHAKES, COATINGS. â&#x20AC;˘ LEAK SPECIALIST WE INSTALL SKYLIGHTS & DO CARPENTRY WORK
662-665-1133 662-286-8257
JIM BERRY, OWNER/INSTALLER
Inside Climate Controlled
Franz Schnabl
662-415-2377
SELDOM YOUR LOWEST BID ALWAYS YOUR HIGHEST QUALITY
BOAT & VEHICLE
Got Gold? I Buy It!
Diamonds @ Wholesale Prices
JIMCO ROOFING. $1,000,000 LIABILITY INSURANCE
CHRIS GRISHAM
STORAGE AVAILABLE
Free Estimates
1011 Hwy 72 E Can Accommodate up to 12 ft. tall
Michael Yancey Michael Yancey 662-665-1079 662-665-1079
Call for more information
16 CR 543 Rienze MS 38865
662-415-2330
SMITH CABINET SHOP
3 Tab Shingles $54.95 per sq. Concrete Steps. $37.95 per tread.
GRISHAM INSURANCE
www.southernhomesafety.com
(662) 212-4735 Bill Crawford â&#x20AC;˘Maintenance Programs â&#x20AC;˘HVAC Systems â&#x20AC;˘HVAC Tune-ups & Inspections
40 Years
SOUTHERN HOME SAFETY, INC. TOLL FREE 888-544-9074 or 662-315-1695
1505 Fulton Drive â&#x20AC;˘ Corinth MS 38834 â&#x20AC;˘ 662-287-2151
SAWMILL Corinth MS and Surrounding Areas Will cut lumber to your own specs! Cedar, Oak, Pine, Etc. Up to 12 ft. long Reasonable prices Call @
662-594-8271
CABINET BARGAINS
YOU NAME IT! WE HAUL IT! Limestone, Sand, Gravel, Rip Rap, Top Soil, Slag, Culverts Land Crearing & House Lots
BUDDY AYERS CONSTRUCTION 662-286-9158 OR 662-287-2296
LARGEST SALE IN OUR 30 YEAR HISTORY!
PLACE YOUR AD IN THIS SPACE! JUST BECAUSE ITâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S COLD OUTSIDE, DONâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;T SIT BACK AND NOT ADVERTISE!!!!
We have recently made changes in the materials and finishes used in some of our cabinet lines. Because of this, we have accumulated several loads of discontinued merchandise. We are selling these cabinets at unbelievable discounts!
We have unfi fiunďŹ nished nished Cabinets in various and sizes that have been We have Cabinets instyles various styles and sizes pickedpicked to dealer closings. up due up that have been due to dealer closings.
30% OFF 30% OFF
(These may be slightly discolored)
(These may be slightly discolored)
We are also replacing our showroom display sets! PreďŹ nished White Cabinets with Raised Panel Doors g p Doors y Pre-FInished White Cabinets with Raised Panel
Marked down an additional 10% with a total of 60% Savings!
Regularly Priced 60% at $1,823.54 OFF NOW
$911.77
Daily Corinthian • Sunday, November 24, 2013 •5B
0107 SPECIAL NOTICE
0244 TRUCKING
BUTLER, DOUG: Foundation, floor leveling, bricks cracking, rotten wood, basements, shower floor. Over 35 yrs. exp. FREE ESTIMATES. 731-239-8945 or 662-284-6146.
DRIVERS" DON'T get hypnotized by the highway, come to a place where there's a higher standard! Up to $2K sign on, Avg $65/yr+bonuses! CDL-A, 1 yr exp. A&R Transport 888-2020004
ADOPTION CREATIVE, Financially Secure Couple, LOVE, Laughter, Travel, Sports awaits baby. Expenses paid. 1-800-557-9529 Lisa & Kenny
GARAGE/ESTATE 0151 SALES
YARD SALE SPECIAL
DRIVER TRAINEES GET PAID CDL TRAINING NOW! Learn to drive for Stevens Transport New Drivers can earn $800/wk & Benefits! Carrier covers cost! NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED! Job-Ready in 15 days! Be trained & based locally! 1-888-540-7364
ANY 3 CONSECUTIVE PART-TIME 0268 EMPLOYMENT DAYS Ad must run prior to or PART-TIME Sales Assoday of sale! ciate for upscale local (Deadline is 3 p.m. day boutique needed. Must have positive, energetbefore ad is to run!) ic attitude,ability to go (Exception-Sun. deadabove & beyond service line is 3 pm Fri.) to customers, multitask, must love fashion 5 LINES & be knowledgeable of (Apprx. 20 Words) trends. Send resumes to Box 405 c/o Daily Corinthian, P.O. Box $19.10 1800, Corinth MS 38835 (Does not include commercial 0320 CATS/DOGS/PETS business sales) 3 ORANGE kittens left, 100% Main Coon. 2 male, ALL ADS MUST 1 female. 662-415-6954 BE PREPAID We accept credit or debit cards 0410 FARM MARKET Call Classified at (662) 287-6147
WANT TO make certain your ad gets attention? 2 LARGE table lamps Ask about attention w/unusual shades, ivory w/design on base. $20 getting graphics.
CAUTION! ADVERTISEMENTS in this classification usually offer informational service of products designed to help FIND employment. Before you send money to any advertiser, it is your responsibility to verify the validity of the offer. Remember: If an ad appears to sound “too good to be true”, then it may be! Inquiries can be made by contacting the Better Business Bureau at 1-800-987-8280. G&G Steel Team Members Needed G&G Steel Mississippi Works is hiring for the positions of: •Welder/Maintenance/ Fitter/Sandblaster/ Painter If you have initiative, good work ethic, accountability, & are eager to learn & excel at a challenging new responsibility, download application at G&G Steel.com, apply in person at the Tri-State Commerce Park, Iuka, MS, or at the WIN Job Center in Iuka, MS. Prove your ability at interview by hands on/written tests. LOCAL COMPANY seeking office manager to supervise mgrs & depts,operations by maintaining office systems, work flow, distribution,completion & personnel issues. Exp. preferred. Send resume to: Box 404, Daily Corinthian, P.O. Box 1800,Corinth MS 38835
0710
HOMES FOR SALE
MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE
TWO ANTIQUE tillers, M&M. CASH FOR JUNK one Sears, one Burns CARS & TRUCKS. 662-415- AREA RUG, 5 1/2'X7 1/2', coral/navy/lt. blue (chain drive), $100. 6625435 or 731-239-4114. Southwestern style, 643-7669 WE PICK UP! good condition, $25. 731-645-4899 CHRISTMAS SPORTING
0560 TREES
0527 GOODS
ATC TIRE, KNOBBY 3006 REMINGTON 742, 6 1/2' CHRISTMAS TREE, K E N D A S C O R P I O N , very good condition, like new, great condi- BRAND NEW, 1/2 PRICE. tion, $45. 662-643-7650 $50. 731-645-4899 $450. 662-808-7116 NEW ENGLAND ARMS, 9 FT. SLIM CHRISTMAS BEAUTIFUL COMFORTER, SINGLE SHOT, 410 GAUGE TREE. EXCELLENT CONDI- SHAMS, DUST RUFFLE, DREAM WITH CROCHET SHOTGUN, GOOD SHAPE, TION. $25. 662-287-2758 FLOWERS, FULL SIZE. $50. $120. CALL 662-665-5472 MISC. ITEMS FOR 662-287-2758 0563 SALE NEW ENGLAND ARMS, BIG PORTABLE SHOP SINGLE SHOT, 12 GAUGE 10 GALLON MULTI-USE FAN, NEEDS MOTOR. $50. SHOTGUN, NICE SHAPE. GAS TANK FOR A BOAT 731-645-4899 $115. CALL 665-5472 OR UTILITY VEHICLE. $15. 731-645-4899 CAMEL-BACK SKIRTED 0533 FURNITURE PASTEL FLORAL BRO14 GALLON ATV 12-Volt CADE COUCH. CLEAN, CHERRY LIGHTED curio E l e c t r i c S p r a y e r GOOD CONDITION. $40. cabinet, $150. 603-1674 w / B o o m a n d H a n d 731-645-4899 Wand. $75. 731-645-4899 CHILDREN'S DESK, FLIP CAMO HELMET for ATV UP TOP & SEAT W/LIGHT 18000 BTU GloBurner or bike. Fulmer. $25. & DRINK HOLDER. $15. wall heater, natural gas, 662-415-8180 662-287-2758 good condition, $50. HAPPY ADS 662-415-1281 0114 CHILDREN'S OVAL TABLE W/DRAWER & 2 CHAIRS. 2 BATHROOM VANITY TOPS, 47" wide. $100. $20. 662-287-2758 SHOWER DOOR 43X64, COFFEE TABLE & end ta- $50. Call 662-287-3398 ble, heavy hard rock maple, $75 both. 662- 2 GE ELECTRIC CLOTHES DRYERS, BOTH RUN BUT 287-1128 NEED WORK. $25 EACH. DECORATIVE WHAT not 731-645-4899 stand w/3 shelves, walnut finish, excellent, 2) 6' wall ladder shelves, sells at Hobby Lobby for $20. 662-287-2935 $100 a piece, $75 for both. 603-1674 HANDMADE OAK desk w/hutch, $175. 603-1674 3 STACK Propane Gas Heater $60. 662-415-8180
MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE
CHRISTMAS LIGHTED vil- CROCHETED PLACEMATS lage houses (sold at AND POTHOLDERS. $5. Belk), $2.00 ea. 603-1674 E A C H . C A L L 6 6 2 - 2 8 7 9739. NO CALLS BEFORE C H U G G I N T O N T R A I N 9 A.M. tracks w/extras, $15. 603-1674 DESIGNER BOOTS, some new, some slightly COMFORTER W/DUST worn, sizes 6, 6.5, $10RUFFLE, CURTAINS, $140, Call 662-415-9098. SHAMS (BURGUNDY & CREAM) LIKE NEW, FULL ELECTRIC 2001 Kenmore SIZE, $50. 662-287-2758 Estate dryer XL capacity. Small repair needed, COMPLETE BATHROOM $125. 662-643-7669 TOILET, READY TO INSTALL. $35. 731-645-4899 ELECTRIC DUCK-PLUCKER, REMOVES FEATHERS COMPLETE WESLO Body FROM ANY FOWL. $50. Weight Resistance Exer731-645-4899 cise System. $50. 731645-4899 FOSTORIA AURORA CRYSTAL CRAFTSMAN, REARmount, double hard- 10 Champagne/sherbag grass & leaf catcher, bert glasses, Gold Trim, 5 1/2" tall. $100. $40. 731-645-4899 9 Wine Glasses, 5 1/4" C R O C H E T E D tall. $90. Rarely used, PILLOWS/CUSHIONS AS- prices firm, call 731-645SORTED COLORS. $20. 4 2 5 0 or email EACH 662-287-9739 jannie38367@yahoo.com
MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE
FOOTED CANE, $10; Walker, $20; Shower chair, $15; Potty chair, $15. 662-287-2935
GE CLOTHES DRYER, LGE CAPACITY, WHITE, WORKS FINE. $95. CALL 662-665-5472
HEAVY DUTY 4 ft. BOX BLADE WITH SPIKES. $300. 731-645-4899 HOSPITAL BED with mattress, $100. 603-3659
KAVU BAG, Style: Secret Squirrel, Print: Antique Blossom/Reversible to Black, never used! $23. 662-643-7650
LADIES HELMET size M, $30. 603-1674
LIKE NEW FULL BEDSPREAD, SHAMS, DUST RUFFLE, CREAM WITH LOTS OF TRIM. $50. 662287-2758
Christmas Angels
RODIAN RED Roosters, LANE OVERSIZED rocker Different Prices. $7 & recliner, earth tone col- 5 STACK propane heatUp. 662-462-5579 o r , e x c e l l e n t c o n d . , er, works great, $100 must see, $165. 662-287- OBO. 662-603-5187 2935 5 TIRES w/ rims. 15" 0460 HORSES 235/75 $400. Call 662KIDS PONY 4 yrs old, STAND W/4 shelves, can 603-3488 or 662-603broken, $400. 662-664- use for plants or stor- 2635 age, $10. 662-287-2935 3264
0506 ANTIQUES/ART
0232 GENERAL HELP
WANTED TO MISC. ITEMS FOR 0554 RENT/BUY/TRADE 0563 SALE
LAWN & GARDEN
0521 EQUIPMENT
each. Must see! 662-2872935 ANTIQUE TABLE w/recessed game playing, must see, $50. 662-2872935
HOUSEHOLD 0509 GOODS
ALUM CHECKER Plate Tool Box for Small size Pickup. $90. Call 731R E D O A K , g r e e n & 239-8668 or 731-453seasoned. $100 stacked. 4615 $90 thrown off. 665-1594 ANTIQUE 3 Pane Glass Door, 32X80. $30. Call BUILDING 0542 MATERIALS 662-415-1281
0539 FIREWOOD
2 SECTIONS of white vinyl-covered porch railing w/8 1/2' column, 7 1/2' & 1 1/2' sections, $30. 731-645-4899
ANTIQUE DISPLAY CASE WITH ADJUSTABLE SLOPING GLASS SHELVES. 4 1/2FTX4 1/2FT. $250. CALL 662-286-3026
NEW 16" Class 1 Insu- ANTIQUE TABLE lamp, lated Flexible Duct, ap- metal with ruby red BEAUTIFUL 27X37 PICprox. 20ft, $25. 731-645- glass base, nice shade. TURE (BOUQUET OF 4899 $35. Call 662-286-5216 FLOWERS) $25. 662-287COMMERCIAL/OFFICE 2758
0754
BEAUTIFUL 30X24 PICTURE (VASE OF FLOWERS) $20. 662-2872758 OVAL MIRROR WITH ROSES & LEAVES ON FRAME. 2X3 FT. $15. 662287-2758
MUSICAL 0512 MERCHANDISE WURLITZER ORGAN, 3 keyboards, walnut finish, must see, $350. 662287-2935
0515 COMPUTER GATEWAY EV500 computer w/speakers & printer, $100 OBO. 662603-5187 LAPTOP COMPUTER-HP Compaq, NC-6220. Great condition w/Windows XP Pro software plus Outlook Express & others, extra long life battery, all for $125. Call Jim Tucker, 284-6724.
SHARP BRAND 13" color tv w/remote, shows great picture perfect for camper, shop, small space, $35. Call 286-5216
Mason Woods Mom: Leticia Woods Grandparents: Eddie Woods & the late Tina Woods Great-Grandparents: David & Wanda Woods Siblings: Braylen Miller
A page featuring your special Angel will be published Sunday, December 22nd, 2013 in The Daily Corinthian
$20 includes pictures & name of child or children and names of parents, siblings, grandparents & great-grandparents MUST BE PREPAID All photos must be in our office by 5 p.m. Friday, Dec. 13th, 2013
COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE AUCTION Live, On-Site Auction! Wednesday, December 11, 2013 at 12 p.m. 160 Wal-Mart Circle Booneville, MS 38829 Commercial real estate in an excellent location next to the WalMart parking lot! High visibility at a convenient location, this property offers an incredible opportunity for a restaurant, retail shop, so many possibilities! Don’t miss this great investment opportunity! For Pics and More Information
I give my permission to publish the enclosed picture(s) and information in the Daily Corinthian Christmas Angels
Signature______________________________________________ Relationship to child(ren)________________________________ Child/Children’s name(s)_________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ Parents, Grand & Great Grandparents, Sibling(s) names_____ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ Day Phone For Contact__________________________________ Cash________________________Check #___________________ CC#____________________________________Exp. date______ Name/address associated with card_______________________ ______________________________________________________ MAIL TO: CHRISTMAS ANGELS, C/O DAILY CORINTHIAN, P.O. BOX 1800, CORINTH, MS 38835 OR DROP BY DAILY CORINTHIAN OFFICE AT 1607 S. HARPER RD. OR EMAIL TO: classad@dailycorinthian.com Call 662-287-6147 for any questions
0518 ELECTRONICS 40" SONY HDTV, great condition, $90. 731-6454899
Kallie Ann Woods Parents: James & Heather Woods Grandparents: Randall & Tammy Jones , Mary & Danny Davis Siblings: Autumn, Zeke & Eli
www.HeadAuctions.com
(601) 613-8693 10% BP - MS Lic. #892 MS RE Lic. #19794
Advertise Your Property For Sale Here! In the Daily Corinthian And The Community Profiles for only $200 a month (Daily Corinthian Only $165)
New Home 4005 St. Andrews Circle 1,925 sq. ft., 3 BR, 2 BA, Separate DR, Vaulted Great Room w/FP, Granite Countertops & Stainless Steel Appliances; Hardwood Floors Throughout $195,000
662-284-6252
$274,999 40 County Road 603 Southwestern Design Fully Furnished Beautiful Professionally landscaped 3BR, 3 Bath home situated on approx. 5 acres with pool and small pond. Gas Fireplace, Cathedral ceilings and jacuzzi are only a few attributes of this lovely home. Double garage, screened porch/ patio with fans. For further info & pics please contact United Country River City Realty 662-287-7707 Lyle Murphy “Not Your Ordinary Real Estate Company”
CR513 KossuthlBiggersville Area 3·4 BR, 2 BA Hdwd, Tile, Unoleum 2 Car Attached Garage 1 Acre, Very Private Fenced in Back Yard $109,900 Call 662-665-1815
3503 Old Ashbrook Drive Cedar Creek Subdivision 3 BR, 2.5 Baths Living area w/open floor plan, vaulted ceilings & gas logs that connect to DR. lg. Master BR w/walk-in closet and spacious master bath. Lge. tiled kit w/breakfast nook. Bonus Rm above garage for Xtra BR or Game Room.
A Great Buy @ $198,000. Call For Info/Appt
662-213-5354 or 662-415-4582
$26,500 AS/IS 1114 E. 4TH STREET 2 BR - 1 BATH STOVE & REFRIGERATOR GAS FLOOR FURNACE WINDOW A/C W/HEAT STORAGE SHED & GARAGE LOT 70X150 CONTACT: 662-286-8475 OR 286-4739
MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE
MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE
HOMES FOR 0620 RENT
LARGE METAL ROLL- WALL MOUNTED DISAROUND UTILITY CART. PLAY CASE/Shadow Box with glass doors. 4ftX3 $50. 731-645-4899 1/2ft, $65.00 Call 662LOAD-HANDLER fits both 286-3026 short & long wheel base pick-ups, $25. 731-6454899 MEN'S Stafford Lea Blazer. Lge, Great Cond, never worn, tags on, Bought @ JCP $300. Will take $200. 643-7650
WANT TO make certain PEG BOARD. 46"X54", $5. your ad gets attention? per sheet. 662-415-8180 Ask about attention PROPANE GAS HEATER, getting graphics.
THERMOSTATICALLY WEIGHT-LIFTING bar sets CONTROLLED. $85. CALL w/assorted weights, 662-665-2852 $40. 731-645-4899 RADIATOR STYLE electric heater, new in box, WESLO EXERCISE Bike. $80. LIKE NEW! Call 731$20. 662-287-2935 239-8668 or 731-453REVERSE YOUR 4615
AD FOR $1.00 EXTRA Call 662-287-6147 for details.
WHITE CROCHETED COTTON INITIAL COASTERS $3. EACH, 662-287-9739. NO CALLS BEFORE 9 A.M.
SMALL CHILD'S TRICYCLE. WHITE FRIGIDAIRE DISHP ERFECT C O N D I T I O N . WASHER, ULTRA QUIET, $ 20. 662 - 2 8 7 - 2 75 8 WORKS PERFECT. $75. S P O R T S C A R C O V E R , 662-287-2758 NEW, FITS CAMARO, WINNIE THE Pooh child MUSTANG, CHARGER, walker, fold out toys on FIREBIRD, ETC. $20. 731tray, good condition, 645-4899 $30. 662-286-5216 STAINLESS STEEL DBL SINK, GOOD CONDITION. FURNISHED 0615 APARTMENTS $20. 731-645-4899 VOIT GRAVITY Rider UPSTAIRS, 1BR, 1BA, Rowing Exercise Bike. Util,Wi-Fi,Sat incl. 924 N. $25. 731-645-4899 Cass. $700. 240-460-2537
RECREATIONAL 0816 VEHICLES
HOMES FOR 0710 SALE
INSIDE CORINTH City HUD Limits: 3BR, 2Ba, $600 PUBLISHER’S mo;GUYS TN-2BR, 1Ba, NOTICE $500.mo; 662-808-2827 All real estate adveror 662-287-7875 tised herein is subject to the Federal Fair LGE 3BR, 2B,good city Housing Act which location, CHA, appls,dbl makes it illegal to adc/p, new paint & kit vertise any preference, vinyl,$600m,415-4400 limitation, or discrimination based on race, HOMES FOR color, religion, sex, 0710 SALE handicap, familial status 3BR, 2 ba, h/wd floors, or national origin, or inlge kit, ldry rm, CHA, in- tention to make any sert in fp, carpt, front such preferences, limiporch, deck, O/S stg. 5 tations or discriminaac, 4 mi so. of Burns- tion. ville Rd 217, Leedy Com- State laws forbid dismunity.662-427-8794 for crimination in the sale, appt. Priced to sell! rental, or advertising of real estate based on 3BR, 2BA, Strickland factors in addition to C o m m u n i t y , n e w l y those protected under painted, HVAC, vaulted federal law. We will not ceilings,fenced yard, dbl knowingly accept any advertising for real esc/p, $112,000. 415-1611 tate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal 8 CR 522 opportunity basis. Biggersville/Kossuth Area 3600 Sq. Ft. Heated area in this nice multilevel home. 4-5 BR, 3 BA, finished basement w/game room, shop, pond. You will Love WANT TO make certain This Spacious Home. your ad gets attention? Let's Talk Price! Ask about attention 662-284-5379 for Appt. getting graphics. & More Info
For Sale
SERVICES
GUARANTEED Auto Sales 868 AUTOMOBILES
470 TRACTORS/ FARM EQUIP.
804 BOATS
1997 Ford New Holland Tractor
‘90 RANGER BASS BOAT
Model 3930, diesel, excellent condition!, 8-speed with forward, reverse transmission. 800 hrs. Power Steering, Wet Brakes. Independent PTO $8,900. 731-926-0006.
361V W/MATCHING TRAILER & COVER, RASPBERRY & GRAY, EVINRUDE 150XP, 24-V TROL. MTR., 2 FISH FINDERS, NEW BATTS., NEW LED TRAILER LIGHTS, EXC. COND.,
$6,400.
53’ GOOSE NECK TRAILER STEP DECK BOOMS, CHAINS AND LOTS OF ACCESSORIES $12,000/OBO
662-808-0113.
2010 BUICK ENCLAVE
Loaded, Leather, 3rd Row Seating, dual sun roofs, rear camera, 44000 miles
$27,500
Call/Text 662-643-8883
1991 Mariah 20’
$32,000 CALL PICO
662-643-3565
804 BOATS
662-287-5893, leave msg. & will return call.
19’6” LONG FIBERGLAS INCLUDES TRAILER THIS BOAT IS KEPT INSIDE AND IS IN EXCELLENT CONDITION NEW 4 CYL MOTOR
Imagine owning a like-new, water tested, never launched, powerhouse outboard motor with a High Five stainless prop,
for only $7995. Call John Bond of Paul Seaton Boat Sales in Counce, TN for details.
731-689-4050 or 901-605-6571
868 AUTOMOBILES
HONDA 4 wheeler, 86-88 You are summoned Four Trax TRX200SX, Red/White/Blue. Excel- to appear and defend lent Cond. $900.287-3023 against the complaint or petition filed against AUTO/TRUCK you in this action at 9:00 0848 PARTS & o'clock A. M. on the 10th day of December, ACCESSORIES 2013, in the Courtroom MUSTANG V-8, 302 enof the Alcorn Chancery gine parts: complete Building in Corinth, Ala/c compressor w/concorn County, Missisdensor coil, $50; power sippi, and in case of steering pump, $25; oil your failure to appear & transmission coolers, and defendant, a judg$15 ea; crankshaft ment will be entered w/pistons, $50. 731-645against you for the 4899 money or other things demanded in the com0955 LEGALS plaint or petition. IN THE CHANCERY You are not required COURT OF ALCORN COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI to file an answer or other pleading but you RE: LAST WILL AND TEST- may do so if you desire. AMENT OF LYMAN Issued under my BURGE MITCHELL., DEhand and the seal of CEASED said Court, this the 8 CAUSE NO. 2013-0590-02 day of November 2013.
You are summoned to appear and defend against the complaint or petition filed against you in this action at 9:00 o'clock A. M. on the 10th day of December, 2013, in the Courtroom of the Alcorn Chancery Building in Corinth, Alcorn County, Mississippi, and in case of your failure to appear and defendant, a judgment will be entered against you for the money or other things demanded in the complaint or petition.
6 CYLINDER RUNS GREAT! 38,000 ORIGINAL MILES
$5,000 CALL PICO:
662-643-3565
1997 FORD ESCORT 30 MPG GOOD CAR
$1650
CALL 662-808-5005
REDUCED
2000 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX GT
1984 CORVETTE 383 Stroker, alum. high riser, alum. heads, headers, dual line holly, everything on car new or rebuilt w/new paint job (silver fleck paint).
228k miles.
$2500 obo.
$9777.77
662-643-6005
Call Keith 662-415-0017.
18’ long, 120 HP Johnson mtr., trailer & mtr., new paint, new transel, 2 live wells, hot foot control.
2001 TOWN CAR Signature Series, Dark Blue Good Tires And Battery Smooth Ride 206,000 Miles
$6500.
$3000
662-596-5053
662-286-7939
2009 Nissan Murano SL, leather upholstery, sunroof, rear camera, blue tooth, loaded to the max!
76, 000 Miles $18,500/OBO 662-808-9764
2012 MALIBU LS LTZ PACKAGE
33 Mpg Highway, 1 Owner, Auto Lights, Sirius Radio, Power Sweats, On Star, Remote Keyless Entry, Cocoa Cashmere Interior, 5 Year 100,000 Mile Power Train Warranty.
$14,900
256-412-3257
RE: LAST WILL AND TESTIssued under my AMENT OF JOHN LOYD hand and the seal of BORDEN, DECEASED said Court, this the 8 day of November 2013. CAUSE NO. 2013-0567-02 SUMMONS STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
BOBBY MAROLT, CHANCERY CLERK ALCORN COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI
COUNTY OF ALCORN
Issued under my RE: LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT OF JOHN LOYD hand and the seal of said Court, this the 8 BORDEN, DECEASED day of November 2013. CAUSE NO. 2013-0567-02
BOBBY MAROLT, CHAN-
14475
You have been made a Defendant in the suit filed in this Court by Cindia Deanett Borden, 864 864 a 868 You are not required Petitioner, seeking TRUCKS/VANS TRUCKS/VANS determination of heirs. to file an answer SUV’S or othAUTOMOBILES SUV’S er pleading but you You are summoned may do so if you desire. to appearREand D DUCEdefend Issued under my against the complaint hand and the seal of or petition filed against said Court, this the 8 you in this action at 9:00 day of November 2013. o'clock A.M. on the 10th day of December, 2013, 2004 Ford F350 1995 in the Courtroom of the BOBBY MAROLT, workCHANtruck, V10, CHEVY VAN Alcorn Chancery BuildCERY CLERK underbed ing in Corinth, TOW Alcorn, ALCORN COUNTY, MIS- tool County, Mississippi and SISSIPPI boxes, towing PACKAGE in case of your failure to package, DVD. appear and defendant, 83,000 BY: WILLIE JUSTICE $8600 obo. Truck isd g m e n tACTUAL a ju will be DEPUTY CLERK Turbo, exc. cond. entered against you for in daily use. Please MILES 3x's call for appt. tothe see, money or other in the $2995/OBO 11/10, 11/17, 11/24/2013 things demanded complaint or petition. 662-415-1482 14474 662-415-8180
1983 NISSAN DATSUN 280 ZX $5000.
1999 RED GRAND PRIX GT
2005 3800 ENGINE WITH ONLY 95,000 MILES ON ENGINE. CAR HAS 257,000 MILES. PAINT AND INTERIOR IN GOOD CONDITION. Asking $1700. 662-284-5733 LEAVE MSG
340-626-5904.
under my 2009 FORD Issued2001 FORD and the WHITE seal of F150hand RANGER said Court, this theXLT 8
Gray, 76,000 day of November 2013. 3.0 V6, Automatic Miles, Air, Cruise, Extended Cab BOBBY MAROLT, CHANPower Windows, New Tires, Cold Air CERY CLERK Great Stereo, Bed Liner ALCORN COUNTY, MISBedliner, Clean SISSIPPI 158,000 Miles $14,000. $4500/OBO
662-212-2492
2004 Ford Expedition
662-415-9121
$5,400
864 TRUCKS/VANS SUV’S
1989 FORD F350 DIESEL MOVING VAN WITH TOMMY GATE RUNS GOOD
$3800
731-607-3173
2000 Ford F-350
110,000 MILES One Owner New Tires
662-415-1043
2005 GMC Envoy DENALI XL
2 OWNER NEW TIRES, BRAKES & BELTS 112,000 MILES
$9800/OBO 662-284-6767 REDUCED
2008 Jeep Wrangler Sahara
super duty, diesel, 7.3 ltr., exc. drive train, 215k miles, excellent, great mechanical condition”.
$20,500 / O.B.O.
662-664-3538
662-396-1705 or 284-8209
$7400.
‘07 Dolphin LX RV, 37’
1995 CHEVY VAN
TOW PACKAGE EXTRA CLEAN
$3100
662-462-7413
V-6, auto., power windows, hard top, Sirius radio w/nav cd, dvd, very clean & well maintained. 54,000 mi.
2007 GMC YUKON 70,000 MILES GARAGE KEPT
$22,500 CALL FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
662-284-8396
2006 Chrysler Town & Country 3.8v-6, Only 62,000 mi. Automatic Transmission CD player, power sliding doors & rear hatch, Stow & Go package. Seats will fold flat into floor.
$7650. 662-665-1995 1977 Chevy Big 10 pickup,
long wheel base, rebuilt & 350 HP engine & auto. trans., needs paint & some work.
$1500
662-664-3958
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.
$85,000 662-415-0590
REDUCED
2004 MERCURY MONTEREY
fully loaded, DVD/ CD system, new tires, mileage 80,700, climate controlled air/heat, heat/ cool power seats.
$7,000 OBO Call or text 956-334-0937
3x's 11/10, 11/17, 11/24/2013 14475
NEW TOP V6 30+ MPG Z28 APPEARANCE PACKAGE ALL POWER
$6900
816 864 TRUCKS/VANS RECREATIONAL VEHICLES SUV’S
You are not required to file an answer or other pleading but you may do so if you desire.
BY: WILLIE JUSTICE 662-284-7293 DEPUTY CLERK
REDUCED
1989 FOXCRAFT
You are not required to file an answer or othLEGALS but you 0955 er pleading may do so if you desire.
CERY CLERK Advertise your CAR, TRUCK,SUMMONS SUV, BOAT, TRACTOR, MOTORCYCLE, RV & ATV ALCORN COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI STATE OF MISSISSIPPI here for $39.95 UNTIL SOLD! Ad should include photo, description and BY: WILLIE JUSTICE COUNTY OF ALCORN DEPUTY CLERK price. PLEASE NOTO: DEALERS & NON-TRANSFERABLE! NO REFUNDS. Unknown Heirs of John Loyd Borden, De- 3x's Single item only. Payment Call 11/17, 287-6147 to place your ad. 11/24/2013 ceased in advance. 11/10,
2001 CAMERO CONVERTIBLE 1979 OLDSMOBILE OMEGA
AT THE CHANCERY
COURT OF ALCORN LEGALS 0955 COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI
BY: WILLIE JUSTICE DEPUTY CLERK TO: Unknown Heirs of John Loyd Borden, De3x's ceased 11/10, 11/17, 11/24/2013 14475 You have been made a Defendant in the suit filed in this Court by HANDYMAN Cindia Deanett Borden, Petitioner, seeking a determination of heirs. HANDYMAN'S HOME CARE, ANYTHING. 662-643-6892. You are summoned to appear and defend against the complaint STORAGE, INDOOR/ or petition filed against OUTDOOR you in this action at 9:00 o'clock A.M. on the 10th AMERICAN day of December, 2013, MINI STORAGE 2058 S. Tate BOBBY MAROLT, CHAN- in the Courtroom of the SUMMONS Alcorn Chancery BuildAcross from CERY CLERK World Color ALCORN COUNTY, MIS- ing in Corinth, Alcorn, STATE OF MISSISSIPPI County, Mississippi and SISSIPPI 287-1024 in case of your failure to COUNTY OF ALCORN appear and defendant, MORRIS CRUM BY: WILLIE JUSTICE a judgment will be MINI-STORAGE TO: Unknown Heirs of DEPUTY CLERK entered against you for 286-3826. Lyman Burge Mitchel, the money or other 3x's Jr., Deceased 11/10, 11/17, 11/24/2013 things demanded in the complaint or petition. PET CARE You have been made 14474 a Defendant in the suit You are not required H O R S E S H O E I N G S E R filed in this Court by to file an answer or oth- VICES I WILL COME TO AT THE CHANCERY Jerry Levi Mitchell, Petier pleading but you YOUR HOME, CALL OR COURT OF ALCORN tioner, seeking a demay do so if you desire. TEXT 662-664-3264 COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI termination of heirs.
340-626-5904.
1993 BAYLINER CLASSIC
PRICE IS NEGOTIABLE CALL 662-660-3433
2000 MERCURY Optimax, 225 H.P.
662-462-7634 or 662-664-0789
1987 Honda CRX, 40+ mpg, new paint, new leather seat covers, after market stereo, $3250 obo.
ski boat, 5.7 ltr. engine, new tires, $6700.
16’ TRAILER, DOUBLE AXEL, BUSH HOG, BACKHOE, FRONT LOADER
2000 TOYOTA COROLLA CE 4 cylinder, automatic Extra Clean 136,680 miles $4200
Rienzi
731-453-5031
2013 KUBOTA 3800 SERIES TRACTOR
868 AUTOMOBILES
complaint or petition.
a Defendant in the suit filed in this Court by Jerry Levi Mitchell, Petitioner, seeking a de0955 LEGALS termination of heirs.
6B • Sunday, November 24, 2013 • Daily Corinthian
2005 AIRSTREAM LAND YACHT
30 ft., with slide out & built-in TV antenna, 2 TV’s, 7400 miles.
$75,000. 662-287-7734 REDUCED
2004 Nissan Murano, black, 120k miles, loaded, adult driver, garage kept, Bose, leather, exc. cond.,
$10,500. 662-284-6559.
1991 CUSTOM FORD VAN 48,000 ONE OWNER MILES POWER EVERYTHING
2012 STARCRAFT CAMPER Fiberglass 18’ bunk house, gray & black water tanks, cable ready w/TV.
$8,500
662-396-1390
Excaliber made by Georgi Boy
1985 30’ long motor home, new tires, Price negotiable.
662-660-3433 $4995. CALL: 832 662-808-5005 MOTORCYCLES/ ATV’S 1988 GMC PICK UP 157,000 Miles New Paint, Good Tires Automatic, 4 Wheel Drive. $3900 662-287-5929
1500 Goldwing Honda 78,000 original miles, new tires.
$4500
662-284-9487
TRAILERS
ADVERTISE YOUR AUTO, TRUCK, SUV, BOAT, TRACTOR, MOTORCYCLE, RV OR ATV LIST IN OUR GUARANTEED AUTO SECTION FOR AS LITTLE AS................................. (No Dealers - Non Commercial Only)
1607 South Harper Rd Corinth MS 38834
email: classad@dailycorinthian.com 662-287-6111
2009 ROAD RUNNER 7X7X21’ ENCLOSED BOXED TRAILER,
WHITE, NEW TIRES
$3500
662-594-8271
2007 CHEVY SILVERADO LT EXTENDED CAB 4.8 One of a kind 46,000 mi. garage kept. $20,000 CALL 662-643-3565
1983 HARLEY DAVIDSON Shovel Head Leather Bags
662-643-3565 REDUCED
$7500